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Jury holding Off
talking of Case ·

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WASHIN GTON (UPI )
gathered at his home. ''The
Another panel member, Roy
Oct. 11 , the jury for the judge said that in.respect to the · V. Carter , 27, a loglstlc:a
Watergate cover-up trial have jury system, he hopes we keep coordinator
at· George
been virtuillly shut off from quiet. He has his reasons.''
Washington University·,
communicating with anyone
Hoff ar did remark, however, limited his · talk to h9W the
but each other and some court that his task for the past three panel got along with e~~ch ~
personnel·, such as federal months was not fun.
during their lengthy conmarshals who were with them
" It isn't any ·joyous job-it finement.
. 1\...
constantly.
isn't any ple'asant experience
"The jurors got along·fine,"
When the lengthy trial finally to do what we did," the retired he said. "We were like a
conclude9 Wednesday, Judge U.S. Park policeman said.
family. I've never met a group
John J . 'sirica told the nine
of people I felt so much af.
women, three man panel to ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::·: fection for."
avoid talking to others about
He said that being cooped up
EXTENDED O~JTLOOK
'the case. It appeared today
so long gave him a feeling ol.
Saturday through Monday,
'that most of the jury was
what may possibly be awaiting
'
rain
or snow likely Saturday
following the instructions.
the four convicted defen·
and Sunday. A chance of
''The judge said no, the judge
dants- !l'ison.
snow ilurrles northeastern
said no," jury foreman John A.
"It makes you see what It's
sections Monday. Highs In like to be confined,... Carter
Hoffar told reporters who had
the 30s north to 'a t imid! ' 40 said. .
southern sections. Lows In
Before they lett the courtthe 30s early Saturday and in room for the final time, Slrlca
the 20s early Monday.
told the jury:
"I would suggest and urge
:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::·
strongly
that If anybody wanta
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to talk to you about this cue;
'and I now make no exceptlo111
Clear and cold tonight. Low -that Includes members of
tonight 20 to 25. Increasing your family. friendS, bualnea
cloudiness Friday, chance of associates, employers, that
rain by late afternoon. High includes anybOdy - I would
TEN CENTS Friday in the upper 30s and the just not talk to them about ·this
lower 40s.
. case."
Sin ~

MEIGS COUNTY COMMON PLEAS COURT JUDGE John C. Bacon,
left, administered the oath of office to three county officials Tuesday.
Receiving the oath, from left, were Howard Frank, Meigs County treasurer,
· who will become county auditor on March 10, 1975 and will resign his
treasurer's post prior to that date: Robert Buck who will begin his duties as

fM!Wcounty court judge on Jan . 1 replacing Frank W. Porter, and Henry ·
Well, Meigs County commissioner, who will be starling his first fullterm
on Jan: 1. ·The fourth official elected in November was We ley Buehl, county
engineer, who is also beginning his first full term in January .

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Devoted
VOL. XXVI

'fo
,,

Th e Interests of Th e M(&gt;igs-Mason A rea
THUR SDAY. JANUAR Y 2. 19/5

. POM EROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 183

enttne

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County will spend-less 'on services
Key NixOnmen convicted
By WESLEY G. PIPPERT

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
three most powerful men of'
Richard
Nixon's
administration stand convicted of
conspiring to cover up their
involvement in Watergate,
closing the last major chapter
on America's worst political
scandal. .
. John N. Mitchell, 61, Nixon's
attorney general and campaign director;, H. R.
Haldeman,. 48, and John D.
Ehrlichman, 49, the men who
ran his White House, were
convicted . of conspiracy
Wednesday. Also convicted
was Robert C. Mardian, 51, a
former assistant attorney

general and campaign aide.
Mitchell, Haldeman and
Ehrlichman also were found
guilty of obstruction of justice
and lying. Mitchell could get 25
y~ars ·in prison and a $37,000
fine; Haldeman, 25 years and
$21,000; Ehrlichman, 20 years
and $35,000, and Mardian, 5
years and $10,000.
All-said they will appeal .
Kenneth W. Parkinson, 46,
hired to do Yliltergate legal
work, was acquitted of conspiracy and obstruction of
justice -the first Watergate
defendant to go free.
Neither Nixon, an unindicted
co-conspirator in the case, nor
President Ford had inunediate

found guilty of Waterga te
crimes.
When Parkinson's acquittal
was announced, Mitchell .
turned
and
whispered
congratulations. Haldeman,
his wife Jo and their daught.er
Susan
were
typically
emotionless . Susan , ,a. law.
student who sal next to her
father at the defense table,
broke into tears as she left the
courtroom.
"There's only one&gt; human
being in the worid who knows
to an absolute moral certainty
the truth of my iMocence or
guilt," H.aldeman said outside
the courthouse in a driving
· (Continued on page 10)

comment.
After 15 hours deliberation,
the jury of eight blacks and
four whites returned the
verdict to U .S. District Court '
Judge John J . Sirica late in the
afternoon of the trial's 63rd
day .It was 30 months after five
men were arrested with bugging equipment inside ~mo­
cralic Party offices at the
Watergate.
The five men stood erect and
motionless at their tables .in
Courtr.oom No. 2 as clerk
James P. Capitanio read the
counts and a series of "guilty
... guilty .. . guilty."
The convictions brought to 17
the number of Nixon aides

No end, yet, to Watergate ·
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The conviction of four former
aides to President Richard M. Nixon ended a·major portion
of the Watergate case, but special prosecutors wiD be busy
for months ahead on other matters growing out of the
scandal.
Still to come to trial are former Treasury Secretary John
B. Co.nnally, charged In relationship to c~palgn contributions from milk producers, and Gordon C. Strahan, a
former White. House aide who wail Indicted In the cover-up
but was not tried with the others.
In addition, appeals by the John N. Mltcbell, John D.
Ehrlichman, H. R. Haldeman and Robert C. Mardlan convicted Wednesday In the cover-up trial -are sure to keep'
-Watergate In the courts for ·some time.
By far the biggest name still facing trial is Connally, the
former governor of Texas who served u Nixon's Treasury
secretary. He Is scheduled to go on trial in' March oo charges
of bribery and perjury In relation to a donation from the milk
producers. Jack Chesnut, a campaign alde.to Sen. Hubert H.
Humphrey, D-Mlnn., 1}11970, also has been Indicted for ac·
ceptlng liD Illegal contribution from the mUk producers.

:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::·

~·;~ . ·E hrlichman exp~cted verdicts
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.· WASHINGTON (UPI ) .
Bv Unl«!d Press International
· John D. Ehrlichman said today
_
. IWO PLATOON~ · OF ISRAI!l}J COMMANOOS raided a that ever sinc;e he and the other
village in southern Lebanon today' and cl.ashed with Arabs hole,d Watergate ·cover-up defenup in one of tbe houses. Lebano{l.said the commandos killed four • dants wel'e indicted nine
villagers and wounded one other in a 10-rninute, .Jire-dawn raid. months ago ,be was "pretty
Israel said cfnly one villager was sl~. There werj! no reported well convinced of the imIsraeli jo~~· ' ·
· .
possibility of securing an
. A military spokeSman in Tel Aviv said · the' commandos acquittal.''
"' penetrated ~o miies into Lebanese territory early· this 'Por~in~ , Because of the pretrial
and struck again'st the village of.Taibe. The spokesman S8ld a publicity surrounding the case,
gunrQan in on~ of the houseS in the ,vlll:age opened fire on. tbe the .congressional
imtroops and t,h~ Israel~ shot back. He said the coinmandos killed ~achment investigatio? and
the gun11l81l and then blew !II&gt; the house.
·
Richard
M.
Nixon's
. A military.spokesman in Beirut said a 00-man Israeli force resignation and pardon, the
raided the vi~age and" blew ·up the borne of Ali Hussein chances of acquittal "was like
Slaraftiddfue, killjng four persons and wounding one .
pushing a stone uphill," the
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former White House domestic
SAN cLEMENTE,'CAilF . ..:. FOR.Ml]:R PresJdent Richard adviser said.
M. Nixon planned to make his first statement,today about the' · Ehrlichman was interviewed
convictionoffourofhistopaidesintheWatetgateco:ver-uptrial. ' oR the NBC Today Show one
~Ziegler, former . White House press secretary and now ' dayafterheandthreeothertop
Nixon's chief assistant, said · .a statement would be made . Nixon administration officials,
.1. ·,; ·sbmetime. today at the Nixon estate here, the for~er Western Chief of Staff H.R. Haldeman,
' · · .White. House: He gave no specific. time.
·.
former Attorney General John
·
Nixon escaped.appearance at.the trial, either as a defendant N. Mitchell and · former
.. • or witness. He·was named an unindicted ~o-conspirator by the · assistant ·Attorney General
' Watergate grand jury. A1l president, he could not be indictE:d.
Robert Mardian, were found
He resigil.ed., the ' presidency Aug. 9 when . ~peaehrnent and . guilty of conspiracy. A fifth
·conviction aweared inuninent, but President Ford gr~nted him · defendant, Kenneth Parkinson,
a full pardoh, ~pt. 8, before the trial began.. . . .
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was found rot guilty.
. ·'Although subpoenaed by both prosecu~on and ~fense' ~ a
"I don't think anyone from
witness, Nixon. was excused on grounds ot ill: health. A penal of the time the indictment was ·
'three· co~ppointed physi~ians checked, and ~Onfi,rm~, the delivered back last March liad
. diagnOsis by Nixon's dOctors. tha~ he ·was ~ ill to travel to any serious doubt about the
Washipgton, or even to give a deposition in response to .written ·problems of securing an
:question's.
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0ver 400
- h ave
fun ·. at ·hall

RAMLE, IsRAEL - ISRAEL'S BEAT KNOWN: astr'oioger
says 1975 will be a year of Middle East mUitary stalema!e, with ~
confrontation·in Junl! and July but no~ ne&lt;:e~y a new. war.
"It depends on whether we wll! be prep~ed and on the
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alert " astrologer Hans .Zeuger ·told the Jerusalem Post. "The
Over 400 big bend residents
June:_,uly confrontation will not only inVPlve the counties in this attended the annual New Yar's
area but Rlissia and th!Jlnlted States.'' Zeuger, who lives at Tal Ball of the Pomeroy Fire ~Pt.
Slahar, a cooperative settlement, predicted ·1975 will be a "slow . and
Emergency Squad
year 1• because of.the dominance' of the outer plane.ts of Saturn, Tuesday night at the Pomeroy
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Junior High School.
. ' Uranus, Neptune and ~u(!l.
The crowd was enthusiastic
ROCHESI'ER, MINN. - DR. JACK Stfll'lllleb of the Mayo .but orderly , with . music
SlY.~. a crease on the ear lobe may indicate heart disease. provided by the' Ambassadors.
Sttirnlieb says a recent study shows the crease on one or both ear.
Prizes were aw'arded to Jim
lobes has appeared on nine out of every 10 heart disease patients. Carleton , Pomeroy; Richard
The Mli:Yo study found a crease in 133 out of 144 patients with Jones, Pomeroy; Harry
clinical symptoms of heart ~. Sternlieb said. However, Su ~ fa c e , Middleport ; John
Sternlleb cautioned that his findings were based on a limited Musser , Pomeroy ; Leroy
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sample of patients.
James, Mason ; Dave Mc·The crease is formed, doctors think~ because the·ear lobe . Crumb, Southside, W. Va .;
contains no cartilage or bone and develops a fold when its blood Charles Sayre, Mason ; Charles
' • SIIPPlY ~ reduce!i by coronary disease. The crease was defined Willett, Gallipolis Ferry, W. ,
a5 an oblique fold starting from the lowest comer of ,the ear Vi.; John McKen ~ ie,
opening and ~ding outward on the lobe in varying !engths, Pomeroy, and a ·'\Mr. Martin", ,,
·
)Continued on lfage 16)
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of Gallipolis.

acquittalinthisfederaldistrict
under the circumstances .. .''
Ehrlichman said.
"It would be hard to imagine
that any of these jurors could
have escaped having some'
preconception.''
Ehrlichman, like the other
three convicted men, said he
wonld appeal the verdict. ·
"There obviously were any
number of rulings throughout
the .trial that would ~onn .the
bas1s for an appeal," E!hrlichmail said. "Perhaps the central one would be the judge's
decision not to require the
former president to give a
deposition, but certainly the
list will be as long as your
arm."
Following the verdict late
Wednesday , Haldeman told
reporters : "There's only one
human being in the world who
knows to an absolute moral
certainty the truth of my innocence or guilt. I know that
legally and morally I am
totally innocent of each of the
charges brought here. And
with that certainty I can live
with myself and I can move
ahead now with the procesSes
of appeal." .
•
Mitchell took the revelation
of his guilt with equanimity,
puffing on his ever-present

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According to Chief Deputy
Ivan Fife, papers containing
Spry's name were found in a
wrecked U-Haul truck submerged in the Ohio Rive( near
.Crown City. The truck 'was
located at noon Wednesday by
Larry Church~
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Fife said the.one and one-half
ton truck apparently traveled
over a s teep embankm!'nt
before it hit the 'water. The

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him, and also J think out of the
genuine desire to have an
historical record."
He then added that "as a
matter of historical perspective, you can make a pretty
good argument that a bonfire
on the South Lawn (of the
White House) wouldn't have
been a bad idea right about
then.''
He said that only about one
tenth of l per cent .of all the
tapes have been publicly
disclosed .
"My argument Is that if
you're going to hear that' much,
you ought to hear Ul.l!ffi all," he
said. "Then you get some
balance in this thing .. . if you
isolate on 20 hours out of five
years, you get a highly warped
view of what really went on.''
Ehrlichman said that if he
had known that everything said
was being ·taped, he 'twould ·
have acted differently.''
He said that tbe public so far
has donated $50,000 to his
defense fund to help pay for the
high level fees that he indicated were much more than

$250,0oo.

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LOCAL TEMP
The temperature in downtown Pomeroy alll a.m. today
was 34 degrees under cloudy
skies.

driver missipg

Gallia County sher iff's
deputies wer£ checking wi lh
Wes t Virginia authorities today
into the whereabouts of Larry
Spry, 1\ge unkn o.wn, of Dingess
or Sissonville, W
. Va .

ainlc

pipe.
"Do I have any reaction?
can't you guess?"
Then he joked that he might
"go to the moon.' ~
Mardian brushed past
reporters and refused to say
anything. After the courtroom
had ·cleared, he sat at the
defendants table with his head
in his·hands.
During his interview today,
Ehrlichman rebuffed chief
prosecutor James Neal's contention that the cover-up was
an orchestration involving
Nillon and all the defendants.
"Actually, if ·you look· at
t,hese five defendants, from my
standpoint one of them I'd
never mel before, Ken P!irkinson, another one I hadn't seen
for a couple of years, Bob
Mardlan, another . one I saw
perhaps four times over the
span of the year that was in
issue in the case, John Mitchell, and then on only a very
casual basis.
!'So if that was an orchestra,
it never got together for a
rehearsal."
Ehrlichman said he believed
Nixon kept the famous White
House tapes that eventually
spelled his downfall "in part
out of a distrust of some of the
people who were working for

Commissioners approve
budget of $1, 75!,~;
reduction of $268,000
BY KATIE CROW
Meigs County will spend 11,751,048.00 In providing public:
services to Its citizens In 1975, down $268,•2.2111 from 1974.
The appropriation was approved Tuellday by the board ol
county commissioners.·The total last year was $1 1~19,100.31.
According to' Robert Clark, president of the board of Clllilmlssloners, the. reason.the budget Ia lower than~ year It ell'- to
the fact the county was overpaid •1&amp;2,000 In reVIJIJe ~
funds. Instead of pa.Yin6 th!l Bovernment back the tun aJM111t,
Washington will take out aPercentage of each allotment, 10 Uiat
the county is actually receiving less from revenue sharing thla
year.
·
Clark added the Commission Examinations, county offloea,
Is saving mpney due to several $10,000. Total, fl9,000.
federally funded programs and
County planning, $1,2~0;
to the fact that the children's Buckeye Hills, $978.53; Total,
home is closed.
$2,228.53.
Disbursements in general
Common Pleas Court fund are as follow :
salaries, offlci!ll, $3,583,'12;
Board of County Com- salaries, employes, ,7,100';
missioners, salaries, officials, supplies, $150; attorney feee, .
$)5,300; salaries, employe , $750; juror's fees, ,1,000;
clerk, $5,100; supplies, $1,500; witness fees, $200; tr8111Cl'ipta,
equipment, $15,000 ; legal $300; jury . commission,
counsel, rent, health dept., salaries, employes, $240'. Total,
$900;
motor
vehicles, $14,103.82.
·
engineer's office, $200; conJuvenile proba~on depart.
tracts, repair, $4,000; travel ment - salaries, " employs, ·
and expenses of com- $6,000; deputy clerk, t$,3oo;
missioners, $900; advertising juvenile officer, $3,00o; other
antt printing, $100; other ex- expenses, '500; probation
penses, postage, $2000; family office, $2,000;. other expe11181,
planning, $1,000; landfill, $300; travel juvenile offlee,
$42,500; senior citizens, $3,500. $1,000. Total $18,100.
Total $47,000.
·
Probat.e court - salary;
County auditor - Salary, official,. $3,563.82, salaries,
official, $8,200; salaries, employes, $4,900; ·supplies,
employes, $23,500; supplies, $2,500; juror's fees, $300: other
$6,000; contracts, $2,400; ad- expenses,
$200.
Total
vertlsing and printing, · $400; · $11,483.82.
other expenses, $400; salaries,
Clerk of Courts - Salary, .
tax commissioner, $1643.16, official, $8,300; salaries,
other expenses, $600. Total, employes, $14,800; supplies,
$43,143,16.
$4,000. Total, $26,900.
County treasurer ~ salary, . Coroner - salary, official,
official, $8,000; salaries em- $2300; other eXIM:~ ,1,000•
ployes, $13,900 ; supplies, Total, $3,300.
$3,500; advertising and prinCounty and municipal
tlng, $500; other expenses, courts, county court, salary,
$500. :rotal, $26,400.
official, $7,583.92; salaries,
Prosecuting attorney - employes, $9,500; supplie1,
Salary , official, $6,800 ; $2,000 ; witness fees, $100;·
salaries, employes , $4,400; bondsmen, $900; other 8:11:·
salary, secret service agent, penses, $1500. Total, $21,683.92.
$3,000 ;
supplies,
$100 ;
Board of elections - salary,
allowances, $3,000. Total , official, $5,200 ; salaries,
$17,100.
employes, $14,430; . supp~es .
Burea u · of Inspec tion
(Continued on page 111)

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~o~'::;~:~::::::'rs

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1\obert Clark was rHlected,pi'ellldent ol tile beard. tl ·:::;
commissioners at the organlzaUonal meetlq thll.....,
nlng. Henry We~ wu elected vice preUlellt, IIII.Miu111a ~

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Ia'wman reported a window to Randall Wamsley' . 18, 504J,fz
the truck 's cab was down and Second Ave.; Gallipolis, and
-~~
o
R Ed
(]uimben was appoiDted clerlt.
:~
that blood was found inside the
ana .
wards, 22, of
Others appobtted were Jim COJ;Dell; cutodJiD; Alfred ::::,
truck and on its cab.
Columb'us. They will appear jn
Frank, dog warden, and Everett Holme., couty aplarJ ,,.
The sheriff's department has Municipal Co t Friday.
bee inlpector.
', .
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not been able to determine if
· Named to ·sene 011 the Comm.ttj Impro~ ~
the driver escaped the truck or
Corp.; (CIC), were Robert Clark, cemmtutllli•; &amp;en.d :~ ·
if he may still be in -'the Obio breaking and entering at the.• ~;~ faltz, representing' Middleport; Boward · Jl'rull, ~
River. Papers. found in the residence of Mr. and Mrs. :;:; representing Raclae; Eleaaor RobiiGa, ~ ~·
vehicle give Spry's ·name and Loren Noble
of Hannan Trace
:;:;
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:·:· Syra·cuae; E• .F• Rob'-·IIIIIVII' repre~e~~- .-....eroy 1111
,,
address in both West Virginia Rd.
·
:;:; Vernon Weber, rep~atlng Rutland.
·~
and Michigan.
Missing were several · :;:;
In othef bualneu tlle ·cOIDIIIIuloD traDifwred fna · ~
· Sheriff 's deputies Wed- electrical appliances including :;:; the county general flUid to the Soil cGillerfttloa .._. ~~
nesda,ycharged three men with a blender, can opener and
pabllc __,.._ · •""' .. ••• ..., ....
..
$3,0011;
..,,BM
to
'te
breaking and en tering · an electric razor. Other I ms t: .Crippled ChDdren's FIIDd...........ce, ..,..
·
. • ·, .
un inhabited dwelling owned by taken were a 12 inch TV, f
AttendiDg were Clark, Wellll ()an aJid Mn. CbaJD. . :·
Mike Pore of Lower River Rd. unknown quantity · of canned
be
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Booked were Jess Glen Smilh, . goods, pillow slips, a flashlight, ;:;:
ra. '.
.
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llip&lt;Jlis
M
Ill
coal.o1
'
llamp
and
clock.
,.
....
.....
........
•.·.·:·.···········:·.············································.,.,·.O:·.·.·················,.·.·.·,;,;;·.·····:·.·····''''::i'~
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arv . ,
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David Poling, D.O.
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3 - The D'c~ily Sentmel, MidcUeporl-Pomt•ro.} ,,0., Thursdtty . J 1H 1. 2. l!I1 J

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2'- The Daily Sentme l, Midclleport-Pomoruy, 0., Thw·sd.J y, J;ut' !· 1!17&gt;

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By DAVID POLING
Rather than discuss the Tnghlights of reli_g1ons stories that
appeared in 1974 and predict the lar~e events for 1975, let us
concentrate on some trends that appear to be shapmg t~e church
at this time. Many thmgs are happening that do not move' from,,
single even t or activtty, yet demonstrate a broader and, at limes,
an exciti]lg development within the religtous t·ommuruty.
For example·
The ordination of women. The EpiScopa l Church contmu'lS to

•

USC cOIDehack could give· McKay fourth ,c rown

I

The. cutting edge. -of religion
'

Seven hundred and fifty' years ago ,\he lonely f;gure of St.
Francis appeared m the Middle Ages: His mission was to help the
poor of the wor ld, largely tgnored, he thought, buy his beloved
Catholic Ch urch Toda), the Francisca ns' contdme !'he zealoUs
mt erests of thei r founder (about 35,000 in this·and related orders
under the rule of St. Francts ).
The Francil;cans are pressing· on several fronts. t.tie
ecumentcal dialogue, the rights of the poor and world starvallon.
One of the significant IOptcs 10 be announced for exploration in'
1975 by the Friars of Graymoore, GarrtSon, N.Y., is dynarru!A! :
"Cnn the Churches Be a Forc-e For ReconciliatiOn tn the Middle

A case-of mis_taken hair

Uon Oakley
Wf.lat price price control? ,
By DON OAKLEY
Thtngs aren't so bad that they couldn't he worse - if they
were better, thal is.

!

A freeway bandit in Cleveland had been t~rizlng women
·motorists. Using a Dashing red light like a police car, he would
force lone females to pull off the road, assault IJ!em and rob them
and then threaten 10 kill them if they went to the pollee.
The robber-rapist-tried it once too often, however. His last
would-be victim had long floWing locks all right, but also hap.
pened to be sporting a moustache. The culprit sped off, but not
before the ·motoril;t got a good look at his car and license plate,
which enabl~d pollee to make an ~":est.
.
Think about thatnext time you.rldtcule long hall' on men.

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IWashington
I Report
~Iarence

I

DR. LAMB

Effect of altitude on heart trouble

Tu111pike
revenue

Certified secretaries

is down

Laurel Oiff

News Notes

"It's Your Show, Fella! Just Let · Me Know
When to Magically Appear .and Dazzle the ·
Crowd!"

- Carpenter .

Most deputies
. ruled under
civil senice

£Jn prey to econo.m y

Kathy Gilligan weds attorney

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By JIM COUR
" I was rollmg out .md
UPI Sports Writer
planned lo run." smd Haden
PASADENA. Calif. ( UPI) '' But the guy who was coverutg
From 1925 through 1940, the Shelton came up on me so l jus!
immorta l Howard Jones dumped it off. Shelton made an
brought three nat ional football .excellent cntch."
championshtps to Souther n . Diggs had to go to Ius knees
California.
to make the catch A tailback
John McKay, the son of a tn lu~h school, Ute San HerWest Virgima coa l mmer, mar nardino. Calif, product adhave gone one up on the fabled nutted he fe lt the pressure of
Jones on New Year's Day
A combinatton of US C's
thrtlling 111-17 VIC lOry over Ohio .. ·:::::&lt;: ::::::::::::::: :::::::::::::
State tn McKay's record eighlh • :;
Rose Bowl coaching appearance and Notre Dame's 13-1'1.,.

··

upsel of Alabama in the
Orange I;!owl could m_ra n the
national· title for the 'l'rojans.
"We have as good a call to it
as anybody," the white-haired
USC coach admitted after No
!-ranked and preVIous)y undefeated Alabama
was
knocked eff on New Year's
,, Night in MtamJ.
"We beat the teams that beat
the teams that beat the teams.
'•
We beat Ohto Stall! who beat
Mtch1ga n and we beat Notre
" Dame who beat Alabama .
" I IA!Il you, I know who I'm
-'
gomg to vote for ."
But McKay , 51, wa sn't
claimmg anythin~
USC No.1?
''Look,
I
don't want to come
"'
out and say we deserve to be
"' rated first because the other
coaches are my friends and 1t
wouldn't be the rtght thing to
do."
The USC coach was probably
talking about Alabama's Bear
Bryant, the man he considers
the best coach in college
football loday. Brya nt and
McKay are good frienda.
McKay won't have long to
wait to find out if he has a
fourth national champwnship
. 10 add to the titles he guided the
TroJans 10 tn 1962, 1967 and
1972.
. The UP!'s board of 3ii
coaches wtll take its final vote
loday.
In Iii seasons, McKay has
moved to within two vtctories
of equallmg Jones' total of 121
wins at USC. He's 5-3 m Rose
Bowl appearances and 2-2 in
the Pasadena classic against
Woody Hayes.
Fittingly, the old B1shop
r· Amat High School tandem of
Pat Haden, the Rhodes &amp;holar
quar!A!rback, and John McKay,
the coach's son who plans to go
to the USC Law School, were
the heroes in their !mal games
as Trojans . .
McKay All Alone
With 2:03 left, Haden, who
had been in!A!rcepted twice and
had fumbled once , found
McKay all alone in the Ohio
State end zone in front of
defensive back Steve Luke . ·
The result : A 38-yard touchdown strike ~hat brought the
Trojans to within one point at
17-16.
Haden then flipped a pass to
sophomore flanker Shelton
Diggs for a two-pomt conver-

:-

•

sion.

\

.'

the situation
']

didn't

!Ju t

thlrlk

, llHHJ I

C&lt;ill~llll g

,·t'ml\ t•rsion Gmurible
.g.unblcd un .1

\ld\, 1\
~'L n t

Huse

made me happy to thmk I'd

~mud

suffered bruised nbs 111 the
opening 30 mmutes

y.JTds 461-286
111ey held HelSII IIJn Trnph)
wumer Archie C.nffm . \VIm had

\\oulrln't grt thP ball agam so

Bu.t there were sta hsh cully
supenor to thr Buc keyes , who
went into tht• ~amc as onetouchdown favm 1tes Ohw .

won the ga me for our semors.
Yeah, n1aybe it was sort of ol
difficult catch but 1'm suppOSed to catch bo•lls like t ho~t "

811 \\!

------------------'1

· !w

H~i

Anthony Oavts, the Pactftc-8

The 'l'roFms rol l ~d up 24 fu.::;t

.ltld

('.ll'ee r

rushmg record holder,

downs to 14 for the BuC'ke} t':-;
and had the advantagr m tota l

Lh t·lt~

\\:um't cmy question m hts

Wednesda) . ·
"We iltdn'l come here to play
fut· a pe," he smd. "We knew
w1th Oh10 State's offense we

~

wereins1detheUSCfive (in the
first quarter) we mtght have
scored. Also we fumbled inside
the 10 once and we missed a
lield goal, too.
"I wouldn't say that call (on
cornerback Neal Colzie) for
spiking the ball was the turning
point. It would be too tough on a
kid to make that ktnd of
sta!A!ment."
The
Buckeyes
were
penalized when Colzie spiked
the ball ai!A!r an m!A!rception
deep m USC territory in the
third quar!A!r.

Haden.
.
"Pat Haden is a great ltttle
quarterback and he can hit the
btg play. He hlt John McKay
wtth a touchdown and hit the
curl pat!A!rn (to Shelton Diggs)
for the conversion and those
were the two big plays.
"That Diggs picked it up just
before it fell to the ground. We
had the play defensed well and
he just made, a great catch."
Hayes explained that he
engaged in a shoving match
with Ohio Stall! linebacker
Arnie Jones late in the game 10
get Jones ''fired up."
"He was not playing particularly good football and he il; a
good player and capable of
playing bet!A!r," Hayes said.
Hayes noted lila\ his IA!am,
which fumbled twice in crucial
situations, has been plagued
·with fumbles all year.
":rhis il; probably the most
fumbles we've ever had in a
season. I JUSt don't have an

YOUR
HEADQUARTERS

E xe c. Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH

exce pt

Sa t urda y by The Ohto Va l ley
P u blt~htng
Company , 1 11

on gmal offer had been ratsed.
"We would like to have had
Hun ter We raised our Orlg)Oal
offer, but we feel there 's
noth1ng to be gamed by lookmg
at the past We are goi ng to
look to the future with the same
bnght hopes we have had m the
past.
"We wish ' htm well and we
wish (Yankees General Manager ) Gabe 1Paul) well too

Gabe has made a line add1hon
to h1s staff "
When asked how much an
additton Hun IA!r would be to the
New York mound staff, Seght
replied· "When you add a
talent the s1ze of Hunter, you've
added subs tan hally to your
team. But the rest of ihe clubs
in the (American Leag ue east)
division are still capable of
Winning it too."

CONVERSE
ALL STAR

Mens
Coveralls

OXFORDS

r a te s

By Motor Route where carr•er
se rv •c e not avall~'::~; . Or,,.

SPORTSWEAR SALE

Red Eye

Aileen
'
Devon

Sale

Uol FridaY a S.lvrdtv

773-5513

""".-;,

w. va.

II

Jrd AVE.

MIDDLEPORT

COATS&amp; CLARKS

LARGE GROUP

Wintuk Yarn

MEN 'S DRESS

Sale

Sale

Sale

$999

$988

98e

ENTIRE STOCK

ENTIRE STOCK
Gir ls &amp; Children's

COATS

SALE

Values to $8 .00

Reg .

Sale

Va lues To $13 .50
On Sale For

10.00 ---- '5 00
1
00
7.95-- ..,:_·'4
•

1

BEDSPREADS
REG.

SLACKS

113.95 .--- '650

Sale

'

One Group Men "s

SHIRTS

Reg . $5.00 to $13.00

-

SALE

SALE

MEN'S

LADIES
JEANS

BRAS &amp;GIRDLES

'

Winter Jackets

1h Off

"

Sale

MEN'S &amp; BO,YS

'

Ladies Dresses LADIES COATS

BOYS DUNGAREES
Sizes 12 to 16

BOYS CORDUROY

81x96 Dacron,

$399

90xl08 Dacron

s4n

PARTY PJ's
SALE

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8
SATURDAY TIL 9

' '

•
I
I •

$} 77

Sale '300

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

8lx96 Cotton

Reg. S3.991o$6.99
Sale

. MIDDLEPORT DEPT. STORE
''

COTI'ON BAITING

Sale ·

LADIES
DUSTERS

SALE

$7.95. __ !4.99

Senhnel

,, ,,. , I

· Concave rhotded t read y•ves
lull tr ead-to road con tact
for long mileage

OXFORDS

~.95----~3.99 ..

$6 50 Subscript to n price '"
etudes
Sun da y
Times

• 'C ross cut trend p11 11ern
stmtla r to o ur ra d11'1l 11res

REG. $1.45

SALE

Valley Lumber
&amp; Supp~ Co.
992·2709

handh,~g and

st.1bthty

Boys
Sweaters

ENTIRE STOCK

Big Lot Ladies'

LONG SLEEVE

REMODELING
NEEDS

• W •de , aggr essrvc
7 nb tread lor
e}!cellen l lr achon

lf2 PRICE

) BLOUSES

FOR ALL YOUR

• 4 st rong plies
ol smoot h nd nty
polyester uor r.J

SALE

SCREEN PRINT

and W Va . One Yea r , SlB , Six
months . S9 5(1 ; Three m onths,
S6 E lsewhere S22 .00 year , SIX
mon thS Sll 50, t h~ ee months ,

month.; S2 60 By rn.;iil •n Oh 10

Houn· I 1&lt;1 S;JO _,, llw'ti Thvn .

REG. $12 .95-$13.95

First Quality

-~

CQ u rt St , Pom e r oy , Ohio

Su bscr•pt i on

liti:Gt1tl-1

domu"Jied '

WI'

~

CLEVELAN D I UP!)
Scgh1 satd he had made "a
Cleveland Indtans Ge neral very sound, very lucrative
offer" to Hunter Monday night
Manager Pht! Seghi says the when the Indians were among
Tr1be wtll have to look the last half dozen clubs still tn
else" here for extra talent now the runnm g and the blddmg
that the New Yor'k Yankees was gomg over the $2 million
have won the battle to sign level.
pttcher Jim "Catfish" Hunter.
Hun!A!r signed a five-year,
$3.7 million contract Tuesday
night to become the highest- ,
- paid player in baseball history
"We thought we had a real
Potatoes can be baked more good shot at him, " Seght satd
qui ckly if a nail IS placed of the talks he and operahons
through the cen ter of the raw
potato before placi ng m the manager Ted Bonda had had
oven or gnll. as the metal of the wtth Hunter and his legal
advtsors. He said Cleveland's
nail con du cts heat -rapidly

INTEREST OF

Deltvere d by carrier where
available 60 cen ts per week ;

SEE US

No. l-ra nked team . Ohio State wo1s second , M1clngH n third and

Tirz•be'' offer turned down

CHME~~GeSRMLA~~~: ~~FLL

St , New Y ork . New York

PRACTICAL NEEDS

rushed for 100 y;11 !Is 111 22

•

DEVOTED TO 11"1E

Nat •onal adve rt •s • ng
representat tve
Bott•ne ll t
· Gall agher, In c , 12 Ea s t d2 nd

.

falling behind early, 13-0, had gone into the bowl games as the

Sentinel

~ ' seco nd class pos tage paid a t
Pomeroy, Ohio

Paint, Hardware
OR
.

them prett y well ," McK(1y
scu d. "Hastca lly, I thmk our
team dtd a fm c JOb ,Ma) be we
should have been fat lher alwad
at the .~ nd ."

,

''It was amazing to me to see

.i5769 Bu smess Off 1ce Phone
992 2156 Fd • to~ · ~· 0 h0ne 9r;"Z
'"57

.FOR YOUR •••

straight ga mes fnr Ohw St.-Jte,
to 75 yc1rds on 20 carrtes.

' "Yes, I thmk

"They beat us by one point, 1tcalled," Hayes said. "I never
so 1 guess they have to be the saw it called before. "
best team we've played,"
Hayes said he was forced toHayes said after a last-minute make some changes .m, the
IS-17 Trojan win tn the Rose Buckeyes' olfense because
Bowl.
USC moved tis tackles .inside .
Hayes wouldn't pick any one
"They wanted to keep Archie
inctdent as the turrung point of Griffin contained inside," he
the game.
, said. I' We didn't expect them to
"ff we hadn't gotten that pinch us like they did."
.five yard· oenaltv when we
Hayes was lavish in his
~
praise of USC quar!A!rba&lt;;k Pat explanation."

• C1ty Editor
P u bli s hed daily

.,._-;;,.
·

Southern California fourth
Who 's No. I"
"We beat Ohio State who beat Michigan, and we beat Notre
The long college football bowl season that fmally ended Dame who beat Alabama," sa id an elated McKa)
Wednesday was supposed to settle that 1ssue, bu t this year all
The third straight USC.{JhJo State Rose BQwl- the TroJans
11 did was confuse tt.
now have won two, the Buckeyes one- featured some of the
At least four teams had a JegJ ttmate claim to shout "We're
season's wtldest plays They tncluded Southern Cal punter Jun
No. I" after Notre Dame, ~hmg an emotional farewell game
Lucas dribbling the ball off his toe by acctdent, then picktng tt
for Ara Parseghtan, upset Alabama, 13,.11, m the Orange Bowl
up and runrung for a fi rst down, and a 15-ya rd penalty agau\St
:: 10 offtc•ally close the 1974 season.
the Buckeyes when All-Amertca Net! Colzie spiked the ball ::
.·:
The fmal ratings w11l be announced tomght-a nd not the
after returning an interceptiOn mstde Ute Southern Cal 10-yard
.·
least of the contenders for the natwn.al championship ts John
line. The penalty probabl) cost the Buckeyes a touchdown that
::; McKay's Southern Califorma team, which won the most
might have clinched the ga me.
::: dramatic of Wednesday's victories when tt beat Ohio State, 111The much-heralded duel between Archie Griffin, the
::: 17, in the Rose Bowl on a touchdown and two-point conversion He~sma n Trophy"wtnner from OhiO State, and USC's Anthony
with 2:03 to go.
Davis, never really developed DaVIs sat out the second half
:::
"We have as good a call to tt as anybody," satd McKay. "I
with an inJury after ruruung for 67 yards tn the first half and
:&gt; know who I'm gmng to vote for."
Gnffin was lim1ted to 75 yards tn 20 carnes, endmg his NCAA
Bear Bryant wasn't saying exactly who he was go1ng to volA!
record streak of 100 yard-plus games at 22. Haden, who passed
::- for after Alabama 's annual bo\'llloss-the Crimson Tide are
feu: both Southern Cal touchdowns, completed 12-of-22 for 181
winless in !hell' last eight bowl games-but no one would have yards.
blamed him if he felt his IA!am, unbea!A!n during the regular
Notre Dame, beaten, 55-24, by USC a month ago and ranked
;:· season, still was No. I.
eighth, turned a fumbled punt by Willte Shelby and an off sides ..
::,:
And then, of course, there ivere the two IA!ams that weren't
penalty against Mike Washington into ltrst half touchdowns
even there- Michigan, bea!A!n only by Ohio State this season_.
and then held o!.! to upset Alabama, the second straight bowl
:;: and Oklahoma, on probation and ineligible for the UPI
VICtory by the lhsh over the Ttde,
;.; rankings but still the nation 's only unbeaten and untied team.
"I told them before the game they owed this game to
In the other of Wednesday's three ga mes, the one that had no
themselves and the people who follow Notre Dame," sa1d
:-: bearing on the national tttle , Penn Stall! critshed Baylor, 41-20,
Parseghtan, who now goes into retirement and turns the team
::: in the Cotton Bowl. Nebraska had defeated Florida, 13-10, in over to Dan Devme. "I just asked them to play like men and go
:: the Sugar Bowl on New Year's Eve.
out like men. My coaching staff did a great job of getting the
:&gt;
At Pasadena, McKay helped set up the last-period Rose Bowl
IA!am ready. I'm sure they made them aware of my feelings " ;:
,:: excitement when he decided to reJect a second-&lt;juarter USC
Sixth-ranked Penn Slate trailing, 7-3, at the half, scored 38
field goal to accept an Ohio State penalty and try for a touchseeond-half points to put a bitter end to Baylor's first-eve.
::; down-and came up tnstead with nothing. But his son, J K ,
Cotton Bowl appearance . Quarterback Tom Shuman complet- :·
} later caught Haden's 311-yard IOuchdown pass and then the
ed 10 of 20 passes for 226 yards, a Penn State bowl record , and .·
Trojans' Rhodes Scholar quarterback threw the winntng
freshman Jimmy Cefalo scored lwo touchdowns and totaled :·
::: conversiOn pass to Shelton Diggs to beat the Buckeye~.
157 yards rushmg and receiVing as the Lions piled up 491 yards :'
,::
Alabama, which never really threatened Notre Dame after tn total offense.
::.
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·:. :::.··:::: .,.......,., ·: ·: ..
.·

season.

Dai~

1n

;1ga mst l' urdut·

USC lost tliat onr. 14-13 But · m the second half because he

Woody has no excuses

.The

42~21 tn lht·

ball," hr !:'i:!Ul. " I sm\ Lt ami I
knew I had to stav with 1t Then
I heard the crowd cheer and 1r

By IRA MILLER
UPI Sports Writer

1

PASADENA, Calif. (UPI ) Woody Hayes offered no excuses for hiS team's loss to
Southern California in the Rose
Bowl New Year's day, admitting only that the Trojans were
just on~ point bet!A!r than his
Ohio State squad.
The veteran coach, who 1sn 't
noted for taking defeat gracefully, proved he could be a good
loser as well and even assured
the west coast press that the
University of Southern California was the best team the
Buckeyes have played this

.II}~ ashe~!

St;ttP
USl '
1!174 Hose llowl

l ht•

Olll)' lhlll g

t'llll\' t&gt;r~\0 1 1

ctectded to go tor two."
'J' tw TrOJ&lt;lll s dtdn ' t 1/c1ve

' \\t'

·l W(l-

Crown up fo_r_firabs

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There ts a steel shortage today, amorig other shortages. Bad'
enough . But if the economy ,were hwruning and if the auto m.:
dustry were taking its normal share of produclion, the shortage
vibrate with the tensiOn and controversy surrounding the orWould be of "staggermg" proportions. Thil; is 'the opinion of
•'
• dination of 10 ~omen m Phtladelphia las t summer. l.JturgJcal
Wilham
H.
Knoell,
presideltt
of
Cyclops
Corp.,
a
steel
producer.
con;ununtons are the last to ordatn women to the pnesthood, a East '1 "
Knoell il; concerned about the re--unposilion of price controls, r-----------------------~-.
,.
,.
This post-Easter conference IS important for several an an t1~nflation measure strongly supported tn .some quarters
move that was begun earlier m th1s century m the· nuun-lme
denominations Perhaps of higher Im portance for the whole rea sons ~'1rst, 1t ts a remtnder that @large chunk of the Arai&gt;- and even more strongly now because. of tile eight per cent price
,.
Chnshan church lS the support and encouragement of the nuun Lsraeh conflict cen!A!rs around re!tgwus sites and theologtcal hike announced by U.S. Steel, the industry's paceset!A!r.
proposals of ~&lt;omen 's liberation
rnmm ttments. Secondly , we forget that tn the 13th centuty, St.
In tractng the origms of loday's steel shortage, he attributes I
I.
The conservative, evangelical churches have been quiet and Franc1s caimly sruled over 10 Egypt and preached the gospel to
tt to the price coqtrols imposed a few years ago, which eom- I
I
'•
hesitant on lhts Issue !a lthough they were the first, 111 the 19th the sultan of Darruetta. They both enjoyed the event and con- poWlded the problem the industry had already been having
'century, to ordain women ). A maJor brea k throu~ h was the new tinued theJT studies_of each other's religion. Has this been g01 ng competing with foret gn steel under the fixed dollar exchange'
Bv
book "All We 're Meant To Be" by &amp;anzont and Hardesty (Word on today, between M~slems and Chril;tians? Whatever the an- rate established by the BretiOn Woods agreement m 1945.
I
.
Miller
I
I ·
Books) whtch deals wtth the 1ssues of women's lib from a Btb lt ~al swer, the Franciscans are on the right IOpic and aHhe nght lime.
Because of a severly overvalued dollar, says Knoell, fore1gn I
Wlth
today's.
digit
inflation,
materials
and
products
has
bid.
In the next 12 months we look for a sharp increase in the
approach In December, thJS book recetved one of the longest and
producers with their modern postwar plants were able to un·
mosl favorable treatmenls in a tevtew publtshed by the con- tntellectual combat between Chril;tians and the rapidly growing dersell American producer,s by $20 to $30. a ton. The dollar was rising unemployment and prices steadily, upward. More
servative, "ChriStianity Today "
" r~g lious" sects Some of their groups in the Satanist camp are
eventually cut loose, but devaluation was ahnost immedia!A!Iy co mntodt ty ·shortages , and more, the United States
America confronts perhaps tts must compete with other
Say the authors, ''None of ).he apostles advocated the un- gomg to fee l the heart of Chril;tian concern. "The Exorcist" was followed by' a freeze on steel prices at "unrealistically" low
greatest
economic .challenge. nahons whose sl.llndards of
medJate overthrow of cultural custom - Chril;ttanity was con- a c ommer~ ial success for Hollywood and a theological disaster
levels.
troverstal enough without that' Yet they did not shy away from for the Georgetown advisors Don't look for "Son of Exorcil;t"
Steel imports continued to ril;e, to account for 18 per cent of Many people ask wl)at has living have improved rapidly.
Stxth ; the Governmen:•s
anytlllle
soon
Other
groups
like
ScieniOiogy,
Reverent
Moon
and
the radical cuttin g edge of the gospel whit h would gradually
domestic steel consumption, or the equivalent of all the growth in caused the current economic
turmOil.
I
think
there
are
•
three
year experiment in wage-'
Wldermine society 's oppress1ve policies and restore God's m- his so-called ChriStian Renewal Church , The Cht!dren of God,
the consumption of steel m this country over a perwd of seven or
se
veral
important
reasons
we
price
control produced
IA!nded harmony . . .men and women worked side by side m Inc., and Transcendental Med!tatton are already feeling the
etght years.
distortions in the pricing
spreading the gospel. There were no second-c lass citizens m brunt of conserva ttve alarm and counteroffensive. As we have
The result was 10 restrict steel producers from making the should keep in mind .
First,
and
perhaps
most
structure
and scarcities in the
Chr1st 's church."
said, all this is where we find the cutting edge of rehgion.
profits · necessary to expand capacity. The plants that were
importanUy,
massive
Federal
production
of. certatn comclosed and the plants that were not bunt then are where the steel
deficit
spending
between
1966
modihes.
'
tsn't coming from today, Knoell asserts.
and 1974 has been a principal
Government is a. major
If leg~sla tors opt again for price controls, he wai-ns, there
culprit.
The
Federal
budget
cause
of tnflation and the
wtll be no proltts to be invested il) reopeniilg or building steel
doubled
during
that
period
government
can contribute
mills. U. S. producers thus will not be able 10 provide the steel
from $134 billion to $268 billion . greatly to controlling It if the
that will be needed when the economy gets going again.
Others no doubt will draw different conclusions from the In the past IA!n years, Federal Congress has the commihnent
same facts. There ts no shortage of evidence, however, to support spending has increased at the to make tough, hard decisions
those who caution that while price controls may buy economic rate of II percent a year. The m the area of fiscal and
stabtlity for a time, they only store up a lot of trouble fo~ later. enormous deficit the Govern- li)Onetary policy.
ment nas rolled up not only
As Knoell says, "Today's crisis all too of!A!n is yesterday's
raised
demand but increased
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. · tl1ey also are Jean people un lt kely that 1! will have any avaJ!abtlity of medical sup- hastily contrived legil;lation."
interest rates because of
DEAR DR. LAMB - Is there eattng far chfferenl!v than w~ sJgnJ !t canl effect on yo ur port, famtly supporl, and what
mass1ve U. S. Treasury
any evtdence that all! tude has do and bre usually physically med1cal status or your health. you are doing about smokmg,
borrowing.
any effect on hear t trouble? f active
Second, expansive Federal
Th&lt;;. 5,000 foot level Is called dtet, exercise and correction of
lived tn the M1dwest at
If you ar e a sea-le vel the "physiological lhreshold," any medical problems that you
The more m1htant feminil;ts may consider the secretary's monetary policy exceeded
altitudes below 1_,000 feet and a inhabitanl and go to altitude, meaning that is the point where mtght have.
job as bemg on the botiOm of the business totem pole. But to at what was necessary for orderly
few years ago rehred to New yo u must · be ca reful not to you ca n ftr st nol!ce any
least 7,300 secretanes around the United States, it il; anything but economic growth. Over the last
Mextco. Now I'm li ving at overdo physical activity for changes in body responses Of
thai.
• ·
six years the money supply has
approximately '6.000 feet. I several days and preferably course, tt you were going to rWJ
That is how many now bold the title of Certified Professional grown at the rate of 6 ~er_cent a
recently_had a mild ~earl at- for t" o weeks. Many men do a mil e race at &gt;,000 fee t and
Secretary. The number is tncreasing every year, and many o( year.
0
tack, and tt must have been a not pay attention to this and
them are men.
were a sea-level dweller, you "
Third, bad weather in recent
CLEVELAND (UPI)- The
ctrc ul ah on problem th at will go out golfing or hun ting
The
certifica!A!
ts
earned
on
the
basis
of
a
26-week
course,
w oc~d not likely do as well.
years has limited crop har· Ohio Tw-npike's total revenue
brought tt on . I wondered tf and c!Jmbtng 1mm edi ate l}
followed by a grueling two-{!ay series of tests held under the vests and caused shortages and
From 5,000 fee t on. thmgs
moving to a lower altitude They w11l be far more acttvc begin to change, Shll. at 7,000
auspices of the National Secrelaries Assn. So comprehensive are subsequently htgher food dropped -to about $4-4.2 million
m 1974, or $1.7 million less than
might help
than they are used to bemg at feet, that w1ll gtve you an idea
the tests (only 11 per cent get a passing grade in every area) that prices.
the prior year.
BY BERTHA PARKER
DEAR READER --: Tbat is home, as well as betng exposed that th1s level 1s pretty safe for
colleges now recognize the certificate as credit toward a degree
Fourth, the quadrupling of
The northern Ohio toll.road's
Sabbath School attendance tn such subjects as business administration.
an tn!A!resltng questwn . You to altitude The combmahon
mos t people. For those ac·
the price of oil in the past second most profitable year in
Dec.
29
at
the
Free
MethodiSt
may reca JJ th at Presid ent ca n be a threat Anvone
The Certified Professional Secretary program not only helps twelve months has had a 'ripple
customed to livtn g at 7,000 !'eel,
history pennitted Ute Ohio
Cllurch was 100, Mor nm g management in selecting qualified secretaries, it promotes the
Eise nhower was III the Denver planmng a tnp to altJtude'w tth
effect over the cost o( nearly
or who are accltmatized, 7,000
worship se rvice attend ance professional identtty of the exceptional secretary and gives her
Turnpike Commission to retire
area when he had h1s first any form of activitv should trv
every- product we use.
fee t IS of no tmportance and was 92.
$19.4 million worth of its bonds.
heart attack. If you ~ve at sea . to Improve physica l ·fttnes~
(or him) a yardstick against which to measure her (or his)
poses no limttatiori, in itself, on
Fifth, Wlpredicted world Commission Chairman
A large crowd attended !he professional development.
!~vel and go to altitude, the before making the trip
·
acttvJtYo
wide demand for raw James W. Sbocknessy said
Christmas program wh1ch was
ft~st few days are the most
The decrease in oxygen m
You will have comple!A!d all held December 22.
some $213 million in bond value
difficul t. Then your body starts the atmosphere is rea ll y verv
of the more important acRev.
and
Mrs~
Morns
Wolf,
hils been retired of the $328
undergomg changes to adapt to gradual. We usually ;to n ~t
climaltzmg adaptations within
million borrowed in 1952 ..
Rac me, attended chur ch
the new alhtude. In some thmk anything very important
a lew months of altitude. All se rvtce Sunday evemng.
Ten persons died in turnpike
na t1ves livtng over 10,000 feet happens to the body until after
thmgs bemg equal , I would
accidents, making 1974 the
Saturday, January 11, there
altitude, hear t di sease ts 5,000 feet. You are )ust at the
think other considerations are
road's safest year. In 1973
will be a gospel smg at the local
almost unkn own However, margm at 6,000 feet and it ts
more Important in your case church. Gospel Messengers,
there were 28 fatalllles.
lhe Chrisltan - F1ve and the
Shocknessy said the redu~
speed limit was Ute major
Joint Atres will be there.
Everyone 1s wecome. Time is·
cause of the improved safety
7-30 p.m. .
performance.
Bertha Parker spent a week ·
m Columbus with Mr. and Mrs.
Hugh Ferguson and so n,
Jmuny, Mr and Mrs Gene
Columbia Grange No. 2435
Alkire, Kimberlee and Kevm,
held their Decemb,er meeting
and Miss Cleo Parker.
with Bertha Crippen, worthy
Mrs . Dora Holley spent
mas!A!r, in charge. Elizabeth
Christmas Da y wtth Mr. and
Jordan, Women's Activities
Mrs. Hartwell Curd, Ball Run .
Cbairman, reported on the
Mr and Mrs. Ted Mathews,
District C.W.A. assembly
Huron; Mr. and Mrs. Ed Bauer,
which was held in Jackson
Cle veland, spent Christmas
County.
Worthy Lecturer,
My wile and-! have had aU the experience with tornadoes that we cpre to have. We also came
wtth Mr . and Mrs. Charles
Arlhur
Crabtree,
presented a
very near to being in the midst of one of the most destructive ones (in hljiiUIIllives) ever to hit thil;
Karr
of
scripture,
program
nation.
·
readings,
skits,
and
songs that
Early on the Sunday morning of the day of Rutland High School's Baccalaurea!A! Exercises in
told
the
story
of
Christmas.
1925, I had fed grain to tbe sixty-odd ewes and tbeir young lambs and let them out of the barn lot to
Plans were made to serve
wander at will in ~he large pasture field.
·
The Almanac
lot. Soon afterward, a~ approaching thunderstorm sent me hurrying back to ~hut them in the barn refreshments for the January
meeting of Meigs County
By United Press International
Pomona
Grange. Delicious
Today is Thursday, Jan . 2, · _Thil;accompllshed, I hurried toward Ute bouse t~escape the nearing'storm. 1saw my wife was
potluck refreshments were
the second day o( 1970 wtth 363 hilvmg trouble getting the three Plymouth Rock hens and their little chicks Into their coops.
enjoy.ed
by the group.
I hurried to her aid. As! neared a sltlall wet--weather creek, beyond which she was striving with
10 follow.
The moon is approaching Its the stubborn chickens, with only an instant's warning, I was enveloped in the blackest of clouds. I
last quarter
could scarcely see the ground and was whirled around several tiriJes- too fast 10 keep count_ but 1
The mcirning stars are Mars managed to keep upright.
and Saturn
. My w_ife, across the creek, was on sloping ground and was not so fortun~te. She was rolled over
The eveni~g stars are Mer- and over mtothe creek. Forhrnately, it was~ at l!rntmoment; ~ut it was not dry much longer.
cury , Venus and Juptter.
II then grew a bttltghter, and I saw hens m the all'. The three coops, each clumsily made of inchThose born on this dale are lumbe~. were going through the air also. One passed by overhead,. another to my right ~nd tbe
other1 was tumbling by me to the left. Part oftbe latter grazed my wle.
' ~
under the sign of Capricorn .
Britisl&gt; Gen. George Wolff,
I unped that evening a~ we marched to the platform for the Baccalaureate Exercises. I should
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A f&gt;-2
th h
Q
bee
add
here that I had rece~ved a High School Teaching certifica!A! sixteen years previous to my ruling by the Ohio &amp;!preme
01
e ero
ue ' ~as b,orn graduation from High School.
·
Court says all sheriff's
Jan. 2, 1727,
Th t
d
f
On thts day in history
,~
e 0~ 118 0 was o~er: ma ew seconds. It had liapperied so suddenly that we had not had time to de)lllties in the state, except
In 1788, Georgia ratiiied the become frtghtent;&lt;J Wltil tt was too Ia !A!. Then tile downpour of rain decreed action, not !tight. We those having fiduciary duties,
uS Cn "tut 'o
d
gathered all the little chicks we could find and took them to Ute .kitchen, though we feared it was a are under the protection of civil
. . . vnsw 1 " . an
was useless move.
.
service lafS and not subject to
admttted to the Unton
them ·
·
·
In ISM Mo
· Radi 0·
We put .
m two old bread pans and set them tn the coal stove oven, leaving the do,or open. hiring and firing Whims.
• •
scow
We saved twen\y-three, I believe, out of about fifth of the baby chicks
The Ohio Ci vU Service
announ eed a cosrruc rocket had
Th layful bab
·
been laun hed t
th
eP
Y torna'do seemed to be playmg hopscotch. As far as I know i\ took to the air for Employees Association had
moon.
c
oward
e two or three miles. Then, near Beech Grove, it unroofed a barn belonging to ira Kennedy. It next appealed the question to the
In !!168, Dr. Chtistiaan struck near Rutland and unroofed a building belonging to Crosby Price.
state's top court to resolve
Barnard performed his second
On JW!e 10, 1958, we narrowly mi,ssed being in the ten'ible tornado at Eldorado Kansas that confticUng decisi~ns by Ute
killed eighty-some people and destroyed two whole blocks oflhe city.
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Geauga, Cuyahoga and Wood
succeS.sful heart lr_ansplant
When we were ready to leave the home of my cOusins, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Nicholson, of Moline in
CoWlty court&amp; of aweai. .
1974
. lned bil·1 PreSident Ntxon southeast Kansas, Ray told me Of the roads we could tak~ reach tbe borne of Mr and Mrs Roy
"This decision will put an
Sign a
reqwrmg states to . Killion
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end to the 'spoils systan'
m~~s ang h:ay -speeds to 55
After goi!Jg north about twenty miles, we could have Ute choice of two roads. They were parallel currently practiced in many
hi h · f ct"' or lose federa l to each other, some _twelve to fifteen miles apart. The upper one was Route 54; and the lower one sheriff's departments," IBid
CQLUMBUS (UPI ) - The
was a much less improved one. He advised us to take the lower one as it had I~ traffic and we Karl E. Stewart, OCSEA
g way un s.
The newspapers employed 31 and Monticello, ~- Y., and
CommWlity Tinnes-Spect.~~tors persons.
could make as much time by doing so.
.
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,
newspaper printing plarits in
executive director,
A thought for the day: Greek
new~pers, weekly newspaBefore nightfall, we were everlastingly grateful to him for his advice.·
Courtland · Communications Michigan and New York and an poet Hesiod S.id, "For himself
DEATH BRINGS ·TIUBtJTE
pers in four suburban areas, owns oommWlity ~ewspapers AM·FM radio station in White
As we neared Augusta about six o'clock,! decided to stop at a service station for gasoline while
does
a
man
work
even
in
the
fell victims to the economy at in Cleveland, Warwick N. Y. Plams, N. Y
ANAHEIM, Calif. (UPI) my wife went to the nearby restaurant!or sandwiches. .
wo_rking of evils for another."
the erid of the year and ceased
There was quite a Storm 10 the north. I asked the attendant from which direction their stonns The death of, "Jack Benny 1ut
)lttblication with this week's
· week broupt forth a tribute
usually came, and he pointed to the dark clouds.
edition.
signed by IIMi mayors of three
"They must be having a terrible stonn in Eldorado, and I look for it to come here "he said
COLUMBUS
(UPI
)
Mr
"Whete
are
you
going?'•
.
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William J. Hollida~ce
Sebellus, R-Kan.
towns famill8r to- tboae who
president in charge of opera- and- Mrs. Keith Ga~y Sebelius
,
· "To Newton," I repliect. ·
heard lleuJ1y's radio show, with
At the Tuesday night rr WAS 8JS FATHER
tions for Courtland Com- are honeymooning in the ceremony here, the bride wore
its classic railroad station
JOHNSTOWN, Pa. (UPI) "Well, I ~dvise ybu to get going right now!" he said. ''And it woUldn't take much to get'!De to go
munications, Cleveland, owner· Caribbean ~£&gt;day, two days a gown of white battiste and Dennis Sabo, 17, was a ml!lllber along! " •
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announcer rouUne.
of Ute newspaper for the past .after their wedding at the. lace, an heirloom from her ,of an amliulanc.e crew sent to
"We've alWays enjo~ the
' I told him he could go with us; but tJe said be must not lose his job.
·
five years, said the decil;ion to governor's mansion .
exposure
Mr. Bemy gave 111,
maternal grandmother's St. Emerick Churcb WedWe hurried 0!1, and before vei-y long Ute storm winds were 51'8ying Ute car a few times ahnost
The new Mrs. Sebelius is the trousseau :· The bride 's at- nesday when a man collapsed stopping its forward progress.llain fell jn a heavy dmpour, making driving a difficult task for
quit publishing WHS based on a
even though our only claim to
Mary IA!ndant was her Sister, Ellen. pf an apparent beart attack at quite awhile.
fame in 'tboae early da)'s wls
','matter of economics ... - lack former Kathleen
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tbe
daughter
of
Gov.
Gilligan,
Of advertising to support the
our funny names," said Mlly!ll'
The best nian was ..Douglas a chur,::lt party.
We reached the Killion home safely as Ute rain 'ended. Here we learned ol the lerrible disas!A!r
editorial product •" '
and Mrs. Johl! J .. Gilligan. Sebelius, brother of Ute groom. . Sabo discovered· the victim at Eldorado. If we had taken the upper road, It ls qUlle lltel)- that we would have been in that
WlDlam J . Thorn.
,- The 72,00) editions printed Sebelius, a Topeka·, Kan,,
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disaster.
.
The •triWie · wii a - jOint
The couple will live in •' was his father, Theodore, 50.
,.Tuesday were distributed, attorney, il; the son o~ U. S. Topeka, Kan:, where the . The.elder Sabo '!i!!c!lead on
-As an old-!imef once said to me, "What a lot of difference that little letter-Hr.an make!"
1 resolution signed -The
~lliday said.
' ·
R~p . and Mrs. Keit~ ' G. groom 1s an attorney.
m&amp;y!JI'S of "Mabeinl, Azusa
arrival at Lee Hclspil.lli.'
-Seth F . Nieholson, R. D. !, Rutland.
and GuciiJIOI!g&amp;.''
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Newspapers

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David Poling, D.O.
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3 - The D'c~ily Sentmel, MidcUeporl-Pomt•ro.} ,,0., Thursdtty . J 1H 1. 2. l!I1 J

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2'- The Daily Sentme l, Midclleport-Pomoruy, 0., Thw·sd.J y, J;ut' !· 1!17&gt;

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By DAVID POLING
Rather than discuss the Tnghlights of reli_g1ons stories that
appeared in 1974 and predict the lar~e events for 1975, let us
concentrate on some trends that appear to be shapmg t~e church
at this time. Many thmgs are happening that do not move' from,,
single even t or activtty, yet demonstrate a broader and, at limes,
an exciti]lg development within the religtous t·ommuruty.
For example·
The ordination of women. The EpiScopa l Church contmu'lS to

•

USC cOIDehack could give· McKay fourth ,c rown

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The. cutting edge. -of religion
'

Seven hundred and fifty' years ago ,\he lonely f;gure of St.
Francis appeared m the Middle Ages: His mission was to help the
poor of the wor ld, largely tgnored, he thought, buy his beloved
Catholic Ch urch Toda), the Francisca ns' contdme !'he zealoUs
mt erests of thei r founder (about 35,000 in this·and related orders
under the rule of St. Francts ).
The Francil;cans are pressing· on several fronts. t.tie
ecumentcal dialogue, the rights of the poor and world starvallon.
One of the significant IOptcs 10 be announced for exploration in'
1975 by the Friars of Graymoore, GarrtSon, N.Y., is dynarru!A! :
"Cnn the Churches Be a Forc-e For ReconciliatiOn tn the Middle

A case-of mis_taken hair

Uon Oakley
Wf.lat price price control? ,
By DON OAKLEY
Thtngs aren't so bad that they couldn't he worse - if they
were better, thal is.

!

A freeway bandit in Cleveland had been t~rizlng women
·motorists. Using a Dashing red light like a police car, he would
force lone females to pull off the road, assault IJ!em and rob them
and then threaten 10 kill them if they went to the pollee.
The robber-rapist-tried it once too often, however. His last
would-be victim had long floWing locks all right, but also hap.
pened to be sporting a moustache. The culprit sped off, but not
before the ·motoril;t got a good look at his car and license plate,
which enabl~d pollee to make an ~":est.
.
Think about thatnext time you.rldtcule long hall' on men.

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IWashington
I Report
~Iarence

I

DR. LAMB

Effect of altitude on heart trouble

Tu111pike
revenue

Certified secretaries

is down

Laurel Oiff

News Notes

"It's Your Show, Fella! Just Let · Me Know
When to Magically Appear .and Dazzle the ·
Crowd!"

- Carpenter .

Most deputies
. ruled under
civil senice

£Jn prey to econo.m y

Kathy Gilligan weds attorney

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By JIM COUR
" I was rollmg out .md
UPI Sports Writer
planned lo run." smd Haden
PASADENA. Calif. ( UPI) '' But the guy who was coverutg
From 1925 through 1940, the Shelton came up on me so l jus!
immorta l Howard Jones dumped it off. Shelton made an
brought three nat ional football .excellent cntch."
championshtps to Souther n . Diggs had to go to Ius knees
California.
to make the catch A tailback
John McKay, the son of a tn lu~h school, Ute San HerWest Virgima coa l mmer, mar nardino. Calif, product adhave gone one up on the fabled nutted he fe lt the pressure of
Jones on New Year's Day
A combinatton of US C's
thrtlling 111-17 VIC lOry over Ohio .. ·:::::&lt;: ::::::::::::::: :::::::::::::
State tn McKay's record eighlh • :;
Rose Bowl coaching appearance and Notre Dame's 13-1'1.,.

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upsel of Alabama in the
Orange I;!owl could m_ra n the
national· title for the 'l'rojans.
"We have as good a call to it
as anybody," the white-haired
USC coach admitted after No
!-ranked and preVIous)y undefeated Alabama
was
knocked eff on New Year's
,, Night in MtamJ.
"We beat the teams that beat
the teams that beat the teams.
'•
We beat Ohto Stall! who beat
Mtch1ga n and we beat Notre
" Dame who beat Alabama .
" I IA!Il you, I know who I'm
-'
gomg to vote for ."
But McKay , 51, wa sn't
claimmg anythin~
USC No.1?
''Look,
I
don't want to come
"'
out and say we deserve to be
"' rated first because the other
coaches are my friends and 1t
wouldn't be the rtght thing to
do."
The USC coach was probably
talking about Alabama's Bear
Bryant, the man he considers
the best coach in college
football loday. Brya nt and
McKay are good frienda.
McKay won't have long to
wait to find out if he has a
fourth national champwnship
. 10 add to the titles he guided the
TroJans 10 tn 1962, 1967 and
1972.
. The UP!'s board of 3ii
coaches wtll take its final vote
loday.
In Iii seasons, McKay has
moved to within two vtctories
of equallmg Jones' total of 121
wins at USC. He's 5-3 m Rose
Bowl appearances and 2-2 in
the Pasadena classic against
Woody Hayes.
Fittingly, the old B1shop
r· Amat High School tandem of
Pat Haden, the Rhodes &amp;holar
quar!A!rback, and John McKay,
the coach's son who plans to go
to the USC Law School, were
the heroes in their !mal games
as Trojans . .
McKay All Alone
With 2:03 left, Haden, who
had been in!A!rcepted twice and
had fumbled once , found
McKay all alone in the Ohio
State end zone in front of
defensive back Steve Luke . ·
The result : A 38-yard touchdown strike ~hat brought the
Trojans to within one point at
17-16.
Haden then flipped a pass to
sophomore flanker Shelton
Diggs for a two-pomt conver-

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sion.

