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28 ~ The Sunjlay Tunes- Sentuwl, Sunday , Jan

~~~~
.
ATHENS Ohw tU Pil , Oh10 Umverstty,led b) Wall&lt;!r
LuckeUs 27 pOints, was "'
command all the WB\' m
handmg Kent Stale a 68-53 MtdAmencan Co nferen ce loss
Saturday afternoon
For the Bobcats, no" 54 on
the )ear and!-(} m the MAC. tl

-r

I

5, 1975

.¥

I

I

1
1
I

.

-------------------------,

D
1•
r ate me
I

'

I

1

Adult-ed classes
: begin on Tuesday
I

I
!
I

I

obeytng safety rules but for the
suppor t shown the department
good safet y ru les clurtng the through the year
The department had 49 calls
twildu) SCcJSOn and th e
ViN'tON - Nt\1 Adult IJ,Iot&lt; ddult
bas a:
educatiOn
durtng
the year whwh mcluded
Porner{'
Y
Fire
Department
rdtH HtJCJn
thtSSCS
drC p1 ogrtlii iS purpose Is to ass1st
sci!Ctlult•d to beg tn Tuesday at adults O\ er the a~c nf 16 111 £t ppr ec i&lt;:~te s 1t , Fuc Ch1ef tv.o false alarms, 12 residence
ftres 10 brush ftres etght
N111 th Ga lha fTt gh School prcpanng for the Crener.1 1 Chwl es I.eg.JJ sau.J
[
egar
sarll
the
commumty
auto~oblle
flv·e business
(~alha Academ) H1 gh Sehoul
~ rlu c.ttwna l
DC\' elopmcnt
houses
f1ve
runs
to assist m~
got
through
the
holiday
season.
K\ger Creek H1gh Sdwul , .md rxdlllllldtiOn
cludrng four m Mtddleport and
H~mn.1n 'I rau· Htgh &amp;houl
Adul ts \\ho pa .s!-/thrs tes t will v.1 thout cill\ fires I .e gar ex
POMEHOY
Pomeroy
rcsrdcnls app"renlly practtced

a county trash con tamer f1re, a

coalltpple, a motorcycle and a
Junk automobile hre
r
Losses durtng the ftrst half of
the
year ran htgh COlJlpared to
By Hohnrt Wil.wm Tr.
the losses by hre durtng the
was their fourth wm m a ro~
last
stx months of 1974, Chtef
AS the yem 1975 unfold:.,( , '"''' Counu"ns c1111 hopl'fulil look
OU led 34-24 at halftuue and
Legar
reports In the first half
grabbed tts btggest margm at forward wtth reasonable conftdence that rt wtll be a gootl 12
bf
the
year, Bowers· Dnve-ln
55-37 on a Jumper b) Tom months desptte nattonal problems
alone had a ftre wtth losses III
+-j +
Hester n Hh 12 m1nutes
pres~t.:tl
his
appreue~tJOn
to
the
one
Jn
Mason,
two
shed
or
barn
the $10,000 range and m the out(
ld
S.Sl'S
"Ill
be
Offl'
l
~d
Ill
ru
e
l\(
d
c~r
frfJl'
d
t
e
flurn
the
TRANSITION from old to new ts dttftcult for some, but tt
rematmng
pubiH.
:
out
unl
)
fo
r
th
eJr
f1
res
a
chem1
tal
spi
llover
run
,
of-town
ca tegory, a ftre arthe
malh~matr c s,
re.acl1ng Ohw .Slate Dcpnr tm ent of
should gtve us all another opporturu t; tv avotd rntstakes of the
J
D
Gnmm
home III Columbta
Engli sh. bu srt·
st 1ence t:du&lt;-.Jtwn whtt h Is equiva lent
past year and make the best posstble use of the a&lt;compltshments
Township had losses of $24,000
1\metlt.:an H1stur y and t.:on~ tv ,r hu.~h school diploma Th1s
of the preceding perwd
WANTS NO SCHOOL
In the ftrst half-of 1974 there
sumer
educ,rtwn
r
ertJf1
cale
ma)
be
used
fr11
+++BOSTO~ t UPI I Ma)Or
WA'l
E
R
TESTS
SET
were
30 calls wht le m the
The
purpose
of
lhts
program
emplo}rnent purposes and
AS we prepare to start the second week of 1975, somethmg
Kr \ 111 H Whltr met w1th school
CHARI
ESTON,
W
Va
second ha lf of the year there
IS to assist the residents of enrollnwn t 1n nruny colleges
new (for those of us 40and under) has captured our attentwn Supertl'llcnde nt Wilham J
1 UP! I
- The U S En - wet e only 19 calls whtch toGallra County rn rece 1vrng the and umvelsit ies
gold
Last
week,
for
the
ftrst
tUlle
smce
1933,
gold
bulhon
I "·"l and other offtc tals
\ 1ronmental
Protection eluded 10m-town ca lls and niiie
equn.alent to .r h1gh .Sl huol
Uu~ses meet or1 Tuesday and
(Con trnued fi om page 151
Saturda) and ta iled for the ownership by Um,ted States cttizens became legal.
Agency
wtll
undertake
a out of !ow n Total losses for the
d1plom.t
J'hur sda} from 6·9 p nr There
permanent clos tng of racially
nattonwtde study to determme las t stx months of the year
1 he adult " '"Y obta111 the 1s dbsoluteh no cos t to the accused of ct ossmg a state
troub led South Boston Htgh
\\hether
dnnkmg water can be amoLUl ted to only $8,823 for the
eqwval en t to a h1gh sdw,ol student
boundarj In conspiring to
Sd1ool l thmk tl should he
hazardous
to hea lth The EPA 10 ca lls wtth $8,123 of the losses
d1ploma bv passtng th e
Anyone
lllt eres ted
1n mctte a not at the 1968
dused and an alternative s1te
w11l
test
water
supphes m 80 betng on one-fire, at the Metgs
Gen er,li t·:ducattona l eruollment tn the adult bc~ ~Jt: DemocrO:Jlic Natio nal Con.
should be found because there
c1lies around the nation to fmd Inn Total losses for the las! SIX
Developmen t Examrndt iOil, L'ti uc.ttwn cla sse~ may ca ll ventwn
IS no educa t10n gomg on
Ellsberg was accused of out 1f they conlam ca ncer months for out~of~lown £1res
whtch ts gtven through the Ho\\,ud ~eckdlll~ at 388-8346
there,' Whti&lt;' satd durtn~ a
ran $2 050 for the mne calls
stealmg, espiOna ge and con. causmg agents
Gall tpolts Ctt) Schools TIIC 11r !88~8724 m the evenm g
bre"k tn the lengthy meetmg
sptracv to obtam the Pentagon
Papers about the Vtetnam war
The Berngans, who are
NOVELIST DIF.S •
Catholic prtests, \\ere accused
IWMF I UP!) - Carlo Levt,
RACINE---Spokesmen satd Memorral Church Go ld te of consptrtng to blow up
the IIO\ eltsl \1 ho portrayed the
Saturday the new ambulan ce Gtlland, Jack Sha1pneck, heatmg tunnels 111 Washmgton
c~ge.ol d peas,Jn t world of
COLUMBUS (UP! )
teachers' demands, tt would
for the Ractne P.R squad Davtd L Hrll, Dm lene Juslts. and to ktdnap Secretary of
sou thern ltaiv and the new
Negottattons broke off late have been necessary to seek
purchased tn Januar) of 1974 Albert Htlt, Charles Baker, State Henry A Kissmger
\\ Orld of ff1sc1sm m Chnst
was patd fot tn full on De&lt;' 23 Gary Wtllford. Mr and Mrs
The Gamesvtlle Etght were Saturday m a wage dispute voter ap proval of an
Stopped .JI Ebolt, · dted of
The ve htcl e cost
ap- Kenneth Thetss, Harry Curlts, accused of conspmng to create between the Columbus Educa- emergency tax levy smce the
br Dnc hml pneumonia at the
proxtma tely $13,000
Hazel Car nahan, Charles havoc at lhe 1972 Repubhcan tion Assoctatwn, whtch repre- school budget does not have the
Rome Polvchntc Saturda) He
sents the ctty's 5,000 teachers, funds to cover tt
PLACER GOLD DISPLAYED - Stanley Evans dtsplays
lhe members of the sq uad P1 les Mt and Mr s Lee NatiOnal Convention
\\Hs72 l'heaulhor,pamter and
two ounces of placer gold m pan above valued at ap" If the board would offer the
Mttchell- who himself took and the Columbus Board of
are maktng kno11n lhetr ap Enoch, Isabe ll Stmpson,
one~hme Commumst sena tor
proxunately $400
Educatton
less
than
two
days
amount asked, we would have
prectalton to the 1estdents of Charl es Alku e, Helen Stmpson, part tn dtscuss10ns of G
!tad been hosp tt ahzed on
before
a
walko~adline The
to have a maJor local tax mGordon
Uddy's
plan
to
ktdnap
th
e
area
[or
th
e
many
J.tlhan
Ha)man,
S
W
Durst,
+++
ChnstllM S Drw
U&gt;achers
wUI
holq
a
mass
crease
because I can't see any
demonstra
tiOn
leaders
at
the
MOST indtvtduals under 40 have probably never even seen donahons and the busmessmen Junwr Spalll1. Het bert Roush,
meetmg
Sunday
afternoon
to
pro[ection
that would mdteate
gold,let alone own some That's probably one reason why many of Metgs County for thetr Dan Sha 111 , Mr and Mrs 1972 GOP conventwn- tesufted
discuss
developments
before
the
state
would
approprtate the
Grover Sals•r. It Ramona m the Gamesvtlle Etght tnal
showed lots of ctmostty but cautiOn when tt became avatlable on frnanctal support
Oue defendant m tha t tnal, the deadlock and posstbly take amount of money requested by
the trading market last week
"
Con tttbu ttn g donati ons In Vonke1s Vug1e Ours, Harr)
ORERLJN WINS
Scott
Carmi, satd "The con- a strtke vote . No further the CEA," he satd
Decelnher were Roy Pearson Swan, Gracte Roush, Ra lph
+++
STEUBEN\i!LLE,
Ohto
Burgess satd the teachers
NONE of Galltpolls' three ban~ IS handlmg any type of gold
Evelyn C Young, John Hall, Radchff e, Ronnre Sa lset, sptracy that extsts ts a con- negottaltons were scheduled
(UP!) - Jtrnmy Jones and
Jack
Burgess,
chtef
CEA
were stU! wtlling to bargain,
Jt·r ry Saunders scored 16 Spokesmen satd, however, that tf any of thetr customers Forrest VanMeter Gm rett Martha L Beeg le Ora Bass, sptracy on the part of the Ntxon negottator, satd "the school bu t tf a stnke became
adtmmstratton
tv
silence
any
(
Commerctal
&amp;
Savmgs,
First
Naltonal
or
Dh10
Valley
Bank
)
are
Ctrcle
Douglas
Johnson,
Wavre
C11cle,
Verna
Ctrcle,
pomts aptece Saturday to lead
Albert Htll, Jt , Joe Swam, Okey Paynter , Charles K person, orgamzahon or board had refused to budge necessary, he believ'ed most of
Oberhn to a 6%6 vtclory over mterested, they wlll be referred through proper channels
Fred Sham. Ft eeland Noms, Spencer, C IV Proffttt, poltttca l party whose acttons from tis posttion of approXI- the teachers and the non+++
.5teubenvllle
TIIOSE of you who have never seen gold wtll have a chance
Etleen Buck, Carroll Netgler, Clarence Baker, Mt and Mrs do not remforce the Ntxon ad- mately a 4 per cent pay In- teachmg personnel would stay
crease,'' while ''the association off the JOb.
to see two ounces of placer gold on display (one day only)
Mr and Mrs Harry Willford Davtd B Sayre, Mrs Ruda A muustrahon. ''
pared close to $4 mtlllon of the
" Parents should thmk twtce
Monday at Stanley Evans' Last Chance Carry.Out at Fourth
In
the
Watergate
tnal,
Mr and Mrs Ross Scat ben y Dw st. Mt and MIS Ralph R
demands
m
its
package
to
a
12
about sendmg chtldren mto
Ave , and Pine St., ln GallipoliS.
Mr and Mrs Hornet Oatley, Henderson PomerO) Nat rona! Mttchell, Haldeman, Ehrlich+++
Mr and Mrs Earl Shuler, Mr Ba nk , Gene and Chat les man and Mardtan were ac- per cent base proposal, which schools where there are not
EVANS satd the placer golrl was mmed recently by Larry
and Mrs Wmston Va&amp;ne). Beegle, Legar Monument Co cused of consptrmg to obstruct we thmk ts fatr at a time when competent teachers," Burgess
Burns on his ranch In Wblte Sulphur Sprmgs, Montana A frtend
JUStice m an effort to conceal we hitve 12 per cent tnflatton " satd
Halite
Payn ter,
Plants and Mts Gladys Shtelds
Burgess satd the CEA would
of Evans purchased the gold from Burns for apprmamately $400
"I would say parents should
top-level mvolvement tn the
recommend
the teachers reJect follow the normal precautions
while hunting out west It ts rated 919, whtch ts near perfect pure
Watergate buggmg Twent}
gold from the ground
other persons, mcludmg NIXon, the 4 per cent offer, addmg he they would on any school day,"
+++
were named as unmdtcted C(). felt "an overwhelmmg maJort- Ellts satd, adding puptls should
ty" would favor holding a go to thetr usual bwldmgs "as
BURNS mmes gold on hts ranch for a hvmg He starts when
In ptoneer devs. good
Ert ol Ptckett Hollywood, wet e Mr and Mrs Larry conspirators
strtke
we don 't know when teachers
netghbors helped rebuild the earth begms to thliw tn the sprmg, and works unttl the ground
Flonda, fle\1 to Coh1111bus then Stante\ and Anna Marron
TheA tm anar
"About
a
2-1
ma1onty
of
ali
freezes
late
in
the
fall
He
relaxes
durmg
the
wmter
months
would
arrtve or at what
when e home wes dedrove here to spend a recen t Mtss Nancv Smtih , Columbus,
By Umt ed Press Internahonal teachers, members and non- butldmgs "
Burns
goes
through
10
yards
of
dtrt
m
order
to
obtam
two
ounces
stroved. Todev, a Stela
\\Cekend w1th Iu s mother, and Reece Tt ather, Pm tsmoth
Today ts Saturda\, J.1n 4 the members, now favor a work
Farm Homeowners Policy of gold. He usually goes through 40 ya rds of dirt a day Thus far,
r t~ u rci KI ebs and hts Guests of Mull Gdlm'l-aJ fourth day of i975 wtth 361 to stoppage," he said "It's gomg
With
_ he has mined more than 10 acres on his ranch. Once he ftmshes tn
daughters , Rtck11 and Rona were M1 and M1 s Rtcllctrd follow
to be unpleasant if we have
an area, he reclaU!ls the land and moves on
Hts grandmothet Maude Pm son~ and sun, Dt~yton and
The
moon
Is
m
1ts
last
one
We're hopeful if there lS a
Continued from page 20)
+++
Holcomb, who had spen t some the Leon Wooclrum famt l) of quarter
stnke,
tt wtll not be of a long land belongmg to- Wtlhamsons
BURNS' ranch is located near Helena, Montana, where
ltme \\tlh her daughier and McArthur
The m'SI-mn g stars arc Mars duration 11
Nelson Story, a Gallia Countlan, was the first rancher to drtve
and said that he saw some tile
family 1n Ccaii[OI ma, flc\\ to
Mt
and
Mt
s Cec tl Gtll ogl} and Saturn
Dr John Eilts, supenn- outlets wh1ch were dtschargmg
catUe through Indian temtory more than 175 years ago Burns Columbus and ac&lt;:ompamed
and fa mtly attend ed a farntl;
Ti1e evemng stars are Mer- tend ent of schools, satd steady streams of water. Thes~
mtnes approximately $1,600 worth of gold a day m his one-man Enol to her home here '
a~~~~~~~t!hel same "good operation
gathermg on Chnstmas eve at curv. Venus and Juptler
classrooms would be kept open tile systems had been mstalled
Those of you who are Interested and are willing _to
n1
principle to
Mr and Mrs Earl Sl&lt;lrkey the home of Mt and Mt s
Those born on thts date arc Monday if the teachers dectded by Henry Wtlliamson and his
"risk" some cash fpr gold can do so by callmg Burns, area cocle
""'"" 't RSUfiRCI.
JOtned their grandchildren and Hmle\. HHmng, Pome r oy
under the stgn of Caprtcorn.
to strike There are 1110,000 son Juruny 15 to 20 years ago
406 M7.J546, m White Sulphur Sprmgs, Mont famthes Mr and Mrs La11 1 Othe1 s present were Mr and
It c~n IIU!omatically lncreue
S1r Isaac Ne\\ ton, discoverer pupils attendmg 170 schools
'
+++ TilE DITCHER has begun
Clark, Tamara and Penn) of Mts Gene Lambert Charlotte of the Ia\\ of gravtty, and here.
your prot~ t l o(1 as the &gt;~•lue
TWENTY YEARS AGQ. from the !ties of the Daily Tnbune
ot vour hom e mcreases
work on the Glenn Holland
Chester and Rev and Mrs and Don, Mt and Mrs Davtd actress Jane Wyman were born
So 1f somethms happens,
" We have a senous farm out Sandhill Road. One of
and weekly Galha Times ... Harold Wetherholl named secretary
you II be able to rebuild
David Wrseman, Renee , Evan Abbott, Mt and Mrs Kenneth Januar} 4ih - he tn 1642 and obliga tion to many parttes (to
• treasurer of Galllpohs Savings &amp; Loan Company
Apyour home tomorrow tht WtY
the ftrst dratnage lmes InDavtd
and Owen Earl of G1 over wtd clu ldi en, Mr and she 111 1914 "'
It 1s today Call or come In
stay open) and the sertous stalled was from the creek to
proxunately 100 electricians go on strike at Kyger Cr1;0k Power
at the home of Mts Marvtn Whtte, Demse and
On thts day m hiStory
salary constderatton, whtle the road and parallel with the
CARROL K. SNOWDEN Plant . GaiUa County enters 37th straight month wtthout auto iVoodsfteld,
their son.m.law and daughter Bn an, and Mr and Mts Bytne
In 1885, tlr Wtlltam Grant of extremely Ullportant, ts not the road. Mr Yoho said that this
fa tallty ... Pollo campaign off to !lymg sl&lt;lrt here _. Record 870
Park Central Hole! Bldg.
Second Avenue
tlabies born In Holzer Hospital durmg 195-1 . John W. (Btl! ) Mtlls Mr and Mrs Roy W1seman m Vaughn all of the PometD} Davenport Iowa perform ed only vartable whtch we must was an extremely wet area and
Hm I Isonville on Chri stmas .1re&lt;-1
Ga llipolis/ Oh1o
the ftrst appendectomy The consider t'' Ellis said
named new Kiwanis Club president . $600,000 lake proposed for
that water was seepmg out of
Eve
for a fanuly gathermg
Phone44~0
Cht
1stmns
dmnei
guests
of
patten! made a complete
The school offtctal satd if the the grolDld mto the ttle all
Gallia County . County reported $36,000 m the red ... C L
Home 446-4518
Mr and Mrs Earl Holland, Mr and Mrs Edrl Starkey 1ecoverv
board had agreed to the along the ditch
(Johnny) Ecker one of 59 men selected to go on tour with Ohio
iiiI ' fMt} tqh,
Jt
and
three
sons,
Phoemx,
\\CI
e
theu
son s~In ~lmv and
Wesleyan Umversity's Glee Club. GAllS nps Jackson 75-55 for
Srlll ,,,. It Mfrl
~
26th straight Southeastern Ohto League wtn .. Blue Imps crush Artzona VISited hcte WJth h1s daug hters, Mr and Mt s Roy
mother, E:len F acemy1e Wtseman Hlllttsonville and
STATE FARM FIRE
Ironboys 57-28 for 36th strBighl hardwood VICtory
un cle and aunt Mr and Mrs Mr and Mt s Donald Jones,
•ltd Cuulftw Comptny
Homt OtliCI
Vtctor Perry c~n d oth e1 Nelsonvtlle Then gra11dson
Bluanli!tlon M•IIOis
telahves
and fami1y Mr and M1 s
NOW YOU KNOW
ftve years to procluce the ftrst
P7326
Mrs Roll,~nd Crabtree and Donald Jones. Jr Bnan and
It took Johann Gutenberg
prmted Btble
Mr and Mrs Mendal Jordan Ca r11e Alexandt la, Vu gima,
received telephone gr ee tings vtstted them on Thut sda)
for Chnsbnds from tlleir son
Mt and Mrs D11ame Jorand daughter Mr and Mrs dan Bryan, Ketth and Salah
Kenneth Ct abtrec. McArthur. Faye \\ el E' m Chtlhcothe for
who spen l the Ch1 tstmas dmne1 on New Yea1 s Eve and
vacalton rn Flonda The stopped em oute home to VISi t
Crabtrees vtstled het uncle and Ius brother-to-law and stster,
mmt, Mr and Mrs Eddte Mr dlld MIS Kenneth CrabCOLOR T.V.
Jot dan and sons at West Palm tree m McArthur
Beach. Flortda on Chrtstmas
Mr
and Mr s
F1 ank

Gallia

Aides ·

New ambulance paid for

Dispute stymied

Carpenter / News, Event

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Dav

Holtday guests of Mr ,md
Mrs Wrlltam Mtller and
daughters tncluded Mr and
Mrs Dann) Akers dnd Linda,

'

I '

pm ento Mt and. MIS C.1rrol
Wood gerd and fan ull dunng
the hohday vacatron

Platn City; Mr and Mrs Glen
Helall\ es from a distance
Gassa wav. Powell, Mr and who spent time \Uth l\11 .md
Mrs Fred Whelllall, Colum- Mr s Wtlham Lawson and
bus. and Mr and Mrs Ted fa nHI) tim tn g the holtday
Mtller of Caledoma
\ac;.~hon \H're M1kc Lawson
Mr and Mrs Joe Moster Umvetsttv of Kcnluck) Mr
Cectl, Ohw, \1St led relaltves 111 and Mrs Bob Gnm and fanHI)
the area dunng Chnstmas from Poca , W Va Mr and
holtdavs and whtle here they Mrs Austm Wtthrow and son
were ~ohfted that thetr home Charleston W Va and Mr and
had been destroyed by ftre ~ Mrs Ted Mtller, Caledoma,
Mrs Moster ts a gra nd - Ohpo
daughl&lt;!r of Murl Galaway and
both were rea red tn lhts
commwnty He ts the son of
Hi\WKEYES ROMP
Mr. and Mrs Douglas Mos•er
IOWA CITY. Iowa (UP!l 11ho are nO\\ in Alhany
Bruce
'Sk) . Kmg scored 18
Mr and Mt s Ralph Fra~ter
pomts
to
top ftve Iowa players
and Susan, Galhpohs, ytstled
\\tth Mrs .Goldte Gtltogly and m double figures Saturday,
leadmg the Ha" keyes to a
other reialtves here
crushmg
95-70 "'" over llhnots
Angela Lingle, San Franm
a
regtonall)
lelevtsed Btg
ctsco, Call forma, ts spendmg
some tune here \\lth her mece. Ten game
Mrs Gene Jeffers and famtly
Others "ho vtstled at the
Jeffers home durtng the
hohda1s were Mr and Mrs
John ·Dunham, famtly, New ·
Boston Ill mots, Mr and Mrs
Btll Lawson and famtly, and
Mr and Mrs Mtchael Lawson
Those "ho g.1thered at the
home of M1 and Mrs LewiS
Srn1fh for u prc·lwhd(l\ dmner

. I '

Wood ge rd and dilug hter.
Cohunbus '' c' e gm ~b of his

DUNLEAVY SHINES
COLUMBIA, S C (UPI ) South Carohna , concentratmg
tis attack wtth guard Mtke
Dunleavy and Alex Enghsh
after tts othe r starters goi mto
fuul

trou ble,

Ot

.wned

Manhattan 82.Ji3 Saturday tn a
rcgtOn,lily televised game

!

finn · smooth top.

Famot.$ Serta Quality.
Furniture Department - Jrd Floor
.

Sale! 25% Off o n Mattress and Box Spring
F:loor Samples · Twin and Full Bed Sizes. ~
.

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.EtBERFELDS
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IN POMEROY
'

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DETROIT (UPI) _ TheUS

auto mdustry launched the ftrst
W/
t
~: full week of 1975 productiOn
t
W
~ today With 14 assembly plants
~ closed, 140,000 workers on
NEW YORK (UP!) -James Neal, the chief prosecutor §! longterm layoffs and reports
In the Watergate conspiracy trial, beUeves former ~ showmg steadily droppmg car
President Nixon bad no prior knowledge of the bugglug 8Dd ~ sales
break-In, accordlug to the current issue of 11me mqazlne.
Prelim mar) figures tilThe Time article said that Neal based hJs opinion on ~ dicated Decemller sales of
"some surprise 00 Nixon's part" when be was Informed of !![ 430,000 domestic-built cars, a
the Watergate affair.
il\ 25 per cent drop from last
Neal said that accordlug to the June 23, 1912 ta@e, when ;!; December's gasolme-pmc hed
Nixon was told by H. R. Haldeman about the break-lo, the ~ sales and 40 per cent below
former president wondered out loud about who bad been W, 1972's record December The
responsible.
!;!

~~

brea k lnto
.
he

t

i~
~

!~

ill
~

~

aterga e

~

~
~
~

$:

!~

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hn dl fig ures wel-e to be
released late todny
Det-ember sales were the
lowest for any month smce
December of 1970, when a
strtke against General Motors
cut deeply mto dehvenes They
ftmshed · 1974 domesllc car
productton wtth a 7 45 mtlhon
total, the lowest smce stnkeaffected 1970
Industry ana lysts satd sales
sho11ed httle stgn of tnlprovement mDecember They added
the dropoff from November

!!
!;!
~;

Dn New Year's Day the Watergate jury found John N.
~' Mitchell and three others -Haldeman, the former Wblte ...

~ Housechlefolstaff; John D. EbrUehman, theformerWhlte

~-:

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I'

House domestic affairs cb[ef; and Robert C. Manllan, once
the assistant attorney general In charge of the Justice ~!
« Departmeat's Internal Security Division - goUty of eon- ·&lt;
splraey. Another defendant, Kenneth W. Parkinson, a lj!
lawyer hired by Nixon re-elecllon committee after the :::

;i:

i
l_

breu-m, was found not guUty.
!!
~~-·~; others
Asked for• his opinion of !be guilty defendants and !~
wbo pleaded goUty, Neal told 11me: ''These are not i

VOL XXVI

NO. 185

Willi not as g1·eat as the usua125

per cent Thts past December
saw dehvenes drop about IS
pet cent from slack November
sales.
•
"December may not have
been . the absolute bottom for
sales, but at least tl dtdn 't
follow the tradittonal year end
pattern," one mdustry analyst

srud "That really would have
been dtsastrous "
Bestdes the 140,000 workers
on open-&lt;&gt;nded la yoffs thts
11eek, another 40,000 were ttlled

lternporartly at the
II car nnd
three truck assembly plants
that were shut and thousands
more were off the Job at
manufacturmg plants
Fo(d Motor Co. kept stx car
and one truck assembly plant
closed, Chrysler two car and'
two truck plants, GM two car
plants and Amen can Motors
one ca r plant to begm
changeover to tts new sporty
Pacer
The mdustry already has

scheduled ftrst quarter production at the lowest point ln 14
years Layoffs through March
will put at least 160,000 workers
on mdefiiitte layoffs and another 140,000on short layoffs from
one to stx weeks -&lt;~bout 40 per
cent of the mdustry's hourly
work force
The mdustry closely guards
the actual number of salarted
workers who have lost their
JObs because of slwnpmg sales,
but authortllahve sources esll-

mate 26,1100 white collar workers -&lt;~bout 20,000 at Chrysler
-are out of work.
Both mdustry and union
officials agree many workers
will not return to their JObs
unUl there is an upturn In new
ear sales. Ward's AntomoUve
Reports, the Industry's statistical publication, m an earlier
predlcllon said automakers
have not faced such a p.&gt;tenitally depressed car market
since the 1930s.

•

(exp~~~!~~:~ :~~~;~:~teo~~": ~d;~ was the i i

;I'

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at y

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enttne

Devoted To The luterests of Th e Meigs-Mason Area
POMEROY MIDDLEPORT OHIO
MONDAY, JANUARY 6, 1975

~~~~~!::.~~:____...:._.:;::.:.:_::.:.:_:::_.:.::::::::::-::::.:_.:::_:~~:_::-,--_______:__~_:_____::__:__.2..::...:._:__::_ _ _ _ _ __ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ TEN
-CENTS
--

!!; evU men. There was no one In control. There was no czar. ;~

But men wbo become convinced their eause Is just, resort to ~-~
- means to attain It !bat they otherwise would not consider. :§
"For example, I can't conceive of any government, any
presldentlal administration, letting a man Ulte Uddy run
.•.
.• Ioose. "
~~
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IN:.,ews.. -in Briefs

Economy, energy
pressing on Ford

~

~~:~=::';i.'f.:;:;o:::;:--:;.i::::::-: :=»:;;·:·:·:=:-::::::::·:·:-:-:-:·~=·~:·:-:.:·:·~=-~·=-=·:·:-:::·:-:·:::::·:·:;:::.~:-:·~:·:§:&gt;:·:;:;:.:-:;:;:;:;:.~
Cv...

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~ .: ....~bb&gt;:
0

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" " ( ; )

By United Press International
WASHINGTON- TODAY'S AUCI'ION of 2mlllion ounces of
gold, valued at perhaps $2 bilhoo, wlll not be much different from
goverrunent sales of surplus desks. Six employes of the General
Services Admtnlstration, the government's property
manaRement a2encv _eather around a olam, ROVernment-tssue
table. One will open sealed btds. Another calls out the offermg
The third writes down the bid. Two are observers .
The Items au&lt;.'tioned are 4()(J.ounce brtcks.of 99.9 per cent
pure gold The experts say it will take a nwwnwn of $611,000 to
get one. Successful btdders will have to pay wit:1 cash or cerUfied
check and make arrangements for removmg the gold from
stockpiles m New York, Denver and San Francisco. GSA and
Treasury officials declmed to speculate on the demand. Charles
R. Stahl, publisher of the authorttative Green's Commodity
Market Comments, was one of the prtvate experts to predict the
bidding probably will be slow
"I would expect no more than lOper cent of the goverrunent's
gold offermg to be sold," he satd

SAIGON -COMMUNIS!' GUNNERS FIRED a barrage of
rockets at suburban Satgon today m the first shelling ag81nst the
capital area m more than three years. To the north, CommlDltSl
troops bombarded a huge underground bunker m the embatUed
province eapttal of Phuoc Binh today but failed to oust diehard
goverrunent defenders.
The Saigon mlll_tary command said CommlDlist glDlners In
camouflaged JUngle lllllnching Sltes!Ii'ect 12 Soviet-made rockets
this mornmg Into the southwestern suburb of Phu Lam. A
spokesman said half the huge rockets hit a long..-ange communications stattoo and the other six crashed Into civilian homes
bordering the base. Four ctvtllans were reported kllled and SIX
wounded. A dozen homes were destroyed
GRESHAM, 'VIS. - A SECOND OUTBURST of gunfii-e
ended a cease-fire Sunday mght, and some 50 Indtans today held
a 64-room monastery for the siXth slratght day. Pohce cut off
their electrtcity and refused to allow deliveries of food mto the
building.
The Shawano County district attorney's offtce satd shooting
erupted for about an hour from the closed Mextan · Brothers
no VI bate monastery. Pohce satd they returned fired three times.
There were no re~pts of InJuries. The shooting ended a ceasefire the Indians and
enforcement offtcers agreed to earlier tn
the day.
The Indians -men, women and children -took over the
abandoned noVItiate early New Year's day and demanded the
budding and surrolDlding grounds be returned to the Menommee
tribe.
BELFAST- THE IRISH REPUBLICAN ARMY has offered
to negottate a permanent cease-fll'e with Britain to end 5.,. years
of rellgtous warfare m Northern Ireland. The Smn Feln, political
arm of the IRA's militant Provisional wmg, said Smday it would
help set up talks wtth Britain on extendmg a holiday season truce
Indefinitely.
"We are wlllmg to act as messenger boys between the
government and the ProvtslonallRA leadership," said Seam~
U&gt;ughran, the Sinn Fein's northern organizer The ffiA ts
outlawed ln Northern Ireland, but the Sinn Fein ts a legal
pol!Ucal party 1n the troubled province.
There was no Ullillediate reacUon from Brttaln to the
posstbility of talks aimed at ending the Protestant-Roman
Catholtc fighting, wh!ch has taken 1,143lives tn the province.

HOBART, Australia (UP!)
- Frank and Sylvia Manley
were driving over the mile-long
bridge with their teen-age
daughter !llaron when 250 feet
of the concrete span crumbled.
''The bridge hao gone!" Mrs.
Manley screamed out as the
rubble fell 150 feet mto the
Derwent River on the Island of

$5400
•

ili~

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ignorant of plan tO bug,

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Pomeroy E-R squad
answered a call to Union Ave
for Mrs Gladys Taylor
Saturday afternoon. She was
taken to Veterans Memortai
Hospital where she was adrrutted.

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WHAT WITH TilE WARMER WINTERS, Metgs Counttans have few opportunlttes to tee
skare However, some are l&lt;lking advantage of the tndoor artiftctaltce rink whtch offers open
skatmg foureverungs a week and two afternoon sesswns on SIDlday The rmk, known as Btrd
Arena, ts located on the Ohio Uruverstty Campus tn Athens. A nomtnal fee ts charged for
skating and shoe skates are avatlable for rental. Some half dozen Metgs Comttans were among
the skaters at the rmk Sunday afternoon.
-

The Manleys -were among the
lucky ones. The rear of their
car stuck on the edge of the
lrldge. "We just hwtg there,"
Manley said."
''I had a bit of trouble getting
oot of the car because my door
opened over the edge, but we
got out through the back door
and ran down the lrldge as fast
as we oould," he said. · .
• The 10,110tk0n freighter Lake
Dlawarra, loaded with zmc ore,
smaslted one of the bridge's
supports, lmocking down a :zoofoot section of the span. The
ship sank within 10 minutes .

Columbus teachers out
Accidents
•
were mmor
Pomeroy pohce mvesttgated
two acctdents Sunday, both
nimor. At 10 50 a.m , at the
corner of Butternut and West
Second St , a car dnven by
Joseph Thompson, Cheshtre,
was stopped at the stop stgn on
Second when tl was struck by a
car drtven by Troy Ohhnger,
Sr , Pomeroy, turnmg from
Butrernut onto Second There
was moderate damage, but no
mJurtes and no arrests
At 3·06 p.m on New St. a car
drtven by Ira Eblin, Syracuse,
hacked mto a parked car
owned by Paul Garnes of
Pomeroy Damage was mtnor
There were no tn]urles and no
ares!

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wednesd ay through
Friday, chance of showers
Thursday mixed with snow
or snow flum es Friday
Highs Wednesday in the
upper 40s and lo" er 50s and
lows In the 30s lowcrmg by
Friday lo htghs in lhe 30s and
lows m the 20s.

Weather
Cloudy tomght, lows m the
Tower 30s Tuesday cloudy, a
little warmer, 40 pet chance of
ram Highs 111 the lower 50s

BOARD TO MEET
The Meigs County Fatr
Board wtll meet at 8 tomght m
the secretary's offtce on the
Rock Sprmgs Fatrgrounds

Police and navy frogmen
searched the rtver bed today
for the sunken ears, missmg
passengers and the lost
freighter crewmen.
Gordon Allan was standing
near his home tn the harborstde suburb - of Montague
Bay when the freighter
smaslted mto tlte bridge.
"I heard a big bang like
thiDtder and saw-a car heading
Into the city swerve across the
bridge,'.' he satd. " It htt
another car and both fell mto

He satd he heard a rwnbling
sound JUst as he drove off the
brtdge. He looked back and
saw two cars plunge Into the
r1ver.
"I could see the headllghts
pointing stratght down at the
water," he sa1d. "It was a
horrtble stght and 1t made me
feel sick I'll never forget the
Tasmania.
,
sound the br1dge made as' tt
"I hit the !rakes but It was
started to go "
too late," Manley satd. "The
Offictals satd VISibility was.
front of the car went over the
poor at the ttme of the accident
lridge."
and the ship's crew apparently
A freighter ranuned Into the
the r1ver.''
mistook an openmg on the
Tasman Bridge Sunday night,
Richard Marsland, a young eastern stde of the JJridge for a
shattering Ute concrete span.
clerk retunung from a date navtgatlon charmel.
Police said two of the wtth hts gtrl frtend , crossed the
Rescue workers recovered five
The brtdge, whtch ltnks 1
vessel's
42 crewmen were lrldge just before the collapse Hobart with Its eastern subodies but said ~ to 14 others
might have perjshed. Thirty ~ ana feared dead. A "If I had stopped for one more burbs, IS tn , the state of
two IJerSOilS were injured. , spokesman said another 12 kiss I reckon I would have gone Tasmania, an tsland oft AusPollee said at least four aul08 peraons may have been 111 lhe Into the rtver," he said
tralia's southeastern Up
fell Into tbe 90-footodeep river- cars that feU mto the river.
'

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WASHINGTON ( UP!) Prestdent Ford ts plannmg to
set astde tUlle every day this
week to work on proposals for
repairing the economy and
conservmg energy
White House Press Secretary
Ron Nessen, satd Sunday Ford
wlli work on legislative proposals for the ne"' Congress as
well as ht~ upcoming State of
the Union message.
Admlnlstratlon sources said
Saturday one of the proposals
was an Income tax cut for low
and mtdtlle-lncome Americans
which, one source estimated,
could put $20 billion hack ln the
economy -but that arnolD\!
wol!!d be taken from a
Treasury facmg large deficits
this year and next.
Time Magazme reported
Sunday th.t admuustratton has
agreed on an- excise...lax to
Increase the prtce of gaSOlineabout 5 cents a'l!allon, cut oil
consumptton by 750,000 to
800,000 gallons a day, a $1 to $3
per barrel tariff on oll Imports,
lnd endtng price controls
coupled wtth a windfall profits
tax
Ford moved Saturday to
cope wtth the natton 's unemployment sthtaiton. About 6.5
million Americans who want
work cannot get It -about 7 I

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

Au;to 'h~ng on shattered bridge

FuII Size Mattresses
Healthful~

~

UNIT CALLED
RACINE - The Racme ER
squad Saturday at 8 20 p. m.
was called to Letart Falls for
James Ettkins, a POSSible heart
patten!, who was taken to
Veterans Memonal Hospital

Sale! Sfi9.95.Serta Rest

• I

l··;::::b:;::·=lA utO sales continue In
·- slump-

Subs, supervisors will
take turn in classrooms
COLUMBUS (UP!) ~ The nearly 4,000-member
Columbus Education Association early today struck
the 170 Columbus public schools, which has a total
enrollment of 100,000, in a wage dispute Schools
were scheduled to open with classes taught by
substitute teachers and supervtsory personnel
The CEA posted pickets at each building and
each school-constructlop ,site CEA Prestdent Ted
Thomas sa1d he expected the some 1,000 nonmember teachers, the city's non-teachmg personnel
and building trade union members to refuse to cross
the picket lines.
Teachers Jammed mto the
Lausche building at the stall&gt;
fa1rgromds .SIDlday afrernoon
and voted m favor of the
walkout by a 60 per cent
maJortty, after rejecting the
school board's last offer by a 72
per cent margin and turning
down two alternatives
The teachers reJe cted a
proposal to delay the walkout
for one week, pending the
oul&lt;!ome of further bargaining.
They also rejected the alternative of both sides submitting
the contract to binding arbitration
Teachers First Walkout
The group decided to go
ahead wtth the state capital
ctly's first teachers strike ln
history after talks broke off
.l;lte Saturday, with no further
negollattons--~eduled. The
teachers had dropped - their
wage mcrease demands from
20 per cent to 12, while Ute ctty
offered 4.1 per cent hike.
Jack Burgess, chief CEA
negotiator, sind "the school
board refused to budge from its
posttton of approxlma tely 4 per
cent pay mcrease " He said his
group had ''pared close to $4
mtlhon of the demands m tts
package to a 12 per cent hase
propos_al, &gt;~hich we think ts frur

at a time when we have a 12 per
cent mflallon."
Dr Johr\ Ellis, ctty school
supertntendent, said the treasury did not have any more
money to grant _teachers. He
said It would he necessary to
seek passage of an emergency
levy to get more money
"We are naturally deeply
(Continued on page 10)

Deer fall' to
machines
The Meigs CQtlllty Shert!f's
Dept. Investigated two accidents over the weekend &lt;£tn
whtch a deer was killed in
each
Saturday at 8:03 p. m. on U.
S. Rt :p Alva L Tiemeyer,
Pomeroy;-traveling south, htt a
deer which ran Into !he-path oi-

per cent. The President s1gned
a bill to provide $4 5 btlllon ln
unemployment benefits and
new
government
job
programs
VIce President Nelson A
Rockefeller is expected to have
some part ln the strategy
sessions. Rockefeller sat ln
Saturday on the meeting of the
Economic Polley Board which
Nessen satd "dovetalled"
energy
and
economic
problems.

Nessen said of Rockefeller
Sunday "He's going to be a
very b!L'Iy mao."
One . of the jobs will he
heading the eight-member
commission to Investigate the
Central lntelllgence Agency.
The commission wlU seek to
find out if the CIA violated Its
charter, which bans domestic
spying, and spied on what news
reports have said were as
many as 10,000 Amerleans
during the 1960s.

Flight is c&lt;&gt;ff
SANTA ANA, Calif. (UP!)Malcolm Forbes' planned
7,(J(J(J.mile balloon fllght to
Europe was aborted before
dawn today when the four tlers
of heliwn filled balloons broke
•
apart.
But Forbes said he wlll
immediately plan another
flight lo be launched before the
end of Febnl'(fy.
Forbes, 55, and aerospace
scientist Thomas Helnshelmer,
35, were Inside the gondola,
"Wlndborne," when the balloons snapped free. The gondola was dragged about 20 feet
across the tarmac of the
Marine Corpll heUcopter base
here. but neither man was
hurt.
Forbes satd they have the
nylon to make more balloons
and the high a!Utude weather
wlll be adequate untlllhe end
of February.
He sold the Wlndborne,
which was not damaged
allhough tt ended up on lts top,
could be relldy to go again ln 30
days.
Forbes, publisher of a buslne,ss magazine, and Helnshlemer, of Rolling Hills,
Calif , had planned four
prevlo!L'I takeoffs since Dec. 30.
Gusty surlace winds delayed
the flight three times. A faulty
communlcatlons system
further delayed the fhght early
Saturday. ,
It was scheduled for launchm~ Into the jetstream 40,000

feet above the earth Sunday
morning and was again postponed by mfavorable winds.
Early today, Forbes said the
weather was good and he was
ready to go, and quickly began
a COIDlldown.
The Uers of balloons were
dragged from the hanger onto
the tarmac and were being
raised $lowly with hellwn when
they began separating.
Forbes said as one Uer pulled
another upward, he released
the bottom stack of three
balloons to prevent heavy
damage to the spherical alumlnwn gondola, which could have
been bounced across the
l'tlllways.
The freed balloons rose lnlo
the dark morning sky above
the glare of floodlights and
vanished.'
The "airship," as Forbes
calls the balloon-gondola rig,
would tower 624 feet high. He
had planned to reach the jelstream and be pushed by the
100 to 150 mOe per hour winds
there to either southern Europe
or northern Africa.
Twelve attempts have been
made to cross the Atlantlc by
balloon. AU failed and ![even
persons died m the attelnpts.
NOW YOU KNOW
The use of fingerprmts for
identification was first used m
the 1860s by Enghsh adllllnlslrator William Herschel
In India

Oldest citizen is de'lid at
age of 101 in Otester
Metgs County's oldest
resident, Mrs. Elizabeth Jane
Wickham, died Monday
mormng at the home of a
daughter, Mrs
Pauline
Rtdenour, m Chester at the age
of 101
Mrs Wickham had been
active through her years She
was a member of the United
Methodist
Church
but
frequently .l'ttended the
Chester Cliurch of the
Nazarene wh1ch was close to
her residence ln Chester She
was a member of Chester
Councll 323, Daughters of
America, and of the Hemlock
Grange
Mrs. Wickham, born July 'l:l1
1873, was preceded m death by
her parents, John Wesley and
Melvlrui Bailey Pulll113; her

16 great-grandchlldren, and
nine great-greatgrandchildren
Runeral $ervlces wlll be held
at 2 p m. Wednesday at Ute
Ewing FID\eral Home with the
Rev Carl mcks and the Rev.
Herbert Grate officiating.
Burial will be In the MI. Hermon Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home
anytime after 7 this evening.
ANSWERS CALL
The Middleport E-R squad "
answered a call to South Third
Ave. at 6:14p. m. SIDlday for
Miss Frieda Faehnle, who was
Ul. She was taken to the Holzer
Medical Center, treated, and
returned liome by private
meanS' later.

hls car There was moclerate husband:'James :- a--.daughter,
iifii~~:-f~!~~=
damage to the car.
Edtth Bryant, a son,- Edsoil; '---SET
SIDlday at 9 30 a.m. in Oltve four grandchildren, a greal.,.--of----,_-&lt;.,,_t
Township on SR 681, W!Ulam grandchild, and a brother, have free pickup
"
Congrove, Reedsville , was James Pullllls.
their Christmas trees, Mayor
traveling east when a deer ran
Survivmg are two daughters, Fred Hoffman s1dd todaymto the path of his car. There ' Mrs. Pauline Ridenour and Residents are to place th~
was mocler~te damage There" Mrs. Erma Hellman, both of discarded trees near the
1
were no personal mjurtes t~ Chester; a son, John, of ctirblng of their homes. The
etther acctdenl
QJesler; four grandchildren, pickup will be made Tuesday.
4

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2- The Dati~ Sentmel, Mtddleport-Pmneroy, 0 Monda), .J,m 6 1975

Q
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~~r

Life and i11creasingly violent death

-

By Don Oakley
Over one blood) weekend tn Cleveland a couple of months
ago, 10 people were shot to death m assorted arguments and
robbenes m passton and m cold blood, by destgn and by madvertence
While tlus 11 as a record for a clt) not particularly noted for a
high leve l of vtolence, the latest ( 1973 ) complete stat1st1cs on the
ponchant of Amencans for knocking each other off md1cate that
111th " hom1c1de rate of 26 5 per 100,000 m c11Jes w1th 250,000 or
more populatiOn, a c1tv th'-'Size of Cleveland can expoct about 179
crumnal hom1c1des (murder and manslaughter ) m a year
Accvrdmg to the FBI s Umform Crime Reports, the cr)IIlmal
hom1r1de ra te m the c1t1es nses conSistently w1th s1ze, from 59
por 100 000 1n clUes of less than 10,000 populatiOn to '1:/ 1 m clUes

'~ 1th

Ask Dick Kleiner

a m1lhon or more

11le ll&lt;ltwnal hom1c1de rate - 10 Oper 100,000 - stands at Its

males and females at ages I to 4, reflectmg to some extent more
accur~te recordmg of deaths resultmg from chtl d abuse As for
white fema les, the1r largest homtctde mcrease occurred ~~ages
75-85, which oomc1des wtth a reported mcrease m crunes agamst
the elderly
- Vtctuns of hom1c1de are predommantly young men, and
predomtll&lt;lntl) nonwh1te While the homtclde rate among wh1te
males between 25 and 34 more than doubled w1thm the decade to
13 4 per 100 000, 11 remams far below the rate among nonwh1te
males In the same age group - 149 5 per 100,000
- !+trearms Yo ere the prmctpaJ means of homlctde more
than two~h trds of the deaths resulte d from the use of a handgun,
nne or shotgun
- About one-fourth of all homiCides occurred Wlthtn the
famt l), w1 th about 12 per cent mvolvmg spouse ktlllng spouse, 3
per cent parent klilmg child and about 8 per cent other famtly
kilhn gs
- Other arguments, frequent!) aggravated by the element
of alcohol, were responsible for about 40 per cent of the
homtctd es, while killings durmg crunes of vwlence constituted
nearly 30 per cent
- The DIStnct of Columbia with 33 5 per 100 000, and
Georgia, with 21 5, had by far the highest hmmctcle rates m the
Umted States
- Thtrteen of the 16 Southern sta tes had lymu ctde rates
greater than the natwnal ciVerage The greatest InCreases,
however, occun ed m the New Eng la nd , M1ddle Atlan hc and East
North Central Slates, where hom1c1de rates more than doubled
durmg the decade
Such IS life, and death 1n th1s land of tlle less and less free
and more and more fearfu l

highest pmnt m 40 years P.•ralleling the general mcrease m
Vl O!encr and dtsorder 1n the 1960s, hom1c1de rates tncreased by
about 85 per cent m the penod from 1960-&lt;il to 197()-71 Current
data tnclicate the trend oontmues
Thts IS not the !trst tune the country has been caught m a
n st ng \\ lurhund of domestic vtolence, eve n tn thts century The
Stat1sttcal Bulletm of Metropolitan Ilfe recalls that homtctde
rd tes tn the United States showed a steady mcrease from 1900 to
1933 11hen a rate of 10 0 per 100,000 was reached, the same rate
as loda v
After 1933 however, tlle rate declined for more than a
deed de, rose sharply m 1945-46, but then resumed a generally
downward trend unhlthe late 195~. when a rate of 4 9 per 100,000
was recorded Then m the early 1960s the tr end was reversed and
the hom1c1de rate has men rapidly smce then
The Metropolitan sta tlsltclans, usmg data from the Natwnal
Center for Health Statlshcs, have broken the raw figures down
mto a number of categones
- ~'or all ages combmed, death rates from hom1c1de between 196()-61 and 197()-71 rose by 95 per cent among white males
The girl s sure not1 ced our
and 44 per cent among white females, and 85 per cent and 37 per
secretary s engage menl rm~
cent among nonwhite males and females
from th e of!tce wolf Three of

Fluctuating Vicki

will bounce

Show suddenly changed ber appearance? Her ha1r 1s at roc1ous

heard tha t It ~as gomg to be on TV Is this true " If It IS, w11l 1t
e\oer come back to theaters agaan ? - S D New Orl ea ns La

Yes 1t s true NBC bought the n ghts to show It on TV once
from MGM - for a reported,$5 mt lll on But the dea l was for JUS!
one showmg 10 effect NBC sunpl) rented 11 The studi Oretams
ownership and presumably \\Ill re release It agam for theatncal

showmg

DEAR DICK Can you please lell me ho" old John Denver s
adopted son 15'' - MARYLOUISE PERRY, San D~ego Calif
Zachary Denver s adopted son IS now SIX months old
DEAR DI CK Can you g1ve me some m!ormat1on aboul the
fellow \\ho played lhe cap1a1n of lhe guards m the mov1c The
Longest Yard ? Where 1s he from ' What other movaes has be
been m• - M II , Oklahoma City, Okla
That s that fine character actor Ed La uter He s a Ne11
Yorker the son of a Broadway actress named Sally Lee He \\a s
m the Broadway productiOn of The Great White !lope tllen
ca me y,est and has been verv busy You could have seen htm m

such movtes as

Rage

The New Cenlunons

and 'Lollv

opinion, features

Strip mining marches on

What people
are saying ...

and she s gamed so much "e1ghl What s her problem• INTERESTED VIEWER, Mobile, Ala
.
Well she recently gotmarned 1f that sa problem She made
the change m her hatr style- adopt1 ng a fuzzy natural - Without
consultmg anybody on the show It "s her persona l taste surfa cmg
that s all Her v.etght her fn ends say al11 ays has fluc tuated It s
JU St flu ctuatmg up these day s maybe smce she became Mrs 1\1
Schull' Her new husband ts the show s mak e up man
DEAR DICK I am a 'Gone 1\lth the Wmd' fa n and I recenlly

Editorial comment,

TOM TIEDE

How the@

By D1 ck Klemer
DEAR DICK Why has V1ck1 Lawrence of The Carol Burnell

Madonna

'em had II previOusly

Quote/Unquote

Leon Jaworski
I had to Witness former
PreSident N1xon gettmg up
before the Amencan people and
talkmg differently from what I
knew the facts to be It was
very difficult to keep QUiet But
I kne\\ that there would be a
day of reckonmg '
- Leon Jaworski, former
Watergate spec1al prosecutor,
saymg 10 ao mterv1ew 1n People
magazme that he was con
vmced of Nixon's guilt as early
as December, 1973
A Londoner runnmg
h1mself down serves many purposes
1t suggests to senSitive Lo nd oners that 11 was at a
posh publi c boardmg school
that he learned h1s shy clum
smess m the presence of women
and 1t makes h1m ternbly
Bnttsh by nature, for If there IS
one tllmg an Enghshman seeks
to av01d It IS havmg htmself
thought of as a womamzer or
suave Latin lover '
-Excerpt from "The Lon
doners L1fe IS a C1vihzed C1ty"
by Walter Henry Nelson, on

same decJsJon "
- Henry E Petersen comment lOg on his handling of
Watergate after resigning as
head of the Justice
Department's Criminal Divl
SIOD

' The only thmg worthwhile m
life 1s to do everythmg you can
to make thmgs better I tlunk
1t s a sad and empty ex1stence
to have a life of balls and parttes I have seen too many
women destroyed because of
that I spent too much of my
own hfe mto that "
-Actress, activist and feminist
Jane Fonda

10

By Tom Tiede
Times m Amertca, hard, have to 40 cent severance tax per
HAZARD, Ky ~ (NEA) swung agamst the sensitive, ton Half the acreage and
Esthetically, Olhe Combs ' m1litant, defiant approach to
property has never been much surface coal mmmg ~ and perm1tchargesare gtven to the
It's 40 acres, most!) up and to ward ' necessary" coun t1es, and a percentage of
down, at the head of a hollow acqm escence Thus wtdow the severance tax Hell, that s
and U1e rear of underdeveloped Combs and other antlstrlppcrs, b1g money You don t fmd
ruraht) tn U1e Kentuck) Ap- once heroes are now, m hght of people around here wllllng to
forego It for the sake of a fell
palachians where 11even the
energy shortages and m- trees We worry about people
weeds have a hard hme a dustrlal stagnation, considered
not landscapes '
ma ktn 11 '
dangerous by many of the
And so 11 IS lhdt while some
NeveJ theless, 11 s all she hns fearful
people
do pro!t~. the landscape
- and her great prtde Thus,
The trend away frQI!l the suffers Desp1te a fatrl; sltff
"hen a coal company rudely hard line on stnpplng IS of
mvaded the land a decade ago, course most apparent m coal state reclamatiOn law, grea t
wtth strtp m1n1ng mtent1ons country Ken Ratliff, of Ken- stretches of the surroWldmg
hills have been wounded
and machmery as tall as the tucky's
Bureau
of Large numbers of gtant coal
trees, w1dow Combs said no
Reclamation, says this state as
She said Is so forcefully, m a whole Is still "very oon- trucks dommate and damage
th e h1ghwa)s
Roadsid e
fact, poSitioning herself m
cerned" about surface mmmg process mg plants, at full
front of bulldozers and so forth
abuses , ' but coal COW1ties are
that she became something oi something else ' Bumper ste&amp;m , thr ow out ever
an mstant mountam legend stickers m the hllls proclaim w1derung Circles of scorched
.9Je was arrested for her "We Dig Coal " Mlnmg area earth The air IS heavy with the
smells and gnme of cold coal
protests, put on telev1slon talk
newspapers trumpet stat1sttcs cash
flown
to
shows,
and
which show a doublmg m
And thmgs wtll gel even
Washmgton as an elderly Kentucky of str1p -mlmng
worse
Coa l productwn 1n
da rlmg or the then growing ac tiVIty Individuals often
America
lh1s year ,,.
anli-strlp muung movement
equate oonservatiomsts w1th prog r am ~d to equal las t
Today, 11 1dow . Combs has
anti-Americanism "Why do vear's 591-fmlllon tons and a
retired from tlle war agamst
they want, the Arabs to take governm ent study foresees
stnppmg She says shes too over?"
annual d1ggmg rates of two
old now -70 - !or oombat .9Je
The pro-stripping attitude b1lhon tons by 1985 - more
docs keep up "some ' w1th stnp carries ny mystery here Coal
mtne news, she adds , but for at present Is synonymous w1th than half of 11 by stnppmg
Farms w11l go (600,000 acres of
the most part she's out of 11
prospertty Oldsters who cropland IS under coal lease 1n
She spends her lime qmetly,
remember the Appalachian North Dakota alone), water
caring for a paralyzed re!at1ve
dollar gloom of) esteryear, and ssppltes Will be threatened
m a dilapidated home on the
read about enormous problems ecologiCal and human balanc-es
flattest portion of the 40 acres
elsewhere even now, say w1th upset Sa;s one area gloomMeanwhile, all about, the accuracy that stnp mmmg
ster "What you see here you'll
stnppers still tear up the land
here IS the difference between soon see everJ'Yherc tn the U
The departure of th1s lower middle class survtval
s
11arhorse 1s of more than and desperate pnvatwn
Ollie Combs agrees Lookm g
passmg mterest m the local
Says one ooal executive
aroundher hills she has seen
and natiOnal str1p mmlng
'Compames are charged $35 the futur e and tt IS bleak - so,
co ntroversy For she has
an acre and $150 for ea€h
retreated net only because of permit to dtg Plus there 1s a 35 retired she s JUSt not lookmg
Rn) more
age , but m the face of changmg
odds favormg the other s1de

"We're Going Along with President Ford's
Ideas on Economy, Smith
You're Fired!"

