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· 16 - The Daily Sentinel, Mi~dlepoh·Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Jan . 8, 1975

Dem.o cratic. court
gets new lineup
' PT . PLEASANT A
111eeting set for organizational
purposes turned into a li tlle
more than that when Mason
Coun ty's Board of Commissioners, formerly known as
the County Court, met for its
first meeting of the new year
Tuesday in its Courthouse
offi ce .
Clarence Adkins will serve

from all walks of life a chance
to attend if they so desire.
rather than a P.rivileged few,''
Commissioners agreed to set
the weekly meetings at 7 p.m.
each 'Tuesday .
Through Whalen's motion,
Audrey Huffman of Letart is to
be Chief Custodian. Others to·
serve "re Martha Friend, also
of Letart; Virginia Williamson
of SOuthside, and Ray Hayes of
Point Pleasa nt. Randall Mayes
of Ashton was named dog

King George Ill a nice chap, what

COLUMBUS (UP I) -A aurv.ey of Ohlo'a baaken bn ·
revealed that rnotlt think home mortpge rateo 1'111 come
down, the prime lnter.. t rate wlll faU and Ohio'• economy
will fare better than the oatlooalaverage thll year.
The survey waa ronducted by The Ohlo Ballker, the In··
dustry 's official trade pabUcatlon.and partfclpatlog .In the
survey were 251 of Ohio's 499 bank cbfef uecudve offlcen.
.The banken forecast tbat borne mortgage rat.. will drop
to about 8.7 per cent by July land will condoue at these Ieveii
through the end Of the year.
The survey showed tbat banten eJpcCt the prime rate to
fall to between 8 and 9 per cent by July 31 and tben rile
slightly to between8.7and 9.3 per cent by the end of the year.
In other areas, the majority of the bantera lhiDJt tbat
lnllallon wlU decrease ralber tbao locreue, and tbat the
gross national product will decreaae.

on party lines

.

achieve the impossible rather 1;000 years.
,
sooner than in Ute inunediate,' '
He said he .first became·
• interested in George nr ''be-".
he said.
" ! th ink now that I've cause people had gone on !Or·.
managed to accustom myself years and years in the history;
to the pace and made people books descrlbine hlm as the'
realize I can't necessarily live Mad Monarch.'"
·
up to the program they've
George Ill ''was a mucl~
mapped out."
maligned
monarch
Charles, in a copyrighted particularly by American
interview with the · London historians, who obviously
Evening Standard published · found it convenient to a certain
Tuesday and today, said he extent to make it easier to
would like to be most like King justify
the
American
George Ill than any other revolution. They could argu~ .
British monarch in the last they were revolting agalllst a
mad monarch who hsd no
credibility In America,"
. Charles said.
He said this has tended to
Con tin~ed from page 1
CQurt disaster,'' ,
obscure George Ill's talents as
"Unfortunately, continued deterioration of service will occur " petron of science and the arts
he added. "Longer delays can be expected on repair and ;;,_ and his character as a line
staUat10n . And tbe wailing list for private lines will lengthen. " country gentleman.
The company ftrst announced a curtailment program in June,
"A lot of people would regard
1973. Last July a further cutback accompanied by layoffs this as boring because he didn't ·
foUowed. In the latter some 400 workers, plus 200 contractor- do what Charles II reporiedly
employed people were furloughed. Further, some 400 con- did and have affairs with aU
struction protects were postponed.
sorts of delectable ladit!f," said
Wop~t said the outlook for 1975 is dim. A $69 million statewide the Prince.
'
expa~st.on program had been planned. This figure was reduced to
He admitted the wUd affairs
$56mtlllon last month. Now it stands at $50 million.
of Charles II made him apThe $13.5 million rate case was filed with the PUCO Dec. 'll
pear ''much more glamorous
1972. The company asked for $9.2 million of it as interim relief than a chap who works hard
last June . The PUCO, however, failed to respond.
and is a conscientious
Wopat satd some officials high in the PUCO recently assured
monarch--and Is also more
the company the rate callll would be completA!d by the end of the discreet."
year. "Maybe we should have asked which year."
In Tuesday's story Chsrles
"The PUCO's dilly-dallying with ours and rate requests of
said he was rather lonely and: .
other companies is irresponsible," he asserted.
was considering marriage as. '
Ge~eral of Ohio serves more than 745,000 telephones in 79 of soon as he finds the right'
Oh10 s 88 counties. It currently has 5,050 employes.
woman.