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the situation
']

didn't

!Ju t

thlrlk

, llHHJ I

C&lt;ill~llll g

,·t'ml\ t•rsion Gmurible
.g.unblcd un .1

\ld\, 1\
~'L n t

Huse

made me happy to thmk I'd

~mud

suffered bruised nbs 111 the
opening 30 mmutes

y.JTds 461-286
111ey held HelSII IIJn Trnph)
wumer Archie C.nffm . \VIm had

\\oulrln't grt thP ball agam so

Bu.t there were sta hsh cully
supenor to thr Buc keyes , who
went into tht• ~amc as onetouchdown favm 1tes Ohw .

won the ga me for our semors.
Yeah, n1aybe it was sort of ol
difficult catch but 1'm suppOSed to catch bo•lls like t ho~t "

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· !w

H~i

Anthony Oavts, the Pactftc-8

The 'l'roFms rol l ~d up 24 fu.::;t

.ltld

('.ll'ee r

rushmg record holder,

downs to 14 for the BuC'ke} t':-;
and had the advantagr m tota l

Lh t·lt~

\\:um't cmy question m hts

Wednesda) . ·
"We iltdn'l come here to play
fut· a pe," he smd. "We knew
w1th Oh10 State's offense we

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wereins1detheUSCfive (in the
first quarter) we mtght have
scored. Also we fumbled inside
the 10 once and we missed a
lield goal, too.
"I wouldn't say that call (on
cornerback Neal Colzie) for
spiking the ball was the turning
point. It would be too tough on a
kid to make that ktnd of
sta!A!ment."
The
Buckeyes
were
penalized when Colzie spiked
the ball ai!A!r an m!A!rception
deep m USC territory in the
third quar!A!r.

Haden.
.
"Pat Haden is a great ltttle
quarterback and he can hit the
btg play. He hlt John McKay
wtth a touchdown and hit the
curl pat!A!rn (to Shelton Diggs)
for the conversion and those
were the two big plays.
"That Diggs picked it up just
before it fell to the ground. We
had the play defensed well and
he just made, a great catch."
Hayes explained that he
engaged in a shoving match
with Ohio Stall! linebacker
Arnie Jones late in the game 10
get Jones ''fired up."
"He was not playing particularly good football and he il; a
good player and capable of
playing bet!A!r," Hayes said.
Hayes noted lila\ his IA!am,
which fumbled twice in crucial
situations, has been plagued
·with fumbles all year.
":rhis il; probably the most
fumbles we've ever had in a
season. I JUSt don't have an

YOUR
HEADQUARTERS

E xe c. Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH

exce pt

Sa t urda y by The Ohto Va l ley
P u blt~htng
Company , 1 11

on gmal offer had been ratsed.
"We would like to have had
Hun ter We raised our Orlg)Oal
offer, but we feel there 's
noth1ng to be gamed by lookmg
at the past We are goi ng to
look to the future with the same
bnght hopes we have had m the
past.
"We wish ' htm well and we
wish (Yankees General Manager ) Gabe 1Paul) well too

Gabe has made a line add1hon
to h1s staff "
When asked how much an
additton Hun IA!r would be to the
New York mound staff, Seght
replied· "When you add a
talent the s1ze of Hunter, you've
added subs tan hally to your
team. But the rest of ihe clubs
in the (American Leag ue east)
division are still capable of
Winning it too."

CONVERSE
ALL STAR

Mens
Coveralls

OXFORDS

r a te s

By Motor Route where carr•er
se rv •c e not avall~'::~; . Or,,.

SPORTSWEAR SALE

Red Eye

Aileen
'
Devon

Sale

Uol FridaY a S.lvrdtv

773-5513

""".-;,

w. va.

II

Jrd AVE.

MIDDLEPORT

COATS&amp; CLARKS

LARGE GROUP

Wintuk Yarn

MEN 'S DRESS

Sale

Sale

Sale

$999

$988

98e

ENTIRE STOCK

ENTIRE STOCK
Gir ls &amp; Children's

COATS

SALE

Values to $8 .00

Reg .

Sale

Va lues To $13 .50
On Sale For

10.00 ---- '5 00
1
00
7.95-- ..,:_·'4
•

1

BEDSPREADS
REG.

SLACKS

113.95 .--- '650

Sale

'

One Group Men "s

SHIRTS

Reg . $5.00 to $13.00

-

SALE

SALE

MEN'S

LADIES
JEANS

BRAS &amp;GIRDLES

'

Winter Jackets

1h Off

"

Sale

MEN'S &amp; BO,YS

'

Ladies Dresses LADIES COATS

BOYS DUNGAREES
Sizes 12 to 16

BOYS CORDUROY

81x96 Dacron,

$399

90xl08 Dacron

s4n

PARTY PJ's
SALE

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8
SATURDAY TIL 9

' '

•
I
I •

$} 77

Sale '300

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

8lx96 Cotton

Reg. S3.991o$6.99
Sale

. MIDDLEPORT DEPT. STORE
''

COTI'ON BAITING

Sale ·

LADIES
DUSTERS

SALE

$7.95. __ !4.99

Senhnel

,, ,,. , I

· Concave rhotded t read y•ves
lull tr ead-to road con tact
for long mileage

OXFORDS

~.95----~3.99 ..

$6 50 Subscript to n price '"
etudes
Sun da y
Times

• 'C ross cut trend p11 11ern
stmtla r to o ur ra d11'1l 11res

REG. $1.45

SALE

Valley Lumber
&amp; Supp~ Co.
992·2709

handh,~g and

st.1bthty

Boys
Sweaters

ENTIRE STOCK

Big Lot Ladies'

LONG SLEEVE

REMODELING
NEEDS

• W •de , aggr essrvc
7 nb tread lor
e}!cellen l lr achon

lf2 PRICE

) BLOUSES

FOR ALL YOUR

• 4 st rong plies
ol smoot h nd nty
polyester uor r.J

SALE

SCREEN PRINT

and W Va . One Yea r , SlB , Six
months . S9 5(1 ; Three m onths,
S6 E lsewhere S22 .00 year , SIX
mon thS Sll 50, t h~ ee months ,

month.; S2 60 By rn.;iil •n Oh 10

Houn· I 1&lt;1 S;JO _,, llw'ti Thvn .

REG. $12 .95-$13.95

First Quality

-~

CQ u rt St , Pom e r oy , Ohio

Su bscr•pt i on

liti:Gt1tl-1

domu"Jied '

WI'

~

CLEVELAN D I UP!)
Scgh1 satd he had made "a
Cleveland Indtans Ge neral very sound, very lucrative
offer" to Hunter Monday night
Manager Pht! Seghi says the when the Indians were among
Tr1be wtll have to look the last half dozen clubs still tn
else" here for extra talent now the runnm g and the blddmg
that the New Yor'k Yankees was gomg over the $2 million
have won the battle to sign level.
pttcher Jim "Catfish" Hunter.
Hun!A!r signed a five-year,
$3.7 million contract Tuesday
night to become the highest- ,
- paid player in baseball history
"We thought we had a real
Potatoes can be baked more good shot at him, " Seght satd
qui ckly if a nail IS placed of the talks he and operahons
through the cen ter of the raw
potato before placi ng m the manager Ted Bonda had had
oven or gnll. as the metal of the wtth Hunter and his legal
advtsors. He said Cleveland's
nail con du cts heat -rapidly

INTEREST OF

Deltvere d by carrier where
available 60 cen ts per week ;

SEE US

No. l-ra nked team . Ohio State wo1s second , M1clngH n third and

Tirz•be'' offer turned down

CHME~~GeSRMLA~~~: ~~FLL

St , New Y ork . New York

PRACTICAL NEEDS

rushed for 100 y;11 !Is 111 22

•

DEVOTED TO 11"1E

Nat •onal adve rt •s • ng
representat tve
Bott•ne ll t
· Gall agher, In c , 12 Ea s t d2 nd

.

falling behind early, 13-0, had gone into the bowl games as the

Sentinel

~ ' seco nd class pos tage paid a t
Pomeroy, Ohio

Paint, Hardware
OR
.

them prett y well ," McK(1y
scu d. "Hastca lly, I thmk our
team dtd a fm c JOb ,Ma) be we
should have been fat lher alwad
at the .~ nd ."

,

''It was amazing to me to see

.i5769 Bu smess Off 1ce Phone
992 2156 Fd • to~ · ~· 0 h0ne 9r;"Z
'"57

.FOR YOUR •••

straight ga mes fnr Ohw St.-Jte,
to 75 yc1rds on 20 carrtes.

' "Yes, I thmk

"They beat us by one point, 1tcalled," Hayes said. "I never
so 1 guess they have to be the saw it called before. "
best team we've played,"
Hayes said he was forced toHayes said after a last-minute make some changes .m, the
IS-17 Trojan win tn the Rose Buckeyes' olfense because
Bowl.
USC moved tis tackles .inside .
Hayes wouldn't pick any one
"They wanted to keep Archie
inctdent as the turrung point of Griffin contained inside," he
the game.
, said. I' We didn't expect them to
"ff we hadn't gotten that pinch us like they did."
.five yard· oenaltv when we
Hayes was lavish in his
~
praise of USC quar!A!rba&lt;;k Pat explanation."

• C1ty Editor
P u bli s hed daily

.,._-;;,.
·

Southern California fourth
Who 's No. I"
"We beat Ohio State who beat Michigan, and we beat Notre
The long college football bowl season that fmally ended Dame who beat Alabama," sa id an elated McKa)
Wednesday was supposed to settle that 1ssue, bu t this year all
The third straight USC.{JhJo State Rose BQwl- the TroJans
11 did was confuse tt.
now have won two, the Buckeyes one- featured some of the
At least four teams had a JegJ ttmate claim to shout "We're
season's wtldest plays They tncluded Southern Cal punter Jun
No. I" after Notre Dame, ~hmg an emotional farewell game
Lucas dribbling the ball off his toe by acctdent, then picktng tt
for Ara Parseghtan, upset Alabama, 13,.11, m the Orange Bowl
up and runrung for a fi rst down, and a 15-ya rd penalty agau\St
:: 10 offtc•ally close the 1974 season.
the Buckeyes when All-Amertca Net! Colzie spiked the ball ::
.·:
The fmal ratings w11l be announced tomght-a nd not the
after returning an interceptiOn mstde Ute Southern Cal 10-yard
.·
least of the contenders for the natwn.al championship ts John
line. The penalty probabl) cost the Buckeyes a touchdown that
::; McKay's Southern Califorma team, which won the most
might have clinched the ga me.
::: dramatic of Wednesday's victories when tt beat Ohio State, 111The much-heralded duel between Archie Griffin, the
::: 17, in the Rose Bowl on a touchdown and two-point conversion He~sma n Trophy"wtnner from OhiO State, and USC's Anthony
with 2:03 to go.
Davis, never really developed DaVIs sat out the second half
:::
"We have as good a call to tt as anybody," satd McKay. "I
with an inJury after ruruung for 67 yards tn the first half and
:&gt; know who I'm gmng to vote for."
Gnffin was lim1ted to 75 yards tn 20 carnes, endmg his NCAA
Bear Bryant wasn't saying exactly who he was go1ng to volA!
record streak of 100 yard-plus games at 22. Haden, who passed
::- for after Alabama 's annual bo\'llloss-the Crimson Tide are
feu: both Southern Cal touchdowns, completed 12-of-22 for 181
winless in !hell' last eight bowl games-but no one would have yards.
blamed him if he felt his IA!am, unbea!A!n during the regular
Notre Dame, beaten, 55-24, by USC a month ago and ranked
;:· season, still was No. I.
eighth, turned a fumbled punt by Willte Shelby and an off sides ..
::,:
And then, of course, there ivere the two IA!ams that weren't
penalty against Mike Washington into ltrst half touchdowns
even there- Michigan, bea!A!n only by Ohio State this season_.
and then held o!.! to upset Alabama, the second straight bowl
:;: and Oklahoma, on probation and ineligible for the UPI
VICtory by the lhsh over the Ttde,
;.; rankings but still the nation 's only unbeaten and untied team.
"I told them before the game they owed this game to
In the other of Wednesday's three ga mes, the one that had no
themselves and the people who follow Notre Dame," sa1d
:-: bearing on the national tttle , Penn Stall! critshed Baylor, 41-20,
Parseghtan, who now goes into retirement and turns the team
::: in the Cotton Bowl. Nebraska had defeated Florida, 13-10, in over to Dan Devme. "I just asked them to play like men and go
:: the Sugar Bowl on New Year's Eve.
out like men. My coaching staff did a great job of getting the
:&gt;
At Pasadena, McKay helped set up the last-period Rose Bowl
IA!am ready. I'm sure they made them aware of my feelings " ;:
,:: excitement when he decided to reJect a second-&lt;juarter USC
Sixth-ranked Penn Slate trailing, 7-3, at the half, scored 38
field goal to accept an Ohio State penalty and try for a touchseeond-half points to put a bitter end to Baylor's first-eve.
::; down-and came up tnstead with nothing. But his son, J K ,
Cotton Bowl appearance . Quarterback Tom Shuman complet- :·
} later caught Haden's 311-yard IOuchdown pass and then the
ed 10 of 20 passes for 226 yards, a Penn State bowl record , and .·
Trojans' Rhodes Scholar quarterback threw the winntng
freshman Jimmy Cefalo scored lwo touchdowns and totaled :·
::: conversiOn pass to Shelton Diggs to beat the Buckeye~.
157 yards rushmg and receiVing as the Lions piled up 491 yards :'
,::
Alabama, which never really threatened Notre Dame after tn total offense.
::.
....
'' ...
·:. :::.··:::: .,.......,., ·: ·: ..
.·

season.

Dai~

1n

;1ga mst l' urdut·

USC lost tliat onr. 14-13 But · m the second half because he

Woody has no excuses

.The

42~21 tn lht·

ball," hr !:'i:!Ul. " I sm\ Lt ami I
knew I had to stav with 1t Then
I heard the crowd cheer and 1r

By IRA MILLER
UPI Sports Writer

1

PASADENA, Calif. (UPI ) Woody Hayes offered no excuses for hiS team's loss to
Southern California in the Rose
Bowl New Year's day, admitting only that the Trojans were
just on~ point bet!A!r than his
Ohio State squad.
The veteran coach, who 1sn 't
noted for taking defeat gracefully, proved he could be a good
loser as well and even assured
the west coast press that the
University of Southern California was the best team the
Buckeyes have played this

.II}~ ashe~!

St;ttP
USl '
1!174 Hose llowl

l ht•

Olll)' lhlll g

t'llll\' t&gt;r~\0 1 1

ctectded to go tor two."
'J' tw TrOJ&lt;lll s dtdn ' t 1/c1ve

' \\t'

·l W(l-

Crown up fo_r_firabs

~

.'

•

~

There ts a steel shortage today, amorig other shortages. Bad'
enough . But if the economy ,were hwruning and if the auto m.:
dustry were taking its normal share of produclion, the shortage
vibrate with the tensiOn and controversy surrounding the orWould be of "staggermg" proportions. Thil; is 'the opinion of
•'
• dination of 10 ~omen m Phtladelphia las t summer. l.JturgJcal
Wilham
H.
Knoell,
presideltt
of
Cyclops
Corp.,
a
steel
producer.
con;ununtons are the last to ordatn women to the pnesthood, a East '1 "
Knoell il; concerned about the re--unposilion of price controls, r-----------------------~-.
,.
,.
This post-Easter conference IS important for several an an t1~nflation measure strongly supported tn .some quarters
move that was begun earlier m th1s century m the· nuun-lme
denominations Perhaps of higher Im portance for the whole rea sons ~'1rst, 1t ts a remtnder that @large chunk of the Arai&gt;- and even more strongly now because. of tile eight per cent price
,.
Chnshan church lS the support and encouragement of the nuun Lsraeh conflict cen!A!rs around re!tgwus sites and theologtcal hike announced by U.S. Steel, the industry's paceset!A!r.
proposals of ~&lt;omen 's liberation
rnmm ttments. Secondly , we forget that tn the 13th centuty, St.
In tractng the origms of loday's steel shortage, he attributes I
I.
The conservative, evangelical churches have been quiet and Franc1s caimly sruled over 10 Egypt and preached the gospel to
tt to the price coqtrols imposed a few years ago, which eom- I
I
'•
hesitant on lhts Issue !a lthough they were the first, 111 the 19th the sultan of Darruetta. They both enjoyed the event and con- poWlded the problem the industry had already been having
'century, to ordain women ). A maJor brea k throu~ h was the new tinued theJT studies_of each other's religion. Has this been g01 ng competing with foret gn steel under the fixed dollar exchange'
Bv
book "All We 're Meant To Be" by &amp;anzont and Hardesty (Word on today, between M~slems and Chril;tians? Whatever the an- rate established by the BretiOn Woods agreement m 1945.
I
.
Miller
I
I ·
Books) whtch deals wtth the 1ssues of women's lib from a Btb lt ~al swer, the Franciscans are on the right IOpic and aHhe nght lime.
Because of a severly overvalued dollar, says Knoell, fore1gn I
Wlth
today's.
digit
inflation,
materials
and
products
has
bid.
In the next 12 months we look for a sharp increase in the
approach In December, thJS book recetved one of the longest and
producers with their modern postwar plants were able to un·
mosl favorable treatmenls in a tevtew publtshed by the con- tntellectual combat between Chril;tians and the rapidly growing dersell American producer,s by $20 to $30. a ton. The dollar was rising unemployment and prices steadily, upward. More
servative, "ChriStianity Today "
" r~g lious" sects Some of their groups in the Satanist camp are
eventually cut loose, but devaluation was ahnost immedia!A!Iy co mntodt ty ·shortages , and more, the United States
America confronts perhaps tts must compete with other
Say the authors, ''None of ).he apostles advocated the un- gomg to fee l the heart of Chril;tian concern. "The Exorcist" was followed by' a freeze on steel prices at "unrealistically" low
greatest
economic .challenge. nahons whose sl.llndards of
medJate overthrow of cultural custom - Chril;ttanity was con- a c ommer~ ial success for Hollywood and a theological disaster
levels.
troverstal enough without that' Yet they did not shy away from for the Georgetown advisors Don't look for "Son of Exorcil;t"
Steel imports continued to ril;e, to account for 18 per cent of Many people ask wl)at has living have improved rapidly.
Stxth ; the Governmen:•s
anytlllle
soon
Other
groups
like
ScieniOiogy,
Reverent
Moon
and
the radical cuttin g edge of the gospel whit h would gradually
domestic steel consumption, or the equivalent of all the growth in caused the current economic
turmOil.
I
think
there
are
•
three
year experiment in wage-'
Wldermine society 's oppress1ve policies and restore God's m- his so-called ChriStian Renewal Church , The Cht!dren of God,
the consumption of steel m this country over a perwd of seven or
se
veral
important
reasons
we
price
control produced
IA!nded harmony . . .men and women worked side by side m Inc., and Transcendental Med!tatton are already feeling the
etght years.
distortions in the pricing
spreading the gospel. There were no second-c lass citizens m brunt of conserva ttve alarm and counteroffensive. As we have
The result was 10 restrict steel producers from making the should keep in mind .
First,
and
perhaps
most
structure
and scarcities in the
Chr1st 's church."
said, all this is where we find the cutting edge of rehgion.
profits · necessary to expand capacity. The plants that were
importanUy,
massive
Federal
production
of. certatn comclosed and the plants that were not bunt then are where the steel
deficit
spending
between
1966
modihes.
'
tsn't coming from today, Knoell asserts.
and 1974 has been a principal
Government is a. major
If leg~sla tors opt again for price controls, he wai-ns, there
culprit.
The
Federal
budget
cause
of tnflation and the
wtll be no proltts to be invested il) reopeniilg or building steel
doubled
during
that
period
government
can contribute
mills. U. S. producers thus will not be able 10 provide the steel
from $134 billion to $268 billion . greatly to controlling It if the
that will be needed when the economy gets going again.
Others no doubt will draw different conclusions from the In the past IA!n years, Federal Congress has the commihnent
same facts. There ts no shortage of evidence, however, to support spending has increased at the to make tough, hard decisions
those who caution that while price controls may buy economic rate of II percent a year. The m the area of fiscal and
stabtlity for a time, they only store up a lot of trouble fo~ later. enormous deficit the Govern- li)Onetary policy.
ment nas rolled up not only
As Knoell says, "Today's crisis all too of!A!n is yesterday's
raised
demand but increased
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. · tl1ey also are Jean people un lt kely that 1! will have any avaJ!abtlity of medical sup- hastily contrived legil;lation."
interest rates because of
DEAR DR. LAMB - Is there eattng far chfferenl!v than w~ sJgnJ !t canl effect on yo ur port, famtly supporl, and what
mass1ve U. S. Treasury
any evtdence that all! tude has do and bre usually physically med1cal status or your health. you are doing about smokmg,
borrowing.
any effect on hear t trouble? f active
Second, expansive Federal
Th&lt;;. 5,000 foot level Is called dtet, exercise and correction of
lived tn the M1dwest at
If you ar e a sea-le vel the "physiological lhreshold," any medical problems that you
The more m1htant feminil;ts may consider the secretary's monetary policy exceeded
altitudes below 1_,000 feet and a inhabitanl and go to altitude, meaning that is the point where mtght have.
job as bemg on the botiOm of the business totem pole. But to at what was necessary for orderly
few years ago rehred to New yo u must · be ca reful not to you ca n ftr st nol!ce any
least 7,300 secretanes around the United States, it il; anything but economic growth. Over the last
Mextco. Now I'm li ving at overdo physical activity for changes in body responses Of
thai.
• ·
six years the money supply has
approximately '6.000 feet. I several days and preferably course, tt you were going to rWJ
That is how many now bold the title of Certified Professional grown at the rate of 6 ~er_cent a
recently_had a mild ~earl at- for t" o weeks. Many men do a mil e race at &gt;,000 fee t and
Secretary. The number is tncreasing every year, and many o( year.
0
tack, and tt must have been a not pay attention to this and
them are men.
were a sea-level dweller, you "
Third, bad weather in recent
CLEVELAND (UPI)- The
ctrc ul ah on problem th at will go out golfing or hun ting
The
certifica!A!
ts
earned
on
the
basis
of
a
26-week
course,
w oc~d not likely do as well.
years has limited crop har· Ohio Tw-npike's total revenue
brought tt on . I wondered tf and c!Jmbtng 1mm edi ate l}
followed by a grueling two-{!ay series of tests held under the vests and caused shortages and
From 5,000 fee t on. thmgs
moving to a lower altitude They w11l be far more acttvc begin to change, Shll. at 7,000
auspices of the National Secrelaries Assn. So comprehensive are subsequently htgher food dropped -to about $4-4.2 million
m 1974, or $1.7 million less than
might help
than they are used to bemg at feet, that w1ll gtve you an idea
the tests (only 11 per cent get a passing grade in every area) that prices.
the prior year.
BY BERTHA PARKER
DEAR READER --: Tbat is home, as well as betng exposed that th1s level 1s pretty safe for
colleges now recognize the certificate as credit toward a degree
Fourth, the quadrupling of
The northern Ohio toll.road's
Sabbath School attendance tn such subjects as business administration.
an tn!A!resltng questwn . You to altitude The combmahon
mos t people. For those ac·
the price of oil in the past second most profitable year in
Dec.
29
at
the
Free
MethodiSt
may reca JJ th at Presid ent ca n be a threat Anvone
The Certified Professional Secretary program not only helps twelve months has had a 'ripple
customed to livtn g at 7,000 !'eel,
history pennitted Ute Ohio
Cllurch was 100, Mor nm g management in selecting qualified secretaries, it promotes the
Eise nhower was III the Denver planmng a tnp to altJtude'w tth
effect over the cost o( nearly
or who are accltmatized, 7,000
worship se rvice attend ance professional identtty of the exceptional secretary and gives her
Turnpike Commission to retire
area when he had h1s first any form of activitv should trv
every- product we use.
fee t IS of no tmportance and was 92.
$19.4 million worth of its bonds.
heart attack. If you ~ve at sea . to Improve physica l ·fttnes~
(or him) a yardstick against which to measure her (or his)
poses no limttatiori, in itself, on
Fifth, Wlpredicted world Commission Chairman
A large crowd attended !he professional development.
!~vel and go to altitude, the before making the trip
·
acttvJtYo
wide demand for raw James W. Sbocknessy said
Christmas program wh1ch was
ft~st few days are the most
The decrease in oxygen m
You will have comple!A!d all held December 22.
some $213 million in bond value
difficul t. Then your body starts the atmosphere is rea ll y verv
of the more important acRev.
and
Mrs~
Morns
Wolf,
hils been retired of the $328
undergomg changes to adapt to gradual. We usually ;to n ~t
climaltzmg adaptations within
million borrowed in 1952 ..
Rac me, attended chur ch
the new alhtude. In some thmk anything very important
a lew months of altitude. All se rvtce Sunday evemng.
Ten persons died in turnpike
na t1ves livtng over 10,000 feet happens to the body until after
thmgs bemg equal , I would
accidents, making 1974 the
Saturday, January 11, there
altitude, hear t di sease ts 5,000 feet. You are )ust at the
think other considerations are
road's safest year. In 1973
will be a gospel smg at the local
almost unkn own However, margm at 6,000 feet and it ts
more Important in your case church. Gospel Messengers,
there were 28 fatalllles.
lhe Chrisltan - F1ve and the
Shocknessy said the redu~
speed limit was Ute major
Joint Atres will be there.
Everyone 1s wecome. Time is·
cause of the improved safety
7-30 p.m. .
performance.
Bertha Parker spent a week ·
m Columbus with Mr. and Mrs.
Hugh Ferguson and so n,
Jmuny, Mr and Mrs Gene
Columbia Grange No. 2435
Alkire, Kimberlee and Kevm,
held their Decemb,er meeting
and Miss Cleo Parker.
with Bertha Crippen, worthy
Mrs . Dora Holley spent
mas!A!r, in charge. Elizabeth
Christmas Da y wtth Mr. and
Jordan, Women's Activities
Mrs. Hartwell Curd, Ball Run .
Cbairman, reported on the
Mr and Mrs. Ted Mathews,
District C.W.A. assembly
Huron; Mr. and Mrs. Ed Bauer,
which was held in Jackson
Cle veland, spent Christmas
County.
Worthy Lecturer,
My wile and-! have had aU the experience with tornadoes that we cpre to have. We also came
wtth Mr . and Mrs. Charles
Arlhur
Crabtree,
presented a
very near to being in the midst of one of the most destructive ones (in hljiiUIIllives) ever to hit thil;
Karr
of
scripture,
program
nation.
·
readings,
skits,
and
songs that
Early on the Sunday morning of the day of Rutland High School's Baccalaurea!A! Exercises in
told
the
story
of
Christmas.
1925, I had fed grain to tbe sixty-odd ewes and tbeir young lambs and let them out of the barn lot to
Plans were made to serve
wander at will in ~he large pasture field.
·
The Almanac
lot. Soon afterward, a~ approaching thunderstorm sent me hurrying back to ~hut them in the barn refreshments for the January
meeting of Meigs County
By United Press International
Pomona
Grange. Delicious
Today is Thursday, Jan . 2, · _Thil;accompllshed, I hurried toward Ute bouse t~escape the nearing'storm. 1saw my wife was
potluck refreshments were
the second day o( 1970 wtth 363 hilvmg trouble getting the three Plymouth Rock hens and their little chicks Into their coops.
enjoy.ed
by the group.
I hurried to her aid. As! neared a sltlall wet--weather creek, beyond which she was striving with
10 follow.
The moon is approaching Its the stubborn chickens, with only an instant's warning, I was enveloped in the blackest of clouds. I
last quarter
could scarcely see the ground and was whirled around several tiriJes- too fast 10 keep count_ but 1
The mcirning stars are Mars managed to keep upright.
and Saturn
. My w_ife, across the creek, was on sloping ground and was not so fortun~te. She was rolled over
The eveni~g stars are Mer- and over mtothe creek. Forhrnately, it was~ at l!rntmoment; ~ut it was not dry much longer.
cury , Venus and Juptter.
II then grew a bttltghter, and I saw hens m the all'. The three coops, each clumsily made of inchThose born on this dale are lumbe~. were going through the air also. One passed by overhead,. another to my right ~nd tbe
other1 was tumbling by me to the left. Part oftbe latter grazed my wle.
' ~
under the sign of Capricorn .
Britisl&gt; Gen. George Wolff,
I unped that evening a~ we marched to the platform for the Baccalaureate Exercises. I should
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A f&gt;-2
th h
Q
bee
add
here that I had rece~ved a High School Teaching certifica!A! sixteen years previous to my ruling by the Ohio &amp;!preme
01
e ero
ue ' ~as b,orn graduation from High School.
·
Court says all sheriff's
Jan. 2, 1727,
Th t
d
f
On thts day in history
,~
e 0~ 118 0 was o~er: ma ew seconds. It had liapperied so suddenly that we had not had time to de)lllties in the state, except
In 1788, Georgia ratiiied the become frtghtent;&lt;J Wltil tt was too Ia !A!. Then tile downpour of rain decreed action, not !tight. We those having fiduciary duties,
uS Cn "tut 'o
d
gathered all the little chicks we could find and took them to Ute .kitchen, though we feared it was a are under the protection of civil
. . . vnsw 1 " . an
was useless move.
.
service lafS and not subject to
admttted to the Unton
them ·
·
·
In ISM Mo
· Radi 0·
We put .
m two old bread pans and set them tn the coal stove oven, leaving the do,or open. hiring and firing Whims.
• •
scow
We saved twen\y-three, I believe, out of about fifth of the baby chicks
The Ohio Ci vU Service
announ eed a cosrruc rocket had
Th layful bab
·
been laun hed t
th
eP
Y torna'do seemed to be playmg hopscotch. As far as I know i\ took to the air for Employees Association had
moon.
c
oward
e two or three miles. Then, near Beech Grove, it unroofed a barn belonging to ira Kennedy. It next appealed the question to the
In !!168, Dr. Chtistiaan struck near Rutland and unroofed a building belonging to Crosby Price.
state's top court to resolve
Barnard performed his second
On JW!e 10, 1958, we narrowly mi,ssed being in the ten'ible tornado at Eldorado Kansas that confticUng decisi~ns by Ute
killed eighty-some people and destroyed two whole blocks oflhe city.
'
'
Geauga, Cuyahoga and Wood
succeS.sful heart lr_ansplant
When we were ready to leave the home of my cOusins, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Nicholson, of Moline in
CoWlty court&amp; of aweai. .
1974
. lned bil·1 PreSident Ntxon southeast Kansas, Ray told me Of the roads we could tak~ reach tbe borne of Mr and Mrs Roy
"This decision will put an
Sign a
reqwrmg states to . Killion
·
'
'
·
·
·
·
u ' t lri h
.
.
'
end to the 'spoils systan'
m~~s ang h:ay -speeds to 55
After goi!Jg north about twenty miles, we could have Ute choice of two roads. They were parallel currently practiced in many
hi h · f ct"' or lose federa l to each other, some _twelve to fifteen miles apart. The upper one was Route 54; and the lower one sheriff's departments," IBid
CQLUMBUS (UPI ) - The
was a much less improved one. He advised us to take the lower one as it had I~ traffic and we Karl E. Stewart, OCSEA
g way un s.
The newspapers employed 31 and Monticello, ~- Y., and
CommWlity Tinnes-Spect.~~tors persons.
could make as much time by doing so.
.
·•
,
newspaper printing plarits in
executive director,
A thought for the day: Greek
new~pers, weekly newspaBefore nightfall, we were everlastingly grateful to him for his advice.·
Courtland · Communications Michigan and New York and an poet Hesiod S.id, "For himself
DEATH BRINGS ·TIUBtJTE
pers in four suburban areas, owns oommWlity ~ewspapers AM·FM radio station in White
As we neared Augusta about six o'clock,! decided to stop at a service station for gasoline while
does
a
man
work
even
in
the
fell victims to the economy at in Cleveland, Warwick N. Y. Plams, N. Y
ANAHEIM, Calif. (UPI) my wife went to the nearby restaurant!or sandwiches. .
wo_rking of evils for another."
the erid of the year and ceased
There was quite a Storm 10 the north. I asked the attendant from which direction their stonns The death of, "Jack Benny 1ut
)lttblication with this week's
· week broupt forth a tribute
usually came, and he pointed to the dark clouds.
edition.
signed by IIMi mayors of three
"They must be having a terrible stonn in Eldorado, and I look for it to come here "he said
COLUMBUS
(UPI
)
Mr
"Whete
are
you
going?'•
.
'
·
William J. Hollida~ce
Sebellus, R-Kan.
towns famill8r to- tboae who
president in charge of opera- and- Mrs. Keith Ga~y Sebelius
,
· "To Newton," I repliect. ·
heard lleuJ1y's radio show, with
At the Tuesday night rr WAS 8JS FATHER
tions for Courtland Com- are honeymooning in the ceremony here, the bride wore
its classic railroad station
JOHNSTOWN, Pa. (UPI) "Well, I ~dvise ybu to get going right now!" he said. ''And it woUldn't take much to get'!De to go
munications, Cleveland, owner· Caribbean ~£&gt;day, two days a gown of white battiste and Dennis Sabo, 17, was a ml!lllber along! " •
·
·
announcer rouUne.
of Ute newspaper for the past .after their wedding at the. lace, an heirloom from her ,of an amliulanc.e crew sent to
"We've alWays enjo~ the
' I told him he could go with us; but tJe said be must not lose his job.
·
five years, said the decil;ion to governor's mansion .
exposure
Mr. Bemy gave 111,
maternal grandmother's St. Emerick Churcb WedWe hurried 0!1, and before vei-y long Ute storm winds were 51'8ying Ute car a few times ahnost
The new Mrs. Sebelius is the trousseau :· The bride 's at- nesday when a man collapsed stopping its forward progress.llain fell jn a heavy dmpour, making driving a difficult task for
quit publishing WHS based on a
even though our only claim to
Mary IA!ndant was her Sister, Ellen. pf an apparent beart attack at quite awhile.
fame in 'tboae early da)'s wls
','matter of economics ... - lack former Kathleen
·
,
·
'
.
tbe
daughter
of
Gov.
Gilligan,
Of advertising to support the
our funny names," said Mlly!ll'
The best nian was ..Douglas a chur,::lt party.
We reached the Killion home safely as Ute rain 'ended. Here we learned ol the lerrible disas!A!r
editorial product •" '
and Mrs. Johl! J .. Gilligan. Sebelius, brother of Ute groom. . Sabo discovered· the victim at Eldorado. If we had taken the upper road, It ls qUlle lltel)- that we would have been in that
WlDlam J . Thorn.
,- The 72,00) editions printed Sebelius, a Topeka·, Kan,,
·
'
disaster.
.
The •triWie · wii a - jOint
The couple will live in •' was his father, Theodore, 50.
,.Tuesday were distributed, attorney, il; the son o~ U. S. Topeka, Kan:, where the . The.elder Sabo '!i!!c!lead on
-As an old-!imef once said to me, "What a lot of difference that little letter-Hr.an make!"
1 resolution signed -The
~lliday said.
' ·
R~p . and Mrs. Keit~ ' G. groom 1s an attorney.
m&amp;y!JI'S of "Mabeinl, Azusa
arrival at Lee Hclspil.lli.'
-Seth F . Nieholson, R. D. !, Rutland.
and GuciiJIOI!g&amp;.''
'
A
•
•---v
~ ,,
'

Newspapers

" .

''

•

·-

�.,
,.

.

.

.

"

.

New year 'b rings '
.

.

.

.

....._

tr~:=:::;~:m!;!MiM!!!l::;:t::;::t:::::::::::!:!;!:'tm::(~!t!!!!!!!!llil

I

~n the jce

By U nil ~d Pl"f'ss lntr rnatimlll l mher 50, un d-prri ou gua b for
TempQrarily, at least. il 11t'w !ht• Hangers.
!':l·~ ls 3, L-.·afs :1:
yrar has created a murr
Guid s hy .John Stcwc1r t ,·md
nmicab le chemical reaction
among players from the Pfliln- n: 1ve J-Irn· hkosy shot c~!li £o rn irt
dclp hia Flyers and Vancouvt•r t~f to a 2-0 Jrad in the first
period. only IO h~J\'(' B&lt;Jr jc
Can ucks.
ThE' two cl ubs have staged .~ lming ~~nd InJ.(L' .J·Icmuuarsome o( the wildest brawls of str om bring the !A..'(J fs t.· vcn
re ce nt hockey vin tage.
brfoi·r 1he end of tlw sess.ion.
The Flyers , were back in Char lie Simmer of Califor.nia
Vancouver Wednesday nig ht for and Errol Th ompson of Toronto
a battle between divisiona l then e xrh~\iigrd serond-peri od
lea ders, and this tinie, exeept guals
for a second-peri od fight . Oilt•rs 3, Mariners-Z:
Husly Pat emn~de Sc::orcd his
be tween Dave Schultz and
C'anu rk rookie Harold Shepsts. 1:11 11 goa l at 5 , 26 uf the
they eonce ntrated their la!enl"i D\'l: r tiJilt.' period to give Edmonon hockey, coming away with a tun its \'iclory. &amp;i n Dit&gt;gtl hC:td
2-0 victory .
forced thP l' xl ra scss inn on · a
Ber nie Paren t stopped 'l4 p&lt;Jwer pl;ty goa l· by Ge nt'
shots to register his seventh P('iJ('t"IS h in thc. lhjf"d period.
shut out· of !he season, but the
."''orditJucs 6, Hac·en; :l:
Flyer:; couldn't c onnec t aga inst
Hcjean Houle and Real
Vari C'O UVer netmi ndcr Ga ry Cloutier scored two goi.l ls cw.:h
Smith unti l the fin a l peri od for Quebec a nd M&lt;Jrc Turdi f
when Bill Barber scored on i l ttnd Robert GuimJ on tCJ il ied one
311-foot drive. Ross Lonsberry each. The victory enabled the
then provided the cushion Ill to Nordiqucs to climb to within
an emp_ty net with 31 seconds one point of id le" Toronto for
remaining.
first place in Uw Canadi cm
The victory enabled Phila- Divisi on.
,
delphia to main l&lt;lin its 13-poi nt
Sa ints 6. t:rusadt:rs 2:
ndvantage in Division 1 over
Ted Han_lpsou's second goal
the New York Rangers , who of the game at 16 :5:1 of the
crushe? Chicago, .6-2./ Van- second period proved to be tho
rouver s marg: m over the Black winner as Mjrmesot..1 won for
Hawks remained at II points in the seven th time in il"i las t
Division 2. ·
eig ht outings. Cleve la nd now
In the only other NHL action, has los t four games in a row.
the California Seals and Toronto Maple l..eafs skated to a 3-:l
tic. In the World Hockey A GOOD CAU..
Ass ocia ti on,
Edmonton
LOS ANGELES (UPI ) _
3
2
squeezed by Sall Diego, • · in Southern Ca lif ornia Coa ch
ove rtime, Qu ebec bea t In· John McKay sa id after his
dianapolis . 6-J, and Minnesota
team 's R,ose Bowl will Wedbeat Cleveland , 6_2.
nesda y that his Trojans have
"as good a call as anybody" to
Rangers 6, Hawks 2:
The Ra ngers broke clea r
the natio nal champion ship.
fr om a 1-1 tie with a fo ur-g011 l
"We have as good a call to it
011tburst in the second period, as anybody," said an elated
highlighted by Rod Gilbert's McKav. " We bea l the teams
201hgoal. 11 was the lOth time that ~at the teams uu1t beat
1n tus career . that Gilbert has . the teams. we bNtt Ohio Sta te
re11 ched 20 goa ls and the New whobe:~ t\l.hircJ-n 111 k ecliM ichi. Yh or~ wing admitted .later tbu t gem alld Wl ' beat Notre Dame,
e \\ us unaware of thts feat.
who ·beat AlalmrncJ."
Rick Middleton, Ron Greschn" 1 tell vou 1 know who I'm
cr and Jean Ratelle scored the going to ~otr for. ' '

I

Sport Parade
~~~Mi;~~NE~:t~~MAN

i!!!!il

!ll

NEW YOI(K 1UPII - Four clubs offered Catfish HWlter more
money than the New York Y cmkee s did .
Origi nally,. he . twli st1 id he'll go where the ~ m oney~-··\vas,
pre ~ wnably mean ing he'r! si~n with the highest bidder, but th.:!l:
wasn't the case a t all.
J)()llar lor dolbr, the San Diego Pad res qnd Kansas City
Roy als both bid higher than the Y ~m k ees d..id ;ond ~odid two' other
cl ubs who managt.'&lt;-1to keep-their identi ties concealed, yet when it
ca rne right down to the crunch, the time to ma ke hi s choice,
C&lt;1 tfish Hunter chose the cl ub that was actually the fif th top
bidde r ·

.

.... Why'?

c ·e ltics move iDto

COl-LE.&amp;E. BOYS Wll-lWf-AI&lt; ...

.

'

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Br;tves.

Boston won its tlurd road
ga me of the last four Wednesday mg ht , 108-94 , over the
Port la nd Tra il Blaze rs, to
move into a tie with Buffalo for
the lea d in the Atlantic Di;iston
of the National Basketball· As·
sociation. Both teams now
have 22-!3 recor&lt;J,s .
Again it was the likes of John
Havlice k, Da ve Cowens, and

Pro Standings

a

JoJo White who oiled the Celtic ·
fa st break and hoWlded Portland into turnovers:
" We 've won three of our last
four on the road and played
pretty well ," Heinsohn sa id.
" Now Buffalo's getting hurt
ancj we' re in pretty good
shape .
Havlicek scored. 31 poinls
and grabbed eight rebounds
while Co wens, who wa s
plagued by ; ome early foul's,
scored 17 while hauling in 14 ·
rebounds. Don Chaney added
17 poilits and White bad 11
assists in helping spark the
fas tbrea k. ·
Portla nd
corrunitted 30
turnovers, 15 coming on Celtic
stea ls.
Portland suffered its fo W'th
consec utive loss, and it was the
l~th straight game missed by
rookie cen ter Bill Wa lton ,
be ing treated for a bone spur in
Los Angeles by an acupWlC·
turist. ,
After a 29-28 lead in the first
quarter, the Celt ics took a 57-48
halft ime lead. They kept the
margin at nine after three
quarters, and Portland was
Wla ble to overcome the Celtics
in the fin al period. Sidney
Wicks led Portland with 23
points while Geoff Petr ie
scored ·20.
In other NBA games Wed·
nesday night, Atlanta topped
Kansas City-Oma ha , 102-97,
and Seattle edged Washington,
123'118, in overtime. San Diego
beat Indiana. 11&amp;-100, in the ·
only ABA ga me.
Hawks 102, Kings 97:
Bob Kauffman led a fourthquarter rally tha[Jifted Atlanta
over KC-Omaha. Kauffman
poured in seven of his 13 poinls
in the final quarter. Rookie
0

forward John Drew, who led
At lanta with 22 poinls, gave the
Hawks their first lead \Nith
eight minutes to play on a pair
of free throws for an 87-&amp;i edge.
Nate Archibald was high man
for the Kings with 30 points and
Jinuny Walker had 24.
Sooies 123, Bullets 108: .
Fred Brown scored for six of
his 30 points in overtime and hit
Seattle's final fou r points as the
Sonics defeated Washington. A
jumpshot by Brown with 2:35
remaining gave Seattle a 117·
115 lead' it never relinquished .
Spencer Haywoo&lt;t" had a gamehigh 32 points for Seattle. Elvin
Hayes led the Bullets with 29
points while Mike Ri.ordan
added 25.
Q's 118, Paeers 100:
Bo Lamar and Travis Grant
combined for 52 points and Lee
Davis came off the bench in the
fin al period to score ,12 points.
as San Diego bea r Indiana.
Lamar led the Q's with 27

RACINE, OHIO

ZENITH

.,

· COLOR TV

eBLACK &amp;

WHITE TV
•STEREO

MASON FURNilURE
HERMAN GRATE
MASON, W. VA.·

Free Delivery!

773-5592

SEOAL STANDINGS
{Varsity)
Team'
W L . POP
· Waverly
4 0 247 210
3 1 275 232
, 'lr9nton
Gallipolis
3_ 1 232 202
Logan
2 2 223 235
_Jackson
2 2 206 211
Meigs
1 3 244 269
·}It hens
1 32192 1a
. Wellston
0 4 196 285
(Reserve)
W L POP
.Jeam
·Athens
3 1 195 146
Logan
3 1 172 158
Gallipoli s
3 1 167 153
Meigs
3 1 150 BS
_Waverly
2 2 124 133
Jackson
1 3 181 195
Ironton
1 3 135 161
Wellslon
0 4 122 21 5
SVAC STANDINGS
(Varsity)
Team
W L POP
H, Trace
5 o 344 253
,North Gallia
4 1 345 282
Southwestern
3 2 275 2a4.
Southern
2 3 241 271
Eastern
1 3 223 245
S. Valley
0 3 155 225
Kyger Creek
o 3 151 174
1Reserve&gt;
Team
W L POP
Norlh Gallia
4 1 171 140
S. Valley
2 1 113 98
Kyger Creek
2 1 102 86
t·l. Trace
3 2 159 159
Southern
2 3 182 181
Southwestern
2 3 138 165
Eastern
0 4 115 147
TRI -VALLEY
!Varsity I
(Team
W L POP
3 ··o 213 150
Nels-York
Vinton Co.
2 1 169 199

NEW YEAR'S

CARL.O AD SALE!
NO. 1 PRE-CUT

STUDS

92eeach

CHOICE BUILDING
SITES FOR SAL£
IN SYRACUSE

-iwAJ:iJ&lt;ro
l.()VI~ T. IM56011 ,

34l NQilWAU&lt; AVG,
BUFFAL-O,
N.Y.

.

,.

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
.

'

MATERIALS CO.

773-5554

MASON, W.VA.

5
8 ,
7.
5¢
.Salad Dress1•ng .. ., ..........
·
.
g·
g
¢
Fudge Brownie ·M ix ..~!.~ . ·
~~ 6'. ·.
g
¢
Vel •• .-•••••• ~ ••••••••••.•••••••••••
rJetti Pen &amp;Beet
lOlfz oz.
Barbecue ...•..•••...••.• ~~...

We

G~d~

Monday Thru Friday

·

Aerosol-'Spray CiP

. 9:00 to 7:00
Saturday 9 to 9

Hb.

WINNERS IN OUR•
CHRISTMAS GIVEAWAY

and

HAM SALAD

Snack

and
~rl'r SPREAD

,·

FLORIDA FRESH

21 oz.

Stuff

. lb.

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5

lb . .

79"

. · .

Ends and
•

lb.

iALT

longhorn

Chunk

PORK

~heese

Bologna

(CHUNK)

Pieces

BANANAS

7 $1

6 lb.
box

00

' lb.

89'

lb,

.

''
~"

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..

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:--; L.

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-P' Itt

$129

I

·· .

GOlDEN RIPE

GRAPEFRUtT

HAZEL CARNAHAM
.DOROTHY GREATHOUSE
; LINDA SPENCER· ~- ~

So ut hwestern

404

Logan

404 .Pl 57.7

{7)

59 ·~ I)

57.7
59 .0

414 (B ) 59.3
42~ 171 60.9

Vinton Co.
Warren Local
Meigs

562 (9 1 62.4
324 (ll 64.8
325 (Sl 6.1.0

430

(7)

61..4

Alexa nder

465

( 7)

66. 4

.'

GROUND
;BEEF

405 (61. 67 .5
340 (S I 68.0
411 (61 68.5
78 I II 78.0
THURSDAY
Buffalo : W. Va. at Wahama
FRIDAY
SEOAL
Wellston at Athens
Ga ll ipolis at Waverly

. .'

~,

..

.

·

.J

··'/

I

..

$129

lb.
,,

•

65'

'

S. Valley
Well ston
Miller
Wahama

ARMOUR'S
.
. I

SLICED·
BACON-'.

12 oz.
LB.

lrontoh at Jackson
Meigs at Loga n

TRI-.VALLEY
Nelsonville· York at Alexander
Belpre at VInton County
Warren Local at Federal
Hocki ng

RATH'S
BLACK HAWK

SVAC

Eastern at Hannan Trace
Kyger Creek at North Ga llia
Southern at Symmes Valley

Others
Southwestern at Wahama
Point Pleasant at Parkersburg

WIENERS·oz.
SAUSAGE

Soulh
Tri mble at Waterford

SATURDAY
Ale xander at Oak Hill
Nelsonville-York at Miller

.

Warren Local at Williamstown

Buffalo, W. Va. at Kyger Creek
Ironton St. Joe at Southwestern

TUESOAYIJan.7l
SEOAL
Athens at Meigs

Ironton at Ga llipol is
Jackson' at Waverly

OR .

12

1 lB. ROll

Well ston at Logan

Others
Williamstown at Belpre
Tr imble at Hannan Trace
Southern at Waterford
Point Pleasant at Hurricane

WEDNESDAY (Jan. 81
Wahama at Hannan (1 p.m.)
SEOAL STATISTICS
!As of Dec. 13)
Field Goal Percentige
Team
FGM-A Pel.
94-198 .475
Athens
Waverly
93-201 , .463
Gallipolis
95-207 .459
Ironton
118-260 .454
Logan
93-206 .451
Jackson
90-248 .363
Meigs
93-258 .360
Wellston
74-207 .357
Free Throw Percentage
Team
FTM-A Pet.
Waverly
61 -81 .753
Meig s
58-81 .716
Logan
37-56 .661
Jackson
36-SS .655
Gal li polis
52-89 .584
Well ston
47·86 .547
Athens
31 -69 .449
Ironton
39.88 .443

PKG.

BLUE BONNET

KRAFT

ORANGE
JUICE

I

No. G Avg.
144 . 4 36.0

Ironton

141 4 35 .3

Wellston
Ga llipolis
Meigs

135 4 33.8
130. 4 32 .5
124 4 3 1.0

Jackson

120 4 30.0

4 STICKS

119 4 29.8
119 4 29.8
Personal Fouls
No. G Avg.
Team
58 4 14.5
Jackson
63 4 15.8
Logan
66 5 16.5
Athens
Waverly
6a 4 17.0
74 '4 18.5
Wellslon
61.4
81
4 20.3
Ga
llipolis.
59.9
82 4 20.5
Ironton
59.3
Meig s
84 4 21.0
59.0
Ind. Leaders
58.0 .
Field Goal Percenage
58.0
57.8
~:~~~fi~:~~
F~~j: ~S.i ~
57.8
Chonko. A
21 -37 .568
57.0
Folden,
G
18-32 .563
56.6
McDonald, J
30-57 .526
56.5
56.3 . .Fitzpatrick, t . 21-40 n.S2S
Free Throw-Perc en age
55 . 3

•

Logan
Waver ly

Name1 Team ,.

52.7

FTM-A

McDonald, J
Holland, Wav
Duduit, Wa v
Pl ei fer, Wav
Kemper, L

¥z gal.
-jug

47.7

47 .2
Avg.
49.2
50. 1
50.4
so 7

PEAK

,.

•.

Pet:

10,12 ·.833
12.15 .a09 :
·i'2-1S .800
- 23-19 .793
· 1.3-17- . ~765
·
R~QIJ njls .Name, Team ··
No; G A.vg:
Cho~kc), ~ ., .
49 : ~ 12.3
45 4 · 11.3
Fitzpalrick, I ·
Wright ,,L
JB 4. 9·.5
Va lentine, G
37 4 9.3
FaulkneJ:. A
37 4 9.3

52.0
51.8
50.0
48.0

'

-

•

COLUMBIA

Rebounds

' In many respects, the second for 'IVhat they hope will · be a
half of the Southern Valley second half surge. All" three
Athletic Conference cage · teams have taken their Jiunps
early this year.
,
season begins Friday night.
Kyger
Creek
is
1-4
ov~rall
League . leading Hannan
Trace will put its ·perfect while Symmes Valley, picked
league mark on tlie line against to finish in a first place tie with
the Eastern Eagles. Coach North Gallia . for the SVAC
Paul Dillon's Wildcats own an championship, has not won a
earlier win over Coach Bill game. The Vikings are 0:6
Phllllps' Eagles. Eastern goes overall a,nd 11-3 in the SYAC.
In oth er action Friday;
into the contest· with a 1~
record and l.J mark in the Kyger Creek travels to second
SVAC. Hannan Trace has a 6-2 place North Gallia; SouthoVerall slate and iHI record in western is a Wahama and
Southern visits Syinmes
the league.
Coaches Philllps of Eastern-, Valley. Saturday night, Bulfaio
Keith Car't er of Kyger ,Creek . of Putnam CoWJty is , at Kyger
imd Ferrell Hesson of Symmes Cr~ek and Ironton St. Joe goes
'
Valley will prepare their teams

85t,

23 oz

pkg.

Lyso I o·: . 1s1n
. • f
can $}19 Bacon
ectant........... ·,

ClOSED ~SUNDAYS

· Waverly
479 IBI
Logan
415 171
Southwestern
41 3 (71
Meigs
290 (51
Pl. Pleasant
58 I11
Belpre
347 (61
·Gallipol is
347 (61
Ja ckson
342 ' 161
Athens
453 (a )
Miller
339 161
Vinton Co.
507 (9)
Al exa nder
3a7 171
Easlern
369 (7)
Trimble
312 16)
S. Val ley
311 16)
Wahama
SO (1)
Kyger Creek
240 (5)
So uthe rn
334 (7).
Wellston
236 (5)
DEFEN·SIVELY
Team .
Pts ( Gl
Jackson
295 (6 )
Waver ly'
.401 (B )
Fed. Hock ing
353 ti l
Gallipolis
304 (6 )

'

'PIN-TO BEANS
BAG

'

.

'

I.

: '.. .

LU"CH MEATS
Sandwich

Detergent For Dishes

Prices Effective Jan; 2-8

(5)

Kyger Creek
Norlh Gall ia

Team
Athens

Team
W L P QP
Alexander
3 0 150 119
Nel s-York
2 1 144 106
Belpre
2 1 11 2 109
Vinton Co.
1 2 120 137
Warren Loca l
1 2 111 111
Fed. Hock ing
0 3 92 147
OFFENSIVELY
Team
Pis IGI Avg.
North Ga llia
345 lSI 69.0
Ironton
473 (7) 67.6
H..Trace
522 (B) 65.3
Fed. Hocking
441 171 63.0
Nels -York
441 (71 63.0
307

{8 ) 55 .4

:i34 ' (6) 55 .7
279 IS l 55.8
2a2 (S ) 56.4

Ironton

(Reserves)

Warren Local

4d

l!e ipr~ .

Athens
Easlern

2 201 210

.

SUPERIORS

,ar

I

Accept Fed. food Stamps

¢

~·

lestee

Right Rese~ to Limit Quantities

1 2 177 177
1 2 156 11a

304 (6 ) 50.7
361 (71 52.4
37~ •(71 53.3 -

·Wildcats host EB;gles · in
S VA C cage headlin.
e
r
·.

Thanks To All . ..
BECAUSEWE ,VAiu'i~ouil=-cusiOMERSHappy New Year To All

Duncan Hines

I

Fed. Hocki ng
Alexander

• •

Pt . Pieasant

2 1 165 167

Warren Loca l

I .

'

'

R·

5th and PEARLSTS., RACINE
'The Store With A Heart
You, WE Ll KE"

Be lpre

"

I

FRESH •

Trimble
Nels.York
So uthern
H. Trace

, 1974-75 HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL
· (Includes games lhrough Dec . 28)
NAME TEAM
OVERAL LSCORI~G
• ·
·
FG FT PTS tGI AVG .
Mark ~wai n , Hannan Trace
99 · 21! 206 (B) 25 .8
Dan B1se, Fed. Hockin g
59&lt;" 38 156 ( I) 22 .3
Kevin Canter, Nel s-York
52 41 145 Jl) 20.7
Mike Mc Donald , Ja_£kson
47
20
114 (6)
19 .0
G\eg James, .North't;allia
42 10
94 (5 1 18.8
M1ke Camden, N. Gall ia
34 19
a7 (5 ) 17'.4
Jim Tatterson, Pt. Pleas .
7
3
11 ·I I I
17.0
Charlie Brown , Alexander
4)
30 116 (71
16.6
,l_l m Niday, Gallipo lis
36 "
.a6 (61 14.3
TerryCarter, Southwest .
43
24
110
171 15.1
Jim Niday , Gallipoli s
36 14
86 161
14.3
SEOAL SCORING
NAME , TEAM
.
FG FT PTS (G) AVG.
Randy Fleoples, Wellston
33 10
76
(4)
19.0
Milch Wright, Logap
30 11
11 141 17.8
Mike M t Donald , Jackson
30
10
70 141
17.5
Jim Niday , Gallipolis
24 11
S9 14) 14.a
Tim Duduil, Wa very
23 12
sa 141 14.5
Joe Holland, Waverly
23 12
SB 141 14.5
Mike Sickles, Gallipoli s
22 10
54
14) 13 .5
ArnieChonko, Athens
21 11
53
141 13.3
Todd Ellwood, Alhens
25
3
53 141 13.3
Eddie Howard, Ironton
24
4
5~
141 13.0
SVAC SCORING
NAME, TEAM
FT E'T PTS !GI AVG.
Mark Swain, Hannan Trace
57
19 133 lSI 26.6
Greg James. North Gallia
42 10
94 lSI 18.8
Mike Ca mden , Nor lh Gall ia
34 19
81 151 17.4
Terr y Carter, Sou thwest.
30
17
77
15) 15.4
Tim Spencer. Eastern
24
11
59
141 14.8
Jaye Myers, S. Valley
18
8
44
131 14.7
Fred Logan, North Ga lli a
31 11
73 IS) 14 .6
Mike Harris, Eastern
22 14
sa (41 14.5
Mike Roberts, Southern
28 10
66
15) 13.2
Lloyd Wood, Southwestern
-.........._.___ 28 ' 10
66
IS) 13.2
Wayne Hesson . H. Trace
27 12
66
lSI 13.2
TRI -VALLEY SCORING
NAME, TEAM
FG FT PTS (G) AVG.
Dan Bise, Fed. Hock ing
27 13
67 ( 3) 12.3
Kevin Canter, Nels -York
24 II
loS 131
21.7
Willie Holberl, W. Loca l
23
6
52
131 17.3
Mike May le, Warren Loca l
18 12
48 131 16.0
Charles Preston. Bel pre · ,
21 s
47 131 15.7
(3) 15.0
Charlie Brown, Alexander
17 11
45
John Johnson, Nels- York
17
11
45
Ill 15.0
Max Pitts. Nels-York
14 12
40 131 13.3
Pete Abele , Vinton County
19
1
39 (31 13.0
Mark S ullivan , Nels-York
10
4
24
121 12.0
OVERALL STANDINGS (Asol Dec. 28)
TEAM
W L PCT. PTS OP
Waverly
7 1 .875 479 401
4
1
.BOO 345 2Bl
North Galli£t
Hannan Trace
6
2
.750 522 443
Nel sonville- Yor
5 2 .714 441 367
Logan
5 2 .7 14 .4 15 404
Gallipolis
4 2 .667 341 304 4 2 .661 341 334
Belpre
Federa l Hocking
4 3 .511 441 353
Southwestern
4 3 .571 413 404
4 3 .57 1 473 430
Ironton
Jackson
3 3 .500 342 295
Trimble
3
3
.500 312 304
Alexander
3 4
.429 3al 465
Southern
3 4
.429 334 373
Warren Local
2 3 .400 301 324
Vinton County
3 6 .333 507 562
Miller
2 4 .333 339 411
Meigs
1 4 .250 250 325
. 1 4 .250 240 219
Kyger Creek
. .Athens
2 6 .250 453 47 4
1 6 .143 369 426
Eastern ·
: Point Pleasant
56
59
0 1 .000
0 1 .000
so
78
Wahama
Wellston
0 5 .000 236 340
Symmes Valley
0 6 .000 311 405

Star Supply

Easy Terms!

~ ·~

SEO cage stats .

Choose
a
~hain for
any our~P.

share of top spot
By Uni ted Press lnternalional
Boston Coach Tom Heinsohn
be lieves his Ce ltics finally have
turned the tables on the Buffalo

~~

points while Grant added 25 as
San Diego. The Pacers' George
McGmnis led aU. scorers with
32 points and teammau! Kevil.'
Joyce had ~9.
•
· :":

·'

One reason is that Catfish Hunter, a country boy from Hertfo rd,:-&lt; .C., says deep down he al ways wanted UJ play baseba ll in
New York, especia lly in Yankee Stadium, und when you think of
it, that ~eeling i.sn't uncommon. Mickey Mantle , another coci.ntry
boy, felt the same way .
Another rea son is thal no other city in the world provides the
exposure New York does, especia lly for a professional athlete.
They put one of those navy blue Ya nkee caps on Hunter 's head
fur the phatogra phcrs at that suddenly ca lled news conference in
the dub's"fficeson New Yeitr' s Eve , and the American League 's
2&amp;-yea r-&lt;&gt;ld Cy Young Award wi nner was so tickled with it; he
wore it all the ,way back home.
Catfish Hunter seemed UJ be getting a bigge r kick out of a $5.75
NHL St an d .n gs
cent baseball cap them over the fa ct he tutd ju)lt become a n inBv un.t e d Pre h Int er na t ional
stant millionaire.
0 1\I I S IOn I
He was anxioll!i to get home .a ftcr the conference was ove r, and
w . 1. r. p rs gt ga
PhdCIClPh•a 25 7 5 55 1]9 7-1
· bad to rush for the plmu: to Norfolk, Va. His four attorneys were NYRc1nqcrs
1711 B -12150118
with him along with Clyde Kluttz, the Yankees' specia l assign- Atlonta
16 15 6 JB 10-1 108
t.t 9 37 127 103
ments' man. Kluttz. from Salisbur-y , N.C., h.ad signed Hunter . NY I s lande 0r s!'_..1.11S HfiT
1'
origma lly !O yea rsago while scouting for the A's and helped do it
w . l ! . pt s gf ga
Vancouve r
n 11 S .\9 139 11 2
agHin this time under a set of completly different circumst&lt;wces. Ch•Cilqo
11 16 .t JH 126 10 3
HW1ter, Kluttz and the lawyers were in a relaxed , me1Jow mood S l LOUI S
15 15 6 ) 6 125 129
11 20 5 77 tOO 153
alter making thei r plane . Why not? It wa s New Year's Eve, their Mmn eo;,o ta
work had bee n accomp lished successfu lly Hntl they were all J&lt;ansasCdy 5 '!6 .1 1-1 8J 159
Di viS IOn 3
returning now to their fam ili e~ .
w . 1. t . pt s gf gil
"Tell you what I'll do," one of the attorneys said to another · Los;.\nqcles 20 5 11 5 111 3 66
70 6 11 5 1 162 106
after they buckled on their seat bel ts. '' I'll betcba buck the Mon t re,11
P rlt Sb urqh
17 16 !:1 J2 14 2 138
stewardess recognizes Jim, HOd knows who he is."
Oe tro ot
10 :tO ~ 25 10 3 145
Wilsh.nqton
J 30 4 10 78 197
"Okay, it's~ bet, " the other attorney said .·
Di v is io n 4
The stewardess didn't recognize Catfish Hunter. Didn 't know
w . !. 1 p t s gf ga
7J B 5 53 167 1,2 1
who he was even though he was weanng his Yil nkee cap. She Bu ff alo
Bo s ton
20 10 6 J6 172 116
wasn't a spor ts fan, she said .
Toronto
II 18 7 191 10 1·tl
9 23 7 25 1Q.t 16 1
It was 11 :50 p.m. when the plane landed in Norfolk . The six Ca l ifornia
W ed n es day 's Rcs u i i .L ....
men were standing in front of an auto renta l COWlte r in the air- NY Ranqers 6 Chicag o 2
port, waiting for a car at the stroke of midnight. They wished Cali fornia 3 To r onl o 3
Phdacl e tptlia 2 Vancouve r 0
each other u Happy New Year and the a ttorney who had lost the
Thu n ,fl.ly ' s Gam es.
buck ea rlier made another dollar bet tha t the girl behind the Washn1uton ii \!1'1 NY Islan d e r s
Mon treal ill A tl anta
counter wou ld· recognize Catfish HWlter.
"
MrnrH•sota at P rrr sburqh
Aosron a t Los. Anqe tes
He lost aga in . She didn 't.
Sr Lour s a t Kc1ns.as Ci ty
· " I know one thing," she said, exa mining Kluttz' cred it cmd.
"You're from the New York Yankees."
Clyde Kluttz, who is 57 und once caught fo r the Braves, Gianls,
WHA Sta nd rn g s
By Un it e·d Pr ess I nt ernational
Ca rdina ls, Pirates, Browns and Senators, has been :i close fri end
Ea st
of Hqnter's ever since he signed him the fi rst time . The two men
w . I. 1. pt s. gf 9•1
N f'W Enqlnd
get along well together and so do their f:un ilies.
19 13 I 391/0 l!i
('veland
l3 18 I 27 88 106
··My desire to get him this time wasn't any different than il wa s Cl
CtliC tlCJO
\ 2 20 0 24 11).1 12.:1
when I signed him 10 y ~ars ago for the A's," says Kluttz. " 1 l nd•an,1polis 6 19 1 13 79 158
w es t
wunted him both ,times. He's the kind of person you'd want as a
w . 1. t . pt s gf ga
son," und here Klutltz laug-hs, "especia lly now thc.tt he's got the Hou ~ t o n
?J \ I 0 ~8 159 99
PllOC il lll
t l 13 ] 37 11 7 108
money . Seriously !hough, he's a high-da ss bov. f-ve hurl'led with Mrrlnc
17 15 0 ],) 139 117
'i ol.l
him when he was With Oakland and I was with the Yankees , and
s a, Dr('CJO
15 17 1 3 1 108 117
it didn 't make any difference. If he' d have signed with another Mi~
ll rqan
1 I 22 3 25 !:!9 153
cl ub, it wou ldn 't have changed a thing."
Canadiol n
w. t. 1. pt s g l g a
If you were to wake up Catfish Hunter in the midd le of the mgh t Toronto
20 13 , ~ ~ 150 125
and. :1sk him ex:Jctly how much he got for sigmng with the Quebe c
20 15 0 ~0 1..1 5 123
Yankeees after he was declared c:t free age nt by an arbitrator E d monton ln18 )0 0 36 108 90
'three weeks ago, he couldn't te ll .you. Not to the penny , anyway . W1nnipe~l
17 1.1 I JS 128 101
All he knows is that ltis wife and two kids are taken ca re of, and Vancouver 15 1.1 2 32 97 97
Wedne sday' s Res u lts
he can eat in all the best restauranls lor a long, long time. for life Qu ebec 6 t nd ranapo t is 3
Mi nn esota 6 C l evel and 2
1f he likes .
Edmntn 3 San D iego 2, o l
Although the exact amou nt the,Yankees paid is being guarded
Thur s d ;~y ' s Gam es
more closely tha n the combina tion number to their vault, the lndianupolis oJI Cleveland
Pt,oe , ix a r Vanco uve r
best estimates place the package figure at $3.7 million.
Michiq&lt;~n at H ous ton
Chemica lly speaking, U1e hunwn body is wo• th Jess than three
dollars, even in the face of inflation , and a lot of people.today are
asking is any ballplayer worth almost $4 million' Gabe Paul, the
Yankees' President, answers this way :
" II ull depends on the return . True, it 's a grea t risk, and the
BUILDING SITES
on ly city in the country that would have &lt;my chance to recover
the money we paid is New York . We have 15 partners in our club
and this shows you how much they want to enj oy the thrill of
winning.' '
There's always the possibility that Hunter, a 25-game wiMer
last yea r, could come up with a sore arm . Wha t then?
"That's tough ," says Gabe Paul. " It's part of the game
On College Road
though.''
Will build or sell
&amp;1y Charlie Finley wins his suit. The court could uphold the
separately.
val idity of Uw reserve clause and rule Ca tfish Hunter still
belongs to t h~ Oakland A's . How now ?
Phone 992-7320
"The Jaw oflhe land prevails," P~ul concedes. "We 'd abide by

TH~ MA6A'ZINE. FE.AiUI&lt;E.5
fH E. NW S'fYl-£5· .. WHAf

,,

\

4 .:.. The Daily Se~tirtel, Mid(!leport. Pomeroy.• 0 .. Th.;,dil)', Jaf1 . 2. 1!.175

peace

..

•

...

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

••
•

. PmSBURGH (UPI J - The
PittsbW'gh Steelers spent part
of New Year's Day limberillg
themselves up..,.both : mentally
and physically--for their Super
Bowl clash with the Minnesota
Vikings.
.
The running on the fielcPat
Three Rivers Stadium was light
and so was the banter inside
the locker room as the learn
held its first meeting since
· defeating Oakland Sunday for
the AFC Iitle.
'

·. · .
.
The atmosphere was e.xaetly
the way Coach Chuck Noll
wanls it for the te&lt;!m's first
championship game in its
history ,
"He (Noll) told us to keep
loose and enjoy all of this, "
said wide receiver Ron ghank·
Un. " He said we shouldn 't let it
. bother. us.''
.Steelers o"•ner and president
Art Rooney pai;sed out some of
his favorite cigars to the
players as they joked their' way
through a photogra phy s~ss ion..

to Southwestern.
At' North GaWa, Coaeh Jim
Foster's Pirates wiU seek their
fifth win in six star.ts against
.the Bobcats of Kyger Creek.
Coach . Richard Hamilton's
surpr1s111g Southwestern
Highlanders will go after_their
fourth win of the year at ·
Wahama . Th~ Highlanders
won only. three' 'g ames ~11 last
season .
Southern 's Tornados own a 34 record overall and 2-3 slate in
the SVAC.
First place will be at stake
Friday night when the SV AC
league leading North Gallia
reserves battle Kyger Creek's
reserves.
Coach
Mike
Mulford's Little Bucs are 4-1
while Coach Carter's and John
Wickline's Bobkittens are 2-1.
.Mark Swain, 6-0 senior:guard
lor the Hannan Trace Wildcats,
is the area's top scorer with 206
points a 25.8 game average.
. Against ·league competition;
Swain is averaging 26.6 points·
per outing.
Greg James; 6-4 jWJior guard
for North Galliil, is second in
P.oint production 'with an 18.8
average. The Pirates' Mike
eaiDden, 6.J serilor center, is
third with a 17.4 average.
· Offensively, North Gallia is
the top team in the area with a
69 point average In five games.

u.~• ..NO. 1 ;

SOLID

OHIO GROWN

GREEN

p·otATOES

Cabbage
1/
.

/2
LB.·

/
j .\

'·

'

''

.

�.,
,.

.

.

.

"

.

New year 'b rings '
.

.

.

.

....._

tr~:=:::;~:m!;!MiM!!!l::;:t::;::t:::::::::::!:!;!:'tm::(~!t!!!!!!!!llil

I

~n the jce

By U nil ~d Pl"f'ss lntr rnatimlll l mher 50, un d-prri ou gua b for
TempQrarily, at least. il 11t'w !ht• Hangers.
!':l·~ ls 3, L-.·afs :1:
yrar has created a murr
Guid s hy .John Stcwc1r t ,·md
nmicab le chemical reaction
among players from the Pfliln- n: 1ve J-Irn· hkosy shot c~!li £o rn irt
dclp hia Flyers and Vancouvt•r t~f to a 2-0 Jrad in the first
period. only IO h~J\'(' B&lt;Jr jc
Can ucks.
ThE' two cl ubs have staged .~ lming ~~nd InJ.(L' .J·Icmuuarsome o( the wildest brawls of str om bring the !A..'(J fs t.· vcn
re ce nt hockey vin tage.
brfoi·r 1he end of tlw sess.ion.
The Flyers , were back in Char lie Simmer of Califor.nia
Vancouver Wednesday nig ht for and Errol Th ompson of Toronto
a battle between divisiona l then e xrh~\iigrd serond-peri od
lea ders, and this tinie, exeept guals
for a second-peri od fight . Oilt•rs 3, Mariners-Z:
Husly Pat emn~de Sc::orcd his
be tween Dave Schultz and
C'anu rk rookie Harold Shepsts. 1:11 11 goa l at 5 , 26 uf the
they eonce ntrated their la!enl"i D\'l: r tiJilt.' period to give Edmonon hockey, coming away with a tun its \'iclory. &amp;i n Dit&gt;gtl hC:td
2-0 victory .
forced thP l' xl ra scss inn on · a
Ber nie Paren t stopped 'l4 p&lt;Jwer pl;ty goa l· by Ge nt'
shots to register his seventh P('iJ('t"IS h in thc. lhjf"d period.
shut out· of !he season, but the
."''orditJucs 6, Hac·en; :l:
Flyer:; couldn't c onnec t aga inst
Hcjean Houle and Real
Vari C'O UVer netmi ndcr Ga ry Cloutier scored two goi.l ls cw.:h
Smith unti l the fin a l peri od for Quebec a nd M&lt;Jrc Turdi f
when Bill Barber scored on i l ttnd Robert GuimJ on tCJ il ied one
311-foot drive. Ross Lonsberry each. The victory enabled the
then provided the cushion Ill to Nordiqucs to climb to within
an emp_ty net with 31 seconds one point of id le" Toronto for
remaining.
first place in Uw Canadi cm
The victory enabled Phila- Divisi on.
,
delphia to main l&lt;lin its 13-poi nt
Sa ints 6. t:rusadt:rs 2:
ndvantage in Division 1 over
Ted Han_lpsou's second goal
the New York Rangers , who of the game at 16 :5:1 of the
crushe? Chicago, .6-2./ Van- second period proved to be tho
rouver s marg: m over the Black winner as Mjrmesot..1 won for
Hawks remained at II points in the seven th time in il"i las t
Division 2. ·
eig ht outings. Cleve la nd now
In the only other NHL action, has los t four games in a row.
the California Seals and Toronto Maple l..eafs skated to a 3-:l
tic. In the World Hockey A GOOD CAU..
Ass ocia ti on,
Edmonton
LOS ANGELES (UPI ) _
3
2
squeezed by Sall Diego, • · in Southern Ca lif ornia Coa ch
ove rtime, Qu ebec bea t In· John McKay sa id after his
dianapolis . 6-J, and Minnesota
team 's R,ose Bowl will Wedbeat Cleveland , 6_2.
nesda y that his Trojans have
"as good a call as anybody" to
Rangers 6, Hawks 2:
The Ra ngers broke clea r
the natio nal champion ship.
fr om a 1-1 tie with a fo ur-g011 l
"We have as good a call to it
011tburst in the second period, as anybody," said an elated
highlighted by Rod Gilbert's McKav. " We bea l the teams
201hgoal. 11 was the lOth time that ~at the teams uu1t beat
1n tus career . that Gilbert has . the teams. we bNtt Ohio Sta te
re11 ched 20 goa ls and the New whobe:~ t\l.hircJ-n 111 k ecliM ichi. Yh or~ wing admitted .later tbu t gem alld Wl ' beat Notre Dame,
e \\ us unaware of thts feat.
who ·beat AlalmrncJ."
Rick Middleton, Ron Greschn" 1 tell vou 1 know who I'm
cr and Jean Ratelle scored the going to ~otr for. ' '

I

Sport Parade
~~~Mi;~~NE~:t~~MAN

i!!!!il

!ll

NEW YOI(K 1UPII - Four clubs offered Catfish HWlter more
money than the New York Y cmkee s did .
Origi nally,. he . twli st1 id he'll go where the ~ m oney~-··\vas,
pre ~ wnably mean ing he'r! si~n with the highest bidder, but th.:!l:
wasn't the case a t all.
J)()llar lor dolbr, the San Diego Pad res qnd Kansas City
Roy als both bid higher than the Y ~m k ees d..id ;ond ~odid two' other
cl ubs who managt.'&lt;-1to keep-their identi ties concealed, yet when it
ca rne right down to the crunch, the time to ma ke hi s choice,
C&lt;1 tfish Hunter chose the cl ub that was actually the fif th top
bidde r ·

.