1 r
1
I

I

1r

Watergate should
he 'historical'

Young managers
win high marks

CLEVELAND (UP!) - A
po ll of some 550 mdustr1ai1Sts
gave voWlg managers h1gh
marks m man) categones
oompared '" th the1r older
oounterparts, Industry Week
BJ La\\renre E L.amb MD
condition
Magazine reported today
111 th thts nmse
DEAR DR L \MB - Ap
1 m 62 and we1g h 100 pounds,
Increasmg age ts ronunonh haThey were COllSidered to be
rder workers than older
Proxunateh fo1tr ~ears ago 1 " h1ch IS my norm a1 we1ght
assoc1aled w1 th buzz1ng and
noticed a noiSe Ill Ill) head This nmse IS hard (o descnbe, rtngmg Ill the ears This IS managers, more effective than
wh1ch great!\ dtsturbed me but 11 sounds like a h1gh hne probabl} related to changes m )Oung managers of past generbecaiiSe I unagtned all ktnd of 111re humnung m th e 111nter th e artenes For thts reason I at10ns,
and more capable of
ff
"mgs that could be wrong u1ne
ectmg
change than wer thell'
e
''
usua11y adviSe people wtth thts
ThiS noise tsnot 1\lth me all the
problem to do the same thmgs predecessors
hme !rna; have tt one day and
DEAR READER - The they should do to prevent heart
Also, they question more, are
not the pext If I drop off to diagnosts and treatment of disease, go on a low-fat, loll ;ore soctally aware, and are
sleep In my cha1r after a days no1ses ts e1ther very s1mple or cholesterol d1et
correc t
angmg industr) 's unage for
work I "ake up wtth tl, and tt almost lmposstble ApparenUy obesity and gel regular sen, ~~better. tlle magazme was
, ;nay last for two days
) ou fallm the latter category Sible exercise
'
"'' After gomg to several docAny obstruction Ill the outer
AvOldmg coffee and dnnks
On the other hand , they are
tors and usmg ear drops and ear can cause rmgmg sounds m that contam caf!eme may help no~well equipped to manage
bemg exammed for the the ear If It Is "(ax, stmpl; some That is better than as th} 's older managers, nor
prostate gland, which IS nor- removing the excess wax m the taking tranquiliZers
are
ey as effective, the
rnal, I have no relief
ear may cure the difficulty
Patients wtth Memere s maT~azme was told
ThiS nmse has caused me to Unfortunately most cases are disease may also have nngmg
e sutvetoy bdroke down
-become very uphght and not that simple
m the ear, dlzztness, nausea m~agers m un er.W, 40-50
nervous I have taken many
Rmgmg and noiSes can also and loss of hearmg This IS anThover.OO age categories
kinds of tranqUJhzers I had a be caused by some med1cmes probabl) related to ace tna)Onty of respondents
Complete phys 1cal 1n 8 When them ed 1cme IS stopped, cumul ation of !lu1d and sa1d those Ill the mtddle
hospttal, and they found the rmgmg stops
changes lnstde the dehcate ear groupmg were best equlpped,
nothtng nor did they gtve me
Circulation changes m the mechamsm not tnslde the by education and trauung, to
any relief from the nOise .The bram and around the'hearmg bram
manage "You've had a fall'ly
brain scan was normal.
ha
decent ed.lcat10n, enough time
mec msm can cause rmgmg
The best advtce I can g1ve to t
s
ge some expenence, and
I have had three bearing , or b
uzzmg notses orne people you smce you have already had )'OU till ha
th dr
f
-ammatlons
which
showed
f
ve e 1ve o
.are more aware o normal a good exalmnation lS to try the
ths "

Noise in head u:on 't quit

r~Jth~a~:~ :~ ~;h~a~v~e~lt~o~st~stom~e~ru~g~h~
- ~c~~r~c w~a~t~Io~n~so~ufn d~s~tll~;an~~oth;ers~--:d~ ~et~:·~ e;x~e~rct~se~!gP:Iro:gr :a~m~.~a~ndL~~;o~~~-;w~as~a
the

l

been told
1101se
, was told I would have to live

'

to the ear, for

suclras gun fire, can cause this

avotd caffeme - contammg

may help sonle

lI
''

Vel th
t d toda
• e reporcommon
sa1 , reJomy's
are better

same degree of 20 )ears ago
One sa1d "our educatiOnal
system has been gomg m the
nght dU'ect10n '
There
was
genera l
agreement that today's
younger manager works no
harder than older managers
did when they were his age, nor
are they felt to be a n) bnghter
However, the) have so much
more deciSion data ava1lab!e
that they can be more effective
than !hell' predecessors and
tlley also want to know the

v.hys and wherefores or processes and decLSions
Yet even the young"
managers polled downgraded
themselves on awareness of
goverument Influen ce, of
pohllcs and of world events It
appears doubtful, the report
satd, they Will lead any
counterattacks" on behalf of
mdustry

The Dai~ Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THF.
INT EREST OF

MEIGS MAS ON ,AR:EA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
Exec Ed
R OBERT HOEFLICH

Ctty Edtto r
J:J u bl , shed dally

For the b1centenmal celebratton , the swte once occupied by
the Democratic NatiOnal Committee should be restored to the
condition at the tune of the
break-m
It also nught be mce to have
wax !tgures dep1ctmg the
"Watergate F1ve" 10 the
process
of buggmg the premiSthe lighter side
es
few days to jom the 10,000 or so
Tidal Basm - Th1s body of
sties, structures and cultures water, where stripper Fame
already certlfted ns histone. • Foxe's nocturnal plunge
As a rule of thumb, the caused the undomg of Rep
des1gnat10n 1s not applted W1lbur Mills, surely IS as
unless at least 50 years have histone as, say, Boston Harelapsed, but excephons can be bor.
made when a place- ll1 hiStory
For when 1t oomes to mdefm1tely IS assured The stte fluencmg the oourse of history,
of the space shots at Cape the downfall of someone as
Canaveral1s an example
powerlul as the chauman of
Under that cntenon, there the House Ways and Means
are a couple of other brand new Commtttee 1s nght up there
histone places that should be w1th the Boston Tea Party
oons1dered for mclus10n m the
Re&amp;lagmg the Boston Tea
regtster They are
Party always draws good
Water gate -Already a crowds, and the btcentenmal
maJor lourtst attraction, this undoubtedly would be enriched
office but!ding 's unpact on by r~nactment of the Tidal
h1story probably exceeds Basm ln ctdent
Gettysburg, Valle) Forge and
I see Ilnda Lovelace m the
Independence Hall ~ombmed
role of Miss Foxe, With John
Wayne playing the part of
M1lls
Apart from these two historic
Sites, a number of other places
recently have acqull'ed hiStorical slgniftcance and nugljt
mer~t a listmg m the reg15ter.
They mclude
-The offices were SpU'o
Agnew allegedly accepted the
payoffs that brought about his
r es1gnatton
as
vice
preSident
Smce these transactions
reputedly took place in a
var1ety of locations, perhaps a
simple bronze plaque of the
" George Washington Sl~pt
Here" type would be posted at
each
-The conference room
wbere officials of the National
Milk Producers Association
deClded which candidate to
favor With campaign conll'ibutlons
-The map room at the
Central Inte!Ugence Agency
where operatives learned to
distmgu1sh between foreign
and domestic spying

Kyger Creek w11l host
Hannan Trace Fr~day
BUFFALO (48)- Walker 5
3 13 Burch 4 0 8 Gatens 1 0 2,
Boles 6 1 13 , Green law 1 2 4
Stone 2 2 6 and Noffmger 0 1 1

Totals 19 10 48
KYGER CREEK

e)(cept

Saturday by The Dt11c Vall ey
P ublt"h lnQ Company
111
Cour t St
f:lomeroy Ohto
J5769 Bustness Off tc e Phone
992 1156 Ed 1tonal Phone ~92
2157
Second class postage pa td at
Porn
Ohto
N
a/ ad -rerttstng
a tl ve
Bofl tne lll
Inc 12 East ~ 2n d
New York..
n
r::ates
ter where
·· ·heP1_e0r week
¥10
carr 1er

Wise 50 10
Kern 0 2 2

-

Sttdham 2 2 6
luca s 0 2 2 and
Totals 14 1l 39

Sm1lh 1 0 2
Reserves- Buffalo 49 Kyger
Creek 29
Ohto College Basketball Scores
By Un1ted Press International

Saturday
M1 ch1gan 85 Ohto State 73
Bowling Green 66 Toledo 64 ot
Ohio Unlv 68 Kent Slate 53
M1am1 67 West M 1ch•gan 59

CmCmnat1 93 Wabash ( lnd ) 67

Pepperdlne 80 Dayton 79
Rice 92 Wnght St 83
Loyola (Ill ) 67 Xavter 62
Ftor1da Tech 63 Ashtand 58 ot
Neb Omaha 100 Youngstown
97 ol
Musklngum

71

Baldw1n

Wal lace 54
Heidelberg 57 Capital 55

Mount Un1on 76 Den1son 68
Kenyon 71 Case Western 56
Wittenberg 69 Marietta 55

Oberlin 69 Steubenville 66

Oh 1o

Northern

61

Adr~an

(Mich ) 56
Otterbein 73 Wooster 54
Defiance 85 Blufflon 78
F1ndlay 83 Anderson ( lnd I 81
Ohio Dominican 73 Marlon
(lnd ) 61
Ear lham ( lnd ) 86 Urbana 84
Manchester
( tnd )
92
W1lmmgton 76

T1ff1n 84 Mercy (N Y) 73
Hall of Fame 'l'ourney, Canton
Walsh 84 W Va Wesleyan 82,

of , cons

Mtll1gan (Tenn ) 94 Malone 79,

champ

In 1919, former President
Theodore Roosevelt died at his
home m Oyster aay, N Y

Green-Toledo coiiiSlon IS any
irnhcatlon, the race for the
1974-75 Mld-Amer~can Con ference basketball title ts going
to be a red-hot affair
BG won the battle, commg
from a 13-pamt second half
delicti for a ~ overtune wm,
thanks to suc pomts by Cornelius Cash tn the extra pertod.
The win gl\fes the Falcons
sole possess1on of ftrst place
with a :Wmark, but there are a
lot of rough roads for ooach Pat
Haley's crew to travel between
now and the March 8 ftnale
agamst Central Mlch1 gan ,
mcludmg a Feb I date at
Toledo
Toledo , which was p1cked
along wtth BG as the teams to
beat tn thiS year's MAC t1tle
chase, almost came away w1th
the key road vtctory
The Rockets led 4()-33 at
halftune and bwlt it to 48-35
before the Falcons started to
close m
Bawlmg Green took tis Ill's!
lead of the seoond half at 58-57
w1th 1 22 left m the game
Toledo's M1ke Larson tied It at
53-all, but miSSed the seoond of
his two free throws, forcmg the
game mto overtune
Cash In The Clulcb
Cash, a 6-8 seruor from
Dayton, scored suc of BG's
etght pomts m overtune, 111-

Sprmg!~eld

The T1gers, 54 overall,
scored the first 10 pomts of the
second half to qmckly ue the
score at 37-37 and took the lead
for good at 41-40 on a basket by
rom Dunn
Dunn, Don Lynam and Jun
Ev~ns paced the 1 tgers'
balanced attack wtth 12 pomts
ap1ece
Martella , wh1ch lost for the
!trst tune m etght games was
led by Chuck Robmson w1th
13 It was the ftrst c-onference
game for both teams
At T1ffm, Heidelberg put a
crunp m Capital's title hopes
w1th a 57-S5 v1ctory over the
Crusaders
The Prmces got 16 pomts
from Mark Chr1shp 15 from
Dave Wtr1ck and 12 from Larry
Remmer as they led from start
to fm1sh Caps' only double
ft gure scorer was Gene Caslm
With 26
Musklngum In F1rsl
Musktngum , meanwhil e,
boosted 1ts Oh10 Conference
record to 2~ with a 71-04

•

dec1s1on over
BaldwmWul!ace The Musk1es' VIctory,
paced by Larry HarriSOn's 18
potnts , g1ves them so le
possesSIOn of first place
In other OC games, Mount
Umon beat Demson 7!Hl8 and
Otterbem whtpped Wooster 7:!54, whtle m games mvolvmg
conference teams, Kenyon defeated Case Western 7 1~
Oberlin tripped Steubenville
69-$ and Ohio Nort11ern beat
Adnan (Mtch ) 61~
Cmcmnati p1cked up tis sixth
wm ut 10 games constmg lo a
93~7 dectston over Wabash
( lnd ) Sophomore forward
Bnan Williams led the Bearcal• m soormg w1th 20 pomts
hittmg 10 of 16 from the floor
Cincmnat1 led 43-32 at halftune and by as many as 27 m
the fmal 20 mmutes as the
Bearcats forced Wabash mto 34
turnovers
Dayton dropped an 8()-79
dec1s1on to
Pepperdme
(Ca ll!) , the Flyers' fourth loss
m 10 games XaVIer fell to iHl
after a 67~2 loss to !.AJyola
(D! ), desp1te 20 pomts and 21
rebounds by Jerry Foley, and
Youngstown State suffered 1ts
ftrst loss m seven games, IOll-97
tn overtime to Ne braskaOmaha
ln the Hall of Fame Tournament at Canton, Mtlllgan
(Tenn ) defeated Maione 94-79
m the champ10nsh1p game,

Highlanders edge-Irish, 82-80
Southwestern outscored
vts1tmg Ironton St Joe 8-4i man
overtime Saturday mght to
post a thnlbng 82-l!O non-league

VIctory
The w1n avenged an earlier
one-pomt loss on the Flyers'
planks Wtth the v1ctory, Coach

while Walsh took the cotlsolatwn oontest w1th an overt1me
84-112 declston over West Vlrg.ma Wesleyan
In other games, Rice beat
Wright Slate 9~. Florida
Tech edged Ashland 63-.&gt;8 m
overtime Defiance downed

Bluffton 85-78, Findlay slipped
past Anderson (lnd ) 84-al,
Oh10 Dominican defeated
Mar10n (Jnd ) 73-61, Earlham
(lnd ) outscored Urbana 8U2,
Manchester (Ind ) beat
Wilmington 92-76 and Tiffin
downed Mercy (N Y ) 84-73

Pro Standings
N BA Stand.ngs
By Umted Pres s 1nterna11onal
Eastern Co nf ere nce
AtlantiC DIVI Si On

w

I
13
14

pet

g l:J

Bos.ton
23
639
• Buffa lo
23
6'17
New York
21 15 583
2
Phlla delph a I S '11 J05 a1 :1
Central D1v1 ston
w
I pet 9 b
Washmgton
'16 12 684
Cleve land
20 15 571
,p.
Hous ton
20 17 541
51J
A llan ta
16 2J
4 10 101 2
New Or lea n s
3 33 083 22
Western Conference
Midwe st DtVI Ston
w I pet 9 b
Delrot t
22 17 564 Ch.cago
19 18 5 14
2
KC Omaha
20 n
476
3 •
M lw i'lukee
17 19
172
3 •
Pattfl c DIVI SIOn
w 1 pel g b
Golden State
24 1 2 657
Sea ttle
19 19
500 6
Portland
16 21 -!3 2 8 1
LosAnge tes
16 22 42 1 9
Phoen1x
15 21 417 9
Saturdays Results
New York 103 Cleveland 10 2
Bu ff alo 1:001 Atlan ta 108
Ch i cago 100 KC Omaha 88
Detroit 89 Ph ladelphta 82
Mt!waukee 93 Hou ston 89
Seattle 11 1 New Orleans 89
Golden St 104 Washmgton 96
Sunday's Resu l ts
Milwaukee 96 Chtca go 95
Cleveland 97 Ph oenix 86
Houston 115 KC Omaha 106
Los Ang 11 :00 Wash ngton 109
Portland Ill New Orleans 102
Monda6 s Gam es
Buffalo at Ph il ade lphi a
NHL Standings
By United Press lnlernattOnal
DI Vis iOn 1
w I t pis gf ga
6 56 142 81
8 46 16 1 123
7 43 11 2 11 0
9 39 130 11 0
1
t pts gf ga

Phtladlphla 25 8
NYRa nger s 19 11
A tl anta
18 IS
NY Island ers 15 15
Dt'IISIOO
w t
vancouver 22 13
Ch 1c ago
17 18
St LOUtS
16 17
M tnnesota
11 22

AB,A Stand1ngs
By Un1ted Press lnternattonal
east
New York
Kentucky
St Lou s
Mcmph 1s
V rg 1n1a

w

28
25
16
10
9

West

I
1l
11
25
28
29

pet

g

~

718
694 l'h
390 13
263 J71h
237 18 1h

w 1 pet g b
Denver
JJ S 868
San An to n10
23 19 548 12
Utah
20 22 476 IS
lndtana
15 2 1 417 17
San D1cgo
li 73 395 18
Saturday s Results
Ulah 115 l nd 1ana 108
New York 1D V1 rgml a 92
Ke ntucky 115 San Antonio 11 1
San 0 ego 143 MemphiS 118
Sun day s Results
51 LOUIS 109 Ken tu cky 106
New York 100 Vl r gt nl a 95
Denver 110 Uta h 93
ln d1ana 108 M em phis 99
San An ton 10 1;14 San O tego 116
M onday s Games
SEin An ion to at Ula h
International Hockey
League Standtngs

- By Untied Press International
Nnrth
wltptsgfga
Sag maw
26 14 1 53 160 128
Flint
24 13 3 51 151 109
Musk eqon

24 15 1 49 165 111
Port Huron 15 22 2 32 128 141
Lansing
10 15 I 21 129 196
Kalama zoo 9 24 2 20 90 135
South
wltptsgfga
Dayton
16 11 2 54 161 133
Columbus 21 18 1 43 154 138
Tol edo
19 22 1 39 151 155
Des Motnes 18 21 2 38 139 150
Fort Wayn e

15 22 0 30 139 151
Saturday's Results
Dayton 7 ~ Moines 5
Ft Wayne 3 Flint 2
Pori Huron 4 Lansing 3
Muskegon 3 Kalamazoo 0
Toledo 4 Columbus 1

Richard Hamtllon s Cl tne 4 2 10 Whaley l 0 2
H1ghlanders pushed theJr Wag mg er 5 0 10 Hacker 8 2
18 J Cl1ne 1 3 5 Hart 6 2 14
record to 5-4 SW IS 3-2 m the Boll ' 3 l1 Gagal4 2 10 Totals
5 49 144 122
SVAC
4 38 135 11 3
33 14 80
6 38 130 138
Sunday's Results
SOUTHWESTERN !82) Clutch baskets by semors
5 1 27 103 167 Lansl ng 4 Fori Wayne l
Walker
l1 5 27 Wood 10 1 21
Uoyd Wood and Kevm Walker Carter 4 2 \0 , Grat e 3 7 13
Fllnl 6 Port Huron 1
6 27 4 16 87 162 Sagenaw 7 Muskegon A
and sophomore; Ke1tll Grate Lew ts I 1 3 Crouse 0 2 2 Nlda Ka nsas Ct l yOt iJIS
tOn l
earned the Hil{hlanders to 1 4 6 Totals 30 22 82
w 1 t pts gl ga Columbus 4 Kalamazoo 0
Rese,.ves - I ronton St Joe Montreal
22 6 12 56179111 Des Moines 3 Toledo 1
the1r overtime v i~lory
Today•s Games
Los Angeles 20 6 12 52 117 73
34 sw 25
Durmg regulation, SW led 23P tltSburgh
14 16 8 36 152 144
No games scheduled
Detroi t
10 22 5 25 104 148
16 at the end of the first penod,
Weshmgton
3 33 4 10 80 215
WHA Standings
44-36 at the half and 61-48
DIVISIOn 4
By United Press tnterna11on11
w 1 1 ph gf ga
East
gomg mto the !mal stanza The
Buff alo
25 8 6 56 173 125
w I I pts gf ga
Lawrence Counbans came on
Boston
22 10 6 50 185 1\8 New Eno lnd 21 14 l 43 132 127
'Toront o
13 18 7 33 127 144 Cle\Je land
14 20 1 29 9S 113
strong m the !mal e1ght
Ca llforn1a
10 23 8 28 111 164 Chi cag o
13 20 l 27 lll 130
mmutes outscormg SW 26-13
Saturday'$ Results
ln d lam1pol s 6 31 2 14 85 168
By MILTON, RICHMAN
By Un1ted Press International NY Rangrs5NY tslndr s 3
West
At
one
ttme,
the
Htghlanders
UPI Sportl Editor
Atlan ta 4 Sf LOUIS 1
Monday
w I t pts gt go
fell four pom tS behind but Oh to State al Michigan Stale Monlreal 10 Washtngton 0
Houston
26 ll 0 52 170 104
Pllt! burgh 4 Vancouver 3
Phoenl)•
Dayton at Houston
18 l4 " 40 124 115
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) - If somebody asked me to describe managed to tie the game on a Ashland
Kansas Ctl'{"2 Detroit 1
Minnesota
18 16 0 36 149 122
at
Rollins
Fla
Boston
8
Minneso
ta
o
Don Wilson, and pinned me down to one word, the word would Wood goal
Central St at Rro Grande
Toronto 6 Chicago 3
San D iego
17 17 I 35 11 2 118
Both teams had an ex- Cedarville at Wilmington
have to be "competttive" because there was lhLS strong streak of
Philadelphia 2 LOS Ang 2
Michigan
12 24 3 27 97 165
Tuesday
Sundays Result s
Canadian
Jack1e Robmson m him whtch made hun try to beat you on the ceptiOnal mght from the floor
Toronto 1 DetrOit 0
w I t pt! gf ga
Southwestern connected on 30 M1 ssour~ a t Ohm University
baseball held or off
Atlanta 3 washington o
Toronto
21 15 1 43 158 136
Eastern Me c h1gan at Akron
Buffalo 4 St LOU IS 2
Quebec
21 15 0 42 148 124
The Don Wtlson I had come to know was full or fll'e, full of of 55 attempts for 54 5 pet ( Jnctnnatl at lOUISVIlle
NY F!angers 6 Van couver 2
E dmonton
18 11 1 37 11 J. 96
wht!e
Ironton
St
Joe
canned
33
Buflalo
at
Cleveland
Sl
m1sch1ef, full of life
Montreal 6 Ch• cago 4
lm at Baldwin Walla ce
Ca l trornta 5 Philadelphia 1
Winnip eg
17 1.&lt;1 1 35 128 101
Now he and hiS fiVe-year-&lt;&gt;ld son Alex, who was the apple of his of 63loor shots for 52 8 pet The Ober
Capttal
at
DeniSon
Mondav's Games
Vancouver
16
16 2 34 104 Hl6
eye, are dead, both vtctims of carbon monoXIde poLSonmg, and game was won at the foul !me Mar~ e tta at Kenyon
nnesola at Kansas I
Saturdav s Results
New Eng 4 Vancouve,. 3 ot
Wednesday •
the police m Houston say tbey aren't altogether sure how Wilson where Southwestern san k 22 of
~~
San Diego 2 Cle'Je!a nd 0
Bow ltng Green at Syracuse
35
attempts
met his death m the garage of his home, but they thtnk 11 was
Quebec 3 Toronto 1
~
.!\\!! ' .
Penn St al Kent St
The Flyers connected on 14 of Youngstown
lndpls 4 Ch icago 4 or
accidental
Sf at Pittsbuegh
Hou
st on S M ic higan 2
Otterbem at Mlame
Don Wilson wanted so much out of life, valued 11 so h1ghly, tt's 26. at the free throw Ime
Sunday's Results
Walker f1n1shed as the Hetdelberg at Ohio Northern
Tor onto A Cleveland 3
diff1cult to conceiVe hiS takmg his own
W1ttenberg at Wooster
Michigan J vancouver 1
'
He always was so eager for the next ball game, tbe next hurdle, games top pomt producer w1th Muskmgum at Mount Unron
Phoenhc 2 Ind ianapolis 1
9 New England 3
the next day, that 11 Is ununagmable thinkmg of hilh giVIng up or 27 Wood had 21, Grate had one Malone at Urbana
After readmg astrologica l Mmnesota
Chicago 3 Edmonton 2
of hts better mghts this wmter Blufflon at Wilm ington
forecasts for the year, we ve
not wishing to compete anymore
Monday's Games
w1th 13 pomts and Terry Carter Case Wester n at Carnegie dec1ded to skip 1975
(N o games sc hedul ed J
He loved to beat the other guy -at anything
Mellon
He pitched two no':hltters, one against Atlanta m 1967 and the dumped m 10 pomts
Cedarville al Rio Grande
H1ttmg double ftgures for the Ftnd lay at Deftan ce
other one agamst Cinc!nnattm 1969 He was working on h1s third
Oh10 Domm ican at Wilberfor ce
no-hitter ag;!mst the Reds last season wben Houston Manager Flyers were Hacker w1th 18
Ma lone at Urbana
Preston Gomez yanked hun for a pmch-hitter m the bottom of the Hart, 14, Boll, II, Gaga1, B Wa l sh at Xav1er
Chne and Wagmger wtlh 10
Thursday
etghth mrung because the Astros were trwling, 2-1 ./
Cleveland St at Wrtght 51
I remember the ftnal game of tbe 1973 season 111 Atlllnta where pomts each
at Central St
Ironton St Joe took the Wilberforce
the Braves were playmg Houston and Hank Aaron needed only
Northwood (Mtch I at Tiffin
reserve game 34-25 La ber led
one more homer to equal Babe Ruth's record
Fr~day
No games scheduled
Each time Aaron came up, Wilson, wbo was m the bullpen the Winners wtth 10 pomts
Saturday
beyond tbe outfield, would come out and move closer to where he Fortner had II for the Little M1nnesota at Ohto State
thought Aaron m~ght htt the ball over the fence ThLS annoyed Highlanders
Ohio Unt verslly al Toledo
Southwestern plays at M1 am t at Bowlmg Green
Dave Roberts, ptlchmg for the Astros, but Wtlson didn't really
Central M1 Ch1gan at Kent St
care If Aaron htt that reoord-tymg homer, he wanted to be the Eastern Saturday mght
Temple at Cmclnnatt
IRONTON
ST
JOE
(SOl
B
one to catch the ball
Cre 1ghfon at Dayton
Roanoke (Va) at Akron
I remember the fll'e m Don Wilson's remarks when he talked
Trt
State lnd at Ashland
about the mequallties eXISting between the black and white
MILLER HONORED
Wayne Sf Mlch at Cleveland
societies and I also remember the mischief in his vo1ce wben one
St
RANCHO LA COSTA, Calif
Ph!la Te xtil e at Youngstown
of his teammates, Jun Bauton, came out w1th hiS all-reveahng (UPI) - JohnnyMiller, Wimer
St
"Ball Four "
of e1ght PGA tournaments and Ba ldw1n Wallace at Ohio
"My wife keeps askmg me 'Are all ballplayers tbe way Bouton a record $353,02llast year, wtll Northern
has 11m hiS b()((k''," he laughed
be honored as Pro Golfer of the Mount Unton at Capital
Denrson at Herde lberg
Don Wilson was far more complex than most ballplayers.
Western sportswnters and Kenyon at Musk lngum
One Houston player especially close to him was Doug Rader, broadcaste rs tomght
Wooster at Marietta
who fll'sl learned of Wilson's death from one of hLS ne~ghbqp;
The '1:/-year-&lt;&gt;ld slender blond W•ttenberg at Oberlin
after coming m from fishing Stmday on the St Lode River near from San FranciSco LS sche- Otterbein at Oh i o-wesleyan
'Rto Grande at Ma iOlll!
his home in Stuart, Fla
H W Safford
duled to be feted at a dmner at Wllm 1ngton at F 1ndlay
If you koow Doug Rader at all, you know he gtves you an honest the La c;osta Country Club
Def1ance at Hanover, lnd
San 01ego,
Blufflon at Taylor. lnd
count, both stdes of the com, and he does so m the most
Mlller, who won the f~rst Hiram
at
Case
Western
straightforward way be can He does the same thmg talkmg three events of the 1974 PGA John Carrol l at Carneg•e
about Don Wilson
Irati, IS the defending cham- Mellon Pa
"I've known him smce 1965," says the Astros' tllll'd baseman piOn at the $150,000 Phoentx Ohro Dominican at Walsh
"I've played with hun Ul tbe nunors and the majors and I've seen Open m Phoentx, Ar1z , this Trffin at Cedarvtlle
Wrlberforce at Steubenville
him at his best and at hiS worst
Huntington, lnd at Urbana
week
"!loved this man dearly when I was m the minors and when he
fll'St came up In the big leagues1but then for two or tllree years
That quote ts f rom an actual letter sent to the
he became bitter The most heart-breakmg thing to me, the
Bette
r Bust ness Bureau And 1t s so true ,
shame of 11 all, IS that he had overcome his bttterness, and he was
some t1m es th e BBB doesn't even have to do
now again the man he used to be, the one I knew at first
anythtng
to ~elp you ge t your money 's worth
"What made him bttter' I'd say he was a little diSillustOned
Just droppmg ou r na me tS frequen tly
with people He was a very seliSIIlve, warm person, and very
enough to get actron from a bu smess
often the bad element m some people would disap~mt him
you re havtng probl ems wtth
tremendously "
Bu t when you really do need ou r
At tune!i, lhe 29-year-&lt;&gt;ld fastballer from Comp~, Call£ ,
would go Into a shell He didn't always offer any reason either
heIp we re ready We don t always
"A Iotta people thought Don Wilson was a militant, but It
succeed, but we always try
wasn't true," says Doug Rader "He was just a very defellSive
When you have a probl em wtth
IndividUal I'we seen him go to hospitals, and I've ~n bow he
busmess tl s bad fo r you and for
was with people there I've seen him :w!tll those wbo were
bustness And no one knows that
severely handlca[lped, and Wlth old people, tbose whose days
better than the busmessmen
\
were limited Onethlngyouhave to say about Don Wilson, he had
sams
good nBighbor.
who su pport the BBB
empathy Wlth other people
Here's my new State Farm off1ce where I can serve t
"I also saw him last summer wben he pitched etght hitless
Innings against Cl!tinnatl and he was pulled out of the game We
you With the best '\lalue m car, home, life and health
all knew how he felt, but he was very understanding of the
msurance I mv1te you to call or drop many teme
Sl\ujltlon. He removed hlljlsel! from the area. Wltll he got his wits
STEVE SNOWDEN
' about him an\! wben he did he thought the manager had dOJie the
CALL YOUR BETTER 8USNSS BUREAU.
1258 Pow~ll !it , Middleport, Ph 992 7155

This Week's

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Games

'"!I
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a~
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indicating .that
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BBB
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1::.-.t.. ,rn Avenue

It costs twice 11 much to feed
a family of four wbeo two illlows Dlove In _ relatively

lipolts. G.
.. Coilr

Speak lag

I

to 18 mtdway through the
second half Rtck Gates scored
20 pomts for the Flashes, who
shpped to 1-7 on the year
In the f~rst heuvy Oh10
Conference actiOn, title
favonte Wtttenberg overcame
a 1o-pomt hal!tune defiCit to
eas1ly dispose of prevwusly
unbeaten Manetta 69-.&gt;5 at

Cold

In

I m glad you l1ke 11 -

eluding a clutch patr of free
throws that gave the Falcons
an unbeatable 6«Hi2 margm
Jeff Montgomery led the
Bowling Green scormg wtth 20
pomts, wlule Cash hmshed
w1th 16 pomts and 17 rebounds
J1m Kindle, a transfer from
BG, led the Rockets w1th 20,
mcludmg 14 m the fll'st half
Kindle was 10 or 16 from the
floor
M1am1 and Oh1o Umverstty
both got orr on the right foot m
the first full week of MAC play,
the Redskms beatmg Western
M1Chtgan 67-.&gt;9 at Oxford, and
the Bobcats takmg a 58-53
dec1s1on over Kent State at
Athens
Sophomore Chuck Goodyear
led Miami to Its eighth Will miO
games w1th 18 points and Greg
Olson and Rod Dieringer htt
some clutch free throws m the
closmg minutes for the Redskins Olson's char1ty toss w1th
4 30 remammg put M1am1
ahead to stay, 58-57
It was a familiar story for
Oh1o U , whtch has new won
four m a row, as Junior guard
Walter Luckett, the top scorer
m the oonference last year,
poured m 27 pomts agams t
Kent
Bobcats Coast
OU was m command all the
way, holding a 34-24 margm at
halftune and bmidmg the lead

mountains."

One

Oh 0
518 St;.:
l'hree mon ths
S'n 00 year SIX
three months
ion pnce tn
T tmi?S
I

(~)

Cottre ll 3 4 10, Metzner 3 1 7

sWorld

?
•

-'••e F011da

By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Wtth a year to go, National
Park Serv1ce offlCtals already
are at work on the b1centenmai
ed1t1on of the National RegLSter
of Histone Places
Several new entnes have
been approved w1thin the last

'

1

Coach Rudolph Rames'
Buffalo B1sons broke a 23-23 he
wtth 16 pomts m the th1rd
period Saturday mght enroute
to a 48-39 v1ctory over Kyger
Creek m a non-league game at
Cheshtre
For Buffalo, 1t was tlle
B1sons' fourth v1ctory m !tve
starts thts year Kyger Creek
m losmg, lost Its s1xth game m
£even starts. Earher thts
Winter, Buffalo had dropped
tile 'Cats 53-29
Coach Ke1th Carter's Bobcats Jumped off to an 1H !trst
penod lead behmd the shooting
of 6-2 sen10r Joe Stidham, 6-2
semor forward Doug Cottrell
and baskets by Dave WISe and
Tom Kern The B1sons outscored the host team , 17-12 m
the second stanza knotting the
game at 23-23
Btg Neal Walker , B1son
center, pumped m s1x pomts
durmg the rally Mike Boles,
jumor guard, added ftve potnts
and John Stone canned four
Leading the Bobcat second
period attack was Cottrell wtth
flVe pomts and JuniOr B1ll
Metzner had three
Buffalo, sparked by Walker,
Boles, M1ke Burch, and Stone
broke tile tie and was never
seriously threatened the rest or
the game Walker and Boles
paced Buffalo w1th 13 pomts
each Cottrell and Wtse had 10
potnts each tn a lostng effort
Buffalo htt 19 of 52 floor attempts for 36 pet and 10 of 18 at
the free throw ltne KC canned
14 of 35 from the floor for 40 pet
and II of 19 at tbe char~ty
strtpe
Buffalo took the reserve lilt,
49-29 Randy Parsons led the
wtnners w1th 16 whtle Ralph
Baylor had seven pomts for the
Bobkittens

I) I

1

DR. LAMB

The Amencan dream ha s

become a nt ghtmare I no
longer thmk the system c~n be
chang ed by lega l means
Amenca IS too corrupt '
-Former New York police officer Frank Serp1co who revealed widespread corruption
among fellow pohcemen.
'Too much Impor tance as
g1ven to the VIews of pohhcans,
CIVtl servants agncultural
researchers econom1sts, b1g
busmess and other so-called ex
perts It 1s the deciSion of the

If Saturday night's Bowling

Bisons topple
Bobcats

Bnttsh woomg techniques

J

•

Falcons edge Rockets in overtime

BYGARYPHILLIPS
Well, It's getting to be that time of year agam when all of the
area basketball teams start worrylll8 The fll'st place team IS
always worrymg about the teams below them and whether they
will be caught while the lower teams are wondermg whether or
not they are gomg to be able to catch that eluslVe fll'st place
team Let's take a look at the games and see how things are gomg
to shape up
Tuesday,Jan. 7
SVAC
Trimble vs Haman Trace Tomcats travel a long way for a
defeat Haman Trace 64 Trunble 53
Southern vs Waterford What can I sa; ' - I like the name
Wildcats' Waterford 62 Southern ii4
(Other Gamefl)
South Pomt 73 Rock Hill 57 Gallipolis 57 Ironton 56, Farrland
65Coal Grove 60, Waverly 64 Jackson 56, Chesapeake 5!10ak Hill
49, PI Pleasan~ 66 Humcane 58, Athens 73 Me1gs 58, Logan 80
Wellston 60
Friday, Jan 10
(SVAC)
Hannan Trace vs Kyger Creek Wildcats add salt to the
Babcat wound Hannan Trace 71 Kyger Creek 60
North Gallla vs Eastern Eagles are tough on home court
North Gall1a 67 Eastern 60
Hannan vs Southern Tornados post another victory
Southern 60 Hannan 50
Symmes Valley vs Rock Hlll Vtkes are havtng 1t rough
Rock Hill 80 Symmes Valley 62
(Other Gamell)
South Pomt 71 Fall'land 69, Trunble 55 Miller 50, Ironton 59
Logan 55, Jackson 67 Me1gs 56, Chesapeake 74 Coal Grove 64, PI
Pleasant 55 Ravenswood 52
Saturday, Jan . 11
(SVAC)
Fall'land vs Symmes Valley Vkkings still can't fmd the
right combination Fairland 78 Symmes Valley 55
Southwestern vs Eastern Eagles wm a squeaker Eastern
63 Southwestern 58
(Other Gamell)
Me~gs 66 Federal Hocking 63

world s farmers and the farmer
alone which Will affect supplies
of food m the future ·
-Charles Munro, Canadian
farmer, addressing the World
Food Conference Ia Rome
If the Democrats cla1m a
mandate for sometl\mg, 11 Will
be for somethmg that doesn t
eXISt The voters don't expect
th e Democrats to solve
anythmg In fact they don t ex
peel to do very much about
problems anymore It s Just
that they re gomg to pumsh the
Republicans '
- Democratic pollster Pat
Caddell on upcoming elect1ons
' If you assume that you can t
trust tlle President, you're m
trouble and that 's all there IS to
1t So de spite the fact that
there s been cnhc1sm, 1 m
a!ra1d 1f I had to do 11 all over
aga m I thmk I d make tlle

I

"

3- The Dally Sent mel, Mlddlepor l-Pbmeroy, 0 , Monday, Jan 6, 1975

DON OAKLEY

...

•

.,

-

,

I

I

q~1

thing_"

Doug_Rader paused a mOinent
"I've heard all kinds of crazy thmgs, nunors, about how Don
Wilson died," he said "I don't care what anyone says, I'll never
believe he killed himself He loved life too much His death
Simply had !o be1an acpdent I'd stake my life on that~·

au

HEI.PIN,G lOU GET lOUR MON_EY'S WORIH.

-

fotdll~lf.

$. . ,,,. II

*"'

'
A PubliC ~rvtee
of This NeWSiliiPet' &amp;The Advertising Council ~

,q

J •
--

j

�'

•

2- The Dati~ Sentmel, Mtddleport-Pmneroy, 0 Monda), .J,m 6 1975

Q
~

~~r

Life and i11creasingly violent death

-

By Don Oakley
Over one blood) weekend tn Cleveland a couple of months
ago, 10 people were shot to death m assorted arguments and
robbenes m passton and m cold blood, by destgn and by madvertence
While tlus 11 as a record for a clt) not particularly noted for a
high leve l of vtolence, the latest ( 1973 ) complete stat1st1cs on the
ponchant of Amencans for knocking each other off md1cate that
111th " hom1c1de rate of 26 5 per 100,000 m c11Jes w1th 250,000 or
more populatiOn, a c1tv th'-'Size of Cleveland can expoct about 179
crumnal hom1c1des (murder and manslaughter ) m a year
Accvrdmg to the FBI s Umform Crime Reports, the cr)IIlmal
hom1r1de ra te m the c1t1es nses conSistently w1th s1ze, from 59
por 100 000 1n clUes of less than 10,000 populatiOn to '1:/ 1 m clUes

'~ 1th

Ask Dick Kleiner

a m1lhon or more

11le ll&lt;ltwnal hom1c1de rate - 10 Oper 100,000 - stands at Its

males and females at ages I to 4, reflectmg to some extent more
accur~te recordmg of deaths resultmg from chtl d abuse As for
white fema les, the1r largest homtctde mcrease occurred ~~ages
75-85, which oomc1des wtth a reported mcrease m crunes agamst
the elderly
- Vtctuns of hom1c1de are predommantly young men, and
predomtll&lt;lntl) nonwh1te While the homtclde rate among wh1te
males between 25 and 34 more than doubled w1thm the decade to
13 4 per 100 000, 11 remams far below the rate among nonwh1te
males In the same age group - 149 5 per 100,000
- !+trearms Yo ere the prmctpaJ means of homlctde more
than two~h trds of the deaths resulte d from the use of a handgun,
nne or shotgun
- About one-fourth of all homiCides occurred Wlthtn the
famt l), w1 th about 12 per cent mvolvmg spouse ktlllng spouse, 3
per cent parent klilmg child and about 8 per cent other famtly
kilhn gs
- Other arguments, frequent!) aggravated by the element
of alcohol, were responsible for about 40 per cent of the
homtctd es, while killings durmg crunes of vwlence constituted
nearly 30 per cent
- The DIStnct of Columbia with 33 5 per 100 000, and
Georgia, with 21 5, had by far the highest hmmctcle rates m the
Umted States
- Thtrteen of the 16 Southern sta tes had lymu ctde rates
greater than the natwnal ciVerage The greatest InCreases,
however, occun ed m the New Eng la nd , M1ddle Atlan hc and East
North Central Slates, where hom1c1de rates more than doubled
durmg the decade
Such IS life, and death 1n th1s land of tlle less and less free
and more and more fearfu l

highest pmnt m 40 years P.•ralleling the general mcrease m
Vl O!encr and dtsorder 1n the 1960s, hom1c1de rates tncreased by
about 85 per cent m the penod from 1960-&lt;il to 197()-71 Current
data tnclicate the trend oontmues
Thts IS not the !trst tune the country has been caught m a
n st ng \\ lurhund of domestic vtolence, eve n tn thts century The
Stat1sttcal Bulletm of Metropolitan Ilfe recalls that homtctde
rd tes tn the United States showed a steady mcrease from 1900 to
1933 11hen a rate of 10 0 per 100,000 was reached, the same rate
as loda v
After 1933 however, tlle rate declined for more than a
deed de, rose sharply m 1945-46, but then resumed a generally
downward trend unhlthe late 195~. when a rate of 4 9 per 100,000
was recorded Then m the early 1960s the tr end was reversed and
the hom1c1de rate has men rapidly smce then
The Metropolitan sta tlsltclans, usmg data from the Natwnal
Center for Health Statlshcs, have broken the raw figures down
mto a number of categones
- ~'or all ages combmed, death rates from hom1c1de between 196()-61 and 197()-71 rose by 95 per cent among white males
The girl s sure not1 ced our
and 44 per cent among white females, and 85 per cent and 37 per
secretary s engage menl rm~
cent among nonwhite males and females
from th e of!tce wolf Three of

Fluctuating Vicki

will bounce

Show suddenly changed ber appearance? Her ha1r 1s at roc1ous

heard tha t It ~as gomg to be on TV Is this true " If It IS, w11l 1t
e\oer come back to theaters agaan ? - S D New Orl ea ns La

Yes 1t s true NBC bought the n ghts to show It on TV once
from MGM - for a reported,$5 mt lll on But the dea l was for JUS!
one showmg 10 effect NBC sunpl) rented 11 The studi Oretams
ownership and presumably \\Ill re release It agam for theatncal

showmg

DEAR DICK Can you please lell me ho" old John Denver s
adopted son 15'' - MARYLOUISE PERRY, San D~ego Calif
Zachary Denver s adopted son IS now SIX months old
DEAR DI CK Can you g1ve me some m!ormat1on aboul the
fellow \\ho played lhe cap1a1n of lhe guards m the mov1c The
Longest Yard ? Where 1s he from ' What other movaes has be
been m• - M II , Oklahoma City, Okla
That s that fine character actor Ed La uter He s a Ne11
Yorker the son of a Broadway actress named Sally Lee He \\a s
m the Broadway productiOn of The Great White !lope tllen
ca me y,est and has been verv busy You could have seen htm m

such movtes as

Rage

The New Cenlunons

and 'Lollv

opinion, features

Strip mining marches on

What people
are saying ...

and she s gamed so much "e1ghl What s her problem• INTERESTED VIEWER, Mobile, Ala
.
Well she recently gotmarned 1f that sa problem She made
the change m her hatr style- adopt1 ng a fuzzy natural - Without
consultmg anybody on the show It "s her persona l taste surfa cmg
that s all Her v.etght her fn ends say al11 ays has fluc tuated It s
JU St flu ctuatmg up these day s maybe smce she became Mrs 1\1
Schull' Her new husband ts the show s mak e up man
DEAR DICK I am a 'Gone 1\lth the Wmd' fa n and I recenlly

Editorial comment,

TOM TIEDE

How the@

By D1 ck Klemer
DEAR DICK Why has V1ck1 Lawrence of The Carol Burnell

Madonna

'em had II previOusly

Quote/Unquote

Leon Jaworski
I had to Witness former
PreSident N1xon gettmg up
before the Amencan people and
talkmg differently from what I
knew the facts to be It was
very difficult to keep QUiet But
I kne\\ that there would be a
day of reckonmg '
- Leon Jaworski, former
Watergate spec1al prosecutor,
saymg 10 ao mterv1ew 1n People
magazme that he was con
vmced of Nixon's guilt as early
as December, 1973
A Londoner runnmg
h1mself down serves many purposes
1t suggests to senSitive Lo nd oners that 11 was at a
posh publi c boardmg school
that he learned h1s shy clum
smess m the presence of women
and 1t makes h1m ternbly
Bnttsh by nature, for If there IS
one tllmg an Enghshman seeks
to av01d It IS havmg htmself
thought of as a womamzer or
suave Latin lover '
-Excerpt from "The Lon
doners L1fe IS a C1vihzed C1ty"
by Walter Henry Nelson, on

same decJsJon "
- Henry E Petersen comment lOg on his handling of
Watergate after resigning as
head of the Justice
Department's Criminal Divl
SIOD

' The only thmg worthwhile m
life 1s to do everythmg you can
to make thmgs better I tlunk
1t s a sad and empty ex1stence
to have a life of balls and parttes I have seen too many
women destroyed because of
that I spent too much of my
own hfe mto that "
-Actress, activist and feminist
Jane Fonda

10

By Tom Tiede
Times m Amertca, hard, have to 40 cent severance tax per
HAZARD, Ky ~ (NEA) swung agamst the sensitive, ton Half the acreage and
Esthetically, Olhe Combs ' m1litant, defiant approach to
property has never been much surface coal mmmg ~ and perm1tchargesare gtven to the
It's 40 acres, most!) up and to ward ' necessary" coun t1es, and a percentage of
down, at the head of a hollow acqm escence Thus wtdow the severance tax Hell, that s
and U1e rear of underdeveloped Combs and other antlstrlppcrs, b1g money You don t fmd
ruraht) tn U1e Kentuck) Ap- once heroes are now, m hght of people around here wllllng to
forego It for the sake of a fell
palachians where 11even the
energy shortages and m- trees We worry about people
weeds have a hard hme a dustrlal stagnation, considered
not landscapes '
ma ktn 11 '
dangerous by many of the
And so 11 IS lhdt while some
NeveJ theless, 11 s all she hns fearful
people
do pro!t~. the landscape
- and her great prtde Thus,
The trend away frQI!l the suffers Desp1te a fatrl; sltff
"hen a coal company rudely hard line on stnpplng IS of
mvaded the land a decade ago, course most apparent m coal state reclamatiOn law, grea t
wtth strtp m1n1ng mtent1ons country Ken Ratliff, of Ken- stretches of the surroWldmg
hills have been wounded
and machmery as tall as the tucky's
Bureau
of Large numbers of gtant coal
trees, w1dow Combs said no
Reclamation, says this state as
She said Is so forcefully, m a whole Is still "very oon- trucks dommate and damage
th e h1ghwa)s
Roadsid e
fact, poSitioning herself m
cerned" about surface mmmg process mg plants, at full
front of bulldozers and so forth
abuses , ' but coal COW1ties are
that she became something oi something else ' Bumper ste&amp;m , thr ow out ever
an mstant mountam legend stickers m the hllls proclaim w1derung Circles of scorched
.9Je was arrested for her "We Dig Coal " Mlnmg area earth The air IS heavy with the
smells and gnme of cold coal
protests, put on telev1slon talk
newspapers trumpet stat1sttcs cash
flown
to
shows,
and
which show a doublmg m
And thmgs wtll gel even
Washmgton as an elderly Kentucky of str1p -mlmng
worse
Coa l productwn 1n
da rlmg or the then growing ac tiVIty Individuals often
America
lh1s year ,,.
anli-strlp muung movement
equate oonservatiomsts w1th prog r am ~d to equal las t
Today, 11 1dow . Combs has
anti-Americanism "Why do vear's 591-fmlllon tons and a
retired from tlle war agamst
they want, the Arabs to take governm ent study foresees
stnppmg She says shes too over?"
annual d1ggmg rates of two
old now -70 - !or oombat .9Je
The pro-stripping attitude b1lhon tons by 1985 - more
docs keep up "some ' w1th stnp carries ny mystery here Coal
mtne news, she adds , but for at present Is synonymous w1th than half of 11 by stnppmg
Farms w11l go (600,000 acres of
the most part she's out of 11
prospertty Oldsters who cropland IS under coal lease 1n
She spends her lime qmetly,
remember the Appalachian North Dakota alone), water
caring for a paralyzed re!at1ve
dollar gloom of) esteryear, and ssppltes Will be threatened
m a dilapidated home on the
read about enormous problems ecologiCal and human balanc-es
flattest portion of the 40 acres
elsewhere even now, say w1th upset Sa;s one area gloomMeanwhile, all about, the accuracy that stnp mmmg
ster "What you see here you'll
stnppers still tear up the land
here IS the difference between soon see everJ'Yherc tn the U
The departure of th1s lower middle class survtval
s
11arhorse 1s of more than and desperate pnvatwn
Ollie Combs agrees Lookm g
passmg mterest m the local
Says one ooal executive
aroundher hills she has seen
and natiOnal str1p mmlng
'Compames are charged $35 the futur e and tt IS bleak - so,
co ntroversy For she has
an acre and $150 for ea€h
retreated net only because of permit to dtg Plus there 1s a 35 retired she s JUSt not lookmg
Rn) more
age , but m the face of changmg
odds favormg the other s1de

"We're Going Along with President Ford's
Ideas on Economy, Smith
You're Fired!"