as president of the now
Democratic dominated group .
Serving for the first time last
night WII S the newly elected warden, replacing Frank
By LEE LEONARD
until July I as he is leaving
Commi s si one r Mi c ha e l Brylll1 .
UPI
Statehouse
Reporter
office,"
said House Minority
Wfialen, who se electio n in
Whalen ask.ed that these
COLUMBUS
(UP!)
House
Leader
Charles
F. Kurfess, RNovember made the board · elwnges become effe ct ive
Democratic : William Rardin today , and tha t salaries be the De.mocralic leaders plan to Bowling Green. "I think there
initiate budget hearings on was probably an arrogance on
GEORGE CURTIS
Jr .. the Republican , completes same as previously.
Gov.
John
J
.
Gilligan
's
new
his
part
in
asking
us
to
adopt
the three-member board.
Rard in ab s tained in the $12.5 billion state budget as it.''
It was appare nt from the votin g, statin g · tha t "In
. beginning that Whaleohad a lot refere nce to Marguerete soon as it is introduced, hoping · " He talks about 'fairly
to get the spendin g plan realigning the congressional
'or questions to be answered Engels, as a• employe of the ·
through the House by April 15. districts,"' Kurfess conlinued.
and he lost no lime in moving Courthouse in the past two
House Speaker Vernal G. "Well, tbey were adoptA!d when
for cour thouse maintenance years, she has done a fine job
Riffe Jr., D-New Boston , set he was governor. He signed the
changes and appointing new and she has knowledge of the
George W. Cur tis of Belpre
the timetable Tuesday night bill. U there was any unfairdog ca tcher. However, when equipment in the Courthouse
has
accepted employment as a
fo llowing Gilligan's final ness, then he was part and
Whalen attempted to appoint which will definit ely be
solicitor
with the Davis In"State of the State" address to parcel to it."
Charles "Sonny" Smith as a missed". His mo tion to keep
a joint session of the General
" He didn't say anything surance Agency. Court and
Magis trate of Lew is District, Mrs. Engels as a custodian
Assembly.
except lax and spend ," said Second Sts. , Pomeroy.
he cotdd not get n second and died for lack of a second.
Born at Mason, W. Va.,
The speaker said he thinks Rep. Norman A. Murdock, R·
asked that his motion be struck
Curtis
is. the son of Mrs. Emma
Adklns proposed to have a the new budget will be in- Cincinnati, the assistant
from the record .
Van Meter of Belpre and the
meeti ng with the new ap- troduced in about a week, bu t minority leader.
County Clerk L. W. Getty pointees saying . "to let them
la&lt;e
Hoyt W. Curtis. Mr. Curtis
noted
that
incoming
Senate President Pro Ternopened the meeting by an- know where they stand ".
resided
in Reedsville about 15
Republican Gov. James A. pore Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron,
nouncing its purpose was ''to
In bringing up the matter Rhodes will submit his own said he was pleased with years before moving to Belpre
organize for the yea r ahead" about Charles Smith 's election
budget by Mar ch 15 and both Gilligan's proposal to increase with his family. He attended
and then went on to ca ll for the as Justice ot the Pence in
proposals will be considered. education spending by $509 Eastern High School for one
nominations.
year befora going to Belpre
Lewi s Distric t during the
Gilligan's budget calls for million.
f Whalen nomin ated Adkins
November General Election, general state spending of $6.43
"Obviously it was a very where he graduated from
and Rardin seconded . Adkins, Wh alen remarked "There
billion over two years under pleasing speech," said Ocasek. Belpre High School. He ataccepting, said " I ass ure you · must be a lack of comexisting tax structures, an
While most other Democrats tended Ohio State University
of one thing . all decisions will munication between someone
increase of $1.454 billion.
offered high pralse for Gil- three years and was employed By BERNARD BRENNER
be made here. I hope to serve about Charles Smith".
The governor said the total ligan's educatiorr proposals, in construction in Puerto Rico
WASHINGTON (UP! ) the people the best I can ." By
before entering the insurance Dairymen who . got a comIn turn he asked that Smith budget, including federal · Republicans disagreed.
accian1afion of Rardin , Whalen be appointed as Magistrate of funds , will ainount to between
"He said nothing about the business. Before accepting promise 10 per cent increase in
was chosen as vice--preside nt ~ Lewis District and that this be $12.5 billion and $13 billion, still process of distributing the employment with the Pomeroy
Whalen wanted to comment, made effective immediately . requiring no new or additional funds," said Kurfess. "It's firm, Curtis wa s employed price supports from the administration last week will
saying, " I have a lot of things Due to legal questions, the taxes.
· things like this budget that with the Peoples Life In· seek further hikes soon, a milk
to talk about" .
matter will be Investigated.
Riffe praised Gllllgan's mes- brought
about
such surance Co. in Athens.
producer spokesman says.
He asked for clarification on
A member of the Uni ted
Rardin asked that a letter be sage, saying: "I think he hit on inequities."
Patrick B. Healy, secretary
hi s reque st for evenin g sent "to our attorney checking areas that the people are
"The governor finally got the Methodist Church, Mr. Curtis of the National Milk Producers
mee tings, commenting that he the legality of this". But concerned about -education, message on the schools," is residing with his wife at
Federation, said in an infelt this wot~d give persons Whalen insisted "This is our mental health and so on."
lOB:.
W.
Second
St.,
in
commented
Senate
Minority
terview that farmers will push
.
county. OtU' people put him in
Republican legislators were Leader Michael J. Maloney, R- Pomeroy. The Davis Insurance legislation built around two
office. "
Iess charitable about Gilligan's Cincinnati. "He proposed a 30 Agency is owned and operated basic points, including a cost
per cent increase after asking by Lorenzo Davis of near escalator designed to provide
Whalen also asked about new budget and his speech,
"I thinK It is rather unseemly for only 6 per cent more two Pomeroy .
additions to the New Haven
automatic quarterly raises in
and Leon fire departments, lor for him to submit a two-year years ago."
milk prices if fann costs
information on the recreati on budget which does not start
continue to rise.
Jail sentence,
area below the river and ,·"how
Last Friday, after vetoing a
INTEREST
we sta.nd now on the fire
biD which would have bQosted
fine is set
department at Apple Grove?"
supports to 85 per cent of the
11
Getty repUed tha t .the steel
fair earning power" parity
MARIE'ITA, Ohio (UP!) - on New Year's Day, some
Donald E. Pauley , 44, Letart,
framework has been erec ted.
Coast Guardsmen conlinued 10,000 gallons of the oily W. Va ., was fin ed $150 and standard and required quartheir efforts today to pinpoint mixture have been pumped costs and was given a three day terly price adjustments,
the source of an oil leak which from the shallow wells.
jail sentence when he was President Ford apprpved a
With the completion of a convicted of driving while compromise.
hss been aUowing pollutants to
Continued from page 1
Agriculture Secretary Earl
flow into the Ohio River here coffer dam, now under con- Intoxicated in a hearing held
people," acting South Viet- since mid-l)ecember.
L.
Butz administratively instruction on Mile Run Creek, a before Middleport Mayor Fred
creased
tbe government floor
namese Foreign Minister Ngo
Wells have been drilled in the deep well wUl be dug in the Hoffman Tuesday night.
price
lor
manufacturing grade
Khac Tinh said. "The govern- saturated ground. and pumps sand ~nd · mud of the creek
Carolyn Clonch, Middleport,
N in e ty day in~erest penalty
ment and people of Vietnam are being used to remove the bank In an effort to pump the and Ellis S. Clonch, Mid- milk to $7.24 a hundredweight,
If
w.l l hdrllwn
be f ore
_msturity da t e.
call on the United States kerosene, diesel fuel and water remaining pollutants from the dleport, were ·assessed costs an increase of 67 cents which
government to support this mlxtur.e which has been soil.
only when they appeared on an will mean· higher consumer
struggle."
seeping into the river.
The Coast Gua.rd also plans assault and battery charge. prices for butter and cheese
Soqfh Vietnam began a
Since the Coast Guard as- to drill additional observation Donald Lovett, 51, Middleport, and - in a few months -for
three-day mourning period for sumed the cleanup respon- wells in order to help pinpoint was assessed costs only on a milk.
The $7.24 rate brought supthe victims of three weeks of slbillty from the Mobil Oil Co. the source of the pollutant.
disorderly manner charge.
por,ts up to the equivalent of 80
heavy combat in Phuoc Long,
per cent of the december parity
centered 70 miles north of
The Ath ens County
price for milk . But Butz
Saigon. The last stronghold in
Savings &amp; loan Co .
skimmed
part of the cream off
the province fell Tuesday.
296 Second s r.
Pomeroy , Oh io
A Viet Cong spokesman,
speaking at Communist truce
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) bers. of the Columbus
headquarters outsiile Saigon, The city's first teachers' strike Education Association and the
Mrs. Nora Brechtel. 100,
_ _ _ ......., 1
said the sending of the En- entered its third day today with Columbus Board of Education. formerly of Pomeroy, died
terprise toward South Vietnam negotiations reported deadFederal Meadiator Joseph Sunday in a Mt. Vernon Nurwas a violation of the cease-fire locked between striking mem. Santa-Emma said no progress sing Home. She is survived by
by the Ford adminlsiratlon.
was made during a Tuesday two sons, Dale, Delaware, and
negotiating session.
Orden, Tulsa , Okla .; two
Franklin County Common grandsons and four great·
Pleas Judge Jay C. Flowers grandchildren.
For Your Dining and Listening
refused Tuesday to order the
Graveside services will be at
Clearing, cooler toni ght, teaches back to work. He did, Beech Grove Cemetery ThursPleasure ...
lows in the mid ~ . Sunny however, issue il " limited day at I p.m. Friends are being
Thursday. highs In the lower restraining order" which pro- received today from 7 to 9 at
50s .
Probability
of hibits · teachers from ob- the Robinson Funeral Home,
precipitation , 20 percent structing or interfering with Delaware .
during the afternoon and 10 the operation of the city's 170
percent tonighl and Thursday. schools.
SQUAD RUNS
SERVICE SCHEDULED
The Pomeroy Emergency
KISER INJURED
Rev . Unson Stebbins will Squad answered a call . to
RACINE - The Racine conduct communion services Locust St. at I :49 a.m. tod ay
Emergency Squad went to Sunday morning, Jan. l2, at the for Mrs . Juanita tlwens who
Southern High School Tuesday Harrisonville Presbyterian was ill. She was taken to the
morning for David Kiser who Church . A congregational Holzer Medical Center. At 9:30
suffered a head in jury in a meeting will follow the ser- a.m, the squad was called to
physical education class. He vices . Everyone is welcome to SR 7 in the Chester area lor
Ph. 992-3629
Pomeroy
was taken to and admitted at attend.
Susanne Martin who was ill .
Veterans Memoria l HospitaL
She was taken to the Holzer
Me&lt;jical
Center .
FILES SUIT
In Meigs County Comm.on
Pleas Court Kathryn Jane
SQUAD SUMMONED
Brallon. Rt. 1, Reedsville, filed ·
~YKAIJUSEThe Syracuse
suit lor divorce against Robert
Bratton, Pompano Beach, Fla., E·R Squad Tuesday at 3:45
chsrglng gross neslect of duty p.m. transported 12-month old
Sarah 'Eynon, daughter of Mr.
and extreme cruelty.
.
.
and Mrs . Bob Eynon to