.... Why'?

c ·e ltics move iDto

COl-LE.&amp;E. BOYS Wll-lWf-AI&lt; ...

.

'

'

Br;tves.

Boston won its tlurd road
ga me of the last four Wednesday mg ht , 108-94 , over the
Port la nd Tra il Blaze rs, to
move into a tie with Buffalo for
the lea d in the Atlantic Di;iston
of the National Basketball· As·
sociation. Both teams now
have 22-!3 recor&lt;J,s .
Again it was the likes of John
Havlice k, Da ve Cowens, and

Pro Standings

a

JoJo White who oiled the Celtic ·
fa st break and hoWlded Portland into turnovers:
" We 've won three of our last
four on the road and played
pretty well ," Heinsohn sa id.
" Now Buffalo's getting hurt
ancj we' re in pretty good
shape .
Havlicek scored. 31 poinls
and grabbed eight rebounds
while Co wens, who wa s
plagued by ; ome early foul's,
scored 17 while hauling in 14 ·
rebounds. Don Chaney added
17 poilits and White bad 11
assists in helping spark the
fas tbrea k. ·
Portla nd
corrunitted 30
turnovers, 15 coming on Celtic
stea ls.
Portland suffered its fo W'th
consec utive loss, and it was the
l~th straight game missed by
rookie cen ter Bill Wa lton ,
be ing treated for a bone spur in
Los Angeles by an acupWlC·
turist. ,
After a 29-28 lead in the first
quarter, the Celt ics took a 57-48
halft ime lead. They kept the
margin at nine after three
quarters, and Portland was
Wla ble to overcome the Celtics
in the fin al period. Sidney
Wicks led Portland with 23
points while Geoff Petr ie
scored ·20.
In other NBA games Wed·
nesday night, Atlanta topped
Kansas City-Oma ha , 102-97,
and Seattle edged Washington,
123'118, in overtime. San Diego
beat Indiana. 11&amp;-100, in the ·
only ABA ga me.
Hawks 102, Kings 97:
Bob Kauffman led a fourthquarter rally tha[Jifted Atlanta
over KC-Omaha. Kauffman
poured in seven of his 13 poinls
in the final quarter. Rookie
0

forward John Drew, who led
At lanta with 22 poinls, gave the
Hawks their first lead \Nith
eight minutes to play on a pair
of free throws for an 87-&amp;i edge.
Nate Archibald was high man
for the Kings with 30 points and
Jinuny Walker had 24.
Sooies 123, Bullets 108: .
Fred Brown scored for six of
his 30 points in overtime and hit
Seattle's final fou r points as the
Sonics defeated Washington. A
jumpshot by Brown with 2:35
remaining gave Seattle a 117·
115 lead' it never relinquished .
Spencer Haywoo&lt;t" had a gamehigh 32 points for Seattle. Elvin
Hayes led the Bullets with 29
points while Mike Ri.ordan
added 25.
Q's 118, Paeers 100:
Bo Lamar and Travis Grant
combined for 52 points and Lee
Davis came off the bench in the
fin al period to score ,12 points.
as San Diego bea r Indiana.
Lamar led the Q's with 27

RACINE, OHIO

ZENITH

.,

· COLOR TV

eBLACK &amp;

WHITE TV
•STEREO

MASON FURNilURE
HERMAN GRATE
MASON, W. VA.·

Free Delivery!

773-5592

SEOAL STANDINGS
{Varsity)
Team'
W L . POP
· Waverly
4 0 247 210
3 1 275 232
, 'lr9nton
Gallipolis
3_ 1 232 202
Logan
2 2 223 235
_Jackson
2 2 206 211
Meigs
1 3 244 269
·}It hens
1 32192 1a
. Wellston
0 4 196 285
(Reserve)
W L POP
.Jeam
·Athens
3 1 195 146
Logan
3 1 172 158
Gallipoli s
3 1 167 153
Meigs
3 1 150 BS
_Waverly
2 2 124 133
Jackson
1 3 181 195
Ironton
1 3 135 161
Wellslon
0 4 122 21 5
SVAC STANDINGS
(Varsity)
Team
W L POP
H, Trace
5 o 344 253
,North Gallia
4 1 345 282
Southwestern
3 2 275 2a4.
Southern
2 3 241 271
Eastern
1 3 223 245
S. Valley
0 3 155 225
Kyger Creek
o 3 151 174
1Reserve&gt;
Team
W L POP
Norlh Gallia
4 1 171 140
S. Valley
2 1 113 98
Kyger Creek
2 1 102 86
t·l. Trace
3 2 159 159
Southern
2 3 182 181
Southwestern
2 3 138 165
Eastern
0 4 115 147
TRI -VALLEY
!Varsity I
(Team
W L POP
3 ··o 213 150
Nels-York
Vinton Co.
2 1 169 199

NEW YEAR'S

CARL.O AD SALE!
NO. 1 PRE-CUT

STUDS

92eeach

CHOICE BUILDING
SITES FOR SAL£
IN SYRACUSE

-iwAJ:iJ&lt;ro
l.()VI~ T. IM56011 ,

34l NQilWAU&lt; AVG,
BUFFAL-O,
N.Y.

.

,.

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
.

'

MATERIALS CO.

773-5554

MASON, W.VA.

5
8 ,
7.
5¢
.Salad Dress1•ng .. ., ..........
·
.
g·
g
¢
Fudge Brownie ·M ix ..~!.~ . ·
~~ 6'. ·.
g
¢
Vel •• .-•••••• ~ ••••••••••.•••••••••••
rJetti Pen &amp;Beet
lOlfz oz.
Barbecue ...•..•••...••.• ~~...

We

G~d~

Monday Thru Friday

·

Aerosol-'Spray CiP

. 9:00 to 7:00
Saturday 9 to 9

Hb.

WINNERS IN OUR•
CHRISTMAS GIVEAWAY

and

HAM SALAD

Snack

and
~rl'r SPREAD

,·

FLORIDA FRESH

21 oz.

Stuff

. lb.

.

5

lb . .

79"

. · .

Ends and
•

lb.

iALT

longhorn

Chunk

PORK

~heese

Bologna

(CHUNK)

Pieces

BANANAS

7 $1

6 lb.
box

00

' lb.

89'

lb,

.

''
~"

\ .

'

-~'"

..

..

:--; L.

·,

!.

'

• limbers up·
-P' Itt

$129

I

·· .

GOlDEN RIPE

GRAPEFRUtT

HAZEL CARNAHAM
.DOROTHY GREATHOUSE
; LINDA SPENCER· ~- ~

So ut hwestern

404

Logan

404 .Pl 57.7

{7)

59 ·~ I)

57.7
59 .0

414 (B ) 59.3
42~ 171 60.9

Vinton Co.
Warren Local
Meigs

562 (9 1 62.4
324 (ll 64.8
325 (Sl 6.1.0

430

(7)

61..4

Alexa nder

465

( 7)

66. 4

.'

GROUND
;BEEF

405 (61. 67 .5
340 (S I 68.0
411 (61 68.5
78 I II 78.0
THURSDAY
Buffalo : W. Va. at Wahama
FRIDAY
SEOAL
Wellston at Athens
Ga ll ipolis at Waverly

. .'

~,

..

.

·

.J

··'/

I

..

$129

lb.
,,

•

65'

'

S. Valley
Well ston
Miller
Wahama

ARMOUR'S
.
. I

SLICED·
BACON-'.

12 oz.
LB.

lrontoh at Jackson
Meigs at Loga n

TRI-.VALLEY
Nelsonville· York at Alexander
Belpre at VInton County
Warren Local at Federal
Hocki ng

RATH'S
BLACK HAWK

SVAC

Eastern at Hannan Trace
Kyger Creek at North Ga llia
Southern at Symmes Valley

Others
Southwestern at Wahama
Point Pleasant at Parkersburg

WIENERS·oz.
SAUSAGE

Soulh
Tri mble at Waterford

SATURDAY
Ale xander at Oak Hill
Nelsonville-York at Miller

.

Warren Local at Williamstown

Buffalo, W. Va. at Kyger Creek
Ironton St. Joe at Southwestern

TUESOAYIJan.7l
SEOAL
Athens at Meigs

Ironton at Ga llipol is
Jackson' at Waverly

OR .

12

1 lB. ROll

Well ston at Logan

Others
Williamstown at Belpre
Tr imble at Hannan Trace
Southern at Waterford
Point Pleasant at Hurricane

WEDNESDAY (Jan. 81
Wahama at Hannan (1 p.m.)
SEOAL STATISTICS
!As of Dec. 13)
Field Goal Percentige
Team
FGM-A Pel.
94-198 .475
Athens
Waverly
93-201 , .463
Gallipolis
95-207 .459
Ironton
118-260 .454
Logan
93-206 .451
Jackson
90-248 .363
Meigs
93-258 .360
Wellston
74-207 .357
Free Throw Percentage
Team
FTM-A Pet.
Waverly
61 -81 .753
Meig s
58-81 .716
Logan
37-56 .661
Jackson
36-SS .655
Gal li polis
52-89 .584
Well ston
47·86 .547
Athens
31 -69 .449
Ironton
39.88 .443

PKG.

BLUE BONNET

KRAFT

ORANGE
JUICE

I

No. G Avg.
144 . 4 36.0

Ironton

141 4 35 .3

Wellston
Ga llipolis
Meigs

135 4 33.8
130. 4 32 .5
124 4 3 1.0

Jackson

120 4 30.0

4 STICKS

119 4 29.8
119 4 29.8
Personal Fouls
No. G Avg.
Team
58 4 14.5
Jackson
63 4 15.8
Logan
66 5 16.5
Athens
Waverly
6a 4 17.0
74 '4 18.5
Wellslon
61.4
81
4 20.3
Ga
llipolis.
59.9
82 4 20.5
Ironton
59.3
Meig s
84 4 21.0
59.0
Ind. Leaders
58.0 .
Field Goal Percenage
58.0
57.8
~:~~~fi~:~~
F~~j: ~S.i ~
57.8
Chonko. A
21 -37 .568
57.0
Folden,
G
18-32 .563
56.6
McDonald, J
30-57 .526
56.5
56.3 . .Fitzpatrick, t . 21-40 n.S2S
Free Throw-Perc en age
55 . 3

•

Logan
Waver ly

Name1 Team ,.

52.7

FTM-A

McDonald, J
Holland, Wav
Duduit, Wa v
Pl ei fer, Wav
Kemper, L

¥z gal.
-jug

47.7

47 .2
Avg.
49.2
50. 1
50.4
so 7

PEAK

,.

•.

Pet:

10,12 ·.833
12.15 .a09 :
·i'2-1S .800
- 23-19 .793
· 1.3-17- . ~765
·
R~QIJ njls .Name, Team ··
No; G A.vg:
Cho~kc), ~ ., .
49 : ~ 12.3
45 4 · 11.3
Fitzpalrick, I ·
Wright ,,L
JB 4. 9·.5
Va lentine, G
37 4 9.3
FaulkneJ:. A
37 4 9.3

52.0
51.8
50.0
48.0

'

-

•

COLUMBIA

Rebounds

' In many respects, the second for 'IVhat they hope will · be a
half of the Southern Valley second half surge. All" three
Athletic Conference cage · teams have taken their Jiunps
early this year.
,
season begins Friday night.
Kyger
Creek
is
1-4
ov~rall
League . leading Hannan
Trace will put its ·perfect while Symmes Valley, picked
league mark on tlie line against to finish in a first place tie with
the Eastern Eagles. Coach North Gallia . for the SVAC
Paul Dillon's Wildcats own an championship, has not won a
earlier win over Coach Bill game. The Vikings are 0:6
Phllllps' Eagles. Eastern goes overall a,nd 11-3 in the SYAC.
In oth er action Friday;
into the contest· with a 1~
record and l.J mark in the Kyger Creek travels to second
SVAC. Hannan Trace has a 6-2 place North Gallia; SouthoVerall slate and iHI record in western is a Wahama and
Southern visits Syinmes
the league.
Coaches Philllps of Eastern-, Valley. Saturday night, Bulfaio
Keith Car't er of Kyger ,Creek . of Putnam CoWJty is , at Kyger
imd Ferrell Hesson of Symmes Cr~ek and Ironton St. Joe goes
'
Valley will prepare their teams

85t,

23 oz

pkg.

Lyso I o·: . 1s1n
. • f
can $}19 Bacon
ectant........... ·,

ClOSED ~SUNDAYS

· Waverly
479 IBI
Logan
415 171
Southwestern
41 3 (71
Meigs
290 (51
Pl. Pleasant
58 I11
Belpre
347 (61
·Gallipol is
347 (61
Ja ckson
342 ' 161
Athens
453 (a )
Miller
339 161
Vinton Co.
507 (9)
Al exa nder
3a7 171
Easlern
369 (7)
Trimble
312 16)
S. Val ley
311 16)
Wahama
SO (1)
Kyger Creek
240 (5)
So uthe rn
334 (7).
Wellston
236 (5)
DEFEN·SIVELY
Team .
Pts ( Gl
Jackson
295 (6 )
Waver ly'
.401 (B )
Fed. Hock ing
353 ti l
Gallipolis
304 (6 )

'

'PIN-TO BEANS
BAG

'

.

'

I.

: '.. .

LU"CH MEATS
Sandwich

Detergent For Dishes

Prices Effective Jan; 2-8

(5)

Kyger Creek
Norlh Gall ia

Team
Athens

Team
W L P QP
Alexander
3 0 150 119
Nel s-York
2 1 144 106
Belpre
2 1 11 2 109
Vinton Co.
1 2 120 137
Warren Loca l
1 2 111 111
Fed. Hock ing
0 3 92 147
OFFENSIVELY
Team
Pis IGI Avg.
North Ga llia
345 lSI 69.0
Ironton
473 (7) 67.6
H..Trace
522 (B) 65.3
Fed. Hocking
441 171 63.0
Nels -York
441 (71 63.0
307

{8 ) 55 .4

:i34 ' (6) 55 .7
279 IS l 55.8
2a2 (S ) 56.4

Ironton

(Reserves)

Warren Local

4d

l!e ipr~ .

Athens
Easlern

2 201 210

.

SUPERIORS

,ar

I

Accept Fed. food Stamps

¢

~·

lestee

Right Rese~ to Limit Quantities

1 2 177 177
1 2 156 11a

304 (6 ) 50.7
361 (71 52.4
37~ •(71 53.3 -

·Wildcats host EB;gles · in
S VA C cage headlin.
e
r
·.

Thanks To All . ..
BECAUSEWE ,VAiu'i~ouil=-cusiOMERSHappy New Year To All

Duncan Hines

I

Fed. Hocki ng
Alexander

• •

Pt . Pieasant

2 1 165 167

Warren Loca l

I .

'

'

R·

5th and PEARLSTS., RACINE
'The Store With A Heart
You, WE Ll KE"

Be lpre

"

I

FRESH •

Trimble
Nels.York
So uthern
H. Trace

, 1974-75 HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL
· (Includes games lhrough Dec . 28)
NAME TEAM
OVERAL LSCORI~G
• ·
·
FG FT PTS tGI AVG .
Mark ~wai n , Hannan Trace
99 · 21! 206 (B) 25 .8
Dan B1se, Fed. Hockin g
59&lt;" 38 156 ( I) 22 .3
Kevin Canter, Nel s-York
52 41 145 Jl) 20.7
Mike Mc Donald , Ja_£kson
47
20
114 (6)
19 .0
G\eg James, .North't;allia
42 10
94 (5 1 18.8
M1ke Camden, N. Gall ia
34 19
a7 (5 ) 17'.4
Jim Tatterson, Pt. Pleas .
7
3
11 ·I I I
17.0
Charlie Brown , Alexander
4)
30 116 (71
16.6
,l_l m Niday, Gallipo lis
36 "
.a6 (61 14.3
TerryCarter, Southwest .
43
24
110
171 15.1
Jim Niday , Gallipoli s
36 14
86 161
14.3
SEOAL SCORING
NAME , TEAM
.
FG FT PTS (G) AVG.
Randy Fleoples, Wellston
33 10
76
(4)
19.0
Milch Wright, Logap
30 11
11 141 17.8
Mike M t Donald , Jackson
30
10
70 141
17.5
Jim Niday , Gallipolis
24 11
S9 14) 14.a
Tim Duduil, Wa very
23 12
sa 141 14.5
Joe Holland, Waverly
23 12
SB 141 14.5
Mike Sickles, Gallipoli s
22 10
54
14) 13 .5
ArnieChonko, Athens
21 11
53
141 13.3
Todd Ellwood, Alhens
25
3
53 141 13.3
Eddie Howard, Ironton
24
4
5~
141 13.0
SVAC SCORING
NAME, TEAM
FT E'T PTS !GI AVG.
Mark Swain, Hannan Trace
57
19 133 lSI 26.6
Greg James. North Gallia
42 10
94 lSI 18.8
Mike Ca mden , Nor lh Gall ia
34 19
81 151 17.4
Terr y Carter, Sou thwest.
30
17
77
15) 15.4
Tim Spencer. Eastern
24
11
59
141 14.8
Jaye Myers, S. Valley
18
8
44
131 14.7
Fred Logan, North Ga lli a
31 11
73 IS) 14 .6
Mike Harris, Eastern
22 14
sa (41 14.5
Mike Roberts, Southern
28 10
66
15) 13.2
Lloyd Wood, Southwestern
-.........._.___ 28 ' 10
66
IS) 13.2
Wayne Hesson . H. Trace
27 12
66
lSI 13.2
TRI -VALLEY SCORING
NAME, TEAM
FG FT PTS (G) AVG.
Dan Bise, Fed. Hock ing
27 13
67 ( 3) 12.3
Kevin Canter, Nels -York
24 II
loS 131
21.7
Willie Holberl, W. Loca l
23
6
52
131 17.3
Mike May le, Warren Loca l
18 12
48 131 16.0
Charles Preston. Bel pre · ,
21 s
47 131 15.7
(3) 15.0
Charlie Brown, Alexander
17 11
45
John Johnson, Nels- York
17
11
45
Ill 15.0
Max Pitts. Nels-York
14 12
40 131 13.3
Pete Abele , Vinton County
19
1
39 (31 13.0
Mark S ullivan , Nels-York
10
4
24
121 12.0
OVERALL STANDINGS (Asol Dec. 28)
TEAM
W L PCT. PTS OP
Waverly
7 1 .875 479 401
4
1
.BOO 345 2Bl
North Galli£t
Hannan Trace
6
2
.750 522 443
Nel sonville- Yor
5 2 .714 441 367
Logan
5 2 .7 14 .4 15 404
Gallipolis
4 2 .667 341 304 4 2 .661 341 334
Belpre
Federa l Hocking
4 3 .511 441 353
Southwestern
4 3 .571 413 404
4 3 .57 1 473 430
Ironton
Jackson
3 3 .500 342 295
Trimble
3
3
.500 312 304
Alexander
3 4
.429 3al 465
Southern
3 4
.429 334 373
Warren Local
2 3 .400 301 324
Vinton County
3 6 .333 507 562
Miller
2 4 .333 339 411
Meigs
1 4 .250 250 325
. 1 4 .250 240 219
Kyger Creek
. .Athens
2 6 .250 453 47 4
1 6 .143 369 426
Eastern ·
: Point Pleasant
56
59
0 1 .000
0 1 .000
so
78
Wahama
Wellston
0 5 .000 236 340
Symmes Valley
0 6 .000 311 405

Star Supply

Easy Terms!

~ ·~

SEO cage stats .

Choose
a
~hain for
any our~P.

share of top spot
By Uni ted Press lnternalional
Boston Coach Tom Heinsohn
be lieves his Ce ltics finally have
turned the tables on the Buffalo

~~

points while Grant added 25 as
San Diego. The Pacers' George
McGmnis led aU. scorers with
32 points and teammau! Kevil.'
Joyce had ~9.
•
· :":

·'

One reason is that Catfish Hunter, a country boy from Hertfo rd,:-&lt; .C., says deep down he al ways wanted UJ play baseba ll in
New York, especia lly in Yankee Stadium, und when you think of
it, that ~eeling i.sn't uncommon. Mickey Mantle , another coci.ntry
boy, felt the same way .
Another rea son is thal no other city in the world provides the
exposure New York does, especia lly for a professional athlete.
They put one of those navy blue Ya nkee caps on Hunter 's head
fur the phatogra phcrs at that suddenly ca lled news conference in
the dub's"fficeson New Yeitr' s Eve , and the American League 's
2&amp;-yea r-&lt;&gt;ld Cy Young Award wi nner was so tickled with it; he
wore it all the ,way back home.
Catfish Hunter seemed UJ be getting a bigge r kick out of a $5.75
NHL St an d .n gs
cent baseball cap them over the fa ct he tutd ju)lt become a n inBv un.t e d Pre h Int er na t ional
stant millionaire.
0 1\I I S IOn I
He was anxioll!i to get home .a ftcr the conference was ove r, and
w . 1. r. p rs gt ga
PhdCIClPh•a 25 7 5 55 1]9 7-1
· bad to rush for the plmu: to Norfolk, Va. His four attorneys were NYRc1nqcrs
1711 B -12150118
with him along with Clyde Kluttz, the Yankees' specia l assign- Atlonta
16 15 6 JB 10-1 108
t.t 9 37 127 103
ments' man. Kluttz. from Salisbur-y , N.C., h.ad signed Hunter . NY I s lande 0r s!'_..1.11S HfiT
1'
origma lly !O yea rsago while scouting for the A's and helped do it
w . l ! . pt s gf ga
Vancouve r
n 11 S .\9 139 11 2
agHin this time under a set of completly different circumst&lt;wces. Ch•Cilqo
11 16 .t JH 126 10 3
HW1ter, Kluttz and the lawyers were in a relaxed , me1Jow mood S l LOUI S
15 15 6 ) 6 125 129
11 20 5 77 tOO 153
alter making thei r plane . Why not? It wa s New Year's Eve, their Mmn eo;,o ta
work had bee n accomp lished successfu lly Hntl they were all J&lt;ansasCdy 5 '!6 .1 1-1 8J 159
Di viS IOn 3
returning now to their fam ili e~ .
w . 1. t . pt s gf gil
"Tell you what I'll do," one of the attorneys said to another · Los;.\nqcles 20 5 11 5 111 3 66
70 6 11 5 1 162 106
after they buckled on their seat bel ts. '' I'll betcba buck the Mon t re,11
P rlt Sb urqh
17 16 !:1 J2 14 2 138
stewardess recognizes Jim, HOd knows who he is."
Oe tro ot
10 :tO ~ 25 10 3 145
Wilsh.nqton
J 30 4 10 78 197
"Okay, it's~ bet, " the other attorney said .·
Di v is io n 4
The stewardess didn't recognize Catfish Hunter. Didn 't know
w . !. 1 p t s gf ga
7J B 5 53 167 1,2 1
who he was even though he was weanng his Yil nkee cap. She Bu ff alo
Bo s ton
20 10 6 J6 172 116
wasn't a spor ts fan, she said .
Toronto
II 18 7 191 10 1·tl
9 23 7 25 1Q.t 16 1
It was 11 :50 p.m. when the plane landed in Norfolk . The six Ca l ifornia
W ed n es day 's Rcs u i i .L ....
men were standing in front of an auto renta l COWlte r in the air- NY Ranqers 6 Chicag o 2
port, waiting for a car at the stroke of midnight. They wished Cali fornia 3 To r onl o 3
Phdacl e tptlia 2 Vancouve r 0
each other u Happy New Year and the a ttorney who had lost the
Thu n ,fl.ly ' s Gam es.
buck ea rlier made another dollar bet tha t the girl behind the Washn1uton ii \!1'1 NY Islan d e r s
Mon treal ill A tl anta
counter wou ld· recognize Catfish HWlter.
"
MrnrH•sota at P rrr sburqh
Aosron a t Los. Anqe tes
He lost aga in . She didn 't.
Sr Lour s a t Kc1ns.as Ci ty
· " I know one thing," she said, exa mining Kluttz' cred it cmd.
"You're from the New York Yankees."
Clyde Kluttz, who is 57 und once caught fo r the Braves, Gianls,
WHA Sta nd rn g s
By Un it e·d Pr ess I nt ernational
Ca rdina ls, Pirates, Browns and Senators, has been :i close fri end
Ea st
of Hqnter's ever since he signed him the fi rst time . The two men
w . I. 1. pt s. gf 9•1
N f'W Enqlnd
get along well together and so do their f:un ilies.
19 13 I 391/0 l!i
('veland
l3 18 I 27 88 106
··My desire to get him this time wasn't any different than il wa s Cl
CtliC tlCJO
\ 2 20 0 24 11).1 12.:1
when I signed him 10 y ~ars ago for the A's," says Kluttz. " 1 l nd•an,1polis 6 19 1 13 79 158
w es t
wunted him both ,times. He's the kind of person you'd want as a
w . 1. t . pt s gf ga
son," und here Klutltz laug-hs, "especia lly now thc.tt he's got the Hou ~ t o n
?J \ I 0 ~8 159 99
PllOC il lll
t l 13 ] 37 11 7 108
money . Seriously !hough, he's a high-da ss bov. f-ve hurl'led with Mrrlnc
17 15 0 ],) 139 117
'i ol.l
him when he was With Oakland and I was with the Yankees , and
s a, Dr('CJO
15 17 1 3 1 108 117
it didn 't make any difference. If he' d have signed with another Mi~
ll rqan
1 I 22 3 25 !:!9 153
cl ub, it wou ldn 't have changed a thing."
Canadiol n
w. t. 1. pt s g l g a
If you were to wake up Catfish Hunter in the midd le of the mgh t Toronto
20 13 , ~ ~ 150 125
and. :1sk him ex:Jctly how much he got for sigmng with the Quebe c
20 15 0 ~0 1..1 5 123
Yankeees after he was declared c:t free age nt by an arbitrator E d monton ln18 )0 0 36 108 90
'three weeks ago, he couldn't te ll .you. Not to the penny , anyway . W1nnipe~l
17 1.1 I JS 128 101
All he knows is that ltis wife and two kids are taken ca re of, and Vancouver 15 1.1 2 32 97 97
Wedne sday' s Res u lts
he can eat in all the best restauranls lor a long, long time. for life Qu ebec 6 t nd ranapo t is 3
Mi nn esota 6 C l evel and 2
1f he likes .
Edmntn 3 San D iego 2, o l
Although the exact amou nt the,Yankees paid is being guarded
Thur s d ;~y ' s Gam es
more closely tha n the combina tion number to their vault, the lndianupolis oJI Cleveland
Pt,oe , ix a r Vanco uve r
best estimates place the package figure at $3.7 million.
Michiq&lt;~n at H ous ton
Chemica lly speaking, U1e hunwn body is wo• th Jess than three
dollars, even in the face of inflation , and a lot of people.today are
asking is any ballplayer worth almost $4 million' Gabe Paul, the
Yankees' President, answers this way :
" II ull depends on the return . True, it 's a grea t risk, and the
BUILDING SITES
on ly city in the country that would have &lt;my chance to recover
the money we paid is New York . We have 15 partners in our club
and this shows you how much they want to enj oy the thrill of
winning.' '
There's always the possibility that Hunter, a 25-game wiMer
last yea r, could come up with a sore arm . Wha t then?
"That's tough ," says Gabe Paul. " It's part of the game
On College Road
though.''
Will build or sell
&amp;1y Charlie Finley wins his suit. The court could uphold the
separately.
val idity of Uw reserve clause and rule Ca tfish Hunter still
belongs to t h~ Oakland A's . How now ?
Phone 992-7320
"The Jaw oflhe land prevails," P~ul concedes. "We 'd abide by

TH~ MA6A'ZINE. FE.AiUI&lt;E.5
fH E. NW S'fYl-£5· .. WHAf

,,

\

4 .:.. The Daily Se~tirtel, Mid(!leport. Pomeroy.• 0 .. Th.;,dil)', Jaf1 . 2. 1!.175

peace

..

•

...

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

••
•

. PmSBURGH (UPI J - The
PittsbW'gh Steelers spent part
of New Year's Day limberillg
themselves up..,.both : mentally
and physically--for their Super
Bowl clash with the Minnesota
Vikings.
.
The running on the fielcPat
Three Rivers Stadium was light
and so was the banter inside
the locker room as the learn
held its first meeting since
· defeating Oakland Sunday for
the AFC Iitle.
'

·. · .
.
The atmosphere was e.xaetly
the way Coach Chuck Noll
wanls it for the te&lt;!m's first
championship game in its
history ,
"He (Noll) told us to keep
loose and enjoy all of this, "
said wide receiver Ron ghank·
Un. " He said we shouldn 't let it
. bother. us.''
.Steelers o"•ner and president
Art Rooney pai;sed out some of
his favorite cigars to the
players as they joked their' way
through a photogra phy s~ss ion..

to Southwestern.
At' North GaWa, Coaeh Jim
Foster's Pirates wiU seek their
fifth win in six star.ts against
.the Bobcats of Kyger Creek.
Coach . Richard Hamilton's
surpr1s111g Southwestern
Highlanders will go after_their
fourth win of the year at ·
Wahama . Th~ Highlanders
won only. three' 'g ames ~11 last
season .
Southern 's Tornados own a 34 record overall and 2-3 slate in
the SVAC.
First place will be at stake
Friday night when the SV AC
league leading North Gallia
reserves battle Kyger Creek's
reserves.
Coach
Mike
Mulford's Little Bucs are 4-1
while Coach Carter's and John
Wickline's Bobkittens are 2-1.
.Mark Swain, 6-0 senior:guard
lor the Hannan Trace Wildcats,
is the area's top scorer with 206
points a 25.8 game average.
. Against ·league competition;
Swain is averaging 26.6 points·
per outing.
Greg James; 6-4 jWJior guard
for North Galliil, is second in
P.oint production 'with an 18.8
average. The Pirates' Mike
eaiDden, 6.J serilor center, is
third with a 17.4 average.
· Offensively, North Gallia is
the top team in the area with a
69 point average In five games.

u.~• ..NO. 1 ;

SOLID

OHIO GROWN

GREEN

p·otATOES

Cabbage
1/
.

/2
LB.·

/
j .\

'·

'

''

.

�1.-

•

~~ . 1!175
. 6-:- The Daily ~ntine l ,_Middli.' JXlft w Pomer o y , 0., T hursdit.\',
.

'

.

•

J ;11 1.

'

Officers named· by _
/I:einple
WILKESV ILLE ~ E l ecti o n
of .'officers for Wilk esv ill e

~ua rd ;
Jennie
Maddy,
protec tor; Thelma Ca mp b~ ll .
pianist.
Mrs ..c~mpbell read an artidc.· Qfl the organization

Tt' mple 59 !. Pythian g(sters ,
hi g hli ~ htecl a nicent meeting
held at the hall. ·
Elee terl .and to be ins ta ll ed a t
~lC Ja n. 17 mee ting o£ the

BEST

or

Sun shine Girls and J e nnie

r Temple wrre Mrs. Anna Ogd in ,
t' m ~ t Px ct~ll c nt chi ef; Ma rtha
·' \Vard , excellent senior; Connie
Gra ve:S, t&gt;xce!lcht jun ior : Mary
Helm . nwnagc r: Hobbi e CoO&lt;!,
!;;N'I' l'l.a r ~·: Wyk le Whille y,
tr ea sur er:
Loiseen Hoy,

TIME
Of The Year to Buy

CARAVELLE

Maddy wa s named as chair-

woman ror lhe group wi th other
members to assist her .
The charter was draped for

Ed n.a

Fowler and

Bessie

Mcinty re, past grand chiefs. It
wa s noted tha t the deputy had

· requested ihspection !O take
place on the third f'r iday i1ight

:;~"&amp;."Y.~:;~::~::=-:~:!::: ~:::::::::::a.::::::::::~~

:: Social

in ·May . Members were
reminded to t.:tke pennies to the
next meeting for the Pe nn ies
from Heaven project.

ll'

{il Calendar~

A ~ ill exchange and potluck

refreshment&lt;: were served at
the conclusion of the meetirlg .
·_ Mrs . Campbell prescnl&lt;!d lhe
program . II was noted tbat
Eug e ne Campbell is seri ous ly
ill 111 the Holzer Medi c al

THCRSOAY
CHRISTMAS trees to be
picked up Thursd; ty in flu! land
by Rutlcmd Villag t~ Have trees
next to highwuy .
~FREE clothin g day at

Cen ter .

Sa lvati on Army. l l5 Butternut
if Ave ., Pomeroy , Thursday from
J 10 a .m. unti l rH10n. All area
'
residents welcome

IELl
,
\1
CllYnLIRl)un/]\110\
I~ j T.ht~rsda~:
1

E
1 ®~
~
~

tJ U

J l' J V.l ~,

\Jn

Family dinner

CO~lrthouse .

educ.atiOnu l,

Mr.

~.' ~;:~e.at J~a st one re presen~

!;

.

'
POMEROY Lodge 164 ,
~ !"&amp;AM regular mee ting, 7; 30
~ p m . Thw·sday at templ e. All
zy Master Masons inv l·tl'l 1,.

"t'ld

. Guesls were Mr s . Eli za
Po well, Harrisv ille ; Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Priddy, Middleport ;
Mr . and Mrs. Randall Gibbs
and daughl&lt;!r, Mason. W.Va . ;
-~
FRII)A Y
Mr . and Mrs. William. Van
POMONA GRANGE, 8 p. m. Me "'r and family, Clifton, W.
Friday a t t~e Rock Spt·irrgs. Va .; Mr. and Mrs . Daniel

Cla ss 1c 1n style Wl!h
tel&lt;IU red gold to nc case

sweep second . lull nurncrat
dial an d un br ea~able
ma.nsprmq . Wal er and
shock re s1stan t· Bu lova
guaranteed . And verY
modestly priced . The s1rap
model . $25 95 . W1 th
M jlJStable l u11 cxpans1on
band, 529 95

,,

.,
•
1

Hall . Columbia Grange to be

Hut ch in so n,

host.

Richa rd Chapell, Columbus;
Mr . and Mrs. Denver Ash and
fa mily, Rober tsburg, W. Va .;
Mr . and Mrs. Pat Aieker, Mrs .
Patty Michael and family ,
Pomeroy; and Mr . and Mrs .
George Bi ng . a nd fa mily,

'

~

SATUIIDAY
l · HYMN Sing at Hazel
Confrnun ily Chureh &amp;lturday,
7·30 p.m. J . B. and The Tiny
Trio of Vienna wi ll be fealured

GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY STORE

singers . Eshl Har t. pastor.
Publi L· invited .

Court St., Pomero y

I, a ncaster;

Lancas"'r.

RUBBER GLOVES
REG. $1.98

Sale

VITAMIN. ClOD

Q.OTHES ·LINE

VITAMIN C250

mg 100's
REG. 98c

REG. SOc

,,

mg lOO's
REG. $1.39

mg . 100's
REG. $1.98

Coupon

ASPIRIN

THIS COUPON

5 grain JOO's

le 99•
ASPIRIN

1975

s grain

100's
REG. 59c

REG. 29c

Al.MANAC

Sale 19•

Sale

NO CHARGE

FOOD MIXER

CANREG.
OPENER
512 .50
Price S6 25
· .

h Price

·

PANTY HOSE

-. Steam-Dry Iron
REG. 512.50
. '12 Price _S625

KNEE HI HOSE

REG. 51.00
Pr .
CARA NOME

.3 .Pr .

16

3 Way

HAND
CREAM
REG. $1.25
~

as~ --

Middl~po_rt,
.,

'
?

\

HIKING BOOTS

T. Andrews a nd Barbara of

30% off

Rodney, Racine.

DUTTON· DRUGS
,.

Mr . and Mrs. Will iam

Mrs . Clyde .Close and Roy,
Waterl9fd : Mr ,;md Mrs . J ohn
Dobbii"S , Dennis and Kerry ,
Columbus: Mrs. Cha r les
Simer a I, Reynoldsburg; Mr .
and Mrs. Harold Brewer, Mrs.
Louise Bre"'er. Mr . and Mrs.
Ronald Beegle, Chrisf&lt;l and

CARA NOME

WATER
PITCHERS
.
REG. S1.88 · .

~vere

Burt on. the former Ali f&lt;l Lyn n
Russell and daugh ters . Lida ·
and Erika.
.
Paul and Jill Andrews and
son, Christopher of Westerville
visiled over the holidays wi th
his pare nts. Mr . and M~s'. Paul

Lined &amp; Unlined

STOMPERS

• 1 yr. free parts and
9o' day free LABOR.
• Five year picture tube protection
- ..

BROKEN
SIZES

_
Always Snowing
Snow forms within most
slorm clouds all year round and ·
in all climates, even the most
torrid . Sununer thunderstorms
often produce snow but on the
journey earthward the warming air tal&lt;es its toll, and the
. flakes melt into raindrops.

Ohio

.
·'
.•

- .-

. ./

..

-..•·'· '

\I'

OiUOLl.REDWOOD

BIRD FEEDER

·!

·.••
/

-·..

..

HICI('S IIEG.

..,••

·'

SS.44
.IIAIDWAifiiR.

••
•

SJ44
COLEMAN .

•••

.

••
••
••
••
••
•

PIECE

••
••
••

'

Hardware

••
••
••
••
••
•
•••
••

Dept.

$

21-piect' 1/ 4" •nd
J / 8" ~qu a~ drive
~:tet se1.

Heck's Reg_. 99•

a••

Values
to $17.99

e

~

4 ~~ rete li ght settings :- Day· Home - Evening·Off ice

. Dual Sw111el Morror - regular or mogni tied

"·"
.•
.•

.gold color acce nt.

e In off· white with

HIKING
BOOTS

·:

..•"
.•••
...••
•
•

HECK'S.REG •

•

$19.96 .

•
•

JEWElRY
DEPT.

••
•

••

BROILER
TOASTER

MEN'S
SHOES

20%0FF
tn'cludes men ' s min'ers
steel toe boots. insulated
boots and 2, 4, 5 buckle
arctics.
·

·Jewelry Dept.

•
•
••
•
•
•

G. E.

P'ERCOLATOR

NAME BRAND
WQMEN'S

$1788

Valued o $13.99

Men's &amp;

Select Group
Boys &amp; Girls

SHOES

ThomMcAn
Poll Parrot
Active Age

1h Price·
SADDLE
OXFORDS
·

WILD BIRD -SEED BELL. ____ :___________________ t

. .·.

SETS
HECK'S REG •.

'3.99
CLOTHING

-

·IRONING BOARD
$988
HECK'S REG•

$11.86

I

-

ou.u .

. HOUSEWARES DEPT •

.'

lRYIO
OIL OR

ntAtiSMIUION
TIEATMIN.T
t:HOICI

.........

,.,,.~

, . .1.39 .

.

:·

4C11'0 ·DI!Pl': .

GLASS

00&lt;"1

BOOKCASE
Walnut pririt on solid ·
Dartide 1board. 29'!."' x
i I \1," X 28';\" high .

'16

'

88

Heck'•' Reg.

. '23.99

'

SPORtS DEPt .

''

'

'

,.

•••

''

'

.,
'-~.., - I .
I •

.
..

].

LEE MUFFLERS ,

,,

30% OFF

' .•

69___ 55~ -

I

.Your Thom MeAn Store Middleport, Ohio
...

__-

29
RISELONE 'QTS. -------------------------------~----·'1
.
.,.
SILICONE CAR WAX--------..------------~-~------~=~--99~
ZIP WAX ~-------------· - ______________ J__________~.:!~ ......ea~
TEXTURl' CAR MATS---~------------::~~t.:~:-'5 66 _-~.:a~!~~ •466
TEXACO 20HD &amp; 30 HD ____________ . .; __________ ~~-~~- 39~
PPO TRANSMISSION FLUID _r!~..':.~~y---------- -------.:~-~44~
SHELL ~~ iOO MOTOR OIL.-1~:~~~~----------~-------:~--59~
HEAT TAPES 6 FT.----------------~-----;_ _______ ~::'__ .'3 66
HEAT TAPES 12 FT. _; ___________________________s_:_: __s43'

heritage house
.~

BATH

BEN PERSON TARGET ARROWS ---------------------~~--29~
REMINGTON SHOTGUN SHELLS~-----------------~~~~-- •3 22

'

.

..

.

.

.. .
-. POT
.
.. .
i4.96 •12'!
GE CM 11 COFFEE . -----------------------------·
c
-.
.
.
.
.
.
5.49
'444
B
.
---MUNSEY TOASTER'·10 ·-----------~-------------

HECK'S REG: '1.17

Connies, Bucky , Thom
MeAn. Stack-white , navy whit e, 1·navy .tan , ,brown -

tan.

2 PIECE

JEWELRY

Girls'

Dingo _·Boots
Several Styles

SPORTING GOODS

'

Boys ~

20%0FF

.

HEAT TAPES 18 FT.. ---------------~--------------::~ .... '5 20 .
10
QJ.
BUCKET
GALV.
______
:..
____________________
--~~: ... •144 ·
HECK'S
REG. $21.96 . EASY WAY SPRAY PAINT --~-----------------------~~--99~
DOOR GRILLS --------~--.,.--.:.------,..-"------------~::~. '3"
JEWELRY
7
. DEPT. .
FESCO TRASH BAGS 10 CT. ·----------------------.. ~~ -- 66~
,,
WESTLY'S MELT DE-ICER ----..----------------:..---~'!..-2/' 1oo
WESTL·Y'S
·
DAISY BB's .
INSTANT
START-_:
. . _________________ :_ __ _..______ _; __ _;.89__ 2/• 1· OO
5
MILK CARTON
'GAS,LLI NE ANTI- FREEzE~~-----------.----~---.:.---~~- 4/'1 00

. SLIPPERS

Merchandise

RUBBER
FOOTWEAR

HEtt('S REG. '31.96

•
"- •

20% -·off

HECK'S REG. '9.99
CLOTHING DEPT.

HECK'S
REa

("

MUNSEY

••
•

On All

. JEWELRY DEPT.

HARDWARE'&amp; AUTOMOTIVE

L

;uede or Leather

'6'''

HECK'S REG. '14.96

Spo11sDepl

.

L .

20% off

PANT SUITS

2 PC. TAN.K SETS ·-------"'"----:------------------.:~~-"--'1"
2 PC. TANK ·SETS ---------------~---------------1.!: __ _.14'
.

•

Storewide

GIRLS

.•

MAKE-UP MIRROR e

••

..•

$500

39~

CLOTHING
.

•
•,,

EE-E EE

$}Q99

Heck's Reg. 2 pk. 63'

Sports Dept • .

.. . G.E. LIGHTfD

..••

By Connie,
Thorn MeAn
Miss Wonderful

pk.

Toaster

Gl RLS PANT SUITS_... ____________________________ ::~---•5"

'•••

SHOES

2

Heok'• Reg. $19.88

..

Super-Solarcolor ·
100% Solid State

FLASHLIGHT
BAnERIES

79~

27

2· SLJ~E

"C" or "D"

6 Pack

•

SHOES

.

••

G. E. AUTOMATIC

EVEREADY

MANTLES

••

WOME
WIDE WIDTH

ot 1n

I

•

One Group
Women's

•

"•

• A quality product. ___..J
This is the beSt llasis
for any warranty.

\
\

'

••

ALL OTHER

PRICE

I;

'·

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

One Group

Valuesto $17 .99

'

.~1

. BAKER FURNITURE

BOYS'

.Men's Shoes

'

4

YOURS FROM ADMIRAL
-COLOR T.V. WARRANTY-

1 GROUP

and Trresa and
Kenneth II, Columbus ; Mr . a nd

as~

oz.

relurned lo Columbus afl er a American Cancer Society. ,
holiday visi t with her parents,
Mr . and Mrs. Nathan Biggs.
Other guests of tbe Nathan
Biggs for Christmas -were Mr.
and Mrs . William Biggs, Cinda.
Penny and Jami e, P omeroy;
and Mr . and Mrs. Robert
Cha pman and children, Randy
a nd Angie, Parkersburg, W.
Va .
Guests of Mr . and Mrs.
Kennelh Russe ll, Racine. ovcf1
the holidays were Lt. a nd Mrs.
Ka rl Rus sell , Me lissa and
Kenne th . Fredericksburg , Va. ;
Mr . and Mrs . F loy d T. Chapman , Shelley and Kimbei·ly,
Men's &amp; Women's
Coltunbus. Telephon ing fr om
Suede ·
th eir home in Or la ndo, Fl a. ,

'

inter·

Ad•••lral~

1n

Hospital

Brewer

-HAND-LOTION
REG. $2 .00

REG. 6Sc

Me mor ial

Long Bottom . Also vistting
were Michael and Rosema ry
Andrews of Columbus , Mr . and
Mrs. Larry Collins and family
of Long__Bottom ; Miss Marf
Ellen Andrews. P ittsb urgh,
Pa ., and Mr . a nd Mrs . C. C.
.Car ter , Parkersburg, W. Va.
Visitors at the home ofM rs .
Allen Brewer ahd David ,
Stiversville-Portland Road,
over !he holidays have been
Mr . and Mrs . John Bea ll and ·
Mark , Mr. and Mrs . Kenneth

REG. 512 .50

'12

G. E.

Sale 53~
JERGENS SOAP

A

spending a week hl're visiting

PLENTY
OF
FREE
·PARKING

I

$588

. - ..

'"!' '

'"'

00

.

i .

...,., ...

Starts Friday; Jan. 3

REG. $1.19

ENTITLES BEARER

1-C Petty Officer and Mrs.
Dwigh t Logan J r . and Shawn
ha ve rcttu·ned to their home at
Vi rgin ia Beac h, fa .. a ft er

Mrs. Margaret Sm ith Ha idet,
66, daugh"'rof the late Mr. a nd
Mrs. H. F. Smith of Har tford,
W. Va .. died Tuesday following
a brief illness at the Clifton

-

.

, 10 TO 9

' ' .1"

heritage house, Middlep9rt

Se~le 49~ '

VITAMIN C500

Pomeroy . . . [
Personal Notes ~ died Tuesday

Pomeroy, is a patient at the
Private fun era l ser vices
Holzer Medical Ce nter, room were held at 2 p.m . 'Phursday
512.
...
( today) in Wilm ington. ConMiss Sharo n Bi ggs has tributions may be made tu the

MOVIE
SCREEN
REG. $9,95
Sale '4 95

23~

'*

-

OPIIIDAILY

• • '..!

LIMITED TIME OFFERI
Seeing is
·· Believing!

Margaret Haidet

,.

...

, n;::

•9

f*':fi..'W:;mmn.~

.

•·

-~

(OLOR T.V.
YOU CAN BUY THIS
ELECTRONIC
TOR

Room 437 . He has been con- Wilmin gton; two sons, Phil

DALITE

CHEESE
CLOTH
.REG. 49c

·il

Middleport
Personal Notes

'

". I

.

'"
.

the

fined there for the piist two Haidet , Wil min g ton, and
weeks.
Rober t of Norfolk, Va .; and
Penny Kirby, six year old tw o sisters, Mrs. Alice Nease,
daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Pomeroy, Rou"' 3, and Mrs.
William Biggs. Rout e 4, Mae Sto ll a!is,.,j::oncord, N. H.

HAND
LOTION
REG. 89c 5 oz.
Sale 43~

REG. SOc

Climbing roses
thwart grower

wi th t·e lulives and fri ends.
Wilmington.
J ames Biggs of Pomeroy, · She is surv ived by her
Route t remains a pa lient at husband, Mon"' , a daug h"'r ,
the Holzer Med ical Center , Mrs .
Marjor ie
F ola nd ,

REG. 98c

PLAYING CARDS

Wa lk ' ln
G"rden
Club · Christmas verse pertaining to special at"'nuon bu t had been
~~ met recently at the the birth of Christ. Mrs. Well placed in a sunny window and
'&gt;!'----·-· .. home of Mrs ~Audrey Well for a gave devotions with an opening watered often. It had light
holiday par ty and meeting .
thought by Donna Morr is. colored bl ooms. Plans were
club to give a
The home ~· a s .decorated . Topic for discussion at the · made for
poi nsettia lo Mrs. Goldie Story
with a Christma s tree and meeting was the poinsettia .
man y li gh"'d candles . For r oll
One member dis played a and a plate of fruiC to Mrs.
. '
call m e mbers rec it ed a plant which had been given no Mabel Lee, both members of
,,
the club. who are ill.
POLLY'S PROBLEM
A gift exchange was held and
DEAR POLLY - 1 have a problem with my monthly w:~:;:~:;m:;x;:w;...a. •.JI .! b.:
new names drawn for 1975. The
clim~ing roses. They ~::,1fow well , bloom in the ~ p ring and thctt
and Mrs . M. C. Wilson spent
ho::;tess served ice cream with ·
~~
i s the end of it. All my other roses bloom every month. I !.3ke very
ChristffiCl!; in Columb us with
strawberries, Chri stmas
good ,cii re of them, all and feed them every six weeks. Can yo. u ==~
Mr . and Mrs. R. L. Halley and
cookies, nuts, and coffee. She
expla in this' - Slt! PPY.
.
ch ilctren, Patgc and Bra d .
was assis"'d by her daugh"'r,
Sunday Mr . and Mrs. Halle)•
Donna . Next meeting will be
DEAR SKIPPY -From what I have been able to learn (I am ~::
came here to bring Paige wh o
held .at the home of Mrs.
oot an ex pert gardener) the shoots on climbing roses originate
Mi ss Carolyn Searl s of is visiting with her grand- F lossie Slory.
from lhe bran ches rather than the base. They may be pruned by Columbus is here for a New parents while lhey altend the
shortening strong shoots during the grl&gt;wing season to keep them
Year 's holiday visit with her Rose Bow l festivitie s and then
within bow1ds. Such roses must be planted where there Is sui·
parents. Mr . and Mr s. Leo fly on to Hawaii for a vaca tion . BEGINS DliTIES
flcl enl room lor them to develop properly. If they are drastically Searls. Miss Searl s was also The couple left their son, Bra d,
RALEIGH , N.C. (UP!) cut bae k eve ry year the result Is fewer blooms. Old wornout
in
Columbus
with
fr
iends
.
Associate Supreme Court Jushere for the Chr istmas ho_\iday
branches are removed lo the spring and that is the only pruning and she and her parents were
Jo hn Tannehill returned to tice Susie Sharp begins her
II!Ually required by less vigorous plants , P erhaps some who have guests of Mrs. Jean Craig and Columbus Tuesday to continue duties loday as the nation 's
great succ.ess with climbing roses will send Ill further advice . at
Oh io State lirst woman state chief justice.
family for Christmas dinner. st udi es
POLLY .
University
fo
ll
owing the
The 67-year-old Miss Sharp,
Mr . and Mrs. Lee Davidson
and children, Anne. John a nd holidays spen t with his fa ther , who has served on the high
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is with those labels clothing
Charles, of Morristown, N. J ., Chet Tann eh ill , Middleport, court for the past 12 years,
•uanufaclurers now put on their products . Having them is a great
are here visiting her parenl'i, and his br other and fam ily, Mr. defeated Republican nominee
help SliT after one washing the printing is of"'n so faded one
Mr . a nd Mrs. Emerson"Jones. and Mrs. Mark Tannehill and J ames Newcombe in the Nov. 5
ca nnot "'II how to care for it, what the size is or the style number .
general elections.
Mr . and Mrs . Earl Knight children , Pomeroy RD . .
- CYNTHIA.
DEAR POl .LY - I always like to read how other people are
saving·on their Christmas gift buying so.,want to pass on a few of
my ideas for inexpensive gifts for sma ll children . A three-orfour-year-old will be deligh"'d with a flashlight of his or her own
and these can be fouhd for less than two dollars. Scrap lumber,
some nails and a sma ll size hammer will keep a little boy ~u sy
for hours . I also take advan!.3ge of photo offers made by local
merchants and send an B x 10 colored family photograph to'
Grandma . Often these are availa ble fo r less than $0. MAUREEN .
DEAR POLLY- As I have enjoyed the Pointers for so many
years I want lo pass on a favorite of mine. At the holiday season
CALCUL~
most of us are making large batches of turkey dressing and
98
popcorn balls. Many ofusdonot own huge pans such as needed 1o
FOR ONLY"
mix such large quantities. I do have a double sink so I wash il
very well , rinse and then pour boiling water all around and in the
from Rockwell International
sink lo kill any germs. Either dre ssing or popcorn balls are made
World's Finest Full Featore 8-digit Electronic Calculator.
in the sink . When a ll is fini shed I rinse the sink with cold water,
fill it with hot water and let it stand for a few minutes. It cleans
0
Operates on Batteries or A.C. Current. ·
;:.ith a swish and no worry about not having a large pan that
would present a storage problem . This has worked for me for
a
many years. - MRS . R.L.N .

•

'

''

'

I

.
i

fly Polly Cra mer

·

RUBBER GLOVES

.

meeting
is
held
Holiday
party,
Polly 's Pointers ·

J

NEW YEAR SALE
Y2 PRICE

I·

I

With The Purchase of

Mr s . Clar ence
Jordan held a fami ly dinner at.
thei r Pomeroy home Chri s~ma s Day.

youth.

~ re hgwus, soc a.:tl group Hskccl to

w c·rc o f ter~nq !h1s wa tch
two wa ys lt"s all f'~Cellcnt
value. Prec1S10n jeweled

•
d on 25 th
en;oye

COMMI'rrEE for Men4tlly
llef&lt;trded meeting 7; 30 p.m.
a,t
Eca:h •

''

I

.

•

' ' '&lt;

'· .

HECK'S REG.

•1 Q99

�1.-

•

~~ . 1!175
. 6-:- The Daily ~ntine l ,_Middli.' JXlft w Pomer o y , 0., T hursdit.\',
.

'

.

•

J ;11 1.

'

Officers named· by _
/I:einple
WILKESV ILLE ~ E l ecti o n
of .'officers for Wilk esv ill e

~ua rd ;
Jennie
Maddy,
protec tor; Thelma Ca mp b~ ll .
pianist.
Mrs ..c~mpbell read an artidc.· Qfl the organization

Tt' mple 59 !. Pythian g(sters ,
hi g hli ~ htecl a nicent meeting
held at the hall. ·
Elee terl .and to be ins ta ll ed a t
~lC Ja n. 17 mee ting o£ the

BEST

or

Sun shine Girls and J e nnie

r Temple wrre Mrs. Anna Ogd in ,
t' m ~ t Px ct~ll c nt chi ef; Ma rtha
·' \Vard , excellent senior; Connie
Gra ve:S, t&gt;xce!lcht jun ior : Mary
Helm . nwnagc r: Hobbi e CoO&lt;!,
!;;N'I' l'l.a r ~·: Wyk le Whille y,
tr ea sur er:
Loiseen Hoy,

TIME
Of The Year to Buy

CARAVELLE

Maddy wa s named as chair-

woman ror lhe group wi th other
members to assist her .
The charter was draped for

Ed n.a

Fowler and

Bessie

Mcinty re, past grand chiefs. It
wa s noted tha t the deputy had

· requested ihspection !O take
place on the third f'r iday i1ight

:;~"&amp;."Y.~:;~::~::=-:~:!::: ~:::::::::::a.::::::::::~~

:: Social

in ·May . Members were
reminded to t.:tke pennies to the
next meeting for the Pe nn ies
from Heaven project.

ll'

{il Calendar~

A ~ ill exchange and potluck

refreshment&lt;: were served at
the conclusion of the meetirlg .
·_ Mrs . Campbell prescnl&lt;!d lhe
program . II was noted tbat
Eug e ne Campbell is seri ous ly
ill 111 the Holzer Medi c al

THCRSOAY
CHRISTMAS trees to be
picked up Thursd; ty in flu! land
by Rutlcmd Villag t~ Have trees
next to highwuy .
~FREE clothin g day at

Cen ter .

Sa lvati on Army. l l5 Butternut
if Ave ., Pomeroy , Thursday from
J 10 a .m. unti l rH10n. All area
'
residents welcome

IELl
,
\1
CllYnLIRl)un/]\110\
I~ j T.ht~rsda~:
1

E
1 ®~
~
~

tJ U

J l' J V.l ~,

\Jn

Family dinner

CO~lrthouse .

educ.atiOnu l,

Mr.

~.' ~;:~e.at J~a st one re presen~

!;

.

'
POMEROY Lodge 164 ,
~ !"&amp;AM regular mee ting, 7; 30
~ p m . Thw·sday at templ e. All
zy Master Masons inv l·tl'l 1,.

"t'ld

. Guesls were Mr s . Eli za
Po well, Harrisv ille ; Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Priddy, Middleport ;
Mr . and Mrs. Randall Gibbs
and daughl&lt;!r, Mason. W.Va . ;
-~
FRII)A Y
Mr . and Mrs. William. Van
POMONA GRANGE, 8 p. m. Me "'r and family, Clifton, W.
Friday a t t~e Rock Spt·irrgs. Va .; Mr. and Mrs . Daniel

Cla ss 1c 1n style Wl!h
tel&lt;IU red gold to nc case

sweep second . lull nurncrat
dial an d un br ea~able
ma.nsprmq . Wal er and
shock re s1stan t· Bu lova
guaranteed . And verY
modestly priced . The s1rap
model . $25 95 . W1 th
M jlJStable l u11 cxpans1on
band, 529 95

,,

.,
•
1

Hall . Columbia Grange to be

Hut ch in so n,

host.

Richa rd Chapell, Columbus;
Mr . and Mrs. Denver Ash and
fa mily, Rober tsburg, W. Va .;
Mr . and Mrs. Pat Aieker, Mrs .
Patty Michael and family ,
Pomeroy; and Mr . and Mrs .
George Bi ng . a nd fa mily,

'

~

SATUIIDAY
l · HYMN Sing at Hazel
Confrnun ily Chureh &amp;lturday,
7·30 p.m. J . B. and The Tiny
Trio of Vienna wi ll be fealured

GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY STORE

singers . Eshl Har t. pastor.
Publi L· invited .

Court St., Pomero y

I, a ncaster;

Lancas"'r.

RUBBER GLOVES
REG. $1.98

Sale

VITAMIN. ClOD

Q.OTHES ·LINE

VITAMIN C250

mg 100's
REG. 98c

REG. SOc

,,

mg lOO's
REG. $1.39

mg . 100's
REG. $1.98

Coupon

ASPIRIN

THIS COUPON

5 grain JOO's

le 99•
ASPIRIN

1975

s grain

100's
REG. 59c

REG. 29c

Al.MANAC

Sale 19•

Sale

NO CHARGE

FOOD MIXER

CANREG.
OPENER
512 .50
Price S6 25
· .

h Price

·

PANTY HOSE

-. Steam-Dry Iron
REG. 512.50
. '12 Price _S625

KNEE HI HOSE

REG. 51.00
Pr .
CARA NOME

.3 .Pr .