1 r
1
I

I

1r

Watergate should
he 'historical'

Young managers
win high marks

CLEVELAND (UP!) - A
po ll of some 550 mdustr1ai1Sts
gave voWlg managers h1gh
marks m man) categones
oompared '" th the1r older
oounterparts, Industry Week
BJ La\\renre E L.amb MD
condition
Magazine reported today
111 th thts nmse
DEAR DR L \MB - Ap
1 m 62 and we1g h 100 pounds,
Increasmg age ts ronunonh haThey were COllSidered to be
rder workers than older
Proxunateh fo1tr ~ears ago 1 " h1ch IS my norm a1 we1ght
assoc1aled w1 th buzz1ng and
noticed a noiSe Ill Ill) head This nmse IS hard (o descnbe, rtngmg Ill the ears This IS managers, more effective than
wh1ch great!\ dtsturbed me but 11 sounds like a h1gh hne probabl} related to changes m )Oung managers of past generbecaiiSe I unagtned all ktnd of 111re humnung m th e 111nter th e artenes For thts reason I at10ns,
and more capable of
ff
"mgs that could be wrong u1ne
ectmg
change than wer thell'
e
''
usua11y adviSe people wtth thts
ThiS noise tsnot 1\lth me all the
problem to do the same thmgs predecessors
hme !rna; have tt one day and
DEAR READER - The they should do to prevent heart
Also, they question more, are
not the pext If I drop off to diagnosts and treatment of disease, go on a low-fat, loll ;ore soctally aware, and are
sleep In my cha1r after a days no1ses ts e1ther very s1mple or cholesterol d1et
correc t
angmg industr) 's unage for
work I "ake up wtth tl, and tt almost lmposstble ApparenUy obesity and gel regular sen, ~~better. tlle magazme was
, ;nay last for two days
) ou fallm the latter category Sible exercise
'
"'' After gomg to several docAny obstruction Ill the outer
AvOldmg coffee and dnnks
On the other hand , they are
tors and usmg ear drops and ear can cause rmgmg sounds m that contam caf!eme may help no~well equipped to manage
bemg exammed for the the ear If It Is "(ax, stmpl; some That is better than as th} 's older managers, nor
prostate gland, which IS nor- removing the excess wax m the taking tranquiliZers
are
ey as effective, the
rnal, I have no relief
ear may cure the difficulty
Patients wtth Memere s maT~azme was told
ThiS nmse has caused me to Unfortunately most cases are disease may also have nngmg
e sutvetoy bdroke down
-become very uphght and not that simple
m the ear, dlzztness, nausea m~agers m un er.W, 40-50
nervous I have taken many
Rmgmg and noiSes can also and loss of hearmg This IS anThover.OO age categories
kinds of tranqUJhzers I had a be caused by some med1cmes probabl) related to ace tna)Onty of respondents
Complete phys 1cal 1n 8 When them ed 1cme IS stopped, cumul ation of !lu1d and sa1d those Ill the mtddle
hospttal, and they found the rmgmg stops
changes lnstde the dehcate ear groupmg were best equlpped,
nothtng nor did they gtve me
Circulation changes m the mechamsm not tnslde the by education and trauung, to
any relief from the nOise .The bram and around the'hearmg bram
manage "You've had a fall'ly
brain scan was normal.
ha
decent ed.lcat10n, enough time
mec msm can cause rmgmg
The best advtce I can g1ve to t
s
ge some expenence, and
I have had three bearing , or b
uzzmg notses orne people you smce you have already had )'OU till ha
th dr
f
-ammatlons
which
showed
f
ve e 1ve o
.are more aware o normal a good exalmnation lS to try the
ths "

Noise in head u:on 't quit

r~Jth~a~:~ :~ ~;h~a~v~e~lt~o~st~stom~e~ru~g~h~
- ~c~~r~c w~a~t~Io~n~so~ufn d~s~tll~;an~~oth;ers~--:d~ ~et~:·~ e;x~e~rct~se~!gP:Iro:gr :a~m~.~a~ndL~~;o~~~-;w~as~a
the

l

been told
1101se
, was told I would have to live

'

to the ear, for

suclras gun fire, can cause this

avotd caffeme - contammg

may help sonle

lI
''

Vel th
t d toda
• e reporcommon
sa1 , reJomy's
are better

same degree of 20 )ears ago
One sa1d "our educatiOnal
system has been gomg m the
nght dU'ect10n '
There
was
genera l
agreement that today's
younger manager works no
harder than older managers
did when they were his age, nor
are they felt to be a n) bnghter
However, the) have so much
more deciSion data ava1lab!e
that they can be more effective
than !hell' predecessors and
tlley also want to know the

v.hys and wherefores or processes and decLSions
Yet even the young"
managers polled downgraded
themselves on awareness of
goverument Influen ce, of
pohllcs and of world events It
appears doubtful, the report
satd, they Will lead any
counterattacks" on behalf of
mdustry

The Dai~ Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THF.
INT EREST OF

MEIGS MAS ON ,AR:EA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
Exec Ed
R OBERT HOEFLICH

Ctty Edtto r
J:J u bl , shed dally

For the b1centenmal celebratton , the swte once occupied by
the Democratic NatiOnal Committee should be restored to the
condition at the tune of the
break-m
It also nught be mce to have
wax !tgures dep1ctmg the
"Watergate F1ve" 10 the
process
of buggmg the premiSthe lighter side
es
few days to jom the 10,000 or so
Tidal Basm - Th1s body of
sties, structures and cultures water, where stripper Fame
already certlfted ns histone. • Foxe's nocturnal plunge
As a rule of thumb, the caused the undomg of Rep
des1gnat10n 1s not applted W1lbur Mills, surely IS as
unless at least 50 years have histone as, say, Boston Harelapsed, but excephons can be bor.
made when a place- ll1 hiStory
For when 1t oomes to mdefm1tely IS assured The stte fluencmg the oourse of history,
of the space shots at Cape the downfall of someone as
Canaveral1s an example
powerlul as the chauman of
Under that cntenon, there the House Ways and Means
are a couple of other brand new Commtttee 1s nght up there
histone places that should be w1th the Boston Tea Party
oons1dered for mclus10n m the
Re&amp;lagmg the Boston Tea
regtster They are
Party always draws good
Water gate -Already a crowds, and the btcentenmal
maJor lourtst attraction, this undoubtedly would be enriched
office but!ding 's unpact on by r~nactment of the Tidal
h1story probably exceeds Basm ln ctdent
Gettysburg, Valle) Forge and
I see Ilnda Lovelace m the
Independence Hall ~ombmed
role of Miss Foxe, With John
Wayne playing the part of
M1lls
Apart from these two historic
Sites, a number of other places
recently have acqull'ed hiStorical slgniftcance and nugljt
mer~t a listmg m the reg15ter.
They mclude
-The offices were SpU'o
Agnew allegedly accepted the
payoffs that brought about his
r es1gnatton
as
vice
preSident
Smce these transactions
reputedly took place in a
var1ety of locations, perhaps a
simple bronze plaque of the
" George Washington Sl~pt
Here" type would be posted at
each
-The conference room
wbere officials of the National
Milk Producers Association
deClded which candidate to
favor With campaign conll'ibutlons
-The map room at the
Central Inte!Ugence Agency
where operatives learned to
distmgu1sh between foreign
and domestic spying

Kyger Creek w11l host
Hannan Trace Fr~day
BUFFALO (48)- Walker 5
3 13 Burch 4 0 8 Gatens 1 0 2,
Boles 6 1 13 , Green law 1 2 4
Stone 2 2 6 and Noffmger 0 1 1

Totals 19 10 48
KYGER CREEK

e)(cept

Saturday by The Dt11c Vall ey
P ublt"h lnQ Company
111
Cour t St
f:lomeroy Ohto
J5769 Bustness Off tc e Phone
992 1156 Ed 1tonal Phone ~92
2157
Second class postage pa td at
Porn
Ohto
N
a/ ad -rerttstng
a tl ve
Bofl tne lll
Inc 12 East ~ 2n d
New York..
n
r::ates
ter where
·· ·heP1_e0r week
¥10
carr 1er

Wise 50 10
Kern 0 2 2

-

Sttdham 2 2 6
luca s 0 2 2 and
Totals 14 1l 39

Sm1lh 1 0 2
Reserves- Buffalo 49 Kyger
Creek 29
Ohto College Basketball Scores
By Un1ted Press International

Saturday
M1 ch1gan 85 Ohto State 73
Bowling Green 66 Toledo 64 ot
Ohio Unlv 68 Kent Slate 53
M1am1 67 West M 1ch•gan 59

CmCmnat1 93 Wabash ( lnd ) 67

Pepperdlne 80 Dayton 79
Rice 92 Wnght St 83
Loyola (Ill ) 67 Xavter 62
Ftor1da Tech 63 Ashtand 58 ot
Neb Omaha 100 Youngstown
97 ol
Musklngum

71

Baldw1n

Wal lace 54
Heidelberg 57 Capital 55

Mount Un1on 76 Den1son 68
Kenyon 71 Case Western 56
Wittenberg 69 Marietta 55

Oberlin 69 Steubenville 66

Oh 1o

Northern

61

Adr~an

(Mich ) 56
Otterbein 73 Wooster 54
Defiance 85 Blufflon 78
F1ndlay 83 Anderson ( lnd I 81
Ohio Dominican 73 Marlon
(lnd ) 61
Ear lham ( lnd ) 86 Urbana 84
Manchester
( tnd )
92
W1lmmgton 76

T1ff1n 84 Mercy (N Y) 73
Hall of Fame 'l'ourney, Canton
Walsh 84 W Va Wesleyan 82,

of , cons

Mtll1gan (Tenn ) 94 Malone 79,

champ

In 1919, former President
Theodore Roosevelt died at his
home m Oyster aay, N Y

Green-Toledo coiiiSlon IS any
irnhcatlon, the race for the
1974-75 Mld-Amer~can Con ference basketball title ts going
to be a red-hot affair
BG won the battle, commg
from a 13-pamt second half
delicti for a ~ overtune wm,
thanks to suc pomts by Cornelius Cash tn the extra pertod.
The win gl\fes the Falcons
sole possess1on of ftrst place
with a :Wmark, but there are a
lot of rough roads for ooach Pat
Haley's crew to travel between
now and the March 8 ftnale
agamst Central Mlch1 gan ,
mcludmg a Feb I date at
Toledo
Toledo , which was p1cked
along wtth BG as the teams to
beat tn thiS year's MAC t1tle
chase, almost came away w1th
the key road vtctory
The Rockets led 4()-33 at
halftune and bwlt it to 48-35
before the Falcons started to
close m
Bawlmg Green took tis Ill's!
lead of the seoond half at 58-57
w1th 1 22 left m the game
Toledo's M1ke Larson tied It at
53-all, but miSSed the seoond of
his two free throws, forcmg the
game mto overtune
Cash In The Clulcb
Cash, a 6-8 seruor from
Dayton, scored suc of BG's
etght pomts m overtune, 111-

Sprmg!~eld

The T1gers, 54 overall,
scored the first 10 pomts of the
second half to qmckly ue the
score at 37-37 and took the lead
for good at 41-40 on a basket by
rom Dunn
Dunn, Don Lynam and Jun
Ev~ns paced the 1 tgers'
balanced attack wtth 12 pomts
ap1ece
Martella , wh1ch lost for the
!trst tune m etght games was
led by Chuck Robmson w1th
13 It was the ftrst c-onference
game for both teams
At T1ffm, Heidelberg put a
crunp m Capital's title hopes
w1th a 57-S5 v1ctory over the
Crusaders
The Prmces got 16 pomts
from Mark Chr1shp 15 from
Dave Wtr1ck and 12 from Larry
Remmer as they led from start
to fm1sh Caps' only double
ft gure scorer was Gene Caslm
With 26
Musklngum In F1rsl
Musktngum , meanwhil e,
boosted 1ts Oh10 Conference
record to 2~ with a 71-04

•

dec1s1on over
BaldwmWul!ace The Musk1es' VIctory,
paced by Larry HarriSOn's 18
potnts , g1ves them so le
possesSIOn of first place
In other OC games, Mount
Umon beat Demson 7!Hl8 and
Otterbem whtpped Wooster 7:!54, whtle m games mvolvmg
conference teams, Kenyon defeated Case Western 7 1~
Oberlin tripped Steubenville
69-$ and Ohio Nort11ern beat
Adnan (Mtch ) 61~
Cmcmnati p1cked up tis sixth
wm ut 10 games constmg lo a
93~7 dectston over Wabash
( lnd ) Sophomore forward
Bnan Williams led the Bearcal• m soormg w1th 20 pomts
hittmg 10 of 16 from the floor
Cincmnat1 led 43-32 at halftune and by as many as 27 m
the fmal 20 mmutes as the
Bearcats forced Wabash mto 34
turnovers
Dayton dropped an 8()-79
dec1s1on to
Pepperdme
(Ca ll!) , the Flyers' fourth loss
m 10 games XaVIer fell to iHl
after a 67~2 loss to !.AJyola
(D! ), desp1te 20 pomts and 21
rebounds by Jerry Foley, and
Youngstown State suffered 1ts
ftrst loss m seven games, IOll-97
tn overtime to Ne braskaOmaha
ln the Hall of Fame Tournament at Canton, Mtlllgan
(Tenn ) defeated Maione 94-79
m the champ10nsh1p game,

Highlanders edge-Irish, 82-80
Southwestern outscored
vts1tmg Ironton St Joe 8-4i man
overtime Saturday mght to
post a thnlbng 82-l!O non-league

VIctory
The w1n avenged an earlier
one-pomt loss on the Flyers'
planks Wtth the v1ctory, Coach

while Walsh took the cotlsolatwn oontest w1th an overt1me
84-112 declston over West Vlrg.ma Wesleyan
In other games, Rice beat
Wright Slate 9~. Florida
Tech edged Ashland 63-.&gt;8 m
overtime Defiance downed

Bluffton 85-78, Findlay slipped
past Anderson (lnd ) 84-al,
Oh10 Dominican defeated
Mar10n (Jnd ) 73-61, Earlham
(lnd ) outscored Urbana 8U2,
Manchester (Ind ) beat
Wilmington 92-76 and Tiffin
downed Mercy (N Y ) 84-73

Pro Standings
N BA Stand.ngs
By Umted Pres s 1nterna11onal
Eastern Co nf ere nce
AtlantiC DIVI Si On

w

I
13
14

pet

g l:J

Bos.ton
23
639
• Buffa lo
23
6'17
New York
21 15 583
2
Phlla delph a I S '11 J05 a1 :1
Central D1v1 ston
w
I pet 9 b
Washmgton
'16 12 684
Cleve land
20 15 571
,p.
Hous ton
20 17 541
51J
A llan ta
16 2J
4 10 101 2
New Or lea n s
3 33 083 22
Western Conference
Midwe st DtVI Ston
w I pet 9 b
Delrot t
22 17 564 Ch.cago
19 18 5 14
2
KC Omaha
20 n
476
3 •
M lw i'lukee
17 19
172
3 •
Pattfl c DIVI SIOn
w 1 pel g b
Golden State
24 1 2 657
Sea ttle
19 19
500 6
Portland
16 21 -!3 2 8 1
LosAnge tes
16 22 42 1 9
Phoen1x
15 21 417 9
Saturdays Results
New York 103 Cleveland 10 2
Bu ff alo 1:001 Atlan ta 108
Ch i cago 100 KC Omaha 88
Detroit 89 Ph ladelphta 82
Mt!waukee 93 Hou ston 89
Seattle 11 1 New Orleans 89
Golden St 104 Washmgton 96
Sunday's Resu l ts
Milwaukee 96 Chtca go 95
Cleveland 97 Ph oenix 86
Houston 115 KC Omaha 106
Los Ang 11 :00 Wash ngton 109
Portland Ill New Orleans 102
Monda6 s Gam es
Buffalo at Ph il ade lphi a
NHL Standings
By United Press lnlernattOnal
DI Vis iOn 1
w I t pis gf ga
6 56 142 81
8 46 16 1 123
7 43 11 2 11 0
9 39 130 11 0
1
t pts gf ga

Phtladlphla 25 8
NYRa nger s 19 11
A tl anta
18 IS
NY Island ers 15 15
Dt'IISIOO
w t
vancouver 22 13
Ch 1c ago
17 18
St LOUtS
16 17
M tnnesota
11 22

AB,A Stand1ngs
By Un1ted Press lnternattonal
east
New York
Kentucky
St Lou s
Mcmph 1s
V rg 1n1a

w

28
25
16
10
9

West

I
1l
11
25
28
29

pet

g

~

718
694 l'h
390 13
263 J71h
237 18 1h

w 1 pet g b
Denver
JJ S 868
San An to n10
23 19 548 12
Utah
20 22 476 IS
lndtana
15 2 1 417 17
San D1cgo
li 73 395 18
Saturday s Results
Ulah 115 l nd 1ana 108
New York 1D V1 rgml a 92
Ke ntucky 115 San Antonio 11 1
San 0 ego 143 MemphiS 118
Sun day s Results
51 LOUIS 109 Ken tu cky 106
New York 100 Vl r gt nl a 95
Denver 110 Uta h 93
ln d1ana 108 M em phis 99
San An ton 10 1;14 San O tego 116
M onday s Games
SEin An ion to at Ula h
International Hockey
League Standtngs

- By Untied Press International
Nnrth
wltptsgfga
Sag maw
26 14 1 53 160 128
Flint
24 13 3 51 151 109
Musk eqon

24 15 1 49 165 111
Port Huron 15 22 2 32 128 141
Lansing
10 15 I 21 129 196
Kalama zoo 9 24 2 20 90 135
South
wltptsgfga
Dayton
16 11 2 54 161 133
Columbus 21 18 1 43 154 138
Tol edo
19 22 1 39 151 155
Des Motnes 18 21 2 38 139 150
Fort Wayn e

15 22 0 30 139 151
Saturday's Results
Dayton 7 ~ Moines 5
Ft Wayne 3 Flint 2
Pori Huron 4 Lansing 3
Muskegon 3 Kalamazoo 0
Toledo 4 Columbus 1

Richard Hamtllon s Cl tne 4 2 10 Whaley l 0 2
H1ghlanders pushed theJr Wag mg er 5 0 10 Hacker 8 2
18 J Cl1ne 1 3 5 Hart 6 2 14
record to 5-4 SW IS 3-2 m the Boll ' 3 l1 Gagal4 2 10 Totals
5 49 144 122
SVAC
4 38 135 11 3
33 14 80
6 38 130 138
Sunday's Results
SOUTHWESTERN !82) Clutch baskets by semors
5 1 27 103 167 Lansl ng 4 Fori Wayne l
Walker
l1 5 27 Wood 10 1 21
Uoyd Wood and Kevm Walker Carter 4 2 \0 , Grat e 3 7 13
Fllnl 6 Port Huron 1
6 27 4 16 87 162 Sagenaw 7 Muskegon A
and sophomore; Ke1tll Grate Lew ts I 1 3 Crouse 0 2 2 Nlda Ka nsas Ct l yOt iJIS
tOn l
earned the Hil{hlanders to 1 4 6 Totals 30 22 82
w 1 t pts gl ga Columbus 4 Kalamazoo 0
Rese,.ves - I ronton St Joe Montreal
22 6 12 56179111 Des Moines 3 Toledo 1
the1r overtime v i~lory
Today•s Games
Los Angeles 20 6 12 52 117 73
34 sw 25
Durmg regulation, SW led 23P tltSburgh
14 16 8 36 152 144
No games scheduled
Detroi t
10 22 5 25 104 148
16 at the end of the first penod,
Weshmgton
3 33 4 10 80 215
WHA Standings
44-36 at the half and 61-48
DIVISIOn 4
By United Press tnterna11on11
w 1 1 ph gf ga
East
gomg mto the !mal stanza The
Buff alo
25 8 6 56 173 125
w I I pts gf ga
Lawrence Counbans came on
Boston
22 10 6 50 185 1\8 New Eno lnd 21 14 l 43 132 127
'Toront o
13 18 7 33 127 144 Cle\Je land
14 20 1 29 9S 113
strong m the !mal e1ght
Ca llforn1a
10 23 8 28 111 164 Chi cag o
13 20 l 27 lll 130
mmutes outscormg SW 26-13
Saturday'$ Results
ln d lam1pol s 6 31 2 14 85 168
By MILTON, RICHMAN
By Un1ted Press International NY Rangrs5NY tslndr s 3
West
At
one
ttme,
the
Htghlanders
UPI Sportl Editor
Atlan ta 4 Sf LOUIS 1
Monday
w I t pts gt go
fell four pom tS behind but Oh to State al Michigan Stale Monlreal 10 Washtngton 0
Houston
26 ll 0 52 170 104
Pllt! burgh 4 Vancouver 3
Phoenl)•
Dayton at Houston
18 l4 " 40 124 115
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) - If somebody asked me to describe managed to tie the game on a Ashland
Kansas Ctl'{"2 Detroit 1
Minnesota
18 16 0 36 149 122
at
Rollins
Fla
Boston
8
Minneso
ta
o
Don Wilson, and pinned me down to one word, the word would Wood goal
Central St at Rro Grande
Toronto 6 Chicago 3
San D iego
17 17 I 35 11 2 118
Both teams had an ex- Cedarville at Wilmington
have to be "competttive" because there was lhLS strong streak of
Philadelphia 2 LOS Ang 2
Michigan
12 24 3 27 97 165
Tuesday
Sundays Result s
Canadian
Jack1e Robmson m him whtch made hun try to beat you on the ceptiOnal mght from the floor
Toronto 1 DetrOit 0
w I t pt! gf ga
Southwestern connected on 30 M1 ssour~ a t Ohm University
baseball held or off
Atlanta 3 washington o
Toronto
21 15 1 43 158 136
Eastern Me c h1gan at Akron
Buffalo 4 St LOU IS 2
Quebec
21 15 0 42 148 124
The Don Wtlson I had come to know was full or fll'e, full of of 55 attempts for 54 5 pet ( Jnctnnatl at lOUISVIlle
NY F!angers 6 Van couver 2
E dmonton
18 11 1 37 11 J. 96
wht!e
Ironton
St
Joe
canned
33
Buflalo
at
Cleveland
Sl
m1sch1ef, full of life
Montreal 6 Ch• cago 4
lm at Baldwin Walla ce
Ca l trornta 5 Philadelphia 1
Winnip eg
17 1.&lt;1 1 35 128 101
Now he and hiS fiVe-year-&lt;&gt;ld son Alex, who was the apple of his of 63loor shots for 52 8 pet The Ober
Capttal
at
DeniSon
Mondav's Games
Vancouver
16
16 2 34 104 Hl6
eye, are dead, both vtctims of carbon monoXIde poLSonmg, and game was won at the foul !me Mar~ e tta at Kenyon
nnesola at Kansas I
Saturdav s Results
New Eng 4 Vancouve,. 3 ot
Wednesday •
the police m Houston say tbey aren't altogether sure how Wilson where Southwestern san k 22 of
~~
San Diego 2 Cle'Je!a nd 0
Bow ltng Green at Syracuse
35
attempts
met his death m the garage of his home, but they thtnk 11 was
Quebec 3 Toronto 1
~
.!\\!! ' .
Penn St al Kent St
The Flyers connected on 14 of Youngstown
lndpls 4 Ch icago 4 or
accidental
Sf at Pittsbuegh
Hou
st on S M ic higan 2
Otterbem at Mlame
Don Wilson wanted so much out of life, valued 11 so h1ghly, tt's 26. at the free throw Ime
Sunday's Results
Walker f1n1shed as the Hetdelberg at Ohio Northern
Tor onto A Cleveland 3
diff1cult to conceiVe hiS takmg his own
W1ttenberg at Wooster
Michigan J vancouver 1
'
He always was so eager for the next ball game, tbe next hurdle, games top pomt producer w1th Muskmgum at Mount Unron
Phoenhc 2 Ind ianapolis 1
9 New England 3
the next day, that 11 Is ununagmable thinkmg of hilh giVIng up or 27 Wood had 21, Grate had one Malone at Urbana
After readmg astrologica l Mmnesota
Chicago 3 Edmonton 2
of hts better mghts this wmter Blufflon at Wilm ington
forecasts for the year, we ve
not wishing to compete anymore
Monday's Games
w1th 13 pomts and Terry Carter Case Wester n at Carnegie dec1ded to skip 1975
(N o games sc hedul ed J
He loved to beat the other guy -at anything
Mellon
He pitched two no':hltters, one against Atlanta m 1967 and the dumped m 10 pomts
Cedarville al Rio Grande
H1ttmg double ftgures for the Ftnd lay at Deftan ce
other one agamst Cinc!nnattm 1969 He was working on h1s third
Oh10 Domm ican at Wilberfor ce
no-hitter ag;!mst the Reds last season wben Houston Manager Flyers were Hacker w1th 18
Ma lone at Urbana
Preston Gomez yanked hun for a pmch-hitter m the bottom of the Hart, 14, Boll, II, Gaga1, B Wa l sh at Xav1er
Chne and Wagmger wtlh 10
Thursday
etghth mrung because the Astros were trwling, 2-1 ./
Cleveland St at Wrtght 51
I remember the ftnal game of tbe 1973 season 111 Atlllnta where pomts each
at Central St
Ironton St Joe took the Wilberforce
the Braves were playmg Houston and Hank Aaron needed only
Northwood (Mtch I at Tiffin
reserve game 34-25 La ber led
one more homer to equal Babe Ruth's record
Fr~day
No games scheduled
Each time Aaron came up, Wilson, wbo was m the bullpen the Winners wtth 10 pomts
Saturday
beyond tbe outfield, would come out and move closer to where he Fortner had II for the Little M1nnesota at Ohto State
thought Aaron m~ght htt the ball over the fence ThLS annoyed Highlanders
Ohio Unt verslly al Toledo
Southwestern plays at M1 am t at Bowlmg Green
Dave Roberts, ptlchmg for the Astros, but Wtlson didn't really
Central M1 Ch1gan at Kent St
care If Aaron htt that reoord-tymg homer, he wanted to be the Eastern Saturday mght
Temple at Cmclnnatt
IRONTON
ST
JOE
(SOl
B
one to catch the ball
Cre 1ghfon at Dayton
Roanoke (Va) at Akron
I remember the fll'e m Don Wilson's remarks when he talked
Trt
State lnd at Ashland
about the mequallties eXISting between the black and white
MILLER HONORED
Wayne Sf Mlch at Cleveland
societies and I also remember the mischief in his vo1ce wben one
St
RANCHO LA COSTA, Calif
Ph!la Te xtil e at Youngstown
of his teammates, Jun Bauton, came out w1th hiS all-reveahng (UPI) - JohnnyMiller, Wimer
St
"Ball Four "
of e1ght PGA tournaments and Ba ldw1n Wallace at Ohio
"My wife keeps askmg me 'Are all ballplayers tbe way Bouton a record $353,02llast year, wtll Northern
has 11m hiS b()((k''," he laughed
be honored as Pro Golfer of the Mount Unton at Capital
Denrson at Herde lberg
Don Wilson was far more complex than most ballplayers.
Western sportswnters and Kenyon at Musk lngum
One Houston player especially close to him was Doug Rader, broadcaste rs tomght
Wooster at Marietta
who fll'sl learned of Wilson's death from one of hLS ne~ghbqp;
The '1:/-year-&lt;&gt;ld slender blond W•ttenberg at Oberlin
after coming m from fishing Stmday on the St Lode River near from San FranciSco LS sche- Otterbein at Oh i o-wesleyan
'Rto Grande at Ma iOlll!
his home in Stuart, Fla
H W Safford
duled to be feted at a dmner at Wllm 1ngton at F 1ndlay
If you koow Doug Rader at all, you know he gtves you an honest the La c;osta Country Club
Def1ance at Hanover, lnd
San 01ego,
Blufflon at Taylor. lnd
count, both stdes of the com, and he does so m the most
Mlller, who won the f~rst Hiram
at
Case
Western
straightforward way be can He does the same thmg talkmg three events of the 1974 PGA John Carrol l at Carneg•e
about Don Wilson
Irati, IS the defending cham- Mellon Pa
"I've known him smce 1965," says the Astros' tllll'd baseman piOn at the $150,000 Phoentx Ohro Dominican at Walsh
"I've played with hun Ul tbe nunors and the majors and I've seen Open m Phoentx, Ar1z , this Trffin at Cedarvtlle
Wrlberforce at Steubenville
him at his best and at hiS worst
Huntington, lnd at Urbana
week
"!loved this man dearly when I was m the minors and when he
fll'St came up In the big leagues1but then for two or tllree years
That quote ts f rom an actual letter sent to the
he became bitter The most heart-breakmg thing to me, the
Bette
r Bust ness Bureau And 1t s so true ,
shame of 11 all, IS that he had overcome his bttterness, and he was
some t1m es th e BBB doesn't even have to do
now again the man he used to be, the one I knew at first
anythtng
to ~elp you ge t your money 's worth
"What made him bttter' I'd say he was a little diSillustOned
Just droppmg ou r na me tS frequen tly
with people He was a very seliSIIlve, warm person, and very
enough to get actron from a bu smess
often the bad element m some people would disap~mt him
you re havtng probl ems wtth
tremendously "
Bu t when you really do need ou r
At tune!i, lhe 29-year-&lt;&gt;ld fastballer from Comp~, Call£ ,
would go Into a shell He didn't always offer any reason either
heIp we re ready We don t always
"A Iotta people thought Don Wilson was a militant, but It
succeed, but we always try
wasn't true," says Doug Rader "He was just a very defellSive
When you have a probl em wtth
IndividUal I'we seen him go to hospitals, and I've ~n bow he
busmess tl s bad fo r you and for
was with people there I've seen him :w!tll those wbo were
bustness And no one knows that
severely handlca[lped, and Wlth old people, tbose whose days
better than the busmessmen
\
were limited Onethlngyouhave to say about Don Wilson, he had
sams
good nBighbor.
who su pport the BBB
empathy Wlth other people
Here's my new State Farm off1ce where I can serve t
"I also saw him last summer wben he pitched etght hitless
Innings against Cl!tinnatl and he was pulled out of the game We
you With the best '\lalue m car, home, life and health
all knew how he felt, but he was very understanding of the
msurance I mv1te you to call or drop many teme
Sl\ujltlon. He removed hlljlsel! from the area. Wltll he got his wits
STEVE SNOWDEN
' about him an\! wben he did he thought the manager had dOJie the
CALL YOUR BETTER 8USNSS BUREAU.
1258 Pow~ll !it , Middleport, Ph 992 7155

This Week's

Sport Parade

Games

'"!I
w...
a~
:1.1
,..

"•••lUSt
.

indicating .that
sentto

e

BBB
can move
•

FOR KIOS-

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FUNMIAL™
Fun Tray
Fun burger
Reg French Frtes
Surpnse Pnze
Reg Soft Ortnk &amp;
a Sweet Treat

81g She!
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Turnover 4
Large Soft OHnk

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th1s 1s my trrst dre,ssl"

1::.-.t.. ,rn Avenue

It costs twice 11 much to feed
a family of four wbeo two illlows Dlove In _ relatively

lipolts. G.
.. Coilr

Speak lag

I

to 18 mtdway through the
second half Rtck Gates scored
20 pomts for the Flashes, who
shpped to 1-7 on the year
In the f~rst heuvy Oh10
Conference actiOn, title
favonte Wtttenberg overcame
a 1o-pomt hal!tune defiCit to
eas1ly dispose of prevwusly
unbeaten Manetta 69-.&gt;5 at

Cold

In

I m glad you l1ke 11 -

eluding a clutch patr of free
throws that gave the Falcons
an unbeatable 6«Hi2 margm
Jeff Montgomery led the
Bowling Green scormg wtth 20
pomts, wlule Cash hmshed
w1th 16 pomts and 17 rebounds
J1m Kindle, a transfer from
BG, led the Rockets w1th 20,
mcludmg 14 m the fll'st half
Kindle was 10 or 16 from the
floor
M1am1 and Oh1o Umverstty
both got orr on the right foot m
the first full week of MAC play,
the Redskms beatmg Western
M1Chtgan 67-.&gt;9 at Oxford, and
the Bobcats takmg a 58-53
dec1s1on over Kent State at
Athens
Sophomore Chuck Goodyear
led Miami to Its eighth Will miO
games w1th 18 points and Greg
Olson and Rod Dieringer htt
some clutch free throws m the
closmg minutes for the Redskins Olson's char1ty toss w1th
4 30 remammg put M1am1
ahead to stay, 58-57
It was a familiar story for
Oh1o U , whtch has new won
four m a row, as Junior guard
Walter Luckett, the top scorer
m the oonference last year,
poured m 27 pomts agams t
Kent
Bobcats Coast
OU was m command all the
way, holding a 34-24 margm at
halftune and bmidmg the lead

mountains."

One

Oh 0
518 St;.:
l'hree mon ths
S'n 00 year SIX
three months
ion pnce tn
T tmi?S
I

(~)

Cottre ll 3 4 10, Metzner 3 1 7

sWorld

?
•

-'••e F011da

By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Wtth a year to go, National
Park Serv1ce offlCtals already
are at work on the b1centenmai
ed1t1on of the National RegLSter
of Histone Places
Several new entnes have
been approved w1thin the last

'

1

Coach Rudolph Rames'
Buffalo B1sons broke a 23-23 he
wtth 16 pomts m the th1rd
period Saturday mght enroute
to a 48-39 v1ctory over Kyger
Creek m a non-league game at
Cheshtre
For Buffalo, 1t was tlle
B1sons' fourth v1ctory m !tve
starts thts year Kyger Creek
m losmg, lost Its s1xth game m
£even starts. Earher thts
Winter, Buffalo had dropped
tile 'Cats 53-29
Coach Ke1th Carter's Bobcats Jumped off to an 1H !trst
penod lead behmd the shooting
of 6-2 sen10r Joe Stidham, 6-2
semor forward Doug Cottrell
and baskets by Dave WISe and
Tom Kern The B1sons outscored the host team , 17-12 m
the second stanza knotting the
game at 23-23
Btg Neal Walker , B1son
center, pumped m s1x pomts
durmg the rally Mike Boles,
jumor guard, added ftve potnts
and John Stone canned four
Leading the Bobcat second
period attack was Cottrell wtth
flVe pomts and JuniOr B1ll
Metzner had three
Buffalo, sparked by Walker,
Boles, M1ke Burch, and Stone
broke tile tie and was never
seriously threatened the rest or
the game Walker and Boles
paced Buffalo w1th 13 pomts
each Cottrell and Wtse had 10
potnts each tn a lostng effort
Buffalo htt 19 of 52 floor attempts for 36 pet and 10 of 18 at
the free throw ltne KC canned
14 of 35 from the floor for 40 pet
and II of 19 at tbe char~ty
strtpe
Buffalo took the reserve lilt,
49-29 Randy Parsons led the
wtnners w1th 16 whtle Ralph
Baylor had seven pomts for the
Bobkittens

I) I

1

DR. LAMB

The Amencan dream ha s

become a nt ghtmare I no
longer thmk the system c~n be
chang ed by lega l means
Amenca IS too corrupt '
-Former New York police officer Frank Serp1co who revealed widespread corruption
among fellow pohcemen.
'Too much Impor tance as
g1ven to the VIews of pohhcans,
CIVtl servants agncultural
researchers econom1sts, b1g
busmess and other so-called ex
perts It 1s the deciSion of the

If Saturday night's Bowling

Bisons topple
Bobcats

Bnttsh woomg techniques

J

•

Falcons edge Rockets in overtime

BYGARYPHILLIPS
Well, It's getting to be that time of year agam when all of the
area basketball teams start worrylll8 The fll'st place team IS
always worrymg about the teams below them and whether they
will be caught while the lower teams are wondermg whether or
not they are gomg to be able to catch that eluslVe fll'st place
team Let's take a look at the games and see how things are gomg
to shape up
Tuesday,Jan. 7
SVAC
Trimble vs Haman Trace Tomcats travel a long way for a
defeat Haman Trace 64 Trunble 53
Southern vs Waterford What can I sa; ' - I like the name
Wildcats' Waterford 62 Southern ii4
(Other Gamefl)
South Pomt 73 Rock Hill 57 Gallipolis 57 Ironton 56, Farrland
65Coal Grove 60, Waverly 64 Jackson 56, Chesapeake 5!10ak Hill
49, PI Pleasan~ 66 Humcane 58, Athens 73 Me1gs 58, Logan 80
Wellston 60
Friday, Jan 10
(SVAC)
Hannan Trace vs Kyger Creek Wildcats add salt to the
Babcat wound Hannan Trace 71 Kyger Creek 60
North Gallla vs Eastern Eagles are tough on home court
North Gall1a 67 Eastern 60
Hannan vs Southern Tornados post another victory
Southern 60 Hannan 50
Symmes Valley vs Rock Hlll Vtkes are havtng 1t rough
Rock Hill 80 Symmes Valley 62
(Other Gamell)
South Pomt 71 Fall'land 69, Trunble 55 Miller 50, Ironton 59
Logan 55, Jackson 67 Me1gs 56, Chesapeake 74 Coal Grove 64, PI
Pleasant 55 Ravenswood 52
Saturday, Jan . 11
(SVAC)
Fall'land vs Symmes Valley Vkkings still can't fmd the
right combination Fairland 78 Symmes Valley 55
Southwestern vs Eastern Eagles wm a squeaker Eastern
63 Southwestern 58
(Other Gamell)
Me~gs 66 Federal Hocking 63

world s farmers and the farmer
alone which Will affect supplies
of food m the future ·
-Charles Munro, Canadian
farmer, addressing the World
Food Conference Ia Rome
If the Democrats cla1m a
mandate for sometl\mg, 11 Will
be for somethmg that doesn t
eXISt The voters don't expect
th e Democrats to solve
anythmg In fact they don t ex
peel to do very much about
problems anymore It s Just
that they re gomg to pumsh the
Republicans '
- Democratic pollster Pat
Caddell on upcoming elect1ons
' If you assume that you can t
trust tlle President, you're m
trouble and that 's all there IS to
1t So de spite the fact that
there s been cnhc1sm, 1 m
a!ra1d 1f I had to do 11 all over
aga m I thmk I d make tlle

I

"

3- The Dally Sent mel, Mlddlepor l-Pbmeroy, 0 , Monday, Jan 6, 1975

DON OAKLEY

...

•

.,

-

,

I

I

q~1

thing_"

Doug_Rader paused a mOinent
"I've heard all kinds of crazy thmgs, nunors, about how Don
Wilson died," he said "I don't care what anyone says, I'll never
believe he killed himself He loved life too much His death
Simply had !o be1an acpdent I'd stake my life on that~·

au

HEI.PIN,G lOU GET lOUR MON_EY'S WORIH.

-

fotdll~lf.

$. . ,,,. II

*"'

'
A PubliC ~rvtee
of This NeWSiliiPet' &amp;The Advertising Council ~

,q

J •
--

j

�..

·'

I ,

'

'

I

...

...

i - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Jan. 6, 1975
.'

'i

....

4, The OaUy Sentinel. Midni•JOrt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , Jan 6, 1ll75

Astro ace, son, die of poison

f

,,

\

"
HOUSTON (UP!) - Don
'· Wilson, the Houston Astros
i' pitcher, died along with his
five-year-old son Sunday of
carbon monoxide poisoning.
Wilson's wife and nine-yearold daughter also were overcome by carbon monoxide
fumes and were hospitalized .
Mrs. Wilson also had a broken
jaw .
"Details of the deaths are
sWI sketchy but lhe preliminary Investigation indicates
the deaths are accidental,'' a
police homicide spokesman
silld.
Wilson's body was found in
' tlle garage slumped ove r a
· rectining seat on tlle passenger
side of his sports ca.r. Tht
ignition was turned on, but the
· engine was not running.
· Police believe Wilson, 29,
.' drove Into his double garage at
· I a.m. Sunday and shut the

'

garage door with an automatic
door close r. Police said the
garage was tightly sealed.
Authorities said fumes from
the. car's exhaust seeped into
the master bedroom above the
garage where Wilson's son, .
Alex, was asleep and into an
adjoining bedroom where his
daugllter, Denise, slept.
ll was not known where Mrs.
Wilson was at the lime, but
police said she did ca ll a neighbor hetween I a.m. and I :30
a.m. and said she needed help.
She was taken to Soutllwest
Memonal Hos pital where
autllorjges said she was in
shock bu l in fair condition.
Denise was taken to Texas
Cluldren's Hospital in critical
condition.
Autllorities also said they did
not know how ' Mrs . Wilson's
jaw was broken.
"That is all we know
. ' " the

homicide spokesman said. "An ler when ma!'ager Preston
autopsy has been ordered. Gomez, with his team lrailing
'Perhaps more on the deatll and 2-1. yanked him for a pinchMrs. Wilson's injury can be hitter in tlle AstrOs' half of tlle
released today."
eighth.
The hospital spokesman said
"I respect Preston G&lt;lmez as
Wilson and his son died of a manager," Wilson said after
" toxic material - car bon tlle game. " I respect him more
monoxide .''
tllan ever tonight. He wants to
Wilson, a rightllander known win and I want to win as much
primarily for his fastball, as he does.
broke into the major leagues
"When people start putting
witll tlle Astros in 1967 and personal goals ahead of tlle
posted a 11).9 record and a 2.79 learn, you'll never have a
ERA. During his career, he winner . I understand how
pitched two nO-hitters-a 2-0 Preston feels. He is consistent
victory ove r the Atlanta and I have nothing but adBraves in 1967 and a ~ victory miration for him."
over tlle Cincinnati Reds in
Wilson, althougl1 he won 15 or
1969.
more games three different
Wilson ca me close to hurling seasons, neve r fulfilled tile
a tllird n~itter last season potential the Astros had prewhen he went eight innings dicted lor him when they
against the CinciMati Reds signed him as a free agent in
without allowi ng a h1t. How- 1964. Although he posted imever , he was deprived of a preijSive strikeout totals, incha nce to complete the no.hJt- .JUrles often curbed his performance and his eight-year
record witil tlle Aslros was only

' Solomon shows credentials
as passer in howl victory

103-92.

His best season was 1971
when he went 10-10, struck out
180 and posted a 2.45 earned
run average. Last year he was
10-13 with a 3.07 ERA .

Penn, Ohio
, TAMPA, Fla. (UP! ) - Pro
scouts have voiced tlle view
that University of Tampa
,quarterback Freddie Solomon
probably will be drafted as a
wide receiver rather than
quarterback, partly because of
his passing credentials.
But Sunday the flee t
:Solomon, who finished flftil in
:the nation in total offense built
•around his dangerous running
;game, tried to put tilat talk to
•rest by leading his Soutil team
Ito a last-eecond, 28-22 win over
1the North In the Lions
:American Bowl, and he did it
.on passing before 19,246 par:Usan fans.
l Solomon, 6-0, and 185 pounds,
IVld sent the South ahead with
bust over a minute to play with
,US second touchdown run of
the game, an eight-yard effort
imd then passed to Florida's
~ McGriff for a twa-point
conversion.
But the lead was shortlived
as Steve Joachim of Temple
passed for his second touchdown of the day with a Ill-yard
toss to usual defensive back

Barry Hill of Iowa State and
tllen passed to Henry Hynosld
of ')'emple for the two-point
conversion_, to deadlock the
score at 22-all with just 32
seconds to play.
The North tried an on..side
kick that Georgia's Craig
Hertwlg recovered for the
South at mid-field. With time
running-out the cool Solomon
dropped back and hit McGriff
with a 24-yard pass and came
right back on tile second play
wltlJ a 211-yard pass to the 1&gt;-9,
170-pound McGriff in the
corner of the end zone witlJ 15
seconds to go.
" ! felt all along I could
pass," Solomon said after the
game. "I hope I made a
believer of some people today.
I don't know what they are
plannnlng on trying me at in
tlle pros but I just hope I get a
shot at quarterback."
Solomon ccimpleted all three
passes he threw Sunday for 66
yards, one touchdown and one
twa-point conversion. He also
carried the ball 11 times for 45
yards and two touchdowns with

his only loss coming on tlle one
reverse he tried from the wide
receiver spot . In addition to his
eight-yard touchdown run,
Solomon had a three-yard
scoring run .
His play won for him the
Most Valuable Player Award
for the South. The MVP for the
North was Hynoski who scored
one touchdown on a one-yard
run In addition to catching his
twa-point pass. Hynosld went
53 yards on the opening play
before being ca ught from
behind and finished the day as
tlle leading rusher with 121
yards on 12 carries.
In addition to Joachim's TD
pass to Hill, he also hit Steve
Grogan with a IS-yard touchdown pass. Grogan, a quarterback at Kansas Stale, was
playing at wide receiver most
of the game and saw only brief
action at quarterback .
Georgia running back
Horace King had a four-yard
touchdown run for the South.
Joe Danelo of Washington
State kicked two extra points
for the North

collide

Oft

st11rs

Aug. 2

HARRISBURG (UP!) - The
PeMsylvania Big 33 football
squad will face the Ohio AllStars on Aug. 2 with quarterbacks Pat Haney of Bethlehem
Catholic, Mike Kraemer of
Nazareth and Tom Rozantz of
Fairview.
·
The Harrisbpr g PatriotNews selected the Big 33 squad
with the aid of 150 writers and ·
coaches through a four-month
screening process In which
2,000 high school athletes were
considered.
The Big 33 teams, with a
record of 6-3-1 in competition
against out-of..state opponents,
have defeated Ohio in all three
games, by scores of '!1-'l:l, 21-19,
14-7, ~ce tile series started in
1971.
There has been at least one
ex-Big 33 performer in each of
the first eight National Football League Super Bow Is and in
this year's college howl games,
33 former Big-33 players were
involved.

Cqllege
results
College Basketba ll Au ults
By United Press International
!