Reaction

'•

LONDON (UP[) - Prince
.Charles came to the defense of
his aJ)cestor King George III
today , claiming the king was a
conscientious, discreet
monarch unjustly blamed for
the American revolution.
Charles also lamentA!d tha t,
besides the .bad press, one of
the burdens of being heir to the
British throne was people
always expected him to be
bi"illia n t.
"The trouble is tbat people
expect one to be a genius at
least, if nothing else, and to

More·cutbacks

Curtis with
Davis Ins.

-

Source of oil leak sought s1so

On Certificates
Of Deposit '

!ltOOO Minimum

Viets strike

30 Mo. Term

Meigs Co. Branch

@

Sides deadlocked

-FSDc
·-

Nora Brechtel
dies, aged 100

the compromise by directing parity as Qf April! each year, a
that the new rate remain fixed pennanent law with a 75 per
for 15 months. It will be ef. cent of parity floor will be back
fective for the rest of the 1974- in operation this year UIJ!ess
75 marketing year which ends Congress intervenes. This
March 31 and also for the entire means that since the $7.24
1971&gt;-76 year which hegins April support is likely to 'slightly ·
' 1.
exceed 75 per cent of the April
When the initial $6.57 a I, 1975 parity, It could legaUy
hundredweight
government be left unchanged until March
support for milk in the 1974-75 31, 1976, no matter what
season was set last April I, It happens to farm costs.
was equal to 80 per cent of
Healy said dairy fanners
April parity. By last week, will ask Congress for a biU
however, rising fann costs had under which the suppbrt floor
raised the parity standard so would he set at 85 or 80 per cent
much that the $6.57 rate of parity. Also, he said, the bill
represented less than 73 per would include a quarterly
cent of December, 1974, parity. adjwtment to bring the dollars
Healy and other dairy and cents support price up to
spokesmen hailed Ford's the proposed 80-85 per cent of
compromise as a victory which parity floor every three
will help head off future sharp months.
declines in milk production.
But two problems remain,
Healy said.
I
One is the fact tbat inflation,
by pushing up farm costs, is
KITIY GROWING
-·
continuing to boost tbe parity
SEATILE, Wash. (UP!) - :'
price of milk . This means the The campaign funds for Sen. , "
$7.24 rate which now equals 80 Henry Jackson's as yet :.
per cent of parity may equal unannounced bid for the _
only about 77 per cent of the Democratic presidential ·
theoretically "fair" parity nomination have hit $1.1
standard on April I and even million. "It's most enless next summer and fall if couraging," said Richard :·
cost inflation continues.
Kline, finance coordinator for ·
The second is tbe fact that the Jackson Planning Comwhile a current temporary law mittee, which was creatA!d last
requires dairy supports to July to raise money and make
equal 80 per cent or more of prellmi.nary campaign plans.

~

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Weather

January Clearance Sale

GEO. HALL

.•

Brings Exceptional Savings All

AND THE HALLMARKS

Over The Store

TONIGHT 8:00 TO 12:30

Mens and Boys Winter Jackets ____________ lh Price
Boys and Mens SweateiS _________ _;_ ______ Jh Price

The .M EIGS INN

Mens '49.95 Sport Coats·----------... -----'24.88
Sale Prices Panasonic Component Systems ·
Yard Goods Sale ____________________ lh Price

ANNOUNCING

.·BAKER'S ANNUAL
.

JANUARY HOME FURNISHING

ASK TOWED

Roger David Coates, · 20,
Elyria, and Jane Ann Bahr, 17,
Rt. I, Reedsville.

SALE OF FAMOUS
MEIGS JHEATRE

NAME BRANDS
---VALUES~----

BA.KER .fURNITURE
MIDDLEPO~T. OHIO

· TONIGHT &amp; THURSI)AY
'""
Jan. 8-f
·
NOT OPEN

..

FRI •. SAT.-SUN.
JAN1 1~11 - 12
MAME

CTechnicolorl
Sta rling Lucille Ball
Show Starts 7: 00p.m.

Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The child was having difficulty
b~eathing.

STAFF ENLARGED .
, James A. Daley, 25, of Grove
City has jbined the Ohio Fann
Bureau Federation as assistant
director of state activities,
~ Morris Allton, Farm Bureau's
vice president for ,public af.
lairs anrt'Dunced today.

.

PLAYERS TO REPORT
Fourtlt grade elementary
scliool ~etball players of the
Meigs Local District are to
Jeport to the Meigs High School
gymriasilun Saturday .from 9 to
10 a.m.