16

3 Way

HAND
CREAM
REG. $1.25
~

as~ --

Middl~po_rt,
.,

'
?

\

HIKING BOOTS

T. Andrews a nd Barbara of

30% off

Rodney, Racine.

DUTTON· DRUGS
,.

Mr . and Mrs. Will iam

Mrs . Clyde .Close and Roy,
Waterl9fd : Mr ,;md Mrs . J ohn
Dobbii"S , Dennis and Kerry ,
Columbus: Mrs. Cha r les
Simer a I, Reynoldsburg; Mr .
and Mrs. Harold Brewer, Mrs.
Louise Bre"'er. Mr . and Mrs.
Ronald Beegle, Chrisf&lt;l and

CARA NOME

WATER
PITCHERS
.
REG. S1.88 · .

~vere

Burt on. the former Ali f&lt;l Lyn n
Russell and daugh ters . Lida ·
and Erika.
.
Paul and Jill Andrews and
son, Christopher of Westerville
visiled over the holidays wi th
his pare nts. Mr . and M~s'. Paul

Lined &amp; Unlined

STOMPERS

• 1 yr. free parts and
9o' day free LABOR.
• Five year picture tube protection
- ..

BROKEN
SIZES

_
Always Snowing
Snow forms within most
slorm clouds all year round and ·
in all climates, even the most
torrid . Sununer thunderstorms
often produce snow but on the
journey earthward the warming air tal&lt;es its toll, and the
. flakes melt into raindrops.

Ohio

.
·'
.•

- .-

. ./

..

-..•·'· '

\I'

OiUOLl.REDWOOD

BIRD FEEDER

·!

·.••
/

-·..

..

HICI('S IIEG.

..,••

·'

SS.44
.IIAIDWAifiiR.

••
•

SJ44
COLEMAN .

•••

.

••
••
••
••
••
•

PIECE

••
••
••

'

Hardware

••
••
••
••
••
•
•••
••

Dept.

$

21-piect' 1/ 4" •nd
J / 8" ~qu a~ drive
~:tet se1.

Heck's Reg_. 99•

a••

Values
to $17.99

e

~

4 ~~ rete li ght settings :- Day· Home - Evening·Off ice

. Dual Sw111el Morror - regular or mogni tied

"·"
.•
.•

.gold color acce nt.

e In off· white with

HIKING
BOOTS

·:

..•"
.•••
...••
•
•

HECK'S.REG •

•

$19.96 .

•
•

JEWElRY
DEPT.

••
•

••

BROILER
TOASTER

MEN'S
SHOES

20%0FF
tn'cludes men ' s min'ers
steel toe boots. insulated
boots and 2, 4, 5 buckle
arctics.
·

·Jewelry Dept.

•
•
••
•
•
•

G. E.

P'ERCOLATOR

NAME BRAND
WQMEN'S

$1788

Valued o $13.99

Men's &amp;

Select Group
Boys &amp; Girls

SHOES

ThomMcAn
Poll Parrot
Active Age

1h Price·
SADDLE
OXFORDS
·

WILD BIRD -SEED BELL. ____ :___________________ t

. .·.

SETS
HECK'S REG •.

'3.99
CLOTHING

-

·IRONING BOARD
$988
HECK'S REG•

$11.86

I

-

ou.u .

. HOUSEWARES DEPT •

.'

lRYIO
OIL OR

ntAtiSMIUION
TIEATMIN.T
t:HOICI

.........

,.,,.~

, . .1.39 .

.

:·

4C11'0 ·DI!Pl': .

GLASS

00&lt;"1

BOOKCASE
Walnut pririt on solid ·
Dartide 1board. 29'!."' x
i I \1," X 28';\" high .

'16

'

88

Heck'•' Reg.

. '23.99

'

SPORtS DEPt .

''

'

'

,.

•••

''

'

.,
'-~.., - I .
I •

.
..

].

LEE MUFFLERS ,

,,

30% OFF

' .•

69___ 55~ -

I

.Your Thom MeAn Store Middleport, Ohio
...

__-

29
RISELONE 'QTS. -------------------------------~----·'1
.
.,.
SILICONE CAR WAX--------..------------~-~------~=~--99~
ZIP WAX ~-------------· - ______________ J__________~.:!~ ......ea~
TEXTURl' CAR MATS---~------------::~~t.:~:-'5 66 _-~.:a~!~~ •466
TEXACO 20HD &amp; 30 HD ____________ . .; __________ ~~-~~- 39~
PPO TRANSMISSION FLUID _r!~..':.~~y---------- -------.:~-~44~
SHELL ~~ iOO MOTOR OIL.-1~:~~~~----------~-------:~--59~
HEAT TAPES 6 FT.----------------~-----;_ _______ ~::'__ .'3 66
HEAT TAPES 12 FT. _; ___________________________s_:_: __s43'

heritage house
.~

BATH

BEN PERSON TARGET ARROWS ---------------------~~--29~
REMINGTON SHOTGUN SHELLS~-----------------~~~~-- •3 22

'

.

..

.

.

.. .
-. POT
.
.. .
i4.96 •12'!
GE CM 11 COFFEE . -----------------------------·
c
-.
.
.
.
.
.
5.49
'444
B
.
---MUNSEY TOASTER'·10 ·-----------~-------------

HECK'S REG: '1.17

Connies, Bucky , Thom
MeAn. Stack-white , navy whit e, 1·navy .tan , ,brown -

tan.

2 PIECE

JEWELRY

Girls'

Dingo _·Boots
Several Styles

SPORTING GOODS

'

Boys ~

20%0FF

.

HEAT TAPES 18 FT.. ---------------~--------------::~ .... '5 20 .
10
QJ.
BUCKET
GALV.
______
:..
____________________
--~~: ... •144 ·
HECK'S
REG. $21.96 . EASY WAY SPRAY PAINT --~-----------------------~~--99~
DOOR GRILLS --------~--.,.--.:.------,..-"------------~::~. '3"
JEWELRY
7
. DEPT. .
FESCO TRASH BAGS 10 CT. ·----------------------.. ~~ -- 66~
,,
WESTLY'S MELT DE-ICER ----..----------------:..---~'!..-2/' 1oo
WESTL·Y'S
·
DAISY BB's .
INSTANT
START-_:
. . _________________ :_ __ _..______ _; __ _;.89__ 2/• 1· OO
5
MILK CARTON
'GAS,LLI NE ANTI- FREEzE~~-----------.----~---.:.---~~- 4/'1 00

. SLIPPERS

Merchandise

RUBBER
FOOTWEAR

HEtt('S REG. '31.96

•
"- •

20% -·off

HECK'S REG. '9.99
CLOTHING DEPT.

HECK'S
REa

("

MUNSEY

••
•

On All

. JEWELRY DEPT.

HARDWARE'&amp; AUTOMOTIVE

L

;uede or Leather

'6'''

HECK'S REG. '14.96

Spo11sDepl

.

L .

20% off

PANT SUITS

2 PC. TAN.K SETS ·-------"'"----:------------------.:~~-"--'1"
2 PC. TANK ·SETS ---------------~---------------1.!: __ _.14'
.

•

Storewide

GIRLS

.•

MAKE-UP MIRROR e

••

..•

$500

39~

CLOTHING
.

•
•,,

EE-E EE

$}Q99

Heck's Reg. 2 pk. 63'

Sports Dept • .

.. . G.E. LIGHTfD

..••

By Connie,
Thorn MeAn
Miss Wonderful

pk.

Toaster

Gl RLS PANT SUITS_... ____________________________ ::~---•5"

'•••

SHOES

2

Heok'• Reg. $19.88

..

Super-Solarcolor ·
100% Solid State

FLASHLIGHT
BAnERIES

79~

27

2· SLJ~E

"C" or "D"

6 Pack

•

SHOES

.

••

G. E. AUTOMATIC

EVEREADY

MANTLES

••

WOME
WIDE WIDTH

ot 1n

I

•

One Group
Women's

•

"•

• A quality product. ___..J
This is the beSt llasis
for any warranty.

\
\

'

••

ALL OTHER

PRICE

I;

'·

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

One Group

Valuesto $17 .99

'

.~1

. BAKER FURNITURE

BOYS'

.Men's Shoes

'

4

YOURS FROM ADMIRAL
-COLOR T.V. WARRANTY-

1 GROUP

and Trresa and
Kenneth II, Columbus ; Mr . a nd

as~

oz.

relurned lo Columbus afl er a American Cancer Society. ,
holiday visi t with her parents,
Mr . and Mrs. Nathan Biggs.
Other guests of tbe Nathan
Biggs for Christmas -were Mr.
and Mrs . William Biggs, Cinda.
Penny and Jami e, P omeroy;
and Mr . and Mrs. Robert
Cha pman and children, Randy
a nd Angie, Parkersburg, W.
Va .
Guests of Mr . and Mrs.
Kennelh Russe ll, Racine. ovcf1
the holidays were Lt. a nd Mrs.
Ka rl Rus sell , Me lissa and
Kenne th . Fredericksburg , Va. ;
Mr . and Mrs . F loy d T. Chapman , Shelley and Kimbei·ly,
Men's &amp; Women's
Coltunbus. Telephon ing fr om
Suede ·
th eir home in Or la ndo, Fl a. ,

'

inter·

Ad•••lral~

1n

Hospital

Brewer

-HAND-LOTION
REG. $2 .00

REG. 6Sc

Me mor ial

Long Bottom . Also vistting
were Michael and Rosema ry
Andrews of Columbus , Mr . and
Mrs. Larry Collins and family
of Long__Bottom ; Miss Marf
Ellen Andrews. P ittsb urgh,
Pa ., and Mr . a nd Mrs . C. C.
.Car ter , Parkersburg, W. Va.
Visitors at the home ofM rs .
Allen Brewer ahd David ,
Stiversville-Portland Road,
over !he holidays have been
Mr . and Mrs . John Bea ll and ·
Mark , Mr. and Mrs . Kenneth

REG. 512 .50

'12

G. E.

Sale 53~
JERGENS SOAP

A

spending a week hl're visiting

PLENTY
OF
FREE
·PARKING

I

$588

. - ..

'"!' '

'"'

00

.

i .

...,., ...

Starts Friday; Jan. 3

REG. $1.19

ENTITLES BEARER

1-C Petty Officer and Mrs.
Dwigh t Logan J r . and Shawn
ha ve rcttu·ned to their home at
Vi rgin ia Beac h, fa .. a ft er

Mrs. Margaret Sm ith Ha idet,
66, daugh"'rof the late Mr. a nd
Mrs. H. F. Smith of Har tford,
W. Va .. died Tuesday following
a brief illness at the Clifton

-

.

, 10 TO 9

' ' .1"

heritage house, Middlep9rt

Se~le 49~ '

VITAMIN C500

Pomeroy . . . [
Personal Notes ~ died Tuesday

Pomeroy, is a patient at the
Private fun era l ser vices
Holzer Medical Ce nter, room were held at 2 p.m . 'Phursday
512.
...
( today) in Wilm ington. ConMiss Sharo n Bi ggs has tributions may be made tu the

MOVIE
SCREEN
REG. $9,95
Sale '4 95

23~

'*

-

OPIIIDAILY

• • '..!

LIMITED TIME OFFERI
Seeing is
·· Believing!

Margaret Haidet

,.

...

, n;::

•9

f*':fi..'W:;mmn.~

.

•·

-~

(OLOR T.V.
YOU CAN BUY THIS
ELECTRONIC
TOR

Room 437 . He has been con- Wilmin gton; two sons, Phil

DALITE

CHEESE
CLOTH
.REG. 49c

·il

Middleport
Personal Notes

'

". I

.

'"
.

the

fined there for the piist two Haidet , Wil min g ton, and
weeks.
Rober t of Norfolk, Va .; and
Penny Kirby, six year old tw o sisters, Mrs. Alice Nease,
daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Pomeroy, Rou"' 3, and Mrs.
William Biggs. Rout e 4, Mae Sto ll a!is,.,j::oncord, N. H.

HAND
LOTION
REG. 89c 5 oz.
Sale 43~

REG. SOc

Climbing roses
thwart grower

wi th t·e lulives and fri ends.
Wilmington.
J ames Biggs of Pomeroy, · She is surv ived by her
Route t remains a pa lient at husband, Mon"' , a daug h"'r ,
the Holzer Med ical Center , Mrs .
Marjor ie
F ola nd ,

REG. 98c

PLAYING CARDS

Wa lk ' ln
G"rden
Club · Christmas verse pertaining to special at"'nuon bu t had been
~~ met recently at the the birth of Christ. Mrs. Well placed in a sunny window and
'&gt;!'----·-· .. home of Mrs ~Audrey Well for a gave devotions with an opening watered often. It had light
holiday par ty and meeting .
thought by Donna Morr is. colored bl ooms. Plans were
club to give a
The home ~· a s .decorated . Topic for discussion at the · made for
poi nsettia lo Mrs. Goldie Story
with a Christma s tree and meeting was the poinsettia .
man y li gh"'d candles . For r oll
One member dis played a and a plate of fruiC to Mrs.
. '
call m e mbers rec it ed a plant which had been given no Mabel Lee, both members of
,,
the club. who are ill.
POLLY'S PROBLEM
A gift exchange was held and
DEAR POLLY - 1 have a problem with my monthly w:~:;:~:;m:;x;:w;...a. •.JI .! b.:
new names drawn for 1975. The
clim~ing roses. They ~::,1fow well , bloom in the ~ p ring and thctt
and Mrs . M. C. Wilson spent
ho::;tess served ice cream with ·
~~
i s the end of it. All my other roses bloom every month. I !.3ke very
ChristffiCl!; in Columb us with
strawberries, Chri stmas
good ,cii re of them, all and feed them every six weeks. Can yo. u ==~
Mr . and Mrs. R. L. Halley and
cookies, nuts, and coffee. She
expla in this' - Slt! PPY.
.
ch ilctren, Patgc and Bra d .
was assis"'d by her daugh"'r,
Sunday Mr . and Mrs. Halle)•
Donna . Next meeting will be
DEAR SKIPPY -From what I have been able to learn (I am ~::
came here to bring Paige wh o
held .at the home of Mrs.
oot an ex pert gardener) the shoots on climbing roses originate
Mi ss Carolyn Searl s of is visiting with her grand- F lossie Slory.
from lhe bran ches rather than the base. They may be pruned by Columbus is here for a New parents while lhey altend the
shortening strong shoots during the grl&gt;wing season to keep them
Year 's holiday visit with her Rose Bow l festivitie s and then
within bow1ds. Such roses must be planted where there Is sui·
parents. Mr . and Mr s. Leo fly on to Hawaii for a vaca tion . BEGINS DliTIES
flcl enl room lor them to develop properly. If they are drastically Searls. Miss Searl s was also The couple left their son, Bra d,
RALEIGH , N.C. (UP!) cut bae k eve ry year the result Is fewer blooms. Old wornout
in
Columbus
with
fr
iends
.
Associate Supreme Court Jushere for the Chr istmas ho_\iday
branches are removed lo the spring and that is the only pruning and she and her parents were
Jo hn Tannehill returned to tice Susie Sharp begins her
II!Ually required by less vigorous plants , P erhaps some who have guests of Mrs. Jean Craig and Columbus Tuesday to continue duties loday as the nation 's
great succ.ess with climbing roses will send Ill further advice . at
Oh io State lirst woman state chief justice.
family for Christmas dinner. st udi es
POLLY .
University
fo
ll
owing the
The 67-year-old Miss Sharp,
Mr . and Mrs. Lee Davidson
and children, Anne. John a nd holidays spen t with his fa ther , who has served on the high
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is with those labels clothing
Charles, of Morristown, N. J ., Chet Tann eh ill , Middleport, court for the past 12 years,
•uanufaclurers now put on their products . Having them is a great
are here visiting her parenl'i, and his br other and fam ily, Mr. defeated Republican nominee
help SliT after one washing the printing is of"'n so faded one
Mr . a nd Mrs. Emerson"Jones. and Mrs. Mark Tannehill and J ames Newcombe in the Nov. 5
ca nnot "'II how to care for it, what the size is or the style number .
general elections.
Mr . and Mrs . Earl Knight children , Pomeroy RD . .
- CYNTHIA.
DEAR POl .LY - I always like to read how other people are
saving·on their Christmas gift buying so.,want to pass on a few of
my ideas for inexpensive gifts for sma ll children . A three-orfour-year-old will be deligh"'d with a flashlight of his or her own
and these can be fouhd for less than two dollars. Scrap lumber,
some nails and a sma ll size hammer will keep a little boy ~u sy
for hours . I also take advan!.3ge of photo offers made by local
merchants and send an B x 10 colored family photograph to'
Grandma . Often these are availa ble fo r less than $0. MAUREEN .
DEAR POLLY- As I have enjoyed the Pointers for so many
years I want lo pass on a favorite of mine. At the holiday season
CALCUL~
most of us are making large batches of turkey dressing and
98
popcorn balls. Many ofusdonot own huge pans such as needed 1o
FOR ONLY"
mix such large quantities. I do have a double sink so I wash il
very well , rinse and then pour boiling water all around and in the
from Rockwell International
sink lo kill any germs. Either dre ssing or popcorn balls are made
World's Finest Full Featore 8-digit Electronic Calculator.
in the sink . When a ll is fini shed I rinse the sink with cold water,
fill it with hot water and let it stand for a few minutes. It cleans
0
Operates on Batteries or A.C. Current. ·
;:.ith a swish and no worry about not having a large pan that
would present a storage problem . This has worked for me for
a
many years. - MRS . R.L.N .

•

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i

fly Polly Cra mer

·

RUBBER GLOVES

.

meeting
is
held
Holiday
party,
Polly 's Pointers ·

J

NEW YEAR SALE
Y2 PRICE

I·

I

With The Purchase of

Mr s . Clar ence
Jordan held a fami ly dinner at.
thei r Pomeroy home Chri s~ma s Day.

youth.

~ re hgwus, soc a.:tl group Hskccl to

w c·rc o f ter~nq !h1s wa tch
two wa ys lt"s all f'~Cellcnt
value. Prec1S10n jeweled

•
d on 25 th
en;oye

COMMI'rrEE for Men4tlly
llef&lt;trded meeting 7; 30 p.m.
a,t
Eca:h •

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HECK'S REG.

•1 Q99

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~~- . - •• 8 ~ The Daily &amp;-nrinr l, M iddlepdrt·Pmnero~··
, il.;
.
. 'l'hursd&lt;~Y . J01n. 2, 1975.

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Start d •ng s

Eas lt•r n Conl"c r c nce
A ll,lAI IC 0 1\liSIOA

w.

n

Bu tt ato
Boston

1. p e r. g ,b .
13 . "62~

'l? 13 6 1~
N ew Y o r k
19 15 . SSV 2 11~ ,
Ph i l,l d Cipt1i i'l
l -1 1l
&lt;1 00
8
Cen t r a l 0 PJ tSIOf1 ·
w I. pet . g .b .
· Wast1inolon
i b 10 722
Clev e land
18 14 .563
6
Hous ton
19 15 .559
6
Atla n ta
16 21 .432 J(l' '?
N e w Orleans
j
20 .091 2-p ;,
Wes t ern Co nfe r e n ce
M id wes t D ivis •on
w. 1. p et . g . b.
Det r oi t
19 17 518
KC Oma t1 a
20 19 .513
v,
Ch ic"aqo
. 11 17 .500
1
M il wau k ee
~4
19 .40'4 31 ~
P aci li c Di v i !:. ion
w . 1 pet . g . b .
Golden St al e
2J 1:&lt;' 6 57
Se ar li e
11,, ,19 .472 6 ';•
15 18 455
7
Phoen1X
Por lletnd
15 20 J29
fl
LosAngel es
15 11 417 8 1 1
W edn es d'ay 's R es ult s
Atlan ta 101 KC Omaha 97
Bo s to n 108 Por tl and 9J
Se al l ie l 'i3 W a s hi ngton 118 , or
T hursday 's G a-m es
Phoenix at N ew Y9 r l\
New Or l ea n &amp; a t D et r oit
A tlan ta at Mi l wa,u k ee

\

•••
l--~i

ABA St a nd i ng s

B y Un i t ed Pr e ss Int e rnation a l

January, three additional sessions of Cake Decorating will ~e
offered as continuing education classes with po college
credits .by U1e Community College.

Cake decorating classes will be continued

Men's CHkr . ('(JS t

f&lt;!r

t he

course. which is not for creclil.
will be $12 tuition and $10 for
supplies for " total of $22.
Two sessions of Inleri"necl iate
Cu ke Decorating w\11 b~ of.

SIDE GLANCES

-/~

•

fi rs l-cnme, first-serve basis.

Rt·gis tration will remain open

.

until the first class meeting or
tm til the class is filled .

!l:- 15 p.m. Mond.n y even ing and

}mothe r from 12 noon to:~ p.m.
oi1 Tuesday : Both sessions will
be hel d in Davis Hall on the Rio
Gnmdc . Campus with Mrs.
Belty Cn rpcntcr as instruc tor .
The!ie cour ses ar c also
li mi ted lo twelv e slud e nl s
rach, and bol.h mu st h3ve a
minimum of ten stud en fs
enrolled to be offe red. Intermed iate CHke Decorating,
which is auotlter contin uing
ed ucati on class with no Co ll ege
crCdits, requires that s tudents
co mpl ete Beginni ng Ca ke
Tlecontl ing before en rolling.
Beginn ers nove lties . a nd
de tailed fl ower arrangemenL.,
wi ll be taught and a wide
\'ar icty of ca k es wil l be
decyrated during the s i x ~wce k
course.
Cos t for In termedia te Cake
Decorati ng will be $12 tuit ion
nnd $5 for St[pplies for a tol&lt;l l of
$17 . Hcgistri1tion for any of the
thre e scs!1 iott s· in . Ca ke
neL'Ora ting may be cnn·lp leted
M o~day, Ji:lnttary !i, at Rio
Ct'itndeCollcg(\fr om na .m. to 4
p.m. and from G to 9 p.m. Sl micn ts will be accepted on a

•

New titles

ID

7 categories
Ry Susan Fleshman
New titleS at the PomeroyMiddleport libraries rea dy for
loa n in g..- or browsing co me in
seve n catego ri es . Inclu ded
are:
NOVELS _
The Killer Angels
four
days in the Battle of Gettysburg.
Idols and Axlegrease - a
host or charac ters in .a small
town during the Depress ion.
Grea t Maria - a roya l
princess in 13th Ce ntury
Europe.
Madonna of the Seven Hills
- a new Jean P la~dy roma nce.

Pennington's Heir - a
yo un g musician uut of jail and
mto fat her hood.
A Billion for Boris _
makinHmoney on the horses is
child 's play in this story.
The · Sacred and Profane
Love Ma chine - Irish Mud och
by Gill Fox
plays with the eternal triangle.
BIOGRAPHY
------ - - .,
There's Nothing I Own Tha t I
Wall t - surv ival in poverty .
A Miracle " Day Keeps the
Dev il Away - Pal Boone.
Beyo nd the Cross and the
Switchblade - Dave Wilerson.
i\h-O ne. Ah-Two: Life with
My Musical Fa mil y
Lawrence Welk.
Ltfe as I Have Known it has
Been Finger Lickin c Good .::
Colon~! Sanders.
I • Mill on
Berl ean
1\utobiography.
Love. Hate and War -Life of
an Ex: P.O.W. - Donal d
Manuel.
Slarfall - Betty Grissom
wr ites a bout .li fe 1n a n
astrommt ·s family.
Bed-Time Story - A lov e

story that survived Hollywood
and alcohol.
FOR KIDS
Where the Wild Things Are.
The Stupids Step Out.
The Night Kitchen.
BUSINESS
Am a teurs Don ' t Ma~ e a
Dime Selling Hard goods - you
ca n increase and create sales
opportunities with the ideas 'in
this book.
Tes ted Advertising Methods
- this takes the guesswork out
or wr it in g you r own. ad vertising.
"
Writer's Market '7 5 - how to
se ll your poems, plays, short
stories. ph otos, j oke s and
a rticles to thou sands of
magazines across America.
.HEALTH
Type "A" Behavior and Your
Hea rl - your behavior patterns can make you heart
at tack-prone; learn how to help
yourself and avoid them .
Seizures , Epilepsy and ' Your
Child - helpful to parents and
teachers.
COOKBOOKS
Joy of Cooking - 4,300
recipes for learners, gourmet
chefs and every r ook in be·
tween.

What 's Cooking in Kentucky home re cipes from the
bluegrass slate.
CURRENT INTEREST
Supership - the new breed of
oil tankers and the dangers
they present.
·
.
Man Kind ? -"Our in credible · incredible war on
wildlife''.
· Muscle and Blood - a clear
look at industrial dangers in
the U. S. and the reasons why
10,000 Ame•icans are killed
each year by their jo?.

E a.st

K enluc k y
New York
St Louis
Virq inia
Memphis

Denver
SanAn tonio

w. 1. pet .
"lJ 10 . 697
15 11 .694
1J 1J 368

g.b.
-·
11 1 1

.165
.157

]4 1 ~

9

25
'16

9
W es t
w . 1.

BACON

111 ?
lJI 7

Ind iana
424
S&lt;m Dle~o
400
W edn esday 's Result
San D1eg o JIB tn diar.~a 100
Ttlursday' s Games
Virgin ia a t St . Louis
M e mphis at U tah
San D 1ego at ' Sa n A nton i o

151 1
16 1 •

LITTLE TIME WASTED
VAIL, Colo . ( UPI ) - white
House Press Secretary ·Ron
Nessen · was ted little time
breaking one of his new year's
resolutions .
He walked into the press
center Wednesday morning,
saying be had resolved to quit
smo~ing and noted he had been
successful for more than 10
hours.
..
After a brief chat witb
reporters, Nessen walked toward his office, unconsciously
lighting a cigarette.

,, ... ' •..

:"

YELLOW ONIONS

s!:' 39¢

3

KRAFT

FRENCH 8
DRESSING oz.

·

Pomeroy

Connies

Miss America
Acmt~

Life Stride

Stride Rite

DRESS &amp; SPORT

Values From sl3.99 to' s2s.oo

UP TO

40

2 LB.

10 lb.,

49¢

CATSUP 14 oz.

0/

·'

KRAFT

FRENCH FRIES
FROZEN

2 LB.

69~

Coffee Mate
22

oz.

39 e
14%

•.

oz.

PORK &amp; BEANS,
· CHILl, OCTOBER, •
NAVY
14 0~

$119

2-/4
I

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snow shovel here with my exerclze
equipment?"

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BUCKHANN ON, W.V11.1 dP I)
- "Somebod y come ami helP
me. Please help me." ·
Thl' pleas &lt;' it Ill(' rron) 12-yPar-

old -Beverly Cleg horn , standing River .
atop i:l sunk en !':ar , up t.o her
Beneath her in tbe river, four
knees in tile swirling, cold friends were dead, victims or a
wa ter' of the Buckhannon New Year's Day traffic accident..
The car of Ronnie E. Casto
went out of control on ·a
slippery •oad near the ~ity
limits and plunged over a 30. by' Neg Cochran . foot embankment into the river.
Casto, his wiie, Charlotte,
A N D l 'M TAKING I"T &lt;XJT 50 YOU Wor.J•T
SRIN0 IT S AC K ! I 'D L.I K E. AUNT M l~ To
both about 26, her sister Mary
GET M'l CHRI STMAS TliAN K-YOU I.:ET·
' Jane .Reger, 12, and daughter,
T-i" R. BEFORe W\LEI-JT II\J E ~ ~Y, 5o
PQN' T LE.T li CUT OF YOUQ HA J\JD
Mary Jo Reger, .5, were killed .'
TILL YOU DIWP IT IN THE
Beverly was the only survivor.
~ILBOX.'
Police and fire rescue units

Q. When a team scores a
touchdown, Is it awardt•d a first

.."

HOURS: 8:00-5:00 .WEEKDAYS
8:00.1:00 SATURDAY

MEAT

Wt custom cut for your
Freezer. All m. . t Is fresh
cut &amp;, wr•pped.

DAILY .

~2-3502

3 lb. Rib Steak
4 lb. Beef Roast
3 lb. Ground Beef
3 lb. Pork Chops

2 Fresh fryers

$

50 •

Ground
·
Bee'-----~:71-'
Pork
Butt..R'oast______ 2~_sg~

50

-

•

•••
••

•

PR.

We overbought •• So you gel the bargai ns .

Sizes· Toddlers thru Size 3. Go outfit your
·boye and girls now .

Y2 .PRICE

$ 99

Values to 518.88

COFFEE!

" STOCK
CHOICE OF ENTIRl
'

DON'T MISS THESE!

•

---{

WOMENS
BLOUSES+'ress
Permanent

.

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(\t1'" \·

:
/

$388 · ~.
BRAS .

ble~ds or polyesters .

.

Solids.

~. ;
·_\.·,
.· _..)mer

For-

prrnts.

30%

Val.ues to ' $6.94.

' ~ . _u .Jj) WOMENS

,' " • ·· TOPS

.· ~#r\

Long Sleeve. Pant Top
types.
Polyester.
S;.1;,
Values
to
$5.
94.
-,

·

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••
•••
••

:

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Excitinll

SIDE-BY-SIDE

Advance
in

COLD
GUARD

Refrigerators
In

Over A

. Refrigerator

Decade

·

Open

.SA YES TIME

'

DRESS GLOVES ·

$15.88 '

Thermal lined, pil e
lined . Soft vinyls a l
a · low, low pric e .

BOYS &amp; MEN'S' SIZES

4 BUCKLE ARTICS

All16.6(;u. ft. models now only 30"
wide.
-

1RVIN"
CHROME
WARE

$499
A~l

&amp;Abbott
.'

NOW

MENS HOUSE SLIPPERS

40%

'

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REDUCED

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

30%

.

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:t·

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COATS

SOFA PILLOWS---------

..

Mens .and Boys

WINTER

MENS SWEA TERS.-,~.:.--~~-.!5 110
MENS SHIRTS--'-----•3" And•4"

WOMENS
SHOES

1f2PRICE

11

Regular $6 .77

ENTIRE STOCK!

$ 22

BOYS &amp; MEN

To

."'

'

$}77 And. $277

Former
Values to 53.24

REDUCED FOR CLEARANCE

.· SAVES
SPACE .
.

PS

MENS SWEAT SHIRtS

'
Easy-to-adjust cantilever shelves
.

t'H. 992-2955.
Friendly Service
.
'' 112 E. MAIN . .1
'
POMEROY,
0 ,.·:::',
.

./

40(//0~~ular
/ ( Pnces

· .

EVERYDAY
LOW PRICE

Drastic
Reductions I

Values

Zipper Boots

Even ·at llQ degn!es, a Philco Sideby-Side· cools :quicker, keeps its
cold longer, than any other
refrigerator-freezer tested!

O.ilyi•OO•.m. to9:30p.m.

,.

PANT
SUITS

Dress Weight
Including

.

PRESCiU PTIONS

'

GIRLS
-COATS

PHILCO

SAVES
FOOD
.

Sundoy tO:lOto t2:30and ~to 9 p.m .

..

WOMEN'S

Allallable ln .colors
'to matcfi nearly any
l_d tchen decor•

1

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.

THEY ALL GO!

$46995

CHRISTMAS
SPECIAL
PRICE

t:leaven Sent.Spray Mist.
SAVE
R'· I . 5.1,5.
.
.
eguar
3
25
2.0.0 .· •••..•• ••..••••••..•...• .. •.:. •
~

P,HILCO"

OFF

GIRLS

$288

The Most

K"'nel!l M~:Cullough; R. Ph. Ctrartes Riffle, R.Pir ·

.,

CHILDREN'S
SHOES

_$399

ENTIRE STQCK

T~E BOY~

Pharmacy

•

Val'ues to 56.94

4

.•

A .SAVINGS
RIOT l

!

PANT COATS and. CAR COATS

IN SLUE
. fREE

Bath·and Body Perfume
SAVE
·
·
•
1.25 ............. ~.~~~~~~.~.. ~-~~ ..... 2.50

L

2 PRS.' $10

·'

WOMENS COATS

OFFERED

SWISHER LOHSE

.. \

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WOMENS
SWEATERS

Mittens, Too

REVOl.T~

JEAN NATE'
A SPRAY OF NATE'

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. ME! WE
.SIMPI.Y

Beauty
Specials

••

.

Entire Stock ·

KNIT
GLOVES

~ICK

'

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Child and Girls

HUMOR

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

576

.

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3 lb. Pork Steak

..

STARTS FR-IDAY MORNING JAN. 3rd 10 A.M.·

'

~ lb. Cube Steak

4 lb. Ground Beef
l!z Ham
2 lb. Cube 'Steak $
4·lb. Beef Roast
3 lb. Pprk Chops

Middleport, Ohio

THE S UR E THIN G

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

PHONE
992-2955

'

TH·E SHOE BOX

We carry a complete atock
of-the finest pharmaceuticals to Fill all your prescription needa. We alao have a
lf!'ide selection of quality
heafth products, including
supplies for tl)e sickroom.
We're dedicated to your
good health-let us take
care .of your pharmacy
needs promptly here!

4·lb. Beef Roast
2 lb. Round Steak

2 lb. Round Steak
,
l!z Ham
4 lb. Beef Roast
4 lb. Ground Beef
3 lb. Pork Chops
2lb. Beef Stew$
3 lb. Rib Steak
·3 lb. Weiners

.
Sizes 8V2 up
'

''

575

574

rescue her.
"The ·car was completely.
under water. She was s tanding
on top, in 10 inches or wate r,
when we go t to her ," a rescuer
said .
The bodies of Mrs. Casto and
the lwoyo un g girls were fou nd
in the ca r. Searchers said Casto
was swept away in the river's
swift ' urrent.
Beverly was taken to . a
hospital but appa rently was not
se l"i ously injured.

, ~SADDLES-

to

P~SCIQ.PTION
:. SEI{YICE

weie at the scene within
minutes. jhey used a boat to

'

.

Foreign Minist~r Ismail Fah· main reason why the Soviet
mi 's recent three-&lt;lay visit to leader met Fahmi ''outside the
·Kremlin and at a location that
the Soviet Union.
. The diplomats declined to was not officially disclosed ."
Diplomats said Brezhnev
identify the illn'ess but said it
caused the postponement of arrived in Paris for hi.s recent
Brezhnev's planned visit to talks with President Valery
Egypt, Syria and Iraq this Giscard d'Estaing in a (atigued
state but quickly perked up.
month . .
The sources said Fahmi, who
Mrs.. Brezhnev told West
returned Tuesday from his trip
to Moscow. visited tbe 68-year- German Chancellor Helmut
old Communist l~ader at the Schmidt in Moscow two months
sanatorium. Brezhnev told ago ber husband cur out official :.
Falimi his doctors advised luncheons so 'he could rest.
"He is working 1_8-hour
against traveling to the Middle
days," she said.
East Jan. 24, they said.
In recent months, he has met
The semiofficial Cairo news·
Schmidt,
Secretary of State
paper AI Ahram said the :!:&gt;minute meeting tooll...!lla&lt;;_~ in a Henry Kissinger and Pakistani
rest home about :io"bunutes' Premier Zulfikar Ali Bhutto in
drive from Moscow "where the Moscow. He conferred with
Soviet leaper has been recupe· President Ford in Vladivostok
and traveled
Pari.s and
rating from. a severe cold."
The newspaper said Brezh· Mongolia on other officials
nev's health was one of the trips.

COMPLETE •••

ij_i

It's Back To School

Q. Did Jimmy the Greek. lhe
oddsmakcr.- ever write a book down that shows up in tht.•
Windsor,
on his life or on sports'! If he _statisti&lt;'s'!-Lnrry
L.aun•l.
Del.
did, where (•an I buy one'! Y· ·, it is. The scorin g rule
Robert G. Landis. Long Rear h.
dale" back to the 1950s.
Calif.

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· Child rescued from roof. of sunken -car

.•.·
;:;:

,. .Hmmy Snyder. oul t;f Ohi o
•11·iginally omd unt'c an oil
wildeei ll l'l' bcfun• he turned t.u
fl1c Nev~t da seen(•, nmdr a dea l ...
&lt;t r\' \~ years a~o .wilh- "Dav£'
i\ nd(•rso n, now thr spor ts
OUT OUR WAY
l'ohuunis t ctf the New York
NO NEED "TO CHECI&lt;
Times , to cullabora h• on a
ClN lT ··! PUT YOU~
book . But ·I Lmde rst~nd that
L.i: TTER ltoJTHERE
L.AS"T toJ I6KT 50 I
Mic key Hershk owitz
of
.WOULDtoJ' T I=O Rc.'SET
Uouston, who wot:ked with
'TO N\AIL IT /
Howard Cosell on his book, has
now jumped int o the ,scenesort of a ghost for a ghos t.

A lot of it is a matter tlF
psyche. Some guys "orne out of
college ball tra ined in team
play and an~ n ··r hungry for
ptiinls. If you'll cheek back t.n
UCLA days, Walto n wasn't an
inordinBil•ly high S\.'Orer. He
only went for the bucket when
the tea m needed someone to
pick up the scoring slack. On
the Po rtl a n ~ Bla z e rs, he's
surrounded by a couple uf
gunners - Sidney Wi cl&lt;s and
Geoff.:_ wh o make it unnecessary for him to shoot .

:• ~------------------~

FRESH

MEATS

\'

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~:''

•.tit.,

~

VAWES TO·s25.00

PR. OR -

fJ!i

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DR.ES$-SPORT~SNO BOOTS
.,
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.$6.

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-.:-.•.'.·.•;._:·.•·.•·-•.·= .-=.·:::::.·::.::::::::::::::::::::·.•.·•.·•.·:.·:.-:.·:.·:.-:.·•.·•.-=.·•.·:.·:.-:.·•.·:.·:.-:.-:.· :.·:.-:.-:.-:,-:,-:,·:-.:.·:.·:.-:_·:• :.-:.-.· •. ; ·. •.. ·.•.••·.·•••••••· ·.·:·:·:·.·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::
·.· .. ·,· . ' ' .. . . .. .. .. ' ' .. '' . . ..... . . ·.. .. .. . ' . . ..

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CHEESE
PIZZA
Show Boat Beans

./OsAVINGs ·.

ONE· LARGE GRO~P

..

&gt;•

Brezhnev _reportedly ill

~

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..·-

MAXWELL HOUSE
INSTANT 14
269
COFFEE
oz.~ $

S349

11 oz.
Fami~ Size

25e

HUNTS

TIDE

577

Now In .Prog.ress~

by Dick Turner

CA'ItNIVAL ,

.

I

.
.r elived..

JANUARY

Chapman's sHoEs
Main St.

CABBAGE

.l!z Ham

TIME AT

"I dreamed an oi l-rich Arab wanted to buy Chicago and.
like a dummy. I wouldn 't sel l' "

&amp;
"T

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SALE
. '

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-·
--

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.

SMOKED CALLIES

1\ coondog ·eld trial will be
held Stmday, eg inning at II
a. m. at the McClintic, Wildlife
Station, located on Rt. 62 north
of Pt. Pleasant. Pr1zcs will be
a.warded winners. Ronald Kidd
and Larry Kidd will serve as
fie ld marshals.

Ph.

.

""

.....
.......
...
-·
...
:
...

FRENCH CITY

TRIA ~SUNDAY

IIJ

~:~. G:rang
·

---• ••..3.

,,,,

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,...,.,.

By Murray Oldennao 1NEA) slug the offensive guy opposite
Q, I hear. so mu~h about him on the head'! It st&gt;ems to
football greats but never read me I've seen it don·e. -John
any mention of one of the 0 .. .Oil Uty. Pa.
outstanding players of all
You sure have. Bu t legn lly, •
.. M
times, J Red Grange, · th e the defender is allowed only
Galloping Ghost. Would you one clout. to the s ~ull per pl ay.
· oblige ·the public by writing a Tha t's beca use a fe w yea rs ago
little history of his terrific Deacon Jones used to beat a
achievements ?
-Rocc o rat-a-tat-ta t on the helmets of
Gargano Union, N. Y.
offensive tackles, machine g·un
I could write a book - in style , so a r ule was passed
• fact , did (" The Runnin g limilin~ the defen.der to only
Backs") - and Grange. now hit. How blockers don··r go out
• retired in Florida, age 71 , has o[ their skulls.
always received his due from
'historians. He reall y was
Q. I've seen Rill Walton play
responsible for the respec- n couple of games. Why is he
of modern pro football not scoring that murh'! Does he
••
•• tability
when he joined the Chicago hav e a different assignmcnl in
•• Bears in 1925 after a fabulous the pro grame? - Tony Sa n·
college career at Illinois: As a doval, Seville, Calif.
junior against a Michigan
powerhouse that had been
undefeated for 20 games, he
scored four l1luchdowns in the
first 12 minutes. In his six
·seasons with the Bears ,
:; Grange was noted mainly as a
~
fine defe~ive back because · By GERARD LOUGHRAN
L
., after he hurt his knee in 1927, . MOSCOW (UPI) - The
•• his nmning effectiveness was
,,,
Soviet Union has refused
::; limited. Red Grange, No. 77, comment on reports that
was one of the golden figures of Communist leader Leonid
the Golden Twenties .
Brezhnev i.s ailing and confined
to bed in a sanatorifUll.
..
Q, What is the highest, lowest
Diplomatic sources in Cairo
: and average salary Of a p~ro say Brezhnev, general secre:
football player In 1974? -R. J., tary of the Soviet Communi.st
:; Cinetnnatl,. 0.
" party, iS being lteated at a
::
The highest would· have to.be sanatorium on the outsklrls of
·
~ Joe Namath's reported $250,000 Moscow.
"We
will
not
comment
on any
· •· a year - by far. The lowest
" isn't officially revealed but such reports," a spokesman for
•.. since the NFL minimum is the Soviet Foreign Ministry
:;; $12,000 currimUy for rookies, said Wednesday in response to
!.~ arid there were a few walk..on questions from Western corre::;-free agent;; in this year of a spondents.
The party chief .was last seen
w sfxike, I'm sure you· could find
r
in
public on Dec. 24 at the
~ a couple of players at the
opening
of the Supreme Soviet,
~ minimum. The average has to
:: be an educated guess - around the U.S.S.R. parliament.
: $36,000 ~ year - or not even . Newsmen said he seemed in
::: half what 1\le pro basketball normal health.
The Cairo sources said
: -.average is.
Tuesday Brezhnev's condition
••
was
disclosed during Egyptian. ·
Q. ·Can a delensive lineman

TUNA

pet . g . b.
487

1.

·STAR KIST
GOLDEN. ISLE

.

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.;;.. Just ask Murray

RUTLAND, 0.

742-5543

15

861
538

U t ah

31 5
11 18
19 20
14 19
14 2 1

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT STORE
~

2 lb. Weiners
J-2

\

' ,.

9- The J?aily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomtlnl~. o .. Tl~ ln·,,d:\ y, .J; II,l. 2. !!175

.

N ,1 t 1n n ol l B ,t ':ik'i l bd ll A ~SOC1 o11 10. n

B v Un ttc d· Pr l'SS Int e rnational

fererl Winter Quar ter. One
~roup will mee t fr om fi : 15 to

/.
·,

·

HIO GHM\DE - Dr George
Ossnum. Hssisl..:- ntt dean fur
two-yt~;n· pr Og ram s a! Ri o
Grande Commun ity College
today
c-tmwun ccd
the
scheduling of thrrl' continui ng
ed uca ti on cake de cor ati ng
courses for Winter Qum·tcr .
These cl&lt;rsses will begi n
January 20 and 21 nnd will
.COf!tinue, meeting oncP e,al' h
week, for si x weeks.
Beginning cH ke clcc:orating
will be offered'tt·om ti: 15 to 9: 15
p.m. enrh Tucsd;w in Davis
Ha ll. The enrollment wt ll be
lim ited to twelve persons and ;.t
min imum of ten studenls is
required fo r the rout·sc to be
offered. Mrs. Betty Ca rpentN
wm aga in be the ins tructor for
the course.
Beginning ca ke ctecor·ating
includes Ute basics of ba king.
rctng
and
ilower
H!Ta ngenwnts . Cakes to be
decora ted during the course
include the Shamrut·k. Wild
Rose, Holiday, and f'h ocol:rtc

,,

I

.

SOME OF THE MEMBE RS are pictured above of the
first Beginning Cake Decorating Class conducted F"ll
Qt.wrrer &lt;J t Rio Grande ComrnWlity College. Starting in

..,·

OFFFORMER PRICES

112 PRICE

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~~- . - •• 8 ~ The Daily &amp;-nrinr l, M iddlepdrt·Pmnero~··
, il.;
.
. 'l'hursd&lt;~Y . J01n. 2, 1975.

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Start d •ng s

Eas lt•r n Conl"c r c nce
A ll,lAI IC 0 1\liSIOA

w.

n

Bu tt ato
Boston

1. p e r. g ,b .
13 . "62~

'l? 13 6 1~
N ew Y o r k
19 15 . SSV 2 11~ ,
Ph i l,l d Cipt1i i'l
l -1 1l
&lt;1 00
8
Cen t r a l 0 PJ tSIOf1 ·
w I. pet . g .b .
· Wast1inolon
i b 10 722
Clev e land
18 14 .563
6
Hous ton
19 15 .559
6
Atla n ta
16 21 .432 J(l' '?
N e w Orleans
j
20 .091 2-p ;,
Wes t ern Co nfe r e n ce
M id wes t D ivis •on
w. 1. p et . g . b.
Det r oi t
19 17 518
KC Oma t1 a
20 19 .513
v,
Ch ic"aqo
. 11 17 .500
1
M il wau k ee
~4
19 .40'4 31 ~
P aci li c Di v i !:. ion
w . 1 pet . g . b .
Golden St al e
2J 1:&lt;' 6 57
Se ar li e
11,, ,19 .472 6 ';•
15 18 455
7
Phoen1X
Por lletnd
15 20 J29
fl
LosAngel es
15 11 417 8 1 1
W edn es d'ay 's R es ult s
Atlan ta 101 KC Omaha 97
Bo s to n 108 Por tl and 9J
Se al l ie l 'i3 W a s hi ngton 118 , or
T hursday 's G a-m es
Phoenix at N ew Y9 r l\
New Or l ea n &amp; a t D et r oit
A tlan ta at Mi l wa,u k ee

\

•••
l--~i

ABA St a nd i ng s

B y Un i t ed Pr e ss Int e rnation a l

January, three additional sessions of Cake Decorating will ~e
offered as continuing education classes with po college
credits .by U1e Community College.

Cake decorating classes will be continued

Men's CHkr . ('(JS t

f&lt;!r

t he

course. which is not for creclil.
will be $12 tuition and $10 for
supplies for " total of $22.
Two sessions of Inleri"necl iate
Cu ke Decorating w\11 b~ of.

SIDE GLANCES

-/~

•

fi rs l-cnme, first-serve basis.

Rt·gis tration will remain open

.

until the first class meeting or
tm til the class is filled .

!l:- 15 p.m. Mond.n y even ing and

}mothe r from 12 noon to:~ p.m.
oi1 Tuesday : Both sessions will
be hel d in Davis Hall on the Rio
Gnmdc . Campus with Mrs.
Belty Cn rpcntcr as instruc tor .
The!ie cour ses ar c also
li mi ted lo twelv e slud e nl s
rach, and bol.h mu st h3ve a
minimum of ten stud en fs
enrolled to be offe red. Intermed iate CHke Decorating,
which is auotlter contin uing
ed ucati on class with no Co ll ege
crCdits, requires that s tudents
co mpl ete Beginni ng Ca ke
Tlecontl ing before en rolling.
Beginn ers nove lties . a nd
de tailed fl ower arrangemenL.,
wi ll be taught and a wide
\'ar icty of ca k es wil l be
decyrated during the s i x ~wce k
course.
Cos t for In termedia te Cake
Decorati ng will be $12 tuit ion
nnd $5 for St[pplies for a tol&lt;l l of
$17 . Hcgistri1tion for any of the
thre e scs!1 iott s· in . Ca ke
neL'Ora ting may be cnn·lp leted
M o~day, Ji:lnttary !i, at Rio
Ct'itndeCollcg(\fr om na .m. to 4
p.m. and from G to 9 p.m. Sl micn ts will be accepted on a

•

New titles

ID

7 categories
Ry Susan Fleshman
New titleS at the PomeroyMiddleport libraries rea dy for
loa n in g..- or browsing co me in
seve n catego ri es . Inclu ded
are:
NOVELS _
The Killer Angels
four
days in the Battle of Gettysburg.
Idols and Axlegrease - a
host or charac ters in .a small
town during the Depress ion.
Grea t Maria - a roya l
princess in 13th Ce ntury
Europe.
Madonna of the Seven Hills
- a new Jean P la~dy roma nce.

Pennington's Heir - a
yo un g musician uut of jail and
mto fat her hood.
A Billion for Boris _
makinHmoney on the horses is
child 's play in this story.
The · Sacred and Profane
Love Ma chine - Irish Mud och
by Gill Fox
plays with the eternal triangle.
BIOGRAPHY
------ - - .,
There's Nothing I Own Tha t I
Wall t - surv ival in poverty .
A Miracle " Day Keeps the
Dev il Away - Pal Boone.
Beyo nd the Cross and the
Switchblade - Dave Wilerson.
i\h-O ne. Ah-Two: Life with
My Musical Fa mil y
Lawrence Welk.
Ltfe as I Have Known it has
Been Finger Lickin c Good .::
Colon~! Sanders.
I • Mill on
Berl ean
1\utobiography.
Love. Hate and War -Life of
an Ex: P.O.W. - Donal d
Manuel.
Slarfall - Betty Grissom
wr ites a bout .li fe 1n a n
astrommt ·s family.
Bed-Time Story - A lov e

story that survived Hollywood
and alcohol.
FOR KIDS
Where the Wild Things Are.
The Stupids Step Out.
The Night Kitchen.
BUSINESS
Am a teurs Don ' t Ma~ e a
Dime Selling Hard goods - you
ca n increase and create sales
opportunities with the ideas 'in
this book.
Tes ted Advertising Methods
- this takes the guesswork out
or wr it in g you r own. ad vertising.
"
Writer's Market '7 5 - how to
se ll your poems, plays, short
stories. ph otos, j oke s and
a rticles to thou sands of
magazines across America.
.HEALTH
Type "A" Behavior and Your
Hea rl - your behavior patterns can make you heart
at tack-prone; learn how to help
yourself and avoid them .
Seizures , Epilepsy and ' Your
Child - helpful to parents and
teachers.
COOKBOOKS
Joy of Cooking - 4,300
recipes for learners, gourmet
chefs and every r ook in be·
tween.

What 's Cooking in Kentucky home re cipes from the
bluegrass slate.
CURRENT INTEREST
Supership - the new breed of
oil tankers and the dangers
they present.
·
.
Man Kind ? -"Our in credible · incredible war on
wildlife''.
· Muscle and Blood - a clear
look at industrial dangers in
the U. S. and the reasons why
10,000 Ame•icans are killed
each year by their jo?.

E a.st

K enluc k y
New York
St Louis
Virq inia
Memphis

Denver
SanAn tonio

w. 1. pet .
"lJ 10 . 697
15 11 .694
1J 1J 368

g.b.
-·
11 1 1

.165
.157

]4 1 ~

9

25
'16

9
W es t
w . 1.

BACON

111 ?
lJI 7

Ind iana
424
S&lt;m Dle~o
400
W edn esday 's Result
San D1eg o JIB tn diar.~a 100
Ttlursday' s Games
Virgin ia a t St . Louis
M e mphis at U tah
San D 1ego at ' Sa n A nton i o

151 1
16 1 •

LITTLE TIME WASTED
VAIL, Colo . ( UPI ) - white
House Press Secretary ·Ron
Nessen · was ted little time
breaking one of his new year's
resolutions .
He walked into the press
center Wednesday morning,
saying be had resolved to quit
smo~ing and noted he had been
successful for more than 10
hours.
..
After a brief chat witb
reporters, Nessen walked toward his office, unconsciously
lighting a cigarette.

,, ... ' •..

:"

YELLOW ONIONS

s!:' 39¢

3

KRAFT

FRENCH 8
DRESSING oz.

·

Pomeroy

Connies

Miss America
Acmt~

Life Stride

Stride Rite

DRESS &amp; SPORT

Values From sl3.99 to' s2s.oo

UP TO

40

2 LB.

10 lb.,

49¢

CATSUP 14 oz.

0/

·'

KRAFT

FRENCH FRIES
FROZEN

2 LB.

69~

Coffee Mate
22

oz.

39 e
14%

•.

oz.

PORK &amp; BEANS,
· CHILl, OCTOBER, •
NAVY
14 0~

$119

2-/4
I

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snow shovel here with my exerclze
equipment?"

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.·.·
.;.;

BUCKHANN ON, W.V11.1 dP I)
- "Somebod y come ami helP
me. Please help me." ·
Thl' pleas &lt;' it Ill(' rron) 12-yPar-

old -Beverly Cleg horn , standing River .
atop i:l sunk en !':ar , up t.o her
Beneath her in tbe river, four
knees in tile swirling, cold friends were dead, victims or a
wa ter' of the Buckhannon New Year's Day traffic accident..
The car of Ronnie E. Casto
went out of control on ·a
slippery •oad near the ~ity
limits and plunged over a 30. by' Neg Cochran . foot embankment into the river.
Casto, his wiie, Charlotte,
A N D l 'M TAKING I"T &lt;XJT 50 YOU Wor.J•T
SRIN0 IT S AC K ! I 'D L.I K E. AUNT M l~ To
both about 26, her sister Mary
GET M'l CHRI STMAS TliAN K-YOU I.:ET·
' Jane .Reger, 12, and daughter,
T-i" R. BEFORe W\LEI-JT II\J E ~ ~Y, 5o
PQN' T LE.T li CUT OF YOUQ HA J\JD
Mary Jo Reger, .5, were killed .'
TILL YOU DIWP IT IN THE
Beverly was the only survivor.
~ILBOX.'
Police and fire rescue units

Q. When a team scores a
touchdown, Is it awardt•d a first

.."

HOURS: 8:00-5:00 .WEEKDAYS
8:00.1:00 SATURDAY

MEAT

Wt custom cut for your
Freezer. All m. . t Is fresh
cut &amp;, wr•pped.

DAILY .

~2-3502

3 lb. Rib Steak
4 lb. Beef Roast
3 lb. Ground Beef
3 lb. Pork Chops

2 Fresh fryers

$

50 •

Ground
·
Bee'-----~:71-'
Pork
Butt..R'oast______ 2~_sg~

50

-

•

•••
••

•

PR.

We overbought •• So you gel the bargai ns .

Sizes· Toddlers thru Size 3. Go outfit your
·boye and girls now .

Y2 .PRICE

$ 99

Values to 518.88

COFFEE!

" STOCK
CHOICE OF ENTIRl
'

DON'T MISS THESE!

•

---{

WOMENS
BLOUSES+'ress
Permanent

.

"
. -(' • . .

(\t1'" \·

:
/

$388 · ~.
BRAS .

ble~ds or polyesters .

.

Solids.

~. ;
·_\.·,
.· _..)mer

For-

prrnts.

30%

Val.ues to ' $6.94.

' ~ . _u .Jj) WOMENS

,' " • ·· TOPS

.· ~#r\

Long Sleeve. Pant Top
types.
Polyester.
S;.1;,
Values
to
$5.
94.
-,

·

-••
••
•••
••

:

••

•

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~

.

.

Excitinll

SIDE-BY-SIDE

Advance
in

COLD
GUARD

Refrigerators
In

Over A

. Refrigerator

Decade

·

Open

.SA YES TIME

'

DRESS GLOVES ·

$15.88 '

Thermal lined, pil e
lined . Soft vinyls a l
a · low, low pric e .

BOYS &amp; MEN'S' SIZES

4 BUCKLE ARTICS

All16.6(;u. ft. models now only 30"
wide.
-

1RVIN"
CHROME
WARE

$499
A~l

&amp;Abbott
.'

NOW

MENS HOUSE SLIPPERS

40%

'

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REDUCED

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

30%

.

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·.

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;

/..,,;,_

:t·

,:

,I

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COATS

SOFA PILLOWS---------

..

Mens .and Boys

WINTER

MENS SWEA TERS.-,~.:.--~~-.!5 110
MENS SHIRTS--'-----•3" And•4"

WOMENS
SHOES

1f2PRICE

11

Regular $6 .77

ENTIRE STOCK!

$ 22

BOYS &amp; MEN

To

."'

'

$}77 And. $277

Former
Values to 53.24

REDUCED FOR CLEARANCE

.· SAVES
SPACE .
.

PS

MENS SWEAT SHIRtS

'
Easy-to-adjust cantilever shelves
.

t'H. 992-2955.
Friendly Service
.
'' 112 E. MAIN . .1
'
POMEROY,
0 ,.·:::',
.

./

40(//0~~ular
/ ( Pnces

· .

EVERYDAY
LOW PRICE

Drastic
Reductions I

Values

Zipper Boots

Even ·at llQ degn!es, a Philco Sideby-Side· cools :quicker, keeps its
cold longer, than any other
refrigerator-freezer tested!

O.ilyi•OO•.m. to9:30p.m.

,.

PANT
SUITS

Dress Weight
Including

.

PRESCiU PTIONS

'

GIRLS
-COATS

PHILCO

SAVES
FOOD
.

Sundoy tO:lOto t2:30and ~to 9 p.m .

..

WOMEN'S

Allallable ln .colors
'to matcfi nearly any
l_d tchen decor•

1

...

.

THEY ALL GO!

$46995

CHRISTMAS
SPECIAL
PRICE

t:leaven Sent.Spray Mist.
SAVE
R'· I . 5.1,5.
.
.
eguar
3
25
2.0.0 .· •••..•• ••..••••••..•...• .. •.:. •
~

P,HILCO"

OFF

GIRLS

$288

The Most

K"'nel!l M~:Cullough; R. Ph. Ctrartes Riffle, R.Pir ·

.,

CHILDREN'S
SHOES

_$399

ENTIRE STQCK

T~E BOY~

Pharmacy

•

Val'ues to 56.94

4

.•

A .SAVINGS
RIOT l

!

PANT COATS and. CAR COATS

IN SLUE
. fREE

Bath·and Body Perfume
SAVE
·
·
•
1.25 ............. ~.~~~~~~.~.. ~-~~ ..... 2.50

L

2 PRS.' $10

·'

WOMENS COATS

OFFERED

SWISHER LOHSE

.. \

-

WOMENS
SWEATERS

Mittens, Too

REVOl.T~

JEAN NATE'
A SPRAY OF NATE'

•

;'

&lt;

. ME! WE
.SIMPI.Y

Beauty
Specials

••

.

Entire Stock ·

KNIT
GLOVES

~ICK

'

'

'

Child and Girls

HUMOR

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

576

.

'

'

3 lb. Pork Steak

..

STARTS FR-IDAY MORNING JAN. 3rd 10 A.M.·

'

~ lb. Cube Steak

4 lb. Ground Beef
l!z Ham
2 lb. Cube 'Steak $
4·lb. Beef Roast
3 lb. Pprk Chops

Middleport, Ohio

THE S UR E THIN G

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

PHONE
992-2955

'

TH·E SHOE BOX

We carry a complete atock
of-the finest pharmaceuticals to Fill all your prescription needa. We alao have a
lf!'ide selection of quality
heafth products, including
supplies for tl)e sickroom.
We're dedicated to your
good health-let us take
care .of your pharmacy
needs promptly here!

4·lb. Beef Roast
2 lb. Round Steak

2 lb. Round Steak
,
l!z Ham
4 lb. Beef Roast
4 lb. Ground Beef
3 lb. Pork Chops
2lb. Beef Stew$
3 lb. Rib Steak
·3 lb. Weiners

.
Sizes 8V2 up
'

''

575

574

rescue her.
"The ·car was completely.
under water. She was s tanding
on top, in 10 inches or wate r,
when we go t to her ," a rescuer
said .
The bodies of Mrs. Casto and
the lwoyo un g girls were fou nd
in the ca r. Searchers said Casto
was swept away in the river's
swift ' urrent.
Beverly was taken to . a
hospital but appa rently was not
se l"i ously injured.

, ~SADDLES-

to

P~SCIQ.PTION
:. SEI{YICE

weie at the scene within
minutes. jhey used a boat to

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Foreign Minist~r Ismail Fah· main reason why the Soviet
mi 's recent three-&lt;lay visit to leader met Fahmi ''outside the
·Kremlin and at a location that
the Soviet Union.
. The diplomats declined to was not officially disclosed ."
Diplomats said Brezhnev
identify the illn'ess but said it
caused the postponement of arrived in Paris for hi.s recent
Brezhnev's planned visit to talks with President Valery
Egypt, Syria and Iraq this Giscard d'Estaing in a (atigued
state but quickly perked up.
month . .
The sources said Fahmi, who
Mrs.. Brezhnev told West
returned Tuesday from his trip
to Moscow. visited tbe 68-year- German Chancellor Helmut
old Communist l~ader at the Schmidt in Moscow two months
sanatorium. Brezhnev told ago ber husband cur out official :.
Falimi his doctors advised luncheons so 'he could rest.
"He is working 1_8-hour
against traveling to the Middle
days," she said.
East Jan. 24, they said.
In recent months, he has met
The semiofficial Cairo news·
Schmidt,
Secretary of State
paper AI Ahram said the :!:&gt;minute meeting tooll...!lla&lt;;_~ in a Henry Kissinger and Pakistani
rest home about :io"bunutes' Premier Zulfikar Ali Bhutto in
drive from Moscow "where the Moscow. He conferred with
Soviet leaper has been recupe· President Ford in Vladivostok
and traveled
Pari.s and
rating from. a severe cold."
The newspaper said Brezh· Mongolia on other officials
nev's health was one of the trips.

COMPLETE •••

ij_i

It's Back To School

Q. Did Jimmy the Greek. lhe
oddsmakcr.- ever write a book down that shows up in tht.•
Windsor,
on his life or on sports'! If he _statisti&lt;'s'!-Lnrry
L.aun•l.
Del.
did, where (•an I buy one'! Y· ·, it is. The scorin g rule
Robert G. Landis. Long Rear h.
dale" back to the 1950s.
Calif.

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· Child rescued from roof. of sunken -car

.•.·
;:;:

,. .Hmmy Snyder. oul t;f Ohi o
•11·iginally omd unt'c an oil
wildeei ll l'l' bcfun• he turned t.u
fl1c Nev~t da seen(•, nmdr a dea l ...
&lt;t r\' \~ years a~o .wilh- "Dav£'
i\ nd(•rso n, now thr spor ts
OUT OUR WAY
l'ohuunis t ctf the New York
NO NEED "TO CHECI&lt;
Times , to cullabora h• on a
ClN lT ··! PUT YOU~
book . But ·I Lmde rst~nd that
L.i: TTER ltoJTHERE
L.AS"T toJ I6KT 50 I
Mic key Hershk owitz
of
.WOULDtoJ' T I=O Rc.'SET
Uouston, who wot:ked with
'TO N\AIL IT /
Howard Cosell on his book, has
now jumped int o the ,scenesort of a ghost for a ghos t.

A lot of it is a matter tlF
psyche. Some guys "orne out of
college ball tra ined in team
play and an~ n ··r hungry for
ptiinls. If you'll cheek back t.n
UCLA days, Walto n wasn't an
inordinBil•ly high S\.'Orer. He
only went for the bucket when
the tea m needed someone to
pick up the scoring slack. On
the Po rtl a n ~ Bla z e rs, he's
surrounded by a couple uf
gunners - Sidney Wi cl&lt;s and
Geoff.:_ wh o make it unnecessary for him to shoot .

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FRESH

MEATS

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VAWES TO·s25.00

PR. OR -

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-.:-.•.'.·.•;._:·.•·.•·-•.·= .-=.·:::::.·::.::::::::::::::::::::·.•.·•.·•.·:.·:.-:.·:.·:.-:.·•.·•.-=.·•.·:.·:.-:.·•.·:.·:.-:.-:.· :.·:.-:.-:.-:,-:,-:,·:-.:.·:.·:.-:_·:• :.-:.-.· •. ; ·. •.. ·.•.••·.·•••••••· ·.·:·:·:·.·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::
·.· .. ·,· . ' ' .. . . .. .. .. ' ' .. '' . . ..... . . ·.. .. .. . ' . . ..

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CHEESE
PIZZA
Show Boat Beans

./OsAVINGs ·.

ONE· LARGE GRO~P

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Brezhnev _reportedly ill

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MAXWELL HOUSE
INSTANT 14
269
COFFEE
oz.~ $

S349

11 oz.
Fami~ Size

25e

HUNTS

TIDE

577

Now In .Prog.ress~

by Dick Turner

CA'ItNIVAL ,

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.r elived..

JANUARY

Chapman's sHoEs
Main St.

CABBAGE

.l!z Ham

TIME AT

"I dreamed an oi l-rich Arab wanted to buy Chicago and.
like a dummy. I wouldn 't sel l' "

&amp;
"T

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SMOKED CALLIES

1\ coondog ·eld trial will be
held Stmday, eg inning at II
a. m. at the McClintic, Wildlife
Station, located on Rt. 62 north
of Pt. Pleasant. Pr1zcs will be
a.warded winners. Ronald Kidd
and Larry Kidd will serve as
fie ld marshals.

Ph.

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FRENCH CITY

TRIA ~SUNDAY

IIJ

~:~. G:rang
·

---• ••..3.

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By Murray Oldennao 1NEA) slug the offensive guy opposite
Q, I hear. so mu~h about him on the head'! It st&gt;ems to
football greats but never read me I've seen it don·e. -John
any mention of one of the 0 .. .Oil Uty. Pa.
outstanding players of all
You sure have. Bu t legn lly, •
.. M
times, J Red Grange, · th e the defender is allowed only
Galloping Ghost. Would you one clout. to the s ~ull per pl ay.
· oblige ·the public by writing a Tha t's beca use a fe w yea rs ago
little history of his terrific Deacon Jones used to beat a
achievements ?
-Rocc o rat-a-tat-ta t on the helmets of
Gargano Union, N. Y.
offensive tackles, machine g·un
I could write a book - in style , so a r ule was passed
• fact , did (" The Runnin g limilin~ the defen.der to only
Backs") - and Grange. now hit. How blockers don··r go out
• retired in Florida, age 71 , has o[ their skulls.
always received his due from
'historians. He reall y was
Q. I've seen Rill Walton play
responsible for the respec- n couple of games. Why is he
of modern pro football not scoring that murh'! Does he
••
•• tability
when he joined the Chicago hav e a different assignmcnl in
•• Bears in 1925 after a fabulous the pro grame? - Tony Sa n·
college career at Illinois: As a doval, Seville, Calif.
junior against a Michigan
powerhouse that had been
undefeated for 20 games, he
scored four l1luchdowns in the
first 12 minutes. In his six
·seasons with the Bears ,
:; Grange was noted mainly as a
~
fine defe~ive back because · By GERARD LOUGHRAN
L
., after he hurt his knee in 1927, . MOSCOW (UPI) - The
•• his nmning effectiveness was
,,,
Soviet Union has refused
::; limited. Red Grange, No. 77, comment on reports that
was one of the golden figures of Communist leader Leonid
the Golden Twenties .
Brezhnev i.s ailing and confined
to bed in a sanatorifUll.
..
Q, What is the highest, lowest
Diplomatic sources in Cairo
: and average salary Of a p~ro say Brezhnev, general secre:
football player In 1974? -R. J., tary of the Soviet Communi.st
:; Cinetnnatl,. 0.
" party, iS being lteated at a
::
The highest would· have to.be sanatorium on the outsklrls of
·
~ Joe Namath's reported $250,000 Moscow.
"We
will
not
comment
on any
· •· a year - by far. The lowest
" isn't officially revealed but such reports," a spokesman for
•.. since the NFL minimum is the Soviet Foreign Ministry
:;; $12,000 currimUy for rookies, said Wednesday in response to
!.~ arid there were a few walk..on questions from Western corre::;-free agent;; in this year of a spondents.
The party chief .was last seen
w sfxike, I'm sure you· could find
r
in
public on Dec. 24 at the
~ a couple of players at the
opening
of the Supreme Soviet,
~ minimum. The average has to
:: be an educated guess - around the U.S.S.R. parliament.
: $36,000 ~ year - or not even . Newsmen said he seemed in
::: half what 1\le pro basketball normal health.
The Cairo sources said
: -.average is.
Tuesday Brezhnev's condition
••
was
disclosed during Egyptian. ·
Q. ·Can a delensive lineman

TUNA

pet . g . b.
487

1.