Tournam e nts

I Final Round Action)

B1g Four Tournament
( Ch a mpion!hip )
Wake For es t 75 D uke 11
( Con solation )
N C St 82 Nort h Car . 61
Pre si d ential Clas s1 c
I Ch a.mpion ship l
Am U 72 Geci Wash 69
(Consolation)
W Va 99 Bost on U BJ
Bluebonnet Clilssic
(Championship)
Hous ton 92 Texas A&amp;M 72
cConsoliltton)
UN LV 89 Hawaii 77
East
Rutgers 97 L I U 87
Pnnceton 50 Penn 49
Geo twn DC 67 Sf J no NY 63
La Sal le 94 Hofstra 61
Syr acuse 77 P1tt 68
Oet ro1t 64 Can1sius 56
Del S l 100 St A ug 87
De law are 80 Maine 67
Bos l on Co l i . 82 Pen n St 71
Temple 67 RI U 64
K1ng' s ( Pa . l 81 A rm y 70
R 1der 65 D rexel 55
Brk l yn Colt 46 York NY 45
l ona 77 St F ran NY 73
Se to n Ha l l 72 Buckne ll 61
St Bonn ie 88 va . Te c h 69
N iaga ra 79 Buffalo St . 69
Wilkes 66 Adelph i 58
New Hamp 57 Conn . 56
Scra nton 70 Mora v tan 68
V!!-rmont 81 St . Jo s. Pa . 74
Cath U 74 La faye tte 108
Moravian 68 Scranton 70
Monmouth ( N JJ 91 Pace 77
Ru t grs Cm dn 97 Swrthmre 78
Soutll
Mary l and 90, Notre Dame 82
Clemson 86 Virg1 n ia 68
Sout h Car . 82 Manhattan 63
LouiSVIlle 82 Br adley SO
Georgia . Te c h 70 Merc er 68
F londa 94 M iss Sf 82
Kentucky 11 5 LS U so
Ce ntenary 96 E Texas Bap 11
F l a . St. 107 E Ky 75
A la barn a 10.4 Vanderbilt 77
Ja c ksonvl 100 UW Mi l w 85
Tennessee 96 Auburn 81
M em phi s St 79 W Ky . 72
E . Ca r 11J.Citadel 8 1
B1sca yne 87 Yale 70
R I Coli. 85 Sf. Leo 72
St e tson 109 Hartford 73
Samford 88 Murray 87
De f i ance 85 Bluffton 78
Car awba 82 Elon 7 1
So M ISS 88 NW Okl a 73
So Al a bama 121 MacAiester 68
Roanoke 89 Md . Ba l l 62
Mid Ten n . 93 VMI 89
Miss Col i. 73 No . Ala 66
Old Dom 61 Wm &amp;M a r y 55
SE La . 87 Nrl h l nd Coli 80
Geotwn Ky . 87 P ikev l 85
DePauw 88 Centre 82
Midwest
M1 c fi 85 Ohio St 7J
Miam i 0 67 W Mi ch . 59
0 . Robert s 88 Ind . St . 77
Indian a 107 Mich St . 55
Iowa 95 Ill inois 70
Ohio U 68 Kent St . 53
Ill St 91 SIU Crbndl e 84
Northwestern 69 W1s 66
S l L 100 W Tex St 6 1
Mt . Un• on 76 Den 1son 68
Oberlin 69 Steubnvl 66
M i nnesota 54 Purdue 51
Mo . 5 1. 79 Lincoln Mo . 76
Cmc• 93 Wabash 67 '
P urd ue lndpl s 76 U I ·Evn sv l 72
H eidelberg 57 Capital 55
Walsh 8.4 W .Va Wslyn 82
Mskingm 71 Bldwn .wallce 54
Witten berg 69 Marietta 55
Ball St 72 Sl ip pr y R c k 71
N or th Dak . 86 UW . Pittevl 68
Evansvl 80 Ky Wesleyan 74
Cen t Mien 89 w Ill. 82

MSU team to beat--Bo
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UP!) Ten runners-&lt;~p, but he said a up their pads, concentrate on
- Michigan Coach Bo Schem- playoff system was not 'feasi- tlleir studies and prepare for
bechler says the Big ·Ten is no · ble."
final e~ams." ~
" We've got to Iace the
longer a two-team ' football
conference and Michigan State academic responsibility," he
is the team to beat next season : said. " If we continued playing RULE SUSPENDED
In a weekend interview, for two or three mqre weeks "" WASHINGTON (UP!)
Schembechler said the league after the season, our semester 1 Baseball Commissioner Bowie
Kuhn said Sunday nigllt he was
will be dominated by five would be over."
"The
break
gives
our
yo,ungsuspending
for at least one
teams, Including current co.
sters
the
opportunity
to
hang
year
a
new
rule that would
champions Ohio State and
-have
allowed
major league
Michigan, and Wisconsin, Dteams to draft some college
linois and Michigan State.
baseball
players while they
Jones,
Allies
"l look for tbose five teams
were
sllll
In school. 1
•
to have shot at the title next
According
to
a
Fred
'Gerardi,
1
year," the coach said. ' And 1 named coaches
sports. information director at
pick Michigan State as the
team to beat."
NEW YORK (UP!) - NBA tlle University of NebraskaMiChigan , ltl-loverall and II-I Commissioner Walter Kennedy Omaha and spokesman for the
In the Big Ten, missed a chance announced today that K. C. American Association of Colat the Rose Bowl last season Jones of the Washington lege Baseball Coaches, Kuhn
when conference athletic Bullets and AI Allies of the made tlle announcement at the
directors again voted to send G&lt;llden State Warriors will coaches 31st annual convention
Ohio State. The Buckeyes then coach the East and West meeting.
College coaches had been
lost 111-17 to USC.
squads, respectively, in the
Schembechler said Michigan 25th annual·NBA All.Star game upset over the move by major
league owners at their winter
"has a. lot of work to do" In Jan . 14 at Phoenix.
preparation for next season.
Both coaches were appointed meeting in New Orleans which
He noted that In the last two because their teams had the amended eligibility rules and
years the team has graduated · highest won-lost percentages in allowed drafting and signing of
53 players who have been in the tileir conference tllrougl1 Sun- college players over 21 years of
age , during a 45-&lt;lay period
starting lineup.
day's games.
The coach said he liked the
Washington, which has the after tile winter draft.
idea of opening up post..season best record in the league 211-12
invitational howl games Big for .684. G&lt;llden State, seeking
its first Pacific Division title, is
Thinking about a
24-12 for .667.
'·
No . Ill 11 3 Cl'1i St . 80
new car?
Bow ing Grn 66 Toledo 64
It is the first All.Star game
Eau Claire 85 No Mich 63
1. Pick out the
coaching assignment for either
Cre 1ghton 73 Buller 60
model.
D e troit Tech 87 Shaw 43
man. This is Attles' sixth
Esn . Mi c h . 82 Way ne 5 1 55
2. line up your
Neb .. Qmaht' 100 Y ngs lwn St 97 season as Warriors' coach and
SE Mo . 64 SW M issour i 62
deal.
Jones' second at Washington.
MO .· ROIIa 82 Kan . Pitt sbg 80
Both coaches are forme{ NBA
3. Then ...
Mo . Ws t rn 60 Wm J ew ell SO
Bethany 96 McPherson 81
players, Jones played nine
Ill. Wslyn 85 Ind . Cent 75
years at Boston and Allies 11
Kearny St 91 S. Col o. St . 62
Central St. 59 Washburn 57
seasons with the Warriors, but
Sf Jos lnd 83 F ranklin 75
... CALLyour
neither man ever made the AllSottthwest
Nationwide agent
M iss ouri 6.4 Texas 60
Star game as a player.
R ice 92 WrightSl~ BJ
lor
details on
BOth Allies and Jones are
Okla Ci ty 86 SMU 75
auto financing.
Hous ton Bap 86 UT A rl 75
black, making them the first
Ark . 100 MacMurray 65
Convenient and conblacks to guide an All-star
sw Te x 77 H . Payne 76
ltdential service •..
S F Aust i n 96 Trltn 84
team in any major league
Lowest possible.fates
McMurry 85 Hrdn Smmos 70
professional
sport.
... terms to Itt your
Ab Ch ris 83 Tex A&amp;l 68

STOP

New Mexico St . 58 Tulsa 56
T exas Wslyn 92 Sl Ed 69
We st
Colo St 90 Denver 67
UCLA 111 Oklahoma 66
USC 91 Fu rman 84
Lng Bch St. 91 Colo 77
Wyoming 70 A i r Force 59
Oregon 86 Providenc e 73
Utah 83 Utah St 77
BY U 100 N E Louis i ana 81
Mon tana 1Q.6· No Ariz 75
Pa c Luth 87 Pac Or e. 76
Ca i . Bap 87Ft Lewis 66
N evada Reno 75 Ore St . 74
Calif 77 Morehed St 71
S D Sf 57 Ly l a Cal. 55
Pepperdine 80 Day ton 79
Seattle Pac 85 Idaho 63
San Fran 87 Stanford 82
Cai . S.B . 91 Davidson 75
F re sno 80 St Mry 's Cal. 78
Sta Clara ,67 U . ot Pac . 59
Weber St 85 Mont Sf 74

budget.

.

A com plete financing ellr vtee Is erso aveUeble
. .. to fmence your boel .
camper, or almost eny
cons umer purchasl!l Catl
tor elllhe delelll.

MCPHERSON TO UCLA
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - Bill
McPherson, an assistant at
Santa Clara lor 12 years, has
joined Dick Vermeil's UCLA
football coaching staff.
He succeeds Jim Mora, who
was in charge of the Bruins'
linebacklng corps last fall.
Mora resigned to become an
assistant at the University of
Washington.

P. J. PAULEY

307 Spring

Ave .. Pomoroy
PH. 992-231.

·~~~
U~--­

.... oc •• t.d •II~
Nlloonwodt lol ~l ul l,.u••~ c • Compeny
WOmt oft Cl C ol~ mbu l 01\ oo

•

"

·:' ·

.. .

;•

.

.l . .

....

of interest
to women
'

PUT YOUR SALESMAtf
AT EVERY-DOORSTEP•••

SYRACUSE - Recitations,
choi r selections and a play
enti tl ed " The Late Little
Angel" was included on the
Christmas program of the
United Asbury Methodis t
Church.
The
recitations
were
"Welcome" by Mike Chancey;
"The Lord's Birthday" by
Shan non Slaven ; "My Part",
Kev in King; "Baby Jesus,"
Jan e Ann Williams; "A Gift of
Love ", Bracie Hubbard ; "A
Big Wish", Barry McCoy ;
"Joy," Kathy Pickens; "I've
Wai ted", Michael Kloes ; " I
Can Spell," Wendy Fry;
"Why", Shelly Wolfe; "Glad to
be Here, " Sherry Sisson ;
" God ' s Light ," Jane Amberger; ' 1 A Child was Born,"
Jenny Bentley; " Baby Jesus

.

Pol(y 's Pointers
By Polly Cramer

Offflavor chills
her on ice cubes
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Our new refrigerator has an ice maker.
The cuhes have !!Jimny or "off" taste. I washed the-hard plastic
pan they fall into with soda and soaked it but tlle smell still seems
to be In the pan. I even have to buy 1ce cubes when having a
party.lcertainly would like to know if there is anything I can do.
- Mt\5. K. S.
DEAR MRS. K. S. -As the refrigerator is new you should
certainly lake the pan back to the dealer from whom it was
purchased and ask for a new one. Meanwhile, remove what you
believe to be the trouble maker and use another suitably sized
pan to catch the cubes as they fall and see If there Is an Jm.
provement. If the cubes continue to ''taste" you should stlll talk
to the dealer and try to find the trouble. -POLLy.

Came",

Roni

Provo ; " I'm

Glad," Debbie Michael; "The
Sign ", Brian Allen and Rick
Cl1ancey . D. J . Harden joined
the children in singing several
Christmas songs.
Children talking part in the
play were Jaye Ord : Jean Ann

· DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is witil manulactur.ers who
put clot_h&lt;overed buttons on dresses th at will be laundered many
many hmes. Long ,before the dress is worn out tile buttons have
polled out and have to be replaced. - MRS. E.A.E.
DEAR HOMEMAKJ;:RS- Before the holiday season how we
clean, wash and shine the house until everything sparkles. The
added holiday decorations are then the frosting on the cake.
During the Christmas season everyone gushes with compliments
on how beautiful the house looks but we aU !mow all good things
have to end. The day the tree and the decorations come down is
the stroke of midnight for that Cinderella-like look, There are
marks and stains, dust and pine needles In the most unexpected
places. '11lat thorough cleaning bas to slart all over again .
A few Pointers on this after-holiday cleanup job seem in
order. First, examine anything and everything for spots. They
are easier to remove when fresh. Spotted table linens shollld be
treated immediately even though there is not time to launder
them right away.
Gravy slalns can be soaked In cool water and then washed In
hot suds. Scrape candlewax off with a lable !mile, put slalned
cloth between two white blottera, press with a hot iron aud then
rub spots remaining with cold lard or turpentine and wa~h In
warm suds, Immediately soak any alcoholic beverage slalnS In
cool water and ljlen wash In warm suds. Soft drink slalns may
turn brown as they age so sponge them with cool water or equal
parts of.alcohol and water. Rub glycerine In staln, let slaad about
30 minutes, rinse out and then wash In hot suds. When you get
around to laundering all those linens do ool bother to Iron them.
Roll rather than fold before storing to eHmlnate creasing.
Wash and dry thoroughly tree light bulbs. To prevent ·
breakage put Mck in sockets and carefully wind the "strongs"
diagonally around a cardboard tube. Most artificial trees and
wreaths can stand a washing in warm suds (ho:.v dirty they do
get), a rinse In clear water and then hang, by a string, on the
clothesline to dry. Never store anything the least bit drupp.
Any felt tree skirts, lablecloths, party aprons, etc., can be
cleaned on both sides with the vacuum and then hun~ outside to
air and scare away the moths. Rolllbem to store. When such
special jobs are finished the regular cleaning ~chedule goes Into
full swing. Soon allis back to normal and the liouse looks bright
and gay In Its usual way, - 'POLLY.

exchange is given
A holiday dinner party and Holly, Mr. and Mrs. Lerrance
gift ~xchange for the Laides Lawrence, May Mason, Manda
Auxiliary of lhe Middleport Easbnan, Teresa Easbnan,
United Pentecostal Chlll'ch and Amanda Lee, Mr. and Mrs.
th eir husb ands was held Ronald Dugan, Velma Keller,
recently at the home of Mr. and 'l'ressie Spencer, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Michael Zirkle.
Russell Priddy and Bob, and
There was group singing of Mabel Pearman .
carols following the turkey and .
ham dinner. Prayer was by the
Rev. William Knittel. Mrs. ~!:
Joyce Sauters gave the ~%
secretary's report to open the ~:!
business meeting. Candy for ;:;:
sale was distributed to the
members wi tlJ lhe proceeds to ~;:
be u!ll'd for church essentials ;~;
including new qarpeting.
MONDAy
It was noted that tlle church
SOUTHERN
Athletic
kitchen is now ready for use Boosters 7:30p.m. at Southern
and the Auxili~ry members High school. Installation of new
extended a vote of thanks to the officers.
men of the church and to Mrs.
RACINE Chapter 134, OES
Don Gosney, architect. Mrs. regular session, 8 p.m. at the
Jean Cunningham, Langsville Masonic Temple. Obligation
will host the January meeting. Night will be observed.
Attending the holiday
·•
meeting were the Rev. Mr. and
THEODORUS COUNCIL 17,
Mrs. Knittel, Mr. and Mrs ...• Daughter of America, Monday,
Leroy Sauters, Mr. and Mrs. 7:30p.m . IOOF Hall. Charter
David Acree, Mr. and Mrs. will be draped for Mrs. Sylvia
Michael Zirkle, Mr. and Mrs. Badgley.
Wilbur Ashley, Mr. and Mrs.
SALEM CENTER PTA,
Don Gosney, Mr. and Mrs. Monday, 7:30 p. m. at the
Danny Cunningham, Dora school. Boy Scouts to present
the program.
TUF..SDAY
GIRLS ATHLETIC Booster
meeting, 7:30p.m . at Southern
High School.

Social

!!

.

A consistent, well co-ordina!ed advertising campaign placed
in your hometown paper can reach more people, quicker
than your salesmen. Newsp~per advertising motivates people . . .
.

when people are motivated ... they buy! So, Mr.
, Americanized "paprikash" is hearty, versatile stew.

.'

FOOD FOR AMERICANS

faste$t
way possible ... think newspaper.
We ..
.
.
.

By AUeen Clair~ .
N~FoodEdltor . .
Hungarian stews ~r papnkas
( p~onounced papnkash) are
fims~ wlll_l sweet or so~

cream: \ra~tionally the baste
m_eat IS c~cken. or veal but
.':"'th. the h1gh: pnce of v~al, a
s~wm_g beef !dis ihe_papnk~sh
bill qwte &gt;rell. Here IS a re~1pe
'th 'th
that may be ma de WI ~~ er
chicken or ~eel. Essential to
the ,stew 1~ · . ~.he c~lodul
"cosmetic sp1ce papnka .. If
possible use fresh pa"pnka
available In some cities in
specialty stores but any.

J
I

..

)

.,...

-.,

paprik~
will do. .
ThiS ground sp1ce

THE
DAILY SENTINEL

p.m. at Legwn Hall m Midnow produced in many foreign
Rehydrate minced onion in 2 dleport.
co~tries and m~st of the tablespoons water. Let stand 10
WOMEN 's auxiliary, Mid·
Umted ~tales crop IS grown in minutes to soften. Cut beef into dleport Fir~ Deparbnent, 7:30
Caltforma.
l-inch cubes or cut chicken into p. m. Wednesday with Mrs.
serving-size pieces . Dredge DOnna Byer and Mrs. Betty
BEEF (OR CHICKEN)
meat in flour mixed with salt Ohlinger as hostesses.
PAPRIKASH
.
_and pepper. Heal oil in a large
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Z tablespoons Instant minced sld)let. Ad&lt;! meat, onion and 1 Club, Wednesday, 2 p. m. at the .
onion
tablespoon paprika. Brown hori'ie"· of Mrs. Robert Fisher.
Water
meat well on all sides. Add 'h Mr · N
M
to
s. an oore . r.ev1ew,
2 pounds honeless beef stew cup water. Cover tightly and "One
Man 's Way" by Arthur
meat OR ·
slmmer, unWtender, aOO.tl'h ·, tiordon; Mrs . o. B. Slout . to
2% pound chicken
hours for beef or 45 miniltt;S'.fDr
·
I'&lt; cup flour
chicken, turning OCC!Ii!l?nally
, .•"
I teaspoon salt
and adding more" W&amp;ter if tlloroughly, but do not boil.
~, leaspDon ground blactr' needed. To make sailce, in a Serve hot with broad noddles, if
pepper
Sll)all saucepan. meit butler. desired. Makes 4 to s. portions .

c~p

"•
oil
was in·
2 tablespoons paprika,
troduced · in_Hungary by the divided
'I'lrks at th~ beginning of tile
l tablespoon butter or
16th century but it ~ctually !"argarlne
cam~·from the New World- a
I tablespoon floor ,
'h cup milk'
member of lhe pod pepper
1 cup dairy sour cream
family called Capsicums. II is

PH. 992-2156

'ADVERTISING DEPT.- ·
l

-'

...,..-·

-r

I·

I

.
'

,I

'.

!q' ,

'

..,

'. '

'.

.

'

""

-

Family Lib

Dinner party is_

Pomeroy ••.
Permal Notes

given at Racine

Mr . and Mrs. Alvin Ritchie
and granddaughter, Lisa, and
Mrs. Latu-a Nice visi ted over
the holidays witll Mr. and Mrs.
Edgar Har tung and son, Ted,
Bryan, Texas.
Edward Houd ashelt of
(Note· Today's column Is wtltten by Joann e.)
Cleveland and Miss Marie
The children were nestled all simg in tileir beds. And Lew Houdashell, Athens , spent the
shouted down to ask when I was coming upstairs. He had been holidsays here with Mr . and .
bu~thng around tile house all evening. I knew he had a presenl Mrs. William Houdashelt .
wa1!Jng for _me - a sweater, maybe, a new robe, or a parka
Christmas dinner guests of
I walked mto the bedroom. Lew whipped back the comforte.r
the
Rev. and Mrs. Robert Kuhn
An? there, st~etched across our king-sized bed, was a tie-dyed
satm sheet With bursts of red exploding all over in large gory were Mr. and Mrs. John Ingle,
blotches. It was the kind of thing you'd expect to see if y~u h d Gallipolis ; Mr.and Mrs. Benny
taken '11 heavy dose of L.S.D.
a Wolfe, Rutland; Jack Kaylor,
But coming up from mopping the kitchen and cold sober like New Have n, and their
lh1s, 1 could only gasp and say "What is it' "
daughter. Miss Janelle Kuhn.
"Satin sheets," said Lew, iooking a bit. crestfallen ·'And Th e fam ily received a
they 're peppy ."
·
telephone call from their son,
(Besides the burats of red , there were smaller bursts of purple
David,
who 1 is stationed ln
green and yellow.)
'
remembered tilat you wanted somethmg liveliel' than England. Mrs. Kuhn left the
wh1le." ,
day alter Chri stma s for
Dravosburg, Pa., to be with her
~-! had in mind powder blue, actually.)
When I saw all tilese colors, I thought this would he perfect. '' stepfather, William Miller ,
Maybe I shou.ld keep them. Lew had intended this to be a lux- confined to the McKeesport
urwus,, ro~an!Jc present. But I knew this psychedelle setting hospital. She returned home
:-vouldn t tns:ge~ any romantk fantasies. One night on these and Tuesday.
mstead of thmkmg ahout. the JOY of sex, I would be dreaming of
Holiday guests of Mr. and
Bela Lug~s1 bitmg my neck. Then there was the realization that
Mrs.
W.A Carpe nter were Mr:
th1s mas~IVe amount of material would have to be washed by
and
Mrs.
John Young, Robin ,
hand and Ironed. That was enough to put a wet blanket on any fantasy.
Phillip and Usa, Lancaster;
" You do~' t like them! " Lew was getting angrier by the second. . Mr. and Mrs. James Ca1·penter
He h~d obvwusly spent a considerable amount of lime and money and son, Jay of Reedsville, R.
on th1s gtfl.
D.: Mr. and Mrs. Dennis
"O.K., lei's return. them," he said, ripping tile sheets off the Carroll and son, Matthew,
bed m a fury, muttermg to himself. "She says she wants colored Cincinn ati , Captain Clare
sheets, so I .~pend a whole day looking for sheets and what thank s Carpenter, Belpre, and Mrs.
do I get ...
Satin sheets just didn't go with our other acquisitions such as Neal West of Bettendorf, Iowa.
the stor!" door with the broken lock which still had 'summe•
screens m on Christmas Eve. Satin sheets didn't coordinate wiUo
worn lounge chairs that had little bits or foam rubber· stuffing
Thought to c o nsider :
creepmg out around tile edges.
Bottlenecks' are always at the
Satm sheets went witil champagne and filet mignon tastes not top .
With ground beef p_lus soybean additive.
'
Satin sheets were?'! for a fa"?ilY which ~ended to romp in bed
on. Sunday morning . Josh floppmg down hke a stiff corpse and
laughl~g hysterically as he hit the mattress, Rachel trying for a
half-gamer and Lisa quietly finishing the last of her coffee cake
Maybe by next Christmas, I would throw practicality to th~
Winds, and segue Into a wild Andy Warhol phase.
But for now, a fringed satin pillow slip from Atlantic Cily was
more our speed.
.
'

A wet blanket
for Christmas

Election, installation of
council officers planned
Osborne .
The mee ling was preceded
by a dinner prepared and
served by the refreshment
committee and a vole of thanks
was extended to the committee
members.
The· Chrisbnas program was
presented by Dorothy Lawson
witil Betty Roush giving the
prayer. Margaret Tuttle sang
two solos, "Christmas" and
~~white . Christmas /!
and
Chrisimas readings were given
by Thelma White and Sadie
Turssell. Th ~re was gro up
singing of carols.
Mary Kay Holter, chairwoman of the good of the order
committee, distributed gifts to
each of the officers along with
a card containing a humorous
jingle written by Ada Morris.
Wmning the door prizes were
Mary Showalter and Mrs.
Morris. Gifts and cards were
exchanged.
Attending were those named
and Erma Cleland, councilor,
Opal Hollon, Dorothy Ritchie,
Zelda Weber, Eth el Orr,
Dorothy Myers, Helen Wolf,
Ada
Neutzling ,
Hattie
Frederick, Jean Summerfield,
Doris Grueser, Ada Bissell, Joe
Bissell, Marcia Keller, Goldie \
Frederick, Go ldie Wolfe,
Eileen Martin , Fern Morris,
lnzy Newetl, Mary Newell,
Carpenter , . Mae Spencer, Laura !&gt;1ae Nice,
Mable Van Meter, Letha Wood ,
Doris Koenig, and Mary' Jo
Pooler.
•

CHESTER - Plans for the
election and installation of the
1975 officers for Chester
Council 323, Daughters of
America, were held at a recent
meeting and holiil!l9 party of
REGULAR
meeting Council members.
The election and installation
Southeastern Ohio Gospel
Music Association, potluck 6 will be tomorrow night at 7:30
p.m., meeting , 7:30 p.m. p.m. at the hall . All members
Springfield Grange Hall. -are reminded to wear white.' !I
Everyone welcome.
was reported that Leda Mae
REGULAR me ei ing, Kraeuter is .home from the
Pomeroy Chapter 186, OES, hospital ahd that Christmas
7:45p.m. Obligation night will gifts had been sent to sick and
be observed. All members shut-in members, including
in vi ted to attend; refresh- Elizabeth Wickham , ·-Maude
ments.
Rolf , Zona Biggs, On a
OHIO ETA · Phi Chapter, · Osborne, Leda Meredith, and
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30 Eva Bailey. Ada Van Meter
p.m. Columbia Gas Co. office. read a letter from Mrs.
Cultm a! report by Karen
McGraw. Demonstration by
HOST DINNER
Gas Co. economist.
CHESTER
Council,
REEDSVILLE - Mr. and
Daughters of America, 7:30 Mrs. James Carpenter and
p.m. at the hall. Flagbearers Jaye entertained at their
and officers to wear white.
Reedsville, R. D. home with a
WEDNESDAY
New Year's Day dinner party.
POMEROY • Middleport Guests were Mr . and Mrs. Roy
Lions Club, regular meeting at Soowden, Homer Parker, Mr.
noon, Meigs Inn.
and Mrs. Carroll Snowden,
POMEROY Chapter 80 , Annette and Larry, and Miss
Royal Arch Masons, stated Suzelle Robinson, Gallipolis ;
conclave 7:30. p.m., Pomeroy Mr . and Mrs . Stev~n Snowden,
Masonic Temple.
Middh!)JO.':t~ Mr . and Mrs.
BOSWORTH council 46 ,-.a~uce May, Debra and
Royal and Select Masters, Michael, Hul!and ; and Mr. and

Add color to-stews
with
pahrikass~~;;o;:::: ~;e· mi:30
·
.
'.f'

cover more of the peopJe you want to reach, everyday.

•

Calendar~

~!~rot'son

.

Members of tlle Meigs ·Pleasure Riders enjoyed a Chrl~~s rmrty at the residence 1
of Mrs. A. R. Knight, Lincoln Hill Drive, Pomeroy.
The Y?~g folks presented Mrs. Knight a bouquet of roses for her assistance :vrllb .
club actiVllles, and Mrs . Rachel Downie a box of c.ll"dY for serving as advisor. Gamea
were played and gifts exchanged. .
. It was noted that new officers will be elected ~t th~ ~an. 20 meeting at the home of
Juhe Elberfeld. Others attending the party were Melissa fhle Tammy Ervin Pam
Nottingham, Lirida Eason, De bbie Woodyard, Rhonda Randolph, Mike llqggs,' Brett
Jones, Faye Reibel, Tammy Smltil, Marsha Dillard, Melanie Dillard, and Anunl Huston,
a former club member. COOkies, potato chips, sandwiches and soft drinks were served.

':1

"

Merchant, when you want to reach the most people; the

shep~ds .

The choir , .directed by Ann
Savage with Rose Ann Jenkins
at the piano, sang several
selections. Making up the choir
were Judy Paper, Judy
Williams, Janice Lisle, Jan
Savage, Cathy Fry , Ca[hy
Moore, Mrs. Aaron Sayre,
Mary Lisle, Helen Teaford,
King,
Dorothy
Judy
Winebrenner, Vera Van Meter,
Dick Ash, Don Harden, John
Li sle, Aaron Sayre, Dick
Savage, Bill Winebrenner and
Roy Jenkins.
Others assisting with the
program we,re Barbara

P..kasure Riders 4-H club has party

.

Rltchart and Lori Guinther, the Cha pm an, Eleano1· Robson,
readers; Conni e' Patterson, Mary Chancey, Demaris Ash,
Tonia Ash, Sonia Ash, Carrie Angie Harden, Jean Kloes and
Guinther , Meg Ainberger , Robert Smith. At tlJe conCarol Gibbs, Teresa 'Halsleln, clusion of the program Santa
Mary Beth Slaven, Tina Gibbs, Cla us arrived with ca ndy ·
and Kathy Weaver, the angels; treats.
Teresa Ferrell, Mary ; Billy
Roush. Joseph ; C. T. Chapman, Bobby Halsteln a nd R i~k
Chancey, the w.isemen ; Brian
Allen, Roger Hubbard, Rob
Gibbs and Matt Weaver ,

Dinner party, gift

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.

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Recitations, choral selections,
drama highlight church program

'

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SYRACUSE - The annual
post-Christmas dinner party of
the Eagles Class of the Asbury
United Methodist Church was
held at. the Steamboat !iln,
Racine, with 25 members at·
tending.
.
The Rev. Richard JarVIi
~ave grace. Following the
dinner 111~mbers went to the
home of 'Mrs. Mary Lisle for a
party. The home was still
decorated for Christmas. The
group enjoyed desserts served
by Mrs. Lisle who aillo 'played
the piano for group singing of
carols.
GUESTS COME
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Price
of Columbus were the New
Year 's Day guests of Mr. an.d
Mrs. Karl Owens, Middleport.
Spending Christmas here with
Mr. and Mrs. Owens were Mr.
and Mrs. Pa)li Winebrenner,
Columbus;
Mrs.
John
Goodrich, Dayton; ·Mr. and
Mrs .
John
Bowman,
Pataskala, and Miss Susan
Bowman, Columbus.
··

JANUARY

,

a.EARANCE.
SALE
NOW IN PROGRESS
heritage house ·
.

Your Thom McAn.Ston ·'
Mhldleport,Ohio

EUREKA·

Reg. SSS!JS U,X.ight
\ . with Reg s1gss
'

Albove·The·Fiaor

Cleaning 1bo1s

Model1416
Powertz ed to clean on rhe floor
or above !!;H; l loor wilh fe wer
strokes. Huge d t!pos ablt dust·

btlg l\ a5 560 CU. in USB I)Ie
ca pa clly U l ehme lu bric OJI6d
mol or rt o~cr nonds ollinq

CLEANS SHAGS!
INGEL·S

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JURNITURE

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People who scheaule the
w.ork are s'eldom the ones who
have to do the Jobs.

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review, "White House China"
by Marian Klamkin. Roll call
response will be a promising
young minister. Annual

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Bl~nd1n
flour and remaining 1. lr'~!IIJI-::"~~-:::;::~b~u~~-n~e:ss:-'m~e~e~tin•g~.;:--.,
tablespoon paprika . CoOk: and

stir mtil mixture bubbles.
Blend in milk; coo)( and stir :
ootil tilickened. GradUally stir
i n 'SOur cream, ·· beating
vigorously: Pour sauce over ·
in skillet and heat
.cooked
. meal
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Yellow,

OFFICE HOURS'9:30 TO 12,'2 TO&gt; I(LOSE
AT NOON
THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.,

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i - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Jan. 6, 1975
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4, The OaUy Sentinel. Midni•JOrt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , Jan 6, 1ll75

Astro ace, son, die of poison

f

,,

\

"
HOUSTON (UP!) - Don
'· Wilson, the Houston Astros
i' pitcher, died along with his
five-year-old son Sunday of
carbon monoxide poisoning.
Wilson's wife and nine-yearold daughter also were overcome by carbon monoxide
fumes and were hospitalized .
Mrs. Wilson also had a broken
jaw .
"Details of the deaths are
sWI sketchy but lhe preliminary Investigation indicates
the deaths are accidental,'' a
police homicide spokesman
silld.
Wilson's body was found in
' tlle garage slumped ove r a
· rectining seat on tlle passenger
side of his sports ca.r. Tht
ignition was turned on, but the
· engine was not running.
· Police believe Wilson, 29,
.' drove Into his double garage at
· I a.m. Sunday and shut the

'

garage door with an automatic
door close r. Police said the
garage was tightly sealed.
Authorities said fumes from
the. car's exhaust seeped into
the master bedroom above the
garage where Wilson's son, .
Alex, was asleep and into an
adjoining bedroom where his
daugllter, Denise, slept.
ll was not known where Mrs.
Wilson was at the lime, but
police said she did ca ll a neighbor hetween I a.m. and I :30
a.m. and said she needed help.
She was taken to Soutllwest
Memonal Hos pital where
autllorjges said she was in
shock bu l in fair condition.
Denise was taken to Texas
Cluldren's Hospital in critical
condition.
Autllorities also said they did
not know how ' Mrs . Wilson's
jaw was broken.
"That is all we know
. ' " the

homicide spokesman said. "An ler when ma!'ager Preston
autopsy has been ordered. Gomez, with his team lrailing
'Perhaps more on the deatll and 2-1. yanked him for a pinchMrs. Wilson's injury can be hitter in tlle AstrOs' half of tlle
released today."
eighth.
The hospital spokesman said
"I respect Preston G&lt;lmez as
Wilson and his son died of a manager," Wilson said after
" toxic material - car bon tlle game. " I respect him more
monoxide .''
tllan ever tonight. He wants to
Wilson, a rightllander known win and I want to win as much
primarily for his fastball, as he does.
broke into the major leagues
"When people start putting
witll tlle Astros in 1967 and personal goals ahead of tlle
posted a 11).9 record and a 2.79 learn, you'll never have a
ERA. During his career, he winner . I understand how
pitched two nO-hitters-a 2-0 Preston feels. He is consistent
victory ove r the Atlanta and I have nothing but adBraves in 1967 and a ~ victory miration for him."
over tlle Cincinnati Reds in
Wilson, althougl1 he won 15 or
1969.
more games three different
Wilson ca me close to hurling seasons, neve r fulfilled tile
a tllird n~itter last season potential the Astros had prewhen he went eight innings dicted lor him when they
against the CinciMati Reds signed him as a free agent in
without allowi ng a h1t. How- 1964. Although he posted imever , he was deprived of a preijSive strikeout totals, incha nce to complete the no.hJt- .JUrles often curbed his performance and his eight-year
record witil tlle Aslros was only

' Solomon shows credentials
as passer in howl victory

103-92.

His best season was 1971
when he went 10-10, struck out
180 and posted a 2.45 earned
run average. Last year he was
10-13 with a 3.07 ERA .

Penn, Ohio
, TAMPA, Fla. (UP! ) - Pro
scouts have voiced tlle view
that University of Tampa
,quarterback Freddie Solomon
probably will be drafted as a
wide receiver rather than
quarterback, partly because of
his passing credentials.
But Sunday the flee t
:Solomon, who finished flftil in
:the nation in total offense built
•around his dangerous running
;game, tried to put tilat talk to
•rest by leading his Soutil team
Ito a last-eecond, 28-22 win over
1the North In the Lions
:American Bowl, and he did it
.on passing before 19,246 par:Usan fans.
l Solomon, 6-0, and 185 pounds,
IVld sent the South ahead with
bust over a minute to play with
,US second touchdown run of
the game, an eight-yard effort
imd then passed to Florida's
~ McGriff for a twa-point
conversion.
But the lead was shortlived
as Steve Joachim of Temple
passed for his second touchdown of the day with a Ill-yard
toss to usual defensive back

Barry Hill of Iowa State and
tllen passed to Henry Hynosld
of ')'emple for the two-point
conversion_, to deadlock the
score at 22-all with just 32
seconds to play.
The North tried an on..side
kick that Georgia's Craig
Hertwlg recovered for the
South at mid-field. With time
running-out the cool Solomon
dropped back and hit McGriff
with a 24-yard pass and came
right back on tile second play
wltlJ a 211-yard pass to the 1&gt;-9,
170-pound McGriff in the
corner of the end zone witlJ 15
seconds to go.
" ! felt all along I could
pass," Solomon said after the
game. "I hope I made a
believer of some people today.
I don't know what they are
plannnlng on trying me at in
tlle pros but I just hope I get a
shot at quarterback."
Solomon ccimpleted all three
passes he threw Sunday for 66
yards, one touchdown and one
twa-point conversion. He also
carried the ball 11 times for 45
yards and two touchdowns with

his only loss coming on tlle one
reverse he tried from the wide
receiver spot . In addition to his
eight-yard touchdown run,
Solomon had a three-yard
scoring run .
His play won for him the
Most Valuable Player Award
for the South. The MVP for the
North was Hynoski who scored
one touchdown on a one-yard
run In addition to catching his
twa-point pass. Hynosld went
53 yards on the opening play
before being ca ught from
behind and finished the day as
tlle leading rusher with 121
yards on 12 carries.
In addition to Joachim's TD
pass to Hill, he also hit Steve
Grogan with a IS-yard touchdown pass. Grogan, a quarterback at Kansas Stale, was
playing at wide receiver most
of the game and saw only brief
action at quarterback .
Georgia running back
Horace King had a four-yard
touchdown run for the South.
Joe Danelo of Washington
State kicked two extra points
for the North

collide

Oft

st11rs

Aug. 2

HARRISBURG (UP!) - The
PeMsylvania Big 33 football
squad will face the Ohio AllStars on Aug. 2 with quarterbacks Pat Haney of Bethlehem
Catholic, Mike Kraemer of
Nazareth and Tom Rozantz of
Fairview.
·
The Harrisbpr g PatriotNews selected the Big 33 squad
with the aid of 150 writers and ·
coaches through a four-month
screening process In which
2,000 high school athletes were
considered.
The Big 33 teams, with a
record of 6-3-1 in competition
against out-of..state opponents,
have defeated Ohio in all three
games, by scores of '!1-'l:l, 21-19,
14-7, ~ce tile series started in
1971.
There has been at least one
ex-Big 33 performer in each of
the first eight National Football League Super Bow Is and in
this year's college howl games,
33 former Big-33 players were
involved.

Cqllege
results
College Basketba ll Au ults
By United Press International
!

Tournam e nts

I Final Round Action)

B1g Four Tournament
( Ch a mpion!hip )
Wake For es t 75 D uke 11
( Con solation )
N C St 82 Nort h Car . 61
Pre si d ential Clas s1 c
I Ch a.mpion ship l
Am U 72 Geci Wash 69
(Consolation)
W Va 99 Bost on U BJ
Bluebonnet Clilssic
(Championship)
Hous ton 92 Texas A&amp;M 72
cConsoliltton)
UN LV 89 Hawaii 77
East
Rutgers 97 L I U 87
Pnnceton 50 Penn 49
Geo twn DC 67 Sf J no NY 63
La Sal le 94 Hofstra 61
Syr acuse 77 P1tt 68
Oet ro1t 64 Can1sius 56
Del S l 100 St A ug 87
De law are 80 Maine 67
Bos l on Co l i . 82 Pen n St 71
Temple 67 RI U 64
K1ng' s ( Pa . l 81 A rm y 70
R 1der 65 D rexel 55
Brk l yn Colt 46 York NY 45
l ona 77 St F ran NY 73
Se to n Ha l l 72 Buckne ll 61
St Bonn ie 88 va . Te c h 69
N iaga ra 79 Buffalo St . 69
Wilkes 66 Adelph i 58
New Hamp 57 Conn . 56
Scra nton 70 Mora v tan 68
V!!-rmont 81 St . Jo s. Pa . 74
Cath U 74 La faye tte 108
Moravian 68 Scranton 70
Monmouth ( N JJ 91 Pace 77
Ru t grs Cm dn 97 Swrthmre 78
Soutll
Mary l and 90, Notre Dame 82
Clemson 86 Virg1 n ia 68
Sout h Car . 82 Manhattan 63
LouiSVIlle 82 Br adley SO
Georgia . Te c h 70 Merc er 68
F londa 94 M iss Sf 82
Kentucky 11 5 LS U so
Ce ntenary 96 E Texas Bap 11
F l a . St. 107 E Ky 75
A la barn a 10.4 Vanderbilt 77
Ja c ksonvl 100 UW Mi l w 85
Tennessee 96 Auburn 81
M em phi s St 79 W Ky . 72
E . Ca r 11J.Citadel 8 1
B1sca yne 87 Yale 70
R I Coli. 85 Sf. Leo 72
St e tson 109 Hartford 73
Samford 88 Murray 87
De f i ance 85 Bluffton 78
Car awba 82 Elon 7 1
So M ISS 88 NW Okl a 73
So Al a bama 121 MacAiester 68
Roanoke 89 Md . Ba l l 62
Mid Ten n . 93 VMI 89
Miss Col i. 73 No . Ala 66
Old Dom 61 Wm &amp;M a r y 55
SE La . 87 Nrl h l nd Coli 80
Geotwn Ky . 87 P ikev l 85
DePauw 88 Centre 82
Midwest
M1 c fi 85 Ohio St 7J
Miam i 0 67 W Mi ch . 59
0 . Robert s 88 Ind . St . 77
Indian a 107 Mich St . 55
Iowa 95 Ill inois 70
Ohio U 68 Kent St . 53
Ill St 91 SIU Crbndl e 84
Northwestern 69 W1s 66
S l L 100 W Tex St 6 1
Mt . Un• on 76 Den 1son 68
Oberlin 69 Steubnvl 66
M i nnesota 54 Purdue 51
Mo . 5 1. 79 Lincoln Mo . 76
Cmc• 93 Wabash 67 '
P urd ue lndpl s 76 U I ·Evn sv l 72
H eidelberg 57 Capital 55
Walsh 8.4 W .Va Wslyn 82
Mskingm 71 Bldwn .wallce 54
Witten berg 69 Marietta 55
Ball St 72 Sl ip pr y R c k 71
N or th Dak . 86 UW . Pittevl 68
Evansvl 80 Ky Wesleyan 74
Cen t Mien 89 w Ill. 82

MSU team to beat--Bo
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UP!) Ten runners-&lt;~p, but he said a up their pads, concentrate on
- Michigan Coach Bo Schem- playoff system was not 'feasi- tlleir studies and prepare for
bechler says the Big ·Ten is no · ble."
final e~ams." ~
" We've got to Iace the
longer a two-team ' football
conference and Michigan State academic responsibility," he
is the team to beat next season : said. " If we continued playing RULE SUSPENDED
In a weekend interview, for two or three mqre weeks "" WASHINGTON (UP!)
Schembechler said the league after the season, our semester 1 Baseball Commissioner Bowie
Kuhn said Sunday nigllt he was
will be dominated by five would be over."
"The
break
gives
our
yo,ungsuspending
for at least one
teams, Including current co.
sters
the
opportunity
to
hang
year
a
new
rule that would
champions Ohio State and
-have
allowed
major league
Michigan, and Wisconsin, Dteams to draft some college
linois and Michigan State.
baseball
players while they
Jones,
Allies
"l look for tbose five teams
were
sllll
In school. 1
•
to have shot at the title next
According
to
a
Fred
'Gerardi,
1
year," the coach said. ' And 1 named coaches
sports. information director at
pick Michigan State as the
team to beat."
NEW YORK (UP!) - NBA tlle University of NebraskaMiChigan , ltl-loverall and II-I Commissioner Walter Kennedy Omaha and spokesman for the
In the Big Ten, missed a chance announced today that K. C. American Association of Colat the Rose Bowl last season Jones of the Washington lege Baseball Coaches, Kuhn
when conference athletic Bullets and AI Allies of the made tlle announcement at the
directors again voted to send G&lt;llden State Warriors will coaches 31st annual convention
Ohio State. The Buckeyes then coach the East and West meeting.
College coaches had been
lost 111-17 to USC.
squads, respectively, in the
Schembechler said Michigan 25th annual·NBA All.Star game upset over the move by major
league owners at their winter
"has a. lot of work to do" In Jan . 14 at Phoenix.
preparation for next season.
Both coaches were appointed meeting in New Orleans which
He noted that In the last two because their teams had the amended eligibility rules and
years the team has graduated · highest won-lost percentages in allowed drafting and signing of
53 players who have been in the tileir conference tllrougl1 Sun- college players over 21 years of
age , during a 45-&lt;lay period
starting lineup.
day's games.
The coach said he liked the
Washington, which has the after tile winter draft.
idea of opening up post..season best record in the league 211-12
invitational howl games Big for .684. G&lt;llden State, seeking
its first Pacific Division title, is
Thinking about a
24-12 for .667.
'·
No . Ill 11 3 Cl'1i St . 80
new car?
Bow ing Grn 66 Toledo 64
It is the first All.Star game
Eau Claire 85 No Mich 63
1. Pick out the
coaching assignment for either
Cre 1ghton 73 Buller 60
model.
D e troit Tech 87 Shaw 43
man. This is Attles' sixth
Esn . Mi c h . 82 Way ne 5 1 55
2. line up your
Neb .. Qmaht' 100 Y ngs lwn St 97 season as Warriors' coach and
SE Mo . 64 SW M issour i 62
deal.
Jones' second at Washington.
MO .· ROIIa 82 Kan . Pitt sbg 80
Both coaches are forme{ NBA
3. Then ...
Mo . Ws t rn 60 Wm J ew ell SO
Bethany 96 McPherson 81
players, Jones played nine
Ill. Wslyn 85 Ind . Cent 75
years at Boston and Allies 11
Kearny St 91 S. Col o. St . 62
Central St. 59 Washburn 57
seasons with the Warriors, but
Sf Jos lnd 83 F ranklin 75
... CALLyour
neither man ever made the AllSottthwest
Nationwide agent
M iss ouri 6.4 Texas 60
Star game as a player.
R ice 92 WrightSl~ BJ
lor
details on
BOth Allies and Jones are
Okla Ci ty 86 SMU 75
auto financing.
Hous ton Bap 86 UT A rl 75
black, making them the first
Ark . 100 MacMurray 65
Convenient and conblacks to guide an All-star
sw Te x 77 H . Payne 76
ltdential service •..
S F Aust i n 96 Trltn 84
team in any major league
Lowest possible.fates
McMurry 85 Hrdn Smmos 70
professional
sport.
... terms to Itt your
Ab Ch ris 83 Tex A&amp;l 68

STOP

New Mexico St . 58 Tulsa 56
T exas Wslyn 92 Sl Ed 69
We st
Colo St 90 Denver 67
UCLA 111 Oklahoma 66
USC 91 Fu rman 84
Lng Bch St. 91 Colo 77
Wyoming 70 A i r Force 59
Oregon 86 Providenc e 73
Utah 83 Utah St 77
BY U 100 N E Louis i ana 81
Mon tana 1Q.6· No Ariz 75
Pa c Luth 87 Pac Or e. 76
Ca i . Bap 87Ft Lewis 66
N evada Reno 75 Ore St . 74
Calif 77 Morehed St 71
S D Sf 57 Ly l a Cal. 55
Pepperdine 80 Day ton 79
Seattle Pac 85 Idaho 63
San Fran 87 Stanford 82
Cai . S.B . 91 Davidson 75
F re sno 80 St Mry 's Cal. 78
Sta Clara ,67 U . ot Pac . 59
Weber St 85 Mont Sf 74

budget.

.

A com plete financing ellr vtee Is erso aveUeble
. .. to fmence your boel .
camper, or almost eny
cons umer purchasl!l Catl
tor elllhe delelll.

MCPHERSON TO UCLA
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - Bill
McPherson, an assistant at
Santa Clara lor 12 years, has
joined Dick Vermeil's UCLA
football coaching staff.
He succeeds Jim Mora, who
was in charge of the Bruins'
linebacklng corps last fall.
Mora resigned to become an
assistant at the University of
Washington.

P. J. PAULEY

307 Spring

Ave .. Pomoroy
PH. 992-231.

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.... oc •• t.d •II~
Nlloonwodt lol ~l ul l,.u••~ c • Compeny
WOmt oft Cl C ol~ mbu l 01\ oo

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of interest
to women
'

PUT YOUR SALESMAtf
AT EVERY-DOORSTEP•••

SYRACUSE - Recitations,
choi r selections and a play
enti tl ed " The Late Little
Angel" was included on the
Christmas program of the
United Asbury Methodis t
Church.
The
recitations
were
"Welcome" by Mike Chancey;
"The Lord's Birthday" by
Shan non Slaven ; "My Part",
Kev in King; "Baby Jesus,"
Jan e Ann Williams; "A Gift of
Love ", Bracie Hubbard ; "A
Big Wish", Barry McCoy ;
"Joy," Kathy Pickens; "I've
Wai ted", Michael Kloes ; " I
Can Spell," Wendy Fry;
"Why", Shelly Wolfe; "Glad to
be Here, " Sherry Sisson ;
" God ' s Light ," Jane Amberger; ' 1 A Child was Born,"
Jenny Bentley; " Baby Jesus

.

Pol(y 's Pointers
By Polly Cramer

Offflavor chills
her on ice cubes
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Our new refrigerator has an ice maker.
The cuhes have !!Jimny or "off" taste. I washed the-hard plastic
pan they fall into with soda and soaked it but tlle smell still seems
to be In the pan. I even have to buy 1ce cubes when having a
party.lcertainly would like to know if there is anything I can do.
- Mt\5. K. S.
DEAR MRS. K. S. -As the refrigerator is new you should
certainly lake the pan back to the dealer from whom it was
purchased and ask for a new one. Meanwhile, remove what you
believe to be the trouble maker and use another suitably sized
pan to catch the cubes as they fall and see If there Is an Jm.
provement. If the cubes continue to ''taste" you should stlll talk
to the dealer and try to find the trouble. -POLLy.

Came",

Roni

Provo ; " I'm

Glad," Debbie Michael; "The
Sign ", Brian Allen and Rick
Cl1ancey . D. J . Harden joined
the children in singing several
Christmas songs.
Children talking part in the
play were Jaye Ord : Jean Ann

· DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is witil manulactur.ers who
put clot_h&lt;overed buttons on dresses th at will be laundered many
many hmes. Long ,before the dress is worn out tile buttons have
polled out and have to be replaced. - MRS. E.A.E.
DEAR HOMEMAKJ;:RS- Before the holiday season how we
clean, wash and shine the house until everything sparkles. The
added holiday decorations are then the frosting on the cake.
During the Christmas season everyone gushes with compliments
on how beautiful the house looks but we aU !mow all good things
have to end. The day the tree and the decorations come down is
the stroke of midnight for that Cinderella-like look, There are
marks and stains, dust and pine needles In the most unexpected
places. '11lat thorough cleaning bas to slart all over again .
A few Pointers on this after-holiday cleanup job seem in
order. First, examine anything and everything for spots. They
are easier to remove when fresh. Spotted table linens shollld be
treated immediately even though there is not time to launder
them right away.
Gravy slalns can be soaked In cool water and then washed In
hot suds. Scrape candlewax off with a lable !mile, put slalned
cloth between two white blottera, press with a hot iron aud then
rub spots remaining with cold lard or turpentine and wa~h In
warm suds, Immediately soak any alcoholic beverage slalnS In
cool water and ljlen wash In warm suds. Soft drink slalns may
turn brown as they age so sponge them with cool water or equal
parts of.alcohol and water. Rub glycerine In staln, let slaad about
30 minutes, rinse out and then wash In hot suds. When you get
around to laundering all those linens do ool bother to Iron them.
Roll rather than fold before storing to eHmlnate creasing.
Wash and dry thoroughly tree light bulbs. To prevent ·
breakage put Mck in sockets and carefully wind the "strongs"
diagonally around a cardboard tube. Most artificial trees and
wreaths can stand a washing in warm suds (ho:.v dirty they do
get), a rinse In clear water and then hang, by a string, on the
clothesline to dry. Never store anything the least bit drupp.
Any felt tree skirts, lablecloths, party aprons, etc., can be
cleaned on both sides with the vacuum and then hun~ outside to
air and scare away the moths. Rolllbem to store. When such
special jobs are finished the regular cleaning ~chedule goes Into
full swing. Soon allis back to normal and the liouse looks bright
and gay In Its usual way, - 'POLLY.

exchange is given
A holiday dinner party and Holly, Mr. and Mrs. Lerrance
gift ~xchange for the Laides Lawrence, May Mason, Manda
Auxiliary of lhe Middleport Easbnan, Teresa Easbnan,
United Pentecostal Chlll'ch and Amanda Lee, Mr. and Mrs.
th eir husb ands was held Ronald Dugan, Velma Keller,
recently at the home of Mr. and 'l'ressie Spencer, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Michael Zirkle.
Russell Priddy and Bob, and
There was group singing of Mabel Pearman .
carols following the turkey and .
ham dinner. Prayer was by the
Rev. William Knittel. Mrs. ~!:
Joyce Sauters gave the ~%
secretary's report to open the ~:!
business meeting. Candy for ;:;:
sale was distributed to the
members wi tlJ lhe proceeds to ~;:
be u!ll'd for church essentials ;~;
including new qarpeting.
MONDAy
It was noted that tlle church
SOUTHERN
Athletic
kitchen is now ready for use Boosters 7:30p.m. at Southern
and the Auxili~ry members High school. Installation of new
extended a vote of thanks to the officers.
men of the church and to Mrs.
RACINE Chapter 134, OES
Don Gosney, architect. Mrs. regular session, 8 p.m. at the
Jean Cunningham, Langsville Masonic Temple. Obligation
will host the January meeting. Night will be observed.
Attending the holiday
·•
meeting were the Rev. Mr. and
THEODORUS COUNCIL 17,
Mrs. Knittel, Mr. and Mrs ...• Daughter of America, Monday,
Leroy Sauters, Mr. and Mrs. 7:30p.m . IOOF Hall. Charter
David Acree, Mr. and Mrs. will be draped for Mrs. Sylvia
Michael Zirkle, Mr. and Mrs. Badgley.
Wilbur Ashley, Mr. and Mrs.
SALEM CENTER PTA,
Don Gosney, Mr. and Mrs. Monday, 7:30 p. m. at the
Danny Cunningham, Dora school. Boy Scouts to present
the program.
TUF..SDAY
GIRLS ATHLETIC Booster
meeting, 7:30p.m . at Southern
High School.

Social

!!

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A consistent, well co-ordina!ed advertising campaign placed
in your hometown paper can reach more people, quicker
than your salesmen. Newsp~per advertising motivates people . . .
.

when people are motivated ... they buy! So, Mr.
, Americanized "paprikash" is hearty, versatile stew.

.'

FOOD FOR AMERICANS

faste$t
way possible ... think newspaper.
We ..
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.

By AUeen Clair~ .
N~FoodEdltor . .
Hungarian stews ~r papnkas
( p~onounced papnkash) are
fims~ wlll_l sweet or so~

cream: \ra~tionally the baste
m_eat IS c~cken. or veal but
.':"'th. the h1gh: pnce of v~al, a
s~wm_g beef !dis ihe_papnk~sh
bill qwte &gt;rell. Here IS a re~1pe
'th 'th
that may be ma de WI ~~ er
chicken or ~eel. Essential to
the ,stew 1~ · . ~.he c~lodul
"cosmetic sp1ce papnka .. If
possible use fresh pa"pnka
available In some cities in
specialty stores but any.