Racial fights'
close school
BOSTON ( UPJ) - Aseries of
flgh~ broke out today among
black and white youths inside
racially troubled Hyde Park
H,igh School and authorities
ordered the school closed when
students tried to wrestle guns
away from poUce.
At least 13 students, 11 blacks
and 2 whites, were arrested.
There were no reports of
serious injuries.
Officials said the students
fought among themselves and
with police in the hallways and
some fights were rept)rled in
classrooms.
When some students tried to
wrestle handguns out of the
holsters of police the officers
inside the school were told to
carry tbeir weapons in their
pockets.
The violence caused officials
to order the school closed for
the day. Buses returned to
Hyde Park to take the children

VOL. XXVI

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Worijens SleepweaL-------... ---------· 1h Price
Sale! Girls Sportswear, Includes SweaterS,
Blouses Pants,·Tops and Jeans _________ _-... lh Price
·Girls Coa1s and_Snowsuits·-------------.
. 72
tl p ·
nee
G.irts Dresses.------~-----~.:.----~----'h . Price
Womens Loilg ~-esses and Pajama Sets; ______ % Price

Sale Priees.Kimball ·Piai'KI
Sale Prices Furniture on the 3rd Floor
Open ThuiSday 9:30 to 5 PM-Friday and Saturday 9:30 to 8 PM

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
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home.
including boys and girls, w!ll'e·
A newsman from radio loaded aboard.
station WEEI was struck by a
The metal detector was
hottle thrown from a third floor taken from newly reopened
window but was not seriously . South Boston High School and
injured.
additional police were moved
Hyde Park high, which had into the Hyde Park scbool area.
been closed sporadically be- · There bad been two metal
cause of violence, had detectors at the school, but one
reopened on schedule Jan. 2 was taken away during the
alter the Christmas vacation. night.
Officials feared some of the
Hyde Park High School,
students had taken weapons along with the South Boston
into school with them. and High School complex bas been
moved a second metal detector a focal point of dennonstrations
to the. school _to help frisk and racial outbreaks since
students.
school got under way in SepThe tough, riot-trained
Continued on page 12
Tactical Police Force was
called into the school alter •
officials reported they could
not put down the fights wNch
broke out shortly after classes
got under way.
Patrol wagons were backed
up to the rear doors of the
school and the arrestA!d youths,

I

·.~/-·'
l
\. f,.

PROGRESS RAPID - Rapid progress Is being made on the · con.
struction of a new apartment building at tbe corner of Third and Mill Sts . in
Middleport. Work began the second week in December. Already walls to

•

at y

NO. 188

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

enclose 'll one-bedroom apartments and two two-bedroom unlts are rising.
Construction ls by the Barr.ctrcle Development Co., Gallipolis, whlch last
year built the Riverside Aparln)ents on First St. in Middleport.

en tine

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1975

TEN CENTS

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::~~

By United Press International

Dairymen wanting more

'

WASHINGTON...:. ON FRII&gt;AY, COlLEGE students will no
longer be eligible for food stamps if they come from weU-tooo
homes and their parents claim them as income tax dependents.
An Agriculture Department regulation announced . Wednesday
bans fond stamps to students over 18 who get more than half their
support from a household that Is economicaUy well off to be
eligible for "lood stamps.
Agriculture spokesmen said they had no estimate of the
munber of college students who may be affected by the change.
They said some nongovernment S!trveys showed "many
·thousands" of students receive food stamps. Tbe spokesmen said
the new student rule will take effect Jan. 10. Students already
receiving food stamps probably will not be affected until periodic

''recertification 1' checks.
GENERAL MOTORS CORP. TUESDAY announced another
series of indefinite layoffs at its Ohio plants which brought to
almost 6,500 the number of workers who wiU be laid off by Jan.
20, including 2,800 at the Chevrolet Vega plant at Lordstown.
· Goodyear Tire &amp; R11bber Co., Firestone Tire &amp; Rubber Co.
and Seiberling Tire &amp; Rubber Co. , aU headquartered in the Akron
area also announced indefinite layoffs of 2,048 workers nationwide, most of them ·furloughed effective Jan. 20. The layoffs
affect about 545 workers at the Akron pia.!lts.
The GM announcennent said production at the ·Chevrolet
Vega plant, which also produces the Pontiac Astre, would be cut
by 80 per cent effective Jan. 20. In addition, the Vega·Astre
assembly plant will close for a week starting next Monday, a
· layoff't;blch Wlll);·announced previously . But when It opens Jan.
20, only the day shift will work.
ISRAEIJ FOREIGN MINISTER · YIGAL AUon flew to the
United' States today to confer with Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger on getting tbe staUed Middle East peace talks moving
again. AUon, in comments to newsmen before leaving Tel Aviv's
Ben Gurian Airport, sai~ the postponment of Soviet leader
'Leonid Brezhnev's Middle East trip this month creatA!d "a new
Situation" on the diplomatic front.
The foreign minister, said, however, he would not offer
Kissinger any "new suggestions" for breaking the Arab-Israeli
.negotiating deadlock . In Washington, diplomatic sources said
·Kissinger would hsve to visit the Middle East himself to.get the
talks moving again. But the State Department said he doesn't
·plan a new peace mission.

'
SAj:GON - HUNDREDS OF REFUGEES, fearing
the city of
Tay Ninh would be the next Communist target, jammed buses
and roads today aud headed for tbe safety of Saigon. The Com·
munlsts, meanwhile; accused the Saigon goverrunent of dropping
napalm on civilians in the Viet Cong capital oi Loc Ninh in
retaliation for the loss of Phuoc Long.
Goverruneqt troops and pollee, plus fully armed mllltia
troops stood guard around Tay Ninh, a city o£70,000. "Most of t!le
rich people here have already moved to Saigon alter the
government announced the !aU of Phuoc Long," one reporter
said.
.
In Saigon, the government military conunand denied the
Communist cbarge of napalm attacks on civilians and insisted
. government w.~rplanes only hit mllltary targets of Loc Ninh in a
massive revenge bombardment lor the Communist capture of
Phuoc Binh .
DETROIT - LAGGING SALES HAVE boosted the auto
lndwtry's backlog of unsold cars to a record 100 days, despite
last month's sharp production cutbacks which triuuned 85,000
autos from the industry's actual inventory, industry analysts
said today.
Industry sources Indicate that more production cutbacks are
being planned to cope with the Huge becldog. Sagging. sales
alrendy have 300,000 workers idled or facing layoffs by the end of
the month. The industry hsd an inventory of 1,785,000 unsold cars
as of Dec. 1- enough to last 85 days. Sharp production cutbacks
dropped the actual j,pventory to 1,680,000 as of Jan. I, but
declining sales show that the Jan. 1 inventory is enough to last a
record 100 days.
.
·
U sales don't pick up, the IIJO.&lt;Iay supply could last until close
to the end of April even II aU auto plants were closed.
·