·STAR KIST
GOLDEN. ISLE

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RUTLAND, 0.

742-5543

15

861
538

U t ah

31 5
11 18
19 20
14 19
14 2 1

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT STORE
~

2 lb. Weiners
J-2

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9- The J?aily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomtlnl~. o .. Tl~ ln·,,d:\ y, .J; II,l. 2. !!175

.

N ,1 t 1n n ol l B ,t ':ik'i l bd ll A ~SOC1 o11 10. n

B v Un ttc d· Pr l'SS Int e rnational

fererl Winter Quar ter. One
~roup will mee t fr om fi : 15 to

/.
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HIO GHM\DE - Dr George
Ossnum. Hssisl..:- ntt dean fur
two-yt~;n· pr Og ram s a! Ri o
Grande Commun ity College
today
c-tmwun ccd
the
scheduling of thrrl' continui ng
ed uca ti on cake de cor ati ng
courses for Winter Qum·tcr .
These cl&lt;rsses will begi n
January 20 and 21 nnd will
.COf!tinue, meeting oncP e,al' h
week, for si x weeks.
Beginning cH ke clcc:orating
will be offered'tt·om ti: 15 to 9: 15
p.m. enrh Tucsd;w in Davis
Ha ll. The enrollment wt ll be
lim ited to twelve persons and ;.t
min imum of ten studenls is
required fo r the rout·sc to be
offered. Mrs. Betty Ca rpentN
wm aga in be the ins tructor for
the course.
Beginning ca ke ctecor·ating
includes Ute basics of ba king.
rctng
and
ilower
H!Ta ngenwnts . Cakes to be
decora ted during the course
include the Shamrut·k. Wild
Rose, Holiday, and f'h ocol:rtc

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SOME OF THE MEMBE RS are pictured above of the
first Beginning Cake Decorating Class conducted F"ll
Qt.wrrer &lt;J t Rio Grande ComrnWlity College. Starting in

..,·

OFFFORMER PRICES

112 PRICE

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.••
~nt inel, Mit1rlli'J:Mn-t·l 'omt·ro~· , t &gt;.• · l'l\ttrs tl:t, . .J;11 ..

· 10 ..- ThP p;lily

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Red Carpet !nn ordered closed
I
. PT. PLEASANT·- 'The l)fleagured Red Carpet Inn was
ordered abut down Indefinitely New Year's night by newly
. BJIROillted receiver Keith Hill of Polol Pleasant.
Hill told news media this morning that the dedsloo to
el- the mulll-mUllon dollar resort was made due to the lack
of operating capital.
·
...
• U. S. ~y Judge Johu Copenhaver Jr. only
Monday of this week named HIU to operate the resort.
Banknlptcy proteedlogs have been peodlog against the
resort s.fnce October. lllnltlaUy had been eXJII'l'ted·that Hill,
an a..,ountaot, would operate tbeiDn iinder bankruplcy laws.
Hill said the Inn will be shut down at least until after a
January 16 bearing before Judge Copenhaver.' WARC
President Howard N. JobiiS&lt;ln, trealurer Ralph George
Halcomb, and Director Josephine Lamont have been ondered
to appear for quellllonlng at the first crediton meeting oo
Jauaary 16.
CUrrent failure of the hotel reStaurant complex along
Route 62 just oortb of here Ia part of a 10-year history of
failures , The resort first opened In 1960.

Sheriff

Robert

C . . Har·

Har\'c~ ' Howell died W ednes&lt;;lay
Har vey Horton Howell, 84,
·Leon, who died Wednesday in
Veterans Memorial Ho5pital in .
Pomeroy, will be held at 2p.m.
Sa turd ay at the Ba.d'c n
Presbyterian Ch urch here. The
Rev . Wilbur Baxter will of.
ficiate , and burial will follow in

abill11f in[Qr~wtion on-(''harg':!s. the residenc-e of Peyton were a
sc wing· mac.: hiHc, welder; guns,
an ott' upied s lruclli'rc, that is, how an~ . arrow,, and a 1970
~tht · n·:--idence o'f Owen Biul'k· nHIIM Lyc le alle ged ly stolen
wot ~ \ in &amp;ipio Township in [rom Cindnrlt.i .
Peyton is in custody waitin g
. Meigs County, to commit a
se
nwncing by Common Pleas
theft as de(ined by law . ·.
. the Raden Ceme tery . Frie nds
· Properl y :-: toiPn recovered al Cour t

tenbach on Dec, 26 at l 2:20 . that he did by 'lurce, trespass
p .m . IQok into cuStudy Wt~ync

Peyton , 22; Rt. I, Dexter , at hi!-1
· resident-c.

. On Saturday Dec . 2a: Peyton
appeared· tiel ore Common
Pleas Judge J ohn C. B;u~on or1

br other , ' Holly ·Franklin
HQWell, Leon; three sisters;
Bessie Hill,' Leon; Lori Pat'.
sons, Lepn, and Mrs . . Chloe
Hill, Point Pleasant. He-was ii
member of the · Baden
Presbyterian Church in Leon;
and was a veteran who served
in France during World War
Two. ·
'
'

will bereceived at the Stevens
Fun eral Home in Pt . ·Pleasant
after 6 p.m. today .
Mr . Howell was born August
31, 1891, a ~on of the late James
and Bertha Parsons Howell. He
was ·preceded. in death by his
wife, Holly Howell , who died in
t962. Survivors include one

'

Key Nixon

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·tremendous

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tables
Modem-and
Colonial

ALL DISPLAY FLOOR STOCK

\1 •
pnce·

Al.l.· WAREHOUSE STOCK

,I

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big chair
bargains!
big selection, too!

,

•

Ingels Furniture
is stirring things up·a bit!

recliners Y2
Reg.
1119

NOW

9

$

PRICE

(PECAN)

Reg.
r·

· .Mattress
. and
· box springs

·

Hurry In TODAY
or Friday &amp; Saturday I

While The Cat Sleeps

Pri'ce S899
NOW
Green

Brown Sola and 2
Matching Chairs

$445

Regular

Sofa Bed

NOW

and Matching Chair
Regular
Pri ce $249

·~

.

NOW

.
27'5

$

price

.

3 Piece Walnut

17"

Bedroom Suite

OIAC OMA.\.

Regular $299.00

Q)lor.
NOW

Regular

TV

•

pnce

Y2

8.95 sq. yd.

Tho

•.'!

HtLLS.DALE

52916W

Modern styled lowbOy

console. Grained Walnut

~

.
.
ZENITH
25".

color". Chromacolor
Pi cture tub~ . Titan

t01 Chassis. Solid·
State 82-ctumnel
Super VIdeo Range

. Tuning Sy$tem. "FC.

Sale $499

Price
NOW

444

Exc'iting new 17" diagona l
compact portable . Distinctive
gra ined Americari Wa lriut

color cabinet acc.ented by

sharply cor=~trasting White tr im

This Price
. for This

.

- ~leOnM
.

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on top. 100% Solid-State ·
Titan 275V Chassis with
. Power Sentry Voltage
Regulator. Solid·State Super
Video Range Tuning System .
Chromatic One-button

$499
'

$499!i ·

Sale

(1 ONLY, ALL PECAN)

..•'

$499~

. .

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DISCOUNT

5
I

·sale

I

95

DISCOUNT

~-

.

Sale

499

95

One ·only suite in off-white. Real
pretty. Will you be the one to buy this
·
suite?

.Reg.

·.

"$39995 .....·.

95

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't~l-2635
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MIDDLEPORT ~ i
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3 PCi BEDROOM SUITE

$31995

$249

ASTEAL AT

$100

. Reg.

$59995 '

sale

Reg. s59995

A real nice suite for anyone who wants
a bargain ~ You just can't beat this buy.

Large dresser. bed chest, big bed and
• nite stand. This is our best buy.

•

Old look distressed finish in dark oak.
With nite stand ;

3· PC. BEDROOM SUITE

Reg.

95

$499

347

95

Tun ing . AFC.

. ·. INGELS
.FURNITU
,.

-·

Selle

.

Reg. ·

•

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.- 4

699

$599.95

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Sale

95

4 PC. BEOROOM SUITE

Shadbw box mirror dresser, s drawer
chest, ~hair back bed with nite stand.

Solid·State Ch romacol 0 r II

*

PHON t

\ .

95

4 PO. BEDROOM SUITE

The MATADOR • E385SW

Zenith

UlWEST PRICE EVER •499
'

$89995

i

4 PC. BEDROOM SUITE

(BY BASSETT)
Regular
$59995

Reg:-

l

A medium size suite to fit your room.
Pecan finish.

Sale ·

4 PC. BEDROOM SUITE

You can't imagine hoW big &amp; beautiful! Six
· foot dresser. shadow box mirror with 3 corner
. shelves on each side of ll)irror. 5 drawer chest,
queen size or regular bed, l&gt;ig nite stand .

Reg.

* ONE·BUTTON
COLOR TUNING
* STYliNG
FINHURNJT~RE

Paneled all oak, large dresser, regular
mirror, , chest, panel bed, large nite
stand.

Sale

Reg.

* 8111LLIANT
COLOR PII:TURE

* STATE
OVER 90% SDllO. ·
CHASSIS

(ONE ONLY)

(3) BEDROOM SUITES

Dresser with shadow box mirror, 5
drawer chest, Cannon Ball bed, big
nite stand. Pine finish.

shag carpet

Sale

4 PC•.BEDROOM SUITE
(BY BASSETT)

4 PC. BEDROOM SUITE

Sale

4 PC•.BEDROOM SUITE' ·.

Closeout! 3 Rolls

bedroom suites!

499

95

DISCOUNT

$§9995 .

'125

All 4 PIECES,

$152

Sale

Your choice of fiber, .
texture and . color for
wall· to.wall luxury .

Price SS49

All white suite trimmed ·in gold with
nite stand.

NOW

95
$499
.

%

Blue Velvet Sofa
2 matching efta irs

Regular

Sale

With SO" dresser, 4 drawer chest and
Cannon Ball bed.

Reg.

every carpet
in stock
reduced

living rooms!

Only

(ONE ONLY)

Burnished Maple suite with nite stand.

A wide array of luxury innerspring sets ·
... lwin, full. queen and king sizes in
decorator covers. Choice of firmnesses .

YOU CAN GET THESE HOT BUYS AT INGELS
FURNITURE. DON1 MISS THIS JANUARY SALE!

$59995

'

Y3ott!

. . ....

Reg.

Now

3 PC. BEDROOM SUITE

4 PC. BEDROOM SUITE

sleepiPsets

Dresser, shadow box mirror, bed and
nite stand.

Sale.

Sale

I

(Medium Size, Pinel

All Maple. Double dresser, S drawe~
chest, Cannon Ball bed and 2-drawer
nite stand.

····"

.4 PC. BEDROOM SUITE

4 PC. BEDROOM SUITE

4 PC. BEDROOM SUITE

4 PC. BEDROOM SUITE

$29995

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table
markdowns!

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Rutland urniture's ·Greatest January Sale Starts Tomorrow
MAYJAG - ' FRIGIDAIRE - GIBSON - SEALY
FAMOUS
ZENITH - BASSETT - RIVERSIDE
BRANDS
KELLER - VIRGINIA HOUSE - BERKLINE

ta ste and compl emen t
th e most per lee\ deco r.

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Pnces- Cut Now
. . • • Save As -Never .Before!
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Somethin g to suit every

DAUGHTER BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Bretz, the
former Sandra Hutton. of 513 S.
Highla nd Ave. , Columbus, are
(Continued from page 1)
announcing
the birth of a
rain .
daughter,
Doreen
Margaret,
"I inow that legally and
Dec
.
12
at
St.
Ann
's
Hospital, ·
morally I am totally Innocent
of each or the charges brought Columbus. Maternal grand·
me and with that certainty I parents ··are Mr . and Mrs.
can live with myself and I can Chester Hutton, Pomeroy ; and
move ahead to see that as this the paternal grandmother is
process continues the · truth Mrs . ·Re ba Bretz. Columbus. ,
ultimately does become known Mrs . Edith Ryther, Syracuse,
is · the maternal grea t.
and understood."
Ehrlichma~ and his wife grandmo ther. Mr . and Mrs.
Jeanne embraced at the front Bretz have two sons, Billy and
of the courtroom. Six months Brian .
ago, Ehrllchman was convicted of conspiring to violate a
citizen's Uberties In the 1971
FAMILY DINES
break-in at the office of Daniel
Mr.
and
Mrs. Dwight Logan,
Ellsbj!rg's psychiatrist.
The Ehrllchmans called Route 3, Pomeroy, entertained
their children In Sea tile and Christmas Day with a family
then went to the press room. dinner party. Attending were
" H there ever has been a George Logan, Bernice King,
political trial In this country, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Bailey,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
this Is It," he said.
As the verdict was read, Milhoan, Shade; Mr. and Mrs.
Mardlan ,turned and ·stared at Dwight (Skip ) Logan and
the jury. Long after the Shawn, Virginia Beach, Va.
courtroom cleared, he sat Evening callers were Mr. and
alone at the defense tables, his Mrs. Guy Sargent and
head bent over his arms. His Jonathan, Mr. and Mr. . Floyd
wife Dorothy came, and they Mitchell , Mason, W. Va .; Mr.
left, both near tears, without and Mrs. Danny Mitchell and
Ca ra, Millwood, W. Va ., Mr.
conunent. •
and
Mrs . William Lester and
Parkinson rejoiced. Haldeman · shook his hand. Jeanne Gary, South Charleston, W.
Va.; Mrs. John McDougall and
Ehrlichman kissed him.
Barbara,
Poin t Pleasant, W.
"A· new lease on life, " said
Parkinson,, a Washington law· Va.
yer. "I've a1.,ays ~ad great
faith and hope and It worked
DINNER GIVEN
out."
The birthdays of Mrs .
"Do I haw any reaction?"
said Mltc:hell, puffing his pipe ·Dwight Logan and Mrs. Robert
with his usual equanimity, F. Holley, Colwnbus, were
"Can't you guess?" Then he observed with a dinner at the
joked that he njlght "io to ·the home of Mr. and Mrs. Dwight
Logan, Route 3, Pomeroy .
moon.''
Mitchell said he would ap- Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
peal "for sure." He said he had Dwight Logan, Jr. and Shawn,
"50" issues on which to base· Virginia Beach, Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert F. Holley, Debbie
the appeal.
Moet defense lawyers said and Patty . Telephoning
!l'ivately their appeals would congratulations to Mrs. Logan
be. based on two Issues -the were her son·in·law and
fallw-e of Nixon to testify and daughter, Mr. ·and Mrs . Jack
the introduction of the Ellsberg Cox of Redlands, Calif.
!reak-in. Ehrllchman had subpoen~ Nixon's testimony as
essentlal to his defense. Law·
FAMILY DINES
yers said Introduction of the
SHADE: - Mr . and Mrs.
Ellsberg break-in could 1\~v~
prejudiced the jury.
Wayne Milhoan of near Shade
AbOut .85 witnesses testified entertained Christmas Eve
and about 30 White House tapes with a family party. Guests
were played. Key proserutlon were Mr. and Mrs. Elmer
witnesses Included former . Bailey, ~orge Logan, Bernice
White House aides JMII W. King, Mr . and Mrs . Guy
Dean Ill , Jeb Stuart Magruder Sargent and Jonathan, Mr. and
and Fred .LaRue.
Mrs. Dwight Logan, Pomeroy ;
Essentially, the IJ'Osecutlon Mr. and Mrs. Howard Gilkey
charged that Mitchell ilp· and Joey, Columbus; Mr . and
proved the ln.telllgence Mrs . Jesse Brick~es, Dennis
gathering plan that led to the and Ryan, Athens .
bugging and was "the general"
for the payment of $429,500 to
keep the original defendants
quiet.
.
FAMILY GATIIERS
Haldern'an and EhrUctunan
Mr. and Mrs. Miles . Dice.
were accused of trying to use Beech st, Mld41eport, enthe CIA to conceal While House tertained Christmas Eve with a ·
Involvement. Mardian and dinner par.ty. Their guests
Parkinson were accused of not were Mrs. Rebecca Martin,
teWng prosecutors what they Karen and Robin , Charleston,
knew.
Mr. and Mr. . Gary Gullian and
children, Bryant, Tony and
Denise, also of Charleston.
. Pleasant Valloy Discharges
Joining the family on Christ·
Ray Bogg, Marshallville; mas Day were Mr. and Mrs.
Joe J~ffes, Gallipolis; .Willard Robert Dice, Mann, W. Va.,
Lane, ,Point Pleasant; Ernest and Mi". and Mrs. Serel Means.
Pearson, Gallipolis Ferry ; Charleston, W. Va.
M11frlel Call, Winfield ; Mrs.
JIUIIC$ Marsh, Point Pleasant;
Charles Nicholson, Gl~nville;
Ernest Frazier.' Frazier 's
BUFFET GIVEN
Bottom; Benjamm Capehart,/"" .
. .
.
' Mason ; Tammy For she~ : , The annual C~tstmas buffet
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Leon'ard of the Harry Pickens famt ly
Tliple,tt, Gl!ilipolisi Ke~neth was held at the home. of ~r .
. . . Mrs . Robe I and Mrs. Erne.s t Whttehead,
Turley,· Raane,
Ferg on PUn . Tim ·Ward r Ree d~vi'11e. .Att en d"mg th e
us '
y, Jam · Baen, hol.da
Henderson.
Mrs
t . y ceIebra·1·ton were Mr.
G·
.. ' · · · C$ ys, _and. Mrs. William Meredith of
alllpolis, .-Mrs• .Sam Lewis, · BeVtTiy· Roger Meredith
.
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.son, Racine ; Mrs. Steve
Martella; Mr.,and Mrs. Harold
. Durbin · Point Plea t· Mr
•
S8Q •
• 8• Sauer, Mary Ruth and Joy,
Willard . Jeffers,
Pomt Middleport, Route !;Mr. and
Pleasant,
Mrs.
·Lena Mrs w n Pi • k•Mr d
Crooldlam IA!oo· Mrs J k
. arre
c~e·~.
. an
Hendrick, Point Pl~t. ~ Mrs .. Denver Weber, .Mark a~d
J
An Blak Hend .
Davtd, home from Ohto
ean n
e,
erson. University ; Mr: and Mrs. Isaac
Frydman, Columbus, Juli
Whitehead, . and
Jane
Whitehead; home from Ohio
University.
•
·A "John Hancock" i·s. a
$ipatUre, . deriv~om the
fact that John Hancock (1737·
ASk· To WED .
1'193), the first ~igner' of the . Robert Paul Boggs, 22, Rt. 1;
Declaratim of I~nderice ,
had an especially large and Reedsville, and · Unda Kay
Calalf&lt;iy, 18,.Rt. I, Reedl;ville.
clear signature.
,·

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Our Gre~test Sale • • .~ All

'

,. ~~~,~~'~''*'"&amp;'-'~..,_~:;.."''#&gt;,~~--"*'"*',·,.~· Pe.y torr held ·for J"udge to sentence.

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.1 - The Daily ~nt~ l , Middl eporl:-~omeroy, U., Tlmrsd&lt;ly, Jo11 1. 2, i ~ 1 i ~

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Red Carpet !nn ordered closed
I
. PT. PLEASANT·- 'The l)fleagured Red Carpet Inn was
ordered abut down Indefinitely New Year's night by newly
. BJIROillted receiver Keith Hill of Polol Pleasant.
Hill told news media this morning that the dedsloo to
el- the mulll-mUllon dollar resort was made due to the lack
of operating capital.
·
...
• U. S. ~y Judge Johu Copenhaver Jr. only
Monday of this week named HIU to operate the resort.
Banknlptcy proteedlogs have been peodlog against the
resort s.fnce October. lllnltlaUy had been eXJII'l'ted·that Hill,
an a..,ountaot, would operate tbeiDn iinder bankruplcy laws.
Hill said the Inn will be shut down at least until after a
January 16 bearing before Judge Copenhaver.' WARC
President Howard N. JobiiS&lt;ln, trealurer Ralph George
Halcomb, and Director Josephine Lamont have been ondered
to appear for quellllonlng at the first crediton meeting oo
Jauaary 16.
CUrrent failure of the hotel reStaurant complex along
Route 62 just oortb of here Ia part of a 10-year history of
failures , The resort first opened In 1960.

Sheriff

Robert

C . . Har·

Har\'c~ ' Howell died W ednes&lt;;lay
Har vey Horton Howell, 84,
·Leon, who died Wednesday in
Veterans Memorial Ho5pital in .
Pomeroy, will be held at 2p.m.
Sa turd ay at the Ba.d'c n
Presbyterian Ch urch here. The
Rev . Wilbur Baxter will of.
ficiate , and burial will follow in

abill11f in[Qr~wtion on-(''harg':!s. the residenc-e of Peyton were a
sc wing· mac.: hiHc, welder; guns,
an ott' upied s lruclli'rc, that is, how an~ . arrow,, and a 1970
~tht · n·:--idence o'f Owen Biul'k· nHIIM Lyc le alle ged ly stolen
wot ~ \ in &amp;ipio Township in [rom Cindnrlt.i .
Peyton is in custody waitin g
. Meigs County, to commit a
se
nwncing by Common Pleas
theft as de(ined by law . ·.
. the Raden Ceme tery . Frie nds
· Properl y :-: toiPn recovered al Cour t

tenbach on Dec, 26 at l 2:20 . that he did by 'lurce, trespass
p .m . IQok into cuStudy Wt~ync

Peyton , 22; Rt. I, Dexter , at hi!-1
· resident-c.

. On Saturday Dec . 2a: Peyton
appeared· tiel ore Common
Pleas Judge J ohn C. B;u~on or1

br other , ' Holly ·Franklin
HQWell, Leon; three sisters;
Bessie Hill,' Leon; Lori Pat'.
sons, Lepn, and Mrs . . Chloe
Hill, Point Pleasant. He-was ii
member of the · Baden
Presbyterian Church in Leon;
and was a veteran who served
in France during World War
Two. ·
'
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will bereceived at the Stevens
Fun eral Home in Pt . ·Pleasant
after 6 p.m. today .
Mr . Howell was born August
31, 1891, a ~on of the late James
and Bertha Parsons Howell. He
was ·preceded. in death by his
wife, Holly Howell , who died in
t962. Survivors include one

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Key Nixon

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·tremendous

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tables
Modem-and
Colonial

ALL DISPLAY FLOOR STOCK

\1 •
pnce·

Al.l.· WAREHOUSE STOCK

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big chair
bargains!
big selection, too!

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Ingels Furniture
is stirring things up·a bit!

recliners Y2
Reg.
1119

NOW

9

$

PRICE

(PECAN)

Reg.
r·

· .Mattress
. and
· box springs

·

Hurry In TODAY
or Friday &amp; Saturday I

While The Cat Sleeps

Pri'ce S899
NOW
Green

Brown Sola and 2
Matching Chairs

$445

Regular

Sofa Bed

NOW

and Matching Chair
Regular
Pri ce $249

·~

.

NOW

.
27'5

$

price

.

3 Piece Walnut

17"

Bedroom Suite

OIAC OMA.\.

Regular $299.00

Q)lor.
NOW

Regular

TV

•

pnce

Y2

8.95 sq. yd.

Tho

•.'!

HtLLS.DALE

52916W

Modern styled lowbOy

console. Grained Walnut

~

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.
ZENITH
25".

color". Chromacolor
Pi cture tub~ . Titan

t01 Chassis. Solid·
State 82-ctumnel
Super VIdeo Range

. Tuning Sy$tem. "FC.

Sale $499

Price
NOW

444

Exc'iting new 17" diagona l
compact portable . Distinctive
gra ined Americari Wa lriut

color cabinet acc.ented by

sharply cor=~trasting White tr im

This Price
. for This

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- ~leOnM
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on top. 100% Solid-State ·
Titan 275V Chassis with
. Power Sentry Voltage
Regulator. Solid·State Super
Video Range Tuning System .
Chromatic One-button

$499
'

$499!i ·

Sale

(1 ONLY, ALL PECAN)

..•'

$499~

. .

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DISCOUNT

5
I

·sale

I

95

DISCOUNT

~-

.

Sale

499

95

One ·only suite in off-white. Real
pretty. Will you be the one to buy this
·
suite?

.Reg.

·.

"$39995 .....·.

95

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't~l-2635
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3 PCi BEDROOM SUITE

$31995

$249

ASTEAL AT

$100

. Reg.

$59995 '

sale

Reg. s59995

A real nice suite for anyone who wants
a bargain ~ You just can't beat this buy.

Large dresser. bed chest, big bed and
• nite stand. This is our best buy.

•

Old look distressed finish in dark oak.
With nite stand ;

3· PC. BEDROOM SUITE

Reg.

95

$499

347

95

Tun ing . AFC.

. ·. INGELS
.FURNITU
,.

-·

Selle

.

Reg. ·

•

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699

$599.95

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Sale

95

4 PC. BEOROOM SUITE

Shadbw box mirror dresser, s drawer
chest, ~hair back bed with nite stand.

Solid·State Ch romacol 0 r II

*

PHON t

\ .

95

4 PO. BEDROOM SUITE

The MATADOR • E385SW

Zenith

UlWEST PRICE EVER •499
'

$89995

i

4 PC. BEDROOM SUITE

(BY BASSETT)
Regular
$59995

Reg:-

l

A medium size suite to fit your room.
Pecan finish.

Sale ·

4 PC. BEDROOM SUITE

You can't imagine hoW big &amp; beautiful! Six
· foot dresser. shadow box mirror with 3 corner
. shelves on each side of ll)irror. 5 drawer chest,
queen size or regular bed, l&gt;ig nite stand .

Reg.

* ONE·BUTTON
COLOR TUNING
* STYliNG
FINHURNJT~RE

Paneled all oak, large dresser, regular
mirror, , chest, panel bed, large nite
stand.

Sale

Reg.

* 8111LLIANT
COLOR PII:TURE

* STATE
OVER 90% SDllO. ·
CHASSIS

(ONE ONLY)

(3) BEDROOM SUITES

Dresser with shadow box mirror, 5
drawer chest, Cannon Ball bed, big
nite stand. Pine finish.

shag carpet

Sale

4 PC•.BEDROOM SUITE
(BY BASSETT)

4 PC. BEDROOM SUITE

Sale

4 PC•.BEDROOM SUITE' ·.

Closeout! 3 Rolls

bedroom suites!

499

95

DISCOUNT

$§9995 .

'125

All 4 PIECES,

$152

Sale

Your choice of fiber, .
texture and . color for
wall· to.wall luxury .

Price SS49

All white suite trimmed ·in gold with
nite stand.

NOW

95
$499
.

%

Blue Velvet Sofa
2 matching efta irs

Regular

Sale

With SO" dresser, 4 drawer chest and
Cannon Ball bed.

Reg.

every carpet
in stock
reduced

living rooms!

Only

(ONE ONLY)

Burnished Maple suite with nite stand.

A wide array of luxury innerspring sets ·
... lwin, full. queen and king sizes in
decorator covers. Choice of firmnesses .

YOU CAN GET THESE HOT BUYS AT INGELS
FURNITURE. DON1 MISS THIS JANUARY SALE!

$59995

'

Y3ott!

. . ....

Reg.

Now

3 PC. BEDROOM SUITE

4 PC. BEDROOM SUITE

sleepiPsets

Dresser, shadow box mirror, bed and
nite stand.

Sale.

Sale

I

(Medium Size, Pinel

All Maple. Double dresser, S drawe~
chest, Cannon Ball bed and 2-drawer
nite stand.

····"

.4 PC. BEDROOM SUITE

4 PC. BEDROOM SUITE

4 PC. BEDROOM SUITE

4 PC. BEDROOM SUITE

$29995

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table
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Rutland urniture's ·Greatest January Sale Starts Tomorrow
MAYJAG - ' FRIGIDAIRE - GIBSON - SEALY
FAMOUS
ZENITH - BASSETT - RIVERSIDE
BRANDS
KELLER - VIRGINIA HOUSE - BERKLINE

ta ste and compl emen t
th e most per lee\ deco r.

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Pnces- Cut Now
. . • • Save As -Never .Before!
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Somethin g to suit every

DAUGHTER BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Bretz, the
former Sandra Hutton. of 513 S.
Highla nd Ave. , Columbus, are
(Continued from page 1)
announcing
the birth of a
rain .
daughter,
Doreen
Margaret,
"I inow that legally and
Dec
.
12
at
St.
Ann
's
Hospital, ·
morally I am totally Innocent
of each or the charges brought Columbus. Maternal grand·
me and with that certainty I parents ··are Mr . and Mrs.
can live with myself and I can Chester Hutton, Pomeroy ; and
move ahead to see that as this the paternal grandmother is
process continues the · truth Mrs . ·Re ba Bretz. Columbus. ,
ultimately does become known Mrs . Edith Ryther, Syracuse,
is · the maternal grea t.
and understood."
Ehrlichma~ and his wife grandmo ther. Mr . and Mrs.
Jeanne embraced at the front Bretz have two sons, Billy and
of the courtroom. Six months Brian .
ago, Ehrllchman was convicted of conspiring to violate a
citizen's Uberties In the 1971
FAMILY DINES
break-in at the office of Daniel
Mr.
and
Mrs. Dwight Logan,
Ellsbj!rg's psychiatrist.
The Ehrllchmans called Route 3, Pomeroy, entertained
their children In Sea tile and Christmas Day with a family
then went to the press room. dinner party. Attending were
" H there ever has been a George Logan, Bernice King,
political trial In this country, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Bailey,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
this Is It," he said.
As the verdict was read, Milhoan, Shade; Mr. and Mrs.
Mardlan ,turned and ·stared at Dwight (Skip ) Logan and
the jury. Long after the Shawn, Virginia Beach, Va.
courtroom cleared, he sat Evening callers were Mr. and
alone at the defense tables, his Mrs. Guy Sargent and
head bent over his arms. His Jonathan, Mr. and Mr. . Floyd
wife Dorothy came, and they Mitchell , Mason, W. Va .; Mr.
left, both near tears, without and Mrs. Danny Mitchell and
Ca ra, Millwood, W. Va ., Mr.
conunent. •
and
Mrs . William Lester and
Parkinson rejoiced. Haldeman · shook his hand. Jeanne Gary, South Charleston, W.
Va.; Mrs. John McDougall and
Ehrlichman kissed him.
Barbara,
Poin t Pleasant, W.
"A· new lease on life, " said
Parkinson,, a Washington law· Va.
yer. "I've a1.,ays ~ad great
faith and hope and It worked
DINNER GIVEN
out."
The birthdays of Mrs .
"Do I haw any reaction?"
said Mltc:hell, puffing his pipe ·Dwight Logan and Mrs. Robert
with his usual equanimity, F. Holley, Colwnbus, were
"Can't you guess?" Then he observed with a dinner at the
joked that he njlght "io to ·the home of Mr. and Mrs. Dwight
Logan, Route 3, Pomeroy .
moon.''
Mitchell said he would ap- Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
peal "for sure." He said he had Dwight Logan, Jr. and Shawn,
"50" issues on which to base· Virginia Beach, Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert F. Holley, Debbie
the appeal.
Moet defense lawyers said and Patty . Telephoning
!l'ivately their appeals would congratulations to Mrs. Logan
be. based on two Issues -the were her son·in·law and
fallw-e of Nixon to testify and daughter, Mr. ·and Mrs . Jack
the introduction of the Ellsberg Cox of Redlands, Calif.
!reak-in. Ehrllchman had subpoen~ Nixon's testimony as
essentlal to his defense. Law·
FAMILY DINES
yers said Introduction of the
SHADE: - Mr . and Mrs.
Ellsberg break-in could 1\~v~
prejudiced the jury.
Wayne Milhoan of near Shade
AbOut .85 witnesses testified entertained Christmas Eve
and about 30 White House tapes with a family party. Guests
were played. Key proserutlon were Mr. and Mrs. Elmer
witnesses Included former . Bailey, ~orge Logan, Bernice
White House aides JMII W. King, Mr . and Mrs . Guy
Dean Ill , Jeb Stuart Magruder Sargent and Jonathan, Mr. and
and Fred .LaRue.
Mrs. Dwight Logan, Pomeroy ;
Essentially, the IJ'Osecutlon Mr. and Mrs. Howard Gilkey
charged that Mitchell ilp· and Joey, Columbus; Mr . and
proved the ln.telllgence Mrs . Jesse Brick~es, Dennis
gathering plan that led to the and Ryan, Athens .
bugging and was "the general"
for the payment of $429,500 to
keep the original defendants
quiet.
.
FAMILY GATIIERS
Haldern'an and EhrUctunan
Mr. and Mrs. Miles . Dice.
were accused of trying to use Beech st, Mld41eport, enthe CIA to conceal While House tertained Christmas Eve with a ·
Involvement. Mardian and dinner par.ty. Their guests
Parkinson were accused of not were Mrs. Rebecca Martin,
teWng prosecutors what they Karen and Robin , Charleston,
knew.
Mr. and Mr. . Gary Gullian and
children, Bryant, Tony and
Denise, also of Charleston.
. Pleasant Valloy Discharges
Joining the family on Christ·
Ray Bogg, Marshallville; mas Day were Mr. and Mrs.
Joe J~ffes, Gallipolis; .Willard Robert Dice, Mann, W. Va.,
Lane, ,Point Pleasant; Ernest and Mi". and Mrs. Serel Means.
Pearson, Gallipolis Ferry ; Charleston, W. Va.
M11frlel Call, Winfield ; Mrs.
JIUIIC$ Marsh, Point Pleasant;
Charles Nicholson, Gl~nville;
Ernest Frazier.' Frazier 's
BUFFET GIVEN
Bottom; Benjamm Capehart,/"" .
. .
.
' Mason ; Tammy For she~ : , The annual C~tstmas buffet
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Leon'ard of the Harry Pickens famt ly
Tliple,tt, Gl!ilipolisi Ke~neth was held at the home. of ~r .
. . . Mrs . Robe I and Mrs. Erne.s t Whttehead,
Turley,· Raane,
Ferg on PUn . Tim ·Ward r Ree d~vi'11e. .Att en d"mg th e
us '
y, Jam · Baen, hol.da
Henderson.
Mrs
t . y ceIebra·1·ton were Mr.
G·
.. ' · · · C$ ys, _and. Mrs. William Meredith of
alllpolis, .-Mrs• .Sam Lewis, · BeVtTiy· Roger Meredith
.
'
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.son, Racine ; Mrs. Steve
Martella; Mr.,and Mrs. Harold
. Durbin · Point Plea t· Mr
•
S8Q •
• 8• Sauer, Mary Ruth and Joy,
Willard . Jeffers,
Pomt Middleport, Route !;Mr. and
Pleasant,
Mrs.
·Lena Mrs w n Pi • k•Mr d
Crooldlam IA!oo· Mrs J k
. arre
c~e·~.
. an
Hendrick, Point Pl~t. ~ Mrs .. Denver Weber, .Mark a~d
J
An Blak Hend .
Davtd, home from Ohto
ean n
e,
erson. University ; Mr: and Mrs. Isaac
Frydman, Columbus, Juli
Whitehead, . and
Jane
Whitehead; home from Ohio
University.
•
·A "John Hancock" i·s. a
$ipatUre, . deriv~om the
fact that John Hancock (1737·
ASk· To WED .
1'193), the first ~igner' of the . Robert Paul Boggs, 22, Rt. 1;
Declaratim of I~nderice ,
had an especially large and Reedsville, and · Unda Kay
Calalf&lt;iy, 18,.Rt. I, Reedl;ville.
clear signature.
,·

'

Our Gre~test Sale • • .~ All

'

,. ~~~,~~'~''*'"&amp;'-'~..,_~:;.."''#&gt;,~~--"*'"*',·,.~· Pe.y torr held ·for J"udge to sentence.

.

'

.1 - The Daily ~nt~ l , Middl eporl:-~omeroy, U., Tlmrsd&lt;ly, Jo11 1. 2, i ~ 1 i ~

...

2. 1~t ;-;)

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12 - 1'he 1),\ily Si&gt;~t ineJ, r.1iddlepor 1·Pomeruy, ( l .. Thllr:-; tl; ~~ ..•l.11 1_. t 1 l :l~!J
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. Drastic Price ·cuts
AU ·Over
Our Store

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YOU~VE

BEEN WAITING FOR?
•

• • • an opportunity
to .make yQur home furnishings ·
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dollar· go farther••• a chance to pick up a bargain I

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BIG 15.7 Cubic Foot
Gibson Food Freezer ·

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2 PIECE LIVING. ROOM SUITES

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This line of Recliners are the best. They cost
little more, but ate worth more.

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OFFON
ALL RECI:INERS

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FROST-CLEAR

Regular 399.95
Your Trade 50.00

FROST-CLEAR

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Gibson Model 82·3866 ~

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Th1s b1 g 550 pound ca pac it y freez er IS
all fros t c lear No mo re de frosting mess .
No fros ty labels or wasted space It' s
the mof"-t e ffi cient way to e njoy iood
freezing _Le t us show you

SAVE $100

Sale

$34995

COPPER

JIGibson~

GREEN

WHITE

K

· NI·CE TABLES

.

~ t\PPLlt\NCES ~

THEYLJ\ST

~-111111111111!~~·~~~~111111"~--~BUY NOW! SAVE NOW!

·----

~

~

3995EACH

€&gt;

15.7cu.tt.

.

...-.
---••
-..••

Complete Stock of Maytag Washers &amp; Dryers
(Floor &amp; Warehouse Stock); Must Go To Make
Room For 1975's.
The 1975 Models Will Cost You More.
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF "OUR SALE PRICES."

,
.

~

·January Sale!

Hexagon .
Design
Regular $59~5

1

.

~

•

'I t .. I

·,· .. ·

..

••

.,

/

. --

-Rk *Ad ,..'~ '*fi"'f'·'"' :;.W~

w

. Just Received:For Big

CHA.IRS ·
.

l

.

.

.

·

........,....._

''' . . . . ,:~ II
.
-

~

'

'

_.. "'-

. .. :.' t

~

--------------------.~--------------~---BERKLINE .

-- ~-- ---~··' " ''"N· '" "'

~

. Selling '399.95 to *599.95 ·
'

. '

M

1· 48.'' COCKTAIL TABLE
2-HEX SIDE TABLES
With these Suh~s
2-LAMPS

FREE

.. , ..-~--

w

PECAN • PINE • MAPLE

'

140 Pieces In Stock For This Sale!

deluxe features (like frost-free convenience) com·
bined with quality and super savings in these two
value-packed Gibson refrigerators!

.

.

.

' "··

closeout sale of ·
·Gibson.refrigerators!

..
ISN'T THIS WHAT

I,

..

-

-

. I

.

....

.

m

I

..

""'.

,· ... ,

••

15 cu. _ft. Frost-Clear refrigera'f'6r
needs no defrosting everl

GIBSON

Chest Freezers

"

~

95

~

w

••
••

--

..

p

-..

13 ONLY SETS OF

~

~

Regular

SALE

439.95 .

BIG 25 CU. FT. CHEST

Only 5 to Sell

"Check Our Price"

g

MATTRESSES AND
BOX SPRIN-GS

MATTRESSES ON .SALE
.

The Nicest
.

Mathes~es

..••.

you've. ever. seen~

Sealy- you know the name. Best price
nowl ·

·"'

:..•• ----------------------------------------------~

..
......
-•...
-.•

·Regular
•139.95
.
.

SOLD ONLY

IN

ALL AT
JANUARY SALE PRICES

a

PAIRS

~

~

SPECIAL JANUARY .SALE

I

SUITE~

Pine! Pecan, Oak

.

Made by Keller,

\ Special Trade In Allowance· On-

ALL

~D

.

0_
1NETTE SETS

7 PIECE SETS
'Will take your trade-In with generous -allowance.

7 PIECE·
.

.

Regul~r .

·

$

/

' .,,., . . .~.139.95

.

Regular 79.95

.

'

.....

...J...........-::-

IL,.....-

1-1

.

.

0

. uour January Price Is The Best Price"

W .T.

30" Frigidaire

In JanuaiJ
SPR22AX

.•

.

•

.

Afine
basic
Gas

{W hi.t e Only)

••
•

.

CUSTOM

LAID NOW
The. Caroet

.

Man.

Carpet Your · Floors ·
and SAVE on Your
HEAT .BILL!

• Full • View Upper ·
Ov en W i nd ow
1 Clock o nd ·lntervol
Ti m er 1 S urfa c e
light 1 l o wer Oven
Wmdow end l ight
1 Deep
Recessed
Coo k ing Svr fo ce
• lift· up Ronge Top
• Spec.: Widt h 30" ,
Heig llt ~"', Dept h

28".

Colors ·

SRP26AX

Electric ·Range •••••• 329
FRIGIDAIRE
· Still Makes A 40 Inch .
ELECTRIC RANGE
.

. ;-

'

20.3 cu. ft. side·by·side has

'

THE

TWIN OVEN
RANGES
•

•

· ·

.TOP FREEZER .
. FRIGIDAIRE
REFRIGERATOR

Free

.

. range. We stock them in harvest gold,
green and white. Get our January price.

See the 20.6 cu. ft.

••

etc.

~ Lots of people still want a large .

a 7.04 cu. fJ. freezer 100%
Frost-Proof. Au tomatic Ice
available (extra charge).
pr

SEE All

CustofT'
,

Elegance.
Bv Frigidaire. '

*All

Ri..,erio '

'

FPCI ~203V

Range

RIVIERA

See Wendell · .Grate,

.
95

•

GET YOUR
CARPET.

.

REFRIGERATORS and ELECTRIC RANGES

SRP29AX

Best Trade-In
Allowances

••
.. •

.

I

·

[

For your old s~fG orUvlng rOOITI suite.
Let'. Tra.de

F-RIGIDAIRE

.

MW

'
•••

.·.~ .,lOO TRA.DE

.

tJ4

•
'

We have 10, 2 piece suites to sell. ALL MARKED
. DOWN. Sleep by night, sit .by day. These suites are
really riice.
. ·
.
'
.

CHROME·.DINETTES

'

j.

~~.qt;y;.unJtQ...

••
•
•••
••
•
••'
•••
'
••

5

. WITH ·CHAIR. TO MATCH

These are all . new &amp; diHerent

With

•••

.

Sealy ·Redi-Beds .

6 Chairs and 42" Round Table· with 2 leaves.

~Ill fiJI rt~ngt

••

of
·Commode·
'

Virginia House.

•

~

· 2 Hexagon

Bassett, Riverside,
....

.lf}JYCS
,Qfl,.

•
••
••

COC·KTA
.TABLES ·

TO CLOSEOUT!

••
••

-•
--

While They_Last

5 ONLY B'G NICE

-DI ~I NG ROOM

&gt;

w

.

r

GAS RANGES ·

(

Come and Look At

· Frigidaire Ceramic Top Range .

.
Delivery :

W.T.
SRP 56GX

and

· ' . Hook Up '

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1

::
..
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I :

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,

. Drastic Price ·cuts
AU ·Over
Our Store

"1

.

·-;;..

-

~

YOU~VE

BEEN WAITING FOR?
•

• • • an opportunity
to .make yQur home furnishings ·
.
.,

dollar· go farther••• a chance to pick up a bargain I

.

;

BIG 15.7 Cubic Foot
Gibson Food Freezer ·

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

,.

••'

-

2 PIECE LIVING. ROOM SUITES

~

M

••

f

a

This line of Recliners are the best. They cost
little more, but ate worth more.

\.

20

07
. /O

NOW

OFFON
ALL RECI:INERS

.

~ I

. .

•••

.-...
....
-..
N

NOW ONLY

'

FROST-CLEAR

Regular 399.95
Your Trade 50.00

FROST-CLEAR

-..
-..

Gibson Model 82·3866 ~

.

Th1s b1 g 550 pound ca pac it y freez er IS
all fros t c lear No mo re de frosting mess .
No fros ty labels or wasted space It' s
the mof"-t e ffi cient way to e njoy iood
freezing _Le t us show you

SAVE $100

Sale

$34995

COPPER

JIGibson~

GREEN

WHITE

K

· NI·CE TABLES

.

~ t\PPLlt\NCES ~

THEYLJ\ST

~-111111111111!~~·~~~~111111"~--~BUY NOW! SAVE NOW!

·----

~

~

3995EACH

€&gt;

15.7cu.tt.

.

...-.
---••
-..••

Complete Stock of Maytag Washers &amp; Dryers
(Floor &amp; Warehouse Stock); Must Go To Make
Room For 1975's.
The 1975 Models Will Cost You More.
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF "OUR SALE PRICES."

,
.

~

·January Sale!

Hexagon .
Design
Regular $59~5

1

.

~

•

'I t .. I

·,· .. ·

..

••

.,

/

. --

-Rk *Ad ,..'~ '*fi"'f'·'"' :;.W~

w

. Just Received:For Big

CHA.IRS ·
.

l

.

.

.

·

........,....._

''' . . . . ,:~ II
.
-

~

'

'

_.. "'-

. .. :.' t

~

--------------------.~--------------~---BERKLINE .

-- ~-- ---~··' " ''"N· '" "'

~

. Selling '399.95 to *599.95 ·
'

. '

M

1· 48.'' COCKTAIL TABLE
2-HEX SIDE TABLES
With these Suh~s
2-LAMPS

FREE

.. , ..-~--

w

PECAN • PINE • MAPLE

'

140 Pieces In Stock For This Sale!

deluxe features (like frost-free convenience) com·
bined with quality and super savings in these two
value-packed Gibson refrigerators!

.

.

.

' "··

closeout sale of ·
·Gibson.refrigerators!

..
ISN'T THIS WHAT

I,

..

-

-

. I

.

....

.

m

I

..

""'.

,· ... ,

••

15 cu. _ft. Frost-Clear refrigera'f'6r
needs no defrosting everl

GIBSON

Chest Freezers

"

~

95

~

w

••
••

--

..

p

-..

13 ONLY SETS OF

~

~

Regular

SALE

439.95 .

BIG 25 CU. FT. CHEST

Only 5 to Sell

"Check Our Price"

g

MATTRESSES AND
BOX SPRIN-GS

MATTRESSES ON .SALE
.

The Nicest
.

Mathes~es

..••.

you've. ever. seen~

Sealy- you know the name. Best price
nowl ·

·"'

:..•• ----------------------------------------------~

..
......
-•...
-.•

·Regular
•139.95
.
.

SOLD ONLY

IN

ALL AT
JANUARY SALE PRICES

a

PAIRS

~

~

SPECIAL JANUARY .SALE

I

SUITE~

Pine! Pecan, Oak

.

Made by Keller,

\ Special Trade In Allowance· On-

ALL

~D

.

0_
1NETTE SETS

7 PIECE SETS
'Will take your trade-In with generous -allowance.

7 PIECE·
.

.

Regul~r .

·

$

/

' .,,., . . .~.139.95

.

Regular 79.95

.

'

.....

...J...........-::-

IL,.....-

1-1

.

.

0

. uour January Price Is The Best Price"

W .T.

30" Frigidaire

In JanuaiJ
SPR22AX

.•

.

•

.

Afine
basic
Gas

{W hi.t e Only)

••
•

.

CUSTOM

LAID NOW
The. Caroet

.

Man.

Carpet Your · Floors ·
and SAVE on Your
HEAT .BILL!

• Full • View Upper ·
Ov en W i nd ow
1 Clock o nd ·lntervol
Ti m er 1 S urfa c e
light 1 l o wer Oven
Wmdow end l ight
1 Deep
Recessed
Coo k ing Svr fo ce
• lift· up Ronge Top
• Spec.: Widt h 30" ,
Heig llt ~"', Dept h

28".

Colors ·

SRP26AX

Electric ·Range •••••• 329
FRIGIDAIRE
· Still Makes A 40 Inch .
ELECTRIC RANGE
.

. ;-

'

20.3 cu. ft. side·by·side has

'

THE

TWIN OVEN
RANGES
•

•

· ·

.TOP FREEZER .
. FRIGIDAIRE
REFRIGERATOR

Free

.

. range. We stock them in harvest gold,
green and white. Get our January price.

See the 20.6 cu. ft.

••

etc.

~ Lots of people still want a large .

a 7.04 cu. fJ. freezer 100%
Frost-Proof. Au tomatic Ice
available (extra charge).
pr

SEE All

CustofT'
,

Elegance.
Bv Frigidaire. '

*All

Ri..,erio '

'

FPCI ~203V

Range

RIVIERA

See Wendell · .Grate,

.
95

•

GET YOUR
CARPET.

.

REFRIGERATORS and ELECTRIC RANGES

SRP29AX

Best Trade-In
Allowances

••
.. •

.

I

·

[

For your old s~fG orUvlng rOOITI suite.
Let'. Tra.de

F-RIGIDAIRE

.

MW

'
•••

.·.~ .,lOO TRA.DE

.

tJ4

•
'

We have 10, 2 piece suites to sell. ALL MARKED
. DOWN. Sleep by night, sit .by day. These suites are
really riice.
. ·
.
'
.

CHROME·.DINETTES

'

j.

~~.qt;y;.unJtQ...

••
•
•••
••
•
••'
•••
'
••

5

. WITH ·CHAIR. TO MATCH

These are all . new &amp; diHerent

With

•••

.

Sealy ·Redi-Beds .

6 Chairs and 42" Round Table· with 2 leaves.

~Ill fiJI rt~ngt

••

of
·Commode·
'

Virginia House.

•

~

· 2 Hexagon

Bassett, Riverside,
....

.lf}JYCS
,Qfl,.

•
••
••

COC·KTA
.TABLES ·

TO CLOSEOUT!

••
••

-•
--

While They_Last

5 ONLY B'G NICE

-DI ~I NG ROOM

&gt;

w

.

r

GAS RANGES ·

(

Come and Look At

· Frigidaire Ceramic Top Range .

.
Delivery :

W.T.
SRP 56GX

and

· ' . Hook Up '

.

..
.
. .· !·
\

. I

')_ •

.

.

(

I

\

\

.

.

.

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1~ - ·The D.'lil~· Sen~ inr~. Midctl~port-Ponh"~ ro~, {)_, TIH u-~ day, J t l n._:!. 1 ~ ' 7·1 I

,It' '

Studies
in Lit

'

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planned
lliO GllANDE - Dr . George

tinuing Nluca tion course in
" Hegiono1l Llfcra turc will be

. offered by C'omnmnlty Co llege,
Winter Quarter.

.

.. The course, which is not. for
College credit, is being offered
111 coo peration with Wood
Thrust Folks Arts CouncJI, and
will be taugh t by Mrs. Barbara

We d o all in our power to hove al l:

Th omas Brown of the Council

and

~li s~

Ruth

ou~

\ advertised specials On our she lves when
you shop for them . Sometimes, due to
condit ions beyond our contro l, we nm out
of on adver tised speci a l. If this should
,....,..:!&gt;1-~J.---l,..J happen ro you, a sk at the }store office
. h a RAIN CHEC~ which entitles you lo

Th omas ,

professor uf literature at Rio

·P lus the
BonusoiTop
Value Stamps

the some adverti sed special at the same
special price any time within 2 weeks .

Grand e College.
Regional Literature classes
_will mtoel each Monday night

Round White

,4;, .

Clover Yailey (Quarters)

Pork Chopys

wreks in the Davis Librar·y on
the Rio Gran de Ca mpus. The

course is limited to twelve
studen l'i and a minimllln of. ten
students mus t regis ter before

Chuck Roast

the class can be offered .
Cos t of til~ eight.week co urse ·
will be $10.00 tuition plus any ·
book cos ts the student.&lt;; may

k ~.

mcur . Reg ional Li te ra ture will

feature his tori ca l novels, folk
ta les, conte mporary· readings

fr om hi ll
wr iters,

an d mountain

·a nd
disc uss ions. It will be a

I

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

LIAR CHAMPION
BURLINGTON, Wi s.
iUPIJ - Robert E. Regent of
Milwaukee wo11 the lllle as
th e world 's bigges t liar
Monday wh en he said:
"F'olks think they have II
tought these days. But we
wt•re so poor in our youth

thai our parents couldn't
alford to go wi11dow shopplug," Regent was honored
by the Burlington Liars Club
at the group's aonunl
worldwide competition,
:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;.;:;:;.;:;.;.;:;.;.;.;.

'.-,(, ,
I
' ·',:i1
.-.

r eadings

S€ minar type class se tting.
Reg istrat ion for the Regional
Li tera tu re 'class mav be
com pleted
on Monda y,
Jan uary 6, from 9 a. m. to 4 p.
m. and from 6 to 9 p: m.
En rollment will remain open
urti l the fi rst day of class or
until twelve students en roll.
Student.&lt;; will be accepted on a
first-come, fir st-served basis.

'1 lb.

'

'

I

I

'I

_/ -

'

89C

U.S. Govt, &lt;;raded Choice, People'• Choice Center Blade Cut

Chuck
Steak • • • • • • • •-• 1•·•
Tender, Lean, Thrifty, 4 Rib~- to 18-lb.
.Whole
Beef 11•
Serve '115ave

j

-- (20' Off Label) Dlsh-hlng o.t.rgent

WE GLADLY REDEEM FEDERAL
FOOD STAMPS AND HELP ~OU
STRETCH THEM FARTHER ,

Piece
Bologna ..... . • • •

'l··69
' c
Gunnoe's
$au sage . ..•... •l·l•..99"
Country (2-lb, Roll $1. 97)

•

Tender, Lean, Thrifty

11• Eye
Steaks ....

s;;;~;.- ...... "'-"-"" ""' "- lb. $149
POtt~~~·~-~~: ~-~~·.:~~ .. .. .. _.. tb. SJ ~9

Fancy

AIKo"-o

3
Pork and Beans .. .. .. ... .. ea,.
.

...1.

1(Hz .

With Coupon

AI

Glazed
Donuts

Wieners
' 12-ol.

Meat
Bologna

. Boneless, Frozen

Pkg.

Perch
Fillets

St .,

Bridgeport, Morgantown &amp; Marietta .

Limes ...... . ~ ..... ,

4W

lb.

·

•••

·

•

Kroger .Rolls . ,.... __ .... 2~;:· Sl
-~He Bread.... '.' ..;.22~· as~

2
Donuts . .. . .. .. .. .... ~~~~-

!",ai~, Combination, Cinnamun SugOJ.d, Appl•
nSpiceCauntryoYen

U.S. Govt. Inspected
For Wholesomeness
'

Fresh, Cut-Up Mhc:ed

Kroger Mcacaroni or Th1n

2·1b.

Spaghetti····-···: ··· · · ··· ······~·

....

-.
YODER RESIGNS
FULLERTON, Calif.. (UPH
- Pete Yoder has resigned as ·
head football coach at Cal
State-Fullerton.
•·
Yoder, 34, a fonner assistlllll""
at University of Southern
California(. will remain at the
school , }rt its Phys~cal
1,E!Iucat!o~ Department, His .
record ' in three yea rs at .
Fullerton was lii'IS.
FuUertoo Aihlelic Dl,rec:tor '
. Neale Stoner, who made the
announ~ement · Wednesday.·
said a.search for a new coach
woaldbegin immedialely,

Clov~ Volley (Vanilla, Fudge Marble,
ChocOlate) ·
.

·

Fu4ce Bars ...... ...... .. . ~~-'·
flin Cremes ..... .... .... 1:.~.'·
2

· K~er

K111sty Rolls

.

·~

5f
Ice Cream ............ ~ . ~: s1 69
Cream Pies ........... .. :_~~1

P.,l9tPal.

Pia in 9f Seeded

F.-yer ·~ P~rts

. lonquet (Chocalale, Str~·rry,lemon)

,Bi-Lo II ~ .... ,. ,. ..

Pain Relief Tablets

Procet_.

o-sr,r.t .

Peai,;, r.och or

..... ...

'

Jtcal
C. . . lllim Ill, 111.: •• 1ft .

_,

,'

.

.

'·'

'

'

I

Sprite or

.
$209
hdorn
........ »C;!·
Plcg.
•
•
24-0. $"
223
Daytime ....•.. .. Plcg. "
' ' " ' ... '~'· $229

Gal.

15-0.

DtntunCitatslngT~($1 . 79

Cant

Sid)

.Efferdent .. :.. .......

.

60,(),

Btl.

With This Covpon

With This Coupon

Liplon.
Tea lacs

Bolden Oriddle

oiMI Porch&lt;ttt of lOG-Ct. Pli1o

ootl hrc- of 24-oL Ill.

Pan~a.ke

Syrup

W.jtct ,, . .,....li ........ Meal til .

c..,. ...,,.. lat.. ,.. .4, 1~

.

Co~a·Cola

$8,633 asked

,.....
...
.· 1;$129

•
for planning

.

,~

Plus D1p111lt

• ••
•
cns1s
semce
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - ThE
slate Public Welfare Depart
ment has 'asked for $8.633 b
· federal fWlds to finance till ·
planning of a comprehensive 24hour emergency service !01
.. Ohio·· chil(lren , and famlllel
facing a crisis .
.The program. comes undei
Department of Health, Educa·
lion and Welfare ·goals to
reduce the need for separation
of children from .u-,elr natiD'al
families ani! to improVe the
quality of services to clilldren
needing substitute care.
· ·
State Welfare Director
Charles W. Bates said that .
folloWing completion . or the .
. evaluation . arid
the ..
department would . be eligible . .
for $350,000 in HEW fwtds to • .
implement the 'emergency ser- '
vice program in 10 . Ohio , ·
oolrities, -which will be S.lected ·

·Canned. Luncheon Meat.

Treet

.Cupa

.

.Save 29,
With · This Coupon

.

• •• $1.49.,.,..... tl

·Kroger .
Spicas .
llllijHt II ... llcMII ltatt aN IICII
c... lltirtl 11~.. .J•. 4. 1m.

plans, .

nrrordin.ll to thP,ir 'nMi~.

I

'

',..
; ,I

.' )

.....

12-ol.

1$1 .~:;;.. $113

4
'
Kroger Biscuits ...
~:'~=~·
' '3a.o. 88~

. .;tel II ..........

'.

7-Up

1

-lb.

_.,.._~lk.

'

lr,

fhe ·Uneola

·lufferln

2 $179
. Kraf'.·lelreeta .... _""'·
Anwrican« ""*"o

Hell11111's
·
..
-Maro••••e
stit. ...
t.. ,

·'

With Coupon

Sulitject tl l,liulllt Sttlt tftl UUI Tu .
ttupu E111ires Sat., JH . •. 1t15

Cottage
Cheese
'2

U% lutttrfcrt Homogon;ztd

1114 ~rcMIO of 32..L Jar

' -i

3·1b.
I

Johnson's
~isposable Diapers

Witll This Coupon

'

B

(Small &amp; .Large

Save 15, Save 25;· Save

,

(10c Off Labell Laundry

'

...

lrown 'nS.,...,·eTwin,Combinotion Flakeor
~etmilk
'

I

Entl ...

• • • c..

•r

-- !

BlackEJaPaas ......... .,,.;:.· ~·
~aoolooo
Y~r 29~
Roma111 LaHuca ....... .chooc•

tor

• • • c.

5~

lb.

3811

'

·w.$125

-

ll

·

15-n-

Nutritious .

2

• • • • ;·~89c· ;

ColeSlaw ·•••••••••••••••••
Cream Cheese Salad ·······
Pineapple

Bush Chili Hot or

'

Hi·Nu 2%
Lowfat Milk

·t

·

88c_ Tide_Detergent·
3
Pinto
leans
, C•• 88c
=
-oz.
Kroger
·
...., ~~.a·-B·c --=- Box
·-lean~

Kroger

.

F,.oh, Sholltd

a
I HI.

Green

Meat-·E trees

••• ••••••

ribbon-cutting cereri1ony on
opening dav .

'

&amp;

Cabbage ...........•.. lb.

Sliced Turkey
and Other Select Varieties
• Freezer Queen

Dtl-

SweetandSet~.~r

u.7

'...

I

Nr«YOtk

A•ondalt Cut

• Kroger

"The wi1inin g slogan will be
used in all promoti onal an d
advertising programs for the ·
1975 State Fair," according to
General Manager Vic Lucas.
"Last yea~·s winning theme
was a FAMILY-A-PAIR."
To enter the 1975 Ohip Stale
Fair Slogan Contes t, send the
sloga n with your name, ad&lt;)ress, and lelepbone number
on ' a postcard lo : SLOGAN
CONTEST, Ohio State Fair, 632
. Ea.st lith AVenue, Columbus,
Oh10, 4321 1.
Entries must be postmarked
no later than Jan. 15, 1975. In
case· of· a lie. the slogan with
. the earlier postmark 'wiU win.

Tart, Juicy Lemons or

S111ijtU 10 INfiUIIIt state 111~ ltCII 111
CIIPIII h11i1is Sit. , Ju. 4, 1175. .

aa~

•••

Fresh
Kale

Can

79~

... 49c

VItamin Rich

·lb.

Po meroy, Sil ver Rndge Teay ' ~ Vall ey Ceo l
0 un b or
Ch
1
'
•
~)
on e~,
~ · e ~t on, Ohio, Ave., N orth Cha rleHon, Konow ha Cit)'
Sm•lh St., Pa rkerr.burg- Pius St. 01 Mur doch Av
H f
'
too BOO W I h
e., un lnQ

Steaks

Pair Slogan Contest which has
been
underway
since
November 15,
The, contest, which ends Jan.
15, 1975, offers a Grand Prize of
$1 50.00, along with accorn~ati ons in a Colwnbus
motel for the winner and. his
fa mily for the fi rst, weekend' of
the Pair .- Thev will also be
invited to pm.-hcipa te in the

•

'

California
Broccoli .••..

Available Only in Stares with Delicatessens
De l ico leHe o.~ locoted
'· ot (lorlc~b 11 rg . we '' on , R'•p 1ey,
.

time to e nter U1eir winning
slogan in the 1975 Ohio Stale

..