J
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paprik~
will do. .
ThiS ground sp1ce

THE
DAILY SENTINEL

p.m. at Legwn Hall m Midnow produced in many foreign
Rehydrate minced onion in 2 dleport.
co~tries and m~st of the tablespoons water. Let stand 10
WOMEN 's auxiliary, Mid·
Umted ~tales crop IS grown in minutes to soften. Cut beef into dleport Fir~ Deparbnent, 7:30
Caltforma.
l-inch cubes or cut chicken into p. m. Wednesday with Mrs.
serving-size pieces . Dredge DOnna Byer and Mrs. Betty
BEEF (OR CHICKEN)
meat in flour mixed with salt Ohlinger as hostesses.
PAPRIKASH
.
_and pepper. Heal oil in a large
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Z tablespoons Instant minced sld)let. Ad&lt;! meat, onion and 1 Club, Wednesday, 2 p. m. at the .
onion
tablespoon paprika. Brown hori'ie"· of Mrs. Robert Fisher.
Water
meat well on all sides. Add 'h Mr · N
M
to
s. an oore . r.ev1ew,
2 pounds honeless beef stew cup water. Cover tightly and "One
Man 's Way" by Arthur
meat OR ·
slmmer, unWtender, aOO.tl'h ·, tiordon; Mrs . o. B. Slout . to
2% pound chicken
hours for beef or 45 miniltt;S'.fDr
·
I'&lt; cup flour
chicken, turning OCC!Ii!l?nally
, .•"
I teaspoon salt
and adding more" W&amp;ter if tlloroughly, but do not boil.
~, leaspDon ground blactr' needed. To make sailce, in a Serve hot with broad noddles, if
pepper
Sll)all saucepan. meit butler. desired. Makes 4 to s. portions .

c~p

"•
oil
was in·
2 tablespoons paprika,
troduced · in_Hungary by the divided
'I'lrks at th~ beginning of tile
l tablespoon butter or
16th century but it ~ctually !"argarlne
cam~·from the New World- a
I tablespoon floor ,
'h cup milk'
member of lhe pod pepper
1 cup dairy sour cream
family called Capsicums. II is

PH. 992-2156

'ADVERTISING DEPT.- ·
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Family Lib

Dinner party is_

Pomeroy ••.
Permal Notes

given at Racine

Mr . and Mrs. Alvin Ritchie
and granddaughter, Lisa, and
Mrs. Latu-a Nice visi ted over
the holidays witll Mr. and Mrs.
Edgar Har tung and son, Ted,
Bryan, Texas.
Edward Houd ashelt of
(Note· Today's column Is wtltten by Joann e.)
Cleveland and Miss Marie
The children were nestled all simg in tileir beds. And Lew Houdashell, Athens , spent the
shouted down to ask when I was coming upstairs. He had been holidsays here with Mr . and .
bu~thng around tile house all evening. I knew he had a presenl Mrs. William Houdashelt .
wa1!Jng for _me - a sweater, maybe, a new robe, or a parka
Christmas dinner guests of
I walked mto the bedroom. Lew whipped back the comforte.r
the
Rev. and Mrs. Robert Kuhn
An? there, st~etched across our king-sized bed, was a tie-dyed
satm sheet With bursts of red exploding all over in large gory were Mr. and Mrs. John Ingle,
blotches. It was the kind of thing you'd expect to see if y~u h d Gallipolis ; Mr.and Mrs. Benny
taken '11 heavy dose of L.S.D.
a Wolfe, Rutland; Jack Kaylor,
But coming up from mopping the kitchen and cold sober like New Have n, and their
lh1s, 1 could only gasp and say "What is it' "
daughter. Miss Janelle Kuhn.
"Satin sheets," said Lew, iooking a bit. crestfallen ·'And Th e fam ily received a
they 're peppy ."
·
telephone call from their son,
(Besides the burats of red , there were smaller bursts of purple
David,
who 1 is stationed ln
green and yellow.)
'
remembered tilat you wanted somethmg liveliel' than England. Mrs. Kuhn left the
wh1le." ,
day alter Chri stma s for
Dravosburg, Pa., to be with her
~-! had in mind powder blue, actually.)
When I saw all tilese colors, I thought this would he perfect. '' stepfather, William Miller ,
Maybe I shou.ld keep them. Lew had intended this to be a lux- confined to the McKeesport
urwus,, ro~an!Jc present. But I knew this psychedelle setting hospital. She returned home
:-vouldn t tns:ge~ any romantk fantasies. One night on these and Tuesday.
mstead of thmkmg ahout. the JOY of sex, I would be dreaming of
Holiday guests of Mr. and
Bela Lug~s1 bitmg my neck. Then there was the realization that
Mrs.
W.A Carpe nter were Mr:
th1s mas~IVe amount of material would have to be washed by
and
Mrs.
John Young, Robin ,
hand and Ironed. That was enough to put a wet blanket on any fantasy.
Phillip and Usa, Lancaster;
" You do~' t like them! " Lew was getting angrier by the second. . Mr. and Mrs. James Ca1·penter
He h~d obvwusly spent a considerable amount of lime and money and son, Jay of Reedsville, R.
on th1s gtfl.
D.: Mr. and Mrs. Dennis
"O.K., lei's return. them," he said, ripping tile sheets off the Carroll and son, Matthew,
bed m a fury, muttermg to himself. "She says she wants colored Cincinn ati , Captain Clare
sheets, so I .~pend a whole day looking for sheets and what thank s Carpenter, Belpre, and Mrs.
do I get ...
Satin sheets just didn't go with our other acquisitions such as Neal West of Bettendorf, Iowa.
the stor!" door with the broken lock which still had 'summe•
screens m on Christmas Eve. Satin sheets didn't coordinate wiUo
worn lounge chairs that had little bits or foam rubber· stuffing
Thought to c o nsider :
creepmg out around tile edges.
Bottlenecks' are always at the
Satm sheets went witil champagne and filet mignon tastes not top .
With ground beef p_lus soybean additive.
'
Satin sheets were?'! for a fa"?ilY which ~ended to romp in bed
on. Sunday morning . Josh floppmg down hke a stiff corpse and
laughl~g hysterically as he hit the mattress, Rachel trying for a
half-gamer and Lisa quietly finishing the last of her coffee cake
Maybe by next Christmas, I would throw practicality to th~
Winds, and segue Into a wild Andy Warhol phase.
But for now, a fringed satin pillow slip from Atlantic Cily was
more our speed.
.
'

A wet blanket
for Christmas

Election, installation of
council officers planned
Osborne .
The mee ling was preceded
by a dinner prepared and
served by the refreshment
committee and a vole of thanks
was extended to the committee
members.
The· Chrisbnas program was
presented by Dorothy Lawson
witil Betty Roush giving the
prayer. Margaret Tuttle sang
two solos, "Christmas" and
~~white . Christmas /!
and
Chrisimas readings were given
by Thelma White and Sadie
Turssell. Th ~re was gro up
singing of carols.
Mary Kay Holter, chairwoman of the good of the order
committee, distributed gifts to
each of the officers along with
a card containing a humorous
jingle written by Ada Morris.
Wmning the door prizes were
Mary Showalter and Mrs.
Morris. Gifts and cards were
exchanged.
Attending were those named
and Erma Cleland, councilor,
Opal Hollon, Dorothy Ritchie,
Zelda Weber, Eth el Orr,
Dorothy Myers, Helen Wolf,
Ada
Neutzling ,
Hattie
Frederick, Jean Summerfield,
Doris Grueser, Ada Bissell, Joe
Bissell, Marcia Keller, Goldie \
Frederick, Go ldie Wolfe,
Eileen Martin , Fern Morris,
lnzy Newetl, Mary Newell,
Carpenter , . Mae Spencer, Laura !&gt;1ae Nice,
Mable Van Meter, Letha Wood ,
Doris Koenig, and Mary' Jo
Pooler.
•

CHESTER - Plans for the
election and installation of the
1975 officers for Chester
Council 323, Daughters of
America, were held at a recent
meeting and holiil!l9 party of
REGULAR
meeting Council members.
The election and installation
Southeastern Ohio Gospel
Music Association, potluck 6 will be tomorrow night at 7:30
p.m., meeting , 7:30 p.m. p.m. at the hall . All members
Springfield Grange Hall. -are reminded to wear white.' !I
Everyone welcome.
was reported that Leda Mae
REGULAR me ei ing, Kraeuter is .home from the
Pomeroy Chapter 186, OES, hospital ahd that Christmas
7:45p.m. Obligation night will gifts had been sent to sick and
be observed. All members shut-in members, including
in vi ted to attend; refresh- Elizabeth Wickham , ·-Maude
ments.
Rolf , Zona Biggs, On a
OHIO ETA · Phi Chapter, · Osborne, Leda Meredith, and
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30 Eva Bailey. Ada Van Meter
p.m. Columbia Gas Co. office. read a letter from Mrs.
Cultm a! report by Karen
McGraw. Demonstration by
HOST DINNER
Gas Co. economist.
CHESTER
Council,
REEDSVILLE - Mr. and
Daughters of America, 7:30 Mrs. James Carpenter and
p.m. at the hall. Flagbearers Jaye entertained at their
and officers to wear white.
Reedsville, R. D. home with a
WEDNESDAY
New Year's Day dinner party.
POMEROY • Middleport Guests were Mr . and Mrs. Roy
Lions Club, regular meeting at Soowden, Homer Parker, Mr.
noon, Meigs Inn.
and Mrs. Carroll Snowden,
POMEROY Chapter 80 , Annette and Larry, and Miss
Royal Arch Masons, stated Suzelle Robinson, Gallipolis ;
conclave 7:30. p.m., Pomeroy Mr . and Mrs . Stev~n Snowden,
Masonic Temple.
Middh!)JO.':t~ Mr . and Mrs.
BOSWORTH council 46 ,-.a~uce May, Debra and
Royal and Select Masters, Michael, Hul!and ; and Mr. and

Add color to-stews
with
pahrikass~~;;o;:::: ~;e· mi:30
·
.
'.f'

cover more of the peopJe you want to reach, everyday.

•

Calendar~

~!~rot'son

.

Members of tlle Meigs ·Pleasure Riders enjoyed a Chrl~~s rmrty at the residence 1
of Mrs. A. R. Knight, Lincoln Hill Drive, Pomeroy.
The Y?~g folks presented Mrs. Knight a bouquet of roses for her assistance :vrllb .
club actiVllles, and Mrs . Rachel Downie a box of c.ll"dY for serving as advisor. Gamea
were played and gifts exchanged. .
. It was noted that new officers will be elected ~t th~ ~an. 20 meeting at the home of
Juhe Elberfeld. Others attending the party were Melissa fhle Tammy Ervin Pam
Nottingham, Lirida Eason, De bbie Woodyard, Rhonda Randolph, Mike llqggs,' Brett
Jones, Faye Reibel, Tammy Smltil, Marsha Dillard, Melanie Dillard, and Anunl Huston,
a former club member. COOkies, potato chips, sandwiches and soft drinks were served.

':1

"

Merchant, when you want to reach the most people; the

shep~ds .

The choir , .directed by Ann
Savage with Rose Ann Jenkins
at the piano, sang several
selections. Making up the choir
were Judy Paper, Judy
Williams, Janice Lisle, Jan
Savage, Cathy Fry , Ca[hy
Moore, Mrs. Aaron Sayre,
Mary Lisle, Helen Teaford,
King,
Dorothy
Judy
Winebrenner, Vera Van Meter,
Dick Ash, Don Harden, John
Li sle, Aaron Sayre, Dick
Savage, Bill Winebrenner and
Roy Jenkins.
Others assisting with the
program we,re Barbara

P..kasure Riders 4-H club has party

.

Rltchart and Lori Guinther, the Cha pm an, Eleano1· Robson,
readers; Conni e' Patterson, Mary Chancey, Demaris Ash,
Tonia Ash, Sonia Ash, Carrie Angie Harden, Jean Kloes and
Guinther , Meg Ainberger , Robert Smith. At tlJe conCarol Gibbs, Teresa 'Halsleln, clusion of the program Santa
Mary Beth Slaven, Tina Gibbs, Cla us arrived with ca ndy ·
and Kathy Weaver, the angels; treats.
Teresa Ferrell, Mary ; Billy
Roush. Joseph ; C. T. Chapman, Bobby Halsteln a nd R i~k
Chancey, the w.isemen ; Brian
Allen, Roger Hubbard, Rob
Gibbs and Matt Weaver ,

Dinner party, gift

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Recitations, choral selections,
drama highlight church program

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r&gt;-o.o-&lt;::&gt;&lt;:&gt;--c::&gt;-o-&lt;&gt;&lt;::&gt;-&lt;;&gt;-:O..::&gt;o--.o-&lt;::"0-(::&gt;&lt;;&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;;;&gt;.c::&gt;.o....:&gt;&lt;;:&gt;&lt;:&gt;.O'G....:·&gt;Q .•

SYRACUSE - The annual
post-Christmas dinner party of
the Eagles Class of the Asbury
United Methodist Church was
held at. the Steamboat !iln,
Racine, with 25 members at·
tending.
.
The Rev. Richard JarVIi
~ave grace. Following the
dinner 111~mbers went to the
home of 'Mrs. Mary Lisle for a
party. The home was still
decorated for Christmas. The
group enjoyed desserts served
by Mrs. Lisle who aillo 'played
the piano for group singing of
carols.
GUESTS COME
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Price
of Columbus were the New
Year 's Day guests of Mr. an.d
Mrs. Karl Owens, Middleport.
Spending Christmas here with
Mr. and Mrs. Owens were Mr.
and Mrs. Pa)li Winebrenner,
Columbus;
Mrs.
John
Goodrich, Dayton; ·Mr. and
Mrs .
John
Bowman,
Pataskala, and Miss Susan
Bowman, Columbus.
··

JANUARY

,

a.EARANCE.
SALE
NOW IN PROGRESS
heritage house ·
.

Your Thom McAn.Ston ·'
Mhldleport,Ohio

EUREKA·

Reg. SSS!JS U,X.ight
\ . with Reg s1gss
'

Albove·The·Fiaor

Cleaning 1bo1s

Model1416
Powertz ed to clean on rhe floor
or above !!;H; l loor wilh fe wer
strokes. Huge d t!pos ablt dust·

btlg l\ a5 560 CU. in USB I)Ie
ca pa clly U l ehme lu bric OJI6d
mol or rt o~cr nonds ollinq

CLEANS SHAGS!
INGEL·S

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JURNITURE

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992-2635

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People who scheaule the
w.ork are s'eldom the ones who
have to do the Jobs.

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review, "White House China"
by Marian Klamkin. Roll call
response will be a promising
young minister. Annual

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81
Bl~nd1n
flour and remaining 1. lr'~!IIJI-::"~~-:::;::~b~u~~-n~e:ss:-'m~e~e~tin•g~.;:--.,
tablespoon paprika . CoOk: and

stir mtil mixture bubbles.
Blend in milk; coo)( and stir :
ootil tilickened. GradUally stir
i n 'SOur cream, ·· beating
vigorously: Pour sauce over ·
in skillet and heat
.cooked
. meal
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Yellow,

OFFICE HOURS'9:30 TO 12,'2 TO&gt; I(LOSE
AT NOON
THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.,

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•

TV in review
•

· Dancing lessons
'

•;

maybe it was ;The Pill," which
freed men and women from the
fears of pregnancy :
"But this show really d'*sn 't
stress the history of r ole
changes. II tries to illuminate
wrlat !s going on now."
·Frankel said that d'uring the
nearly five months tha t he and

begin at park
. .

• NEWYORK(UPI) -'- AiitUe
girl sllJI!S a home run in UtUe
League baseball . A father
slays at home ironing diapers .
And group of swinging singles
meet for lunch and discuss last
night's sex.
This' Is part and parcel of the
changing roles of men and
women ln America, the impact
of which may mean entirely
different society by tile 21st

tjlree women ,-worked on the
pr'?)ect he noticed the level of

Sayre, Ll'lart, W. Va : Dress

century.

co nsciousness

for - the lessnns ('(mduetcd

On Thursday!tigbt, NBC will
air "Of Men and Women," a
special three-hour look at the
newest AnJerican revolution.
The special broadcast is the
fifth time since 1963 tllat NBC
· pre-empted its entire evening
programming for a documentary.
1 think," said executive
produ't:er Eliot Frankel in an
. Interview., "ti)at it .will be a
night of information, filled with
emotion, sadness, entertainment , eyebrow-raising segments, and perhaps a lltUe,
anguish lor many of us."
I
Some of the areas probed
Include : sex among the
elderly ; .recreational sex ;
women and politics, pin-up
•

11

girls; male consciousness

raising ; women and sports ;
and bisexuality.
Among the experts surveyed
are historians, entertainers,
anthropologists, pyschologlsts,
marriage counselors ,
politicians and psycblatrists.
"We also tried to determine,"
said Frankel, "how · lasting
these changes will be and
whether the more traditional
views wlll prevail after
reaction sets ln. In addition, we
a1ao tried to determine the
moral dimensions of the
revolution and, we talked with
those people who are worried
about the consequences of the
this new and changing
9Dclety.''
Frankel, who produced such
award-winning docwnentaries
"Pensions : The Broken
Promise,"
and
"First
Tuesday" series," was asked
what caused the change in sex
roles.
·
" It seems to be many
things," he said. "Maybe, it
was World War II and the use
·or women in factories. Maybe,
It was the increase in the
number of women who went to
·college. Maybe, It was Belly
Frlellan's · book,
"The
Feminine Mystique." That
book crystallzed a lot of
thinking. Many women who
read It said, 'Gee, it's me she's
talking about. • Then too,

his associates -three men and

was

rai se d

among the group.
"Just talking about
changes and doing
research lead to a great
more freedom in

the
the
deal
our

Western style sq uarr
dancing lt•ssOns will begin
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the

recreation building, Royal
Oak Park, near Pomcro)'.
The lessons arc sponsored by

the Shade River Belle and
Beaus · Square Danre Clu b
and the instructor is Ced i

over a SC\'cral week period is
casual. Those interestt•d are

asked to report tu the hall
Thursda y ni ght fur the
opening session.

discussions /' he sa id . HOne

women In the group called me
one morning and said she
wasn't coming to work - 'It's
my monthly cr81Jlps,' she said.
Well, before this program, she
wouldn't have said that. It
would have been a cold or an
upset stomach .

1

'

Huglws ~vill put

Institutes for
taX. pr.eparers
are rumounced
CINCINNATI - Two

2~ay

Tax In stitutes for new income

· up hard fight

tax preparers will be conducted by the Cincinnati

LOS ANGELES I UPl)
Howard Hughes doesn't want
to give up $2.8 million wi thout a
fight. A hearing is scheduled
Jan. 27 in U. S. District Court
on a motion to set asid e
payment of the money awa rded former employe Robert
Maheu.
Maheu was awarded the
amoWl t as damages for what
the jury found were slanderous
remarks made by Hughes in a

District of Internal Revenue
Service.
These particular courses are

telephone news confe rence in
1972.

Hughes said nt the time he
had fired Maheu because " he
stole me blind. "
Hughes' lawyers sa id the
jury contradicted itself by
refusing to accept the defense
that Maheu was actuall;:
dishonest, while at the same
time granting Summa Corp. a
counter-cla im of $47,000
against Maheu .

Local

,. !

~wling

lndustriallCii9Ul'
o ec . ?6, 1974
won Lost
Jack 's Pla c e
90
46
K -C Jewele rs
Sl · ~5
Steam Oor~t Inn
67
69
M i l hone Sohio
6?
'"
L andmark
'JI
IY
team 4
51 85
H igh team J games
Jack ' s
P l a ce 2575 ; L andmark 2531 .
Sl eam Boa t Inn 2480 .
H iq h team ~ tunes - learn 4
'929 ; Steam
Boat Inn 888 ;

Jack 's P lacj! 887 :
.
H igh In d . J games - E d voss
6J 1; B... Wi l l ford 531: R . Roach

521.

H i gh i nd . games
Ed Vos~
236; Mower l y 130 ; Norman 214.
E n d of fi rst ha lf.

directed at the new and untrained prepared rather than
the prosessional or fully
trained person.
These institutes will set forth
certain basics Inherent in the
tax law today . The objectives
of the course are :
(1) - To enable interested
people to prepare individual
income tax returns for others,

and (2) to improve the quality
of assistance provided to the
public by new tax return
preparers.
There will be no charge for
the classes. They are
scheduled in Columbus, Ohio
on January 30 and 31 and in
Cincinnati on January 27 and
21!. Class hours are 8:30 a.m. to
4:30p.m.
The class size is limited and
reservatlont will be filled on a
lir~l-come, flrst_.;erved basis.
Anyone Interested in attending
should ' co ntact
Robert
Eveslage, Qncinnati District
Training Qfficer, by Januat·y
1:1, 1975. Phone 513&lt;i84-2.193 or
mall your request to P. 0. Box
1818, Cincinnati, Ohio 45201.
A thought lor th e dily :
America n novelist James
Branch Cabe ll said , "The
optimist proclai1ns that we live

in the best of all possible
worlds and the pessimist fears
this is true .''

··-

COLUMBUS - A little more area encompasses 142 acres.
twtural heritage .has

·· rrwin Prairie is considered

com e unclcr· state protection
with the desigmltion of four
new sUite nctture preserves by

to be the finest we.t prairie in

11f Oh iu '~

the

stale,'~

Nye sa id. H)t's one

of the last vesti ges of the Black

Ohi o Natura l Resources Swamp, which covered most of
northwestern Ohio and part of
Director Willi&lt;Jm B. Nye .
!\'yc. in (tnnouncing the southeastern Michigan in post
designations last week said the ~ lac ia l times."
new preserves a re Irwin
Dick Moseley , PNR's
Prairie in Lucas County, Kiser natw-al areas administrator,
l&lt;•ke Wetlands in Champaign sa.id the northern part or the
CtH U11y, C?e~a r Creek Gorge in preserve is a matur~ and little
W;-trren County · nnd Tinkers disturbed forest of swamp
Creek in Stm tmi t cmd Portage white oa k and pin oak.
Southward, the lowest and
counties.

"The designa ti on of these wettest part of the preserve
fuur prese rves brings the toU:i l contains a prolific growth of
number of s tate natur e grasses and many species of

preserves to 19 and the tota l rare planIs.
"The prairie is the habitat of
acreage to :1,904,'' sHid Nyc.
The DepH rtment of Natural the rare spotted bog turtle as
He sources' 1DNR 1 natura l we Uas several varieties or ~ird
Hrea!; program protects a sys- life," said Moseley .
slem
of unique
natur e
No trails have been
preserves for the enjoyment esta blished at the present time,
Wld education of Ohioans .
and access to the preserve
The preserves are classified requires the written perscien ti fic, inter pr e tive and mis sion of DNR 's natu ral
scen ic, with scientific areas areas plapning section.

being the most restricted for

Nye commended the WaiteBrand Foundation, the Northwest Open Space Trust and the
bem~ the least restricted.
The Irwin Prairie prese rve, Ohio Chapter of the Nature
designated interpretive, is 13 Conservancy and its members
public use

~mel

scenic areas

miles west of Toledo near the for financial assistance in

in tersec tion of Irwin Road and obtaining land for the nature
Dorr Stree t and adjacent to preserve. ·DNR obtained a 50
Secur Metropolitan PHrk. The per cent federal grant for the
land purchase from the U. S.

Bureau of Ooldoor Recreation. by great volumes ' of glacial
Kiser Lake
Wetlands" melt-water culling down
preserve, also designated throlll!h the Wlderlylng bed·
interpre tive, consists Of 1two

rock ."

separate areas on the · si&gt;uth . · In many places, the gorge
side of the lake within Kiser walls 'rise to 180 feel above the
Lake State Park. The preserve valley floor and expose 0"
totals nearly 51 acres.
dovlclan limestone and shale
"Both areas are remnants of rich In fossils.
a 300-acre bog, once called
The gorge retains much of its
Mosquito Lake Bog," said Nye. wild character with the north
"The bog was an indirect result and south hillsides heavily
of the glacial invasion into wooded, a ,)uxurianl herbaceous flora covering the
Ohio."
Moseley said the two areas forest floor and a variety of
have species of plants foWld In prairie plants on the gorge
bogs, like fringed gentian and cliffs and in the fields of the
shrubby cinquefoil, as well as presen:e, Moseley . explained.
Although a few rugged hikin~
varieties of plants found. in wet
prairies, like queen-of.lhe- trails exist, permanent trails
prairie .
have not been constructed.
The preserve has no trails as Until they are developed,
yet, and the written permission access is only by written
of DNR's natural . areas perml~ionofthenaturalareas
planning section is needed · planning section.
before entry into the preserve
DNR received a 50 per cent
is permitted.
federal grapl from the U. S.
Caesar
Creek
Gorge Bureau of Ouidoor'Recreation
preserve, designated scenic, is to purchase the land for the
two miles north of Oregonia preserve.
along Caesar Creek, a
The Tinkers Creek preserve,
tributary of the Little Miami also designated scenic , is
River, between Corwin and within Tinkers Creek Stale
O'Neall roads. The area Park. It encompasses 786
consists of 463 acres.
acres.
;: The awesome terrain "The area's prime reature is
altering power of a continental its extensive marshland, which
glacier is well demonstrated at occupies nearly 73 per cent of
Caesar Creek Gorge," said the preserve's . acreage," Nye
Wye. "The gorge was created said. "Several spring-led lakes
are within the preserve."
The flora ranges from cattail
and willow in the marsh areas
to American beech and sugar
maple in the drier areas,
Moseley said.
The diversity of habitats
struction in firefighting skills
offer the visitor an excellent
and techniques.

July I - The Meigs Cq~nty
Board of Mental Retardation
nixed a joint workshop with
Gallia County for adult mentally retarded. The Big Bend
Regatta cleared $2700 and
Pomeroy Council increased the
salaries of Pom~roy Police
Departm_ent members.
Ju)y Z - Mr. and Mrs . Joe
Stobart used a riverboat theme
in the opening of their new
"Steamboat Inn" restaurant in
Racine .

July 3 -

A grant to aid

tourism in Southeastern Ohio
1neluding Meigs was approved.
July~

- Beverly Wilcox took

top honors at the annual

Hullanct Fire Department
ta lent show.
July 5 - Bessie Darst,
Middleport, won $500 worth of
groc,eries given by the Ohio
Society for the Promotion of
the Bull Frog.
July 6 - Plans were made
for Wendy Carper and Teresa
Casey to tt·avel to Australia to

And all the t•es t uf tht:1 .:uys on
U.S. Snvi ngs BonOs. Hr,ndSI.Jtnf'.
Good backgrmmrl. And ht?st of Rll .
thev' ll neve,r le t you down .
H()w doyoumet~t ~uys like
tha t '? Simple. ,Ju:-:t :-: tgn up f,H. 1lw
P l&gt;111 :1 1 u or k.
1:-'( ~Pt

:::JX'&lt;.: i(v

aside from your pn.wht't·k.anrl
used to buv L'. ~. Sa ,·i·n)ots B~llltb.
Before ;r·o~ know it , you :md the
OOys w1ll be seeing :1 lut hf .
each other.

Join Payroll &amp;wings rod11y.

That wuy; you·ll alwHy~ lul\'t- a
nice. sl-li.mg shoulder to le~m on.
Your mother would approve.
•..-n Qr do.ln~ . Wlwn ,-.w. tlw)' ,,.~ t... noll'lt\l ••
J'AI• hoo.-. 1 - . - , . nut~"' -. &lt;K kx-1111"'-'"lo'
b•... •nd r..lor..!l.a_. ""'v boo U.,."''"""l 11n11t M"Wfft.~•!i•on

•

.

.

Thke

• stock.
m_Nnenca.

Join the Pay toll Savings Plan.

Carolina
. ·,

..

-312 6~

~umber

,&amp;·Supp~ Co.

PHONE 675-1160
POINT PLEASANT
ST.

SOFAS
TrLdilional - floral. attached back.
92", 3 cushion, heavy, good wearing;
fabric.

Traditional - by Heritage. Deep
tufted back, crescent shaped. 85",
beautiful design, yellow · blue,
heavy cotton rayon fabric. Featured
now in our show window.
. REG. $1 , 165

·- Sale$692

Contemporary by Selig. Modern
wide stripe in orange tones. loose
cushion back and seat. 84" in length .

.

,.

¥.
.-.·

~ -~

.

--:·.-- -·--

,.
- ~.~~-~~--~I

Sale $247

f{EG. $475

\
·'

. -DAlE

I

Sale $321

REG. $495

begin their teaching careers.
July 7 &amp; Pomeroy Boy Scout
Troop 249 left for a week at
Camp Arrowhead.
MATl'ER OF PRJNCIPI,E
July 8-.-,Terry Bartlett, 15
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.
accidentally downed while . (UPI) - II was a matter- of
swimming in a strip mine pitat ,principle and so the Broward
Page town. Middleport CoWlcU ' County Consumer Affairs
okayed a· second apartment Office saw to it that the Irate
complex in .Middleport.
shopper got her money backJuly 9 - Bonnie Ruth all one penny of II.
Pickens, 13,
Pomeroy,
"Who are we to say that a
drowned while wading in the complaint Is !llllall and unlmPlay it safe and' mre.
Ohio River at the Pomeroy portanl?" said Harry Appel,
It
may be time to
levee.
·
director of the agency .
have
ypur present
July 10- The Richard Rupe "There's a lot of principle
·
policy
updated,
fam ily made preparations for attached to these complaints."
moving to South Africa lor a
The compialnt was flied by a ·
let's fafk Soon
year. Extended area telephone woman who was charged a one
service between Chester and cent lax on a half-dozen
C.'tf' ARNER
Pomeroy was recommended as doughnuts. She contended that
the result of an earlier hearing. food is not covered undeJlo
INS. AGENCY
July 11 - Millon Hood was F1orida's sales tax laws ant:l
992-2143
honored on his retirement after took the matter to the con-'
,Pomeroy
102 W. Main
37 years with Ford. TheM &amp; R sumer office.
/·
Shopping Center marked its
11th anniversary.
July 12 - A monument was
placed at the Racine fire
sta lion dedicated to the honor
and · sacrifice of men and
women of the Racine area who
served their coWl try.
July H -A gala party at the ·
Meigs Inn marked the 40th
wedding anniversary of Mr.
and Mrs. Aaron Kelton.
July 15 - Pomeroy Council
· granted $500 to the Meigs
Senior Qtizens program.
July 17 - Elwood Bowers
opened his home gffiall ap.
pliance repair shop and the
Francis Florist Shop .readied
lor a grand opening In' the
former location where Bowers
operated a restaurant In
Pomeroy lor many years.
July 19 - Popular Raymond
Suthe'1'buld, Boy Scout leader
and pho~ographer, was killed
in an accident at the Southern ·
Ohio Coal Co.
July Ztl -Artist Bonnie Agan
who turned over p~oceeds from
her work for several months to
the Meigs Humane Society was
the subject of a Senlinel
Feature. She and her husband,
Richard, later lefl Meigs
County to join the U. S. Navy.
July Z2 - A pickup of junk
car service was established in ·
Meigs County. Kelly M. Sayre,
43, and his son, Gregory M.
J
Sayre, 17, Pataskala, were
killed in · an accident In
These people -all work in industries that
Columbus, where they worked.
. The elder Sayre was. formerly
need natural gas to keep operating. Without it,
of Meigs County.
production will stop and jobs will be lost ..
July Z3 - Raymond Lee
But, by keeping your home thermostat
McClellan, 41, Langsville,
set at 68 degrees, and conserving gas in other
Route I, was killed .when a tree ,I
ways, you'll hel p to provide gas to keep
he wa_s cutting fell on him.
July 24 - Mandie Rose, Long
someooe working.
Bottom, was named Meigs
Saving gas can help save jobs. ·
CoWlty Beef Queen.
.
.
July 2S- A fund drive began
for Anita Renee Levacy, an ·
open heart sqrgery P&amp;tient. ·
Al
July 21 - Tom Kelly, Middleport, was named vice
GIS Is proc..,.,
pare fairJy • , ,:·- it wisely.
.
. .. r ·
chairman' of the Conunlll!ity
Mental Health lind Mental
Ret~rdation Board, Gilllia,
Meigs and Jackson C~tles. ·
July U - Pam Holcomb ·
represented Meigs County at.
an area 4-H safety speaking
contest held at Jackson. Key
personnel met in preparation,
lor the kickofl of th!1 Meigs
Local teacher reading corps
. program.
r July Sl -Twenty Rutland .
' and three Middleport firemen
received certificates for
completing :!6 hours ,. of in- ·

.

'

r-----------------------~

TREAT YOURSELF "
.

We at Tope's wish you and your
family a very prosperous and
fulfilling 1975. And as your needs
for home furnishings arise in the
new year, treat yourself to Tope's
truly fine quality furniture at the
finest furniture store in Southeastern Ohio. Enjoy the quality
furniture that makes you proud to ·
own .

'

DUR.ING JANUARY ONLY
(CLOSED TONIGHT TO PREPARE FOR SALE)
(ALL ITEMS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE)

Traditional by Heritage. Our best
,. quality, classic design, tufted back,
rounded arm, with double sculp·
tured skirt, apricot velvet, 85".
•
Reg. $893
•

•

Sale $582

Contemporary by Selig
green
stripe; walnut base, 85" length.
Reversible back and seat cushions, ·

..

Sale $425

REG. $545

_.•

.

.,
"

"•

Classic Colonial! by Broyhill.
Orange-brown plaid of nylon with
maple trim . Attached back, 85".

•' ..

REG. $484

....,'

Sale $372

•••

Sofa and Love Seat by Drexel.
Traditional. Green pattern, ex cellent comfort and quality.
Sofa 84", REG. $696
LS. 60", REG. $528

..••

Sale Both $995
Sofa and Love Seat by Selig. Contemporary, red white and blue
stripe, walnut base, Olefin cover,
loose cushion.
Sofa 85", REG. $465
L S. 58",- REG. $395

..,

.. '"

...

Sale Both $597

.•
A

~

.

.

Sofa and LDveseal by Kroehler.
English Pub collection, Pl!!id in
earthtone, very comfortable family
room group, outstanding with
Colonial or Traditiqnal.
Sofa 84~'. REG. $439
LS. 57", REG. S377

•

Sale $710

BOTH

w'

.,
~

..
4

-:..
~

••

.....
••

,.

.... .
--..
~
~

~

••

~.

BEDROOM SUITES

LIVING ROOM TABLES

Bamboo Styling in Oak - Cane
headboard, triple dresser with
-mirror, 5 drawer chest, all wood.

Cherry Tables An Italian
Provicial. gracefully designed with
tapered legs · all wood · 3 groups.

REG. $732

Sale $422

Solid Pine- Master Suite, Colonial
Classic in warm . candlelight pine
finish, double dresser and mirror, 5
drawer chest on chest and yoke
·. headboard with frame .
REG. $759

Sale $595

-:.
.....

::

.-.

-

Heritage - gold velvet Traditional
Sofa, tufted back, 84' 1• Our finest
,guality,:; cushion :

Sale $"555

.- REG. $845

Traditional .
Mediterranean .
Orange &amp; brown floral, curved,
attached. back, 86" ·
·
- REG. 5665

,.

~

-

Sale $5·62

20 .MORE SOFAS ALSO ON SALE

CHAIRS
Sale $49

Traditional · Wingback Queen Anne
leq by Hiqhland House Floral, multi
color, 45" HT.
Heritage Tables Outstanding
beauty in lifetime quality, all wood
with pecan surfaces, Traditional,
limited stock. (I coffee, 5 end)

.,

5Q%0FF

REG. $289.

Pine Tables- Rustic warm finish,
good selection of cocktail, end,
storage and chairside. Some with
slate inset tops.

Sale $592
Drexel accolade Bedroom Suite .
Full or Oueen size, brass headboard
with frames, 5 drawer campaign
chest and 9 drawer dresser and
mirror in pecky pecan . Outstanding
master bedroom &lt;uite.·
REG. $I287

Sale s372

5 MORE SUITES ALSO ON SALE

2Q%0FF

5 Piece- French in antique yellow,
4 chairs with cane back. stripe
upholstered seats. Table 42" round
ext. to 60" w-leaf. By Chaircraft.

Sale $319

• REG. $441

Drexel . - Outstanding life time
group. "San Martino", 56" lighted
china with wire grid front, oval table
4Qx64" ext. to 84" and 104", 5 side
chairs with upholstered green and
yellow seats. I arm chair . All. in
pecan .

MAnRESSOR
BOX SPRING
SPECIALS
Med. Firm Quilted Cover
SIZE
Regular Sale
TWIN 39x74
$99 ea.
$79 ea.
FULL54x74
$119 ea.
$99 ea.
QUEEN60x80
·$289 set $244 set ·
Ex. Firm Discontinued Cover . Our
Best quality.
·
·
TWIN 39x74
$129. ea. $95 ea.
FULL54x74
$149 ea. $115 ea.
QUEEN 60x80·
$369 set $289 set

REG. 52464

Sale $1,7 45

Classic Colonial- Cherry all wood ·
beautiful lifetime ' group. 45" china
(56" also available) . 42"x64" reef.
table. Ext. to 89", 6 windsor arm
chairs (featured in our window). ,1

Sale $873

REG. $1067· ·

FA-SLE

!SOFAS THAT MAKE A BED)
Red, white and blue stripe, Queen
size, ·c ontemporary, loose cushion .
REG. $595 SALE

~344

Yellow and while Aztec stripe.
Q\leen size, heavy cover. · $
REG. $539 SALE

.
395

Kroehler Early Amer. Floral gree~·
and gold nylon cover, maple trim.
Queen Size.
REG. $569 SALE

$444

Beige with green and gold stripes of
,olefin by . Stearns &amp; Foster. Oueen
size foam mattress, traditional
style. loose cushion ..

REG. '475

SALE

Pine beautiful medium dark
genuine pine group, 66" intricately
styled China, 48" round table ext. to
58" and 68". 4 side chairs .

Sale $899 ·

REG. $1166

Pine Group also available with
trestle or pedestle table and 52"
china .

...

4.MORE SUITES
. ALSO
.r

.•ACCESSORIES
-..
•LAMPS
Carolina Candles,
•PICTURES
ngs and Holders
GROUP

50%:0ff · , 50% OFF
REGULAR PRICES

Sale $88

Crushed Velvet, yellow Traditional,
comfortable.
REG. $225

Sale $99

Light Blue Velvet, lounge, hi-back,
Traditional.
REG. $245

DINING ROOM

Sale $144

Heritage
Green
velvet,
Traditional, tufted back, decorative
tapered leg, lounge chair .
REG. $319

Mediterranean Oak. All wood .
Lattice headboard. Triple dresser
with twin mirrors, court chest · and
ni!tft,t stand .
Featured in our window.

ODDS 'N' ENDS

Blue · Green Stripe, Swivel, Hi -back,
Contemporary style in Olefin cover.
REG. $162

4Q%0FF

Also available with triple dresser
and cannon ball bed.

STEARNS AND FOSTER

"

M ·a iAna:s

Sow E Bond. Pill' 6~ ink'ttM ,.·he-n hr Mllio· .....,,,. ,. ,~ ,I
$ ) - t ' l ltH • IN' ~not ~Hr l H.on;Jo .,.. ooopla._...J of 1......

.

TOMORROW 9i30 SHARP
HUNDREDS OF iTEMS DRASTICAllY
REDUCED PARTIAL LISTING BELOW

Study the items listed below
carefully . All pieces listed are
from our regular stock of high
quality merchandise. We at Tope's .
work very hard at selecting the
best values and merchandise for
you . Our Semi -Annual Sale
represents truly fine savings on
the finest and most up to date
furniture available .

.l

•

•

'STARTING TUESDAY, JAN~ 7

PLEASE

..

-CE SALE

.

to saw?

Like George. And Torn. And Abe.

'

.,

'

recreation .

witlyou help

.

-

YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO OUR
SEMI-ANNUAL

oppartunity to see a variety of
wildlife, including many
species common to marshlands;·
.
The~preserve , managed by
DNR's division of parks and
'recreation, offers a system of
hiking trailk available. for
visitors. No one is allowed off
the esUiblished trails without
the written permission of tht
natural areas planning section
or the division of parks and

Whose~b

umvun t ) 'lHl

..

0 ., Monday, Jan. G, 1975

Local news highlights

.tfDiffl.

Payroll Snving-:::

..

.

Four new nature preserves estahl~shed

It's

An

II

•

I

·Isn't it time
you met some~
you can count on?

'

.

..

·'

.

.-

1 ~the Daily Sentinel, Middlepor~-Pom~roy, 0., Mond::·. Jan. 6,
I

,•

•

Sale s112

Highland House - Traditional,
floral stripe, lounge chair. green and
white.
REG. $315

Sale.$188

Pair Selig Contemporary Oc- ·
casional, Herculon Cover · brown &amp;
white check.

'

.

REG. $155

Sale $75

Selig Lounge Chair, green velvet,
Contemporary .
REG.

s:tso

Sale $133

U-Haul the items listed
below and save an
additional 20%
·on.sale price.
IS" Round Accessory tables, 3 leg
tripod bamboo base, 16" Ht. Ant.
gold finish. 2 Only.
REG. $37 EA.
SALE '1750

REG. $282

Sale $177

OVER 50 MORE
CHAIRS
NOW N SALE
RECLINERS
Famous
LA-Z-BOY
Rocker
Recliners and LDunger Recliners.

20%0FF

'63

Maple 4 Drawer Chest, 37" Ht , 26"
wide. mar resistant top (1 only).
.REG. $79
SALE

'56

U-Haul

*44

Samsonite Folc;ti.ng Table and 4
Chairs - Our best, chrome and
yellow group.
table, chairs
padded back &amp; seat. floor samples (2
groups) .
·
REG. $130

w·..

u: Haul

SALE '73

'58

4 Tier corner shelf in gold, 58" Itt.
floor sample (I only)
REG. $69
SALE

'28

U-Haul

•22·

Oak Secretary
Traditional
Styling. Both desk and top lock, desk
with 6 small pencil drawers and 3
shelves, 3 drawers in base, 3 shelves
in top, 72" Ht. 26" Wd. · (2 Only) ·
REG. $319

'243

U-Haul

~ 195

Desk Chair· Oak, Gold Velvet
Seat cane Bilek n Onlyl
REG. $69
SALE

'22

U-Haul

'17

Dark Oak End Table With
Drawer - All Wood (1 Only) ·
REG. $99
SALE

•28

U-Jiaul

•22

Console Lamp · red decorator;
double candlestick style- All metcil
(1 Only].
REG. $64 ·-

'22

~U-Haul

'17

WALL UNITS

DIRECTOR CHAIRS

REG. $27.50 SALE
•·

U-Haut

SALE .'79

SALE

FlOOR SAMPLES
Folding patio or family room occasional chairs, black frames,
covers in green, orange
and
.
. yellow.

'14

Cedar Chest- By Lane. oak, med.
dark finish, 48" long, scroll front,
with lock and full guarantee (2
onlvl .
REG. $129.50

SALE
LA-Z-·BOY Recliner, green Nylon
cover, with oak trim, excellent
comfort and value.

U-Haul

Good selection of Book Case, Desk,
Bar and Storage Wal! Units in Oak,
Pine and Pecan.

$18ll..' .

1. 20%

_EA.

qj Furniture
·. . Galleries

Off

eFine Furniture
. eCustom Drapery
•Carpet
..

... .,.,
Seco.nd at' Grape
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 446-0332

•interior Design
.

..~

Hours: Dally 9:30-5
Mon .- Fri. 9:30-8
'

REGULAR PRICES

,.
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•

TV in review
•

· Dancing lessons
'

•;

maybe it was ;The Pill," which
freed men and women from the
fears of pregnancy :
"But this show really d'*sn 't
stress the history of r ole
changes. II tries to illuminate
wrlat !s going on now."
·Frankel said that d'uring the
nearly five months tha t he and

begin at park
. .

• NEWYORK(UPI) -'- AiitUe
girl sllJI!S a home run in UtUe
League baseball . A father
slays at home ironing diapers .
And group of swinging singles
meet for lunch and discuss last
night's sex.
This' Is part and parcel of the
changing roles of men and
women ln America, the impact
of which may mean entirely
different society by tile 21st

tjlree women ,-worked on the
pr'?)ect he noticed the level of

Sayre, Ll'lart, W. Va : Dress

century.

co nsciousness

for - the lessnns ('(mduetcd

On Thursday!tigbt, NBC will
air "Of Men and Women," a
special three-hour look at the
newest AnJerican revolution.
The special broadcast is the
fifth time since 1963 tllat NBC
· pre-empted its entire evening
programming for a documentary.
1 think," said executive
produ't:er Eliot Frankel in an
. Interview., "ti)at it .will be a
night of information, filled with
emotion, sadness, entertainment , eyebrow-raising segments, and perhaps a lltUe,
anguish lor many of us."
I
Some of the areas probed
Include : sex among the
elderly ; .recreational sex ;
women and politics, pin-up
•

11

girls; male consciousness

raising ; women and sports ;
and bisexuality.
Among the experts surveyed
are historians, entertainers,
anthropologists, pyschologlsts,
marriage counselors ,
politicians and psycblatrists.
"We also tried to determine,"
said Frankel, "how · lasting
these changes will be and
whether the more traditional
views wlll prevail after
reaction sets ln. In addition, we
a1ao tried to determine the
moral dimensions of the
revolution and, we talked with
those people who are worried
about the consequences of the
this new and changing
9Dclety.''
Frankel, who produced such
award-winning docwnentaries
"Pensions : The Broken
Promise,"
and
"First
Tuesday" series," was asked
what caused the change in sex
roles.
·
" It seems to be many
things," he said. "Maybe, it
was World War II and the use
·or women in factories. Maybe,
It was the increase in the
number of women who went to
·college. Maybe, It was Belly
Frlellan's · book,
"The
Feminine Mystique." That
book crystallzed a lot of
thinking. Many women who
read It said, 'Gee, it's me she's
talking about. • Then too,

his associates -three men and

was

rai se d

among the group.
"Just talking about
changes and doing
research lead to a great
more freedom in

the
the
deal
our

Western style sq uarr
dancing lt•ssOns will begin
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the

recreation building, Royal
Oak Park, near Pomcro)'.
The lessons arc sponsored by

the Shade River Belle and
Beaus · Square Danre Clu b
and the instructor is Ced i

over a SC\'cral week period is
casual. Those interestt•d are

asked to report tu the hall
Thursda y ni ght fur the
opening session.

discussions /' he sa id . HOne

women In the group called me
one morning and said she
wasn't coming to work - 'It's
my monthly cr81Jlps,' she said.
Well, before this program, she
wouldn't have said that. It
would have been a cold or an
upset stomach .

1

'

Huglws ~vill put

Institutes for
taX. pr.eparers
are rumounced
CINCINNATI - Two

2~ay

Tax In stitutes for new income

· up hard fight

tax preparers will be conducted by the Cincinnati

LOS ANGELES I UPl)
Howard Hughes doesn't want
to give up $2.8 million wi thout a
fight. A hearing is scheduled
Jan. 27 in U. S. District Court
on a motion to set asid e
payment of the money awa rded former employe Robert
Maheu.
Maheu was awarded the
amoWl t as damages for what
the jury found were slanderous
remarks made by Hughes in a

District of Internal Revenue
Service.
These particular courses are

telephone news confe rence in
1972.

Hughes said nt the time he
had fired Maheu because " he
stole me blind. "
Hughes' lawyers sa id the
jury contradicted itself by
refusing to accept the defense
that Maheu was actuall;:
dishonest, while at the same
time granting Summa Corp. a
counter-cla im of $47,000
against Maheu .

Local

,. !

~wling

lndustriallCii9Ul'
o ec . ?6, 1974
won Lost
Jack 's Pla c e
90
46
K -C Jewele rs
Sl · ~5
Steam Oor~t Inn
67
69
M i l hone Sohio
6?
'"
L andmark
'JI
IY
team 4
51 85
H igh team J games
Jack ' s
P l a ce 2575 ; L andmark 2531 .
Sl eam Boa t Inn 2480 .
H iq h team ~ tunes - learn 4
'929 ; Steam
Boat Inn 888 ;

Jack 's P lacj! 887 :
.
H igh In d . J games - E d voss
6J 1; B... Wi l l ford 531: R . Roach

521.

H i gh i nd . games
Ed Vos~
236; Mower l y 130 ; Norman 214.
E n d of fi rst ha lf.

directed at the new and untrained prepared rather than
the prosessional or fully
trained person.
These institutes will set forth
certain basics Inherent in the
tax law today . The objectives
of the course are :
(1) - To enable interested
people to prepare individual
income tax returns for others,

and (2) to improve the quality
of assistance provided to the
public by new tax return
preparers.
There will be no charge for
the classes. They are
scheduled in Columbus, Ohio
on January 30 and 31 and in
Cincinnati on January 27 and
21!. Class hours are 8:30 a.m. to
4:30p.m.
The class size is limited and
reservatlont will be filled on a
lir~l-come, flrst_.;erved basis.
Anyone Interested in attending
should ' co ntact
Robert
Eveslage, Qncinnati District
Training Qfficer, by Januat·y
1:1, 1975. Phone 513&lt;i84-2.193 or
mall your request to P. 0. Box
1818, Cincinnati, Ohio 45201.
A thought lor th e dily :
America n novelist James
Branch Cabe ll said , "The
optimist proclai1ns that we live

in the best of all possible
worlds and the pessimist fears
this is true .''

··-

COLUMBUS - A little more area encompasses 142 acres.
twtural heritage .has

·· rrwin Prairie is considered

com e unclcr· state protection
with the desigmltion of four
new sUite nctture preserves by

to be the finest we.t prairie in

11f Oh iu '~

the

stale,'~

Nye sa id. H)t's one

of the last vesti ges of the Black

Ohi o Natura l Resources Swamp, which covered most of
northwestern Ohio and part of
Director Willi&lt;Jm B. Nye .
!\'yc. in (tnnouncing the southeastern Michigan in post
designations last week said the ~ lac ia l times."
new preserves a re Irwin
Dick Moseley , PNR's
Prairie in Lucas County, Kiser natw-al areas administrator,
l&lt;•ke Wetlands in Champaign sa.id the northern part or the
CtH U11y, C?e~a r Creek Gorge in preserve is a matur~ and little
W;-trren County · nnd Tinkers disturbed forest of swamp
Creek in Stm tmi t cmd Portage white oa k and pin oak.
Southward, the lowest and
counties.

"The designa ti on of these wettest part of the preserve
fuur prese rves brings the toU:i l contains a prolific growth of
number of s tate natur e grasses and many species of

preserves to 19 and the tota l rare planIs.
"The prairie is the habitat of
acreage to :1,904,'' sHid Nyc.
The DepH rtment of Natural the rare spotted bog turtle as
He sources' 1DNR 1 natura l we Uas several varieties or ~ird
Hrea!; program protects a sys- life," said Moseley .
slem
of unique
natur e
No trails have been
preserves for the enjoyment esta blished at the present time,
Wld education of Ohioans .
and access to the preserve
The preserves are classified requires the written perscien ti fic, inter pr e tive and mis sion of DNR 's natu ral
scen ic, with scientific areas areas plapning section.

being the most restricted for

Nye commended the WaiteBrand Foundation, the Northwest Open Space Trust and the
bem~ the least restricted.
The Irwin Prairie prese rve, Ohio Chapter of the Nature
designated interpretive, is 13 Conservancy and its members
public use

~mel

scenic areas

miles west of Toledo near the for financial assistance in

in tersec tion of Irwin Road and obtaining land for the nature
Dorr Stree t and adjacent to preserve. ·DNR obtained a 50
Secur Metropolitan PHrk. The per cent federal grant for the
land purchase from the U. S.