EXTENDED WEA THEll
Saturday through !11onrlay,
a chance of showers
Saturday, changing to snow ·
flurries and colder Sunday
By CHARLES E. FLINNER program began In the
and Monday. Highs will be in
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Depression.
the 541s on Saturday, dropLabor
Secretary Peter J.
ping to the 30s Sunday and to
" Your workloads can be
Brennan
urged slate unem- expected to grow tremendousthe upper 20s and lower 30s
ployment office personnel to ly," he said.
on Monday. Lows wUI be In
show understanding and
the lower 40s oli Saturday
-Brennan told the officials
compassion 'to thousands of that many of their- clients
morning, dropping to the
jobless Americans who will be "hav~ never endured the
teens by Monday morning.
seeking unemployment tragedy of joblessness.''
benefits for tbe first time.
Legislation to aid the unennBrennan
addressed
·representatives of state employment offices and other
manpower officials at the
opening of a day-long meeting
Chance of rain late tonight;
on new jobless benefits totaling lows in the upper 30s. Rain
$4 bllllon.
·
likely Friday, highs in the 40s.
Brennan said that currently
there are 6.5 million unem•
LOCAL TEMPS .
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (UPI) ployed persons and that 813,800
Temperature in downtown
- Two teenagers were killed persons filed for unemby a Chesapeake &amp; Ohio freight ployment insurance during Pomeroy Thursday at 11 a. m.
train Wednesday just north of Christmas week-the most was 52 degrees under cloudy
~ere .
·
ever since t~e insurance skies.
Scioio ·County sheriff's
deputies identified the youths
as Randy Hemphill, 14, and
Andy Howard, also 14, both of
Sciotoville .
The boys were killed as they
Meigs High School opened its Aviation Ground School has 12,
walked on the tracks with a
companion, Pat Brown, 14, also doors Tuesday evening to 136 Sewing 19, General Office
of Sciotoville. Brown said the new adult vocational students Training 19, Shorthand and
other two boys froze as the enrolled in Welding, Aviation Typing 28, Electrical Wiring 18
train approached, but be was Ground School, Sewing, and Welding 40, split into two
Geqeral Office Training, classes of 20 each.
able to run to safety.
Teachers co nductin g. th·e
Brown was treated for shock Typing and Shorthand and
Electrical Wiring,
.. classes are Willard Miller,
at a local hospital.
Welding; John VanMeter,
Aviation Ground ~chool ;
Each course is designed to Beverly Gaul, Typing and
provide skills individual Shorthand;
Fred Gaul,
students need to advance in a General Office . Trainin2 :
job or profession. Altendan.ce Everett Holcomb, Electrical
at the first meeting was a Wiring; Susan Mill~r. Sewing.
surprising 100 pet.
Adult Class Director Ray
The Meigs County Speech
Enrollment by classes shows Goodman, indicated he could
and
Hearing
Clinic will resume Saturday at
.the Pomeroy Elementary
PIONI!.ER UAYS RETURN - Home ·
School from. 9 to 12 noon, acI
butchering 100 yea rs ago in Meigs County
c\!i-ding to Mrs. Susie Heines,
was ordinary a s h11cou selling for 15t a
speech and hearing copound. 1-_,iftct~ll cent baton likc.• ly is goni'
ordinator.
forever, bul uot the art of horne but- , .
All clients previously
cheri ng, which is returning with mt·al
enrolled are to' please attend
pricc.•s being what th('y a-re. Ht&gt; rP Caldu
regularly scheduled times
Mayle has hung fJif ~:uo ling om: of two
unless notified otherwise. An
butchered 350 lb. hugs raised by Mr~. IJana
invitation is open to any child
Coven al the foot of Hiland Road near the
or adult interestA!d in parRoute 7 bypass, RD Pomeroy.
ticipating in the program.
.
I
Supervisor for this quarter is
Dr. Jon Shallop from Ohio
University . There will be eight
speech clinicians and two ·
diagnosticians. For additional
information Mrs. Heines may
be called at 9864163.

States brace for new jobless
workers receive the benefits
this new legislation provides,
swiftly and efficienUy. Your
workload, which I know Is
already very heavy, will get
heavier," Brennan said.
Brennan summoned the state
and local officials to prod them

Oinic resumes

9-12 SatlJ!"day

r-·-------------1
I
I
I
I

I

Sr.;

·I

into making qulc~ use of $7rl
million recently appropriated
to create 100,000 public service
jobs around the nation. 'lbe
jobs would be in local government agencies such as public
works departments, schools,
hospitals and pollee forces .

'

Hit him
in
bed
---

PUBLIC SMORGASBORD
The
Middleport
Fire
Department will stage a public
smorgasbord at the Middleport
Elementary School beginning
at 4 p. m. Saturday.

136 new students in Voc-ed

Veteraoa Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Laurene
· Wilson, Hemlock Grove;
.
'
Oswell Durbam, Middleport;
WASHINGTON- BETTY S. MURPHY, an Ohio native, will
Barbara Roush, 'Hartford;
be nominatA!&lt;! to head the National Labor · RelatiOf!S Board,
Celesta Pickens, Racine ;
President Ford announced Wednesday. The nomination would
Payne, Middleport;
Charles
shift her from her current post as admiiliatrator of the Labor
Joe
Hemsley,
Syracuse; Lyle
· Department's wage and hour division.
.
Hysell,
Pomeroy
; John Sellers,
If confinned by the,Senate to be a member of the NLRB lor a
Portland; Marvin Randolph.
five-year' term, Ford said·he would qeslgnate her as chainnao to
Pom~roy .
·
succeed Edwarll Miller who reslgried last_ month . .In 1953 and
DISCHARGED
Marvin
1954, Mrs; Murphy was a free lance correspondent in Europe and·
Asia and was elllployed by United Press, now United Pre.. In- , Darst, Mildred Johnson, Jerry
ternational, in 1955 and 1953,
.
· Rowe, Dar:lene Nelson,
Mrs. Mutphy was educated at The Ohio State University and Charles Collins, Charles
Landers,
Rhonda Jeffers,
received her law degree from American .University.
Freddie Aleshire, Floyd Gould,
ADen Dill Sr.•. Mary Botltic,
. a&gt;LUMBUS - THE CENTER OF BUSINESS and
Mildred
Roush. '
Ec:ooomlc Research at Ohio State University niported today tbat
retail sales in Ohio during November were only Olll! per cent
above November, 1973 although sales for the first 11 months of ·
SQUAD AIDS
the year were 8 per cent over the corresponding period in 1973.
. The Pomeroy . Eloergency ·
·.
The Oenter said a trend of COIISIIDienl' postponing purchases
of durable goods became increasingly evjdent as household Squad answered a caU to the •.
Earl Frecker honie at Peach •
appliance st«e5 showed a sales drop of :14 per cent from
Fork at 10:49 p. m. Wednesday
November,l973 !Uid automobile dealers and furniture stores
sbarell15 pei'cent sales declines. Retailers ofllrlng weD during . for RodJ!ey Frecl\er who was
November included general stores with food where sales were· ill. He was taken to the Holzer .
Medical Center.
reporled ~ 25 per cent and fuel dealers up 21 per cent.
'
.,

..,.