7 '12

Kt09•1WilhChet.e)

Fmh

sa.

a$

~~~

175-Ct. aa~
Ralls

-

Ktaget

COLU MBUS - Ohio State
Fair fa n., only have u shor t

',

16-

Fac1a 1nues .. .......... 2~~I.~~~
s.
Fleece Towels .. .. .. .. ... 2
3
Macaroni Pinners ......... Pk;~·

lb:

Kroger Meat

to p_l!t in

4JOY2-Gl.88~
cans
.

.

, Fresh ·

Time short

Maxwell House

Swa~=iit"· Yello_wotPinkl

G;i'bT;n ....................... s1J9

"
8

lb.

16-oz.

K~erCreamofMushroom&amp;C..-amof

39
Yellow .:~:;. ·2&amp;·•·*2
111
Onions 10,;
·

Vac Pac Coffee

can•

Kroger's Pro ... .._.. .. _.__._......... .lb. 69~·

Ground Beef

't

OI~Kottlo

AD&amp;Iiciou• Blendof75 % Fntsh Beef And 25 %
Textur.d Vegetable Protein

Regular or
Chub Pak

Mild

3
$
Applesauce.. .. .. .. .. .. .. ...
1
Ch~ken Soup.. .. .. .. .. ...
Kroger Kraut .. .. .. ... .. .. 3ca~:·

Tender, Lean, Th1ifty

Avg.

Roll

Liqu1d

Boneless Roll Roast .. ... ... ... .. . lb. s1s 9
Rib Steaks.. ..... .. ........... .. .. . lb. $139

•

3h.79
••• ~·.
C

lvorr

U.S. Govt . Gtaojed"ICho;oo,
Choiu~

.

fair slogan

of

Margarine

- U.S. Govt. Graded Choice
People's Choice, Center Blade Cu.t

Quarter Pork Loin iliced into

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Slatehouoe Reporler
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - -Ohio's
brand new Court of t;Jaims
swings in~ operation Thursday,
but its chief administrator
cannot estimate how heavy its
caseload
be, and warns
early claimants there will be
"growing pains!' and perhaps
delays.
"Like any new agency, we
will have some growing pains ,"
said Charles Crowley, clerk of
the court which will operate on
the 40th fl oor' of the Stale Office
Tower.
The new court was set up by
. the IIOlh General Assembly,
opening the way for lawsuits
against the state for the first
time. Previously, claims for
damages against the state were
heard by the SWldry Claims
Board, which then recommend·
ed any compensation to the
legislature, which had to pass a
bill providing the money.
Henceforth, Crowley said,
anyone believing they were
injured or wr6nged through .
negligence of state equipment
or employes may submit a
claim in writing to the court in
Columbus.
Claims Procedures
They will be se nt a special
form to fill out, detailing the
time of the incident and who
was involved. If the claim Is for
less than $100, Crowley will
decide himself how much to
award, if any.
· If the claim is for more than
$100, the claimant may have his
case tried by a judge; yet to be
appointed to the cOurt. Chief
1 - Justice C. William O'Neill of
the Ohio Supreme Court has
said he will probably name a
retired judge to serve the first ..
tenn onI the bench of the new
court.
Crowh!y said a claimant with "'
a request for ·between $100 and
$1,000 may waive his right to a
trial by judge and have th\
clerk render a decision. He
explained this might be quicker
and less costly, because it
would not involve the calling of
witnesses, nor would the
clalman t have to visit Columbus .
Crowley said disposition of
large claims by the judge could
lake up to three months, and ·
the slate attorney general Is
~mpowered to get a 5tklay
delay on top of that without a
court order - longer with one.
· Time Limits
_
Any claim filed before next
July I can pertain to an
accident or injury which took
place two years ago. Mter July
I, claims will have to be filed
within six mor&gt;tps of the alleged
incident.
Crowley ·said about ioo cases
pending before the Sundry
Claim~ Board will be carried
into the new court.
He pointed out that the state
Office of Budget and Manage:.
ment (OBM) and General '
Assembly will exercise certain
judgments over payment of
claims. Payment must come
from furds o[ the defending
s\llte agency .
If the OBM certifies the
age ncy has no extra money or
the stale hasn 't enough emergency money to pay a.claim, it ·
m~st be sent to the legislature
for an appropriation or carried
into the next fiscal period when
the money will be made
available.

will

will begin January 1:1. 1975, and
. from 7 ti l 9 p. m. for e1g ht

claims

• • •

Ossman. assistant dean for
twu-yt:&gt;ar programs for Rj o

j'

I

.. I

'

I

'

'

- Crande Comnw.nity College . , ·
tlxlay announced a new con-

'

·

I.

,r

15 - The Dailr Sentinel, MidcUeport-1'0mf'ro:. 0 .. '~'hur!'dm· ~ J.; rl. ~. WiJ

'

.

;,

I'

\

.,

'

·: &lt;

..

•

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. .'

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'' ''

.I

,.

' I

.'

.,.

-,

' ·,'.

',

'
I

~

..

'

I

I

•'

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v

.:.;_

"

~

••
•'

..

.

1~ - ·The D.'lil~· Sen~ inr~. Midctl~port-Ponh"~ ro~, {)_, TIH u-~ day, J t l n._:!. 1 ~ ' 7·1 I

,It' '

Studies
in Lit

'

.......

. '

,.

'

•

.

'

·l '

;

,.

' -1.
'

./

. ·-y

'

•' ~

. ·~

I.

•

seen m

'

planned
lliO GllANDE - Dr . George

tinuing Nluca tion course in
" Hegiono1l Llfcra turc will be

. offered by C'omnmnlty Co llege,
Winter Quarter.

.

.. The course, which is not. for
College credit, is being offered
111 coo peration with Wood
Thrust Folks Arts CouncJI, and
will be taugh t by Mrs. Barbara

We d o all in our power to hove al l:

Th omas Brown of the Council

and

~li s~

Ruth

ou~

\ advertised specials On our she lves when
you shop for them . Sometimes, due to
condit ions beyond our contro l, we nm out
of on adver tised speci a l. If this should
,....,..:!&gt;1-~J.---l,..J happen ro you, a sk at the }store office
. h a RAIN CHEC~ which entitles you lo

Th omas ,

professor uf literature at Rio

·P lus the
BonusoiTop
Value Stamps

the some adverti sed special at the same
special price any time within 2 weeks .

Grand e College.
Regional Literature classes
_will mtoel each Monday night

Round White

,4;, .

Clover Yailey (Quarters)

Pork Chopys

wreks in the Davis Librar·y on
the Rio Gran de Ca mpus. The

course is limited to twelve
studen l'i and a minimllln of. ten
students mus t regis ter before

Chuck Roast

the class can be offered .
Cos t of til~ eight.week co urse ·
will be $10.00 tuition plus any ·
book cos ts the student.&lt;; may

k ~.

mcur . Reg ional Li te ra ture will

feature his tori ca l novels, folk
ta les, conte mporary· readings

fr om hi ll
wr iters,

an d mountain

·a nd
disc uss ions. It will be a

I

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

LIAR CHAMPION
BURLINGTON, Wi s.
iUPIJ - Robert E. Regent of
Milwaukee wo11 the lllle as
th e world 's bigges t liar
Monday wh en he said:
"F'olks think they have II
tought these days. But we
wt•re so poor in our youth

thai our parents couldn't
alford to go wi11dow shopplug," Regent was honored
by the Burlington Liars Club
at the group's aonunl
worldwide competition,
:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;.;:;:;.;:;.;.;:;.;.;.;.

'.-,(, ,
I
' ·',:i1
.-.

r eadings

S€ minar type class se tting.
Reg istrat ion for the Regional
Li tera tu re 'class mav be
com pleted
on Monda y,
Jan uary 6, from 9 a. m. to 4 p.
m. and from 6 to 9 p: m.
En rollment will remain open
urti l the fi rst day of class or
until twelve students en roll.
Student.&lt;; will be accepted on a
first-come, fir st-served basis.

'1 lb.

'

'

I

I

'I

_/ -

'

89C

U.S. Govt, &lt;;raded Choice, People'• Choice Center Blade Cut

Chuck
Steak • • • • • • • •-• 1•·•
Tender, Lean, Thrifty, 4 Rib~- to 18-lb.
.Whole
Beef 11•
Serve '115ave

j

-- (20' Off Label) Dlsh-hlng o.t.rgent

WE GLADLY REDEEM FEDERAL
FOOD STAMPS AND HELP ~OU
STRETCH THEM FARTHER ,

Piece
Bologna ..... . • • •

'l··69
' c
Gunnoe's
$au sage . ..•... •l·l•..99"
Country (2-lb, Roll $1. 97)

•

Tender, Lean, Thrifty

11• Eye
Steaks ....

s;;;~;.- ...... "'-"-"" ""' "- lb. $149
POtt~~~·~-~~: ~-~~·.:~~ .. .. .. _.. tb. SJ ~9

Fancy

AIKo"-o

3
Pork and Beans .. .. .. ... .. ea,.
.

...1.

1(Hz .

With Coupon

AI

Glazed
Donuts

Wieners
' 12-ol.

Meat
Bologna

. Boneless, Frozen

Pkg.

Perch
Fillets

St .,

Bridgeport, Morgantown &amp; Marietta .

Limes ...... . ~ ..... ,

4W

lb.

·

•••

·

•

Kroger .Rolls . ,.... __ .... 2~;:· Sl
-~He Bread.... '.' ..;.22~· as~

2
Donuts . .. . .. .. .. .... ~~~~-

!",ai~, Combination, Cinnamun SugOJ.d, Appl•
nSpiceCauntryoYen

U.S. Govt. Inspected
For Wholesomeness
'

Fresh, Cut-Up Mhc:ed

Kroger Mcacaroni or Th1n

2·1b.

Spaghetti····-···: ··· · · ··· ······~·

....

-.
YODER RESIGNS
FULLERTON, Calif.. (UPH
- Pete Yoder has resigned as ·
head football coach at Cal
State-Fullerton.
•·
Yoder, 34, a fonner assistlllll""
at University of Southern
California(. will remain at the
school , }rt its Phys~cal
1,E!Iucat!o~ Department, His .
record ' in three yea rs at .
Fullerton was lii'IS.
FuUertoo Aihlelic Dl,rec:tor '
. Neale Stoner, who made the
announ~ement · Wednesday.·
said a.search for a new coach
woaldbegin immedialely,

Clov~ Volley (Vanilla, Fudge Marble,
ChocOlate) ·
.

·

Fu4ce Bars ...... ...... .. . ~~-'·
flin Cremes ..... .... .... 1:.~.'·
2

· K~er

K111sty Rolls

.

·~

5f
Ice Cream ............ ~ . ~: s1 69
Cream Pies ........... .. :_~~1

P.,l9tPal.

Pia in 9f Seeded

F.-yer ·~ P~rts

. lonquet (Chocalale, Str~·rry,lemon)

,Bi-Lo II ~ .... ,. ,. ..

Pain Relief Tablets

Procet_.

o-sr,r.t .

Peai,;, r.och or

..... ...

'

Jtcal
C. . . lllim Ill, 111.: •• 1ft .

_,

,'

.

.

'·'

'

'

I

Sprite or

.
$209
hdorn
........ »C;!·
Plcg.
•
•
24-0. $"
223
Daytime ....•.. .. Plcg. "
' ' " ' ... '~'· $229

Gal.

15-0.

DtntunCitatslngT~($1 . 79

Cant

Sid)

.Efferdent .. :.. .......

.

60,(),

Btl.

With This Covpon

With This Coupon

Liplon.
Tea lacs

Bolden Oriddle

oiMI Porch&lt;ttt of lOG-Ct. Pli1o

ootl hrc- of 24-oL Ill.

Pan~a.ke

Syrup

W.jtct ,, . .,....li ........ Meal til .

c..,. ...,,.. lat.. ,.. .4, 1~

.

Co~a·Cola

$8,633 asked

,.....
...
.· 1;$129

•
for planning

.

,~

Plus D1p111lt

• ••
•
cns1s
semce
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - ThE
slate Public Welfare Depart
ment has 'asked for $8.633 b
· federal fWlds to finance till ·
planning of a comprehensive 24hour emergency service !01
.. Ohio·· chil(lren , and famlllel
facing a crisis .
.The program. comes undei
Department of Health, Educa·
lion and Welfare ·goals to
reduce the need for separation
of children from .u-,elr natiD'al
families ani! to improVe the
quality of services to clilldren
needing substitute care.
· ·
State Welfare Director
Charles W. Bates said that .
folloWing completion . or the .
. evaluation . arid
the ..
department would . be eligible . .
for $350,000 in HEW fwtds to • .
implement the 'emergency ser- '
vice program in 10 . Ohio , ·
oolrities, -which will be S.lected ·

·Canned. Luncheon Meat.

Treet

.Cupa

.

.Save 29,
With · This Coupon

.

• •• $1.49.,.,..... tl

·Kroger .
Spicas .
llllijHt II ... llcMII ltatt aN IICII
c... lltirtl 11~.. .J•. 4. 1m.

plans, .

nrrordin.ll to thP,ir 'nMi~.

I

'

',..
; ,I

.' )

.....

12-ol.

1$1 .~:;;.. $113

4
'
Kroger Biscuits ...
~:'~=~·
' '3a.o. 88~

. .;tel II ..........

'.

7-Up

1

-lb.

_.,.._~lk.

'

lr,

fhe ·Uneola

·lufferln

2 $179
. Kraf'.·lelreeta .... _""'·
Anwrican« ""*"o

Hell11111's
·
..
-Maro••••e
stit. ...
t.. ,

·'

With Coupon

Sulitject tl l,liulllt Sttlt tftl UUI Tu .
ttupu E111ires Sat., JH . •. 1t15

Cottage
Cheese
'2

U% lutttrfcrt Homogon;ztd

1114 ~rcMIO of 32..L Jar

' -i

3·1b.
I

Johnson's
~isposable Diapers

Witll This Coupon

'

B

(Small &amp; .Large

Save 15, Save 25;· Save

,

(10c Off Labell Laundry

'

...

lrown 'nS.,...,·eTwin,Combinotion Flakeor
~etmilk
'

I

Entl ...

• • • c..

•r

-- !

BlackEJaPaas ......... .,,.;:.· ~·
~aoolooo
Y~r 29~
Roma111 LaHuca ....... .chooc•

tor

• • • c.

5~

lb.

3811

'

·w.$125

-

ll

·

15-n-

Nutritious .

2

• • • • ;·~89c· ;

ColeSlaw ·•••••••••••••••••
Cream Cheese Salad ·······
Pineapple

Bush Chili Hot or

'

Hi·Nu 2%
Lowfat Milk

·t

·

88c_ Tide_Detergent·
3
Pinto
leans
, C•• 88c
=
-oz.
Kroger
·
...., ~~.a·-B·c --=- Box
·-lean~

Kroger

.

F,.oh, Sholltd

a
I HI.

Green

Meat-·E trees

••• ••••••

ribbon-cutting cereri1ony on
opening dav .

'

&amp;

Cabbage ...........•.. lb.

Sliced Turkey
and Other Select Varieties
• Freezer Queen

Dtl-

SweetandSet~.~r

u.7

'...

I

Nr«YOtk

A•ondalt Cut

• Kroger

"The wi1inin g slogan will be
used in all promoti onal an d
advertising programs for the ·
1975 State Fair," according to
General Manager Vic Lucas.
"Last yea~·s winning theme
was a FAMILY-A-PAIR."
To enter the 1975 Ohip Stale
Fair Slogan Contes t, send the
sloga n with your name, ad&lt;)ress, and lelepbone number
on ' a postcard lo : SLOGAN
CONTEST, Ohio State Fair, 632
. Ea.st lith AVenue, Columbus,
Oh10, 4321 1.
Entries must be postmarked
no later than Jan. 15, 1975. In
case· of· a lie. the slogan with
. the earlier postmark 'wiU win.

Tart, Juicy Lemons or

S111ijtU 10 INfiUIIIt state 111~ ltCII 111
CIIPIII h11i1is Sit. , Ju. 4, 1175. .

aa~

•••

Fresh
Kale

Can

79~

... 49c

VItamin Rich

·lb.

Po meroy, Sil ver Rndge Teay ' ~ Vall ey Ceo l
0 un b or
Ch
1
'
•
~)
on e~,
~ · e ~t on, Ohio, Ave., N orth Cha rleHon, Konow ha Cit)'
Sm•lh St., Pa rkerr.burg- Pius St. 01 Mur doch Av
H f
'
too BOO W I h
e., un lnQ

Steaks

Pair Slogan Contest which has
been
underway
since
November 15,
The, contest, which ends Jan.
15, 1975, offers a Grand Prize of
$1 50.00, along with accorn~ati ons in a Colwnbus
motel for the winner and. his
fa mily for the fi rst, weekend' of
the Pair .- Thev will also be
invited to pm.-hcipa te in the

•

'

California
Broccoli .••..

Available Only in Stares with Delicatessens
De l ico leHe o.~ locoted
'· ot (lorlc~b 11 rg . we '' on , R'•p 1ey,
.

time to e nter U1eir winning
slogan in the 1975 Ohio Stale

..

7 '12

Kt09•1WilhChet.e)

Fmh

sa.

a$

~~~

175-Ct. aa~
Ralls

-

Ktaget

COLU MBUS - Ohio State
Fair fa n., only have u shor t

',

16-

Fac1a 1nues .. .......... 2~~I.~~~
s.
Fleece Towels .. .. .. .. ... 2
3
Macaroni Pinners ......... Pk;~·

lb:

Kroger Meat

to p_l!t in

4JOY2-Gl.88~
cans
.

.

, Fresh ·

Time short

Maxwell House

Swa~=iit"· Yello_wotPinkl

G;i'bT;n ....................... s1J9

"
8

lb.

16-oz.

K~erCreamofMushroom&amp;C..-amof

39
Yellow .:~:;. ·2&amp;·•·*2
111
Onions 10,;
·

Vac Pac Coffee

can•

Kroger's Pro ... .._.. .. _.__._......... .lb. 69~·

Ground Beef

't

OI~Kottlo

AD&amp;Iiciou• Blendof75 % Fntsh Beef And 25 %
Textur.d Vegetable Protein

Regular or
Chub Pak

Mild

3
$
Applesauce.. .. .. .. .. .. .. ...
1
Ch~ken Soup.. .. .. .. .. ...
Kroger Kraut .. .. .. ... .. .. 3ca~:·

Tender, Lean, Th1ifty

Avg.

Roll

Liqu1d

Boneless Roll Roast .. ... ... ... .. . lb. s1s 9
Rib Steaks.. ..... .. ........... .. .. . lb. $139

•

3h.79
••• ~·.
C

lvorr

U.S. Govt . Gtaojed"ICho;oo,
Choiu~

.

fair slogan

of

Margarine

- U.S. Govt. Graded Choice
People's Choice, Center Blade Cu.t

Quarter Pork Loin iliced into

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Slatehouoe Reporler
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - -Ohio's
brand new Court of t;Jaims
swings in~ operation Thursday,
but its chief administrator
cannot estimate how heavy its
caseload
be, and warns
early claimants there will be
"growing pains!' and perhaps
delays.
"Like any new agency, we
will have some growing pains ,"
said Charles Crowley, clerk of
the court which will operate on
the 40th fl oor' of the Stale Office
Tower.
The new court was set up by
. the IIOlh General Assembly,
opening the way for lawsuits
against the state for the first
time. Previously, claims for
damages against the state were
heard by the SWldry Claims
Board, which then recommend·
ed any compensation to the
legislature, which had to pass a
bill providing the money.
Henceforth, Crowley said,
anyone believing they were
injured or wr6nged through .
negligence of state equipment
or employes may submit a
claim in writing to the court in
Columbus.
Claims Procedures
They will be se nt a special
form to fill out, detailing the
time of the incident and who
was involved. If the claim Is for
less than $100, Crowley will
decide himself how much to
award, if any.
· If the claim is for more than
$100, the claimant may have his
case tried by a judge; yet to be
appointed to the cOurt. Chief
1 - Justice C. William O'Neill of
the Ohio Supreme Court has
said he will probably name a
retired judge to serve the first ..
tenn onI the bench of the new
court.
Crowh!y said a claimant with "'
a request for ·between $100 and
$1,000 may waive his right to a
trial by judge and have th\
clerk render a decision. He
explained this might be quicker
and less costly, because it
would not involve the calling of
witnesses, nor would the
clalman t have to visit Columbus .
Crowley said disposition of
large claims by the judge could
lake up to three months, and ·
the slate attorney general Is
~mpowered to get a 5tklay
delay on top of that without a
court order - longer with one.
· Time Limits
_
Any claim filed before next
July I can pertain to an
accident or injury which took
place two years ago. Mter July
I, claims will have to be filed
within six mor&gt;tps of the alleged
incident.
Crowley ·said about ioo cases
pending before the Sundry
Claim~ Board will be carried
into the new court.
He pointed out that the state
Office of Budget and Manage:.
ment (OBM) and General '
Assembly will exercise certain
judgments over payment of
claims. Payment must come
from furds o[ the defending
s\llte agency .
If the OBM certifies the
age ncy has no extra money or
the stale hasn 't enough emergency money to pay a.claim, it ·
m~st be sent to the legislature
for an appropriation or carried
into the next fiscal period when
the money will be made
available.

will

will begin January 1:1. 1975, and
. from 7 ti l 9 p. m. for e1g ht

claims

• • •

Ossman. assistant dean for
twu-yt:&gt;ar programs for Rj o

j'

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'

- Crande Comnw.nity College . , ·
tlxlay announced a new con-

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,r

15 - The Dailr Sentinel, MidcUeport-1'0mf'ro:. 0 .. '~'hur!'dm· ~ J.; rl. ~. WiJ

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:_16 . . . .: ThP Dail~ St•nti nd, Middkjxw t-PP!ll.l'l'fly,' (i .. 'l'ltur:od; 1·. ,l. o1·. ~!. 1·· .... ·

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prrJ&gt;&lt;tr&lt;~ltLm insti1u! ions in Ohio

COLUMBUS \ UPI) - Sta te
School Supt. Martin Essex sai d
today the redesign of teaeher

News.
•

J

."le'-f.S

zn Br ·

• ••

Jt

if•

· said Essex in' et year end stateBoston High School out of business for good. Roston sc hool of-

"Generations of 'future Ohi-

ficials were sc hedtued 10 a."., U. S. DisLri cl Co urt Judge W. AI:·

oans should receive vastly

lhur GarriJy.tod;.n· whcUJCr the f(JUr-schuol complex, closed since
Dec. !J alter the slabbing of a whi te student. should be opened

improved learning ex~ ri en ces
as a result of the new sta ndards.

Monday in the [;tee of police repurls of a possible escalation of

tor Ohio's 52 teacher educattion institutions," said Essex."

racial violence Lhen:~.
. . . Qty offirictls were prer&lt;t rin g to ask Garrity to order the
complex closed pcrmarlt&gt;rlll.\· and ha\'e classes transferred to

.. . •

cluded clinical preparation to
enable teachers to use modern

Wednesday orctererl a delay at lea st until Monday becmL':ie of
secret informottion he snid \~· as given him by stnte ;md city police
indicatin g the possibility of esctt lflted violence.

dia gno stic- instruments and to
prescribe instruction accord-

today in search of additional vi ctims of a New Yar 's Eve
avai.Ulche that killed twelve West Germ;:m skiers at Gaschurn in

VAll., CO LO, - PRESIDENT FORD WEDNESDAY chose
Housing Sectet.m James T. Lyrn. 47. of Cleveland , as his new
bud

: dirrctor. n "'laci ng Roy M. Ash. Lyrm will remain in hi s

HUD po" unlil l'• Tilled and Ash will help Ford put the
fi nishing touu "·s o, a budget for fiscal 1976 expected to run ·
between $.130 bil,:on :. od $.140 billion . A congressional staff study
estimoted ths will contain a $23 billlon deficit-&lt;1 postwar
record - and that for fisca l 1977, U1e deficit is expected to reach
$36 billion.
Lyn" ·., chief responsibil}ty will be to shepherd the ad·
ministration 's big, red-ink spending · program through the incorning Democratic Congress. Ford's appcinlmenl of Lynn was
one of his roost important in &lt;m expected general overha ul of the
Nixon holdover cabinet. Lynn will have to "sell " to a show-me
Olngress a deficit budget experts say could run $20 billion in to
the red in the fsi cal year sta rtirlg July 1 and perhaps rise to a
$5().billion deficit the following year.

I

~

$3.000;

equipm ent.

~

../

Baptism , Like the Early
Ch urch BaptizecJ, In Jesus Name.
Acts 2: 38.

Of Kingsport, Tenn .
•.

In Obedience to Math. 28: 19. ·
Father, Son , and Holy Ghost are
tit les . His name is Jesus, il.cts 4:
12, Acts 8: 16, Acts 10: 47 , 48, Act5
. 19: · 1-6.

'

JAN,·· 2 THRU 5. 7:30 PM
MIDDLEPORT UNIT£D
PENTECOSTAL OfURCH
)

Healing and Deliverance Through
the Name of Jesus. Acts 3: 1·8.

South Third Avenu e
• Middleport, Ohio

'

.

PENTECOSTAL SINGING
ANOINTED PREA&lt;;HJ NG

.

These miraculous works are
indeed a lr e~dy occuring in this
reviv&lt;~ .l through • Jesus.

REV: WILLIAM
. KNITTEL, PASTOR
.

COME TO THE TRUE CHURCH OF J.E,SUS CHRIST.

".
I. '

I

... ,.

A

•

,oft!.'/

.,' ;;; . :'

Few sorry

~

....•

•

r

\
AULilorltltl:)

take Qver
. -monastary
.

cnforceme nl

o,ffrce r s ,

Huwteloss denied the Indians
fired :my shots. lle said the

'

Indians were armed with

they've held off the P.,lice."
Hawtetosssaid leaders of' the
group , which calls itself the
"Me nomin ee

shots had

been fired. but not by law

.

about 400 indians were in. turns it over to them.
The 37-acre·'site was sealed . volved in the takeove r. But ·
off by county, state and federal authorities estima led the
officers but~ a .spo kesman for number at 40 or 50.
"We are holding the Alexian
the Indians said they \"ere
"prepared to die for what we Brothers respcnsible - for the
lives and the safely of our
believe in."
Neal Hawte.toss , 2~ , a people in the monastery ,"
spokesman for the _group, said Hawte to ss said. "So far

.':1.. 11&lt;1

"bows and arrows." Another

Indiru1 spokesmrut sa id they
on ly

Wa rrior

hHd

"so me · hunting

equipment."

Society,'' were to meet todlty
But the caretaker of the
with two of · the Alexian facility, Jue Plonka, said when
Brothers of America, who own the Indians arrived they were
·the site and used it as a qarrying J'plenty of handguns
novitiate until 1968.
and shotguns." Plonka said

they Iin·d "pot shots at .takeover.
passersby ."
'Sha·Nano Olunty authorities ·
'1)1ere wer~ no reports of said they asked for extra
injuries.
manpower from neighboring
Plonka, his wife and their counties but that there was no
two children were ejected from request lor the Nation&amp;! Guard.
the monastery about two hours The FBI had several agents on
aft er the lndian·s· arriva l hand to deten:nine whether any
• shortly after midnight New · federal laws were violated.
Year's Day.
·
The monastery, a mansion
· Plonka, in a report to built in the 1940s by a New York
Brother Florian Eberle in woman ·and given to the
Chi cago, president of the Alexlans in t950 for use as a
Alexians, said he saw about 10 novitiate, is seven miles west
or 12 Indians at the lime of the of here in r an sparsely

- ._ at passirig

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•
•

••
•
•
•••
•

populated area with a large .
percentage of Indians .
· "We want our land back " ·
'
said John ~auanasciun, 2ji;
·Neopit. "I won't lea.ve here
unless we reach an agreement
with the Alexian·Brothers. The
Jndians need this land. We can
use the buildings for a hospital
or something."
Hawletoss said his group'was
not part ·of the American Indian Movement, which sl&lt;lged
a 71-day · occupation at
Wounded Knee, S.D., in 1973.
'

.

~·

'

of old year
By United Press lnlernallonal
Some prayed, others partied
or nursed hangovers and yet
others slumped before their
television sets for a foolball·.
and-parade marathon Wednesday as the nation ushered in
1975.
For many, the .11assing of 1974
brought little relte t.
It had been a long year,
lengthened by soa ri ng in-

.-·•••
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-....

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

GOLD, GOW AND MORE GOW surrounds Theresa Gutarra of the Consolidated Refining
Co., Inc., in Mamaroneck, N.Y. Anticipallng a heavy demand lor gold by private citizens now
permitted to buy 11, the company has been processing gold into quarter·, half- nod lull-ounce
in~ols for sale to dealers who willlhen resell to cillzens. Before Theresa are gold bars, a bag of
gold dust and overhead is a thin strand of finely rolled gold.

County will

'
Water

t

~

Reason I. We are income tax
specialists. We ask the right
questions. We dig for every honest
deduction. We want to leave no
stone unturned to make sure you
Pl\Y the smallest legitimate tax:

.

instrumentality . .

People Receiving the Baptism of
th e Holy Ghost, Acts 2: 1-4, Acts
10: 44-46, Acts 19: 1-6.

'

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statewide inservice education

'

JOYFUL. SOUNDS

-·.•
..•
..••
••

••
••
·•

improved supply of teachers"
"Co nt inued ed uca tion of
Ohio's more than 100,000
teaches now in service will be
buttressed by high quality
sland·free,. self-instructional
materials being ·prepared by
the newly created Di\1sion of
Ed ucational Redesign and
Renewa l the nation's first

Continuer! -from page l

KESHENA , Wis. (UPI )- An
armed band of Indians who
took o\ler a closed monastary,
early New Year's Day sa~ they
will hold t~e, facility unill 'the
religious order that owns it

.••

should come to us
for income tax help.

lion," said Essex .

,..

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\,~

med ical . $2 .500: ch ildr en 's
hom e bui lding, eq ui pment ,
$t.OOO; cont racts ; repair,
$2.000; fue l and light , $3,000 ;
other expenses, $200. Total.
$22.600.
Soldiers relief - sa lary.
offi cia l. $2, 100; sa laries.
employes. $7,300; equi pment.
$675; relief allowances. $3,600 ;
expenses, $600; travel. $300;
other expe nses, $1,700. Total
$16.275.
Public assistance - grants,
$5,894. Total $5,894.
· workhou se

~

con tr acts,

serv ices . $1.000. Total. $1,000.
In sur ance , pe nsion s a nd

taxes - cou nt y buildings ,
$6.000 ; Workmen 's Compensation. coun ty C~nd Disabled

Workmen's Relief. $6.000;
official bonds, $1,800 ; pensions.
public employes' retirement ,

$40,000. Total. $53.800.
Contin gencies, un a nticipa ted

.
618 E. MA IN ST.
Open 9 a .m . lo 5 p.m . Mon .- Sat.
Ph . 992-3795
NO APPOINTMENT NECE SSA RY

eme rgencies , $40 .000 .
Dog and Kennel fund -

am.litor's cl erk hire and sup-

988 accidents·'
probed. in '74
.

report released todav bv the
i Ga llia-Meigs Post S~le High! way Patrol. 988 traffic ac1 ·cidents were invfsligaled
\ during 19il. There were seven
fatalities in· Ga llia and Meigs
Counties.
Included in the accidents
253 injury accidents in

which 361 persons were in·
jur'\d. The patrol arrested 260
motbrists for DWI and made
1.974 assists .
During the month · of
December, 97 acddents were
investigaled . The patrol made
393 arrests, issued 445 warn-· .
ings, made 174 assists and ·
inspected 467 motor vehicles.

.

6 oz.

CASE
.24

bots.

·).'-

16 o~.
loaf

Golden Isle

·4/SlOO

Bread
U.S. No. 1
Maine·

201b.bag

Panasonic
Battery Powered

Spry
Vegetable
...

Pocket size. Sol id state. Built-in

42 oz. can

$ 79

Potatoes

speaker Lack .
Choice of colors.

$21.95 Value

BROCH'S

CHERRY 1HUMPS
CANDY BARS.

Golden Isle
·Fruit Drinks

Broughtons

or

· . Orange, .Grape, Fruit
Punch

2% Milk

Fox De Luxe
Frozen Pizzas

13% oz.

pak.

Cheese, Pep.,

79'

Sausage

gal.
w

-2.9

The board, which .considers
grie vances against . So ~ th
Carolina · attorneys, will
discuss possible action against ·
Denl, who pleaded guilty in
November to a misdemeanor
in connection with a 1970 GOP.
~nd-raising effort. He .·served
'!':!Is ·a Nixon aide at the lime o(
.
- t!te incident.

--

l320 watts, 7 position hea t selector.
$25.95 Value

EUGENE DOU.
12" DOU.
Movable arms, legs

and head.
. Sits and stands.
Washable.

..

'

.

'

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I

Sp.e clal Salel

Easy way to accurately
count your oun ces
and calorie intake .
ONLY

, ·Shop Our

SPECIAL
DANA

VALUES
All Over
SU(;HETS

The Store

Now!! ,

.

,! .

15 oz.
54.00 Value

98~

:::IJons had brought $25.5 billions .
~ the pockets of bus i~essm&lt;•·
aropl)&lt;l'the wp rld. · ·
·
'
..

.,

MOISTURIZING
HAND AND
BODY LOTION

$4.25 Value

.: · omas Edison 1s Ul97 .inven-

'

PRINCE MATCHABELLI

. •225

DIET SCALES

CombabJe hair.

~ At the ti me of his death ih.
tJJ , it was esti mated that

'

, bloat. Gentle, effective, economical.
Sat i sfaction guaranteed or money
back .

CACHET

Tur[ls off If upset .

:

--

Hel ps you loose excess ·water weight,

j swe lling , and uncomfortable body

60 Tablets

Compact desi gn . Features in stan t
heat in 6 second s. 4505 BTU rating at

10.

:
:
:
•
:
:

ODRINIL

PORTABLE
HEATER

' THE SUBJECf
DENT
COLUMBIA, S.C. (UP!) Harry Dent, former Whiie
House Southern strategist
under former President ·
Richard Nixon, will be the
subject of discussion by· the
South Carolina Bar board of
grievances and discipline Jan.

Valley Bell.

ODRINEX

TOASTMASTER

. Tuesday, said he and his wife
-want to catch. "the mood, the
fee ling, the impressio~ of one's
(ellow citizens."

' .ca.n s

NEWI NATURAL
WATER . PILL

5

•.: Giscard, in his resolution

-

Each

LOSE WEIGHT
QR MONEY BACK

120 Tablets

Giscard, who was accom panied by his wife, AnneAymone.
•

46 oz.

'149

·'1988

No special exe r cise . ..Suppresses
your appetite. ContaIns the most
effec tive r educing aitt avaiab l e
without "prescr iti on.

15c VALUE

have towar ds yo u," said

,.

2 Styles
11"x6"
Choice of Colors

dynamic speakers. complete with
battery, ea:r phone a nd externa l

DINES WITH ELDERS
PARIS (UP!) - President
, Valery Giscard d'Estaing, who
- has rC§lllved to dine with or, dinary French families during
the new year, ate chicken and
" green peas Wednesday with 34
;,: residents of an old folks home,
•., " I didn't know he was
~ coming, bu t I recognized him
right away," an 84-yearo{l!d
;. woman said.
•
"It is natur·al that the
::: president visil you to Ishow the
brotherhood France should

Shortening

CERAMIC
ASH TRAYS

AM &amp; FM antehnas. 211.. " PM

·..

$289

MODERN SHAPE

AM/FM RADIO

...,•

COCA-COLA

,

-... ,

·---

••
..
...
·'

SQlJAD TRANSPORTS
. The Ra cine E·R Squad
transported Ada Stigliano from ·
Veterans Memorial Hospital to ·
her home in Portland Wed·
nesday at 2:t5 p. m.

'·

$1.40 Value

..

lb.·-

workmen 's compensa tion an d

Patrol .reJXJrlS

25's
91c Value

5 oz .

100's
$1.J7 Value

crime rates.
It was also lengthened by

ALKA-SELTZER

..

Cube Steak
.39' lb.
Ground Beef

Mot or vehicle and gasoline

'

BAYER ·

' '
"
Alka·Seltzer

..

tax ftmd - engineer, salaryofficia l. $14.600 ; supplies, $500;
equipmen t. $5.000: expenses.
$10,000; roads, labor, $200,000;
maler ia ls. $100,000; equ ip·
men t. $125 .000 ; contracts
services. $250,000; emergency.
$10,000 ; comp ensation and
damages. $5,000; public employe's reti rement. $25,000;

Revenue Sharing, law en-

SOFT
&amp;DRI
DEODORANT

..

.

ness fee. $2 ,200;-·public em·
ploye 's retirmcnt, s:t50 ; oth.er
ex penses. $700. Tota l $8.545.

force lnent , capita l
ililprovement. $79.850.
Water Districl funds, landfill, salaries. employes.
$24.000: mal erials. $t5,000 ;
conD·acts- repair'fue( $10.000;
containers. $2.500. · To tal
$51.500.
Gene ral . fund·· totale d,
$640.872.20. dog and kennel
fand. $4,545. motor vehicle and
gasoline tax fun d, $88t,100.

PIZZA
MIX

timekeepers around the world,
who stopped th eir atom ic
.. .... clocks for one second to correct
•
a time lag caused by a slowing
of the ea rth 's rotation.
When the clocks chimed
midnight , the bands struck up
••
..•
"Auld Lang Syne" and cocktail
•
glasses
were lifted in tribute,
''
and most revellers breathed a
•
sigh
of relief.
•
'
Rain
greeted the new year in
,.
..
New
York's
Times sQuare, but
.
failed to pu t a damper on the
thousands who ga thered for the
traditional holiday observance .
.'
Bul othe rs shunned the
eleme nts. Some paid $99.99 for
•"
a "bargain" evening of enter••• lairunent at San Francisco's
••
., Sheraton-Palace. Many simply
.'' . avoided the crowds, attending
·, or hosting small parties or
relaxing quietly in their own
••
••• homes.
The old year was gone. But
•
the problems lingered .
•
••
Tightrope diplomacy held
•
Midd le East tension to a war of
••• words and President Ford
.,
ended a ski holiday to return to
Washington and the struggle
·•
with the nation's economic
.
,' •
woes.
·;
The first day of the year
~
brought a,ll end to the Water·
. ::
gale trial of five former top
' • aides to former Presideut
•
Richard M. Nixon. A jury in
:': Wa shington found former
~
attorney general John N.
·•
Mitchell, former White House
•• Chief of Staff H. R. Haldeman,
: - .former presidential Domestic
. ~ . Affairs Adviser John D.
·:
Ehrlichman, and former
'! assistant attorney general and .
·:
Nixon campaign aide Robert C.
• Mardi ~n guilty of a .variety of '
·• charges stemming from the
Watergate cover-up.
Former Nixon ~;ampaign
committee lawyer Kenneth W.
Parkinson was acquitted.

THURSDAY JANUARY 2- 4
We Reserve Right. To Lim it Quantity

men t, $1500 : daims and wit-

w~re

--·

9 Til 7
PRICES EFFECTIVE Mon. thru Sat.

plies. $445 ; •alarios , empl oyes.
$2.400; supplies. $950; equip-

disabled u·ork?'en 's relief,
$6.000 : other expenses. $5,000;
bridgest and culverts, ' labor.
$35,000f" materia ls, $40,000 ;
co ntrac ts-pr ojec ls. $50,000.
Total. $881.100.

DIAL
SOAP

war'
drought,
natural
disasters, fami ne and soaring

••

Op~n

TICKETS ON SAlE
HERE
NOW

New-Family Size

flation, recession , joblessness,

••

v

Accordin g to th e annual

.WITH

wake of unprecedented infla-

Henry Block has
17 reasOns ·why you

A

Education in a nticipa tion of an

Mark V Super Market
PENTECOSTAL REVIVAL
CONTINUING

major source. of concern in the

.A

of research-based. long-range
planning by the state Board of

CORRECTION I .

.

...
--·
-·

Americans," said Essex . "The
standards culminate six years

.

...:....:_. ·,~.,._

facing the
"School finances which have
General As· been lifted from the chaotic
to agree on· depths of despair by the state
which will . income tax continue to be a

Indians

•

·.
$:100;
co ntraet" sery ices, $6,000;
travel . $460; other expenses.
$:100. Total $29,690.
WASHINGTON - A 40 YEAR DECLINE in the number of
Buil dings a nd ground s,
farms may be "bottoming out" in 1975, an Agriculture Dep;trtcapi tal improvements, ~alary
menl statistician said today. The tentative analysis bv James
- official. $7,000; - supplies
Garrett, of the Statistical Reporting Service came ;Iter th e
$1.000; jail renovation, $10,000 ;
agency released an annual report e~.timatin g t here are 2.819
co nstru c ti on, maintenan ce ,
million farms in the nation .
$15,000 ; contracts repai r .
The esli.rilate was the lowest in government records which go
$4.000; con tracts. fu el and li gh t
back to 1910. But it represented a decline o( only 11,000 farm units
$14,000; other expenses, alarm
from the 2.830 million estin1ate for 1974 and was the smallest
eounty home. $20,000 . Tote:JI
decline recorded since 1936. "The Indications are that we are
.$71,000.
about to bottom out in farm munbers, but we won't really know
Prote,c tion to property and
whether this has happened for a year or two ," Garrett said.
persons - s herif f, sa laryoffic ial. $8.200; sa lari es.
SAIGON - TANK-LED COMMUNIST TROOPS stormed a
employes, matron an'd cook,
key city north of Saigon today, smashing through government
$4 ,840. Total, $1:1,040.
lines and battling in the streets with defenders ordered to hold
Recorder - salary, offic ial,
besieged Phouc Binh "at any cost."
$7,900; sa laries. employes ,
The city, located 66 miles north of Saigon, is the last
$5.300; supplies. $3,500;
govenunent position in the entire of Phuoc Long province. a
documen ts. binding , $2,993;
jungled area between Saigon and the Cambodian. border. The
other expenses. $i50 . Total.
Saigon command vowed to defend Phouc Binh to the end but
$19.843.
initial reports ind icated the defenders were losing ground
Ag ri culture
gra nt s .
quickly, in the capital of 11,000 people.
$15.835; fair board ; $2,noo; soil
conservati on, $3,000: apiary
GRAND TETON PARK, Wyo - THE AMERICAN Revolution
inspec tion. $400; cat tle disease
bicentennial flag , planted by II mountaineers who scaled the
preve nti on, $750; histori cal
13,766-fQOl swrunit of Grand Teton Peak ·New Year's Dav. flew in
society, $900. Total $23,685.
clear, Hklegree-below-zero weather Wednesday . Pa ul Petzoldt,
Health and Welfare66, the leader of the annual trek up the mounl&lt;li~ . said it was the
SoutheastHn Ohi o Emergency
second day the flag was planted iin the peak. He said tonditions
Medical Service, $13,000. Total.
were as good Wednesday as lhe day before, when six members of
$13.000.
his 2Hl!ember party first reached the uppermost lip of the
Tuberculosis hospital clinics
jagged peak.
and care - salaries. $12.200;
Petzoldt said possible • adverse weather condi ti.ons could
supplies. '$3,500; con tr act
prevent a third trip to lhe top of the peak today·. "We've very,
se r vices. H.OOO; hospital,
very happy and well," Petzoldt radioed to Grand Teton National
$7,000; travel. $1.800, fees and
Park headquarters. "The fla g was taken up yesterday and today.
cos ts. $1, 100 ; wo rkman' s
But the weather doesn't look good to the west and we inay not
co mpen sa tion. $250 ; oth er
make it tomorrow, We don't want to lake any chances."
expense. $656. Total . $30,506.
Registration
of
vi ta l
statistics- fees. $tOO. Total.
$100.
OU1er health. - Hydrophobia
claims, $200\ crippled children
aid, $2.411; other. P.O.D ..
$7 , ~50. Total. $10.161.95.
Co unty boa rd of mental
retarda tion - sa lary, officin l.·
$27.000; personnel , $1,640;
workmen's compensta ion,
$450.; supplies. $4.500: uti lities.
$225 : contracts . $2.25J : Iran·
sportation. $1,800; other ex·
penses. $8t0. Total. $38.675.
Cotulty home -- salary. official. $4.800; salaries. empl oyes. $12,660: supplies,
"_. ' ·..., '
$12.oO
O; equipment, $4.000:
I
cont rac ts
q~ap i r,
$500:
clolhing. $500. · Total. $34.460.
Child Welfare Board'
.
. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
· supplies. $1 ,500: boarding
.__ _ _ _ _..;.;,;,;,-.;,;-;,;..;,.;,;..;.,..;.,;,;.;.;,_ _ _... home in Galli aCounty. $12.400:

......

"Enrollment declines have not
been slifficient to affect the
need for additional dollars · to
sustain the quali ty of education
mmost distri cts.

ingly .
"No other slate has made
sweeping reforms .to assure
better tea chers of young

VII':NNA - RESCUE SKI TEAMS PI.OWI':D through snow

but there is alw.ays a chance day visitors might still be buFied
under the snow,'' a police spokesman at Gaschurn said . Three
West German sklrrs held by police on suspicion o£ starting the
avalanche were releused Clfter Questioning Wednesday.

importan t task
conver.ing 111th
sembly will be
fl sl'al sol utions

•

'1
17 - The Oi1ily Sentinel. ~liqCueport -Pomeroy . u.. 'i'lnu·:da) . Ja11 . 2. 1!175

-

Essex: said the advances in
teacher preparation also in-

other schools around the etl)'. The schools had Ueen scheduled to.
reopen today , but School Superintendent William J . Leary

the Austiran Alps.
"All the people staying in Gaschurn have been accounted for,

.

occ upational preparations for assure suitab le educational
all high school youth is in sigh t opportunity · for . all Ohio
with vast expansion in urban youth,"
saJd
Essex.

llll'nt.

BOSTON - 1\ACIAJ. VIO LENCE MAY IIAVI': pul South

'

· (&gt;r1 ~ other educational frOnLc;; centers and 30 jdint vocational
Essex said , "all Ohio citize~ ·scllools in oPeration,. Another
can ta ke partiCular pride in .15 joint vocalional schoo ls .:ire
rhe ~·o r1 tinued t.&gt;xpaflliion of w1dcr constfuction.
voc •tioncd educ~tion and the
" The toughest a nd moSt

eentury the reform of coll eges rehabili).&lt;!Lion of the handi capto better prepare teahers may
ped .
well be
most far-rea ching ' "lJhio's goal of pro.Viding a
advancement of our time,'' choice of al least 1~ different

Sternlief said.

~

-

:-1ctual school experience· wus
thr main educationHI ;J,.dy-itnc·e
in the Bu'ckeye Sttlte in 197\1'.
··Compared with other deve!Oprnents 1ft" this half of the

·whi ch prO\'l(h:s pro spC c1ive
teachrr~ with rnqre &lt;tnd m r li er

•

.

.....

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State. superintendent cites better .teacher preparation
.

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•MYSTIC

Westclox
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AMBUSH
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:_16 . . . .: ThP Dail~ St•nti nd, Middkjxw t-PP!ll.l'l'fly,' (i .. 'l'ltur:od; 1·. ,l. o1·. ~!. 1·· .... ·

.

.

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prrJ&gt;&lt;tr&lt;~ltLm insti1u! ions in Ohio

COLUMBUS \ UPI) - Sta te
School Supt. Martin Essex sai d
today the redesign of teaeher

News.
•

J

."le'-f.S

zn Br ·

• ••

Jt

if•

· said Essex in' et year end stateBoston High School out of business for good. Roston sc hool of-

"Generations of 'future Ohi-

ficials were sc hedtued 10 a."., U. S. DisLri cl Co urt Judge W. AI:·

oans should receive vastly

lhur GarriJy.tod;.n· whcUJCr the f(JUr-schuol complex, closed since
Dec. !J alter the slabbing of a whi te student. should be opened

improved learning ex~ ri en ces
as a result of the new sta ndards.

Monday in the [;tee of police repurls of a possible escalation of

tor Ohio's 52 teacher educattion institutions," said Essex."

racial violence Lhen:~.
. . . Qty offirictls were prer&lt;t rin g to ask Garrity to order the
complex closed pcrmarlt&gt;rlll.\· and ha\'e classes transferred to

.. . •

cluded clinical preparation to
enable teachers to use modern

Wednesday orctererl a delay at lea st until Monday becmL':ie of
secret informottion he snid \~· as given him by stnte ;md city police
indicatin g the possibility of esctt lflted violence.

dia gno stic- instruments and to
prescribe instruction accord-

today in search of additional vi ctims of a New Yar 's Eve
avai.Ulche that killed twelve West Germ;:m skiers at Gaschurn in

VAll., CO LO, - PRESIDENT FORD WEDNESDAY chose
Housing Sectet.m James T. Lyrn. 47. of Cleveland , as his new
bud

: dirrctor. n "'laci ng Roy M. Ash. Lyrm will remain in hi s

HUD po" unlil l'• Tilled and Ash will help Ford put the
fi nishing touu "·s o, a budget for fiscal 1976 expected to run ·
between $.130 bil,:on :. od $.140 billion . A congressional staff study
estimoted ths will contain a $23 billlon deficit-&lt;1 postwar
record - and that for fisca l 1977, U1e deficit is expected to reach
$36 billion.
Lyn" ·., chief responsibil}ty will be to shepherd the ad·
ministration 's big, red-ink spending · program through the incorning Democratic Congress. Ford's appcinlmenl of Lynn was
one of his roost important in &lt;m expected general overha ul of the
Nixon holdover cabinet. Lynn will have to "sell " to a show-me
Olngress a deficit budget experts say could run $20 billion in to
the red in the fsi cal year sta rtirlg July 1 and perhaps rise to a
$5().billion deficit the following year.

I

~

$3.000;

equipm ent.

~

../

Baptism , Like the Early
Ch urch BaptizecJ, In Jesus Name.
Acts 2: 38.

Of Kingsport, Tenn .
•.

In Obedience to Math. 28: 19. ·
Father, Son , and Holy Ghost are
tit les . His name is Jesus, il.cts 4:
12, Acts 8: 16, Acts 10: 47 , 48, Act5
. 19: · 1-6.

'

JAN,·· 2 THRU 5. 7:30 PM
MIDDLEPORT UNIT£D
PENTECOSTAL OfURCH
)

Healing and Deliverance Through
the Name of Jesus. Acts 3: 1·8.

South Third Avenu e
• Middleport, Ohio

'

.

PENTECOSTAL SINGING
ANOINTED PREA&lt;;HJ NG

.

These miraculous works are
indeed a lr e~dy occuring in this
reviv&lt;~ .l through • Jesus.

REV: WILLIAM
. KNITTEL, PASTOR
.

COME TO THE TRUE CHURCH OF J.E,SUS CHRIST.

".
I. '

I

... ,.

A

•

,oft!.'/

.,' ;;; . :'

Few sorry

~

....•

•

r

\
AULilorltltl:)

take Qver
. -monastary
.

cnforceme nl

o,ffrce r s ,

Huwteloss denied the Indians
fired :my shots. lle said the

'

Indians were armed with

they've held off the P.,lice."
Hawtetosssaid leaders of' the
group , which calls itself the
"Me nomin ee

shots had

been fired. but not by law

.

about 400 indians were in. turns it over to them.
The 37-acre·'site was sealed . volved in the takeove r. But ·
off by county, state and federal authorities estima led the
officers but~ a .spo kesman for number at 40 or 50.
"We are holding the Alexian
the Indians said they \"ere
"prepared to die for what we Brothers respcnsible - for the
lives and the safely of our
believe in."
Neal Hawte.toss , 2~ , a people in the monastery ,"
spokesman for the _group, said Hawte to ss said. "So far

.':1.. 11&lt;1

"bows and arrows." Another

Indiru1 spokesmrut sa id they
on ly

Wa rrior

hHd

"so me · hunting

equipment."

Society,'' were to meet todlty
But the caretaker of the
with two of · the Alexian facility, Jue Plonka, said when
Brothers of America, who own the Indians arrived they were
·the site and used it as a qarrying J'plenty of handguns
novitiate until 1968.
and shotguns." Plonka said

they Iin·d "pot shots at .takeover.
passersby ."
'Sha·Nano Olunty authorities ·
'1)1ere wer~ no reports of said they asked for extra
injuries.
manpower from neighboring
Plonka, his wife and their counties but that there was no
two children were ejected from request lor the Nation&amp;! Guard.
the monastery about two hours The FBI had several agents on
aft er the lndian·s· arriva l hand to deten:nine whether any
• shortly after midnight New · federal laws were violated.
Year's Day.
·
The monastery, a mansion
· Plonka, in a report to built in the 1940s by a New York
Brother Florian Eberle in woman ·and given to the
Chi cago, president of the Alexlans in t950 for use as a
Alexians, said he saw about 10 novitiate, is seven miles west
or 12 Indians at the lime of the of here in r an sparsely

- ._ at passirig

.'

•
•

••
•
•
•••
•

populated area with a large .
percentage of Indians .
· "We want our land back " ·
'
said John ~auanasciun, 2ji;
·Neopit. "I won't lea.ve here
unless we reach an agreement
with the Alexian·Brothers. The
Jndians need this land. We can
use the buildings for a hospital
or something."
Hawletoss said his group'was
not part ·of the American Indian Movement, which sl&lt;lged
a 71-day · occupation at
Wounded Knee, S.D., in 1973.
'

.

~·

'

of old year
By United Press lnlernallonal
Some prayed, others partied
or nursed hangovers and yet
others slumped before their
television sets for a foolball·.
and-parade marathon Wednesday as the nation ushered in
1975.
For many, the .11assing of 1974
brought little relte t.
It had been a long year,
lengthened by soa ri ng in-

.-·•••
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.•..•

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-....

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

GOLD, GOW AND MORE GOW surrounds Theresa Gutarra of the Consolidated Refining
Co., Inc., in Mamaroneck, N.Y. Anticipallng a heavy demand lor gold by private citizens now
permitted to buy 11, the company has been processing gold into quarter·, half- nod lull-ounce
in~ols for sale to dealers who willlhen resell to cillzens. Before Theresa are gold bars, a bag of
gold dust and overhead is a thin strand of finely rolled gold.

County will

'
Water

t

~

Reason I. We are income tax
specialists. We ask the right
questions. We dig for every honest
deduction. We want to leave no
stone unturned to make sure you
Pl\Y the smallest legitimate tax:

.

instrumentality . .

People Receiving the Baptism of
th e Holy Ghost, Acts 2: 1-4, Acts
10: 44-46, Acts 19: 1-6.

'

·~

·~

statewide inservice education

'

JOYFUL. SOUNDS

-·.•
..•
..••
••

••
••
·•

improved supply of teachers"
"Co nt inued ed uca tion of
Ohio's more than 100,000
teaches now in service will be
buttressed by high quality
sland·free,. self-instructional
materials being ·prepared by
the newly created Di\1sion of
Ed ucational Redesign and
Renewa l the nation's first

Continuer! -from page l

KESHENA , Wis. (UPI )- An
armed band of Indians who
took o\ler a closed monastary,
early New Year's Day sa~ they
will hold t~e, facility unill 'the
religious order that owns it

.••

should come to us
for income tax help.

lion," said Essex .

,..

·,

\,~

med ical . $2 .500: ch ildr en 's
hom e bui lding, eq ui pment ,
$t.OOO; cont racts ; repair,
$2.000; fue l and light , $3,000 ;
other expenses, $200. Total.
$22.600.
Soldiers relief - sa lary.
offi cia l. $2, 100; sa laries.
employes. $7,300; equi pment.
$675; relief allowances. $3,600 ;
expenses, $600; travel. $300;
other expe nses, $1,700. Total
$16.275.
Public assistance - grants,
$5,894. Total $5,894.
· workhou se

~

con tr acts,

serv ices . $1.000. Total. $1,000.
In sur ance , pe nsion s a nd

taxes - cou nt y buildings ,
$6.000 ; Workmen 's Compensation. coun ty C~nd Disabled

Workmen's Relief. $6.000;
official bonds, $1,800 ; pensions.
public employes' retirement ,

$40,000. Total. $53.800.
Contin gencies, un a nticipa ted

.
618 E. MA IN ST.
Open 9 a .m . lo 5 p.m . Mon .- Sat.
Ph . 992-3795
NO APPOINTMENT NECE SSA RY

eme rgencies , $40 .000 .
Dog and Kennel fund -

am.litor's cl erk hire and sup-

988 accidents·'
probed. in '74
.

report released todav bv the
i Ga llia-Meigs Post S~le High! way Patrol. 988 traffic ac1 ·cidents were invfsligaled
\ during 19il. There were seven
fatalities in· Ga llia and Meigs
Counties.
Included in the accidents
253 injury accidents in

which 361 persons were in·
jur'\d. The patrol arrested 260
motbrists for DWI and made
1.974 assists .
During the month · of
December, 97 acddents were
investigaled . The patrol made
393 arrests, issued 445 warn-· .
ings, made 174 assists and ·
inspected 467 motor vehicles.

.

6 oz.

CASE
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Fox De Luxe
Frozen Pizzas

13% oz.

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Cheese, Pep.,

79'

Sausage

gal.
w

-2.9

The board, which .considers
grie vances against . So ~ th
Carolina · attorneys, will
discuss possible action against ·
Denl, who pleaded guilty in
November to a misdemeanor
in connection with a 1970 GOP.
~nd-raising effort. He .·served
'!':!Is ·a Nixon aide at the lime o(
.
- t!te incident.

--

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$25.95 Value

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~ the pockets of bus i~essm&lt;•·
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' THE SUBJECf
DENT
COLUMBIA, S.C. (UP!) Harry Dent, former Whiie
House Southern strategist
under former President ·
Richard Nixon, will be the
subject of discussion by· the
South Carolina Bar board of
grievances and discipline Jan.

Valley Bell.

ODRINEX

TOASTMASTER

. Tuesday, said he and his wife
-want to catch. "the mood, the
fee ling, the impressio~ of one's
(ellow citizens."

' .ca.n s

NEWI NATURAL
WATER . PILL

5

•.: Giscard, in his resolution

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Giscard, who was accom panied by his wife, AnneAymone.
•

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'149

·'1988

No special exe r cise . ..Suppresses
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have towar ds yo u," said

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2 Styles
11"x6"
Choice of Colors

dynamic speakers. complete with
battery, ea:r phone a nd externa l

DINES WITH ELDERS
PARIS (UP!) - President
, Valery Giscard d'Estaing, who
- has rC§lllved to dine with or, dinary French families during
the new year, ate chicken and
" green peas Wednesday with 34
;,: residents of an old folks home,
•., " I didn't know he was
~ coming, bu t I recognized him
right away," an 84-yearo{l!d
;. woman said.
•
"It is natur·al that the
::: president visil you to Ishow the
brotherhood France should

Shortening

CERAMIC
ASH TRAYS

AM &amp; FM antehnas. 211.. " PM

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MODERN SHAPE

AM/FM RADIO

...,•

COCA-COLA

,

-... ,

·---

••
..
...
·'

SQlJAD TRANSPORTS
. The Ra cine E·R Squad
transported Ada Stigliano from ·
Veterans Memorial Hospital to ·
her home in Portland Wed·
nesday at 2:t5 p. m.

'·

$1.40 Value

..

lb.·-

workmen 's compensa tion an d

Patrol .reJXJrlS

25's
91c Value

5 oz .

100's
$1.J7 Value

crime rates.
It was also lengthened by

ALKA-SELTZER

..

Cube Steak
.39' lb.
Ground Beef

Mot or vehicle and gasoline

'

BAYER ·

' '
"
Alka·Seltzer

..

tax ftmd - engineer, salaryofficia l. $14.600 ; supplies, $500;
equipmen t. $5.000: expenses.
$10,000; roads, labor, $200,000;
maler ia ls. $100,000; equ ip·
men t. $125 .000 ; contracts
services. $250,000; emergency.
$10,000 ; comp ensation and
damages. $5,000; public employe's reti rement. $25,000;

Revenue Sharing, law en-

SOFT
&amp;DRI
DEODORANT

..

.

ness fee. $2 ,200;-·public em·
ploye 's retirmcnt, s:t50 ; oth.er
ex penses. $700. Tota l $8.545.

force lnent , capita l
ililprovement. $79.850.
Water Districl funds, landfill, salaries. employes.
$24.000: mal erials. $t5,000 ;
conD·acts- repair'fue( $10.000;
containers. $2.500. · To tal
$51.500.
Gene ral . fund·· totale d,
$640.872.20. dog and kennel
fand. $4,545. motor vehicle and
gasoline tax fun d, $88t,100.

PIZZA
MIX

timekeepers around the world,
who stopped th eir atom ic
.. .... clocks for one second to correct
•
a time lag caused by a slowing
of the ea rth 's rotation.
When the clocks chimed
midnight , the bands struck up
••
..•
"Auld Lang Syne" and cocktail
•
glasses
were lifted in tribute,
''
and most revellers breathed a
•
sigh
of relief.
•
'
Rain
greeted the new year in
,.
..
New
York's
Times sQuare, but
.
failed to pu t a damper on the
thousands who ga thered for the
traditional holiday observance .
.'
Bul othe rs shunned the
eleme nts. Some paid $99.99 for
•"
a "bargain" evening of enter••• lairunent at San Francisco's
••
., Sheraton-Palace. Many simply
.'' . avoided the crowds, attending
·, or hosting small parties or
relaxing quietly in their own
••
••• homes.
The old year was gone. But
•
the problems lingered .
•
••
Tightrope diplomacy held
•
Midd le East tension to a war of
••• words and President Ford
.,
ended a ski holiday to return to
Washington and the struggle
·•
with the nation's economic
.
,' •
woes.
·;
The first day of the year
~
brought a,ll end to the Water·
. ::
gale trial of five former top
' • aides to former Presideut
•
Richard M. Nixon. A jury in
:': Wa shington found former
~
attorney general John N.
·•
Mitchell, former White House
•• Chief of Staff H. R. Haldeman,
: - .former presidential Domestic
. ~ . Affairs Adviser John D.
·:
Ehrlichman, and former
'! assistant attorney general and .
·:
Nixon campaign aide Robert C.
• Mardi ~n guilty of a .variety of '
·• charges stemming from the
Watergate cover-up.
Former Nixon ~;ampaign
committee lawyer Kenneth W.
Parkinson was acquitted.

THURSDAY JANUARY 2- 4
We Reserve Right. To Lim it Quantity

men t, $1500 : daims and wit-

w~re

--·

9 Til 7
PRICES EFFECTIVE Mon. thru Sat.

plies. $445 ; •alarios , empl oyes.
$2.400; supplies. $950; equip-

disabled u·ork?'en 's relief,
$6.000 : other expenses. $5,000;
bridgest and culverts, ' labor.
$35,000f" materia ls, $40,000 ;
co ntrac ts-pr ojec ls. $50,000.
Total. $881.100.

DIAL
SOAP

war'
drought,
natural
disasters, fami ne and soaring

••

Op~n

TICKETS ON SAlE
HERE
NOW

New-Family Size

flation, recession , joblessness,

••

v

Accordin g to th e annual

.WITH

wake of unprecedented infla-

Henry Block has
17 reasOns ·why you

A

Education in a nticipa tion of an

Mark V Super Market
PENTECOSTAL REVIVAL
CONTINUING

major source. of concern in the

.A

of research-based. long-range
planning by the state Board of

CORRECTION I .

.

...
--·
-·

Americans," said Essex . "The
standards culminate six years

.

...:....:_. ·,~.,._

facing the
"School finances which have
General As· been lifted from the chaotic
to agree on· depths of despair by the state
which will . income tax continue to be a

Indians

•

·.
$:100;
co ntraet" sery ices, $6,000;
travel . $460; other expenses.
$:100. Total $29,690.
WASHINGTON - A 40 YEAR DECLINE in the number of
Buil dings a nd ground s,
farms may be "bottoming out" in 1975, an Agriculture Dep;trtcapi tal improvements, ~alary
menl statistician said today. The tentative analysis bv James
- official. $7,000; - supplies
Garrett, of the Statistical Reporting Service came ;Iter th e
$1.000; jail renovation, $10,000 ;
agency released an annual report e~.timatin g t here are 2.819
co nstru c ti on, maintenan ce ,
million farms in the nation .
$15,000 ; contracts repai r .
The esli.rilate was the lowest in government records which go
$4.000; con tracts. fu el and li gh t
back to 1910. But it represented a decline o( only 11,000 farm units
$14,000; other expenses, alarm
from the 2.830 million estin1ate for 1974 and was the smallest
eounty home. $20,000 . Tote:JI
decline recorded since 1936. "The Indications are that we are
.$71,000.
about to bottom out in farm munbers, but we won't really know
Prote,c tion to property and
whether this has happened for a year or two ," Garrett said.
persons - s herif f, sa laryoffic ial. $8.200; sa lari es.
SAIGON - TANK-LED COMMUNIST TROOPS stormed a
employes, matron an'd cook,
key city north of Saigon today, smashing through government
$4 ,840. Total, $1:1,040.
lines and battling in the streets with defenders ordered to hold
Recorder - salary, offic ial,
besieged Phouc Binh "at any cost."
$7,900; sa laries. employes ,
The city, located 66 miles north of Saigon, is the last
$5.300; supplies. $3,500;
govenunent position in the entire of Phuoc Long province. a
documen ts. binding , $2,993;
jungled area between Saigon and the Cambodian. border. The
other expenses. $i50 . Total.
Saigon command vowed to defend Phouc Binh to the end but
$19.843.
initial reports ind icated the defenders were losing ground
Ag ri culture
gra nt s .
quickly, in the capital of 11,000 people.
$15.835; fair board ; $2,noo; soil
conservati on, $3,000: apiary
GRAND TETON PARK, Wyo - THE AMERICAN Revolution
inspec tion. $400; cat tle disease
bicentennial flag , planted by II mountaineers who scaled the
preve nti on, $750; histori cal
13,766-fQOl swrunit of Grand Teton Peak ·New Year's Dav. flew in
society, $900. Total $23,685.
clear, Hklegree-below-zero weather Wednesday . Pa ul Petzoldt,
Health and Welfare66, the leader of the annual trek up the mounl&lt;li~ . said it was the
SoutheastHn Ohi o Emergency
second day the flag was planted iin the peak. He said tonditions
Medical Service, $13,000. Total.
were as good Wednesday as lhe day before, when six members of
$13.000.
his 2Hl!ember party first reached the uppermost lip of the
Tuberculosis hospital clinics
jagged peak.
and care - salaries. $12.200;
Petzoldt said possible • adverse weather condi ti.ons could
supplies. '$3,500; con tr act
prevent a third trip to lhe top of the peak today·. "We've very,
se r vices. H.OOO; hospital,
very happy and well," Petzoldt radioed to Grand Teton National
$7,000; travel. $1.800, fees and
Park headquarters. "The fla g was taken up yesterday and today.
cos ts. $1, 100 ; wo rkman' s
But the weather doesn't look good to the west and we inay not
co mpen sa tion. $250 ; oth er
make it tomorrow, We don't want to lake any chances."
expense. $656. Total . $30,506.
Registration
of
vi ta l
statistics- fees. $tOO. Total.
$100.
OU1er health. - Hydrophobia
claims, $200\ crippled children
aid, $2.411; other. P.O.D ..
$7 , ~50. Total. $10.161.95.
Co unty boa rd of mental
retarda tion - sa lary, officin l.·
$27.000; personnel , $1,640;
workmen's compensta ion,
$450.; supplies. $4.500: uti lities.
$225 : contracts . $2.25J : Iran·
sportation. $1,800; other ex·
penses. $8t0. Total. $38.675.
Cotulty home -- salary. official. $4.800; salaries. empl oyes. $12,660: supplies,
"_. ' ·..., '
$12.oO
O; equipment, $4.000:
I
cont rac ts
q~ap i r,
$500:
clolhing. $500. · Total. $34.460.
Child Welfare Board'
.
. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
· supplies. $1 ,500: boarding
.__ _ _ _ _..;.;,;,;,-.;,;-;,;..;,.;,;..;.,..;.,;,;.;.;,_ _ _... home in Galli aCounty. $12.400:

......

"Enrollment declines have not
been slifficient to affect the
need for additional dollars · to
sustain the quali ty of education
mmost distri cts.

ingly .
"No other slate has made
sweeping reforms .to assure
better tea chers of young

VII':NNA - RESCUE SKI TEAMS PI.OWI':D through snow

but there is alw.ays a chance day visitors might still be buFied
under the snow,'' a police spokesman at Gaschurn said . Three
West German sklrrs held by police on suspicion o£ starting the
avalanche were releused Clfter Questioning Wednesday.

importan t task
conver.ing 111th
sembly will be
fl sl'al sol utions

•

'1
17 - The Oi1ily Sentinel. ~liqCueport -Pomeroy . u.. 'i'lnu·:da) . Ja11 . 2. 1!175

-

Essex: said the advances in
teacher preparation also in-

other schools around the etl)'. The schools had Ueen scheduled to.
reopen today , but School Superintendent William J . Leary

the Austiran Alps.
"All the people staying in Gaschurn have been accounted for,

.

occ upational preparations for assure suitab le educational
all high school youth is in sigh t opportunity · for . all Ohio
with vast expansion in urban youth,"
saJd
Essex.

llll'nt.

BOSTON - 1\ACIAJ. VIO LENCE MAY IIAVI': pul South

'

· (&gt;r1 ~ other educational frOnLc;; centers and 30 jdint vocational
Essex said , "all Ohio citize~ ·scllools in oPeration,. Another
can ta ke partiCular pride in .15 joint vocalional schoo ls .:ire
rhe ~·o r1 tinued t.&gt;xpaflliion of w1dcr constfuction.
voc •tioncd educ~tion and the
" The toughest a nd moSt

eentury the reform of coll eges rehabili).&lt;!Lion of the handi capto better prepare teahers may
ped .
well be
most far-rea ching ' "lJhio's goal of pro.Viding a
advancement of our time,'' choice of al least 1~ different

Sternlief said.

~

-

:-1ctual school experience· wus
thr main educationHI ;J,.dy-itnc·e
in the Bu'ckeye Sttlte in 197\1'.
··Compared with other deve!Oprnents 1ft" this half of the

·whi ch prO\'l(h:s pro spC c1ive
teachrr~ with rnqre &lt;tnd m r li er

•

.

.....

\

.

~

State. superintendent cites better .teacher preparation
.

.....

'

' .

.. .

I

''
:

.-.

'

.

•MYSTIC

Westclox
"MASCOT"

ALARM
CLOCK
Sweep alarm
indicator

Loud .bell alarm
Dependable

•

AMBUSH
OR

HARDWOOD ·

TABU

PUZZLES

·SPRAY

Fun for all ages I
Genuine hard wood-.

COLOGNE

.Fascinating ..
$1.19 Viltue

2 oz. Size

PUFFS
2DD's

�•

•

.'

,n •

.....

.I

..'

•

. ..

z. 1 175
1

I

\

J'

19- The DallJ Sent mel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Th tu·,dal , .1.111

'

Market
•
openmg
slower
~

--....--

u nempl oyme nt,

Auto Sales __

.

.

2 SIGNS Pomeroy ·
_Of .

NEW YORK iUPl i - We
arc starting 1975 in a less
favorable poslllon than a year
ago at this lime," according \o
Internation a l S ta t lSll ca l
Bureau Inc It CJles tnflahon,
growmg

Senti.n el Classijcieds Get Results!