Bureau of Ooldoor Recreation. by great volumes ' of glacial
Kiser Lake
Wetlands" melt-water culling down
preserve, also designated throlll!h the Wlderlylng bed·
interpre tive, consists Of 1two

rock ."

separate areas on the · si&gt;uth . · In many places, the gorge
side of the lake within Kiser walls 'rise to 180 feel above the
Lake State Park. The preserve valley floor and expose 0"
totals nearly 51 acres.
dovlclan limestone and shale
"Both areas are remnants of rich In fossils.
a 300-acre bog, once called
The gorge retains much of its
Mosquito Lake Bog," said Nye. wild character with the north
"The bog was an indirect result and south hillsides heavily
of the glacial invasion into wooded, a ,)uxurianl herbaceous flora covering the
Ohio."
Moseley said the two areas forest floor and a variety of
have species of plants foWld In prairie plants on the gorge
bogs, like fringed gentian and cliffs and in the fields of the
shrubby cinquefoil, as well as presen:e, Moseley . explained.
Although a few rugged hikin~
varieties of plants found. in wet
prairies, like queen-of.lhe- trails exist, permanent trails
prairie .
have not been constructed.
The preserve has no trails as Until they are developed,
yet, and the written permission access is only by written
of DNR's natural . areas perml~ionofthenaturalareas
planning section is needed · planning section.
before entry into the preserve
DNR received a 50 per cent
is permitted.
federal grapl from the U. S.
Caesar
Creek
Gorge Bureau of Ouidoor'Recreation
preserve, designated scenic, is to purchase the land for the
two miles north of Oregonia preserve.
along Caesar Creek, a
The Tinkers Creek preserve,
tributary of the Little Miami also designated scenic , is
River, between Corwin and within Tinkers Creek Stale
O'Neall roads. The area Park. It encompasses 786
consists of 463 acres.
acres.
;: The awesome terrain "The area's prime reature is
altering power of a continental its extensive marshland, which
glacier is well demonstrated at occupies nearly 73 per cent of
Caesar Creek Gorge," said the preserve's . acreage," Nye
Wye. "The gorge was created said. "Several spring-led lakes
are within the preserve."
The flora ranges from cattail
and willow in the marsh areas
to American beech and sugar
maple in the drier areas,
Moseley said.
The diversity of habitats
struction in firefighting skills
offer the visitor an excellent
and techniques.

July I - The Meigs Cq~nty
Board of Mental Retardation
nixed a joint workshop with
Gallia County for adult mentally retarded. The Big Bend
Regatta cleared $2700 and
Pomeroy Council increased the
salaries of Pom~roy Police
Departm_ent members.
Ju)y Z - Mr. and Mrs . Joe
Stobart used a riverboat theme
in the opening of their new
"Steamboat Inn" restaurant in
Racine .

July 3 -

A grant to aid

tourism in Southeastern Ohio
1neluding Meigs was approved.
July~

- Beverly Wilcox took

top honors at the annual

Hullanct Fire Department
ta lent show.
July 5 - Bessie Darst,
Middleport, won $500 worth of
groc,eries given by the Ohio
Society for the Promotion of
the Bull Frog.
July 6 - Plans were made
for Wendy Carper and Teresa
Casey to tt·avel to Australia to

And all the t•es t uf tht:1 .:uys on
U.S. Snvi ngs BonOs. Hr,ndSI.Jtnf'.
Good backgrmmrl. And ht?st of Rll .
thev' ll neve,r le t you down .
H()w doyoumet~t ~uys like
tha t '? Simple. ,Ju:-:t :-: tgn up f,H. 1lw
P l&gt;111 :1 1 u or k.
1:-'( ~Pt

:::JX'&lt;.: i(v

aside from your pn.wht't·k.anrl
used to buv L'. ~. Sa ,·i·n)ots B~llltb.
Before ;r·o~ know it , you :md the
OOys w1ll be seeing :1 lut hf .
each other.

Join Payroll &amp;wings rod11y.

That wuy; you·ll alwHy~ lul\'t- a
nice. sl-li.mg shoulder to le~m on.
Your mother would approve.
•..-n Qr do.ln~ . Wlwn ,-.w. tlw)' ,,.~ t... noll'lt\l ••
J'AI• hoo.-. 1 - . - , . nut~"' -. &lt;K kx-1111"'-'"lo'
b•... •nd r..lor..!l.a_. ""'v boo U.,."''"""l 11n11t M"Wfft.~•!i•on

•

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.

Thke

• stock.
m_Nnenca.

Join the Pay toll Savings Plan.

Carolina
. ·,

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-312 6~

~umber

,&amp;·Supp~ Co.

PHONE 675-1160
POINT PLEASANT
ST.

SOFAS
TrLdilional - floral. attached back.
92", 3 cushion, heavy, good wearing;
fabric.

Traditional - by Heritage. Deep
tufted back, crescent shaped. 85",
beautiful design, yellow · blue,
heavy cotton rayon fabric. Featured
now in our show window.
. REG. $1 , 165

·- Sale$692

Contemporary by Selig. Modern
wide stripe in orange tones. loose
cushion back and seat. 84" in length .

.

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Sale $247

f{EG. $475

\
·'

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I

Sale $321

REG. $495

begin their teaching careers.
July 7 &amp; Pomeroy Boy Scout
Troop 249 left for a week at
Camp Arrowhead.
MATl'ER OF PRJNCIPI,E
July 8-.-,Terry Bartlett, 15
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.
accidentally downed while . (UPI) - II was a matter- of
swimming in a strip mine pitat ,principle and so the Broward
Page town. Middleport CoWlcU ' County Consumer Affairs
okayed a· second apartment Office saw to it that the Irate
complex in .Middleport.
shopper got her money backJuly 9 - Bonnie Ruth all one penny of II.
Pickens, 13,
Pomeroy,
"Who are we to say that a
drowned while wading in the complaint Is !llllall and unlmPlay it safe and' mre.
Ohio River at the Pomeroy portanl?" said Harry Appel,
It
may be time to
levee.
·
director of the agency .
have
ypur present
July 10- The Richard Rupe "There's a lot of principle
·
policy
updated,
fam ily made preparations for attached to these complaints."
moving to South Africa lor a
The compialnt was flied by a ·
let's fafk Soon
year. Extended area telephone woman who was charged a one
service between Chester and cent lax on a half-dozen
C.'tf' ARNER
Pomeroy was recommended as doughnuts. She contended that
the result of an earlier hearing. food is not covered undeJlo
INS. AGENCY
July 11 - Millon Hood was F1orida's sales tax laws ant:l
992-2143
honored on his retirement after took the matter to the con-'
,Pomeroy
102 W. Main
37 years with Ford. TheM &amp; R sumer office.
/·
Shopping Center marked its
11th anniversary.
July 12 - A monument was
placed at the Racine fire
sta lion dedicated to the honor
and · sacrifice of men and
women of the Racine area who
served their coWl try.
July H -A gala party at the ·
Meigs Inn marked the 40th
wedding anniversary of Mr.
and Mrs. Aaron Kelton.
July 15 - Pomeroy Council
· granted $500 to the Meigs
Senior Qtizens program.
July 17 - Elwood Bowers
opened his home gffiall ap.
pliance repair shop and the
Francis Florist Shop .readied
lor a grand opening In' the
former location where Bowers
operated a restaurant In
Pomeroy lor many years.
July 19 - Popular Raymond
Suthe'1'buld, Boy Scout leader
and pho~ographer, was killed
in an accident at the Southern ·
Ohio Coal Co.
July Ztl -Artist Bonnie Agan
who turned over p~oceeds from
her work for several months to
the Meigs Humane Society was
the subject of a Senlinel
Feature. She and her husband,
Richard, later lefl Meigs
County to join the U. S. Navy.
July Z2 - A pickup of junk
car service was established in ·
Meigs County. Kelly M. Sayre,
43, and his son, Gregory M.
J
Sayre, 17, Pataskala, were
killed in · an accident In
These people -all work in industries that
Columbus, where they worked.
. The elder Sayre was. formerly
need natural gas to keep operating. Without it,
of Meigs County.
production will stop and jobs will be lost ..
July Z3 - Raymond Lee
But, by keeping your home thermostat
McClellan, 41, Langsville,
set at 68 degrees, and conserving gas in other
Route I, was killed .when a tree ,I
ways, you'll hel p to provide gas to keep
he wa_s cutting fell on him.
July 24 - Mandie Rose, Long
someooe working.
Bottom, was named Meigs
Saving gas can help save jobs. ·
CoWlty Beef Queen.
.
.
July 2S- A fund drive began
for Anita Renee Levacy, an ·
open heart sqrgery P&amp;tient. ·
Al
July 21 - Tom Kelly, Middleport, was named vice
GIS Is proc..,.,
pare fairJy • , ,:·- it wisely.
.
. .. r ·
chairman' of the Conunlll!ity
Mental Health lind Mental
Ret~rdation Board, Gilllia,
Meigs and Jackson C~tles. ·
July U - Pam Holcomb ·
represented Meigs County at.
an area 4-H safety speaking
contest held at Jackson. Key
personnel met in preparation,
lor the kickofl of th!1 Meigs
Local teacher reading corps
. program.
r July Sl -Twenty Rutland .
' and three Middleport firemen
received certificates for
completing :!6 hours ,. of in- ·

.

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TREAT YOURSELF "
.

We at Tope's wish you and your
family a very prosperous and
fulfilling 1975. And as your needs
for home furnishings arise in the
new year, treat yourself to Tope's
truly fine quality furniture at the
finest furniture store in Southeastern Ohio. Enjoy the quality
furniture that makes you proud to ·
own .

'

DUR.ING JANUARY ONLY
(CLOSED TONIGHT TO PREPARE FOR SALE)
(ALL ITEMS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE)

Traditional by Heritage. Our best
,. quality, classic design, tufted back,
rounded arm, with double sculp·
tured skirt, apricot velvet, 85".
•
Reg. $893
•

•

Sale $582

Contemporary by Selig
green
stripe; walnut base, 85" length.
Reversible back and seat cushions, ·

..

Sale $425

REG. $545

_.•

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.,
"

"•

Classic Colonial! by Broyhill.
Orange-brown plaid of nylon with
maple trim . Attached back, 85".

•' ..

REG. $484

....,'

Sale $372

•••

Sofa and Love Seat by Drexel.
Traditional. Green pattern, ex cellent comfort and quality.
Sofa 84", REG. $696
LS. 60", REG. $528

..••

Sale Both $995
Sofa and Love Seat by Selig. Contemporary, red white and blue
stripe, walnut base, Olefin cover,
loose cushion.
Sofa 85", REG. $465
L S. 58",- REG. $395

..,

.. '"

...

Sale Both $597

.•
A

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Sofa and LDveseal by Kroehler.
English Pub collection, Pl!!id in
earthtone, very comfortable family
room group, outstanding with
Colonial or Traditiqnal.
Sofa 84~'. REG. $439
LS. 57", REG. S377

•

Sale $710

BOTH

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BEDROOM SUITES

LIVING ROOM TABLES

Bamboo Styling in Oak - Cane
headboard, triple dresser with
-mirror, 5 drawer chest, all wood.

Cherry Tables An Italian
Provicial. gracefully designed with
tapered legs · all wood · 3 groups.

REG. $732

Sale $422

Solid Pine- Master Suite, Colonial
Classic in warm . candlelight pine
finish, double dresser and mirror, 5
drawer chest on chest and yoke
·. headboard with frame .
REG. $759

Sale $595

-:.
.....

::

.-.

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Heritage - gold velvet Traditional
Sofa, tufted back, 84' 1• Our finest
,guality,:; cushion :

Sale $"555

.- REG. $845

Traditional .
Mediterranean .
Orange &amp; brown floral, curved,
attached. back, 86" ·
·
- REG. 5665

,.

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Sale $5·62

20 .MORE SOFAS ALSO ON SALE

CHAIRS
Sale $49

Traditional · Wingback Queen Anne
leq by Hiqhland House Floral, multi
color, 45" HT.
Heritage Tables Outstanding
beauty in lifetime quality, all wood
with pecan surfaces, Traditional,
limited stock. (I coffee, 5 end)

.,

5Q%0FF

REG. $289.

Pine Tables- Rustic warm finish,
good selection of cocktail, end,
storage and chairside. Some with
slate inset tops.

Sale $592
Drexel accolade Bedroom Suite .
Full or Oueen size, brass headboard
with frames, 5 drawer campaign
chest and 9 drawer dresser and
mirror in pecky pecan . Outstanding
master bedroom &lt;uite.·
REG. $I287

Sale s372

5 MORE SUITES ALSO ON SALE

2Q%0FF

5 Piece- French in antique yellow,
4 chairs with cane back. stripe
upholstered seats. Table 42" round
ext. to 60" w-leaf. By Chaircraft.

Sale $319

• REG. $441

Drexel . - Outstanding life time
group. "San Martino", 56" lighted
china with wire grid front, oval table
4Qx64" ext. to 84" and 104", 5 side
chairs with upholstered green and
yellow seats. I arm chair . All. in
pecan .

MAnRESSOR
BOX SPRING
SPECIALS
Med. Firm Quilted Cover
SIZE
Regular Sale
TWIN 39x74
$99 ea.
$79 ea.
FULL54x74
$119 ea.
$99 ea.
QUEEN60x80
·$289 set $244 set ·
Ex. Firm Discontinued Cover . Our
Best quality.
·
·
TWIN 39x74
$129. ea. $95 ea.
FULL54x74
$149 ea. $115 ea.
QUEEN 60x80·
$369 set $289 set

REG. 52464

Sale $1,7 45

Classic Colonial- Cherry all wood ·
beautiful lifetime ' group. 45" china
(56" also available) . 42"x64" reef.
table. Ext. to 89", 6 windsor arm
chairs (featured in our window). ,1

Sale $873

REG. $1067· ·

FA-SLE

!SOFAS THAT MAKE A BED)
Red, white and blue stripe, Queen
size, ·c ontemporary, loose cushion .
REG. $595 SALE

~344

Yellow and while Aztec stripe.
Q\leen size, heavy cover. · $
REG. $539 SALE

.
395

Kroehler Early Amer. Floral gree~·
and gold nylon cover, maple trim.
Queen Size.
REG. $569 SALE

$444

Beige with green and gold stripes of
,olefin by . Stearns &amp; Foster. Oueen
size foam mattress, traditional
style. loose cushion ..

REG. '475

SALE

Pine beautiful medium dark
genuine pine group, 66" intricately
styled China, 48" round table ext. to
58" and 68". 4 side chairs .

Sale $899 ·

REG. $1166

Pine Group also available with
trestle or pedestle table and 52"
china .

...

4.MORE SUITES
. ALSO
.r

.•ACCESSORIES
-..
•LAMPS
Carolina Candles,
•PICTURES
ngs and Holders
GROUP

50%:0ff · , 50% OFF
REGULAR PRICES

Sale $88

Crushed Velvet, yellow Traditional,
comfortable.
REG. $225

Sale $99

Light Blue Velvet, lounge, hi-back,
Traditional.
REG. $245

DINING ROOM

Sale $144

Heritage
Green
velvet,
Traditional, tufted back, decorative
tapered leg, lounge chair .
REG. $319

Mediterranean Oak. All wood .
Lattice headboard. Triple dresser
with twin mirrors, court chest · and
ni!tft,t stand .
Featured in our window.

ODDS 'N' ENDS

Blue · Green Stripe, Swivel, Hi -back,
Contemporary style in Olefin cover.
REG. $162

4Q%0FF

Also available with triple dresser
and cannon ball bed.

STEARNS AND FOSTER

"

M ·a iAna:s

Sow E Bond. Pill' 6~ ink'ttM ,.·he-n hr Mllio· .....,,,. ,. ,~ ,I
$ ) - t ' l ltH • IN' ~not ~Hr l H.on;Jo .,.. ooopla._...J of 1......

.

TOMORROW 9i30 SHARP
HUNDREDS OF iTEMS DRASTICAllY
REDUCED PARTIAL LISTING BELOW

Study the items listed below
carefully . All pieces listed are
from our regular stock of high
quality merchandise. We at Tope's .
work very hard at selecting the
best values and merchandise for
you . Our Semi -Annual Sale
represents truly fine savings on
the finest and most up to date
furniture available .

.l

•

•

'STARTING TUESDAY, JAN~ 7

PLEASE

..

-CE SALE

.

to saw?

Like George. And Torn. And Abe.

'

.,

'

recreation .

witlyou help

.

-

YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO OUR
SEMI-ANNUAL

oppartunity to see a variety of
wildlife, including many
species common to marshlands;·
.
The~preserve , managed by
DNR's division of parks and
'recreation, offers a system of
hiking trailk available. for
visitors. No one is allowed off
the esUiblished trails without
the written permission of tht
natural areas planning section
or the division of parks and

Whose~b

umvun t ) 'lHl

..

0 ., Monday, Jan. G, 1975

Local news highlights

.tfDiffl.

Payroll Snving-:::

..

.

Four new nature preserves estahl~shed

It's

An

II

•

I

·Isn't it time
you met some~
you can count on?

'

.

..

·'

.

.-

1 ~the Daily Sentinel, Middlepor~-Pom~roy, 0., Mond::·. Jan. 6,
I

,•

•

Sale s112

Highland House - Traditional,
floral stripe, lounge chair. green and
white.
REG. $315

Sale.$188

Pair Selig Contemporary Oc- ·
casional, Herculon Cover · brown &amp;
white check.

'

.

REG. $155

Sale $75

Selig Lounge Chair, green velvet,
Contemporary .
REG.

s:tso

Sale $133

U-Haul the items listed
below and save an
additional 20%
·on.sale price.
IS" Round Accessory tables, 3 leg
tripod bamboo base, 16" Ht. Ant.
gold finish. 2 Only.
REG. $37 EA.
SALE '1750

REG. $282

Sale $177

OVER 50 MORE
CHAIRS
NOW N SALE
RECLINERS
Famous
LA-Z-BOY
Rocker
Recliners and LDunger Recliners.

20%0FF

'63

Maple 4 Drawer Chest, 37" Ht , 26"
wide. mar resistant top (1 only).
.REG. $79
SALE

'56

U-Haul

*44

Samsonite Folc;ti.ng Table and 4
Chairs - Our best, chrome and
yellow group.
table, chairs
padded back &amp; seat. floor samples (2
groups) .
·
REG. $130

w·..

u: Haul

SALE '73

'58

4 Tier corner shelf in gold, 58" Itt.
floor sample (I only)
REG. $69
SALE

'28

U-Haul

•22·

Oak Secretary
Traditional
Styling. Both desk and top lock, desk
with 6 small pencil drawers and 3
shelves, 3 drawers in base, 3 shelves
in top, 72" Ht. 26" Wd. · (2 Only) ·
REG. $319

'243

U-Haul

~ 195

Desk Chair· Oak, Gold Velvet
Seat cane Bilek n Onlyl
REG. $69
SALE

'22

U-Haul

'17

Dark Oak End Table With
Drawer - All Wood (1 Only) ·
REG. $99
SALE

•28

U-Jiaul

•22

Console Lamp · red decorator;
double candlestick style- All metcil
(1 Only].
REG. $64 ·-

'22

~U-Haul

'17

WALL UNITS

DIRECTOR CHAIRS

REG. $27.50 SALE
•·

U-Haut

SALE .'79

SALE

FlOOR SAMPLES
Folding patio or family room occasional chairs, black frames,
covers in green, orange
and
.
. yellow.

'14

Cedar Chest- By Lane. oak, med.
dark finish, 48" long, scroll front,
with lock and full guarantee (2
onlvl .
REG. $129.50

SALE
LA-Z-·BOY Recliner, green Nylon
cover, with oak trim, excellent
comfort and value.

U-Haul

Good selection of Book Case, Desk,
Bar and Storage Wal! Units in Oak,
Pine and Pecan.

$18ll..' .

1. 20%

_EA.

qj Furniture
·. . Galleries

Off

eFine Furniture
. eCustom Drapery
•Carpet
..

... .,.,
Seco.nd at' Grape
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 446-0332

•interior Design
.

..~

Hours: Dally 9:30-5
Mon .- Fri. 9:30-8
'

REGULAR PRICES

,.
1.
---~

t

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-The Daily'Sentmel Mtddleport-Pomeroy 0 Monday JM 6 1075

•

.

8- The Datly Sentmel Middlepo rt-Pomeroy 0 Monday Jan 6 1975

Racine Social Events
By Mrs Francis Morris
Mrs Ann Coe recetved word
of the death_of her brother4n
law Ray Rtethmtller of
F1ortda at the home of hts son
in~aw and daugtlter, Rev and
Mrs Leonard Peale al Ne"
York, Sunday mormng
Recent dinner guests m the
home of Rev and Mrs Howard
9uveley and famtll were Mrs
Mae Moore of The Plams and
Mtss Zelia Ntsley and Davtd
Kluzuskt of Athens
Rev and Mr s How ar d
Suvele) and famtl y and Te rry
Spoun spent Chnstmas with
Mrs Myrtle Loumen houser
and Mrs Lowse Shiveley m
Wtlmlngton They also vtsttea
wtth other relatives and frtenrls
tn the Wtlmln ton and
_ Washmgton Co urt House area
Rev a nd Mrs Walter
Bikacsan and Sharon vtstled
relattves tn Tallmadge,
Wadsworth Akron and Kem
over the Chnstmas holidays
Mrs Karen Turley was a
patient tn Pleasant Valley
Hospttal Pt Pleasant and was
returned home New Year s
Day
, Mr Clarence Mtller and
daughter Patrtcla of Monroe
La , spent several days over
Christmas wtth his parents
Mr and Mrs Ed Mtller They
all VISited Mr anq Mrs Bob
Cornwell at
Gallipolis
amstroas Day
Mr and Mrs Jesse Brmker
spent Chnstrnas With Mrs
Brtnker smother, Mrs Esther
Comstock at Kanauga
Mr and Mrs Stanley Stearns
spent a week over Christroas Ill
Orlando Flo viStllng thetr
son Enoch who has enlisted m
the Navy
Christmas guests of Mr and
Mrs Jack Sharpnack were Mr

Reedsville
News, Notes

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

"

OF
QUALITY

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

HElL
RACINE PWMBING
&amp;HEATING

JOHNSON'S

»--News 6 Beverly H•llblllles a Hodgepodge Lodge 20
Trails West 15 Etec Co JJ
00--News J 4 8 10 12 13 15 ABC News 6 Elec Co 20
Adler ian Counseling 33
• »--NBC News J 4 15 ABC News 13 Bew1tched 6 CBS New s
8 Zoom 20
7•00--Truth or Cons 3 Phil Dona~ue a' Bowling for Doll~rs 6
News TO , New Candid Camera 13 Wally s Workshop IS
•
Ohio This Week 20 Ltllas Yoga &amp; You JJ
::' 30-That Good Ole Nashville MuSic J Masquerade Party 4
College Basketball 6 $25 000 Pyram•d B In the Know 10 To
Tellthe Truth 13 Untamed World 15 Wash•ngton Straight
Talk 20 Episode action 33
~ I 00--Mov~e The Specialists J 4 15 Jacques CO!Jsteau 13
Gunsmoke 8 10

NOTICE TO

EAGLE
CLUB MEMBERS

News Notes

nc rea se would b e obta ned by
t e mp o ra r ly subs llt ut ng th e
rate sc-hedul es for stand ard
re s denrtal and Qenera l se rv ce
small sec onda ry e!ec t r c ser
viCe 1n the Cdy of We ll s ton and
n a ll th e rnun c pal 1 es m
F rankl n Coun ty
except th e
C ty of Co l um bus from pr esent
Sc hedu es R s w a 1d G s 1 w
w fh Sc hedules R Sa nd G s 1 m
ttlc C ty of Wells ton &lt;~nd fr om
p r ese nt Schedu l es R and G 1
w1 th Sc hed ul es R F and G 1 F n
th e applrcab l e mun c p a i N es n
F rank n County and the 1 ap
plyn g t ile pr oposed 12 per ce nt
surcharge excl u s vc of fu e l
ad,us tm ent amou nts on those
mcn.•a sl!s T hese cha nges and
proposed surc harge r a •se the
leve rs of the ra t es n t hose
r espe c t \le mun c pa l t es to a
! eve co 1 SI Sl e nt w lh c om
para ble se rv ice n lh etr a r ea s
Based on t he test p en od of the
tw el'o'e (12J mo nth s e nd e d
D ecember 31 1974 temporary
add tiona I annua l reve nu e of
S21S 218 w ou ld be provtded from
e1ec tr1 c ener gy used n t he C ty
of Wel lston S4 539 266 f r om t he
nun lc pet t1e s
n Frankl n
Coun ty ex c lus ve of the Crty of
Co lumbus an d sn 369 275 from
th e r emamder o f the co mpa 1y s
etec l r•c se r v ce •n cl ud ng t he
C tv of Co tum b us b emg p er
ce ntagc
n creast&gt;s of 56 tl
percent ) 1 97 percent and 12
percen t respect vely
0 1 Jan uary 20 \ 975 a t 9 30
am ES T at lh eo ff ce sot Th e
PubI c UtI t es Co mm ss on of
Oh o 111 North H gh Street
Columbus Oh•o 43215 a near ng
w II be held on the proposed
t em porar y mcreas es Furth er
mformalton may be obta1n ed
f r om The Pubnc Utll t es
Com TltSS on ot Oh10 or t~ P
~1)6 13 2t c

be done by appom tments
only Plea se phone 99 2 2272 or
see Mrs Wand a Ebl n Laurel
Cl ff Rd Pomeroy OhiO
1 3 30t c

lost

sur roun d n g ar ea Peasant
bus n ess H gh pro f t Items
Can start part 1 me Age or
ex penence not tmportant
Re qu res car an d SI J95 to
U19S c a ~ h mves!men t For
details wr t e and
n c lude
you r phone numb er

RED IR I SHse lf erw ltlwh l e on
Mr and Mrs LouiS Del uz
c he st n L .=tng sv dt e area
Vlstted Mrs Lucille Southall,
Rewilrd Call 74 2 5909
Staat's Mills, W Va and Mr
1 5 61p
---- - -and Mrs FrWJk Marty and
NOTICE FOR SERVICE
daughter of CottageVIile on
BV PUBLICATION
D epartment BVV
ChriStroas Day
To Rob ert E Clela (ld 1329
3938 Meadowbrook Rd
W
Yale St reet
Orlando
Mrs Charles Hilton was a
M.nneapolls MN S5426
Ftor da 32604 otherw se whos e
member of the Semor Citizens
p la ce of res den ce 1S unknown
and canno t wtlh reasonable
Chotr for the Chrtstrnas can
d I gen ce be ascerta n ed
tala 111 Pomeroy
To Josepl"l H Bntt whose INCR E DIBLE No Fees
No
addres s s unknown and can~~tot
Mr and Mrs Carl Auther
Ware hou s ng
Pa te n t
w1th reasonab l e d 1 gen ce be
Protect on S•x Ye.u Hr story
son, local, Mr and Mrs Jun
asc~rfained
R epa r w ndstlr eld and pl a t e
You
ar
e
not
f1ed
thai
you
ha
ve
Pape and daughters of
gl a ss at less than 2{1 p et of
been named Defendants n a
rep l acement cos t M n•mum
Syracuse were Friday guests
lega l act on en t fled Kenneth 0
nvest m ent of $12 so Ca ll
Mark ns and Vermont Ma r k n s
of Mrs Elva Oatley at
Co llect M r F rankl n (2 14 )
Route 1 Rae ne Oh o Pan
242 658 1 The Glas s Doctor
Syracuse
I Hs vs Rober t E Cleland and
I nc
2225 Be I L ne R oad
Mr and Mrs Vtctor Durst
Joseph H BrIt D ef endants
Carrollt on Texas 75006
Th1 s act10n ha s be en asstgned
1 5 2tp
and sons The Plains were
case No 15 614 n th e Court of
Christroas Day callers at the
Common Pl eas Me gs County
Pom eroy Oh o
home of his parents, Mr and
The Obtec t of t he Complaint 1S Employment Wanted
Mrs R R Durst and Tom
to canc e l the land contra ct
recorded Jun e 29
l 9t.7
n REMO DEL I NG
p l umbmg
Mr and Mrs Danny Haines
Volume 12 1 Pag e 189 Me gs
h eat ng
and a l l typ es of
of Belpre vtstted relahves m
County Mortgag e Records
ge n e ral
r ep a r
Work
WhiCh Sl11d contra c t prov id ed
g ua ran t eed 20 years ex
Uus commumty on Sundav
tor the sa le o f Lot No 7 n th e
pen ence Phone 992 2409
Hfternoon
n cor pornt ed V llage o f Racme
1 J 12tc
n
Sutton
Townsh
p
Me1gs
Mrs Ruby Bryant has
--------- ~ Co unty Oh o
returned home after a recent
The Com pta nt alleges f a lur'e W I L L BABY SIT n my home for
to
pay t he contract pr ce as
work ng mo t her Phone 985
hospttahzatton at Veterans
ag ree d and the ca n cell at on of
41 02
Memonal Hospttal
th e co n tr act and furth er that
12 30 7tc
th e Pia n ti ffs l 1tte n the r eal
Mtchele VanMeter, Pomeroy
estate be qu1eted as agamst the
WILL do babys1tt ng n my
was an ovenught guest of her
Defendants
home 5 d ays per week Infant
You
are
requ
red
to
o1ns
wer
POMt:ROV
LANES
grandmother Mrs Ada Van
to 2 years Ha s references
the Complamt w th n 28 days
Early Sunday M1xed
Ca l l ~9 2 27 89
Meter on Saturday
after th e last publ cat on of th s
Dece mber 1S 1974
1 5 3fC
Won Lo st noftce which w II b e publ shed
The home of Mr Wld Mrs
_._
Tom s Carry Out
95
40 once each w eek fo r s x sue ---------, - Monte Proffttt and family was Pu I ns Excaval tng
The
l a st
84
52 cesslve weeks
Eag l es Club
80
56 pub! cat ton wtll be made on Jan
destroyed by a ftre last week
Help Wanted
Fr•endly Ta vern
54
82 n 1975 and the 28 days for
The property 11 as formerly Sw1sher &amp; L oh se Pharm
answer w II co mmen c e on that
48
88 date
owned by the Dell Talbott
In case of you r fa lure to
Mayer &amp; H:•ll Barbers
46
9()
fanuly
H Qh lnd Game - Jr Phelp s answer or otherwiSE!' re spond a s
FUneral servtces were held 243 Jr Phelps 115 Women requ red bY the Oh 10 Ru1es of
Marlene Wilson 201 Mary Vos s C vtl Pro ce d ure 1udgm ent by
at the Sttversvtlle Commurutv 195
d efa ult will be rendered aga nst
In
you for t he r ei e f demanded n
H19h Sen es ~ Jr Phe l ps 663
Church last week for Mrs
th1S Com pia nt
Dick. Duga n 553
Wom en
Nellie Gluesencamp, one of the Marlene W lson 566 Mary Voss
551
Larry E Spencer
area's oldest rest dents
Te~m H gh Game Tom s
Clerk of Court
Age 8 or Older
Mr and Mrs Artbtr Allen, Carry Out 729
M e1gs County 1
Team H gtl Ser es - Tom s
Pomeroy Oh o
Newark, VlSlted rela!ives Ill the Carry
Out 2153
netghborhood
over
the
{12) 13 30 ( 1) 6 13 20 27 6tc
D ecember 12 I~H
Won Lost
holidays
TCII'!l s Carry Out
6
2
Mrs Joan Greathowe and Sw st1 er &amp; LOh$t Pharm 6
2
111 Court St , Pomeroy •
Tea m H gh Game - Eagles
4
4 Club
daughter and Mr Everett Eag les Club
7.11
Phone 992 21~
Mayer &amp; H ill Barbers
4
4
T eam H1gh Seres - Tom s
Horner vtstted m East Pull ins E xc avat ng
2
6 Carry Ou t 2049
F r•endly Tavern
2
6
Uverpool a recent weekend
December 2f 19H
H1gh lnd
Game Gary
Won lost CARHOP wantect app l y m
Mrs Barbara Talbott and Wa yland 23.4 Larry Dug an 224
Sw1sher&amp; Loh se Ph arm
person a t Crow s Steak
famtly Mrs Freda Mtd- Women Betty wn t l atc h 215
14
2
Hou s ~
Belfy Wh•tlat ch 206
Eagles Club
10
6
dleswart, Mrs Myrtle Lewts
12 2'9 l Otc
Hlq h Sertes - Larry D ugan Torn s Ca rr y Out
6
8
and family , Daruty Black, Paul 571 Jr Phe lr,~s 567 Women Pull in S Excavat n g
6
10
Betty Wh 1lla t ch 577 Marlene
F r tend ly Tavern
6
10 TAKE orders for 0(1 of M n k
Dean Evans and Mr and Mrs Wlson 529
Cosmetics
Lact es sales
Maver &amp; H il l Barbers
4
12
meetmgs g rts mtereSt.ng
Larry Fowler and children
H 1gh lnd
Game
Bob
•
trarnrng aw arcts recogn rt ron
Mrs Ruby Bryant, Debra and Couct'l 21 8 Ch arl es Sm1th 216
were recent callers at the nome
Part full time Sauv age s
Women
Mary Voss
19S
Box " Syracus e On o 45779
of Mr and Mrs Billllryant and Davtd, Melvm Dailey, Tom Marlene W1lson lU 8 e tly
I 5 3tp
Durst, Ntcki Van Meter, Mr Sm 1th 193
family
------H1glt Series J~ff W1tson
EX PER I ENci0 fu el-;;f driver
Those vwtlng the E H and Mrs Jack Cornell and 587 B tll W11tord 558 Women
nee&lt;l'ed Send rep l 1es to Sox
Carpenters were Mr and Mrs. family, Paul Evans, Mr and Betty 6m1th 558 Mary Voss
72 9C c o Th e Da ly Sent met
5!1
Pomeroy Oh10 45769
'
LoutS DeLuz, Mr and Mrs R Mrs Woodrow Downte, Stan
Team H1gh Game and Ser ,es
12 30 6t c
Eagles
ClUb
7
4
t~
an
d
7169
F1etcher
and
S
W
Durst
R Durst, Mrs Elva Dailey.,

Local Bowling

Carrier Wanted

NEW HAVEN

The Daily Sentinel

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

-----r-------

!

I

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...

bath
Ul1l t1es pa1d
NO
chrtdren or pets Phone 992
5810 or 814 Eas t Ma n
Pomeroy
1 5 6tp

3BEDR00Mhous e 3 m lesou t
on State Route 143 references
and depos t requ1red No pets
Phone 949 3716
1 6 Jtc

- ---

----------

3 and 4 ROOM furnished and
unfurn shed
apa rtments
Phon e 992 5t134
4 12 lfc
PRIVATE meet ng room for
an y organ zat on phone 992
3975
J 11 tfc

-

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

FURN I SHED apt Adults only
Middleport Phon e 992387 .4
1114tfc

------

- -- - - - - -

UNFY'\,NISHED
house
4
r ooms and bath 1650 L nco ln
He ghts Phone 992 3874
11 14 tfc

Beaut1lul bulldtng site 1'12
acres wooded TP water m
a new area SJ SOO

Finest Hours 20

O L D HOUSE n Syracuse on 2
n tee lots S3 ooo w II tear
house clown f wanted Phone
992 589B
1229 7tp

---

- ---------

BUILDING lot 60 ft frontage
by 165 ff The second lot on lei!
on R1verv ew Dr ve L ncotn
H II Pomeroy Oh10 If In
teres ted call992 3230 after 5 p
m

10 17 tfc

Movie

$90 month
992 257 1

Phone 992 3975 or

1 3 tfc

Bath and /2, excellent
neighborhood, wall towall carpetmg, storm
wmdows, large lot, 3
car garage, reasonable
ufthttes

For Sale
GROCERY bu s ness for sale
Build ng fo r sale or lease
Phone 773 5618from 8 30p m
to 10 p m for appointmen t
3 10 tfc

------- - - - - - - SIEGLER and
MONOGRAM

I

19 57 CHEVY parts
NEW
Lakewood tra ctton bars hi
tacker a1r shocks hooker
headers with 9 collectors tor
sm al l block
Call 992 3496
after 6 p m BEST OFFER
f
1017tfc

Carro

10

News 13

Sunnse Se mes ter 10

Dear Helen
• Your defmttion of a shower for live-togethers - an ''un
bndaled" shawer - UISptred us to print an ''un" before the
bndal" m the UIVltations we sent out for Jeanme and George
They had plaMed a wedd10g, but fmaily dectded Utey d try a oneyear practtce nm first Whtchever, they needed things for thetr
apartroent
I guess a few fanuly fnends dido t get the message When 11
finally came out at the party that thts was an un-marnage, two of
Jeanme s aunts ptcked up thell' unopened presents Wld marched
out m a huff Stnce her mother came to the shower with a lovely
gtft meanmg she accepted the arrangement, don't you thmk
relattves should have kept thetr moral mdignatton to them
selves• - 'IULD OFF BY RUDE GUESTS
Dear TOBRG
You mtght have av01ded trouble had your or Jeanme's
mother enhghtened the unllberated relatives on the real meanmg
of 'Un' -before the shower Smce no one bothered, I'd guess
SOMEBODY anllctpated a scene and secretly enJoyed 11
For shame&gt; - H

+++
6 2 S~ Fa rm

Report 13
30---Frve Mmutes to L1ve By 4 News 6 B1ble Answers 8
Concerns &amp; Comments 10 Rev Cteopphus Robm son 13

6 :jjt--Columbvs Today 4
45-/lfornmg Report 3 Farmttme 10
00--Today J 4 15 AM America 13 AM Amenca 6 CBS
News B 10
I Oil-LasSie 6 Capt Kangaroo 8 Popeye tO Sesame St 33
lG-Your Future tS Now 20

8 25-Capt Kangaroo 10

30-B•g Valley 6
I QO--A M J Paul Dtxon 4 Phil Donahue 15 Rocky &amp; Fnends
8 Morn1ng w1th D M 13 9 25-Chuck Wh•le Reports 10
' 31)-Not For Women Only 3 Dinah 6 Hazel B Tattletales 10
~
Arthur Smtth 12 New Zoo Revue 13
0 00--Celebnty Sweepstakes J 1 ~, Joker s Wild B 10 Mov1e
Come Back L•ttle Sheba 13
• 0 30-Wheel of Fortune J 15 Phil Donahue 4 Gambtt 8 10
• .l1 OD--H1gh Rollers J 15 One L1fe to L ve 6 Now You See It
8 10
11 31)-Hollywood Squares J 4 15 Brady Bunch 6 Love ol L1fe
8 tO sesame St 33
11 55-CBS News 8 Dan !met s World 10 News 13
12 Oil-Jackpot J 15 Password All Stars 6 13 Bob Braun s 50 50
Club 4 News B 10
c 12 31)-Biank Check J 15
Spilt SEcond 6 13 Search for
Tomorrow 8 10

To Be Announced 33

12 45-Eiec Co 33 12 55- NBC News 3 15
J QO--News J All My Children 6 13 What s My Lne B Young &amp;
Restless 10 Not For Women Only 15
1 30---How To Survive a Marnage 3 415

Lets Make

a

Deal

6 13 As the World Turns 8 10
,''(J 00--Days of Our L1ves 3 4 15 $10 000 Pyramid 6 13 Gu1dmg
Light B 10
2 31)-Doctors 3 4 15 Big Showdown 6 13 Edgeol Night B 10
-:1 Oil-Another World 3 4 15 General Hospital 6 13 Pnce iS
,
Right 8 10 Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20
J 31)--()ne L1fe to L•ve 13 Lucy Show 6 Match Game B 10 Your
Future ts Now 20

:f oo-Mr Cartoon 3

I Oream of Jeannre 4

Somerset 15

Gilligan sIs 6 Tattletales B Sesame St 20 33 Movie That
Kmd or Woman 10 M1ke Douglas 13
· 4 31)-Bew•tched 3 Jackpot 4 Mod Squad 6 Lucy Show B
:

Bonanza

15

WIN AT BRIDGE

This is no hand to torqet
NORTH

6

"'K 94
¥ K 10 3
• K Q J 10'6
... J 3

I

+++

Dear Helen
My husband ts a handsome , good, lovmg (very') man 1
adore hun, but I can't take tt
Is tt so terrtble tohope he fmds another woman, not to fail m
love wtth, of course, but to reheve me of pressmg wifely duties'
5 oo-FBI J Merv Gnffm 4 Andy Gnfflth B MISter Rogers
Ne tghborh ood 20 33

SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 22)
Be even mo(e mindful than

Raymond Burr 13

'

usual of your appearance to
day Dress to suit the occas10n
to make a favorable lmpres
slon

Tuoodoy, Jon 7 1175
ARIES (March 21 April 18)
For

more Interesting for the

T KURUS (April 20 Moy 20)
You 11 break your word about

CAPRICORN (Deo 22-Jen

l1stener you re apt to embeiUsh
details a trifle too mu ch
11) If you re trying to stick to a
budget t s best you avoid the
company of an e)(travagant
friend today

momen t mucll to your em
barrassment
2~-Juno

20) II

AQUARIUS (Jon 20 Fob

11)
A goal that you re Interested rn
m achlevmg cant be won
through easy measures such
as those you II try to get by

workmg 1n handlcralts don I
m a ke 1nn ova 1•ons Wi t hout
thmkmg them through Aesu ts
wont equal your artrsll c nten
!tons

21

July

with

22)

PISCES

You tend to bea m te II rt at1ous
now You may form an attac h
ment suddenly that w II end as
abruptly as 11 began

(Feb

20 M111ch

20)

You re more likely to tell others
what they want to hear rather
than what they should hear
Tht s wont advance your cause

LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Don I
buy a novel type 1tem lor the
home Without firs t talk ing to
one who knows tts va u e
through eKperlence
Vl~GO

by THOMAS JOSEPH
DOWN
ACROSS
1 Sherlfrs men
1 'l):alnee for

21) In order to make a story

some tllm g you co mmitted
yourself to on the spur of lt1e

GEMINI (May

6itt:~MtHdf

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Doc

So meone you let t a strong ms
!a nt atlractron for 1sn I all you
fir st thought as you II learn for
)'ourself shortly

CANCER (Juno

Dear Helen
I m ll1 my early 4!ll and have two children But I m m love
wtth a young man of 19 and am thinking of dtvorcmg my
husband
Tod (my young man) acts tike he s m love wtth me, but he
wont admtt 11 He ltkes bemg wtth me Wtil the divorce help' BEWILDERED
Dear Be
Your announcement of a dtvorce will probably scare Tod 10to
the next state' When an older woman's attenlton progresses to
'mten!tons "a youngman'sfancy turns off' -H

+++
Dear Helest
An answer to the woman who favored trapping anunals for
fur sales
Here'saquote from Cleveland Amory's book, Man Kind"
"I have talked to scores of trap)lErs (about the survtval
hours' ol trapped animals) until the leghold trap ts outlawed,
any woman who wears a wild fur -meaning m the U s any fur
not mink or chinchilla - has on her back at least 150 hours of
torture " - FOR FAKE FURS

normally consider are likely to
temp t you today Study
c arsfully bargains offered you

Ired By Unbrldal-ed Shower

TUESDAY JANUARY 7 1975
DO-Sunrise Sem 1nar 4

~

Dear prag
I'm surprised you didn't carry pragmatism one step further
and add, "After all, this ts chl'llper thW1 sending my hu$band to a

prostitute, and, besides, housecleaning services come with the
package "
Wouldn't your money be better spent on a reputable sex
therapist' - H

2 Bedeck
3 Follow the
fashion
11 Fragrance
(4wds)
11 Albanian
capital ( var ) 4 Sea eagle
5 TWlning stem
1Z Implanted
6 Jeanne d'11 lnltlgate
7 Ship's officer
Yesterday's Anawer
14 Hindu Iitle
(2
wds
)
15
Ethereal
29 Waterway
11 "Honest - '
8
Inter
18
Honey
badger
30 Hearten
II Celtic
nahonal
19
Posts
32 Brthsh
Neptune
under
22
Breastwork
Conserva
11 Dinner
standing
23 Solvent
ttve
course
9 More
24 Falsehood
35 - deck
11 Mw's
cauhous
26 'Conunon
36 Central
antithesis
11 Utasa ts
Sense
Amertcan
20 Stag
tts capital
autltm
tree
l1 Before (Lat )
U One of the
Andtews

Sisters

u Bengal -

(Aug 23 Sop!

22)
You re apt to be a bit loose
lipped today You could say
some thing unth 1nkmgly th at
wou d offend another

!$ Yearn
21 VIctor~

JM 71 1171
You wi lt fmd yourself involved
th s year In an interesting
glamorous metter that has the
potential of a profll Just be
sure lo proceed sensibly

LIBRA (Sept 23-0cl 23)
F nanctal nsks you wou ldn I

~l]JWID~;"'-~;:::!!:! .-J c
loy 101 N l ll 1\IINI&gt;I II

" ' I !Lilli

H

Pull What
obO&lt;OIC_,...,

Unscramble thelt foorJumbln.
one letter to eac:h oquare to
form four ordinary words

2(]

Barenbolm on Beethoven

33

10 OD-Pol1ce Story 3 4 15 Marcus Welby MD 6 13 Barnaby
Jones B 10 News 20 Soundstage 33
10 3D-Your Future ts Now 20
11 OD-News 3 4 6 8 10 13 15 ABC News 33
11 JI)-Johnny Carson 3 4,15 W•de World Mystery 13 FBI 6

Mov1e Banacek 8 Movie The B1g Land 10 Janakl 33
12 31)-W•de World Mystery 6
1

oo-Tomorrow

34

llMllitary
II Bind

sa M~calsalt

34 Venom
II Spirit lamp

'

n PerseVllre
II PuiBatlon
ill Word with
bopper
te Heraldic
wreath

8 10 Zoom 20 Your Future ts Now 33
7 oo-Truth or Cons J 4 Bowling for Dollars 6 Phil Donahue a
News 10 Name That Tune 13 To Be Announced 15 Antiques

9 3D-Woman

symbol
rl Dance
Zl LorTBlne s
partner
command
(abbr )

5 30- News 6 Beverly Hlllbllhes 8 Hodgepodge Lodge 20
Tra1ts West 15 Elec Co 33
6 00 - N ~w s 3 4 7 8 10 13 15 ABC News 6 Elec Co 20 lTV
Uti liZation 33
6 31)- NBC News 3 4 15 ABC News 13 Bew itched 6 CBS News

20 Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33
7 30- Hollywood Squares 3 &gt;;, Wild Wild Wor ld of Animals 6
Buck OwensJkNew Price Is R1ght 10 To Tell the Truth 13
People Just Don t Whistle 20 Marco Sport lite 33
B 01)-Adam 12 3 4 15 Happy Days 6 13 Good Times B 10
Amen ca 20 33
B 31)-Mov•e The Dream Makers J 4 15 Movie Lets Switch
6 13 Mash 8 10 Ascent of Man 20 33
9 OO-Hawa11 F1ve 0 a 10

knighthood
5 Swl&amp;s city

10
()

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
II

II

SYMJCT ~

I I. I.

!:,

One letter almply 1tando for al!Other In thiS sample A Ia
lor the three L s, X for the two 0 s etc Smglo letters
apaatrophel, the length and formation of the words are all
blDII Each day the code letters are different

IT WA5 THE TAL-K

u~ed

OF ANCIEN'T ~EI

CRYPTOQUOTE

Now ........,. the clrclod !etten
to fonn the ourprioe 0111wer, u
•UJceoted br the aboYo eartoon.

V "i
~

PO

(Aaewe,. ta.orrow)

Salurday•

News 13

l

PIECE

BISON

JQQ

KM

DAYJCTYMM

CEY

JVCEPA

JTU

SYJQCE

v

DAJTC
M
YlllerdQ'a ~ate: INFLATION WOULDN'T BE SO
IW&gt; IF PRICES WOUU&gt;N'T KEEP RISING - ANON

CANOPY KNIGHT

AMwer1 Suppoaed to contain lftHt- SKIN

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

QJIPAYA

CEY

;::I::::=Pril==
.. ~.~~~~~-~wa~~~~~~~l ( I I I X ]
lumbl"

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

DICK TRACY

EAST

WEST

• 10 7 2

¥6
.98752
oloA 1084

SOUTH IDI

.A

$8500 00- Two bedroom frame
home Bath paneling gas F f&lt;.
furnace
water

basement

$20,000 oo -

and

clfy

New J bedroom

home
ltvrng room 13x19~
beautiful kttchen ceramrc tile

Netther vulner able
West

North

Eut

South

Pass

2t

Pass

2 .,

Pass

4¥

Pass

Pa ss

l¥

GASOLINE ALLEY

almost one acre

~~

Openmg lead - 5 "'

n,ooo 00 - Old one floors room
house wltf1 nat gas and clt'Y

BUILDING LOTS - Several
locations $1500 00 up
LIST IT WITH US FOR BEST
RESULTS

We talk to you

like a person.

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald One thmg a really
great player needs ts the socalled feel of the table He wtll
even go far and away agamst
normal percentages because he
suspects somethmg. abnormal
" Jtm Here IS a hand that you
sbould recall You were capta m
of the North Amencan team
~hat won the worlds cham
p10nsh1p m 1970 and 1971 I was
~ member of the team and thts
little gem was played by my
partner Bobby Wolff
.. Oswald East won the ftrst
:n'rck wtth the ace of clubs and
~ back the deuce of spades
:1\:est rose wtth the ace cashed
l iJ't kmg of clubs and then led
lll!tk a spade f\tght'
.. Jtm Yes' Then Bobby put
on hiS thmktng cap and dectded
that West was actmg like a man
who expected a trump trtck So
Bobby won the spade wtth the
queen and led the Jack of
hearts West covered
Oswald
Then Bobby
lhought some more and dectded
that West also held the n10e So
he came back to hts hand wtlh
the ace of dtamonds led the
etght of trumps Jet It rtde
cashed dummy s ten, ruffed a
i!ood dtamond to get back to hts
hand cashed hts ace of trumps
to ptck up the nme and clatmed
hts contract
!N }

CAPTAIN EASY
EASY DROPS A GEtJTLf, HJ,_,T TO
PR'INCE"56 JA~M II\1 5 &amp;DDV61JAilP IJOT
TO FOLJ,OW THEM ABOUT SO CL06fi.V

It's hard to tel l
what 40u're putt 1nq
on when ~o u dress
under the covers '

vPass

Attached garage and

For Sale
CLOSE OUT on new Z g Zag
sew.ng machmes For sew ng
stretch fabr cs buttonholes
fancy des gns etc
Paint
Slightly blemished Cho ce of
c arry1ng case or sew~ng
stand S49 80 cash or terms
available PhOne 992 7755
1218tfc

M ovie

I m thinking of hirmg a housekeeper I can trust - not
beautiful, but seductble - someone who wouldn't be a threat to
my marrtage
When one partner IS highly sex~a the otber isn't, why not
be practical• - PRAGMATIC

oloQ 962

CALL 992-3877

COLONIA L MAPLE stereo
rad1o am fm 4 speakers 4
speed automat c changer
Ba l ance ! 116 78
Use ovr
budget ter ms Ca I 992 3965
1 6 ttc

8

II
I

¥AJ B74

barn and large lot

1

The

By Helen Bottel

.

• Q63

home modern bath nat gas
f urnace new block Qarage

HOUSE

00- Tomorrow 3 4

I

water on n1ce corner lot

7 ROOM

Pretty Peggy

Janak1 33
2 31)-Wtde World Mystery 6

- K 75

$12 500 00 - Older 4 bedroom

2 BEDROOM tratler at corne r
of
Broadway and
E lm
M ddleport
No p e ts or
ch ldren Call 992 2580 after 6
p m
12 5 tf c

Prtced for Outck Sale ·
1 New Wood Burntng
HEATER-139 95

ssoo down

Scream

... ':t43

bath
3 BEDROOM house

a t Wolf Trap 33 Mov te

33
31)-Movie Target RISk 3 4 IS ABC Theatre 6 Rhoda B 10
0 OD--Medlcal Center B 10 News 20 Washmglon Stra1ght Talk
33
10 30-Behmd the L nes 33
1 OD--News 3 4 6 B 10 13 15 ABC News 33
' " 1 31)-Johnny Carson 3 4 15 W1de World Mystery 13 FBI 6

"'A J 8 5
; iQ9o2

ALL CASH FOR YOUR
HOME LET US SELL IT
992 2259or 992 2568

T R A IL ER space 2m les f ro m
Pomeroy Rt 1.43 Phone 992
5858
10 27 tfc

FUEL OIL
HEATERS

Real Estate for 5ale

Performance

" I 00--ABC Theatre 13 Maude B 10 What Makes a Good Father

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

Stivers ville

-~---

Business
Services
== - - ----.