Weather

Two boys
killed

ployed is expected to provide
assistance lor about 3 mlillon
persons not previously eligible
for unemployment benefits. It
also is expected to enable 1.5
milRon workers who are
covered by unemployment Insurance to receive addltional
compenstation when they exhaust their regular benefits.
"You, as state employment
security aud. manpower officials, will be at the front line
of our efforts to help jobless

have filled several other
classes if applications had been
received sooner.
Information about 25 new
classes Meigs High School is to
offer for adul·ts in the spring of
1975 will be announced. All
pe,;ple who are interested in
finding out more about present
and future adult classes should
contact Mr. Goodman at the .
high school. Since all classes
presently are full, howver, no
other applications will be taken
until registration for the spring
tenn.

•

CINCINNATI (UP!) ,_ A jumped up and rushed to the
stamp purchased for $10 may shop to take another look."
make Michael Middleton and . Since then various stamp
his two partners in a stamp a.nd collectors from around the
coin shop here multi-mil- world have bltlomore tban ,1.7
Uonaires.
million lor the stamp, believed
Middleton, a partner in ·the to be a fouriJtnce · 1\dlgllsh
Olde Times Stamps &amp; Coin Issue of 1887-1882 printed with a
Shop, attended a public auction brown border and a green
in Covington, Ky., last June Clln\er poftrall of Queen Vicand sucesslully bid · $10_for ~ toria. The green center P,Ordon
package of mixed odd lot Is missing and Wildman said
stamps and old stamp albums. both the American and Royal
Middleton said he tossed the Philatelic foundations have
stamp albums aside. Two certified the stamp as a
months later one of his part.. genuine one-of-a-kind color
ners, Ronald Riggs, looking error.
The partners said they have
through one of the almbums .
apparently put together by a returned certified checkl for
Frenchman before 1913, $1.5 mllllon and $5,000 in cash
discovered .''someone got a ~ arrived by maU ·
stamp in here with no picture
The men believe they can
on lt.''
gross more thait $5 million by
The men did not pay much showing the stamp in exhlbiattention to the stamp until the !Ions.
next morning about 4 a.m.
when the third partner, Robert
Wildman,
said
"the
significance hit me in bed and I

Man held in

death of cow

Portable TV
said stolen

on December 29

Meigs County Sheriff Robert
C. Hartenback disclosed today
Bob White, of Racine, Is lodged
Gallia County sheriff's in Meigs County Jail charged
deputies Wednesd ay in- in the shooting of a cow owned
vestigated the theft of an 18 · by Jim Circle, also of Racine,
Inch RCA porta ble TV taken
The incident occurred on
from the residence of Larry Dec. 29 on CR 28 near Racine.
Curry, Rt. 2, Bidwell.
Whi te. will appear in Meigs
Ironically, while Mr. Curry County Court Friday morning .
was at the Gallia County
The sheriff's department
sheriff's office reporting the investigated an accident
theft,. someone entered his Wednesday at 5:30p. m. on SR
home for a second time and 689 when a deer was killed. Leo
took another television set.
Chea twood, Wellston, traveling
Zenith Shaw of Rt. 218 south, hit the deer headori,
reported the theft of a dinner heavily damaging the grlU and
bell from her yard. ·
·
radiator of his vehicle .

.Evans·president
of school board
RACINE - Denny Evans
was elected president of the
Southern Local School District
Board of Education Wed·
nesday
night
in
an
organizational session. Named
vice president for the n.W y~ar
was Jack Bostic .
The board set regular
meetings for 7:30 p. m. on the
third Thursday of each month.
Jane Wagner was . appointee
I
clerk for a· two year term
replacing Mrs . Genevieve
Harvey who resigned recently.
HoweveF, at a special session
. following the organizationalsession, Mrs. Harvey was hired
as consul tan! lor the clerk
during her trtiiiting. '
The pay ta te of. board
members was set at $2~ a
I month and a service lund to

reimburse board members lor
ex penses incurred handling
board bwiness was set at $200.
It was agreed il' purchase a
bond for the clerk-treasure~
and the Racine lionie National
the
Bank was · designatA!&lt;!
depository for school funds. ,
The board approved the use
of the high school on Jan. 31 by
the jlacine Emergency Squad
for a soup supper and II was
agreed to join the Ohio School
Boards Assn. lor 1975. The next
meeting w!U .be at 7:30p.m. on
,Jan. 20. ·
Attending were Evans,
Bostic, Grcni~r .Salser, Jr.,
Dennie Hill and David Nease,
boitrd members, Bob .Ord, ·
superintendent, and ' Mrs·.
Harvey; the retiring clerktreasurer.
. ,

as

�•

.,

• I

-!

..
'

~- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday , Jan. 9, 1975

•-The Dilly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thur9dl!y, Jan . 9, 19::;75;.,..::;&gt;..c&gt;..c&gt;..c&gt;...::&gt;...::&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;:&gt;·o- -o-o-o--o-o-o-.o-.o-.o"G~&gt;.C-c"-C&gt;..::""'::&gt;&lt;::&gt;--&lt;::;;-

Rio o-usted in overtime

I .

" I'll cover the front door, you get the back!"

RAY CROMLEY
Getting involved
can be inoolved
By Ray Cromley
WASHINGTON - In a recent colwnn I argued that the only
·way·oo get decent officials and clean politics is for all of us tD get
involved.
_
A thoughtful reader from Napa, Calif., responds: ·
"I try ... I have gone door to door campaigning ... I- have
never nm for public Office ... {It ) is not just a matter of time I
feel there are several restrictions for the average citizen ...
"( I ) In the state of California there IS a filin g fee for all but
the indigent. Evfll If the fee IS only $200 it is more than I can
lfford since in this day of inflatiOn my paycheck as a teacher
leaves me little surplus at the end of the monui.
" (2) The expense of a campaign is not realistic for one of
average income.
"(3) The filing proc-edure Itself is complicated enough to
dl$courage. Interested candidates. To insure against
disquallficallcin.lt is necessary to hire an attorney tD handle the
matter. Another expense .
"(4) All!o, certain political positions are not really available
IQ lhe aver~ge citizen. One example would be the county
supervisors in California who meet during a time which many of
111 ... have tD be on our jobs. Therefore,! think you will agree that
tJ\ose such as lawyers and merchants have the advantage of not
being tied down to certain work hours ."
That puts the problem in a nut she II.
Most of us can add other examples. The legislature in
VIrginia traditionally meets full time in January and February.
This makes II impossible for most men and women tD consider
the job. Few of us can take two months off, especially for a post
paying a part~ime salary ,
. Historically, the dates made sense. In colonial days, these
were months farmers were less busy and January-February
meeting dates thus made it possible for the average man to serve
in public office. Today, the proctlce insures that attorneys, and
others who profit directly or indirectly from membership, will
dominate the state Senate and House.
It Is not only filing for office that is complicated . For years
the laws governing political campaigns have been so confusing
!Ju!! almost eveey candidate has been in violation time and again.
Tile additional restrictions recently voted complicate this legal
labyrinth.-No one In his right mind should now run lor federal
oftlce without a battery of attorneys. Various sections of the law
are so co'i'tradictory, and contain so many ill-defined restrictions, that a sensible candidate will want tD know all reasonable
.interpretations.
There's no gainsaying these problems. But politics Is more
than electing men and women to public ofllce . It's getting them
to&amp;elher to break down rules and cus!Dms - such as those
mentioned above - which prevent good men from nmning. It's
sanring as poll watchers, to help keep the voting and vote
CQUnting honest. It's developing organizations of civic-minded
citizens willing to canvass door~o-&lt;loor, write news releases,
phone, distribute literature, do research and the thousand other
things more effective than dollars In winning political races.
It's keeping an eye on every elected and appointed .official.
Abd it's studying contracts, workmanship and spending on city,
county and state projects. These watchdog duties require a great
deal of voluntary man and woman power .
If the city council or county board or supervisors meets In the
daytime, and that proves a handicap in your community, concerned citizens should start drives to get meeting !l,mes changed.
A major prelude to the election of new blood in my county
Willa racli!allll!!!\.lh the selection of precinct judges and clerks
Of 8eC!tlon, ehMilce won by determined volunteer effort.
\This Is known as clearing away the underbrush.