I

Motor Co.

QUALITY
1973 CHEVROLET C 10

1971-MATA DOR

the

$249S

Dar t C ste m . 4 door, loca l 1 owner ca r , 31 8 V 8 e ng m e,
auto m a t ic tra n smi SSIOn a nd po e r c; teenng. a 1r co
drt ronrng v rn yl tr1m , v 1n yl top, r ad10, w h1te w a ll t 1r es,
gold f tn1sh

"Most mdustnes are showmg a
less favorable trend at the

___

'

Investments

OPEN EVES.S :OO P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO
19 66

,

DR JACOB BRONOWSKI is narrator and author of a 13part television sen es, ' 'The Ascent of Man," which follows in
the high-&lt;Jua hty pattern set by BBC programs "Qvil!salion"
and "America " The new scnes starts Jan. 7 at 8 p m Rio
Grande Commuruty College IS usmg the televised program as
the bas1s ~f an off-campus course

"TI1e stock market never
evaluates secuntles fa~rly except while passmg from an
extreme of overvaluation to a
corresponding excess or undervaluatton, " says Wrtght Investors Semce The Bndgeporl r
Conn. firm says " famous
name" growth stocks have
fluc tuated more w1dely m the
past two years than any other
investment group and the Dow
Jones mdustrials have taken
an unprecedented beatmg.
"We beheve that durmg the
nex t tw o years the stock
market w1ll reverse Its current
ex tr emes or underva luatiO n
JUS! as surely as It corrected
for 1972's extremes or overpncmg," 1t adds.

"Common

Justice served

stocks

have

provided a superior long-term
rate of return," says Vance,

Sanders &amp; Co., Inc., ~~eve n
allowmg lor the current bear
market." Data compiled by
researchers al the University
of Chicago shows "the apprecia lion of the Standard &amp;
Poor's 500, assumm g remvestment
of
div idends,
PfOVlded an average annual
return of 8.6 per cent from 1962
through October , 1974, " the
Boston l1rm says. Taking mflal!on into consideratiOn, the
average annual return was 6 4
per cent, 11 notes.

By Unlted Press International out to be better Americans
Pohl!c1ans generally com- than the Watergate conmended the Waterga te JUrors spirators, and their leader,
Wednesday and smd JUStice m N1xon, who used their enorthe cover-up trial had been mous power agau1st the best
served .
interes ts of th e AmeriCan
But Dorothy M11rchan, the people."
w1fe of Robert Manhan, one of
Rep . Robert Drman , D-Mass,
Ute rour men conv1 ctcd, stuck pra1sed the JUry for lis
out her tongue m court and "dlscriminatmg and sens1b,le"
spu ttered a "Bronx cheer " to gullt)l. venhct. • He sa1d the
protest the verdict
deCISion "does ShOW tha t the
Some prmcipal figures m the JUry was discrimmatmg m that
long scandal, mciudmg former it allowed Parkinson to go
Wa tergate Prosec utors Ar- free."
chibald Cox and Leon
"The defmilion of C&lt;&gt;nsplracy
Jaworksl, declined comment. is very techmcal. It was adr01t
SERVICE CONOUCTE D1
For'mer President Richard M. of the jury to say that
Elder Herbert C. Morgan, of
Nixon smd he would have a Parkmson was on the fringes Parkersbm·g, W Va , returned
sta tement later , and President and not at the heart of the to the Pomeroy . Seventh-Day
Ford had no comment
Adventist Church, of wh1ch he
conspiracy," Orman srud .
The four me n con vi cte d
Rep -Elect Norma n D'A- Wfts a former pastor. to conmaintained th e ir Inno cence mours, D-N H., sa1d, " It show~ •du ct bapt isma l servi ces,
and srud they wo1dd appeal, that the system works. It IS jus Sabbath a fternoon, Dec 2i.
and the fifth defend a nt , fur ther proof trutl1 eventua ll) followmg the serm on by Pastm
Kenneth Parkinson, who was Will out. Our jury form or Ge rard Se ton ymtmg w1th the
found mnocenl, was elated and Jus tice, although ponderous Seventh-day Adventist Church
sa1d he had a new lease on hfe
and not always satisfactory, 1s wer e Mi ss Na~ c y Queen,
Reaction from pohl!Cal lead- sl!ll pretty good, and speedy Guy sville. M1ss Wendy Mams.
ers was gene ral~ subdued. A enough when- it has to be."
Athens, MISS Shern Morgan,
statement by newly maugurat-Parkersburg,
and Joseph IV
Sen . Lowell We1cker, Red New York Gov. Hugh L. Conn. , a member of the Senate Wh1 te, of Kyger
Carey was typical
Wa tergate Committee, sa1d,
"The Offenses were an attack "The Watergate verdict is not
on the fundamenta ls of our a panacea lor the repeated
system and , wh1le no one takes trampli ng or co nstitutional MOST VALUABLE
DALLAS ( UPI J - Penn
any pleasure m 11 , the verd1ct democracy.
State
quarterback Tom
speaks for itse lf," he sa1d
' 'It is the fmlure to correct
Retirmg Sen George Aiken, ong01ng abuses, not {.he guilt or Shuman Wednesday was voted
R-Vt . th&lt;! dean of tilC Senate, uuwcence of md1V1duals for the most valuable offensive
said, "From the vrrv start of pnsl offenses, which continues player m the 1975 Cotton Bowl
game, the second stra1ght year
the Watergate case 1 have said to disturb me."
he has won such an award.
· the matter should be left to the
Shuman edged teammate
courts, the U S House and the
Jimmy
Cefalo lor the honor.
Senate. I expect they've done
The
N1ttany
Lions quarterback
thetr JOb as U1ey had to."
BUTTERS SIGNED
hud also been voted the moot
Rep . Bella Abzug·, D-New
&amp;i _PAUL, Mmn (UP()
York,
sa1d ,
"This The Mmnesota Ftghting Samls valuable player last year in
predomin a t e ly b lac k, Wednesday a nn ounced the Penn Stale's Orange Bowl
predornmantly female JUr) has s1gning of delenseman Bill VJctory over LSU
Baylor. delens1ve back Ken ,
acted 1111h 111 sdom a nd Butters to a multiyear coo tract
dedication to U1e pnnc1ples of begmmng m the 1975-76 season ~esen berry was named the
our democracy They turned
The 24-year.., ld Butlers. a Cotton Bowl's most valuab le
defensive player. Quesenberry
recovered two fumbles durmg
the contest

Berrys World

PL Y MOUT H F ur y Ill ,
p s r&lt;1 d1 o Ca ll 99 2 5105
1 2 ) lp

HO US E 4 room s an d b alh , n 1ce
ya r d and dr1v c w ay
A lso ,
f urn 1shed a pt Call 992 2780 o r
NEI GL E R BUILDING SUP
992 ]4]2
PL Y F OR R E MODELING
1212 tf c
AN D K I T CHE N CAB IN ET S
CA L L GUY NEIGHLER ,
1 RM ap t furn •sh ed adu lts n o
I N E , O HI O PHONE 949
RAC
dr un k s A lso 3 r m a pt J oh n
360d
Sh eet s
3 m iles south of
12 19 261 c
Middl eport on R t 7
12 29 6tp

W E WOU LD l 1ke to thank a ll ll1e
Sport Ad
---- ------ - ~ p eo pl e who h&lt;~v e h elped 111 so 19 73 DO DG E P U
... enlur e red and Wh1 l e , J IB F URN I SHED m obil e hom e to r
m an y way s dur.ng our t1rn e of
c 1d a 1 , p s , r ad 10 Ke lly
A lb er t H1 1!
R ac1ne
r en t
t r ovb le Toda y y o u hear of all
too l bo x c h ro me w es t coas t
Oh•O Phon e 949 2:26 1
th e il pathy a na c r ueln ess , but
m 1rr o rs, rea r sle p bum per
you Ciln t 1mag 1n e how truly
12 29 6tc
nooo mde s Ph on e 99'1 51 05
good and k 1nd p eopl e r ea ll y
I 1 ) tp
arc We wou ld l 1ke to n ame
ev ery one wh o h as h el p ed , but
1957 C HEVROLET Be ll a1r 4 dr
f WO Uld be Impo SS ibl e Th e y
ex c e ll ent c on d 1t1on Phon e
kn ow and th ey shou l d have a
GRO CERY bus1ne ss for sale
7 42 41 I 1
v ery good feelmg A lot o f
Bu1 ld1ng for sa te or lea~e
12 31 3t c
th ese peopl e we d1dn t e ve n
Phone 77 3 5618 from 8 30 p m
know but th ey lletped and
to 10 p m for appo1n tm ent
w e' l l alw a ys r em ember no w 1968 CHEVEL L E 327 , 4 speed
3 10 tfc
g
ood
body
and
1
nt
en
or
P
hon
e
kmd ev er yon e wa s S1 gn ed
992 7•189
M r and """'r s Monty Proff1 1t
12 31 41p MODER N Walnut s t er e o
and Childr en
r ad10, 8 tra ck tap e com
12 29 4l c
b 1naf1on .
qm fm
rad10
19 6 4 O LD SMOB IL E L uxury
Ba lan ce $108 .tS3 or t erm s Call
Mod el 1n good cond1 t 1on Set
992 ]9 65
of r ad 1a l t.r es, s1z e t R 70 15 1n
12 31 t fc
good sha p e 21 •nch b la c k and
SHO O T IN G M ATC H
Corn
wh1
te
lel
ev1
S1
0n
a
mpllf1
er
for
Hollow C un Club , Turn l1r st
a p a
sys t e m
For 1n
E L ECTROLUX Swe eper d el uxe
ngh t after Mdes Ce m e tery
for m•at 1on , call 99 2 250 8 or see
mod el
Complet e w1 t h all
Ru t l and
F a c tory cho ke d
at 131 Laur e l St , Pomero y,
r. l ea n tng atta c hmen t s and
g uns onl y Sunday , Jan 5 I p
Oh10
u ses paper bags Sl igh t ly used
m
•
12 29 6t c
but c leans and looks l 1ke new
__ _ 1f!~ tc
Wtll se ll for $37 25 cash or
t erms .wailable Phon e 992
SPE C I A L A U C TI O N Cont ents 1968 GM C Dump Tru ck' 7500
7755
ser1es Tr1 a x l e Jus t be en
of old m ercnand1 Se s t o r e
$3 500
Con t ac t
ov erhaul ed
12 18 lfc
m cl ud1ng many 'ant•ques to be
L awrence L ee , Larkm s St ,
so ld b eg1nn 1n g at I p m Sal ,
Rutland Oh10
CLOSE OUT on new Z1g Zag
J an •1. on Horton Sl ( A c ro ss
sew1ng machmes F or sew 1ng
12 27 6t c
from Ma s on Auction J 1n
stretch fabr 1cs , but tonho les
Maso n
W
Va
Howard
fan c y des.gns , etc
P aml
Beas l ey , Au c t •on eer
Slightly blem 1shed Ch o 1ce of
1 2 2t c
c arryrng case or s ewmg
st and $49 80 cash or term s
AUCT I O N ,
Thursday
and
available Phone 992 7755
Sa t urday ntgnt 7 p m at
12 18 ttc
Mason Auc t 1on. Horton St m WILL BABYS I T m my home fo r
--------- ~ ----Mason . W Va ConS ignments
wo r kmg mother Phone 985
1973 STA R CRAFT 24 ft trav el
w el come Phone (3 04) 773
410 2
trail er Phone .S 82 339 1
54 71
12 30 71c
12 2951p
10 3 tf c

the Cenlral League .

PUBLIC NOTICE
B•d s will be r ec e1v ed 1n th e
Comm , ss.oners ' off 1ce fo r a 1975
Sh en H s car un t d 9 00 a m
o' cl o c l on Tuesday Jan 7, 1975
Speett. ca t10ns a r e as follo w s
Colo r - WtHte o r b lack
4 door sedan
60
A MP
Alter l).alo r M fr:·11 mum
Hea vy d uty ba ttery
Underc oa t m g
V 1nyl up h o l st ~ r y
J00 cub• c 1nch VB t:n g fne
Au t oma t •c
heavy
dut y
tran sm ISSJOn
Non SI •P d• tt eren t1 al
1
F o am seat
M •n• m um w heel base 120" o r fu ll S1 ze car
A1 r cond •t lon mg
J
Po l1ce Ch ass 1s p acka g e
Po llee body pa cKage
H 78 x 15 black l 1r e
Ra ct 1a l fi res
Spot11 gh t , left SJ de (Wh i l e an d
r ed lens )
W d t lrade- 1973 Plymouth
Del•very 1n 60 da y s .
•
The Co m m is s1oners reser ve
the nght to r e ject any o r au
bids
Metgs Co unl y
Co mm .ss 1on ers
M art h a Chambers (lcr k f
( 12 ) 26 i J (1 } 2, 2tc

P I ANO
tun1ng and repa1r
Char le s Sc ott 992 J71 8
12 13 32t p
..._

______ _______ _

C B RADFORD Au c tiOne er
Comp lete Serv 1ce
Phon e 949 38 21 or 949 316 1
R ac 1n e, Oh10
Cr1tt Bradford
5 1 tfc

For Sale

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

Notice

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

Employment Wanted

O I L O F M1n k Co smeti CS "
So und d1ft erenP W e have a
com p lele I me that wrt l sat1sfy
ev en you Ca ll us we h ave
spec1 at s atl th e l 1m e You' ll be
surp r 1se d BROW N 'S 9'9 2
5 11 3

Help

Wante~
-

SH OOTING mat ch N:ac 1ne Gun
Club Sunday I p m A ssort ed
m eat s and fa c tory c hoke gun s
on ly
12 22 tic
WANTE D d ee p
Phon e 98 5 38!9

well
'

In

OLD fu r n 1lur e. 1c e bo x es , brass
b ed s, or compl ete n ouseholds
W n t e M D Mil l er Rt 4,
Pom eroy , OhiO Ca l l 99 2 7760
10 1 74

NEW HAVEN
Age 8 or Older

-

Tire Prices

Sales H elp Wanted
A N OH I O O I L CO
offe r s
PLE NT Y bF M O NEY p~s
ca sh bonuses , fr1nge benefits
t o matu r e 1nd•v•dua1
•n
Pomeroy a r ea Regard l ess of
e xper1ence , a 1rmad G
1
R ead ,
Pres ,
Aml!flci.tn
L ubr1 c ants Co , Box 696 ,
Day ton , Oh 10 45401
122951p
EXPERII;NCEO fu el oil dr 1ver
ne eded Send r eplres to Box.
72 9C co The Daily Sentme l,
Pom eroy Oh1o 45769
- 12 30 6tc

For Rent

CO UNT R Y M obile Ho me Park ,
R t 33 ten m il es nor th of
R E G Bn lla1n y Span .el lfemal e
Pom eroy
La rge lot s w1th
pu p 4 m on ths ol d Ca ll 99 2
cooc r e l e pat1os . srdewalks ,
5071
r unn e rs
and off
str e et
I 2 Jl c
park 1n g Phone 992 7479
12 31 ttc

--------------..
M b"l H
F Sal
M and ba th furn rs h ed apt
0 I e OmP.S Or
e · - 3 ROO
Utllll• e s pa1d , 35 6 N or th

It's

F U RN I TURE Upho l st e r~ng ,
Rea sonabl e
rates ,
f r ee
e slim a tes
pi c kup
and
d e l 1ve ry , prompt serv 1ce
Mowrey ' s Uphol stery , P01nt
Plea sant w va Phone 675
4 154
12 31 26t p

We talk to you

772-5881

Mason, W.Va.

1957 CHEVY parts
NEW
Lakewood t rac t •on bars, h r
1ack.er a.r shock s, hooker
head~rs , w 1th 3" co ll ec tor s fo r
sma ll bl oc k . Ca l l 992 3496
after 6 p m BEST OFFE R
10 17 ftc

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

DUE lo lolal d 1sa0 111ty , mus t
sell com p l ete flock N 1ne Reg
Suffo l k ewes 1 y r old , bred
and pap ered
One Suffolk
ram , non r e lat ed Ca ll 949
3073 any t rme
12 27 6t c
A K C 4 y ear old l nsh Se tt er ,
e xc eltenl pet , S60 Howard
8 1r chf1 eld
Phone 742 59 32
12 24 He

P IG S
$15 eac:h
Holstem
Her eford h e• fer , $125 On e t on
196 5 Ford truck. , 6 c y l •nd er ,
$550 C W R 1ce . pho n e 949
2115
• 12296t p

---...----------SIEGLER and
MONOGRAM

8 QO---Mac Oa1115 3,4, 15 , Odd Coup I.., 6, 13, The Walto ns 8, 10 ,
Soundstage 33 , C1t1es for Peop le 20

8 3D-Paper Moon 6,13

~

Jack W C1rsey, M9r.

Phont 'f2· 2111

10· Jo-Y our Future IS Now 20 , Caugh t m I he A cl 33

11 Oil-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13, 15, ABC News 33
11 3D-Johnny Carson 3,4,I S; W1de Wor ld Even t 13.. FB I 6.
, Mov 1e T o be Announced 8. Mov 1e " Oramo nd Head' 10 ,

Janak • 33.
Wi ld West 6

12· 3D-Wild

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

OLD HOU SE 1n Syrac use on 2
n •ce lots , $3 000 W ill t ear '
house dow n , 1f wanted Phon e
992 5898
12 29 7t p

6:0Q--Sunnse Semmar 4, Sun n se Semester 10.. 6 25- Farm

Report 13

10.
7•01l-Today 3.4,15

V 1rqil H l•·,lf,l ti
131 nk I I
l: 1 'II• IL11l1c 'it

7
6; Tennessee Tuxedo 13
8:01l-Captaln Kangaaroo8, Jeff's Colloe 6, Popeye 10, New Zoo
Revue 13 , Sesame St 33
8 25-Capt. Kangaroo 10 , Jack LaLanne 13
8 30- Brady Bunch 6. 8 55- News 13
9 Oil-A.M. 3; Paul D1xon 4; Wold Wild West 6, Phil Donahue 15,

"

CREMEA N S CONCRETE de
l •ve r ed Monday through
Sa turday
and
eve nmg s
Phone 446 11 42
6 13 t f c
EXCAVAT I NG , dozer , load er
and backhoe work , sept1 c
lanks inst a ll ed dump trucks
and lo boys for h •re , Will haul
fil l d~rt , t op so d , 11mestone &amp;
gravel , Call Bob or Roger
J eff ers . day phone 992 7069 .
n1gh t phone 992 3525 or 992

lub 4; News 8,1 0,13.

12 3D-Celebrity Sweepstakes 3, 1~; Sp!1l SEcond 6. Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10 ; Afternoon w1th

r•v Oh1 o :'&gt;'6·i

room

fram e, 3 bedrooms, bath , nat
gas, furnac e, ctfy water

$7500 00 W1ll sell on tome
IN THE COUNTRY - 5 acres
and a 2 bedroom home wrth full

base men t

56500 00

Reasonable down payment

33 ACRES - 3 bedrooms, ele
furnace. Ohto Power , bullt. m
st ove, double smk , ca bmets,
c ity water . and m t nera l s,

$25,500 00
INCOME - 8 rooms, 2 baths ,

EXCELS IOR Salt Wor k s, East
Ma1n St Pomeroy A ll k 1n d s
of sa l t, water pe ll et s. wa ter
nuggets, b lock sail and own
Oh10 R1ver Sa lt Phone 992
3891
6 5 tfc

3 oo-Another World 3,.4,15 , General Hosp1tal 6,13; Pr1ce IS
Righl8 ,10 , You ONe otto Yourself 9 ; Book Beal 20.

3 3D-How to Surv1ve a Ma rriage 3,4, 15 . One L1fe to L' ve 13,
Lassle6, Match Game8,1 0, L1i1as Yoga 1!. You 9; Woman 20
4 OQ-Mr. Cartoon 3, Bonanza 4 , Somerset 15; Gilligan's Is. 6;
Tattletales 8, Sesame St. 20,33 , Mov1e " Birds Do It" 10 ,
Mike Douglas 13.
4 3D-Bewtlched3, ModSquad6 ; Lucy ShowS, Bonanza 15

Real istate For sale
3 BEDROOM h ouse , 3 mil es out
on
State
Rou t e
143 ,
References
and
deposit
req u1red No pe ts Ph one 949
3716
12 31 4t c

WIN AT BRIDGE

Dummy meets reversal

------------'-----

t
POMEROY-B-ID

E-

Aimost new home, 3

BR wtth

double - closets, lovely kitc hen , dmmg R, l arge living

R, H W. floors wolh lots of

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec

Yo u tend to ! rea \, oth ers •n a
ve r y co u r t eo u s an d c o• •
s1 de ra1e manner today Th1 s
w11l reflec t mos t hwor abty on
your o wn 1m age

21) Cond1tro ns that have an Infl uence llpo n yo u r sta tu s and
ma tenat well -be1ng a r e ex. 11 Pmely tavo rabl e tor you ea r ly
111 th e day

GEMINI (l\lay 21-June 20)

CAPRICORN (Doc 22-Jan 18)

Yo u II b e a bit too b ored 11 you
have to stay at ho me thi S even
•rlQ Wh&gt;y not call sorn e tn end s
antttak e 10 dtnner and a stl ow ?

Yo u II do ve ry well to day rn
atea s wh ere y ou can express
yo ur c reati vity and 1mag ma t1on
w1thmJt o uts1de •nte rferen ce

CANCER (June 21 -July 22)

AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb

19)
You It not•ce tod ay th at people
wrll go mo1 e oul ol t h e ~r way
th an us ual to m ake ttl l ngs
oos1e r lo r y ou

Yo u II be getl •ng some good

a co nl1dent•al rm ture

that you 11 ha\le a very ha rd
tu n e kaeprng to yo w )eU

LEO (July 23·AUI 22)

PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)

T h '5
w ould b e a good day lor yo u to
go on &lt;1 p erso nal sllop p1ng e.:c urSIOtl fo r tlem s yo u need 10 1
yourself
VIRGO lAua 23-Seat 22, Yo u

O th ers wil l frnd you r c ompany
e•lfOy.lble t oday because of•
yO ll f o pt1m tsi1C ou tlook You 'll
see sunsh1ne wh ere they see
shadows

11. Could)le.L!lilllY love an_imperfect person when he 's so perfect?
- DR'lllliS-PITY
Dear D.P.
I'm sure that Tom could really love a perfect person w1th a
limp (which IShowhecons!de~HOU now ). BUT - love won't last
if you continue seeing yours'elf"as "a n ugly cripple."
Don'tlet an accident warp your personality. Be glad you
carne out of 11 w1th only a limp, and get on w1th your wedding
plans. - HELEN

+++

ACROSS
1 Varnish
oomponent
t Distanees
10 Powdered
lava
u Ship's
oounterbalance
1% Greenland
Eskimo
l3 Short operatic song
lt Matter
(law)
15 Wooden pall
(dis!.)
1&amp; "Sweetheart
of Sigma

_..

l7 Retracted
(2 wds.)

19 Chinese
word for
God
zo Bell sound
!1 Attractive
D Edible

JlllJJ~]~Ji1lE® I4J ~•ow&lt;t.J -.1 , _

ze Like some

I &gt;V IliNII1 1111Ntlll) "ltllltl l l l f l

ANOTHER?

lnstrwnent

evoo

keel
(2 wds.)

streets

(hyph. wd.)
11 Moisten
3Z Comedian

I

DeLulae
33 Reslall'ar's
question

sona l 1ty &amp; Behavioral Development 33

30- NBC News 3,4,15, ABC News 13, Bewitched 6, CBS News
8, 10; Zoom 20
o
7 oo-Truth or Cons 3,4, Bowl ing for Dollars 6. WCHS TV
Report a, Av1 alion Weolher 20,33 ; J 1mmy Dean 13, I py 1_5

LATA\'

7 3 0~ Porter Wagone r 3, Masquerade Party 4; New Candtd

6; Pop Goes the Country 8, Treasure Hunt 10, To

I

DAILY CRYProQUOTE -Here's how to work it:

Tell the Truth 13 , Black Perspectiveon the News 20,33

Bang Bang" 8,10 , Was h1ngton Week 1n Rev1ew 20.33. Wall
Street Week 20,33

E.'V"Fill'Z

00- Rockford Files 3,4,1 5, S1x Million Dollllr Man 6,13;

1· I

20, Bonn 1e Ra1ft &amp; Paul Butterfi e ld 33 .
10 oo-Potoce Woman 3,4, 15, ABC News Closeup 6, 13, News 20,
Masterpiece Theatre
Paul Nuch1ms 33

11 00- News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 1S, ABC News 33
11 3D-Johnny Carson 3,4, ]5 ; W1de World In Concert 13; Mov1 e
"A Study in Terror" 6, Mov te " Twist Around t he Clock "
Movie " Island of L os t Women " 10 , Janak1 33.

8,

OD-M1dn•ghl Special 3,4,15; Don K"shner's Rock Conce rl6.
Mov1e "The Curse oft he Mummy's Tomb" 10 ; News 13

(;()f/JU,'

NOT THE FIR'GT

J

! V"

I I

AN INCREA~E!

r

I"-u,..,.,

,

CRYPTOQUOTES
LKWUN C

Now arranre the drc1ed !etten

~

to form Ihe- IUrpriae anawer, u

PriUe SIMIISI AHSWIIIIln

' r •lrr•l • · ·,

One letter almply atands !or another In this sample A fo
used !or the three L's, X tor the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apoalrophea, lhe length and !ormatoon of the words are all
hiau. Each day the code letters are d1lferent
YHHM

Jumhlr• f SCARY

4

l:IME: THE~E' 5

I'-:::= I':·=:::·====
I !,.~_j====-..::surrested by the above cartoon.

2 30- Mov te " Fam ~ 1s t he Name ofthe Game" 4

4 00- Movie " Doctor Blo(ld's Coff1n" 4
5 3D-Movie " Those Endearing Young Charms"

AIYDLB AAXR
LONGFELLOW

Ia

a oo- Sanford 1!. Son 3,4, 15, Kung Fu 6, t3, Movie "Chitty Chitty
9

Yesterday's Answer
6 " Brown
23 Marked with
October.-" lines
7 Surpnse
24 Swindlers
(2 wds J
(2 wds.)
8 Lover of
26 Pean~t
beauty
29 Greek
9 Blemish ed
marketII Bowls
place
18 Fraternity 30 Long
bouse topi c 32 Tipster's
19 Terrify
info..
22 Skill
35 Went ahead

!4 Bastlnad~
!I Mature
ze African
reed
!1-

Unscramble these foor Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to
form four ordmary words.

34 Place for a
pendant
(2 wds.)
36 Brown kiwi
37 Become ·
preclpl to us
36 Miscalculate
39 Planting
device
~ Angelo or
Antonio
DOWN
1 Sootllsh
proprietor
2 MldJaelmas
daisy
3 Cornered
(t wds.)
t Lamour garb
5 Closed, as
wings

fruits

6

Camera

d&amp;du•"w.
br THOMAS JOSEPH

Dear D.:
Ask yourself, "Would I drop Torn because he can't play
tennis or cHmb mountains with me'"
If a lunp couldn't change your feeling lor HIM, then why do
you thmk his lov~ has turned to p!ly?
I'd say th1s IS mostly self-pity.
Knock it off! - SUE

6 00- News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15, ABC News 6, Elec Co 20, Per

ITC~V

..

D-( 1 I X)"

MEASLY

(Aa•wen
NIPPLE

to•orra • ~

t (IIMfd I FHf(•m 1 lll/1111/rllt ml NUIIIhiM - HIS EARS

GKCUGE
WKM

NH

YUPG

HVGC . - R.

KEG
BA

I BJ L

NLKV

CHIG'ECGN

NLG

IKBYLKI

Yellerda)-'1 Cryptoqaote: THIS IS THE ONE DAY WE SET
ASIDE TO WISH YOU HAPPINESS AND LO'v.E EVERY DAY
OF THE YEAR.-PUZZLE EDITORS
fC ltf&amp; lltl11 Ptaturee B)'tldloete, lno.)
•

A 62

EAST
• 981632

¥Q862

¥AKto14

• 10 6 43

.AQ108762

East-West vulnerable
Weil

$5,800
RUTLAND AREA - 45 '
ACRES - Fenced, stocked '

Pass
Pass

pond, good spring, mtnerals,
tols'Of build ing sit~s $11,000

sew ing

R,

GASOLINE ALLEY

3.

Pass

Pass

You

can't

have a

1n LjOUr
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
storeWhen a br~dge expert talks
room,
about dummy reversal he 1sn't
Slim
?
referrmg to a dummy meehng
With reverses. He IS re£errmg
•
to a play that "cons1sls of
declarer makmg an extra tnck
by ruffmg so many of dummy's
cards in his own hand that dummy . wind s up With the long
trump
Today's hand shows an extreme example of this play.
'Normally South wi ll be able to
ruff hiS las! diamond m dummy
and make his contract but West
is unkind enough to open a
trump and East shows out
South can st11l brmg the contract horne but he must star!
:teversmg lh e dummy lm-:rnedlalely •
He w1ns the fir st tnck m
dummy, ruffs a heart, leads a
spade to the kmg rulls a second
6eart, leads a spade to the a~,
ruffs a third heart, leads a dia - WINNIE
mond to the ace , ruffs the last
heart, gets back to dummy by
Jeadmg h1s next to last trump , ®WHAT SHOULD !' GO
ruffs dummy's last spade w1th TO JOHN MRIDLI '.:&gt;
llis own last trumP. a•d has 10 FASHION fJ1'0N AS ?
(ricks horne , while there IS
dummy w1th one more trump
for the lith

car-

petong, paneling, l•le, full
oa•·aoe., patio, double tot

CASH FOR YOUR
HOME, LET US SELL IT
FOR YOU

panel 1ng, carpetmg, a nd a 4

7 ROOM
HOUSE
Bath and 1/ 2, excellent
neighborhood, wa li-towall carpeting, storm
windows, large lot, 3
car garage, reasonable
utilities.
-

CALL 992-3877

E. A. Smith,, 4-1
~
1000 S. Monroe .Street
Baltimore, Maryl~'nd 21232

Soutb

heater

basement w1th recreat1on
R., workshop, porches ,

room ren tal. All for $18,000 00.
COUNTRY HOME - 7 rooms ,
4 mce BRs, beth, db! s1nk,

5•

East

Openmg lead- 5 •

F'OMEROY
Just.
Ireo1ov••ted - 4 BR, 2 baths,
R,

North

t NI::~I'APEH

•

'

••
'!Yell

~!!ass

ENTERPRISE ASSN

1•
3

Pass

+

4t
Pass
~.You South . bold ,

BORN WSER
I KATE: To
Kll.~ A FLOWER

ca.o !li-&lt;XlD 11-

.

ALLEY OOP

2

Sou lb

r,,
Pass , I •

Pass

. llqht bill'

I

The b1ddmg has been
North East

And electric
heat 15 out'
Runs up her

j_

••

34

o"

'

&lt;(K16 43 .,A 2 t 9.AK 132
, What do you do now?
• A-Bkl four •uns. This ca1't be
r.-d II I lleart s•il, bat DlUII be
s~wtq tile beart aee. If your
puUer WUII to bid I sll'iD DOW yot

\

t o&lt;E SNOW GODS

H.O.TE ME !

0

0

Do

o. ,..~,..._,, 0

0

0

0

0

ciJi .11011d II.

toDA Y'S QUESTION
Your panqer contmues 1.0 lour

,

'"

•

'

notrump What ~ you do now ?

)

•

(

TQ

·-

carpettng., full ba sem ent has,
large re c r ea tion
room ,
shower , utility R Carportt,

If you are willing to accept responsibility in return for a
future in your own business, write giving"' full personal
qualifications to:
'

TAURUS (AP&lt;II 20-May 20)

2

WEST
•QJ

Rass

.

15, Elec Co 33 .

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22)

your cred1t yo u wr it handle a
delic nte SitUatiOn that alfects a
h •t.m d 111 n m ost com pa ssionate
and u nderst and•ng manner

tKJ97
+Q5
.54 3
· SOUTH IDI
• 10 5

Ohio.
&gt;

·'

Tr~ 1 ls West

.Som ethrng yolj !I do Will g1ve
you a real sense of aciHe ve-m ent and pnda even 1houg h 1t
w on I Appear trl at large 1n th e
eyes of oth er s

i

\

• KJ 9

Offers an exciting opportunitY to operate a business of
your own with a vety small investment. We are interested
in ·a qualified Sales oriented person with previous retail
experience to own and operate a catalog store in Pomeroy,

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

OD- FBI 3; Merv Gro ffi n 4, Andy Groff1lh a, 'Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,33 , Raymond Burr 13
5 30- News 6. Beverly Hillbillies 6; Hodgepodge Lodge 20,
5

(Sept 23-0cl 23)

Thr oug t1 use o t diplom acy and
t::r c t you II rece 1v e co nSi derati o ns tha t w1 tl be de n1ed
othm s e spec ratly by th e OP·
p0$ 118 SeK

(March 21-Aprol 19)

news o t

Your Blrth&lt;loy - Jon. 3, 1175
M a tor go;, ls that you set fQr
you rself 1111s year w11l com e
eas 1er than you f1rs1 ant1c1p ate
Lu ck wi ll play a m1n0 r role but
rnost of me brea ks you II make
on yoll r ow n

.A K4
• J 95 3

(Serving America for~(}() Years)

- L-------------

D.J 13, To Be Announced 33

12: 45-Etec. Co. 33, 12 55-NBC News 3,1S
1·oo-News 3, All My Children 6,1 3; Phol Donahue 8. Young 1!.
the Restless 10; Not for Women Only 15
1. 15-To Be Announced 33.
1 3D-Jeopardy 3,4,15 ; Let's Make a Deal 6, 13, As the Wor ld
Turns 8, 10, Erica 33.
11
1· 45-Maklng Things Wor k 33
2 Oll-Oays of Our L•ves 3,4,15; $10,000 Pyram 1d 6, 13 ; Gu1id1ng
Light 8,10; Movie "Tne Finest Hours" 33.
2· 3D-Doctors 3,4, 15. Big Showdown 6, 13 ; Edge of N1 gh l B, 10

2 11 tfc

+++

LIBRA

'

·-

w1 11 ~l n Jw t l f'f t oday 1n
srtuai iOth wl u•rc rnoney rs In volved t ho~11 yo11 w111 tomorro w
whe n condl t•o ns grow mo re
com plicated

~

By Helen. and 'Sue Hottel

Dear Rap.
Shorlly after I got engaged to Torn, I v:as in an accident that
left me w1th a permanent limp He says he slillloves me and, of
course, I love hun so much It hurts.
But I don't want hun rnarrymg a cnpple out of p1ly. I en
never climb mo1111tains or play tennis with hun again. "I'm not
graceful any more. Sometimes I thmk I'm the ugliest person
alive- and I used to be quite adequate looking. He insists I'm
wrong - I'm "still perfect" to him .
When I tried to break our engagement, Tom wouldn't hear of

8, Movi~'The Birds and the Bees" 13. Mtster

Builw•11kle

Rogers 33, 9 25-Chuc k Whole Reports 10
9 3D-Not For Women On ly 3, Hazel 8; Tattleta les 10, Arthur
Smoth 12; Zoom 33
10 oo-Name That Tune 3,15, Company 6, Joker 's Wild 8,10 .
Nova 33.
10.3D-Winnlng Streak 3,15, Phol Donahue 4, Gambit 8.10
11 :01l-Hogh Rollers 3,4, 15; Money Maze 6, Now You See It 8, 10.
Password All Stars 13, A Skating Spectacular 33
11 : 3D-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15 ; Bra dy Bunch 13 ; Lucy, Show
6; Love of L1fe 8, 10; Sesame St 33.
11 · 55-CBS News 8; Dan !mel 's Wvr ld 10
12 QO-Jackpol3, 15, Password All Stars 6, Bob Braun's 50 50 C

mostly tlllable, TP water. '
c lose to recrea t ion area.

6

Goober 6, CBS News 6,10. Farmers

Daughter 13
30-New Zoo Revue

f./ILL tnm or cui t ree s or
shru bbery
c l ean
o ut
basements, aftrcs, et c 949
3221 or 742 4441
12 15 26tc

.1

Band BD:
Pe rhaps the threat of a walk..,ul m1ght convmce your fath er
- especially after he SejlS the cut on your head.
Agood nursing home w1ll provide the ca re your grandmother
needs. Get your doctor's approval, make a strong case, and
suggest a tnal run Who knows?'Once transplanted, she may
even enJOY her new surroundings. - HELEN AND SUE

6 3D--Five Minutes to L1v e By 4, News 6 , B1ble Answer s 8
Public Affa~rs 10: Blue R•dge Quar tet 13.
6 . 35-Columbus Today 4; , 6 45 - M ornmg ReporL Far mlime

w1 th storage building YOUj
MUST SEE THIS $27,000.
REEDSVILLE - Rt 124-9
ACRES lovely building sites. •

TEAFORD
NEW LISTING -

3, 4, News 13

FRIDAY, JANUARY 3,1975

MONTGOMERY
WARD &amp;CO.
..

unf u rn •shed
apartments ,
2 SM AL L dog s on e dark bro w n
Phone 99 2 5J 34
n amed Tam my , the oth er
4 12 1rc
m a l e light brown L ost .n a r ea
of K 1ngsb ur} , reward offered
PR I VATE m eetm g room for
Ph on e 99 2 5629
..any org an 1zat •on . phone 992
1227 6t p
3975
3 11 tfc

oo- Tomorrow

1

NORTH

BU I L DI N G lo t, 80ft fro ntage
by 165ft Th e second lot on tefl
on R1verv1ew Drr ve. L1n col n
Hil l , Pomeroy , Ohto If i n
ter es ted ca ll 992 3230 afler 5 p

$17.500.00.

POMEROY LANDM.O,RK

· 'f.~

Elders 20, Pathfmder 33
10 oo-Mov1n' On ' 3,4,15 , Harry 0 6,t3 Woman 33

Real Estate For Sale

new 3 bedrooms , bath . gas
furnace , closets. sto'ife a nd
refrigerator . One acre Only

Pricea for I&gt;IUICk Sale

9 DO--I r o ns1 de 3,4, 15 , Streets of San Fanc1sco 6, 13 M ov ie To be
Aflnounced 8; , M ov te " Th,e Se ven Hil ls of Rom e ' 10 The

..

ON YOUR DIAL

f'tlill·'l

-

~0

f1 ... ~""§

Suffer, Utile Children ...
Rap
Three years ago we moved from the City to 1111! country
because my grandmother couldn 't hve alone any more, and she
wouldn 't hve m town.
No one would take the JOb of can~ lor her. Housekeepers
qu1t after a week of her meanness. The doctor says she's semle.
but Mom says she's always had th1s cruel streak and now she's
rea lly indulgmg it She screams, hils, demands and expects. And
I'm the one who gets'most of the work 'cause she makes Mom so
nervous she's about to have a breakdown.
I can't get an outs1de JOb - have to be home every vacation ·
to care for Grandmother. I cau't go out evemngs - prandmother
m1ght need me. I must be patient - Grandmother "1sn'1 herself." All this from Dad, who av01ds her whenever he can He
won't put her in a rest home because she ·has tantrums 11 we
suggest it. (We could afford a really good nursing horne . J
lthmk he's got a gUilt th1ng because he C&lt;&gt;uld never love her,
but why mak~ ME suffer for it? Th1s morrungshe threw a vase at ,
me and I ha~e a big cut on my head. Quite often she throws a
whole plateful of food across the room Her temper flares over
nothing, and you'd better duck or ·you've had 1l. She needs
prolesswnal help Must Mom and I run away to prove thiS to
Dad? - BRUISED AND BEATEN DOWN

Ba ske l ba ll 6 Ne.,..
Pnce is R 1g ht 8, Wild Kmgdom lO To T e ll th e Tr uth 13 G el

Smart 15, Aging

DOZER work , l and c lear mg by
t he a cr e , hourly or cont ract
Farm ponds , r oads , e t c
L arge dozer and operator
With over 20 years e)(
per rence Pull 1n s Excava t1ng ,
Pomeroy , Oh10 Phone 992
2476
12 19 tfc

5232

~

7 30-Hollywood Squares 3, 4, Fred Tayl o r
"

.m::s:.::.&lt;::®~~~'«~'%.'~·:--~- E

Generat~on ·Rap -

I

s; NejNs 10, Let's Ma ke a Deal 13. To Be Announ ced 15,
Two-Way Street 20; Nova 33.

SEWIN G MAC H INE Repa1rs ,
servtce , all makes, 992 2284
The F abr •c Shop . Pomeroy ,
A ulhor .zed Smger Sa les and
Servrce We sharpen Scrssors
3 29 lfc

Garden $16,500.00
NO MONEY DOWN-almost

HEATERS

--------·-----3 and .&amp; ROOM furn •shed and

1------+--------

·-

READY M! X C O NCREf~ ~
11vered r1ghl to your pr o tect
Fa s t
and
easy
Free
es t•mate s Phone 992 32 84
Goeg l e1n R e ady M1x Co ,
M 1ddleport Oh10
6 30 tf c

carport, 2 outbutldm gs, N!c;e

RJEL OIL

12 31 Jtc

n.(&gt;

WMP0/1390

m

BEND TIRE CENTER

1970 F LEETWOOJP mob• le
SMA LL house, •d ea l for
2
h om e , 112 bath , 2 b edroom
work 1ng men M i ddleport
12x70 Phone 7J2 S86 A
area Phone 99 2 779 t afler 5
..
123 1 3t c
p m

F U RNISHED apt Adults onl y
M •Cfd lepor t Ph one 99 2 3874
LEGAL NOTICE
11 14 tfc
Not 1ce 1S here by g1ven t hat
th e an nual mee t 1ng , of t he
hou se ,
4
sto c kt1'o tder s of
F armers UNFURNISHED
room s and b ath , 1650 Lmco ln
Ban k and Sav ings Company ot
He •gl'1ts •pn.one 99 2 38 74
21t
West
Se co nd
St ree t .
l1l4ffc
Pomeroy Oh 1o , w d l be he l d at
!he 0ff 1ce Df sa 1d ban k in
Pomer o y , Qh10 , acc or dm g to 1IS TR AI LER spa ce . 2 m 1tes from
Pomer o y , R l 143 , Phone 99 2
by Jaws , on th e fh rrd W ed
sasa
'
nesda y of January , 1975 at 4 p
10-27 tfc
n1 for ttre purpose ·of etect.ng
d •re ctors and the t'ansact.on of
su ch oth er bus.n ss as may 2 GEDROOM tr~11 ter et corner
of
Broadway and
Elm ,
pro p e.r (y c o me
e fore sa 1d
M rddleport
No pe t s or
m e e t mg ~
c flildr en Call 992 -2580 a fter 6
.
aul E K loes
p m
Se crefury
_.
, l2 ~ He'
Oec 19, 26. J an 2. 9

like a person.

10 11 ttc

T R A ILER for r E'n t or sale , 3
Fou rth Sl M 1ddl eport
b ed roo ms , un furn is h e d
12 31 lfc
ut1 1111es p a•d . toc al ed at n ew
Ho me
Park
1n
M obile
J ROO M f ur n iShe'd apt Ca ll 992
Bu r lmgh am Phone 992 77 51
5908 before 1 p m
12 J llfc
12 31 6tc

I.DSt

CA RPET InSta ll atiOn $1 25 per
yard Phon e R 1chard w est.
84 3 2667
1
12 24 261p

For the Lowe~!

I

J UN K aulo s
c omplete and
d el1 ve red to our yard We P•Ck F U R NISH ED
apa C
nt
,
1
up' aulo bodieS and buy all
ul d 1t1 eS furn 1s1'1 ed , \~t~ b l e
k 1nds ot scrap m etals and
for two work 1n g men or
1r o n R•d er ' s Salvage , St Rt
r etr r ed couple L1v1ng roo m ,
12-1 . R t 4 Pom eroy , Oh 10
k•t c hen Shower and bath On
Call 992 5468
marn h1ghway , Mason . W Va
10 17 tfc
Phone 77 3 5147
10 27 tfc
CA SH pa 1d tor all makes and
model s of mob•le homes 4 RM f urn•shed apt c lose t o
Phon e ar ea code 61 4 423 953 1
Powel l's Sup er Va tu phon e
4 13 tf c
99 2 36 58
11 20/f c

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

R epa1r Ser v 1ce Any t hmg
l1x. ed around t he home , from
roof to ba se men t You wilt
lr ke our work and r ates
Phon e 742 5081
12 29 lfc

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

WOMA N to l1 v e rn and aSS ISI
twsband In t he care of h1 s
A N N UAL Deer F eed at the
a1 l 1ng W1f e Room and board ,
Ra c me G un C l ub , Sal Jan J
salary ' t1 m e off Telephone
6 p m O p en to t he pub l i C
992 375 6 befo r e noon or after 8
12 3 1 M e
p m
1 2 3tc
GU N SH OOT M1le Hill Road ,
Jan .:1 , 7 p m A ssorted meals
F a c tory chok ed guns on l y CARHOP w anted app l y In
Spon sor ed by Racme F1re
person a l Craw ' s Steak
D ept
Hous e
12303t c
12 29 10t c

-JlJNKC:A Rs

------------HOME
I mprov ement
and

H ERE F ORD Holste1n Ca lf 1S 10
days old A l so, 352 For d mo tor
and fl at head , 6 cyl Dodge
motor Phone 84 J 2353
12 29 St c

m the Area

CAS HS$$$SF OR
Camp FR YE S TRUCK and
A UT O PART S
Ru11and
Phon e 742 6094
1 2 26tp

WA L L pap er hang m g and a!l
m tenor f 1n 1shmg Phone 742
50 81
12 29 12t p

12 29 6t p

- - - --------

Carrier Wanted

12 29 6tp

CO MPL E TE
2 16
Q/
261
Ch ev rol e t e ng1n e
Frank
Dodd e r er
co
Bo x
162 ,
Coolv1p e. Oh10
1 2 3tp

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

p m

pump

Wanted To Buy

SEPT I C t anks , excava tm g
dump ! r uc k Phon e 742 374 2
12 20 26t c

ol d SSO Phone 99 2 5728 aft er 6

.

.

12 29 t f c

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

'

t~~~~

Zoom 20 , What Now, Amenca" 33

8 ,10 ;

.

.

2 ,~ )975

7· QO- Truth or Cons. 3,4, Bowlmg for Dollars 6 . What's My L me

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

------------G RE A T DANE P U P S a w ee k s

Pets For Sale

former Umvers1ty of M1nnesota sta r, hJIS been playing
With the Toronto Maple Leafs '
Oklahoma aty farm tean'1 !'n

"If I had known ! _was gomg lo be la1d off, I'd
have run for Congress m the last,e!ection!"

AI

SE P T I C
T A NK S
c le aned
Mod ern Sa nllat1 on . 991 3954 or
99 2 7349
9 1a lfc

For Rent

POMEROY. MOTOR CO.

begmnmg or 1975 than 1974 espe c ially
automob~,
housmg and texliles," 1t adds

\

heating serv1ce and
gen11ral sheet metal
Ph. 992 -5682 or 992 -7121
w o ·r k s .
Fr e e
All Me ~ hamcal Work
Estimates .
- Phone 949-5961
Open Mon. Sat
'
Emergency 992-3995
Phone (304) 773 -5503
SA.M. 6 P.M
or 992-5700
, ~·---------------' I

S1S95

1972 DODGE

Alumtnum s1d1ilg-, roo fmg,
co mpl ete r es 1d e nflal con
structton Wirmg, p•umbmg,
elec .
hea ling
k-•t che n
cabtnets etc
27 Yrs ex pen ence m ca n st
trade .

Rutland

V 8 4 d oo r . automat1c tran sm 1SS1on . powe r steermg . a nd
po w er brak es, vmy l 1n ter1or , v myl r oo f , red fm1 sh g ood
w h1t e w a l l t1r es. rad1o , fa,ctory .:nr

energy crunch and International disturbances as the
major problems facin g the
economy m the new year

REMODELING &amp; CONST.

,975

THURSDAY, J.O.NUARY 2,
6 oo- News3.4.8.1 0,15, ABC News6 , Elec Co 20. Caught'" the
Act 33
6 ]()-N BC News 3,4, 15, ABC News 13 , Bew ,lched 6 CBS News

, HEll

JOHNSON'S

~

On Sta te Rt 124, '12 m1 fro m
Route 7 by pass towards

f J n l ~h . del u xe v •n yl 1nfer ror

•

-

ROGER HYSEU'S
GARAGE .

52995

8' F l ~ ts1 d e P1 c kup , 350 V 8,, au to matF c trans , oo wer
st een ng r a d1o loc"l 1 owner &amp; onl y 15,500 m 1tes, gr ey

--.

T-elevision Log

_.

-· Business Services
-

I

'

•,

l

'.

,,

' '

�•

•

.'

,n •

.....

.I

..'

•

. ..

z. 1 175
1

I

\

J'

19- The DallJ Sent mel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Th tu·,dal , .1.111

'

Market
•
openmg
slower
~

--....--

u nempl oyme nt,

Auto Sales __

.

.

2 SIGNS Pomeroy ·
_Of .

NEW YORK iUPl i - We
arc starting 1975 in a less
favorable poslllon than a year
ago at this lime," according \o
Internation a l S ta t lSll ca l
Bureau Inc It CJles tnflahon,
growmg

Senti.n el Classijcieds Get Results!

I

Motor Co.

QUALITY
1973 CHEVROLET C 10

1971-MATA DOR

the

$249S

Dar t C ste m . 4 door, loca l 1 owner ca r , 31 8 V 8 e ng m e,
auto m a t ic tra n smi SSIOn a nd po e r c; teenng. a 1r co
drt ronrng v rn yl tr1m , v 1n yl top, r ad10, w h1te w a ll t 1r es,
gold f tn1sh

"Most mdustnes are showmg a
less favorable trend at the

___

'

Investments

OPEN EVES.S :OO P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO
19 66

,

DR JACOB BRONOWSKI is narrator and author of a 13part television sen es, ' 'The Ascent of Man," which follows in
the high-&lt;Jua hty pattern set by BBC programs "Qvil!salion"
and "America " The new scnes starts Jan. 7 at 8 p m Rio
Grande Commuruty College IS usmg the televised program as
the bas1s ~f an off-campus course

"TI1e stock market never
evaluates secuntles fa~rly except while passmg from an
extreme of overvaluation to a
corresponding excess or undervaluatton, " says Wrtght Investors Semce The Bndgeporl r
Conn. firm says " famous
name" growth stocks have
fluc tuated more w1dely m the
past two years than any other
investment group and the Dow
Jones mdustrials have taken
an unprecedented beatmg.
"We beheve that durmg the
nex t tw o years the stock
market w1ll reverse Its current
ex tr emes or underva luatiO n
JUS! as surely as It corrected
for 1972's extremes or overpncmg," 1t adds.

"Common

Justice served

stocks

have

provided a superior long-term
rate of return," says Vance,

Sanders &amp; Co., Inc., ~~eve n
allowmg lor the current bear
market." Data compiled by
researchers al the University
of Chicago shows "the apprecia lion of the Standard &amp;
Poor's 500, assumm g remvestment
of
div idends,
PfOVlded an average annual
return of 8.6 per cent from 1962
through October , 1974, " the
Boston l1rm says. Taking mflal!on into consideratiOn, the
average annual return was 6 4
per cent, 11 notes.

By Unlted Press International out to be better Americans
Pohl!c1ans generally com- than the Watergate conmended the Waterga te JUrors spirators, and their leader,
Wednesday and smd JUStice m N1xon, who used their enorthe cover-up trial had been mous power agau1st the best
served .
interes ts of th e AmeriCan
But Dorothy M11rchan, the people."
w1fe of Robert Manhan, one of
Rep . Robert Drman , D-Mass,
Ute rour men conv1 ctcd, stuck pra1sed the JUry for lis
out her tongue m court and "dlscriminatmg and sens1b,le"
spu ttered a "Bronx cheer " to gullt)l. venhct. • He sa1d the
protest the verdict
deCISion "does ShOW tha t the
Some prmcipal figures m the JUry was discrimmatmg m that
long scandal, mciudmg former it allowed Parkinson to go
Wa tergate Prosec utors Ar- free."
chibald Cox and Leon
"The defmilion of C&lt;&gt;nsplracy
Jaworksl, declined comment. is very techmcal. It was adr01t
SERVICE CONOUCTE D1
For'mer President Richard M. of the jury to say that
Elder Herbert C. Morgan, of
Nixon smd he would have a Parkmson was on the fringes Parkersbm·g, W Va , returned
sta tement later , and President and not at the heart of the to the Pomeroy . Seventh-Day
Ford had no comment
Adventist Church, of wh1ch he
conspiracy," Orman srud .
The four me n con vi cte d
Rep -Elect Norma n D'A- Wfts a former pastor. to conmaintained th e ir Inno cence mours, D-N H., sa1d, " It show~ •du ct bapt isma l servi ces,
and srud they wo1dd appeal, that the system works. It IS jus Sabbath a fternoon, Dec 2i.
and the fifth defend a nt , fur ther proof trutl1 eventua ll) followmg the serm on by Pastm
Kenneth Parkinson, who was Will out. Our jury form or Ge rard Se ton ymtmg w1th the
found mnocenl, was elated and Jus tice, although ponderous Seventh-day Adventist Church
sa1d he had a new lease on hfe
and not always satisfactory, 1s wer e Mi ss Na~ c y Queen,
Reaction from pohl!Cal lead- sl!ll pretty good, and speedy Guy sville. M1ss Wendy Mams.
ers was gene ral~ subdued. A enough when- it has to be."
Athens, MISS Shern Morgan,
statement by newly maugurat-Parkersburg,
and Joseph IV
Sen . Lowell We1cker, Red New York Gov. Hugh L. Conn. , a member of the Senate Wh1 te, of Kyger
Carey was typical
Wa tergate Committee, sa1d,
"The Offenses were an attack "The Watergate verdict is not
on the fundamenta ls of our a panacea lor the repeated
system and , wh1le no one takes trampli ng or co nstitutional MOST VALUABLE
DALLAS ( UPI J - Penn
any pleasure m 11 , the verd1ct democracy.
State
quarterback Tom
speaks for itse lf," he sa1d
' 'It is the fmlure to correct
Retirmg Sen George Aiken, ong01ng abuses, not {.he guilt or Shuman Wednesday was voted
R-Vt . th&lt;! dean of tilC Senate, uuwcence of md1V1duals for the most valuable offensive
said, "From the vrrv start of pnsl offenses, which continues player m the 1975 Cotton Bowl
game, the second stra1ght year
the Watergate case 1 have said to disturb me."
he has won such an award.
· the matter should be left to the
Shuman edged teammate
courts, the U S House and the
Jimmy
Cefalo lor the honor.
Senate. I expect they've done
The
N1ttany
Lions quarterback
thetr JOb as U1ey had to."
BUTTERS SIGNED
hud also been voted the moot
Rep . Bella Abzug·, D-New
&amp;i _PAUL, Mmn (UP()
York,
sa1d ,
"This The Mmnesota Ftghting Samls valuable player last year in
predomin a t e ly b lac k, Wednesday a nn ounced the Penn Stale's Orange Bowl
predornmantly female JUr) has s1gning of delenseman Bill VJctory over LSU
Baylor. delens1ve back Ken ,
acted 1111h 111 sdom a nd Butters to a multiyear coo tract
dedication to U1e pnnc1ples of begmmng m the 1975-76 season ~esen berry was named the
our democracy They turned
The 24-year.., ld Butlers. a Cotton Bowl's most valuab le
defensive player. Quesenberry
recovered two fumbles durmg
the contest

Berrys World

PL Y MOUT H F ur y Ill ,
p s r&lt;1 d1 o Ca ll 99 2 5105
1 2 ) lp

HO US E 4 room s an d b alh , n 1ce
ya r d and dr1v c w ay
A lso ,
f urn 1shed a pt Call 992 2780 o r
NEI GL E R BUILDING SUP
992 ]4]2
PL Y F OR R E MODELING
1212 tf c
AN D K I T CHE N CAB IN ET S
CA L L GUY NEIGHLER ,
1 RM ap t furn •sh ed adu lts n o
I N E , O HI O PHONE 949
RAC
dr un k s A lso 3 r m a pt J oh n
360d
Sh eet s
3 m iles south of
12 19 261 c
Middl eport on R t 7
12 29 6tp

W E WOU LD l 1ke to thank a ll ll1e
Sport Ad
---- ------ - ~ p eo pl e who h&lt;~v e h elped 111 so 19 73 DO DG E P U
... enlur e red and Wh1 l e , J IB F URN I SHED m obil e hom e to r
m an y way s dur.ng our t1rn e of
c 1d a 1 , p s , r ad 10 Ke lly
A lb er t H1 1!
R ac1ne
r en t
t r ovb le Toda y y o u hear of all
too l bo x c h ro me w es t coas t
Oh•O Phon e 949 2:26 1
th e il pathy a na c r ueln ess , but
m 1rr o rs, rea r sle p bum per
you Ciln t 1mag 1n e how truly
12 29 6tc
nooo mde s Ph on e 99'1 51 05
good and k 1nd p eopl e r ea ll y
I 1 ) tp
arc We wou ld l 1ke to n ame
ev ery one wh o h as h el p ed , but
1957 C HEVROLET Be ll a1r 4 dr
f WO Uld be Impo SS ibl e Th e y
ex c e ll ent c on d 1t1on Phon e
kn ow and th ey shou l d have a
GRO CERY bus1ne ss for sale
7 42 41 I 1
v ery good feelmg A lot o f
Bu1 ld1ng for sa te or lea~e
12 31 3t c
th ese peopl e we d1dn t e ve n
Phone 77 3 5618 from 8 30 p m
know but th ey lletped and
to 10 p m for appo1n tm ent
w e' l l alw a ys r em ember no w 1968 CHEVEL L E 327 , 4 speed
3 10 tfc
g
ood
body
and
1
nt
en
or
P
hon
e
kmd ev er yon e wa s S1 gn ed
992 7•189
M r and """'r s Monty Proff1 1t
12 31 41p MODER N Walnut s t er e o
and Childr en
r ad10, 8 tra ck tap e com
12 29 4l c
b 1naf1on .
qm fm
rad10
19 6 4 O LD SMOB IL E L uxury
Ba lan ce $108 .tS3 or t erm s Call
Mod el 1n good cond1 t 1on Set
992 ]9 65
of r ad 1a l t.r es, s1z e t R 70 15 1n
12 31 t fc
good sha p e 21 •nch b la c k and
SHO O T IN G M ATC H
Corn
wh1
te
lel
ev1
S1
0n
a
mpllf1
er
for
Hollow C un Club , Turn l1r st
a p a
sys t e m
For 1n
E L ECTROLUX Swe eper d el uxe
ngh t after Mdes Ce m e tery
for m•at 1on , call 99 2 250 8 or see
mod el
Complet e w1 t h all
Ru t l and
F a c tory cho ke d
at 131 Laur e l St , Pomero y,
r. l ea n tng atta c hmen t s and
g uns onl y Sunday , Jan 5 I p
Oh10
u ses paper bags Sl igh t ly used
m
•
12 29 6t c
but c leans and looks l 1ke new
__ _ 1f!~ tc
Wtll se ll for $37 25 cash or
t erms .wailable Phon e 992
SPE C I A L A U C TI O N Cont ents 1968 GM C Dump Tru ck' 7500
7755
ser1es Tr1 a x l e Jus t be en
of old m ercnand1 Se s t o r e
$3 500
Con t ac t
ov erhaul ed
12 18 lfc
m cl ud1ng many 'ant•ques to be
L awrence L ee , Larkm s St ,
so ld b eg1nn 1n g at I p m Sal ,
Rutland Oh10
CLOSE OUT on new Z1g Zag
J an •1. on Horton Sl ( A c ro ss
sew1ng machmes F or sew 1ng
12 27 6t c
from Ma s on Auction J 1n
stretch fabr 1cs , but tonho les
Maso n
W
Va
Howard
fan c y des.gns , etc
P aml
Beas l ey , Au c t •on eer
Slightly blem 1shed Ch o 1ce of
1 2 2t c
c arryrng case or s ewmg
st and $49 80 cash or term s
AUCT I O N ,
Thursday
and
available Phone 992 7755
Sa t urday ntgnt 7 p m at
12 18 ttc
Mason Auc t 1on. Horton St m WILL BABYS I T m my home fo r
--------- ~ ----Mason . W Va ConS ignments
wo r kmg mother Phone 985
1973 STA R CRAFT 24 ft trav el
w el come Phone (3 04) 773
410 2
trail er Phone .S 82 339 1
54 71
12 30 71c
12 2951p
10 3 tf c

the Cenlral League .

PUBLIC NOTICE
B•d s will be r ec e1v ed 1n th e
Comm , ss.oners ' off 1ce fo r a 1975
Sh en H s car un t d 9 00 a m
o' cl o c l on Tuesday Jan 7, 1975
Speett. ca t10ns a r e as follo w s
Colo r - WtHte o r b lack
4 door sedan
60
A MP
Alter l).alo r M fr:·11 mum
Hea vy d uty ba ttery
Underc oa t m g
V 1nyl up h o l st ~ r y
J00 cub• c 1nch VB t:n g fne
Au t oma t •c
heavy
dut y
tran sm ISSJOn
Non SI •P d• tt eren t1 al
1
F o am seat
M •n• m um w heel base 120" o r fu ll S1 ze car
A1 r cond •t lon mg
J
Po l1ce Ch ass 1s p acka g e
Po llee body pa cKage
H 78 x 15 black l 1r e
Ra ct 1a l fi res
Spot11 gh t , left SJ de (Wh i l e an d
r ed lens )
W d t lrade- 1973 Plymouth
Del•very 1n 60 da y s .
•
The Co m m is s1oners reser ve
the nght to r e ject any o r au
bids
Metgs Co unl y
Co mm .ss 1on ers
M art h a Chambers (lcr k f
( 12 ) 26 i J (1 } 2, 2tc

P I ANO
tun1ng and repa1r
Char le s Sc ott 992 J71 8
12 13 32t p
..._

______ _______ _

C B RADFORD Au c tiOne er
Comp lete Serv 1ce
Phon e 949 38 21 or 949 316 1
R ac 1n e, Oh10
Cr1tt Bradford
5 1 tfc

For Sale

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

Notice

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

Employment Wanted

O I L O F M1n k Co smeti CS "
So und d1ft erenP W e have a
com p lele I me that wrt l sat1sfy
ev en you Ca ll us we h ave
spec1 at s atl th e l 1m e You' ll be
surp r 1se d BROW N 'S 9'9 2
5 11 3

Help

Wante~
-

SH OOTING mat ch N:ac 1ne Gun
Club Sunday I p m A ssort ed
m eat s and fa c tory c hoke gun s
on ly
12 22 tic
WANTE D d ee p
Phon e 98 5 38!9

well
'

In

OLD fu r n 1lur e. 1c e bo x es , brass
b ed s, or compl ete n ouseholds
W n t e M D Mil l er Rt 4,
Pom eroy , OhiO Ca l l 99 2 7760
10 1 74

NEW HAVEN
Age 8 or Older

-

Tire Prices

Sales H elp Wanted
A N OH I O O I L CO
offe r s
PLE NT Y bF M O NEY p~s
ca sh bonuses , fr1nge benefits
t o matu r e 1nd•v•dua1
•n
Pomeroy a r ea Regard l ess of
e xper1ence , a 1rmad G
1
R ead ,
Pres ,
Aml!flci.tn
L ubr1 c ants Co , Box 696 ,
Day ton , Oh 10 45401
122951p
EXPERII;NCEO fu el oil dr 1ver
ne eded Send r eplres to Box.
72 9C co The Daily Sentme l,
Pom eroy Oh1o 45769
- 12 30 6tc

For Rent

CO UNT R Y M obile Ho me Park ,
R t 33 ten m il es nor th of
R E G Bn lla1n y Span .el lfemal e
Pom eroy
La rge lot s w1th
pu p 4 m on ths ol d Ca ll 99 2
cooc r e l e pat1os . srdewalks ,
5071
r unn e rs
and off
str e et
I 2 Jl c
park 1n g Phone 992 7479
12 31 ttc

--------------..
M b"l H
F Sal
M and ba th furn rs h ed apt
0 I e OmP.S Or
e · - 3 ROO
Utllll• e s pa1d , 35 6 N or th

It's

F U RN I TURE Upho l st e r~ng ,
Rea sonabl e
rates ,
f r ee
e slim a tes
pi c kup
and
d e l 1ve ry , prompt serv 1ce
Mowrey ' s Uphol stery , P01nt
Plea sant w va Phone 675
4 154
12 31 26t p

We talk to you

772-5881

Mason, W.Va.

1957 CHEVY parts
NEW
Lakewood t rac t •on bars, h r
1ack.er a.r shock s, hooker
head~rs , w 1th 3" co ll ec tor s fo r
sma ll bl oc k . Ca l l 992 3496
after 6 p m BEST OFFE R
10 17 ftc

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

DUE lo lolal d 1sa0 111ty , mus t
sell com p l ete flock N 1ne Reg
Suffo l k ewes 1 y r old , bred
and pap ered
One Suffolk
ram , non r e lat ed Ca ll 949
3073 any t rme
12 27 6t c
A K C 4 y ear old l nsh Se tt er ,
e xc eltenl pet , S60 Howard
8 1r chf1 eld
Phone 742 59 32
12 24 He

P IG S
$15 eac:h
Holstem
Her eford h e• fer , $125 On e t on
196 5 Ford truck. , 6 c y l •nd er ,
$550 C W R 1ce . pho n e 949
2115
• 12296t p

---...----------SIEGLER and
MONOGRAM

8 QO---Mac Oa1115 3,4, 15 , Odd Coup I.., 6, 13, The Walto ns 8, 10 ,
Soundstage 33 , C1t1es for Peop le 20

8 3D-Paper Moon 6,13

~

Jack W C1rsey, M9r.

Phont 'f2· 2111

10· Jo-Y our Future IS Now 20 , Caugh t m I he A cl 33

11 Oil-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13, 15, ABC News 33
11 3D-Johnny Carson 3,4,I S; W1de Wor ld Even t 13.. FB I 6.
, Mov 1e T o be Announced 8. Mov 1e " Oramo nd Head' 10 ,

Janak • 33.
Wi ld West 6

12· 3D-Wild

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

OLD HOU SE 1n Syrac use on 2
n •ce lots , $3 000 W ill t ear '
house dow n , 1f wanted Phon e
992 5898
12 29 7t p

6:0Q--Sunnse Semmar 4, Sun n se Semester 10.. 6 25- Farm

Report 13

10.
7•01l-Today 3.4,15

V 1rqil H l•·,lf,l ti
131 nk I I
l: 1 'II• IL11l1c 'it

7
6; Tennessee Tuxedo 13
8:01l-Captaln Kangaaroo8, Jeff's Colloe 6, Popeye 10, New Zoo
Revue 13 , Sesame St 33
8 25-Capt. Kangaroo 10 , Jack LaLanne 13
8 30- Brady Bunch 6. 8 55- News 13
9 Oil-A.M. 3; Paul D1xon 4; Wold Wild West 6, Phil Donahue 15,

"

CREMEA N S CONCRETE de
l •ve r ed Monday through
Sa turday
and
eve nmg s
Phone 446 11 42
6 13 t f c
EXCAVAT I NG , dozer , load er
and backhoe work , sept1 c
lanks inst a ll ed dump trucks
and lo boys for h •re , Will haul
fil l d~rt , t op so d , 11mestone &amp;
gravel , Call Bob or Roger
J eff ers . day phone 992 7069 .
n1gh t phone 992 3525 or 992

lub 4; News 8,1 0,13.