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

;. « ,
;p ?Ult!t"':CPIUT"''"""('""""

Helen Help
U s. • •

MOND~Y , JANUARY 6 1915

and Mrs P H Baker Mr and
Mrs Gary Sp tr cs Mi ss
'
Auto Sllles
For Sale
Mar.thelle Sharpn,tek dnd Mr
and Mrs Jack Sharpna ck and FOR SALE or tra de on p ckup
or
van
196 7
! On
In
family wljo also VISited Mr and
1crna 1 on~11
truck
wtth
Mrs C W Proffitt at Portland
a um num t ur n ture van 8
ply 1 r es P S
P B
50 000
~-=:::::=:::::::=~--=:::::::::::
=--==x=The) Wei e all or Columbus
m te s P han e 99 2 3509 or se~ a t
..-Mr and Mrs Walte r Cleland
JO B Page S t M dd eport
1 6 61C
were l1mstmas dmner guests
of Mr and Mrs Marton Sloter O tt s tove \15 Cl n ng room
tabl e W1lh 6 chai r s- S65 old
and fam tly Their grand
1913 CHEVROLEl c 10
$2995
REMfDELING &amp; CONST.
secrc t ar..,
\175
smo k tng
8 Flee t s1de Ptckup 350 V 8 a utomatt c tran s power
daughter, Rita accomparued
~ l and copp e r 1 ne d
\8 f 1 ng
sf eer tng radto loa I 1 owner &amp; only 15 500 m1les grey
On State Rt 124 12 tnt from
cab n e S tO I ~ n gasol ne
illem to Parkersburg and 11crc
Complete plumbmg &amp;
Alum1num s1drng, roofmg
f rnrsh deluxe v n yl rnterror
11otor wat e r pump SSO P 8. J
Route 7 by pass towards
supper guests of Mr and Mrs
complete residenftal con
Odds and Ends
115 N
heat1ng serv1ce and
Rutland
Second
M dctlepo rt
Phone
structton Wrring, plumbmg ,
John Cleland
197 1MATADOR
Sll95
genera I sheet meta I
99? 3509
elec
heat1ng
kttchen
V
8
4
door
automa
t
1c
tr
ansm
1ss1on
power
st
eer~
ng
and
l.e11 Talbott or Dansville Dl
1 6 Jtc
works
Free
Ph 992 5682or992 7121
cabtnets etc
power brakes vtnyt 1 nter~or v 1nyt roof red f n1sh good
VISited over Chnstmas "tlh THERMOCO UP LES
27
Yrs
experience
'"
canst
't 75
Estimates
w hil e wat t ftr es ra dto fa c tory a r
All Mecham cal Work
Mr and Mrs George Taylor
trade
I her nostals sa 50 fan con
Phone 949 5961
trots
1m t s w t c h es S IO
Mr and Mrs Cl)de Cross
1972 DODGE
S249l
Open Mon Sat
Emergency
9h-3995
furn&lt;1ce mo t ors \15
all
Phone (304) 773 5503
Dart Custom 4 door local 1 ow ne r ca r 318 V 8 engine
and RO) or Colwnbus spent
tieat nq
coot ng
p l umb ng
BAM 6PM
or
992
5700
automatrc t ran sm ss on an!;~ power steermg atr con
PM IS marked down below
over Chnstmas holidays 1\ tth
cost
P&amp;J
H ome Man
dttronmg v tnyt trrm v ny l t op radro wh te wa ll trres
Mrs Howard Netgler and Mr
cnance 215 N orth Secolld
gol d fm1sh
READY MIX CONCRErr&lt;li
SEPTIC
TANK S
cleaned
M dd eporl
phone 99? J509
and Mrs Earl Cross
1 vered r ght to your protect
Modern Sa n tat10n 992 3954 or
1 6 ) IC
Mobile
Homes
For
Sale
Fast
and
easy
Fre•
99'2 7349
Weekend guests of Mr and
e stima tes Phone 992 328
9
18
tfc
RErR GERATOR
c art
T RAILER f or r ent or sa le J
Mrs George Netgler were Mr
Goegle n R.eady M x Co
r es taur ant g • I daub e co k e
b ed r ooms
unfu r n sned
OPEN
EVES
8
00
PM
M ddleport Oh10
and Mrs Plul Mtll er of Kenton
coo er sta nless stee l back
ut I I res pad lo cate d a t n ew
6 )0 tfc
NEIGLER BUI L DING SUP
POMEROY, OHIO
bar Dayton el ec lrt c sea es
Mob le
Hom e
Park
n
and Mr and Mrs Rob Palmer
-----PLY FOR REMODE L ING ------- P&amp;J Odds and E nd s
215
Bu rl ngham Phone 992 775 1
'
AND KITCHEN CABI NET S SEWING MACHINE Repatrs
or North Ca rolina
Nor t1 Secon d M d dl epor t
12 31 tic
serv ce all makes 992 2284
CALL GUY NEtGHLER1
Phone 992 3509
Mr and Mrs Davtd Perry
The Fabr c ShOP Pomeroy
RAC I NE OHIO PHONE 949
973 COME T
19 000 m l es
1 6 Jt c In Memory
AuthOn zed S nger Sa tes anc
J604
au t omat c tra n sm ss on l1k e
Jeff and Trrnmy spe nt ten
serv1ce We sharpen Sc ssors
12 19 26t c
n ew Ca ll any t m e 667 344 2
da ys over Chrtstma s holidays
For Rent
3 29 ttc
IN
L OVING
m e mory
of
NOTICE
I 5 12tp
- - - - - - - - ----husband lat her and g r and
Co lumbus nnd Sou t hern OhtO
m Wtlmmgton wt th th etr
2 BEDROO M Ira er Phone 99 2
lather Orv lie
Jake
Ga u
EIH tr c Company hereby g ves
t un ng and repa1r
P I ANO
3975 or 997 257 1
parents and fanuh es
DOZER work land clearing bl
w ho pa ss ed a way January 6 Pets For Sale
Charles Sc ott 992 371 6
10 t ce tha t on D ecem b er '1 9 14
1
3
li
e
the ac re hour lY or contract
197
I
12
13
]2tp
1
l
o
r
11at1y
requested
Th
e
Mr and Mrs Alber t Hill
Farm pond s roads
etc
Publ c Ut 1 h es Co 11m ss on of H s sm r ng way and p l easant FOR SALE to good horne
were ChriStmas guests of Mr
fa ce
Large dozer and operator
Oh o
o approve te porar y
C BRADFORD AuCt iOneer
m n•atur e Da chshund Reg --1-tO U SE 4 rooms and ba th n ce
w th over 20 years ex
ya rd and dr veway
Also
Complete ServiCe
With pap ers 3 yrs
w th al
and Mrs Watd Foster and n cr eases n ra t E's charg ed tor A r e c1 p leasur e to reca ll
penence Pullms Excavating
f urn shed apt Ca ll 992 27 80 or
!:' l eclrt c se r v cc because of a n H e had a k ndly wo r d for ench
Phone 949 3821 or 949 3161
sho t s Hou seb rok e good w th
famtly In Colwnbus They were emt!rgen c y wh ch tnr ea re ns An d d 1ed bel ove d by all
992 34J'l
Pomeroy Oh o Phone 992
Rae ne Oh10
c h ldren Phon e 965 4160
So
1
e
day
we
hope
to
mee
t
h1m
2478
n
tury
to
th
e
bu
s
n
ess
and
m
Cr II Bradford
12 12 lf c
accompamed home by illetr
I 5 Jtp
12 19 tft
erests o f t he pub ! c and II e Son e day we know no t wnen
s
1 tfc
grandson
company The compa n y see ks To clasp n s hand n the better O N E 2 year old f ull Dalmat on
CO UNTRY Mob le Hom e Park
tan Cl
SE PT C tanks
e x cavat ng
~ ppr ova l t o co tee t add 1 anal
A famtly dmn er m ob
$15 Phone 992 73 12 even ngs
R I 33 l en m l es north of
WILL tr m or cut trees or
~nnua l
e l ect r c revenue of Ne ver to par t aga n
dump tru c k Phone 742 3742
I 3 Jtc
Pomeroy
L
a
rge
lots
w
th
Servance of Christmas v. as $'17 123 000 n t h e manner
shrubbery
clean
out
Sadly m sse d bv 'o'Our w f e
122026tc
co ncrete pat os s dewatks
basements att cs etc 949
If
t he
en l d r en and grandch dren
enjoyed by the famty of Mrs dcsc r b e d be l ow
r
unners
an
d
off
street
322 1 or 742 4441
pr oposed n crease s approved
1 6 t c Wanted To Buy
park ng Phon e 99 2 7479
F URNIT U RE Upholstermg
Grella Simpson at her home
12 15 26tc
the
t emporary
add t onal
R e asonable
rat es
free
12 31 tf c
r evenue would b e collec ted unt 1
CAS HSSSU F OR JU N K CARS
Frtday evenmg
es t1mate s
p ckup
and
CREMEANS CONCRETE de
a determ na t1 on s mad e of th e
Com p F RYE S TRUCK and J ROOM and ba th furn shed a pt
d e l very promp t serv ce
Mrs Helen Sunpson spent permanen t rate c hange s Noltce
!1vered Monday throuoh
A U TO
PART S
Rutland
Ultl t es pa d
356 N orth
Mowrey
s
Upholstery
Po1nt
Saturday
and
evenings
Phon e 742 6094
Chrtstroas at the home of her r eques ted n the company s ~
Fou
rt
h
St
M
ddlepor
t
W
Va
Phone
675
Ple
a
sant
App ll cat ons m Case No 74 760
Phone 446 l\.42
\
1 2 26tp
4154
12 31 ftc
son, Mr and Mrs Br1an EL A I R and Case No 7 1 813
6 13 fc
12 31 26tp
Simpson m Baltunore and was E L A IR fl ed November 6 197~
4 R OOM turn shed apt Call 992
B F T BED for 3 ~ to n F ord truck
and
Decembe r
2
1974
590 8 b efor e I p m
JOUled by her brother and wtfe, respec t vety to ncrease ts
Phone 992 5162
EXCAVATING dozer loacter
12 Jl 6tc
and backhoe work
septic
ra
t
es
c
harg
ed
fo
r
c
l
ec
tr
c
I
5
Jtp
Real
Estate
For
5ale
Mr ahd Mrs Max Wolfe of
tanks msta lled dump trucks
se rv ce by \50 69 3 000 based on
Sandusky
F URNI S HED
a partment
and lo boys for hire w 11 haul
the tes t per od o f t ne tw el ve ( 121
OLD furn ture ce boxe s br ass
ut I fte s furn 1shed
su table
fill d rt top soil limestone &amp;
Mr and Mrs Roy ffif!le months end ed Decemb er 31
bed s or complete househO l ds
1974
for two wor k mg men or
gravel Call Bob or Roger
Wr
t
e
M
D
M
I
er
Rt
4
spent Saturay 10 Gallipolis
E~FECTIVE I 6 7S
ret r e d co up le L v ng r oom
The appl ca t ons I l ed n Case
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
Pome ro y Oh o Ca 1 992 7760
k tchen shower and bath On
n ght phone 992 3525 or 992
vtst tmg Mr and Mrs Bill No 74 760 EL A I R a nd Ca se No
10
7
7
4
M eeting s wilt be held every
mam h ghway Mason W Va
74 8 13 E L A IR pl nce befor e Th e
5232
McKenzie and chtldren
Pllon e 773 5 147
2 11 ttc
Publ c U t ll t iCS Co mm SS tOn Of
other Monday at B 00 p m
J U NK au tos
co mplete and
10 27 tf c
Mrs Marton Kmghtstep and Oh 10 all of the Co mpany s r a te s
Th e Soc tat Room wtll be open
de l 1v ered to our yard W e p ck
rmces an d c harges for a t! of ts
EXCELSIOR Salt Works East
up aut o bod es and buy all
to all members famtly and
daughter of Reynoldsburg elec
4 R M t urn shed apt close to
tr c serv ce presentl y under
Mam Sf Pomeroy All ktnds
k
nds
ot
scrap
metals
and
guests eve r y Monday n1ght
Powet s Super va u phone
of salt water pellets water
were holiday guests of her th e tur.sd ca t on of th1s Com
~ron
R1der s Salvag e 51 Rt
992 3658
SS 10n
exce pt
s t andard
nugg ets block salt and own
12~
Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh o
mother Mrs Lavmla Sunpson m
r!:!'S dent a t and gener a serv ce
1l 20 tf c
Ohio R 1ver Salt Phone 99.2
Call 99 2 5468
3891
They were jo10ed by other sm il l se condary el ect r c ser SHO O T N G ma t ch Rae ne Gun
POMEROYAbout
2
yr
10 1? tf c
2 BEDROOM I ra l et n Rutland
v ce cov e r ed bY ord1 nan cc
6 s ttc
Club Sunday 1 p m Assorte d
relaUves to spent ChriStmas co
old - BRICK &amp; FRAME
Phon e 742 4465
n tr a c ts n t he mun cpa ,, es
meats and f ac tor y cho k e g un s CAS H pad l or all makes and
about 1 acre 4 BR 2 baths
t 5 Jtc
Day wtth Mrs Ruth Sunpson o f 6a nbr dge Gall po t s
WA L L paper hangmg and all
only
mode l s o f mob l e homes
Ma n c h es t er
M ddleport
Inter or f n shmg Phone 742
lovely kitchen &amp; dm1ng
12
22tfc
Phone ar ea co de 614 423 953 1
and son
2 BE DROOM mob l e hom e
P•k e ton
Se aman
Wa\lerly
;oat
4 13 lfc
uttl
tty
R
rec
space
car
u t I lie s furn shed close n
Mr and Mrs Bnan Su11pson Wes.t U n on and Win che ster AUCT ION
12 29 12tp
Thursday
and
peted storage bldg JUST
Ca ll 992 7649 aft er 4 p m
oc&lt;1tcd ou ts d e of f r anklin
and children of Baltimore County
Sa tu rday n•ght 7 p m a t
1 5 6tc
$26 000
HOME
Impro vement
and
Ma son A uc t on Horton St n
The proposed 1 crease would
spent the weekend here wtth
Re pa r Serv1ce Anyth tnO
Bustoess
Opportunrlies
OLD
RT
JJ - Close 1n 12x6S
Ma
so
n
W
Va
Co
n
s
gnm
ents
TR A I LER spa ce 2 mr es from
be ob ta n ed by apply 1g a 11
f xed around the home from
Mrs Helen Simpson and Mr percet
Mob rle Home with expando
w e lcome
Phon e (3 04 1 173
H arr son v I e Phone 742 3621
t surc h e~rge exc lus \IC of
roof to basement You wtll
547
1
lrvrng R 3 BR bath car
1 5 6tc
and Mrs Ralph &amp;dgley
fu el adtustment amounts on a t
l1ke our work and rat.P,!
10 3 tfc
p r ese t t rate sc h edule s ap
Phone 742 5081
~
peted air cond 1 n1ce acre
Mrs Margaret Houdashelt p i ct~ b le to cu stomers w h ose
4 ROOM furnr shed apt
2
1229 ttc
all
e
lectnc
about
4
years
RESPONSIBLE
O
IL
OF
Mmk
Cos
m
e!
cs
bedrooms a du ts on y Phone
spent Chrtstmas wtth Mr and b I ngs are th e subrect n att er
Soun d d 1flerenP We have a
old
992 2676
t1 C ap pll cat on f or per
PERSON
Mrs Mtltc;, Houdashelt 10 ofl 1anc11
compl
et
e
I
ne
that
wil
l
sa
l
sfy
r ate cha ng es req u es ted
1 5 4l c
NEAR LANGSVILLE - 10 CAR PET nstattat on S1 25 per
even you Call us we have
Galllpolls
yard Phone R tchard West
n Case N o 7J 760 EL AIR and
acres
1deat for home or
spec a s all t he r tlfe You 11 b e
64) 2667
2 BEDROOM all electrt c apt
Case No
74 813 E L A IR
n
Mr and Mrs Francis Morrts c ud ng the Cit y of Co lumb us
tra tler approved for septic
surp r sed BR O WN S 992
off Route 7 near Pomeroy
12 24 26tp
5 11J
tank good blacktop road
Available now phone 99 2 7666
spent New Year s Day and was except th e C ty of We l lston and
12 29 tfc
or 992 7017
the mun1 C1pa1 t1 es n F rankl n
close to mme areas JUST
a dinner guest of Mrs Anna County
o th er t han the Cll y of
1 5 3tc
Want ed to own and operatE:
$5
BOO
I NCO ME Ta x Prepare d both
Hilldore at Syracuse
Co unbu s
candy 8. confec t on ve nd mg
TUPPERS
PLAINS
Fed
era
l
and
Stat
e
T&lt;t
xes
w•
1
In ad dll• on
th e propos ed
4 ROOM furn •shed apt
and
r oute
Pomeroy
and

2 SIGNS

~~"'""""

Television Log

~

'

~IL

ABNER

.

...

ALLEY OOP
DO VOU 1\AW SOME~lNG Ito!

MIND,

06CAA?

WSI' AI t H t:N T ~H I HIS!:: ASSN I

tz:en :J ~~rlh£.1 u

~OMEROY LANDMARK '
Jack W Carsey Mgr
Phone 992 2111

•
The btddtng has been
6
West North Ea1t South

POTATOE S
Cobbler
and
Kennebec Thomas Sa y re
Phone 843 2491
1 3 Jtp

&gt;
Pass
Pass

1•
2•

Pass
Pass

I.

1•
?

1(ou Soulll hold

IF CAR Pf;:TS look dUll and
drear remove spo ts as they
appea r w th Blue Lustre
Re nt elec trt c s.h ampooe r S1
Ba ker Furn 1ture Com pany
1 3 Jtc

~E CAN'T 00 IT~
VER~ LONG

.K7643¥A2t9 .. AK732
What do you do no}V?
A-Bid tbree beartl Pall II I

cl01e second choice

TODA Y'S QUESTION
['nstead of rebtddmg two
hearts your partner has rebtd
two dtamonds over your one
spade What do you do now '
I
Auswer Tomorrow

ELECTROLUX Sweeper ut= tUXe
model
Complete w lh all
clea n i ng attachments and
uses paper bags Slightly used
but clean s a l d 1ooks l i ke new
W1J1 sell for S3 7 25 cash or
terms available Ph one 992
1155
12 18tfc

...

'Q!J
- -.
•
- '"'

\

- - -------, ----

----

-·-~---~-·

All THE SNOW R~ES
TO HIS HEAO '

i

I

\

1

�0

l
-The Daily'Sentmel Mtddleport-Pomeroy 0 Monday JM 6 1075

•

.

8- The Datly Sentmel Middlepo rt-Pomeroy 0 Monday Jan 6 1975

Racine Social Events
By Mrs Francis Morris
Mrs Ann Coe recetved word
of the death_of her brother4n
law Ray Rtethmtller of
F1ortda at the home of hts son
in~aw and daugtlter, Rev and
Mrs Leonard Peale al Ne"
York, Sunday mormng
Recent dinner guests m the
home of Rev and Mrs Howard
9uveley and famtll were Mrs
Mae Moore of The Plams and
Mtss Zelia Ntsley and Davtd
Kluzuskt of Athens
Rev and Mr s How ar d
Suvele) and famtl y and Te rry
Spoun spent Chnstmas with
Mrs Myrtle Loumen houser
and Mrs Lowse Shiveley m
Wtlmlngton They also vtsttea
wtth other relatives and frtenrls
tn the Wtlmln ton and
_ Washmgton Co urt House area
Rev a nd Mrs Walter
Bikacsan and Sharon vtstled
relattves tn Tallmadge,
Wadsworth Akron and Kem
over the Chnstmas holidays
Mrs Karen Turley was a
patient tn Pleasant Valley
Hospttal Pt Pleasant and was
returned home New Year s
Day
, Mr Clarence Mtller and
daughter Patrtcla of Monroe
La , spent several days over
Christmas wtth his parents
Mr and Mrs Ed Mtller They
all VISited Mr anq Mrs Bob
Cornwell at
Gallipolis
amstroas Day
Mr and Mrs Jesse Brmker
spent Chnstrnas With Mrs
Brtnker smother, Mrs Esther
Comstock at Kanauga
Mr and Mrs Stanley Stearns
spent a week over Christroas Ill
Orlando Flo viStllng thetr
son Enoch who has enlisted m
the Navy
Christmas guests of Mr and
Mrs Jack Sharpnack were Mr

Reedsville
News, Notes

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

"

OF
QUALITY

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

HElL
RACINE PWMBING
&amp;HEATING

JOHNSON'S

»--News 6 Beverly H•llblllles a Hodgepodge Lodge 20
Trails West 15 Etec Co JJ
00--News J 4 8 10 12 13 15 ABC News 6 Elec Co 20
Adler ian Counseling 33
• »--NBC News J 4 15 ABC News 13 Bew1tched 6 CBS New s
8 Zoom 20
7•00--Truth or Cons 3 Phil Dona~ue a' Bowling for Doll~rs 6
News TO , New Candid Camera 13 Wally s Workshop IS
•
Ohio This Week 20 Ltllas Yoga &amp; You JJ
::' 30-That Good Ole Nashville MuSic J Masquerade Party 4
College Basketball 6 $25 000 Pyram•d B In the Know 10 To
Tellthe Truth 13 Untamed World 15 Wash•ngton Straight
Talk 20 Episode action 33
~ I 00--Mov~e The Specialists J 4 15 Jacques CO!Jsteau 13
Gunsmoke 8 10

NOTICE TO

EAGLE
CLUB MEMBERS

News Notes

nc rea se would b e obta ned by
t e mp o ra r ly subs llt ut ng th e
rate sc-hedul es for stand ard
re s denrtal and Qenera l se rv ce
small sec onda ry e!ec t r c ser
viCe 1n the Cdy of We ll s ton and
n a ll th e rnun c pal 1 es m
F rankl n Coun ty
except th e
C ty of Co l um bus from pr esent
Sc hedu es R s w a 1d G s 1 w
w fh Sc hedules R Sa nd G s 1 m
ttlc C ty of Wells ton &lt;~nd fr om
p r ese nt Schedu l es R and G 1
w1 th Sc hed ul es R F and G 1 F n
th e applrcab l e mun c p a i N es n
F rank n County and the 1 ap
plyn g t ile pr oposed 12 per ce nt
surcharge excl u s vc of fu e l
ad,us tm ent amou nts on those
mcn.•a sl!s T hese cha nges and
proposed surc harge r a •se the
leve rs of the ra t es n t hose
r espe c t \le mun c pa l t es to a
! eve co 1 SI Sl e nt w lh c om
para ble se rv ice n lh etr a r ea s
Based on t he test p en od of the
tw el'o'e (12J mo nth s e nd e d
D ecember 31 1974 temporary
add tiona I annua l reve nu e of
S21S 218 w ou ld be provtded from
e1ec tr1 c ener gy used n t he C ty
of Wel lston S4 539 266 f r om t he
nun lc pet t1e s
n Frankl n
Coun ty ex c lus ve of the Crty of
Co lumbus an d sn 369 275 from
th e r emamder o f the co mpa 1y s
etec l r•c se r v ce •n cl ud ng t he
C tv of Co tum b us b emg p er
ce ntagc
n creast&gt;s of 56 tl
percent ) 1 97 percent and 12
percen t respect vely
0 1 Jan uary 20 \ 975 a t 9 30
am ES T at lh eo ff ce sot Th e
PubI c UtI t es Co mm ss on of
Oh o 111 North H gh Street
Columbus Oh•o 43215 a near ng
w II be held on the proposed
t em porar y mcreas es Furth er
mformalton may be obta1n ed
f r om The Pubnc Utll t es
Com TltSS on ot Oh10 or t~ P
~1)6 13 2t c

be done by appom tments
only Plea se phone 99 2 2272 or
see Mrs Wand a Ebl n Laurel
Cl ff Rd Pomeroy OhiO
1 3 30t c

lost

sur roun d n g ar ea Peasant
bus n ess H gh pro f t Items
Can start part 1 me Age or
ex penence not tmportant
Re qu res car an d SI J95 to
U19S c a ~ h mves!men t For
details wr t e and
n c lude
you r phone numb er

RED IR I SHse lf erw ltlwh l e on
Mr and Mrs LouiS Del uz
c he st n L .=tng sv dt e area
Vlstted Mrs Lucille Southall,
Rewilrd Call 74 2 5909
Staat's Mills, W Va and Mr
1 5 61p
---- - -and Mrs FrWJk Marty and
NOTICE FOR SERVICE
daughter of CottageVIile on
BV PUBLICATION
D epartment BVV
ChriStroas Day
To Rob ert E Clela (ld 1329
3938 Meadowbrook Rd
W
Yale St reet
Orlando
Mrs Charles Hilton was a
M.nneapolls MN S5426
Ftor da 32604 otherw se whos e
member of the Semor Citizens
p la ce of res den ce 1S unknown
and canno t wtlh reasonable
Chotr for the Chrtstrnas can
d I gen ce be ascerta n ed
tala 111 Pomeroy
To Josepl"l H Bntt whose INCR E DIBLE No Fees
No
addres s s unknown and can~~tot
Mr and Mrs Carl Auther
Ware hou s ng
Pa te n t
w1th reasonab l e d 1 gen ce be
Protect on S•x Ye.u Hr story
son, local, Mr and Mrs Jun
asc~rfained
R epa r w ndstlr eld and pl a t e
You
ar
e
not
f1ed
thai
you
ha
ve
Pape and daughters of
gl a ss at less than 2{1 p et of
been named Defendants n a
rep l acement cos t M n•mum
Syracuse were Friday guests
lega l act on en t fled Kenneth 0
nvest m ent of $12 so Ca ll
Mark ns and Vermont Ma r k n s
of Mrs Elva Oatley at
Co llect M r F rankl n (2 14 )
Route 1 Rae ne Oh o Pan
242 658 1 The Glas s Doctor
Syracuse
I Hs vs Rober t E Cleland and
I nc
2225 Be I L ne R oad
Mr and Mrs Vtctor Durst
Joseph H BrIt D ef endants
Carrollt on Texas 75006
Th1 s act10n ha s be en asstgned
1 5 2tp
and sons The Plains were
case No 15 614 n th e Court of
Christroas Day callers at the
Common Pl eas Me gs County
Pom eroy Oh o
home of his parents, Mr and
The Obtec t of t he Complaint 1S Employment Wanted
Mrs R R Durst and Tom
to canc e l the land contra ct
recorded Jun e 29
l 9t.7
n REMO DEL I NG
p l umbmg
Mr and Mrs Danny Haines
Volume 12 1 Pag e 189 Me gs
h eat ng
and a l l typ es of
of Belpre vtstted relahves m
County Mortgag e Records
ge n e ral
r ep a r
Work
WhiCh Sl11d contra c t prov id ed
g ua ran t eed 20 years ex
Uus commumty on Sundav
tor the sa le o f Lot No 7 n th e
pen ence Phone 992 2409
Hfternoon
n cor pornt ed V llage o f Racme
1 J 12tc
n
Sutton
Townsh
p
Me1gs
Mrs Ruby Bryant has
--------- ~ Co unty Oh o
returned home after a recent
The Com pta nt alleges f a lur'e W I L L BABY SIT n my home for
to
pay t he contract pr ce as
work ng mo t her Phone 985
hospttahzatton at Veterans
ag ree d and the ca n cell at on of
41 02
Memonal Hospttal
th e co n tr act and furth er that
12 30 7tc
th e Pia n ti ffs l 1tte n the r eal
Mtchele VanMeter, Pomeroy
estate be qu1eted as agamst the
WILL do babys1tt ng n my
was an ovenught guest of her
Defendants
home 5 d ays per week Infant
You
are
requ
red
to
o1ns
wer
POMt:ROV
LANES
grandmother Mrs Ada Van
to 2 years Ha s references
the Complamt w th n 28 days
Early Sunday M1xed
Ca l l ~9 2 27 89
Meter on Saturday
after th e last publ cat on of th s
Dece mber 1S 1974
1 5 3fC
Won Lo st noftce which w II b e publ shed
The home of Mr Wld Mrs
_._
Tom s Carry Out
95
40 once each w eek fo r s x sue ---------, - Monte Proffttt and family was Pu I ns Excaval tng
The
l a st
84
52 cesslve weeks
Eag l es Club
80
56 pub! cat ton wtll be made on Jan
destroyed by a ftre last week
Help Wanted
Fr•endly Ta vern
54
82 n 1975 and the 28 days for
The property 11 as formerly Sw1sher &amp; L oh se Pharm
answer w II co mmen c e on that
48
88 date
owned by the Dell Talbott
In case of you r fa lure to
Mayer &amp; H:•ll Barbers
46
9()
fanuly
H Qh lnd Game - Jr Phelp s answer or otherwiSE!' re spond a s
FUneral servtces were held 243 Jr Phelps 115 Women requ red bY the Oh 10 Ru1es of
Marlene Wilson 201 Mary Vos s C vtl Pro ce d ure 1udgm ent by
at the Sttversvtlle Commurutv 195
d efa ult will be rendered aga nst
In
you for t he r ei e f demanded n
H19h Sen es ~ Jr Phe l ps 663
Church last week for Mrs
th1S Com pia nt
Dick. Duga n 553
Wom en
Nellie Gluesencamp, one of the Marlene W lson 566 Mary Voss
551
Larry E Spencer
area's oldest rest dents
Te~m H gh Game Tom s
Clerk of Court
Age 8 or Older
Mr and Mrs Artbtr Allen, Carry Out 729
M e1gs County 1
Team H gtl Ser es - Tom s
Pomeroy Oh o
Newark, VlSlted rela!ives Ill the Carry
Out 2153
netghborhood
over
the
{12) 13 30 ( 1) 6 13 20 27 6tc
D ecember 12 I~H
Won Lost
holidays
TCII'!l s Carry Out
6
2
Mrs Joan Greathowe and Sw st1 er &amp; LOh$t Pharm 6
2
111 Court St , Pomeroy •
Tea m H gh Game - Eagles
4
4 Club
daughter and Mr Everett Eag les Club
7.11
Phone 992 21~
Mayer &amp; H ill Barbers
4
4
T eam H1gh Seres - Tom s
Horner vtstted m East Pull ins E xc avat ng
2
6 Carry Ou t 2049
F r•endly Tavern
2
6
Uverpool a recent weekend
December 2f 19H
H1gh lnd
Game Gary
Won lost CARHOP wantect app l y m
Mrs Barbara Talbott and Wa yland 23.4 Larry Dug an 224
Sw1sher&amp; Loh se Ph arm
person a t Crow s Steak
famtly Mrs Freda Mtd- Women Betty wn t l atc h 215
14
2
Hou s ~
Belfy Wh•tlat ch 206
Eagles Club
10
6
dleswart, Mrs Myrtle Lewts
12 2'9 l Otc
Hlq h Sertes - Larry D ugan Torn s Ca rr y Out
6
8
and family , Daruty Black, Paul 571 Jr Phe lr,~s 567 Women Pull in S Excavat n g
6
10
Betty Wh 1lla t ch 577 Marlene
F r tend ly Tavern
6
10 TAKE orders for 0(1 of M n k
Dean Evans and Mr and Mrs Wlson 529
Cosmetics
Lact es sales
Maver &amp; H il l Barbers
4
12
meetmgs g rts mtereSt.ng
Larry Fowler and children
H 1gh lnd
Game
Bob
•
trarnrng aw arcts recogn rt ron
Mrs Ruby Bryant, Debra and Couct'l 21 8 Ch arl es Sm1th 216
were recent callers at the nome
Part full time Sauv age s
Women
Mary Voss
19S
Box " Syracus e On o 45779
of Mr and Mrs Billllryant and Davtd, Melvm Dailey, Tom Marlene W1lson lU 8 e tly
I 5 3tp
Durst, Ntcki Van Meter, Mr Sm 1th 193
family
------H1glt Series J~ff W1tson
EX PER I ENci0 fu el-;;f driver
Those vwtlng the E H and Mrs Jack Cornell and 587 B tll W11tord 558 Women
nee&lt;l'ed Send rep l 1es to Sox
Carpenters were Mr and Mrs. family, Paul Evans, Mr and Betty 6m1th 558 Mary Voss
72 9C c o Th e Da ly Sent met
5!1
Pomeroy Oh10 45769
'
LoutS DeLuz, Mr and Mrs R Mrs Woodrow Downte, Stan
Team H1gh Game and Ser ,es
12 30 6t c
Eagles
ClUb
7
4
t~
an
d
7169
F1etcher
and
S
W
Durst
R Durst, Mrs Elva Dailey.,

Local Bowling

Carrier Wanted

NEW HAVEN

The Daily Sentinel

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

-----r-------

!

I

'"

...

bath
Ul1l t1es pa1d
NO
chrtdren or pets Phone 992
5810 or 814 Eas t Ma n
Pomeroy
1 5 6tp

3BEDR00Mhous e 3 m lesou t
on State Route 143 references
and depos t requ1red No pets
Phone 949 3716
1 6 Jtc

- ---

----------

3 and 4 ROOM furnished and
unfurn shed
apa rtments
Phon e 992 5t134
4 12 lfc
PRIVATE meet ng room for
an y organ zat on phone 992
3975
J 11 tfc

-

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

FURN I SHED apt Adults only
Middleport Phon e 992387 .4
1114tfc

------

- -- - - - - -

UNFY'\,NISHED
house
4
r ooms and bath 1650 L nco ln
He ghts Phone 992 3874
11 14 tfc

Beaut1lul bulldtng site 1'12
acres wooded TP water m
a new area SJ SOO

Finest Hours 20

O L D HOUSE n Syracuse on 2
n tee lots S3 ooo w II tear
house clown f wanted Phone
992 589B
1229 7tp

---

- ---------

BUILDING lot 60 ft frontage
by 165 ff The second lot on lei!
on R1verv ew Dr ve L ncotn
H II Pomeroy Oh10 If In
teres ted call992 3230 after 5 p
m

10 17 tfc

Movie

$90 month
992 257 1

Phone 992 3975 or

1 3 tfc

Bath and /2, excellent
neighborhood, wall towall carpetmg, storm
wmdows, large lot, 3
car garage, reasonable
ufthttes

For Sale
GROCERY bu s ness for sale
Build ng fo r sale or lease
Phone 773 5618from 8 30p m
to 10 p m for appointmen t
3 10 tfc

------- - - - - - - SIEGLER and
MONOGRAM

I

19 57 CHEVY parts
NEW
Lakewood tra ctton bars hi
tacker a1r shocks hooker
headers with 9 collectors tor
sm al l block
Call 992 3496
after 6 p m BEST OFFER
f
1017tfc

Carro

10

News 13

Sunnse Se mes ter 10

Dear Helen
• Your defmttion of a shower for live-togethers - an ''un
bndaled" shawer - UISptred us to print an ''un" before the
bndal" m the UIVltations we sent out for Jeanme and George
They had plaMed a wedd10g, but fmaily dectded Utey d try a oneyear practtce nm first Whtchever, they needed things for thetr
apartroent
I guess a few fanuly fnends dido t get the message When 11
finally came out at the party that thts was an un-marnage, two of
Jeanme s aunts ptcked up thell' unopened presents Wld marched
out m a huff Stnce her mother came to the shower with a lovely
gtft meanmg she accepted the arrangement, don't you thmk
relattves should have kept thetr moral mdignatton to them
selves• - 'IULD OFF BY RUDE GUESTS
Dear TOBRG
You mtght have av01ded trouble had your or Jeanme's
mother enhghtened the unllberated relatives on the real meanmg
of 'Un' -before the shower Smce no one bothered, I'd guess
SOMEBODY anllctpated a scene and secretly enJoyed 11
For shame&gt; - H

+++
6 2 S~ Fa rm

Report 13
30---Frve Mmutes to L1ve By 4 News 6 B1ble Answers 8
Concerns &amp; Comments 10 Rev Cteopphus Robm son 13

6 :jjt--Columbvs Today 4
45-/lfornmg Report 3 Farmttme 10
00--Today J 4 15 AM America 13 AM Amenca 6 CBS
News B 10
I Oil-LasSie 6 Capt Kangaroo 8 Popeye tO Sesame St 33
lG-Your Future tS Now 20

8 25-Capt Kangaroo 10

30-B•g Valley 6
I QO--A M J Paul Dtxon 4 Phil Donahue 15 Rocky &amp; Fnends
8 Morn1ng w1th D M 13 9 25-Chuck Wh•le Reports 10
' 31)-Not For Women Only 3 Dinah 6 Hazel B Tattletales 10
~
Arthur Smtth 12 New Zoo Revue 13
0 00--Celebnty Sweepstakes J 1 ~, Joker s Wild B 10 Mov1e
Come Back L•ttle Sheba 13
• 0 30-Wheel of Fortune J 15 Phil Donahue 4 Gambtt 8 10
• .l1 OD--H1gh Rollers J 15 One L1fe to L ve 6 Now You See It
8 10
11 31)-Hollywood Squares J 4 15 Brady Bunch 6 Love ol L1fe
8 tO sesame St 33
11 55-CBS News 8 Dan !met s World 10 News 13
12 Oil-Jackpot J 15 Password All Stars 6 13 Bob Braun s 50 50
Club 4 News B 10
c 12 31)-Biank Check J 15
Spilt SEcond 6 13 Search for
Tomorrow 8 10

To Be Announced 33

12 45-Eiec Co 33 12 55- NBC News 3 15
J QO--News J All My Children 6 13 What s My Lne B Young &amp;
Restless 10 Not For Women Only 15
1 30---How To Survive a Marnage 3 415

Lets Make

a

Deal

6 13 As the World Turns 8 10
,''(J 00--Days of Our L1ves 3 4 15 $10 000 Pyramid 6 13 Gu1dmg
Light B 10
2 31)-Doctors 3 4 15 Big Showdown 6 13 Edgeol Night B 10
-:1 Oil-Another World 3 4 15 General Hospital 6 13 Pnce iS
,
Right 8 10 Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20
J 31)--()ne L1fe to L•ve 13 Lucy Show 6 Match Game B 10 Your
Future ts Now 20

:f oo-Mr Cartoon 3

I Oream of Jeannre 4

Somerset 15

Gilligan sIs 6 Tattletales B Sesame St 20 33 Movie That
Kmd or Woman 10 M1ke Douglas 13
· 4 31)-Bew•tched 3 Jackpot 4 Mod Squad 6 Lucy Show B
:

Bonanza

15

WIN AT BRIDGE

This is no hand to torqet
NORTH

6

"'K 94
¥ K 10 3
• K Q J 10'6
... J 3

I

+++

Dear Helen
My husband ts a handsome , good, lovmg (very') man 1
adore hun, but I can't take tt
Is tt so terrtble tohope he fmds another woman, not to fail m
love wtth, of course, but to reheve me of pressmg wifely duties'
5 oo-FBI J Merv Gnffm 4 Andy Gnfflth B MISter Rogers
Ne tghborh ood 20 33

SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 22)
Be even mo(e mindful than

Raymond Burr 13

'

usual of your appearance to
day Dress to suit the occas10n
to make a favorable lmpres
slon

Tuoodoy, Jon 7 1175
ARIES (March 21 April 18)
For

more Interesting for the

T KURUS (April 20 Moy 20)
You 11 break your word about

CAPRICORN (Deo 22-Jen

l1stener you re apt to embeiUsh
details a trifle too mu ch
11) If you re trying to stick to a
budget t s best you avoid the
company of an e)(travagant
friend today

momen t mucll to your em
barrassment
2~-Juno

20) II

AQUARIUS (Jon 20 Fob

11)
A goal that you re Interested rn
m achlevmg cant be won
through easy measures such
as those you II try to get by

workmg 1n handlcralts don I
m a ke 1nn ova 1•ons Wi t hout
thmkmg them through Aesu ts
wont equal your artrsll c nten
!tons

21

July

with

22)

PISCES

You tend to bea m te II rt at1ous
now You may form an attac h
ment suddenly that w II end as
abruptly as 11 began

(Feb

20 M111ch

20)

You re more likely to tell others
what they want to hear rather
than what they should hear
Tht s wont advance your cause

LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Don I
buy a novel type 1tem lor the
home Without firs t talk ing to
one who knows tts va u e
through eKperlence
Vl~GO

by THOMAS JOSEPH
DOWN
ACROSS
1 Sherlfrs men
1 'l):alnee for

21) In order to make a story

some tllm g you co mmitted
yourself to on the spur of lt1e

GEMINI (May

6itt:~MtHdf

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Doc

So meone you let t a strong ms
!a nt atlractron for 1sn I all you
fir st thought as you II learn for
)'ourself shortly

CANCER (Juno

Dear Helen
I m ll1 my early 4!ll and have two children But I m m love
wtth a young man of 19 and am thinking of dtvorcmg my
husband
Tod (my young man) acts tike he s m love wtth me, but he
wont admtt 11 He ltkes bemg wtth me Wtil the divorce help' BEWILDERED
Dear Be
Your announcement of a dtvorce will probably scare Tod 10to
the next state' When an older woman's attenlton progresses to
'mten!tons "a youngman'sfancy turns off' -H

+++
Dear Helest
An answer to the woman who favored trapping anunals for
fur sales
Here'saquote from Cleveland Amory's book, Man Kind"
"I have talked to scores of trap)lErs (about the survtval
hours' ol trapped animals) until the leghold trap ts outlawed,
any woman who wears a wild fur -meaning m the U s any fur
not mink or chinchilla - has on her back at least 150 hours of
torture " - FOR FAKE FURS

normally consider are likely to
temp t you today Study
c arsfully bargains offered you

Ired By Unbrldal-ed Shower

TUESDAY JANUARY 7 1975
DO-Sunrise Sem 1nar 4

~

Dear prag
I'm surprised you didn't carry pragmatism one step further
and add, "After all, this ts chl'llper thW1 sending my hu$band to a

prostitute, and, besides, housecleaning services come with the
package "
Wouldn't your money be better spent on a reputable sex
therapist' - H

2 Bedeck
3 Follow the
fashion
11 Fragrance
(4wds)
11 Albanian
capital ( var ) 4 Sea eagle
5 TWlning stem
1Z Implanted
6 Jeanne d'11 lnltlgate
7 Ship's officer
Yesterday's Anawer
14 Hindu Iitle
(2
wds
)
15
Ethereal
29 Waterway
11 "Honest - '
8
Inter
18
Honey
badger
30 Hearten
II Celtic
nahonal
19
Posts
32 Brthsh
Neptune
under
22
Breastwork
Conserva
11 Dinner
standing
23 Solvent
ttve
course
9 More
24 Falsehood
35 - deck
11 Mw's
cauhous
26 'Conunon
36 Central
antithesis
11 Utasa ts
Sense
Amertcan
20 Stag
tts capital
autltm
tree
l1 Before (Lat )
U One of the
Andtews

Sisters

u Bengal -

(Aug 23 Sop!

22)
You re apt to be a bit loose
lipped today You could say
some thing unth 1nkmgly th at
wou d offend another

!$ Yearn
21 VIctor~

JM 71 1171
You wi lt fmd yourself involved
th s year In an interesting
glamorous metter that has the
potential of a profll Just be
sure lo proceed sensibly

LIBRA (Sept 23-0cl 23)
F nanctal nsks you wou ldn I

~l]JWID~;"'-~;:::!!:! .-J c
loy 101 N l ll 1\IINI&gt;I II

" ' I !Lilli

H

Pull What
obO&lt;OIC_,...,

Unscramble thelt foorJumbln.
one letter to eac:h oquare to
form four ordinary words

2(]

Barenbolm on Beethoven

33

10 OD-Pol1ce Story 3 4 15 Marcus Welby MD 6 13 Barnaby
Jones B 10 News 20 Soundstage 33
10 3D-Your Future ts Now 20
11 OD-News 3 4 6 8 10 13 15 ABC News 33
11 JI)-Johnny Carson 3 4,15 W•de World Mystery 13 FBI 6

Mov1e Banacek 8 Movie The B1g Land 10 Janakl 33
12 31)-W•de World Mystery 6
1

oo-Tomorrow

34

llMllitary
II Bind

sa M~calsalt

34 Venom
II Spirit lamp

'

n PerseVllre
II PuiBatlon
ill Word with
bopper
te Heraldic
wreath

8 10 Zoom 20 Your Future ts Now 33
7 oo-Truth or Cons J 4 Bowling for Dollars 6 Phil Donahue a
News 10 Name That Tune 13 To Be Announced 15 Antiques

9 3D-Woman

symbol
rl Dance
Zl LorTBlne s
partner
command
(abbr )

5 30- News 6 Beverly Hlllbllhes 8 Hodgepodge Lodge 20
Tra1ts West 15 Elec Co 33
6 00 - N ~w s 3 4 7 8 10 13 15 ABC News 6 Elec Co 20 lTV
Uti liZation 33
6 31)- NBC News 3 4 15 ABC News 13 Bew itched 6 CBS News

20 Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33
7 30- Hollywood Squares 3 &gt;;, Wild Wild Wor ld of Animals 6
Buck OwensJkNew Price Is R1ght 10 To Tell the Truth 13
People Just Don t Whistle 20 Marco Sport lite 33
B 01)-Adam 12 3 4 15 Happy Days 6 13 Good Times B 10
Amen ca 20 33
B 31)-Mov•e The Dream Makers J 4 15 Movie Lets Switch
6 13 Mash 8 10 Ascent of Man 20 33
9 OO-Hawa11 F1ve 0 a 10

knighthood
5 Swl&amp;s city

10
()

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
II

II

SYMJCT ~

I I. I.

!:,

One letter almply 1tando for al!Other In thiS sample A Ia
lor the three L s, X for the two 0 s etc Smglo letters
apaatrophel, the length and formation of the words are all
blDII Each day the code letters are different

IT WA5 THE TAL-K

u~ed

OF ANCIEN'T ~EI

CRYPTOQUOTE

Now ........,. the clrclod !etten
to fonn the ourprioe 0111wer, u
•UJceoted br the aboYo eartoon.

V "i
~

PO

(Aaewe,. ta.orrow)

Salurday•

News 13

l

PIECE

BISON

JQQ

KM

DAYJCTYMM

CEY

JVCEPA

JTU

SYJQCE

v

DAJTC
M
YlllerdQ'a ~ate: INFLATION WOULDN'T BE SO
IW&gt; IF PRICES WOUU&gt;N'T KEEP RISING - ANON

CANOPY KNIGHT

AMwer1 Suppoaed to contain lftHt- SKIN

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

QJIPAYA

CEY

;::I::::=Pril==
.. ~.~~~~~-~wa~~~~~~~l ( I I I X ]
lumbl"

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

DICK TRACY

EAST

WEST

• 10 7 2

¥6
.98752
oloA 1084

SOUTH IDI

.A

$8500 00- Two bedroom frame
home Bath paneling gas F f&lt;.
furnace
water

basement

$20,000 oo -

and

clfy

New J bedroom

home
ltvrng room 13x19~
beautiful kttchen ceramrc tile

Netther vulner able
West

North

Eut

South

Pass

2t

Pass

2 .,

Pass

4¥

Pass

Pa ss

l¥

GASOLINE ALLEY

almost one acre

~~

Openmg lead - 5 "'

n,ooo 00 - Old one floors room
house wltf1 nat gas and clt'Y

BUILDING LOTS - Several
locations $1500 00 up
LIST IT WITH US FOR BEST
RESULTS

We talk to you

like a person.

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald One thmg a really
great player needs ts the socalled feel of the table He wtll
even go far and away agamst
normal percentages because he
suspects somethmg. abnormal
" Jtm Here IS a hand that you
sbould recall You were capta m
of the North Amencan team
~hat won the worlds cham
p10nsh1p m 1970 and 1971 I was
~ member of the team and thts
little gem was played by my
partner Bobby Wolff
.. Oswald East won the ftrst
:n'rck wtth the ace of clubs and
~ back the deuce of spades
:1\:est rose wtth the ace cashed
l iJ't kmg of clubs and then led
lll!tk a spade f\tght'
.. Jtm Yes' Then Bobby put
on hiS thmktng cap and dectded
that West was actmg like a man
who expected a trump trtck So
Bobby won the spade wtth the
queen and led the Jack of
hearts West covered
Oswald
Then Bobby
lhought some more and dectded
that West also held the n10e So
he came back to hts hand wtlh
the ace of dtamonds led the
etght of trumps Jet It rtde
cashed dummy s ten, ruffed a
i!ood dtamond to get back to hts
hand cashed hts ace of trumps
to ptck up the nme and clatmed
hts contract
!N }

CAPTAIN EASY
EASY DROPS A GEtJTLf, HJ,_,T TO
PR'INCE"56 JA~M II\1 5 &amp;DDV61JAilP IJOT
TO FOLJ,OW THEM ABOUT SO CL06fi.V

It's hard to tel l
what 40u're putt 1nq
on when ~o u dress
under the covers '

vPass

Attached garage and

For Sale
CLOSE OUT on new Z g Zag
sew.ng machmes For sew ng
stretch fabr cs buttonholes
fancy des gns etc
Paint
Slightly blemished Cho ce of
c arry1ng case or sew~ng
stand S49 80 cash or terms
available PhOne 992 7755
1218tfc

M ovie

I m thinking of hirmg a housekeeper I can trust - not
beautiful, but seductble - someone who wouldn't be a threat to
my marrtage
When one partner IS highly sex~a the otber isn't, why not
be practical• - PRAGMATIC

oloQ 962

CALL 992-3877

COLONIA L MAPLE stereo
rad1o am fm 4 speakers 4
speed automat c changer
Ba l ance ! 116 78
Use ovr
budget ter ms Ca I 992 3965
1 6 ttc

8

II
I

¥AJ B74

barn and large lot

1

The

By Helen Bottel

.

• Q63

home modern bath nat gas
f urnace new block Qarage

HOUSE

00- Tomorrow 3 4

I

water on n1ce corner lot

7 ROOM

Pretty Peggy

Janak1 33
2 31)-Wtde World Mystery 6

- K 75

$12 500 00 - Older 4 bedroom

2 BEDROOM tratler at corne r
of
Broadway and
E lm
M ddleport
No p e ts or
ch ldren Call 992 2580 after 6
p m
12 5 tf c

Prtced for Outck Sale ·
1 New Wood Burntng
HEATER-139 95

ssoo down

Scream

... ':t43

bath
3 BEDROOM house

a t Wolf Trap 33 Mov te

33
31)-Movie Target RISk 3 4 IS ABC Theatre 6 Rhoda B 10
0 OD--Medlcal Center B 10 News 20 Washmglon Stra1ght Talk
33
10 30-Behmd the L nes 33
1 OD--News 3 4 6 B 10 13 15 ABC News 33
' " 1 31)-Johnny Carson 3 4 15 W1de World Mystery 13 FBI 6

"'A J 8 5
; iQ9o2

ALL CASH FOR YOUR
HOME LET US SELL IT
992 2259or 992 2568

T R A IL ER space 2m les f ro m
Pomeroy Rt 1.43 Phone 992
5858
10 27 tfc

FUEL OIL
HEATERS

Real Estate for 5ale

Performance

" I 00--ABC Theatre 13 Maude B 10 What Makes a Good Father

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

Stivers ville

-~---

Business
Services
== - - ----.