a

DR. LAMB

Editorza-l .comnJ,ent,
opinion, features

DEAR DR. LAMB - My
dociiJr told~ - have a fl roid
tumor an
ould ha e a
hysterectomy. 'm 43 d we
have six childre
we don't

plan to have any more, but I
don't want this surgery.
I read in a magazine a quote
!rom Gloria Swanson about
how she shrunk her own twnor
without surgery . She said, "I

Extended
life
is
----full o( p~oblems
·--

Jly Jl:l!JlYft. 1I'IUION
1'0LsA, Okla. (UPI) - A ~

are enormous ano. unless we

come to grips with those !irs!,
)'UI'okl P'l watches with it is probably unwise tD tamper
widk)I1!CI excitement as Ule with the biological clock."
w..-Jil celelratfiS the dawn of The biological clock is the
th.-2111 century-and 100 years key to resea'rch into increasing
latet remembers that mtment life expectancy. But Hayfllck
u she sees her great11reat was .quick to point out in an
grllldcblld help usher in the interview that there is a dif.
ference between life expect• 22nd century.
There Is nothing particularly ancy and life span. The latter,
unusual about this scenerio, for controlled by the biological
the cbildren of the last decade clock, appears to be relatively
of U!is century and their fixed .
" If you cured all of the
'
diseases that you know about,
longevity would not be affected
descendants . wlll, in all significantly. Aging is a prl&gt;p:obabllity, belong tD a race of grammed series of events, just
as your development as an
cent.arlans.
Medical acience has brought infant through adolescence and
us to the edge of that adulthood are all programmed.
achievement already , but
" As far as we know, there is
lholli Who are leading the, a fixed median life span for all
..-rch In aging are in- animals. Man, let's say, is
c.nulhiiY Uldnl lbemselves about 00.100, something in that
whal ' the sociological lni· -range. What we have been
• . pllc.-.a of extended life will doing by resolving diseases is
be.
simply allowing more people to
"The most important live to the maximum age.
We're not increasing the
~tn In geronoology is what
are the goals of our research," median life span, whicb is a
said Dr. Leonard Hayflick, popular 'misconception.' '
Hayflick belleves the oldest
- professor
or
medical
microbiology at Stanford anyone could live would be
University's
School
of about 125 oo- 130 years if all
Mediein'e and one _of the diseases were curable.
"Approached in the light of
natiOD's leading researchers in
modern science, I think the
aging.
"If It is to extend human possibility of tampering with
lonptlty, then' one must, as a the biological clock is a real
respoaslble scientist, worry one," he said, adding that a
a!Jout the social consequences. person born since 1950 is likely
Is lt4ealrable to have evei-yme tD see ll COOle to pass &lt;luring his
lift • addlllllilal 10 ot 20 lifetime.
linD
Cllllld l!lritch . l!ut to make such p~;
"' II a lllluch a Hayfllck.said the nation will
,._, , t t111J Woldd not be have to spend more than the $4
IIPUIIkJIIhal addiUOnal lime mlllion now being aijocated
annually to the biology. of
u an old person?
'"'lb4 IIOcial conseonP.IIces. aging.

Scienc,e today

If;.

TOM TIEDE ,
Johnny Appleseed of good word
By TOM TIEDE
MIDDLESBORO, Ky. - In
76 years Henry Harri&lt;en
Mayes has been witness to tlve
wars, one Great Depression,
several sexual revolul!ons and
a state fair that featured
painted ladies. But he's never
seen anything tD equal the
nation 's current state of af·
fairs. "The only thing that's
_goma put things right again,"
he says, "is for every-body tD
right here and now get to know
the Lord."
Mayes, as a matter of fact,
plans to help the familiarizing
process as much as he can . And
ju&lt;Jsing from his past efforts
along the same line, his efforts
should be herculean. II has
been Henry Harrison Mayes
who, singlehandedly and like a
Johnny Appleseed of good
words, has for 56 years been
painting and planting many of
America 's roadside ad-·
vertlsements for Jesus Christ.
You've seen them, no doubt.
They are outside Middlesboro
and nearly every other community in the country. They
are . usually sizable -- things,
fashioned out of corrugated
iron or recycled Coca Cola
sheet metal. "Get Right With
(i,\1(1," they read,.or "Prepare
tOMeet God." Usually they are
straightforward commands,
but in one case - "If You Go
To Hell, It's Your Fault" Mayes adds an editorial
opinion.
Nobody, not even Mayes,
k;nows how many of the
religious billboards have been
distributed, . but
their
famillarlty attests to their
nwnbers. Mayes, a rellred coal
miner, says the posters
presently stand in "at least 50
states and 82 foreign lands."

And even though there's no
total count as to units, Mayes
has computed the energy and
money expended : 60 per cent or
his time aod $75,000 "at a
mmimwn .''