12 3D-Celebrity Sweepstakes 3, 1~; Sp!1l SEcond 6. Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10 ; Afternoon w1th

r•v Oh1 o :'&gt;'6·i

room

fram e, 3 bedrooms, bath , nat
gas, furnac e, ctfy water

$7500 00 W1ll sell on tome
IN THE COUNTRY - 5 acres
and a 2 bedroom home wrth full

base men t

56500 00

Reasonable down payment

33 ACRES - 3 bedrooms, ele
furnace. Ohto Power , bullt. m
st ove, double smk , ca bmets,
c ity water . and m t nera l s,

$25,500 00
INCOME - 8 rooms, 2 baths ,

EXCELS IOR Salt Wor k s, East
Ma1n St Pomeroy A ll k 1n d s
of sa l t, water pe ll et s. wa ter
nuggets, b lock sail and own
Oh10 R1ver Sa lt Phone 992
3891
6 5 tfc

3 oo-Another World 3,.4,15 , General Hosp1tal 6,13; Pr1ce IS
Righl8 ,10 , You ONe otto Yourself 9 ; Book Beal 20.

3 3D-How to Surv1ve a Ma rriage 3,4, 15 . One L1fe to L' ve 13,
Lassle6, Match Game8,1 0, L1i1as Yoga 1!. You 9; Woman 20
4 OQ-Mr. Cartoon 3, Bonanza 4 , Somerset 15; Gilligan's Is. 6;
Tattletales 8, Sesame St. 20,33 , Mov1e " Birds Do It" 10 ,
Mike Douglas 13.
4 3D-Bewtlched3, ModSquad6 ; Lucy ShowS, Bonanza 15

Real istate For sale
3 BEDROOM h ouse , 3 mil es out
on
State
Rou t e
143 ,
References
and
deposit
req u1red No pe ts Ph one 949
3716
12 31 4t c

WIN AT BRIDGE

Dummy meets reversal

------------'-----

t
POMEROY-B-ID

E-

Aimost new home, 3

BR wtth

double - closets, lovely kitc hen , dmmg R, l arge living

R, H W. floors wolh lots of

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec

Yo u tend to ! rea \, oth ers •n a
ve r y co u r t eo u s an d c o• •
s1 de ra1e manner today Th1 s
w11l reflec t mos t hwor abty on
your o wn 1m age

21) Cond1tro ns that have an Infl uence llpo n yo u r sta tu s and
ma tenat well -be1ng a r e ex. 11 Pmely tavo rabl e tor you ea r ly
111 th e day

GEMINI (l\lay 21-June 20)

CAPRICORN (Doc 22-Jan 18)

Yo u II b e a bit too b ored 11 you
have to stay at ho me thi S even
•rlQ Wh&gt;y not call sorn e tn end s
antttak e 10 dtnner and a stl ow ?

Yo u II do ve ry well to day rn
atea s wh ere y ou can express
yo ur c reati vity and 1mag ma t1on
w1thmJt o uts1de •nte rferen ce

CANCER (June 21 -July 22)

AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb

19)
You It not•ce tod ay th at people
wrll go mo1 e oul ol t h e ~r way
th an us ual to m ake ttl l ngs
oos1e r lo r y ou

Yo u II be getl •ng some good

a co nl1dent•al rm ture

that you 11 ha\le a very ha rd
tu n e kaeprng to yo w )eU

LEO (July 23·AUI 22)

PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)

T h '5
w ould b e a good day lor yo u to
go on &lt;1 p erso nal sllop p1ng e.:c urSIOtl fo r tlem s yo u need 10 1
yourself
VIRGO lAua 23-Seat 22, Yo u

O th ers wil l frnd you r c ompany
e•lfOy.lble t oday because of•
yO ll f o pt1m tsi1C ou tlook You 'll
see sunsh1ne wh ere they see
shadows

11. Could)le.L!lilllY love an_imperfect person when he 's so perfect?
- DR'lllliS-PITY
Dear D.P.
I'm sure that Tom could really love a perfect person w1th a
limp (which IShowhecons!de~HOU now ). BUT - love won't last
if you continue seeing yours'elf"as "a n ugly cripple."
Don'tlet an accident warp your personality. Be glad you
carne out of 11 w1th only a limp, and get on w1th your wedding
plans. - HELEN

+++

ACROSS
1 Varnish
oomponent
t Distanees
10 Powdered
lava
u Ship's
oounterbalance
1% Greenland
Eskimo
l3 Short operatic song
lt Matter
(law)
15 Wooden pall
(dis!.)
1&amp; "Sweetheart
of Sigma

_..

l7 Retracted
(2 wds.)

19 Chinese
word for
God
zo Bell sound
!1 Attractive
D Edible

JlllJJ~]~Ji1lE® I4J ~•ow&lt;t.J -.1 , _

ze Like some

I &gt;V IliNII1 1111Ntlll) "ltllltl l l l f l

ANOTHER?

lnstrwnent

evoo

keel
(2 wds.)

streets

(hyph. wd.)
11 Moisten
3Z Comedian

I

DeLulae
33 Reslall'ar's
question

sona l 1ty &amp; Behavioral Development 33

30- NBC News 3,4,15, ABC News 13, Bewitched 6, CBS News
8, 10; Zoom 20
o
7 oo-Truth or Cons 3,4, Bowl ing for Dollars 6. WCHS TV
Report a, Av1 alion Weolher 20,33 ; J 1mmy Dean 13, I py 1_5

LATA\'

7 3 0~ Porter Wagone r 3, Masquerade Party 4; New Candtd

6; Pop Goes the Country 8, Treasure Hunt 10, To

I

DAILY CRYProQUOTE -Here's how to work it:

Tell the Truth 13 , Black Perspectiveon the News 20,33

Bang Bang" 8,10 , Was h1ngton Week 1n Rev1ew 20.33. Wall
Street Week 20,33

E.'V"Fill'Z

00- Rockford Files 3,4,1 5, S1x Million Dollllr Man 6,13;

1· I

20, Bonn 1e Ra1ft &amp; Paul Butterfi e ld 33 .
10 oo-Potoce Woman 3,4, 15, ABC News Closeup 6, 13, News 20,
Masterpiece Theatre
Paul Nuch1ms 33

11 00- News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 1S, ABC News 33
11 3D-Johnny Carson 3,4, ]5 ; W1de World In Concert 13; Mov1 e
"A Study in Terror" 6, Mov te " Twist Around t he Clock "
Movie " Island of L os t Women " 10 , Janak1 33.

8,

OD-M1dn•ghl Special 3,4,15; Don K"shner's Rock Conce rl6.
Mov1e "The Curse oft he Mummy's Tomb" 10 ; News 13

(;()f/JU,'

NOT THE FIR'GT

J

! V"

I I

AN INCREA~E!

r

I"-u,..,.,

,

CRYPTOQUOTES
LKWUN C

Now arranre the drc1ed !etten

~

to form Ihe- IUrpriae anawer, u

PriUe SIMIISI AHSWIIIIln

' r •lrr•l • · ·,

One letter almply atands !or another In this sample A fo
used !or the three L's, X tor the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apoalrophea, lhe length and !ormatoon of the words are all
hiau. Each day the code letters are d1lferent
YHHM

Jumhlr• f SCARY

4

l:IME: THE~E' 5

I'-:::= I':·=:::·====
I !,.~_j====-..::surrested by the above cartoon.

2 30- Mov te " Fam ~ 1s t he Name ofthe Game" 4

4 00- Movie " Doctor Blo(ld's Coff1n" 4
5 3D-Movie " Those Endearing Young Charms"

AIYDLB AAXR
LONGFELLOW

Ia

a oo- Sanford 1!. Son 3,4, 15, Kung Fu 6, t3, Movie "Chitty Chitty
9

Yesterday's Answer
6 " Brown
23 Marked with
October.-" lines
7 Surpnse
24 Swindlers
(2 wds J
(2 wds.)
8 Lover of
26 Pean~t
beauty
29 Greek
9 Blemish ed
marketII Bowls
place
18 Fraternity 30 Long
bouse topi c 32 Tipster's
19 Terrify
info..
22 Skill
35 Went ahead

!4 Bastlnad~
!I Mature
ze African
reed
!1-

Unscramble these foor Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to
form four ordmary words.

34 Place for a
pendant
(2 wds.)
36 Brown kiwi
37 Become ·
preclpl to us
36 Miscalculate
39 Planting
device
~ Angelo or
Antonio
DOWN
1 Sootllsh
proprietor
2 MldJaelmas
daisy
3 Cornered
(t wds.)
t Lamour garb
5 Closed, as
wings

fruits

6

Camera

d&amp;du•"w.
br THOMAS JOSEPH

Dear D.:
Ask yourself, "Would I drop Torn because he can't play
tennis or cHmb mountains with me'"
If a lunp couldn't change your feeling lor HIM, then why do
you thmk his lov~ has turned to p!ly?
I'd say th1s IS mostly self-pity.
Knock it off! - SUE

6 00- News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15, ABC News 6, Elec Co 20, Per

ITC~V

..

D-( 1 I X)"

MEASLY

(Aa•wen
NIPPLE

to•orra • ~

t (IIMfd I FHf(•m 1 lll/1111/rllt ml NUIIIhiM - HIS EARS

GKCUGE
WKM

NH

YUPG

HVGC . - R.

KEG
BA

I BJ L

NLKV

CHIG'ECGN

NLG

IKBYLKI

Yellerda)-'1 Cryptoqaote: THIS IS THE ONE DAY WE SET
ASIDE TO WISH YOU HAPPINESS AND LO'v.E EVERY DAY
OF THE YEAR.-PUZZLE EDITORS
fC ltf&amp; lltl11 Ptaturee B)'tldloete, lno.)
•

A 62

EAST
• 981632

¥Q862

¥AKto14

• 10 6 43

.AQ108762

East-West vulnerable
Weil

$5,800
RUTLAND AREA - 45 '
ACRES - Fenced, stocked '

Pass
Pass

pond, good spring, mtnerals,
tols'Of build ing sit~s $11,000

sew ing

R,

GASOLINE ALLEY

3.

Pass

Pass

You

can't

have a

1n LjOUr
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
storeWhen a br~dge expert talks
room,
about dummy reversal he 1sn't
Slim
?
referrmg to a dummy meehng
With reverses. He IS re£errmg
•
to a play that "cons1sls of
declarer makmg an extra tnck
by ruffmg so many of dummy's
cards in his own hand that dummy . wind s up With the long
trump
Today's hand shows an extreme example of this play.
'Normally South wi ll be able to
ruff hiS las! diamond m dummy
and make his contract but West
is unkind enough to open a
trump and East shows out
South can st11l brmg the contract horne but he must star!
:teversmg lh e dummy lm-:rnedlalely •
He w1ns the fir st tnck m
dummy, ruffs a heart, leads a
spade to the kmg rulls a second
6eart, leads a spade to the a~,
ruffs a third heart, leads a dia - WINNIE
mond to the ace , ruffs the last
heart, gets back to dummy by
Jeadmg h1s next to last trump , ®WHAT SHOULD !' GO
ruffs dummy's last spade w1th TO JOHN MRIDLI '.:&gt;
llis own last trumP. a•d has 10 FASHION fJ1'0N AS ?
(ricks horne , while there IS
dummy w1th one more trump
for the lith

car-

petong, paneling, l•le, full
oa•·aoe., patio, double tot

CASH FOR YOUR
HOME, LET US SELL IT
FOR YOU

panel 1ng, carpetmg, a nd a 4

7 ROOM
HOUSE
Bath and 1/ 2, excellent
neighborhood, wa li-towall carpeting, storm
windows, large lot, 3
car garage, reasonable
utilities.
-

CALL 992-3877

E. A. Smith,, 4-1
~
1000 S. Monroe .Street
Baltimore, Maryl~'nd 21232

Soutb

heater

basement w1th recreat1on
R., workshop, porches ,

room ren tal. All for $18,000 00.
COUNTRY HOME - 7 rooms ,
4 mce BRs, beth, db! s1nk,

5•

East

Openmg lead- 5 •

F'OMEROY
Just.
Ireo1ov••ted - 4 BR, 2 baths,
R,

North

t NI::~I'APEH

•

'

••
'!Yell

~!!ass

ENTERPRISE ASSN

1•
3

Pass

+

4t
Pass
~.You South . bold ,

BORN WSER
I KATE: To
Kll.~ A FLOWER

ca.o !li-&lt;XlD 11-

.

ALLEY OOP

2

Sou lb

r,,
Pass , I •

Pass

. llqht bill'

I

The b1ddmg has been
North East

And electric
heat 15 out'
Runs up her

j_

••

34

o"

'

&lt;(K16 43 .,A 2 t 9.AK 132
, What do you do now?
• A-Bkl four •uns. This ca1't be
r.-d II I lleart s•il, bat DlUII be
s~wtq tile beart aee. If your
puUer WUII to bid I sll'iD DOW yot

\

t o&lt;E SNOW GODS

H.O.TE ME !

0

0

Do

o. ,..~,..._,, 0

0

0

0

0

ciJi .11011d II.

toDA Y'S QUESTION
Your panqer contmues 1.0 lour

,

'"

•

'

notrump What ~ you do now ?

)

•

(

TQ

·-

carpettng., full ba sem ent has,
large re c r ea tion
room ,
shower , utility R Carportt,

If you are willing to accept responsibility in return for a
future in your own business, write giving"' full personal
qualifications to:
'

TAURUS (AP&lt;II 20-May 20)

2

WEST
•QJ

Rass

.

15, Elec Co 33 .

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22)

your cred1t yo u wr it handle a
delic nte SitUatiOn that alfects a
h •t.m d 111 n m ost com pa ssionate
and u nderst and•ng manner

tKJ97
+Q5
.54 3
· SOUTH IDI
• 10 5

Ohio.
&gt;

·'

Tr~ 1 ls West

.Som ethrng yolj !I do Will g1ve
you a real sense of aciHe ve-m ent and pnda even 1houg h 1t
w on I Appear trl at large 1n th e
eyes of oth er s

i

\

• KJ 9

Offers an exciting opportunitY to operate a business of
your own with a vety small investment. We are interested
in ·a qualified Sales oriented person with previous retail
experience to own and operate a catalog store in Pomeroy,

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

OD- FBI 3; Merv Gro ffi n 4, Andy Groff1lh a, 'Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,33 , Raymond Burr 13
5 30- News 6. Beverly Hillbillies 6; Hodgepodge Lodge 20,
5

(Sept 23-0cl 23)

Thr oug t1 use o t diplom acy and
t::r c t you II rece 1v e co nSi derati o ns tha t w1 tl be de n1ed
othm s e spec ratly by th e OP·
p0$ 118 SeK

(March 21-Aprol 19)

news o t

Your Blrth&lt;loy - Jon. 3, 1175
M a tor go;, ls that you set fQr
you rself 1111s year w11l com e
eas 1er than you f1rs1 ant1c1p ate
Lu ck wi ll play a m1n0 r role but
rnost of me brea ks you II make
on yoll r ow n

.A K4
• J 95 3

(Serving America for~(}() Years)

- L-------------

D.J 13, To Be Announced 33

12: 45-Etec. Co. 33, 12 55-NBC News 3,1S
1·oo-News 3, All My Children 6,1 3; Phol Donahue 8. Young 1!.
the Restless 10; Not for Women Only 15
1. 15-To Be Announced 33.
1 3D-Jeopardy 3,4,15 ; Let's Make a Deal 6, 13, As the Wor ld
Turns 8, 10, Erica 33.
11
1· 45-Maklng Things Wor k 33
2 Oll-Oays of Our L•ves 3,4,15; $10,000 Pyram 1d 6, 13 ; Gu1id1ng
Light 8,10; Movie "Tne Finest Hours" 33.
2· 3D-Doctors 3,4, 15. Big Showdown 6, 13 ; Edge of N1 gh l B, 10

2 11 tfc

+++

LIBRA

'

·-

w1 11 ~l n Jw t l f'f t oday 1n
srtuai iOth wl u•rc rnoney rs In volved t ho~11 yo11 w111 tomorro w
whe n condl t•o ns grow mo re
com plicated

~

By Helen. and 'Sue Hottel

Dear Rap.
Shorlly after I got engaged to Torn, I v:as in an accident that
left me w1th a permanent limp He says he slillloves me and, of
course, I love hun so much It hurts.
But I don't want hun rnarrymg a cnpple out of p1ly. I en
never climb mo1111tains or play tennis with hun again. "I'm not
graceful any more. Sometimes I thmk I'm the ugliest person
alive- and I used to be quite adequate looking. He insists I'm
wrong - I'm "still perfect" to him .
When I tried to break our engagement, Tom wouldn't hear of

8, Movi~'The Birds and the Bees" 13. Mtster

Builw•11kle

Rogers 33, 9 25-Chuc k Whole Reports 10
9 3D-Not For Women On ly 3, Hazel 8; Tattleta les 10, Arthur
Smoth 12; Zoom 33
10 oo-Name That Tune 3,15, Company 6, Joker 's Wild 8,10 .
Nova 33.
10.3D-Winnlng Streak 3,15, Phol Donahue 4, Gambit 8.10
11 :01l-Hogh Rollers 3,4, 15; Money Maze 6, Now You See It 8, 10.
Password All Stars 13, A Skating Spectacular 33
11 : 3D-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15 ; Bra dy Bunch 13 ; Lucy, Show
6; Love of L1fe 8, 10; Sesame St 33.
11 · 55-CBS News 8; Dan !mel 's Wvr ld 10
12 QO-Jackpol3, 15, Password All Stars 6, Bob Braun's 50 50 C

mostly tlllable, TP water. '
c lose to recrea t ion area.

6

Goober 6, CBS News 6,10. Farmers

Daughter 13
30-New Zoo Revue

f./ILL tnm or cui t ree s or
shru bbery
c l ean
o ut
basements, aftrcs, et c 949
3221 or 742 4441
12 15 26tc

.1

Band BD:
Pe rhaps the threat of a walk..,ul m1ght convmce your fath er
- especially after he SejlS the cut on your head.
Agood nursing home w1ll provide the ca re your grandmother
needs. Get your doctor's approval, make a strong case, and
suggest a tnal run Who knows?'Once transplanted, she may
even enJOY her new surroundings. - HELEN AND SUE

6 3D--Five Minutes to L1v e By 4, News 6 , B1ble Answer s 8
Public Affa~rs 10: Blue R•dge Quar tet 13.
6 . 35-Columbus Today 4; , 6 45 - M ornmg ReporL Far mlime

w1 th storage building YOUj
MUST SEE THIS $27,000.
REEDSVILLE - Rt 124-9
ACRES lovely building sites. •

TEAFORD
NEW LISTING -

3, 4, News 13

FRIDAY, JANUARY 3,1975

MONTGOMERY
WARD &amp;CO.
..

unf u rn •shed
apartments ,
2 SM AL L dog s on e dark bro w n
Phone 99 2 5J 34
n amed Tam my , the oth er
4 12 1rc
m a l e light brown L ost .n a r ea
of K 1ngsb ur} , reward offered
PR I VATE m eetm g room for
Ph on e 99 2 5629
..any org an 1zat •on . phone 992
1227 6t p
3975
3 11 tfc

oo- Tomorrow

1

NORTH

BU I L DI N G lo t, 80ft fro ntage
by 165ft Th e second lot on tefl
on R1verv1ew Drr ve. L1n col n
Hil l , Pomeroy , Ohto If i n
ter es ted ca ll 992 3230 afler 5 p

$17.500.00.

POMEROY LANDM.O,RK

· 'f.~

Elders 20, Pathfmder 33
10 oo-Mov1n' On ' 3,4,15 , Harry 0 6,t3 Woman 33

Real Estate For Sale

new 3 bedrooms , bath . gas
furnace , closets. sto'ife a nd
refrigerator . One acre Only

Pricea for I&gt;IUICk Sale

9 DO--I r o ns1 de 3,4, 15 , Streets of San Fanc1sco 6, 13 M ov ie To be
Aflnounced 8; , M ov te " Th,e Se ven Hil ls of Rom e ' 10 The

..

ON YOUR DIAL

f'tlill·'l

-

~0

f1 ... ~""§

Suffer, Utile Children ...
Rap
Three years ago we moved from the City to 1111! country
because my grandmother couldn 't hve alone any more, and she
wouldn 't hve m town.
No one would take the JOb of can~ lor her. Housekeepers
qu1t after a week of her meanness. The doctor says she's semle.
but Mom says she's always had th1s cruel streak and now she's
rea lly indulgmg it She screams, hils, demands and expects. And
I'm the one who gets'most of the work 'cause she makes Mom so
nervous she's about to have a breakdown.
I can't get an outs1de JOb - have to be home every vacation ·
to care for Grandmother. I cau't go out evemngs - prandmother
m1ght need me. I must be patient - Grandmother "1sn'1 herself." All this from Dad, who av01ds her whenever he can He
won't put her in a rest home because she ·has tantrums 11 we
suggest it. (We could afford a really good nursing horne . J
lthmk he's got a gUilt th1ng because he C&lt;&gt;uld never love her,
but why mak~ ME suffer for it? Th1s morrungshe threw a vase at ,
me and I ha~e a big cut on my head. Quite often she throws a
whole plateful of food across the room Her temper flares over
nothing, and you'd better duck or ·you've had 1l. She needs
prolesswnal help Must Mom and I run away to prove thiS to
Dad? - BRUISED AND BEATEN DOWN

Ba ske l ba ll 6 Ne.,..
Pnce is R 1g ht 8, Wild Kmgdom lO To T e ll th e Tr uth 13 G el

Smart 15, Aging

DOZER work , l and c lear mg by
t he a cr e , hourly or cont ract
Farm ponds , r oads , e t c
L arge dozer and operator
With over 20 years e)(
per rence Pull 1n s Excava t1ng ,
Pomeroy , Oh10 Phone 992
2476
12 19 tfc

5232

~

7 30-Hollywood Squares 3, 4, Fred Tayl o r
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.m::s:.::.&lt;::®~~~'«~'%.'~·:--~- E

Generat~on ·Rap -

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s; NejNs 10, Let's Ma ke a Deal 13. To Be Announ ced 15,
Two-Way Street 20; Nova 33.

SEWIN G MAC H INE Repa1rs ,
servtce , all makes, 992 2284
The F abr •c Shop . Pomeroy ,
A ulhor .zed Smger Sa les and
Servrce We sharpen Scrssors
3 29 lfc

Garden $16,500.00
NO MONEY DOWN-almost

HEATERS

--------·-----3 and .&amp; ROOM furn •shed and

1------+--------

·-

READY M! X C O NCREf~ ~
11vered r1ghl to your pr o tect
Fa s t
and
easy
Free
es t•mate s Phone 992 32 84
Goeg l e1n R e ady M1x Co ,
M 1ddleport Oh10
6 30 tf c

carport, 2 outbutldm gs, N!c;e

RJEL OIL

12 31 Jtc

n.(&gt;

WMP0/1390

m

BEND TIRE CENTER

1970 F LEETWOOJP mob• le
SMA LL house, •d ea l for
2
h om e , 112 bath , 2 b edroom
work 1ng men M i ddleport
12x70 Phone 7J2 S86 A
area Phone 99 2 779 t afler 5
..
123 1 3t c
p m

F U RNISHED apt Adults onl y
M •Cfd lepor t Ph one 99 2 3874
LEGAL NOTICE
11 14 tfc
Not 1ce 1S here by g1ven t hat
th e an nual mee t 1ng , of t he
hou se ,
4
sto c kt1'o tder s of
F armers UNFURNISHED
room s and b ath , 1650 Lmco ln
Ban k and Sav ings Company ot
He •gl'1ts •pn.one 99 2 38 74
21t
West
Se co nd
St ree t .
l1l4ffc
Pomeroy Oh 1o , w d l be he l d at
!he 0ff 1ce Df sa 1d ban k in
Pomer o y , Qh10 , acc or dm g to 1IS TR AI LER spa ce . 2 m 1tes from
Pomer o y , R l 143 , Phone 99 2
by Jaws , on th e fh rrd W ed
sasa
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nesda y of January , 1975 at 4 p
10-27 tfc
n1 for ttre purpose ·of etect.ng
d •re ctors and the t'ansact.on of
su ch oth er bus.n ss as may 2 GEDROOM tr~11 ter et corner
of
Broadway and
Elm ,
pro p e.r (y c o me
e fore sa 1d
M rddleport
No pe t s or
m e e t mg ~
c flildr en Call 992 -2580 a fter 6
.
aul E K loes
p m
Se crefury
_.
, l2 ~ He'
Oec 19, 26. J an 2. 9

like a person.

10 11 ttc

T R A ILER for r E'n t or sale , 3
Fou rth Sl M 1ddl eport
b ed roo ms , un furn is h e d
12 31 lfc
ut1 1111es p a•d . toc al ed at n ew
Ho me
Park
1n
M obile
J ROO M f ur n iShe'd apt Ca ll 992
Bu r lmgh am Phone 992 77 51
5908 before 1 p m
12 J llfc
12 31 6tc

I.DSt

CA RPET InSta ll atiOn $1 25 per
yard Phon e R 1chard w est.
84 3 2667
1
12 24 261p

For the Lowe~!

I

J UN K aulo s
c omplete and
d el1 ve red to our yard We P•Ck F U R NISH ED
apa C
nt
,
1
up' aulo bodieS and buy all
ul d 1t1 eS furn 1s1'1 ed , \~t~ b l e
k 1nds ot scrap m etals and
for two work 1n g men or
1r o n R•d er ' s Salvage , St Rt
r etr r ed couple L1v1ng roo m ,
12-1 . R t 4 Pom eroy , Oh 10
k•t c hen Shower and bath On
Call 992 5468
marn h1ghway , Mason . W Va
10 17 tfc
Phone 77 3 5147
10 27 tfc
CA SH pa 1d tor all makes and
model s of mob•le homes 4 RM f urn•shed apt c lose t o
Phon e ar ea code 61 4 423 953 1
Powel l's Sup er Va tu phon e
4 13 tf c
99 2 36 58
11 20/f c

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

R epa1r Ser v 1ce Any t hmg
l1x. ed around t he home , from
roof to ba se men t You wilt
lr ke our work and r ates
Phon e 742 5081
12 29 lfc

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WOMA N to l1 v e rn and aSS ISI
twsband In t he care of h1 s
A N N UAL Deer F eed at the
a1 l 1ng W1f e Room and board ,
Ra c me G un C l ub , Sal Jan J
salary ' t1 m e off Telephone
6 p m O p en to t he pub l i C
992 375 6 befo r e noon or after 8
12 3 1 M e
p m
1 2 3tc
GU N SH OOT M1le Hill Road ,
Jan .:1 , 7 p m A ssorted meals
F a c tory chok ed guns on l y CARHOP w anted app l y In
Spon sor ed by Racme F1re
person a l Craw ' s Steak
D ept
Hous e
12303t c
12 29 10t c

-JlJNKC:A Rs

------------HOME
I mprov ement
and

H ERE F ORD Holste1n Ca lf 1S 10
days old A l so, 352 For d mo tor
and fl at head , 6 cyl Dodge
motor Phone 84 J 2353
12 29 St c

m the Area

CAS HS$$$SF OR
Camp FR YE S TRUCK and
A UT O PART S
Ru11and
Phon e 742 6094
1 2 26tp

WA L L pap er hang m g and a!l
m tenor f 1n 1shmg Phone 742
50 81
12 29 12t p

12 29 6t p

- - - --------

Carrier Wanted

12 29 6tp

CO MPL E TE
2 16
Q/
261
Ch ev rol e t e ng1n e
Frank
Dodd e r er
co
Bo x
162 ,
Coolv1p e. Oh10
1 2 3tp

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

p m

pump

Wanted To Buy

SEPT I C t anks , excava tm g
dump ! r uc k Phon e 742 374 2
12 20 26t c

ol d SSO Phone 99 2 5728 aft er 6

.

.

12 29 t f c

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

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Zoom 20 , What Now, Amenca" 33

8 ,10 ;

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2 ,~ )975

7· QO- Truth or Cons. 3,4, Bowlmg for Dollars 6 . What's My L me

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------------G RE A T DANE P U P S a w ee k s

Pets For Sale

former Umvers1ty of M1nnesota sta r, hJIS been playing
With the Toronto Maple Leafs '
Oklahoma aty farm tean'1 !'n

"If I had known ! _was gomg lo be la1d off, I'd
have run for Congress m the last,e!ection!"

AI

SE P T I C
T A NK S
c le aned
Mod ern Sa nllat1 on . 991 3954 or
99 2 7349
9 1a lfc

For Rent

POMEROY. MOTOR CO.

begmnmg or 1975 than 1974 espe c ially
automob~,
housmg and texliles," 1t adds

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heating serv1ce and
gen11ral sheet metal
Ph. 992 -5682 or 992 -7121
w o ·r k s .
Fr e e
All Me ~ hamcal Work
Estimates .
- Phone 949-5961
Open Mon. Sat
'
Emergency 992-3995
Phone (304) 773 -5503
SA.M. 6 P.M
or 992-5700
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S1S95

1972 DODGE

Alumtnum s1d1ilg-, roo fmg,
co mpl ete r es 1d e nflal con
structton Wirmg, p•umbmg,
elec .
hea ling
k-•t che n
cabtnets etc
27 Yrs ex pen ence m ca n st
trade .

Rutland

V 8 4 d oo r . automat1c tran sm 1SS1on . powe r steermg . a nd
po w er brak es, vmy l 1n ter1or , v myl r oo f , red fm1 sh g ood
w h1t e w a l l t1r es. rad1o , fa,ctory .:nr

energy crunch and International disturbances as the
major problems facin g the
economy m the new year

REMODELING &amp; CONST.

,975

THURSDAY, J.O.NUARY 2,
6 oo- News3.4.8.1 0,15, ABC News6 , Elec Co 20. Caught'" the
Act 33
6 ]()-N BC News 3,4, 15, ABC News 13 , Bew ,lched 6 CBS News

, HEll

JOHNSON'S

~

On Sta te Rt 124, '12 m1 fro m
Route 7 by pass towards

f J n l ~h . del u xe v •n yl 1nfer ror

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ROGER HYSEU'S
GARAGE .

52995

8' F l ~ ts1 d e P1 c kup , 350 V 8,, au to matF c trans , oo wer
st een ng r a d1o loc"l 1 owner &amp; onl y 15,500 m 1tes, gr ey

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T-elevision Log

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:io - 'The Daily li&lt;&gt;ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Thursday, J;m. l , ~IV~75~-----..;·_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _"""..,;...,...,,.,_ _~----····;·.- - - - - - . ; - - - - - - - - - . ,

.
cburt · spoke sman

Weather
Cloudy. chance df ra in or
snow fl urries to n i~ht, lows
around 30. Cloudy Sa turday,
high s in th e upper 30s.
Probability of precipitation 50
pet. tonight, 20 pet. _Saturd'ly

By CHARLOTI'E MOULTON
Bar re tt
WASIUNGTON (UPI) - Jus· McGurn referred to Douglas'
tice William 0 . Douglas, 76, illness as "an apparent cere. who has served on the Supreme bra-vascular accident."
Court longer than any member
"He is currently resting
'
in histnry. today was under comfortably in an !ntensive
inteJI(!ive hospital care - the care unit and is alert, althoush
vi,ctlm or a stroke suff~ed his condition is officially
during a Bahamas vacatio11, "\ categorized as serious, and his
'
For the ~§t. six years vital signs are stable," McGurn
Dou!!las has an electronic heart said .
r-------..----~---·--------.---------· ----------~-.-.----'-------·-~--·-r-----·----- ~--·------·----·--t
pa~maker in his chest. When . · Mrs. Douglas stayed with her
he set his record or 34 years 196 husband ·at the hospital.
days on Oct. 30, 1973, he said
The justice's electronic heart
his doctor pronounced him in pacemaker was !irs! implanted
"line" health.
in his chest in.., 1968. The
The outspoken jurist had )usl battery-powered. device is deI Polyester . Percale . Flannel . Corarrived in Nassau with his wile, signed Ill assure a steady heart
duroy · Upholstery fabrics.
.
Ca thleen, for a short vacation . . beat at a rate app'ropriate lor
He was stricken on New Year's the wearer. Douglas had
...
Eve and taken to Princess experienced an abnormally
Our
e.ntire
stock
of
misses, WOrT) ens,
slow rate.
Margaret Hospital .
juniors and preteen sizes is included.
By an ironic qulrli, his way
After that, Douglas relaxed
misses, half sizes, juniors.
1
home was smoothed by Presi· his pace, cutting down on
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dent Ford, who as House mountain climbing and treks to
Republican Leader led an far countries . He and Mrs
attempt to impeach him in 107~ . Douglas did travel Ill China in
I
.
Ford arra~ged for Douglas' 1974, thus realizing a desire he
I
N_o-iron. polyester-cotton blends · in
physician, Thomas Connally of had harbored for many years.
dtscontmues patterns and colors.
Arlington, Va., to be flown Ill
Douglas was a mainstay of
his patient !rom Andrews Air the "liberal bloc" during the
Force Base.
tenure or Earl Warren as Chief
Then, by presidential order, a Justice. But .over the long run,
C9 medical plane was dis· since he came to.,lhe bench in
patched !rom Homestead AFB 1939 at age 4~. he has been
in Florida to bring Douglas to known as a dissenter, particu·
Washington . He arrived larly alter Burger succeeded
Wednesday morning and was Warren.
taken to Walter Reed Army
The Constitution, he has said
JSSeS
j . Skirts . Blouses.
1
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Hospital.
many · times, was intended to
Chief Justice Warren E. take government "off the backs
Burger n~ti!ied the other or the people .." He abhorred
justices.
censorship, loyalty oaths and
The first press notice by electronic eavesdropping.
Tape players, record changers, air suspension
speakers, AM-FM-FMS tuners. ·

January Clear.a nce-Sale!

VOL XXVI NO. 184

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WOMENS·COATS !! ' DRESSE.S

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Sa e Prices

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Clearance

saIe. pr1ces
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omens • uruors

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SALE. PRICES

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Nora I. Baker died Wednesday
LONG BOTTOM - Mrs.
Nora I. Baker, 65, Rl. I, Long
Bottom, died early Wednesday
morning at Holzer Medical
Center following an extended .
illness ..
Mrs. Baker was born in
· Athens County, the daughter of
the late John and Vida Buck
Hawk. She was also preceded
·in de'ath by one brother, Walter
E. Hawk. ·
Mrs. Baker was a resident of
Meigs County !he gre~ ter part
or her life.
She is survived by her
husband, Seldon E. Baker;
three sons, ·Seldon. Junior
Baker, Pomeroy, Rt. 2; Walter
E. Baker, Tuppers Plains, and
Larry D. Baker, Pomeroy; one
daughter, Mrs. Jennings
(Carol) Jell, Minersville; four
brothers, Glen Hawk, MI.
Gilead; Harold Hawk, Cardington;
Ralph
flawk ,
Delaware, and Floyd Hawk,
EdisOn; two sisters, Helen
Kincade, Crestline and Lucille
Gantz, EsterQ, Fla.; 13

grandchildren, and one greatgranddaughter.
Funeral services will be held
Saturday at I p.m. at the White
Funeral Home in Coolville with
the Rev . Floyd Shook of·
liciating. Burial will be in
Coolville Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
after 7 p.m. today.

MEIGS THEATRE

WARREN, Ohio (UPI) David Furrie, 26, Mineral
Ridge, a Trumbull County
sheriff's deputy, remained in
critical condition at a YoungstoWn hospital Wednellday with
gunshot wounds received
during the armed robbery or a
Mineral Ridge service staUon.
Furrl• was working at the
station and wu dilcovered by
his relief in a backroom. He
!lad been "shot once in the head
and three tlmes in the leg, and
1

Mon~y was misSing 'frorri the
station, Sllld Trumbull County
!lleriff Robert W. Barnett.

Talks resume
in school dispute
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Negotiations were to resume
tllday in the contract dispute
between the Columbus Board
of Education and the Columbus
Education Association.
· The pact covering the teachers expired at midnight Tuesday. ~
A federal mediator said both
sides were still far apart on
salary increases lor the
teachers.

Huheey ll) take
statewide post

•••*****************•*****t*****t

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Fo~,Yo...Dining and
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Listening · :
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Pleasure.;....

I Clearance Sale .
GI'RLS COATS I MENS_5WEATERS

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sleevelss styles.

11
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Pri•Ce

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AND KNIT
s ItDTS
.
ft
JUVENILE SIZES 2 to 12
An ex_cellent selection .

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!· F Y2 PRICE
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Mens Winter Jackets I Clearance Sale
!l
~~7~::.
Ionge~ ja~kefs
I BOYS SWEATERS I
' Sale 1f2 Price t
6 2;
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Clearance Sale ~ Cleara11ce Sale I
y2 PRICE
I
Glassware-- 1MENS SPORT COATS~-------·---· -·--------'--·-1
and Giftwares l :ui~ti~~9 95~otu:~;~ l'Mens Insulated Coveralls t
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$2488 1I
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SAlE "h PRICE I
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Includes our entire stock. Size~36 to 54 . Waist
jackets ·

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· CPO's · Jac

Boys sizes
to
Car.digans
slipovers and sleeveless styles.

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size. While they last.

Selected from stock.

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Reg. $27 .50 Big Ben made by Wrangler. Sizes
small (34-36), medium (38-40.), large (42 -44)
and extr11 large (46-48). So lief color cJiive and
brown canvas. Permanent press. 59'.per cent
colton.· SO per cent polyester . Fully insulated.
Adiustable leg snaps.

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FURNITURE.

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1 Reg.

169.00 Gray Swivel Racker

1 Reg . 1'9 .00 Brown Viny.l Lounge Chair

Sate 85.90
Sate 85.00

1 Reg. 169.00 Green and R_ed
Twee~ Lounge Chair
1-Reg. 139.00 Gold, Beige, Grey Tweed Chair

Sale 85.00
Sate 70.00

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Sale 99.00

1 Reg. 189.00 Red Twee~ Early American Chair Sale 95.00

1 Reg. 169.00 Gold Swivel Rocker
1 Reg. 139.00 Gold Occasional Chair
1 Reg.209.00 Wing Back Floral Chair
1 Reg. 298.00 Red and Black Spa~ish' Chair
1 Reg. 139.00 Nylon Print Occasional Chair
1 Reg. 139.00 Gold Velvet
Occasional Ch.flir

1 Reg . 149.00 'Green Occasional Chair

1 Reg. 139.00 'Green Velvet Stripe Chair
1 Reg. 139.00 Black and Gold Velvet

Living Room Suite
1 Reg .' 479 .00 2 pc . Green Kroehler
Living Room Suite

Sale 85.00
Sale 70.00
~ 105.00
. . 149.00
Sale 70.00

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Sate 7.0.00
Sate 75.00
Sate 70.00

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Sate 70.00

Sf ripe Chair

1 Reg. 129.00 Gold, Brown, While
Print Chair
6 Reg. 69.00 Vinyl TV Swivel Chairs
1 Reg . 139.00 Gold Wing Back Chair
1 Reg. 659.00 2 pc. Rust Kroehler

Sate 65.00
Sate 35.00
Sale 70.00

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1 Reg. 395.00 2 pc. Gold Kroehler
Living Room Suite

1 Reg. 6S9 .00 Black, Red, Gold Kroehter Sola
1 Reg. 189.00 Black Vinyl Kroehler Love Seat
1 Reg. 298 .00 Blue, Green Kroehler Sofa

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Sale 399.00
Sale 299.00
Sale 24l.o0
Sale 399.00
Sale 109.00
Sale 179.00 .

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Knit Goods.
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Gloves ·
Mittens.

Scarfs

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Free tuning and electric damp chaser wit~ each Pi(no.

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Lim ited quantity. .

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.~ .~~l.tE. ·-~·-·J· ~Lt 1h ~RICEL~~~-P_8~~~s

Sale 750.00
Sate 789.00
Sale799.00
Sale 789.00
Sale 799.00

Reg. 950.00 Walnut Spinet Piano
Reg. 1125.00 C!Mrry Spioiel Piano
Reg. 1150.00 Walnut Console.Piano
Reg._112S.OO Pecan Spinel Piano
Reg. 1150.00 Pecan Console Piano · ·
Reg. 1350.00 Walnut Electronic Organ with
Automatic Rhythmn

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Main Store • Toy Store • Warehouse Open· Both Friday and Saturday 9:30 to 8 P.M.

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WASHINGTON (UP)) _

The nation's unem-

~ ploym~nt rate jumped to a 13-year high of 7.1 per
:::! cent in December when approximately 6.5 million

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Americans were out of work, the Labor Department
said today. The jobless rate last reached 7,1 per cent
in May, 1961 and ttxlay's statistics was the highest
since unemployment hit 7.4 per cent. in August, 1958.
December unemployment; led by huge layoffs
in the staggering auto industry spurred in part by
the nationwide coal strike, jumped by 560,000 from

November when the rate was 6.5 per cent.
The one-month 0.6 per cent increase was the
highest since October, 1960 when the rate went up a
similar amount from 5.5 per cent the previous
month . Virtually every worker group was affected
by the increased joblessness. The jobless rate for·
heads of households increased in December from
3.9 tb 4.5 per cent. ·
The incre~ing jobless fate is :!!-!!:::::::::::::=:--::::::::::::::.-==::::::::..-.::;::::::.~::.'t~
expected to prompt action in
COLUMBUS (UPI) Congress when it convenes
Unemployment In Ohio
later this month and from
~GREAT OAKS FROM TINY ACORNS grow, so do great evergreens !rom smaU seed·
President Ford, who is expect· during December continued
to rise sharply witb the
lings. This large tree, which has served as the village Christmas tree on the upper parking lot
ed
to
propose
bold
new
SYRACUSE
Robert village sol icitor .
issued 106 warnings . Fines,
in Ppmeroy, will be taken away any day. The tree was planted in the mid-thirties by the late
number of jobless up by
Wing ett was re-elec ted
The repor t of Police Chi ef costs and bond forfeitures economy measures in his State more than 343,0~0 wben
Philip (Rupe) Killinger, a World War II casualty, in the yard of his late paren\s, Mr ..and Mrs.
president of Syracuse Vill age " Milton Varian was rea d and totaled $4,078.90. The depart- of the Union address to the compared with Decem~er, ~IIQer Killinger, Naylor!s Run, Pomeroy. The seedling was one of several pl~nted by Mr.
lawmakers.
Council and the annual ap- accepted for the year 1974.
ment recovered one stolen
Killinger in his-parents' yard when he was in the CCC of depression years. The tree was given
Ford Tuesday signed legisla· 1973, It was reported today
propriation for 1975 was apIt showed that he drove vehicle. ·
by
the
,.
Ohio
Bureau
of
Ill
thtlviUage by Rupe's sister, Mrs. Philomena Follrod, to use for the holiday season.
·
proved by council in regular 5,437. 8 miles; used 631.5
Bary McCoy, councilman, lion appropriating $4 billion lor Employment Services.
public service jobs and extend· ·
session Thursday night with gallons of fuel; fuel cost was said seedlings could be Ob·
The Bureau of Em·
ed unemployment comMayor Herman
Lond on $359.15; oil and lube, $12. 71 ; ta ined for next spring from the
pensation for unemployed ~!;;3~0ent O~~;:!~es ;::: :::::::::::t~~:~;;:::;:;z~~:&lt;:::::::::
presiding . ·
fuel filler, $3;· wax, $20; tires, Meigs County Extension Office workers . ·
The annual budget total ed $63,84 ; rims, $28. Tota: cos t of by signing an order the last of
unemployed one week or
CANTON, Ohio (UP!) The legislation . authorized
$84,462.62, up from last year by opera li on of new crui ser , January. The seedlings will be
Uere1are this week's winning
more in "be'cember, 1971,
I
$2.5 billion for 33~,000 new jobs.
$23,138.38. Last year's annual $486.70.
placed along Snowball Hill Rd.,
compared with 204,000 lor
numbers in tbe Ohio lottery
This is on top of about $1 billion
appropriation was $61 ,324.24.
He received 99 complai nt.-; ; ~c ouncil agreed.
dra~ Friday:
December, 1973.
already ~llocated to local
In other business, coun cil re- i93 phone calls; investigated 10
Councilman Troy Zwilling
Nu)nber 412 1lour one two)
governments for 17~, 000 public ::::::;:;;;:::::::&lt;;:::::&lt;;::::::::::::$;;;:::::::::$::::::$:::::~~:,:,:
•.
In ""'V box on ticket wbis $20.
appointed Frank W. Por ter as acciden t.-; ; made 56 arrest.-;;' announced the following had service jobs.
pe~ cent annual average
Nulnbers 389 (three eight
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - An statement. "The YCC eampen
been named to firemen 's
Unemployment had reached unemployment in 1973.
nine)
and
751
(seven
live
Ohio
Department of Natural work.aud live in· an· outdoor~ -- --··"' '•
dependency board, McCoy, a 311! year low of 4.6 per cent in
Among
white
collar
workers,
one)
/In
green
and
blue
wins
.
Resources
spokesman said atmosphere that creates ophimself, Eber Pickens, council Octllber, 1973 but that month
$500~·
Thursday a $146,000 federal portunities lor a better un·
members, and Ralph Lavendar the Arab oil embargo began Ill the figure rose to 4.1 per cent in
December,
the
highest
since
N
mbers
389
and
751
in
grant
had been received by the derstanding and appreciation
of the fire department. A fifth ·take its IIlli and since then the
records
on
this
category
were
'blue
boxes
wins
$1,000.
department
for operation or of natural environment."
· member is yet Ill be ·elected by unemployment raie has in·
begun
in
1958.
The
bulk
of
the
Numbers
3B9
and
751
in
The spokesman said the !ltate
two
Youth
Conservation
Corps
the other four members.
By United Press International
creased 2.5 percentage points. increased joblessness among
gre~n boxes eligible lor
(YCC) camps in the state this mu8t match ·the grant with.
SEVERAL HUNDRED THOUSAND PERSONS WERE
Pickens, a member of the
Most of the joblessness in· white collar workers occurred , $300\ ~0~ drawing and swnmer.
money, facUlties and personnel
ADDED Ill unemployment compensation rolls in the week before fire and emergency depart- crease occurred during the last
in
sales
and
manager
forces.
auto)nat(cally
wins
$15,000.
"The
growing
Yf;C
program
in
order lo be eligible.
ments gave the following four months when the rate rose
Christmas and slumps in factory orders and ·the construction
The
state-operated campe
Unemployment among blue ;:,::~:;:;:::~;::::::~:,:::::~::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: JrOvides summer work experiindustry signaled even heavier layoffs in the New Year . The
financial report: lire depart- from 5.4 per cent in August Ill
collar
workers
rose
from
8.2
ence lor thousands Of young are conducted at en·
skyrocketing nurnllet of persons · seeking jobless benefit.-;
ment, uniform fund, $539.35; its new level this month.
Americans
each year," ac· vironmental resource centers
per
cent
oo
9.4
per
cent
strongly indicated another sharp rise in the nation 's unem· fir e truck fund, $1,390.48 ;
Since the data .was collected
Joblessness
4mong
black
cording
to.
a
Natural
Resources at Shawnee State Forest in
ployment rate. The Labor Department was to release December general fund, $289.56; total of during the first · week in
rose
fr6,Plll.7
Ill
12.8
workers
Sciotn County and Zaleski State
figures today.
,
•
$2,219.39. Emergency fund, · December further layoffs have
per
cent
Teen..age
unempJoy.
Forest in Vinton County.
·
It was expected to near, if not reach, 7percent of the nation's
$615.27. The E-R Squad made heen reported in automobile,
ment
rose
from
17.3
to
18.3
per
A
YCC
camp
Is
conducted
work force, adding some 500,000 persons to the November total of
46 runs last year and drove 936 steel and. related industries. cent.
·
each swruner by the Depart.
6 million, or 6.3 per cent. The government said Thursday th~t
miles.
Th~ Meigs Cotmty Sheriff's
ConStruction unemployment
Besides
the
increase
in
the
ment
o!lnterior at Helron Fish
677,800 workers applied lor unemployment insurance the week
Mayor London warned that was 15 per cent in December,
Dep4rtment invesligated a
number
of
workers
unemHatchery in Licking County. A
llefore Christmas. In the week .ending Dec. H, more than 3.3 . th ere are lour trailers whose highest since the recession of
sing!~ car accident on SR 7 in
ployed,
there
was
a
surge
in
the
camp
at Wayne National
million persons received unemployment benefits, up 246,800 from
owners have not complied with 1961.
Salis~ury Twp., Thursday at 7
number
·of
persons
working
in MoiU"oe County is
Forest
the previous week, and the highest since 1971.
· the village l[dinance in regard
p.m. jin which the d• iver was
Two defendanl'l were fined ,- · conducted by the Department
The December unem- part time.
to underPinning. Owners of ployment rate in manufac·
Government· economic ad- cited ~tll court lor no operator's one forfeited a bond and of Agriculture's U.S. Forest
WASIDNG'!i'lN - THE WATERGATE COVER-UP trial is jun~ cars in violation of a turing was 8.6 per cent, double
licenjle. He was Reymond another costs only in the court
over, but the hook is far from closed. Attorneys for the four men village ordinance will be cited uie December, 1973 rate. Most visers predicted laat fall that LitU~ , 44, Racine, w~o was rif Middleport Mayor Fred Service.
unemployment might up Ill 7
The spokesman said the four
convicted New Year's Day- John N. Miichell, H. R. Haldeman,
into court if they do not comply of this was due to the slump in
trav~ing north on SR 7 when Hoffman Thursday night.
in
mid-1975.
But
some
camps
in Ohio would &amp;C· .
per
cent
John D. Ehrlichman and Robert C. Mardian--are preparing within 60 days .
the automobile industry.
the ri~ ht front tire blew out. He
Donald Lovett, 51 , Mid· commodate 368 youths in two
private
·
economists
had
appeals which may take years to resolve. A! the offices of the
Harold Jeffers met with
The December figures left an predicted unemployment was approaching the four lane dleport, was lined $5 and cosl'l four ~week sessions this sumWatergate Special Prosecution Force, it was business as usual as
council in regard to water annual average rate or 5.6 per might reach 8 per cent by mid· from the two lane when he and was given a 15 day jail mer'. Work experience for 60
·work continue&lt;) in a batch of related cases. One of t11ese involves spilling from Snowball Hill eent for .1974 compared with 4.9 1975.
struck drums and signs on the sentence on each of two youngsters per session Is
John B. Connally, former Texas governor and former- U. S. onto his property. Councii
highway . The car was disorderly manner charges, provi(led by the state-run
Treasury secretary. His bribery-perjury case comes to trial in
agreed to remedy the situation
demolished. Little was not Emmett R. Smalley , Mid· ·camps. The federally run camp
March.
by putting two loads of gravel
injured .
dleport, was fined $5 and costs at Helron has. a 2ksmper
Others known still to be under investigation include former
in the area and two more if
on an assured clear distance capacity, and the camp --at
Commerce Secretary Maurice H. Stans; Nixon's secretary, Rose needed . Council later plans to
charge. Robert H. Knotts, 75, Wayne. National Forest· will
Mary Woods ; and close Nixon friend C. G. (Bebe) Rebozo. Two ditch the area so the water will
Vintlln, forfeited a $25 bond
·~ campers a session.
fl posted on an assured clear house
Watergate grand juries are still working, and further in· flow into a ditch rather than on By United Press International central and northern Dllnois
Only
school counselors, con·
A powerful winter stnnn and parts of Wisconsin and .
dictments are expected in the next few weeks and months.
the highway into the Jeffers
distance charge. Assessed serution science teachers or
packed the nation's midsection upper Michigan .
President Ford, who pardoned Nixon of any and all
yard.
cosl'l only on a charge of !ailing designated YCC represenwith
heavy snows tllday and
Two young Nebraskans were
Watergate crimes last September, said it wouldn 't be apThe Syracuse Home Utilities
to underPin a mobile home was tatives can accept student and
JrOpr!ate lor him to comment on the cover-up convictions. On the Co. will increase the gas rates made highway travel hazar. killed Thursday night in a carJohnny Pope, Middleport.
nonstudent camp applications.
area . At pickup truck smashup on
advice of his lawyers, Nixon himself said nothing aQout the case, 10 .cent.-; per I ,000 cubic feet dous throughout
but an aide read reporters a general statement "Former effective in February, under. least six persons were killed in snow-slick u .s . 81, about four
storm-related traffic ac- miles north of Norfolk, Neb.
President Nixon is deepl~.pguished by Watergate and that these
Continued on page 10
cidents.
State police said th~ two
men wbo were among his clo~t aides and their families have
COJ..UMBUS !UP! ) - A
The
stonn'
raged
over
the
persons . in the pickup, Gale
suffered so much and that their lives have heen so tragically
mid-Mississipp'i Valley, Hanneman, 21, and Rodney R. Daytpn paper producer has
touched by Watergate," the state said.
C OF C TO CONVENE
causing the National Weather Greenamyre, 18, both of agre~ to invest . $17 million
Ray E. Gibbs, 84, or 234 businessman , was associated
. The Pomeroy Ghamber or Service Ill issue heavy snow Brunswick, were killed.
WASHINGTON - IDS SKllNG HOUDAY BEHIND him,
over \he next!our years to curb Mulberry Ave. , Pomeroy died with the Rizer Oil Co. , until
In Iowa, eight inches of new · air ppllutanl'l at a Chillicothe at H?lzer Medic.a l Ce nter retirement. He was a veteran
. President Ford tllday begins high4evel meetin gs dealing with Commerce will meet Monday warnings and travelers ad·
at
noon
at
the
Meigs
Inn
.
visories throughout nor· . snow piled up at Red Oak. Des mill It was announced tllday. Thursday evening.
rif World War I, a memher of
charges that ).he Central Intelligence Agency illegally spied on
theas\em Missouri, Iowa,
Continued on page I~
American dissidents.
The an.nouncement was . .. He wa• the son of the late the F&amp;AM Masonic Lodge
Ford scheduled, an early meeting with Secreiary of SUite
made by Booker P. Bunch ,,vice Ar~h and Emma Lilly Gibbs. !Mason, W. Va.) council, and
Henry A. Kissinger, who returned from Puertn Rico Thursday
president of the Mead Papers He was also preceded in death Commandery at Pomeroy.
Mr. Gibbs is survived by his
night on Air Force 2 w'ith Vice President Nelson A. Rockefeller.
Divislop, and . Ohio Attorney by a daughter, E li zabeth
One of the 7'1 bills left for action before Saturday is t)le trade
General WilliamJ. Brown, who (Betty Jane ) Nicely , in 1968. wile, Louise Vining Gibbs; one
bill, which .Kisslnger .and Ford both lobbied ,for. Ford signs it . ITHACA, N.Y. (UPI ) - A
repr esents the Ohio EnMr . Gibbs, a vromin ent grandchild, Bee Jay Swan,
Sullivan,
a
former
Cornell
found
in
present
commercial
viro~mental
Protec
tion
Columbus; three . great ·'.
tllday in an East Room ceremony, giving the Sqviet Union the · variety of ci&gt;rn with high
graduate
student
now
with
the
hybrids.
Agency'
.......
:-._
..................
;{
..
0:·:-'
:
•:-:·:
..
X• .•.
....o.« ;o.-.;o;o-.o;?;o, • , ._ · : ,' • • .I
grandchildren, Tim, J~ck, and
same trading treatment as other Western_!)3tions. Congress resiStance to two major insect
Th.e Cornell com also differs
under the agreement, Mead
Tonya Swan ; three sisters,
passed it oitly with assurances the Ru'!"i;ms wotjld liberalize pests, the European corn borer Ul)iversity of Delaware, made
EXTENDED OUTLOOK ·
U)e discovery as they were from present resistant hybrids will iQstall equipment designed
Lena Gibbs, and Freda
their policies toward emigration of Soviet Jews.
and the sugar cane borer, has test~ numerous strains of in \hal the mechanism of tn remove particulate 11)8tter
Sunday through Tuesday,
Lepa c ~, both of Mason, and
heen discovered by New York "exotic corn" from Central resistance is apparently some·
chance of rain or snow
Emma Shoemaker, or Scio1
from its· power b&lt;Jiler and
•
State College of Agriculture
thing other than the antlblotic recoJ ery exhaust at the Sunday and agaln on
Ohio·.
·
WASHINGTON -THE MIND OF JUSTICE William 0. and Life Sciences scientists . America.
1
Tuesdap. Highs In the upper
Through cooperation with chemlcal DIMBOA found .in
Funeral
Servicif
will
be h~ld
Douglas_was not Impaired by his stroke, and his dcctor says the
Vernon E. Gracen, a profes. the International · Center for most resistimt plants, Gracen Chilli~othe mill.
.
. 30s and the lower 4~s and ·
Saturday
at
3:p!lll.
~t
.
Ewing
dean of the Supreme Court is nowhere near death .• ·
~ - ~ _ - sor at the Cornell University•
·
Con~truc~on of tw!' eleclows in the 20s.
Maize
and
Wheat
in·
Mexico,
said.
•
trostatlc
precipitators
will
Chapel with the Rev. carl
Douglas, .76, "feU and had some !"eakness" Tuesday in his based college, said Thursday,
Research 'to determine the begin , this spring. When all '*'®~,- .:.:::w..."''*'~$Z.&gt;~;::w.:~~ Hicks or!ictating. Burial will be
hotel room in Nassau, where he and his wif~ Cathleen had gone "This is the first time coni lias Gracen said, experimental
in · Beech Gr!We Cemetery .
for a short holiday. 'f11e court's spokesman, Barrett McGurn, .ever beenfound to have built-in v~ietles will be tested in the mechanism of resistapce is unil'l are completed in 1978,
United
States
Asia
Africa
and
continuing
with
the
Mead
1.will
be
removing
more
SQUAD
.CALLED
may call at the funeral
Friends
said Douglas' condillon is described as "serious," b)it ther~ W'!"
resistance Ill both types of com South Ameri~a. '
cooperatfon
of
Prof
.
Ward.
M.
·
than
99
per
cent
or
the
par·
The
-Pomeroy
Emergency
home any time.
110 sign of mental impairment. He was being treated with an· ' insects."
Corn that is res!Btant to the Tingey • an entomologist at the ticulates from its boilers and Squad went Ill the horne of Mrs.
ticoagulants to lessen.the possibility or blot clots moving from his
"The discovery represents a borer is not new. But, Gracen college.
f
d'
tn th ' Paul B
Ch · te at 8 56
heart, which is regulated by -~ electric pacemaker. .
He said, researchers ar.e now urna qes, accor tng
e
.
aer near es r
:
major step forward in develop- said, ' the new var•'ety has
I
announcement.
Th~
agreement
'.p.m.,
Thursda¥.
Mrs.
Baer,
LOCAL TEMPS
ing corn resistant to the com resistance to both generations developing resistant mbre~ also requires Mead to limi\ IJihO was · ill,. w~s tak~n Ill
EGYPI'IAN OFFICIAL1S BELIEVE APOWER STRUGGLE
The
temperature in downborer lor use throughout the of the European CQm bOrer lines that should be ready for sulphur oxide emissions by Vete~an~ M•mor1al Hospital
town
Pomerpy
at II a.m. today
within the Kremlin may have !or.ced ~viet leader Leonid I.
wo&lt;ld ," Gracen said.
which·
occur
during
·a
single
field
trial
In
New
York
and
contrnlling
the
-quality
or
coal
where
she
.
was
treated
and
was
3B
degrees
under ex, .
' Brezlmev to cancel •his vl &lt;i t to the Middle East; the Beirut newsHe said he and Prof. SjJe grounnu season -..a -trait not other areas "within a year or
r 1 d
-r
.
Continued
on
page
10
1
tremely j:~oudy skies. ~ .
......
two. "
burned in rer boi ers.
e ~ase .
-~ .
-1·

hitting·drums

Two fined in

go

Midwest socked

$17 milli0

m{lrked for
clelaner m·d.

Ray Gibbs, 84,.is

1 Reg. 269.00 Green, Gold, While
Kroehler Love Seal .
·
Sale 166.00
1 Reg. 398.00 Brown Velvet Kroehle' Sola
Sale.249.00
1 Reg. 319.00 Brown Velvet Kroehter love Seal Sale 199.00

'&gt;

Discontinued colors and fabrics . Lee
Tech Twill work Pants . ShirtS: Not
every size in every color. Pants
regularly 9.98. Shirts regularly 8.98.

l

.!: ~:!,· in Decell_lh~r are blamed

•
.,.,

-1

Coal strike, auto slum

ihe

/' I
LEE WORK .
• I SAL~ $21 84 . ~-~,.;,;:,--;;-Pants - Wo~k S~uts 1~::::~::-r-Zt::::~:·l Kimb~ll ..Pianos a~d Organs
. ·Clearance Sale

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

mayor's court

1 Reg. 198.00 Early American

Print Lounge Chair

TEN CENTS

Auto wrecked

M

I

Slipover.Sweaters - CoatStylesandSieeveiess ·
styles. Crew and turtle neck sweaters.

.•'.,

Clearance Sale

I1
I

Clearance Sale

!
lt

I!
I

... _._.._.._:._.._._.._..._.._.._.._.-._.._....-....._..~.__.,-1

Pomeroy . :

\

1

Includes all of our bbys winter jackets ·. CPO
shirts and Jac shirts · Juvenile sizes 4 to 12 and
8
20
Boys sizes to ·

:,...................................
·~

Ii sweaters
Includes our entire !tock of mens
. coats . sl ipover and

PHONE 992-2156

Two youth camps
in Ohio assured

1

.

!,. .TONIGHT·9:30 TO 2:00 i.
j The LWEIGs-~ J
:

our Entire stock Included

SALE PRICES I
1f2 p ICE
1 ON SALE AT THE TOY STORE
--------·--·-·----·------- ~--------·--- ---·--~----·;
IN THE MIDOLE BLOCK
Clearance Sale
l Clearance Sale
! .
.
BOYS WINTER JACKETS he_BOYS SW M~ERS . p~!~es~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

~

GEO; HALL
AND THE HALLMARKS

·

TOY SALE
l
l ·. ·
j SALE - ~ PR.ICE ~

Clearance Sale

~

:.,.
l

earance a e

1

FRIDAY. JANUARU, 1975

Syracuse __council

--~~M-~!~~-~.~----~-~~~~-!~!~~!~_.J
7-14, 3-6x. Infants and Toddlers sizes.

COLUMBUS ( UPI) - The
TONIGHT, JAN. 2 .
Ohio Dairy Products Associa·
NOT OPEN
lion Inc. will install George M
Huheey of Qncinnatl as presi·
Fri.-Sal..$un.
dent during its annual meeting
· Jan. l-H
here Jan . 12-14.
·
.THE LAST OF SHEILA
' Hulieey is president of the
ITechnicolor)
Starring Raqvel Welch
Cedar Hill farms Dairy Inc.,
'
·
lPG!
Cincinnati. He succeeds David
Colorurtaon:
A: Davis, Borden Inc. general·
Plra~ Byrd
~.)
manager in Columbus as
. . .5•ho•w-St•a•rts-•t.·7:0011111ip•.m•.-•
.
president or the statewide
. organization.

:

l Gowns . Robes . Pajamas. Selected
from our regular stock.

l

AND SNOWSUITS

remains critil al

!

Sleepwear !----~~~~-!~!~-~-~---~
Cl
S 1

·1Womens

AND TODDLER BOYS SUITS

Sheriff's deputy

fool.

Vererapi Memorial Hoapttal
Tuesday Admlulons Virgil Yarbrough, li~tland;
Nellie . Dunn, Middleport';
Gladys . DIIlon, Reedsville;
Georgia Oiler, Middleport;
Donna Pierce, Long Bottom;
Martha Johnson, Racine.
Tuesday Dlscbarses - Doris
Haynes, Dores Arnold, Shirley
Rosser, Joanne White.
Wedllesday Admiulons : Rocky Hupp, Racine; Al~rt
Hill, Long Bottom; Rhonda
Jeffers, Pomeroy; Sally
Gloeckner, Racine ; Floyd
Bush, Letart, w. Va. . ·
Wednesday Discharges Mildred Bissell, Ermalean
Johnson, Ada Stigliano. Leo
Jarvis, Rocky Hupp. ·

GIRLS · oRESSE~

..

Wingett to lead

I COMPONENT SYSTEMS

Clearance Sale

.

wASHINGTON (UP I) - The cost of things farmers had to buy during 1974 averaged
16per cent above 1973 while the prices of things they sell rose only 6.3 per cent, a year·
end Agriculture Department summary says .
The price and cost summal")l from tlie Crop Reporting Board disclosed sharP dlf·
lerences In the way different groups of farmers were affected. Producers who grow
croJl!i found their higher cost rates more than of!set by a 30 per ceot increase In average
prices. Livestock pr.oducers found their prices averaging 7per cent below 1973.
The 16per ce nt gain reported in overall Iarmer spending, lor 1974 includes prices of
both production goods and family living ilems ranging from food to furulrure, along with
an estimate of changes in interest, tax and wage expenses. This annual average fisure,
wblch Includes a 15 per cent gain In production expense rates compared with 1973, un·
derstates the way the cost situation appears to farmers currently making their 1975
production plans.
1

@

t
&lt;·:
~j~L::: : : : : : : ;: : : : : ~: : : : : : ;: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : ;: : : : : : :: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : &lt;=: : : : : : :I!,
~

t"--·~---·-----------------.._;-+-·--..:..-.--·------·----------J

Clearance Sale

Squeeze on farmers Ag figures show

f.:.:

~--·---·---·--------·--.....

Clearance Sale

1

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

'

~

IlSHEETS AND PILLOWCASES
•
I
. . 1.
--·---------·---·----~-·-~---~----·~---,--·----·---~ . SALE Y2 PRICE
Clearance Sale

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OH.IO

f'''''**'""'''';:;;,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,;,:;:,:,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,:,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,;,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,~,,,,,,~,,:;:;,~:,:;:;:,:,:;:;:~~«';'''''~''fl

~ ~~T~~e~ec:~~~ ~fn:r~~~~s, d~~~:e:u~t~; LL~A!~--~_P.~!~~-Sal

1

•

entine

Nation's unemployment rate
jumps to 13-year high of 7.1%

p~lECtGO~~s

j

a1y

Very little actual digestion
takes place in the stnmach.

"""

...

I ,Clearance Sale · ·

Now YouKnow

De votl'd 1'o '/the lutere11ts Of The Meig11-Mason Area

SALE STARTS . FRID.AY AT 9:30. A.M.

Clearance Sale .

.

. '·

-~
A

de~d

Borer free corn ·discovered

x.•,•;o.·;,o~-·;,o;o,.v.,Y..~
._"'&lt;QOI;QITF..o7"F~

.

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            <text>Newspaper</text>
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        </elementTextContainer>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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              <text>January 2, 1975</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
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    <tag tagId="214">
      <name>baker</name>
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  </tagContainer>
</item>