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

;. « ,
;p ?Ult!t"':CPIUT"''"""('""""

Helen Help
U s. • •

MOND~Y , JANUARY 6 1915

and Mrs P H Baker Mr and
Mrs Gary Sp tr cs Mi ss
'
Auto Sllles
For Sale
Mar.thelle Sharpn,tek dnd Mr
and Mrs Jack Sharpna ck and FOR SALE or tra de on p ckup
or
van
196 7
! On
In
family wljo also VISited Mr and
1crna 1 on~11
truck
wtth
Mrs C W Proffitt at Portland
a um num t ur n ture van 8
ply 1 r es P S
P B
50 000
~-=:::::=:::::::=~--=:::::::::::
=--==x=The) Wei e all or Columbus
m te s P han e 99 2 3509 or se~ a t
..-Mr and Mrs Walte r Cleland
JO B Page S t M dd eport
1 6 61C
were l1mstmas dmner guests
of Mr and Mrs Marton Sloter O tt s tove \15 Cl n ng room
tabl e W1lh 6 chai r s- S65 old
and fam tly Their grand
1913 CHEVROLEl c 10
$2995
REMfDELING &amp; CONST.
secrc t ar..,
\175
smo k tng
8 Flee t s1de Ptckup 350 V 8 a utomatt c tran s power
daughter, Rita accomparued
~ l and copp e r 1 ne d
\8 f 1 ng
sf eer tng radto loa I 1 owner &amp; only 15 500 m1les grey
On State Rt 124 12 tnt from
cab n e S tO I ~ n gasol ne
illem to Parkersburg and 11crc
Complete plumbmg &amp;
Alum1num s1drng, roofmg
f rnrsh deluxe v n yl rnterror
11otor wat e r pump SSO P 8. J
Route 7 by pass towards
supper guests of Mr and Mrs
complete residenftal con
Odds and Ends
115 N
heat1ng serv1ce and
Rutland
Second
M dctlepo rt
Phone
structton Wrring, plumbmg ,
John Cleland
197 1MATADOR
Sll95
genera I sheet meta I
99? 3509
elec
heat1ng
kttchen
V
8
4
door
automa
t
1c
tr
ansm
1ss1on
power
st
eer~
ng
and
l.e11 Talbott or Dansville Dl
1 6 Jtc
works
Free
Ph 992 5682or992 7121
cabtnets etc
power brakes vtnyt 1 nter~or v 1nyt roof red f n1sh good
VISited over Chnstmas "tlh THERMOCO UP LES
27
Yrs
experience
'"
canst
't 75
Estimates
w hil e wat t ftr es ra dto fa c tory a r
All Mecham cal Work
Mr and Mrs George Taylor
trade
I her nostals sa 50 fan con
Phone 949 5961
trots
1m t s w t c h es S IO
Mr and Mrs Cl)de Cross
1972 DODGE
S249l
Open Mon Sat
Emergency
9h-3995
furn&lt;1ce mo t ors \15
all
Phone (304) 773 5503
Dart Custom 4 door local 1 ow ne r ca r 318 V 8 engine
and RO) or Colwnbus spent
tieat nq
coot ng
p l umb ng
BAM 6PM
or
992
5700
automatrc t ran sm ss on an!;~ power steermg atr con
PM IS marked down below
over Chnstmas holidays 1\ tth
cost
P&amp;J
H ome Man
dttronmg v tnyt trrm v ny l t op radro wh te wa ll trres
Mrs Howard Netgler and Mr
cnance 215 N orth Secolld
gol d fm1sh
READY MIX CONCRErr&lt;li
SEPTIC
TANK S
cleaned
M dd eporl
phone 99? J509
and Mrs Earl Cross
1 vered r ght to your protect
Modern Sa n tat10n 992 3954 or
1 6 ) IC
Mobile
Homes
For
Sale
Fast
and
easy
Fre•
99'2 7349
Weekend guests of Mr and
e stima tes Phone 992 328
9
18
tfc
RErR GERATOR
c art
T RAILER f or r ent or sa le J
Mrs George Netgler were Mr
Goegle n R.eady M x Co
r es taur ant g • I daub e co k e
b ed r ooms
unfu r n sned
OPEN
EVES
8
00
PM
M ddleport Oh10
and Mrs Plul Mtll er of Kenton
coo er sta nless stee l back
ut I I res pad lo cate d a t n ew
6 )0 tfc
NEIGLER BUI L DING SUP
POMEROY, OHIO
bar Dayton el ec lrt c sea es
Mob le
Hom e
Park
n
and Mr and Mrs Rob Palmer
-----PLY FOR REMODE L ING ------- P&amp;J Odds and E nd s
215
Bu rl ngham Phone 992 775 1
'
AND KITCHEN CABI NET S SEWING MACHINE Repatrs
or North Ca rolina
Nor t1 Secon d M d dl epor t
12 31 tic
serv ce all makes 992 2284
CALL GUY NEtGHLER1
Phone 992 3509
Mr and Mrs Davtd Perry
The Fabr c ShOP Pomeroy
RAC I NE OHIO PHONE 949
973 COME T
19 000 m l es
1 6 Jt c In Memory
AuthOn zed S nger Sa tes anc
J604
au t omat c tra n sm ss on l1k e
Jeff and Trrnmy spe nt ten
serv1ce We sharpen Sc ssors
12 19 26t c
n ew Ca ll any t m e 667 344 2
da ys over Chrtstma s holidays
For Rent
3 29 ttc
IN
L OVING
m e mory
of
NOTICE
I 5 12tp
- - - - - - - - ----husband lat her and g r and
Co lumbus nnd Sou t hern OhtO
m Wtlmmgton wt th th etr
2 BEDROO M Ira er Phone 99 2
lather Orv lie
Jake
Ga u
EIH tr c Company hereby g ves
t un ng and repa1r
P I ANO
3975 or 997 257 1
parents and fanuh es
DOZER work land clearing bl
w ho pa ss ed a way January 6 Pets For Sale
Charles Sc ott 992 371 6
10 t ce tha t on D ecem b er '1 9 14
1
3
li
e
the ac re hour lY or contract
197
I
12
13
]2tp
1
l
o
r
11at1y
requested
Th
e
Mr and Mrs Alber t Hill
Farm pond s roads
etc
Publ c Ut 1 h es Co 11m ss on of H s sm r ng way and p l easant FOR SALE to good horne
were ChriStmas guests of Mr
fa ce
Large dozer and operator
Oh o
o approve te porar y
C BRADFORD AuCt iOneer
m n•atur e Da chshund Reg --1-tO U SE 4 rooms and ba th n ce
w th over 20 years ex
ya rd and dr veway
Also
Complete ServiCe
With pap ers 3 yrs
w th al
and Mrs Watd Foster and n cr eases n ra t E's charg ed tor A r e c1 p leasur e to reca ll
penence Pullms Excavating
f urn shed apt Ca ll 992 27 80 or
!:' l eclrt c se r v cc because of a n H e had a k ndly wo r d for ench
Phone 949 3821 or 949 3161
sho t s Hou seb rok e good w th
famtly In Colwnbus They were emt!rgen c y wh ch tnr ea re ns An d d 1ed bel ove d by all
992 34J'l
Pomeroy Oh o Phone 992
Rae ne Oh10
c h ldren Phon e 965 4160
So
1
e
day
we
hope
to
mee
t
h1m
2478
n
tury
to
th
e
bu
s
n
ess
and
m
Cr II Bradford
12 12 lf c
accompamed home by illetr
I 5 Jtp
12 19 tft
erests o f t he pub ! c and II e Son e day we know no t wnen
s
1 tfc
grandson
company The compa n y see ks To clasp n s hand n the better O N E 2 year old f ull Dalmat on
CO UNTRY Mob le Hom e Park
tan Cl
SE PT C tanks
e x cavat ng
~ ppr ova l t o co tee t add 1 anal
A famtly dmn er m ob
$15 Phone 992 73 12 even ngs
R I 33 l en m l es north of
WILL tr m or cut trees or
~nnua l
e l ect r c revenue of Ne ver to par t aga n
dump tru c k Phone 742 3742
I 3 Jtc
Pomeroy
L
a
rge
lots
w
th
Servance of Christmas v. as $'17 123 000 n t h e manner
shrubbery
clean
out
Sadly m sse d bv 'o'Our w f e
122026tc
co ncrete pat os s dewatks
basements att cs etc 949
If
t he
en l d r en and grandch dren
enjoyed by the famty of Mrs dcsc r b e d be l ow
r
unners
an
d
off
street
322 1 or 742 4441
pr oposed n crease s approved
1 6 t c Wanted To Buy
park ng Phon e 99 2 7479
F URNIT U RE Upholstermg
Grella Simpson at her home
12 15 26tc
the
t emporary
add t onal
R e asonable
rat es
free
12 31 tf c
r evenue would b e collec ted unt 1
CAS HSSSU F OR JU N K CARS
Frtday evenmg
es t1mate s
p ckup
and
CREMEANS CONCRETE de
a determ na t1 on s mad e of th e
Com p F RYE S TRUCK and J ROOM and ba th furn shed a pt
d e l very promp t serv ce
Mrs Helen Sunpson spent permanen t rate c hange s Noltce
!1vered Monday throuoh
A U TO
PART S
Rutland
Ultl t es pa d
356 N orth
Mowrey
s
Upholstery
Po1nt
Saturday
and
evenings
Phon e 742 6094
Chrtstroas at the home of her r eques ted n the company s ~
Fou
rt
h
St
M
ddlepor
t
W
Va
Phone
675
Ple
a
sant
App ll cat ons m Case No 74 760
Phone 446 l\.42
\
1 2 26tp
4154
12 31 ftc
son, Mr and Mrs Br1an EL A I R and Case No 7 1 813
6 13 fc
12 31 26tp
Simpson m Baltunore and was E L A IR fl ed November 6 197~
4 R OOM turn shed apt Call 992
B F T BED for 3 ~ to n F ord truck
and
Decembe r
2
1974
590 8 b efor e I p m
JOUled by her brother and wtfe, respec t vety to ncrease ts
Phone 992 5162
EXCAVATING dozer loacter
12 Jl 6tc
and backhoe work
septic
ra
t
es
c
harg
ed
fo
r
c
l
ec
tr
c
I
5
Jtp
Real
Estate
For
5ale
Mr ahd Mrs Max Wolfe of
tanks msta lled dump trucks
se rv ce by \50 69 3 000 based on
Sandusky
F URNI S HED
a partment
and lo boys for hire w 11 haul
the tes t per od o f t ne tw el ve ( 121
OLD furn ture ce boxe s br ass
ut I fte s furn 1shed
su table
fill d rt top soil limestone &amp;
Mr and Mrs Roy ffif!le months end ed Decemb er 31
bed s or complete househO l ds
1974
for two wor k mg men or
gravel Call Bob or Roger
Wr
t
e
M
D
M
I
er
Rt
4
spent Saturay 10 Gallipolis
E~FECTIVE I 6 7S
ret r e d co up le L v ng r oom
The appl ca t ons I l ed n Case
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
Pome ro y Oh o Ca 1 992 7760
k tchen shower and bath On
n ght phone 992 3525 or 992
vtst tmg Mr and Mrs Bill No 74 760 EL A I R a nd Ca se No
10
7
7
4
M eeting s wilt be held every
mam h ghway Mason W Va
74 8 13 E L A IR pl nce befor e Th e
5232
McKenzie and chtldren
Pllon e 773 5 147
2 11 ttc
Publ c U t ll t iCS Co mm SS tOn Of
other Monday at B 00 p m
J U NK au tos
co mplete and
10 27 tf c
Mrs Marton Kmghtstep and Oh 10 all of the Co mpany s r a te s
Th e Soc tat Room wtll be open
de l 1v ered to our yard W e p ck
rmces an d c harges for a t! of ts
EXCELSIOR Salt Works East
up aut o bod es and buy all
to all members famtly and
daughter of Reynoldsburg elec
4 R M t urn shed apt close to
tr c serv ce presentl y under
Mam Sf Pomeroy All ktnds
k
nds
ot
scrap
metals
and
guests eve r y Monday n1ght
Powet s Super va u phone
of salt water pellets water
were holiday guests of her th e tur.sd ca t on of th1s Com
~ron
R1der s Salvag e 51 Rt
992 3658
SS 10n
exce pt
s t andard
nugg ets block salt and own
12~
Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh o
mother Mrs Lavmla Sunpson m
r!:!'S dent a t and gener a serv ce
1l 20 tf c
Ohio R 1ver Salt Phone 99.2
Call 99 2 5468
3891
They were jo10ed by other sm il l se condary el ect r c ser SHO O T N G ma t ch Rae ne Gun
POMEROYAbout
2
yr
10 1? tf c
2 BEDROOM I ra l et n Rutland
v ce cov e r ed bY ord1 nan cc
6 s ttc
Club Sunday 1 p m Assorte d
relaUves to spent ChriStmas co
old - BRICK &amp; FRAME
Phon e 742 4465
n tr a c ts n t he mun cpa ,, es
meats and f ac tor y cho k e g un s CAS H pad l or all makes and
about 1 acre 4 BR 2 baths
t 5 Jtc
Day wtth Mrs Ruth Sunpson o f 6a nbr dge Gall po t s
WA L L paper hangmg and all
only
mode l s o f mob l e homes
Ma n c h es t er
M ddleport
Inter or f n shmg Phone 742
lovely kitchen &amp; dm1ng
12
22tfc
Phone ar ea co de 614 423 953 1
and son
2 BE DROOM mob l e hom e
P•k e ton
Se aman
Wa\lerly
;oat
4 13 lfc
uttl
tty
R
rec
space
car
u t I lie s furn shed close n
Mr and Mrs Bnan Su11pson Wes.t U n on and Win che ster AUCT ION
12 29 12tp
Thursday
and
peted storage bldg JUST
Ca ll 992 7649 aft er 4 p m
oc&lt;1tcd ou ts d e of f r anklin
and children of Baltimore County
Sa tu rday n•ght 7 p m a t
1 5 6tc
$26 000
HOME
Impro vement
and
Ma son A uc t on Horton St n
The proposed 1 crease would
spent the weekend here wtth
Re pa r Serv1ce Anyth tnO
Bustoess
Opportunrlies
OLD
RT
JJ - Close 1n 12x6S
Ma
so
n
W
Va
Co
n
s
gnm
ents
TR A I LER spa ce 2 mr es from
be ob ta n ed by apply 1g a 11
f xed around the home from
Mrs Helen Simpson and Mr percet
Mob rle Home with expando
w e lcome
Phon e (3 04 1 173
H arr son v I e Phone 742 3621
t surc h e~rge exc lus \IC of
roof to basement You wtll
547
1
lrvrng R 3 BR bath car
1 5 6tc
and Mrs Ralph &amp;dgley
fu el adtustment amounts on a t
l1ke our work and rat.P,!
10 3 tfc
p r ese t t rate sc h edule s ap
Phone 742 5081
~
peted air cond 1 n1ce acre
Mrs Margaret Houdashelt p i ct~ b le to cu stomers w h ose
4 ROOM furnr shed apt
2
1229 ttc
all
e
lectnc
about
4
years
RESPONSIBLE
O
IL
OF
Mmk
Cos
m
e!
cs
bedrooms a du ts on y Phone
spent Chrtstmas wtth Mr and b I ngs are th e subrect n att er
Soun d d 1flerenP We have a
old
992 2676
t1 C ap pll cat on f or per
PERSON
Mrs Mtltc;, Houdashelt 10 ofl 1anc11
compl
et
e
I
ne
that
wil
l
sa
l
sfy
r ate cha ng es req u es ted
1 5 4l c
NEAR LANGSVILLE - 10 CAR PET nstattat on S1 25 per
even you Call us we have
Galllpolls
yard Phone R tchard West
n Case N o 7J 760 EL AIR and
acres
1deat for home or
spec a s all t he r tlfe You 11 b e
64) 2667
2 BEDROOM all electrt c apt
Case No
74 813 E L A IR
n
Mr and Mrs Francis Morrts c ud ng the Cit y of Co lumb us
tra tler approved for septic
surp r sed BR O WN S 992
off Route 7 near Pomeroy
12 24 26tp
5 11J
tank good blacktop road
Available now phone 99 2 7666
spent New Year s Day and was except th e C ty of We l lston and
12 29 tfc
or 992 7017
the mun1 C1pa1 t1 es n F rankl n
close to mme areas JUST
a dinner guest of Mrs Anna County
o th er t han the Cll y of
1 5 3tc
Want ed to own and operatE:
$5
BOO
I NCO ME Ta x Prepare d both
Hilldore at Syracuse
Co unbu s
candy 8. confec t on ve nd mg
TUPPERS
PLAINS
Fed
era
l
and
Stat
e
T&lt;t
xes
w•
1
In ad dll• on
th e propos ed
4 ROOM furn •shed apt
and
r oute
Pomeroy
and

2 SIGNS

~~"'""""

Television Log

~

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ABNER

.

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ALLEY OOP
DO VOU 1\AW SOME~lNG Ito!

MIND,

06CAA?

WSI' AI t H t:N T ~H I HIS!:: ASSN I

tz:en :J ~~rlh£.1 u

~OMEROY LANDMARK '
Jack W Carsey Mgr
Phone 992 2111

•
The btddtng has been
6
West North Ea1t South

POTATOE S
Cobbler
and
Kennebec Thomas Sa y re
Phone 843 2491
1 3 Jtp

&gt;
Pass
Pass

1•
2•

Pass
Pass

I.

1•
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1(ou Soulll hold

IF CAR Pf;:TS look dUll and
drear remove spo ts as they
appea r w th Blue Lustre
Re nt elec trt c s.h ampooe r S1
Ba ker Furn 1ture Com pany
1 3 Jtc

~E CAN'T 00 IT~
VER~ LONG

.K7643¥A2t9 .. AK732
What do you do no}V?
A-Bid tbree beartl Pall II I

cl01e second choice

TODA Y'S QUESTION
['nstead of rebtddmg two
hearts your partner has rebtd
two dtamonds over your one
spade What do you do now '
I
Auswer Tomorrow

ELECTROLUX Sweeper ut= tUXe
model
Complete w lh all
clea n i ng attachments and
uses paper bags Slightly used
but clean s a l d 1ooks l i ke new
W1J1 sell for S3 7 25 cash or
terms available Ph one 992
1155
12 18tfc

...

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•
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----

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All THE SNOW R~ES
TO HIS HEAO '

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"
10 _ The Dally Sentmei;Middleport-f&gt;orlleroy, 0 ., Monday, J~ . 6, W7~

'
'

Oakh•t Pric·c·,

Teachers
tContinued from page t )

7 (1

dies in (uliuuhus

Thieves, vandals have big
weekend .
-'

disappointed that the teachers . Oakley Price, 76, Columbus,
PT. PLEASANT - Two
voted to strike rather than to 'rormerly of Middlepor t, died in Mason Coun ty schools , one the band ro om of Point
acc&lt;;Pl the board's salary Columbus Sunday afternoon . here, the other at Mason were Pleasa nt High School, a stereo
proposal or to continue to teach Mr . Price Was born in hit by thieves ove r th e set valued at $850 is am ong
missing items. The loss was
while bargaining continues," Fe brua ry, 1898 in Meigs weekend .
discovered Sunday by Gerald
Ellis said: "We will continue to County, the son of the laic Nile
In a b re~ kin g and entering of
work in good faith toward a and Myrtle Price. He was also
reasonable solution to this very preceded in death by a brother
difficult problem."
and a sis(., r,
CEA Pte:;ident Ted Thomas
Surviving are a sister, Mrs.
disagr~ that the extra money
George (E mma) N ei g h~orgall,
Mrs .
Carol
Sprouse, after Chrishnas visitors of her
is not available.
and a brother, Lawrence, both da ugher, Kimbe rly of St . grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
"Our negotiation is with a of Columbus; a brother, teslie, Louis, Mo., Mr . and Mrs. Guy Harl ey . T. J ohn so n. Also
school board that is playing a of Pomeroy , and se veral Sargent , son Jon athan, and Mr. visHing were Mr. and Mrs.
sheU game with the public," he cousins, nieces a nd nephews. · and Mrs. Elmer Bailey, spent Roger Brown . ~
said . "Careful analysis of the
Funeral services will be held Chri slmas Day with Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson
school board budget shows that at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Mrs. Robert Reed, Hemlock were Sund ay aftern oon visitors
it consislenUy under-estimates Rawlings-Coats Funeral Rome Grove.
of Mrs. Ber tha Russell.
its income and over-estimates with Mr. George Glaze ofMr. and Mrs. Paul McElroy
Mr. Uncoln Russell was
Its expenditures .
ficiating. Burial will be in spent Thursday with Mr. and Saturday evening visitor of Mr.
"We know the board can fund Gravel Hill Ce me tery at Mr s . Carl McE lr oy of and Mrs. Harley Johnson.
the aSsociation's 12 per cent Cheshire ..friends may call at Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson
salary increase without any the ftmerai home any time.
Chri shna s Eve guests of were New Year 's Day guests of
major risk to the financial
Mrs. Helen Johnson were Mr . Mrs. John Murphy and family,
picture of the district. Our
and Mrs. Evere tt Ray Johnson , also Mr. and Mrs. John Downs .
proposal, which just meets the ~rvicc s held for
Audra, Jeff, Eri c, Dublin, 0 .,
Mr . and Mrs. Charley Smith
·national . cost of living, is
Mr. and Mrs. James Johnson , visited Mr: and Mrs. Harley
fundable without the need for
Jamie Sue, Todd and Teresa. Smith of Kanauga.
P. Folden
increased state ·fundinR."
Mr . and Mrs. Larry Johnson,
Mr . and Mrs. Larry Johnson,
Parents' Decision
RUTLAND
Funeral Gina, Tahnee and Brady, Mrs . Gina , Ta hn ee, Brady and
The CEA Urged parents to services for Jam es Pearl Beverly Roush, Rodn ey , Geneva Shumate spent Friday
keep children at home during Folden, 7S, Rt. I, Rutland, who Cheryl and Joey of Pomeroy and Sa turday with Mr. and
lhe strike, while Ellis said it di ed Saturda¥ night at and Mr. and Mrs . Kenneth Mrs. Ivan Shun1ale and sons of
· was up to the parents tAl make .• '{e(.,rans MemQrial Hospilcil Johnson, Anl1&lt;!tte and Duane. Mansfield .
QUEEN FRIDLEY
·
Mrs. Helen Johnson spent
' .
were held today at 2 p.m . at the
Mr. and Mrs. Maur,y Miller
PT. PLEASANT - Honor came to Mason County Saturday the ae~ision ,
Chrislmas
Eve
with
Mr.
and
Ellis
said
schools
would
stay
Walker
Funeral
Hom
e
in
and
daugh(.,rs spent Christma s
upon the crowning of Miss Erma Lynne Fridley as the new "Miss
open and €hildren should try to Rutland.
Mrs.
Larry
Jolmson,
Gina,
with
her sister, Mr. and Mrs.
West Virginia State Fair Queeil'' at a pageant in Clarksburg at
Tahnee
and
Brady.
attend
classes,
but
did
not
The
Rev.
Herb
Grate
ofBill Smith and family of
the Sheraton Inn , There·were 26 contestants.
Mrs.
Helen
Johnson
was
eliminate
the
chance
classes
ficiated
.
Burial
was
in
Lone,
Parkersburg.
A sophomore at Marshall University, she is the 18-year..,ld
dinner
guest
of
Mr.
Chrishnas
woul~
offi~iaUy
close.
Oak
Cemetery,
Pl.
Pleasant.
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Nimrod Fridley of Charleston Road,
" If we can't maintain an
Mr. Folden was born Aug. 23, and Mrs . James John son ,
and Mason County's 1974 fair queen.
Erma and her mother, who accompanied her to the event, were educational program and stu- 1899, the son of the late David Jamie Sue , Todd and Teresa.
Mr . and Mrs. Larry Barr and
not the only ones overwhelmed with emotion when the winner dent safety, we will officially and Nancy Jones Folden. He
family
of Rutland were Friday
close,"
Elllls
said.
"If
we
are
was
also
preceded
in
death
by
a
was proclaimed. Floyd Rayburn, Mason County fair president,
forced
to
close,
the
days
will
daughter,
son
,
and
brother.
and Walden Uoush , retiring vice president, were there for the
have to be made up later in the
on Sept. 16, 1939 he married
crowning ceremony.
school year."
Ernestine Elias who survives
Thomas said parents should as do two grandchildren , 15 VARIETIES
MOSCOW (UP! I - Sergei
keep children home since " the Barbara and Raymond Tracy,
Arkhipov
offers all of the bestbuildings will not be staffed by of Columbus. Mr . Folden was a
known
varieties
of American
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mildred Roush, New Haven ; a competent, certified staff." tool grinder with Columbus
apples
from
a
single
tree in his
"We urge that parents not Bolt and Forging Co.
Saturday Admissions Vincent Varney, Ewlngton ;
garden near Leningrad, acEdith
Manuel, Racine; Diana Jarvin, Vinton; Dorothy try to staff classrooms because
of
the
great
liability
ris~."
cording
to the Tass news
M a ~ ga r e t All en, Pomeroy; Anthony, Middleport; Jessie
Thomas
said.
"By
law,
only
agenvy.
He
grafted 15 cuttings
Timothy .. Smith, Pomeroy ; Beaver, Cheshire; Dottie Will,
certifi~
teachers
may
work
In
onto one tree and all are
Gladys T~ylor, Pomeroy; Ava Pomeroy; William Buchanan,
claSSl'ooms."
bearing fruit , Tass said SunGilkey, Harrisonville; James Hockingport.
Thomas
admitted
.
there
day
.
Eakins, Racine.
Sunday Discharges - Usa
could
be
picket
line
incidents,
Saturday Discharges - Herald, Harold Hudnall.
but promised to try to hold
·Nellie Thomas, Charles
them to a minimum .
FIFTH PUBLISHER
Holzer Medical Center
Stewart, Paul Sigman, Gladys
.
"Teachers
have
made
thfllr
(Births)
DALLAS
(UP!) - Tom
Dillon , Shirley Smith, Frances
COLUMBUS - About 100,000 Johnson, a 33-year..,ld former
FRIDAY - Mr . and Mrs. commitments," Thomas said.
Clark, George Carter, Henry
persons
- who are not now aide to President Lyndon B.
"Now
it
is
up
to
the
school
Hunt, William Buchanan , Ricky Boyd , son, Jackson, Mr.
covered
by the Ohio Unem- Johnson, becomes the . fifth
board to negotiate."
Dc·borah Taylor, Shannon and Mrs. Charles Carson, son,
.
ployment
Compensation Laws publisher in the history of the
Pomeroy. Mr. and Mrs. James
Cremeans .
will become eligible to receirt Dallas Times Herald today.
Campbell, son, Letart.
Sunday Admissions
benefits under new Federal
Johnson, elevated from his
Allen Dill, Sr ., Pomeroy ; Clara !SATURDAY - Mr. and Mrs.
legislation
, Ohio Bureau of position as executive editor,
Brown,
son,
Gallipolis.
Kermit
Phillips, Rutland; Walter
Employment Services (OBES) will be responsible for ali
SUNDA'.' - Mr. and Mrs. ·
Shasteen, Pomeroy: F\oyd
•
'
Administrator William E. phases of the newspaper owned
Gould , Shade; George Deem, John Martin, son, Pomeroy.
Garnes said today.
by the Times-Mirror Co. of Los
Racine; Luz Jacobs, Rutland ; Mr . and Mrs. Ri chard Sanders,
At the same time President Angeles .
son, Gallipolis. Mr. and Mrs.
Ford was signing the special
Larry Sprague , daughter ,
His promotion wa s anUnemployment
Assistance
Wellston. Mr. and Mrs. Leslie
nounced Saturday.
Acts in Vall, Colo., New Year's
Stapleton, daughter, Crown
City. Mr. and Mrs. Danny
Ohio Selective Service Eve, Governor John J. Gilligan
Taylor, son, Pt. Pleasant. Mr. Director Paul A. Corey~­ was signing an agreement with
and Mrs. David Tulloh, son, nolinced today the State Hi . - the U. S. Department of Labor
Mason . Mr. and Mrs. Daniel way Patrol is cooperating 1th (DOL) which would permit
Williams, daughter, Gallipolis. Selective Service in displaying Ohio to participate in the
Mr . and Mrs. Kenneth •'mail-in'' registration posters programs.
The new emergency U. I.
Williams, daughter, Coalton . in each of Ohio's Driver:s
legislation
will permit the
· Examination Stations.
BUY PERMITS NOW
of
unemployment
payment
Young men can now register
Motorists wishing to purfor selective service by compensation to individuals
chase parking meter permits
who have been working in nonin Middleport should do so at completing a mail-in card. The covered employment, but who
•
location of the Ohio Drivers
once at Middleport Village
otherwise
meet
ali
the
criteria
Examination Station in Meigs
Hall. The permits for fr ee
County is village hall in Mid- of the regular state JJ. C. law.
parking at meters, once the
The new legislation, in addleport.
charge for the permit has been
dition,
provldJS for the early
Volunteer registrars in
paid, are availabl e con a
payment of extended benefits
monthly, or yearly basis at the Meigs County are Helen to those who have recently
office'of Mayor Fred Hoffman . Heaton, secretary; Eastern exhausted their regular U. C.
Permi Is being used for 1974 High Sch\)01, ReedsvUle, Ro~te benefits. Benefits under both
I ; Marilyn Powell, secretary,
expired on Dec. 31, 1974.
laws wUI be paid from general
Southern High School, Racine;
funds.
'
Harold E. Sauer, Guidance
CLUB TO MEET
Garnes pointed out that a
''A helping hand is always
TUPPERS PI..AINS - The Counselor, Meigs High School, modifies tlon of the Ohio law
worth more than two that
Tuppers Plains Community Pomeroy, and Mrs . Hazel will be required before Ohio
pUsh. "
Club will meet at 7:30 p. m. McKelvey, office manager , can begin paying extended
Wednesday ai the community Gallia-Meigs Corp. for Com- be11&lt;!flts at the earlier date. It is
Now tha t th e Holidays are
munity Action, Meigs County understood · "'that
over, you mlly want to get
building.
such
at that " spec ia l painting
Courthouse, Pomeroy.
legislation will be among the
chore". If you need hel p on
Regislration at age 18 is stili very.first pieces of legislation
co lor -co-ord lna l ln g
or
required under the Selective to be submitted to the Ohio
sel ec tion get a helping
Service
Act.
hand from the " FRIEN MON. THRU THURS.
General Assembly when it
DL Y ONES ". We tea ture
JAN. 6-9
convenes on January 6, 197S.
Pr a·ct ltal ly WORK-FREE .
HEARING SET
NOT OPEN
Individuals potentially
PAINT pl us every ac COLUMBUS - The Public
cessory you need tor the
eligible
for benefits based on
Utilities Commission of Ohio
job .
non-covered
employment or a
was scheduled to open hearings
FRI.-SAT.·SUN .
today on requests from three combination of non-covered
JAN. 10-11 -12
It'• 1till not too late for New Year'•
MAME
utilities to cut back natural gas and covered employment, can
I ITechnlcotor)
re1olutioru•.• and one re•olution
serv'tce. The ·requests were begin riling applications in any
Starring Lucille Bal l
filed by .West Ohio Gas Co., of the bureau offices beglming
you migha coruitler now, il to
East Ohio Gas Co. and River January 6, 1975.
Show Starts 7:oop:m.
Gas Co.
malce •ure tlae laol.iday• don't

Wolfpen News, Notes

~:

James

j

Sell!Jted state queen

Stewart, band direc tor, when
he went to his office about
noon.
Other mi ssin g property
includes two Fisher speakers,
one Fisher four tube channel
AM and F M receiver, one
United Audi o dual, a 122S turnta ble and a little less than SS in
change.
Mason Chief of Po lice
Richa rd
Ohlin ger
said
Wa hama JuQior Hi gh was
ent ered but only a sma ll
amount of change is miss ing.
There was no sign of fon·ible
entry in to the school, bu t glass
was broken in the door ap·
parently to gain access into the

f1UNTINGTON , W. Va.
(UPI) - Don Arthur, twotime West Virginia Triple-A
football c hampion ship
coach, was named today an
assistant coach at Marshall
University.
Also joining the Marshall
staff of new head coach
Frank Ellwood was Bob
Brown, coach for six years at
Sylvania High School in
Ohio.
Arthur coached at East
Bank High. His teams took
the state title In 1971 and
1973 .

POmeroy cou~cil hears' complaints, cOmplaints

·-

office. Discovery was made by
Rona ld Roush Jr., janitor.
Chief Ohlinger said an attempted brea king and entering
occurred at the Orchid Inn
around 1: 30 a.m., discovered
by J ohn and Ruth Bush of
Har tfo rd , wh o closed the place,
then re turned shortly later.
Mason police also are investigating vandalism at two
Mason es tablishments , Forrest
H. Johnson, an employe of the '
Ci ty Distributi ng Co. said a
window had been broken, and
in the nearby Fabric Shop., one
large plate glass window was
broken when hit by a stone or
similar object resultin g in high
proper ty damage.

•
BY KATIE CROW
Pomeroy Council Monday night approved its annual bvdget
for 197S in the amount of $1,033,916 and reelected Ralph Werry
president.
·
The budget for 1974 ll'as $1,131,042.50, making this year's
budget down $97,126.50.
'
In its first meeting of 1975 council listened to complaints and
rev-iewed blueprints for a proposed new city building submitted
by Earl C. Hayes, Jr ., of Hayes , Donaldson, Wittenmyer and
Partners, Portsmouth .
The blueprints called for a brick exterior building of 2,200
square feet. The site suggested Monday night was on Butternut
Ave., across from the new Pomeroy fire station . It is necessary
for council to approve a sketch of the proposed building and
estima(., to send to the Economic Development Administration .
No action was taken.
Mayor Dale Smith appointed the following committ• es for
the new year :
Finance, Lou Osborne, chairman, Ralph Werry and Harry

Weather

TO ORGA NIZE
HAC INE - The" Southern
Local Board of Education will
hold its organizational meeting
Wednesday, Jan. 8, at 7:30 p.
m. at the hi gh school.
HSTOMEET
An importan t meeting of the
Meigs Coun ty Humane Society
will be held at 7:30 p. m.
Thursday at Middleport
Villa ge Hall . The annual report
will be given. All members are
urged to attend, and the public
is invited.

VOL XXVI

is expected

every department on all three floors

s1gnup now

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Time to
plan for

. PALESTINIAN GUERRILLA LEADER Vasser Arabia says
Arab oil countries will blow up their wells ra !her than let the
.Continued on page 8

M~nning Webster, Meigs
County Juvenile Judge, was
named new chairman of the
Megs County Board of
Retardation when the board
met (or its organzational
meeting Monday . night at the
courthouse.
Judge Webster succeeded Ed
Kennedy who had served as
chairman of ._the board and
recently turned down reappointment to the body . The
board .elected Rick Crow vice
chaimian and reelected Rev:
Bill
Perrin
recording
secretary. ·
The need for operating funds
·to continue ·school for the
county's retarded persons was
discussed and il was agreed to

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.

•

BA.KER'S ANNUAL
·- - --·-JANUARY.HOME FURNISHING

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SALE OF f:AMOUS
NAME BRANDS
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FURNI.TUR~

MIDDLEPORr,, OHIO

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~perue1 when they come again,
u Klf!llru buildingot~erall
financial •ecur;.y for your family.
Talk with u1 t~ay about a •aving•

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"'•

Jarmers ·Bank &amp; Savings leo.
'

POMEROY, OHIO
MEMBER FDIC
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PHONE 992-2156
- - -- - - -

TEN CENTS

A

trouble meetzng state S
new saJ+ety requirements
1

Federal money may be lend a Tourism Promotion
available later this year to meeting at Old Washington on
build a publicly owned and Jan . 17, and Bill Grueser
operated nursing home in reported
that
Nolan
Meigs County according to Amusement Co ., has been
Fred Crow, Pomeroy attorney. engaged for this year's
Crow told t he Pomeroy Regatta on June 20, 21 and 22.
Chamber of Commerce
Mrs. Thomas was given
Monday at its noon luncheon at permission to purchase
the Meigs Inn that at least one necessary hardare to place a
nursing home in Meigs Coun ty mail slot on the door of the
is being forced to close due to chamber office.
strict new laws requiring
The following breakdown of
costly modernization (in- the financial statement for the
cluding sprinkler systems).
1974 Chrishnas promotion was
Crow said he will investigate put in the record:
the possibility of federal
Income
financing for a non-profit,
24 sponsors at $50 each, total
publicly owned· and opera ted $1,200; 7 contributors, $120;
nursing home in Meigs County. ticket sales, $20S, total income
In other business Carolyn $1,S25.
Thomas, secretary, presented
Expenses
a financial statement to
Color TV, $800; Santa, $95;
members which showed that candy, $48.15; printing posters,
the Christmas promotion $21.84; tickets, $93 .60; gift
netted $103.93. The money is certificates, $12.48; adearmarked for new Chrislmas vertising, $400; installation
lighting, Mrs. Thomas said.
lights, $150.
President Ted Reed said Total expenses , $1 ,421.07 ;
there is nothing new on the total profit, $103.93; balance
proposal to receive bus service earried forward, $S27.S7;
from Pomeroy to Athens, or Balaftce, $631.50.
·
when the Pomeroy-Mason Attending were Reed , Fred
bridge will be closed for Morrow , Grueser, Kerr ,
repairs . .hick Kerr disclosed he Ferman Moore, Wendall
has made a contact with Doc Hoover, Richard Chambers,
McCoy in regard to.barge line Ralph Graves, Bob Jacobs,
service when the bridge does Virgil Tealord, Crow, Jack
close. .
Carsey, Melissia Croise,
Reed suggested that Mrs. Beulah Jones and Katie Crow.
Thomas and her husband at-

Space junk on
way lO landing

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday. through
Saturday, chance of rain
Friday cbanging to snow
Saturday. Highs Thursday in
the 40s and lows in the 30s
lowering by Saturday to
highs In the 30s and lows In

HEAVY EQUIPMENT OF THE ENGLE CONSTRUCTION CO. of McArthur is scaling hillsides in the
beginniug stages of the relocation of County Route 75, known
as the Hiland Church Road, which runs from near the Meigs
GQunty Infirmary on Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, to the
Route 7 by-jlass. At a cost of $S23,984, the new road is being
built through -state Issue I funds. The Hiland Road project

was one of five suggested in•tbe way of acceas roads In the
county which were to have materialized from the lssue I
funds, The project won top priority. Second on the list in
priority Is Page St. in Middleport leading to the Middleport
Marina. That project has lso been in planning stages for
several years.

lnspec~ions show~d Bridge wa.s safe
CHARLESTON, w. Va .
iPI) - A state highway
gineer has testified that all
ie Inspections of the Silver
idge prior to its collapse in
1967 showed that the span was
up to its safety standards.
Joseph S. Jones, chief engi-

jury and property·damage.
Forty..six persons were killed
when the bridge collapsed into
the Ohio River at Point
Pleasant on Dec. 15, 1967.
Jones told the court there
were at least IS state' inspeclions of the stLSpension bridge

up t_o the strength designed by
the American Bridge Co,
Specifications called for each
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
eye-bar in the linking suspen(UP!) :_ Scientists expect an
sion chain to have '8 yield
1!3,500-pound chunk of "space
strength of 7S,OOO pounds per
junk" to plunge toward Earth
square inch, he said, and
about Friday. But how much
ultimate strength of 105,000
pounds per square inch.
Jones also noted that the
·
where it will hit _ no one
the wi.tness stand as the West collapse 16 years later. SCat- bridge was designed to carry
meet with the Meigs County knows, space officials said after the launch but the orbit Virginia Court of Claims tered deparhnent records indi- three lanes of traffic, but only
Commissioners to discuss the Monday.
has been "decaying" ever resumed the landmark Silver cate t h e r e were more inpossibilities of the comThe junk is· the S2 stage of since under pull of the earth's Bridge trial.
spections, Jones said, but full
missioners appropriation of the Saturn rocket . which gravity. NASA officials said
Jones is the state's chief reports on those evaluations
more general fund money for launched Skylab· into orbit in there is a 70 per cent chance witness in its defenS&amp; against have not been found .
•
that purpose. A tax \evy for May of 1973 . The S2 went into that the fragments will fall into claims totaling $6.S million for
Each inspection,. he said,
The Meig ~ County Comoperating tlie school wa turned orbit 100 miles iibove Earth an ocean.
wrongful death , personal in- showed the bridge was living
missioners accepood the low
~ ~~~s d~~is i~~! Y ~~ve~~!~ ;.~==~::::::~~::::::::~:::~m~:&lt;=:::=:=~: -,:;~~==~~»:=:m=~;:=:&lt;::::::&lt;::=:&lt;:::::::::;:;;,;:;:;:;::::;;::::;:::::&lt;~;;::::::;::;::::::;::::::::::::;;;,:;~,:;;:&lt;::::&gt;.:::::::::::::::::«&lt;~..::::::::;;~:m..:.&lt;:&gt;.:::-.&lt;=W~;!;;::::;,;I*- bid of Keith Goble Ford on a
crui ser for the . sheriff' s
department at their meeting
this morning.
The Goble bid was in the
College site in Syracuse as the &gt;:
::;:
ledf
;o~
~ amount of $3,79S. Other bids
locafion have been lab
or
SAIGON (UPI)- American Vietnamese coast by 8 a.ni. l A Pentagon spokesman in there was no plan for the !ask submitted were by Smith
the.
present
because
of'the
lack
di
e force to enter Vietnamese Nelson Motors, $4,500, and
of ope' rating ·fimds once the
p1oma tic sources sa id a US
. . Wednes d ay ( 7 p .m. EST Wash'mgt on, asked a bout rschool was built. A planned Nary task force headed by the today) ,
ports of the ship movements oorritorial waters or territorial Pomeroy Motor Company,
meeting with trustees of the nuclear -powered
aircraft
A second . U.S. Navy task from Subic Bay, sa,id, "There's waters of any of the nations in $4,195.
Carleton College has not been carrier Enterprise sailed from force led by the carrier Coral just nothing to that. " He said the area.
In other buiness, the board
held because of the lack of op- the Philippines in tbe direction Sea also was reported the Enterprise, the world's
Aircraft carriers , which appoved a n animal claim
of South Vietnam today holD's operating in tbe South China largest warship, had been build up flank'speed of up to 35 submitted by Verlle Midkiff for
erating funds.
8fter Comniunlst troops inflict- Sea but it was not knoWn how si:heduled to .leave Sublc Bay knots.in order to provide a wind the loss of nine sheep and four
ed a major military defeat on cljllldt was to Vietnam waters. today but was not going to into which ro launch their
'
Saigon government troops.
'lbe Viet Gong's Giai Phong Vietnam waters. A U.S. Em- planes, normally operate out of
·The government ' setback Pr.ess Agency said today in a hassy source said a report the .sight of any coastline. They
.came when Conununist.s troops broadcast monitored in Saigon fleet would enter Vietnam speed in wide circles on the
MEET WEDNESDAY
overran the provincial capital tl)at the Coral Sea was con- waters was· a "fabrication." · high seas while underway, and
Vegetable producers of
One American diplomatic the 12-rnile limit claimed by
this area are Invited to tbe
Bradford and Mrs. Lucille of Pbuoc Binh, 75 miles nor- ducting operations off the
" mull~counly"
vegetable
Leifheit will leave tomorrow lllweirt of Saigon, and thus South Vietnam~e ooast but it !!Ource said the Enterprise task bOth Vietnames and cambodia
gained
control.
over
all
of
did
not
say
where
and
did
not
force
was
headed
for
tbe
Gulf
would
not
'provide
enough
al
the
.
.Meigs
Inn in
meeting
for Columpus where they will
Phuoc Long Province-the . say any U.S. planes were flying of Thailand, a huge bay-like operating space for the huge
Pomeroy Wednesday, Jan. 8.
attend sessions of the annual
only South Vietnam province in over Vietnam.
indentation on the Indochinese ships sucp as the Enterprise. The meeting will start at 10 1
fail: board convention.
Legislation passed by Con- coast between South Vietnam
President Nguyen Van Thieu
a.m. and conclude at 3 p.m.,
·At that time, grandstand Communist hands.
At tbe same time, Com- gress in the fall of 1973 bans and Cambodi~. Operations Issued an order tonight, read · according to John Rice,
events will be bool!.ed and
·
by television and radio announcounty extension agent,
's'!l)PUes pwchased . Bill Dowie munisl forces in cambodia u,s. armed forces from,carrywere posing a new threat tn ing out ally military activity from th8t a~ would put the cers, calling for three days of agriculture.
,(! also expected to attend some
Phnom Penh, the capital.
''in, over or from the shores of" El!lterprlse 's planes within mourning for ,the dead, wound- ::::::::::::::-;::~:~¢::~-;~:~~:::::::::'!-::::-»X..&lt;*..'X~~
·sessions of the conven1ion
.The American sources said any of the four states of In- flying distance both of Saigon ed and missing during the fivewhich runs Wednesday through the Enterprise and the dochina.
. and Phnom Penh, where heavy day battle for Pbuoc l)inh.
Friday. Bradford, Downie, and nuclear-poweredguidedDussue
LOCAL TEMPS
The uiw does not.· prohibit fighting also is underway.
He oondemned Communist
Mrs. Leifheit are fair board cruiser Long Beach lefiSubic ·
planes from flyipg' over
In the past, aircraft carriers attackers as aggressors and . "I:he temperature in down. mem]jers and Mrs. Bradford is
in · the Philippines and South Vietnam, howe~er, and always have operated on the called on all South Vietnamese town Pomeroy at 11 a.m. today
the bOa~d secretary.
' were, to join nine sm~Uer . military flights based in Thai- east side of Viet&amp;m opposite to unite to face the increased was 47 degrees under sunny
skies. · ·
warships near the South . land do so routinely.' ·
the ll!Iti'. The sources stressed .hattlefield '!jtlacks.

~;~~=~edt~ ~~9st~~~~

carried two.
"This would reduce the
stresses and therefore increase
the safety factor," he said.
Jones, who was expected to ·
be on the stand two more days,
only touched on the cause of the
collapse. He said it was the
only span of which he.lqlew
. that apparently failed from .
stress corrosion where the eyehars were joined by a pin.

Cruiser bid ·taken

:1E~~s~~r;i~~~~~~;to~ I,

Task. force in Viet waters

@.

lambs. He was paid $26S.
Eddie Blake met with the
commissioners in regard to a
sprinkler system for the county
home. No action was taken.
Attending were Robert Clerk,
Henry Wells, and Warden
Ours , commisslones, and
Martha Chambers, clerk.
The commission will advertise for bids for a 197S model
dump truck. Sealed bids must
be received at the office of the
commissioners by 10 a.m. Jan.
28. .

• g SWJ•tch·.e d
Racm

...

COUPLES SEPARATED
A divorce was granted and
anolher dissolved in Meigs
County. Common Pleas Court.
Gloria . K. Reynolds was
granted li div...-e from Ronald
Franlilin Reypolds on charges
ri gioss neglect of duty, and
extreme cruelty. Tl)e marriage
of Janet G. Marcum and David
W. Marcum was· dis•olved.

TUESDAY, JANUAR Y 7, !975

W ehster named
•
hoard ch a1rm an ;~~u~~~~~t~os~;;:;~ :~~ ·''~~:~:,;:~:~;:::: : 5: : :::&gt;;:: : : : : : : : &lt;:: : : : : : : : : ~~:':g:ffe~r~~~~~sM:~:y ~~

New Year

TICKETS OFFERED
Tickets to the Ohio Junior
Miss ~eant to be held Jan : 17
and 18 inay be obtained by
writing to Southeast Ohio
Junic:c Miss Pageant, P. 0 . Box
104, Pomeroy. Checks are to be
made payable to Ohio Junic:c
Miss; Inc. Deadline for purchasing the ,tickets, is Jan. 9.
Tickets are $6 per set for both
nights.

•

SINGAPORE - HARBOR VESSELS worked around the
clock today to keeP a giant oil slick from.polluting the beaches of
three Southeast Asian nations. Authorities said the Uknile-long
. slick from a crippled Japanese supertanker threatened to
splatter a million gallons of oil onto the beaches of Singapore,
Malaysia and Indonesia.
Singapore's port, maritime, defense and envirorunental
agencies joined forces in an attempt to control the mass leakage
from the 237,698-ton tanker Showa Maru. The giant ship ran
aground Monday on rocks and . coral reefs five miles off
Singapore's. coast, cracking three of the vessel's 12 huge oil
tanks.

the

ANNOUNCING

POM EROY-M IDDLEPO'RT, OHIO

WASHINGTON - THE GOVERNMENT HELD lTS great
gold auction Monday and proved one thing: Most Americans find
gold about as attractive an investment as a frozen porkbeUy .
Most of the 209 bidders were foreigners. The bulk of the
American bids were from jewelers. Of the .few ordinary
Americans who participated, six or seven submitted bids of $1 an
ounce, which were not ta)&lt;en seriously.
Only 38 per cent of the 2 million ounces of gold offered for
auction from the U.S. Treasury was sold, most of that at prices
lower than the world market. At first glance, the auction a()peared a dismal failure. Treasury Secretary William E. Simon,
who sponsored it, was delighted.
He didn't really want Americans to buy much of the stuff.
"Gold is jtLSl not a good inveshnent for individuals," he said.

.,·

MEIGS THEATRE

only

Devoted To 'Fhe Interests Of Th e Meigs-M/Isof/ An&gt;11

ByUnttedPresslnternalional
,
PITI'SBURGH - THE .NATION'S STEEL MILLS are
humming although production in the auto indtLStry - the largest
user of steel - is at a near standstill. Most major steelmakers
have diverted shipments from Detroit to other major tLSets of
steel, avoiding, at least for the time being, the economic woes
which have thrown an estimated 650,000 auto workers off the job.
The auto industry, which annually uses 20per cent of all steel
made in this country, has reduced first quarter steel orders this
year as much as SOper cent. Shipments to appliance makers also
have dropped off drastically. But steelmakers are producing all
they can.
. Big steel has experienced a hectic production pace during the
past few months as steel inventories, depleted by record
demand, were further reduced when steelmakers were confronted by a shortage of coal - an essential ingredient in steel
production - because of the nationwide miners' strike.

'

during this annual storewide sales event.

ent1ne

Snakes have
developed lung.

~-'in .B~ Existing faci(~ties in ,

You'll Find Outstanding Values in

thru mails

at

,

18-year-olds

•

Now YouKnow

Non-profit public owned nursing home proposed

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE

for jobless

definite date when the CQmmit~e could view the area. Lehew
said he has damaged several cars going up the hUI to his home.
Leh ew noted.he shl1uldn't even have to come to council with the
problem, that they should know the problems, and take care of
them.
Council agreed to meet Lehew Wednesday a t 4 p.m. to view
the area.
· Norman Baxter , Mulberry Ave., told council tlJat since 'the
lines have been laid, for the new water system water has been
spilling into his yard. He said he would appreciate a ditch in the
area being cleaned out, to which council agreed,
Chuck BarUes, Pomeroy E-R Chief, asked and was granted
perrollssion for the fire deparlment to put the popcorn trailer on
Main Street Saturday. He also asked that a load of limestone be
placed in front of the fire station to which Council also agreed.
Representatives of Middleport Cab Co. asked permission to
park one cab at one of the three loca nons on Court St. Mayor and
council directed Chief of Police Jed Webster to inform t(le
(Continued on page 8)

·- -- - - - - - - - - -

CONTINUING OUR STOREWIDE

More coverage

NO. 186

from U1eir clt-cted or a ppointed offices. Ca n you table tltis
request? Signed Guido Girolami, successful businessman."
To Girolami 's letter, William Snouffer observed that he has
never heard any person offer of give any costructive help to the
town and that money is not available to do things that should be
done.
ALSO MEETING with coun cil was William " Bill" Lehew
who lives on top of Breezy Heights, near the Microwave Tower to
condemn the road goiug to his home and give it back to the
property owners or fix it.
Lehew said he lias lived at his present home 10 years and in
ali that tin1e the road has not been maintained. He cited cotmcil
for shirking its responsibility.
One cotmcilman said he should have come to council earlier.
To this Lehew replied that council should know every street and
road in the village and the co ndition of each. Lehew observed
that the city was not.interested in the road.
The .mayor said he would refer the matter to the street
committee, to which Lehew would not agree and wanted a

'

Cloudy tonight and Wednesday, chance of rain tonight,
more likely Wednesday. Lows
tonight in the upper 30s . Highs
Wedesday
upper
40s.
Probability of precipitation 10
pet. today, 40 pet. tonight and
70 oct. Wednesday.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

HOSPITAL NEWS

Davis; street, Davis, chairllJitn , John Manley and William .
Snouffer ; safety and parking meter, Manley, .chairman , Phil
Globokar, Werry; utility and sanitation , Snouffer, chairman,
Werry and Manley; ordinance, Globokar, chairman, Osborne,
and Werry; building, Werry, chairman , Osborne and Globokar;
mobile homes, Globokar. The mayor also appointed Fred Crow
as village solicitor.
'
Meeting with,s;ouncil was Guido C:irolami who read a letter
requesting resignation of the administration. The letter sta tes:
"For the past number of years, city' employes, from the
mayor on down the line to the curatorofthe city graveyard, tiJese
people have been accepting pay and accomplishing nothing. Why
should we continue to pay someone for doing nothing ? It is high
time for our town fathers to ask themselves the question, am I
doing my job• We live in the modern century, but all we see is our
Village of Pomeroydeteriorating right before our eyes. If I were
to run my business like city hall IS run I would have been out of
business long ago. I hereby request the mayor and his able staff
to get off their haunches and ao their duty or kindly step down

Bay

u.s.

•

'I

'.

..

.,

'.

Veterans Memorlai·Hospital
Admitted
Mildred
Johnson , Middleport; Venedla
Knight, Ra cine; Ellsworth
Dill, Reedsville; Betty .Baijey,
Vinton;
Jason
Lawson,
Rilcine ; Mary Bostic, Middlep.6 rt ; Andrew Warner,
Guysville ; Dale · Walburn,
Middl.'t!?ort; Hiram Pauley,
Letart; W. Va.; Paul Hudson,
Pomeroy; Albert Hill, Long
Bottom ; . Jessie
White,
Pomeroy; Andrew . Hlltfield,
Langsville; .Diana Neal, New
.Haven ; Earl · King, Rutland;
Celesta . Bush;· Middleport;,
Noreen S~epa~ , .~ville. ,
•J

'

·I

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