Don't ask why, Mayes says
that should be readily a~
parent. "I've got this cabinet In
my workshop what's filled with
all the nudity and pornography
ever printed. • Well, that alone
is reason for Mayes' passion
for propagandizing God. And
when today 's other troubles
are added to the equation,
" things like the Book of
Revelations predicted a long
time ago," Mayes feels he is
more dedicated than peculiar.
"Somebody's got to he a wakin'
the people up."
There is of course some
wonder whether the people
appreciate being wakened in
the Mayes mariner. Hunters
shoot the Mayes signs full of
double-ought shot, kids at
graduation disfigure them with
class numerals, and farmers
often seem less than pleased
when a Get Right With God
poster appears in the tractor
path . On this latter point,
Mayes admits, " I'm the most

wanted man in America. The
AAU has been after me for 45
years, the highway depart·
ment.&lt;;, too. The last time I
heard from New York they
wanted $43 for the cost of
removing two signs. I suppose I
could go to jail for a million
years."
But they'll have to catch him
first. And considering the
painter's schedule that doesn't
seem likely. To meet
emergency needs, Mayes plans
tD spend this summer traveling
and planting from Georgia to
Maine. "And the next year I'll

•

Meigs

Property
Transfers

Kissinger's Vietnam peace
•
m shambles 10 years later
By PHIT. NEWSOM _
UP! Forelgo News Analyst
It has taken just a little more
than 10 years for the war
Vietnam to come full circle .
It was in 1964 that President
Lyndon B. Johnson ordered the
first massive infusion of
American troops into South
Vietnam tD uphold a regime on
the verge of defeat.
' Defense Secretary Robert S.
McNamara vis&gt;ted Saigon and
drove through its streets
wrapped in a bullet-proof vest.
Americans were just beginning to hear such unfamlliar
names as Soc Trang, Danang,
Duc Tho and Hue.
Communist forces were attacking In regimental and even
division strength, launching
mortars into Danang and Hue
in the north and tightening a
circle around Saigon .
The expenditure of nearly
50,000 Am6rican lives and

·

more than $100 billion staved
· off defeat for South Vietnam
but it did not win the war.
Today the " peace with
honor"
negotiated
by
Secretary of State Henry A.
Kissinger is a shambles. The
last year turned out tD he one of
the bloodiest of the war,
costing some 75,000 lives on
both sides . And once again a
circle is tightening around
Saigon.
Beginmng with President
Dwight D. Eisenhower through
former President Richard M.
Nixon, the Indochina peninsula
has been a major preoccupation
of
American
presidents.
· As the last American troops
departed South Vietnam,
Nixon assured South ·vietnamese President Nguyen Van
Thieu of continued u. s·. su~
port and he warned North
Vietnam that the Uniied States
intended tD see that the terms
of the peace accord were kept.
When President Ford !Dok
office, he declared:
"In Indochina, we are determined to see the observance of
the Paris cease-fire and a
negotiated settlement in Laos.
We hope tD see an early
compromise settlement in
Cambodia."
It didn't work out that way.
Congress cut an administra·
tion request for $1.6 billion in

m

military aid to the Saigon
regime to $700 mlllion.
North Vietnam is stepping up
its military pressure on the
Thieu regime and believes that
balance has shifted in its favor.
It is betting the United States
will forget its pledge tD make
the Paris accords stick.
With Its gosollne supplies
limited, the South Vietnamese
air force has cut down on its
sorties. The army has abandoned scores of small outposts
and Is conserving on Its ammunition.
For only the second time of
the war a provincial capitaiPhuoc Binh-has fallen .
In Saigon, a dissident Catholic minority is demanding
Thieu's resignation, with the
majority Buddhists still mostly
on the fence. There is no sign
that Thleu 's fall might be
imminent. But to win, he must
not only protect the people of
the countryside, he also must
resto~e the economy and keep
open the lines of communication. There is no sign he can-do
that either.
So the war remains a
stalemate.
The United States seems long
ago tD have abandoned any
idea of helping North Vietnam
recover from its war damage.
What furdJer steps il take to
PrOP up Thieu remain to be
seen.

Berrw's wo·rid

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Company ,

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991 -1156 . Editorial Phone 992-

2157
Second class postage paid at
Pomeroy, Oh io.
·

St , New York, New Yor.k
Subscription
rates :
Delivered by carrier wher•
availabLe 60 cents per week ;
By Motar Route where carrier 1
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month . S2.60. By 'nail in .Oh io

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$6. Elsewhere S22 .00 year ; s ix
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S6 50. Subscript ion pr ice '" ·
sunday
Times -

~!"'des

.Se.rUinet.. -

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\.V h!le

Rio-Cedarville box

•••

CEDARVILLE (71)
FG -A FT-A RB PF PTS
5 14 5 7 2 3
15
6-13
44
5
4
16
0 3
12
3 1
1

PLAYER
John Myers
Ste ve Young
Bob Melford
Martin Book
Don Sm ith
Jeff Reep
Dale Thacker
Dave Brutner
Terr y Odom

0-0
3-6

0-0
2-2
46

6 12
3-10
0-1

0
6

5-8

00

0
4

8

2

8
3
I

3
0
2

0
8
16
11
0
2

1-4 0-2
1I 00 0 0
2
25-64 21 -31 36 19 71
RIO GRANDE (70)
FG-A FT-A RB PF PTS
9-29
5-6 16
3
23
5-14
0-0 15
0
10
0-3
0-0
2
0
0
5-15 4-4 8 5 14
4-10 '
0-0
6
3
8
2-8
0-0
4
I
4
1-2
I
4
5
27

Dan Coomes
TOTALS

PLAYER
Jim Noe
Dan ·Bolllnger
Mac Barbee
Jim Stewart
Gil Price
Brownie Wilson
Paul Albanese
Bob Caldwell
0 1
Andy Davenpor t
3-7
George Vickroy
0-0
TOTALS
30-87
Halftime - Rio 36 Cedarville Jl
Officials - Ron Patrick, Don Rinker -

0-0
0-0
0-0

0
I
0

2
4
1

10-12 53 23

0
6
0
70

Springfield

Huntrng dogs improved

By RICHARD L. SHOOK

Cour t St : ; Pomeroy , Ohio
45769 . Business Offlc~ Phone

National adver t is i ng
repreSentat.ve
Bot t ~neiJr.
Gallagher, Inc ., 12 Easl •2nd

Malone , Sa turd ay

Cedarville host.&lt;; Tiffin.
In Wednesday 's reser ve
ga me, the Yell Ow Jackets
pulled away in the fin al
minutes for a 74-ti7 vic tory.

RIO GRANDE COl J..EGE CHEERLEADERS
Members of the 1974-75 Rio Grande College varsity
cheerleaders squad are, front row, Marcia Martin. Second

-UP! Sports Writer
Usually the most significant
contribution a rookie makes to
a championship contending
team during an important
game is when he rosses towel
to a sweating starter. Not Gary
Brokaw.
"He's the difference," a
reluctant Coach Ray Scott of
the Pis!Dns admitted Wednesday night after the Milwaukee
Bucks scored a big 102-92
victory over Detroit.
Four Bucks scored 20 polrits
or more, including Brokaw who
netted his career best of 22.
Brokaw's fast-break layups
and short jwnpers in the
second period, when be scored
14 points and Bob Dan&lt;lrldge
scored 16, gave Milwaukee a
workable margin to carry
them tD the win.
In other NBA games, WashIngton beat Phlienix, 102-!lU,
Boston downed Atlanta, 1~.
Los Angeles defeated Philadelphia, 106-98, and New York
beat Seattle, 113-102.
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
scored 23 points and effectively
nullified Bob Lanier of Detroit
to shave the Pistons' marglri
over Mllwaukee in the Midwest
Division ol the NBA to three
games.
.
Bob Dandridge scored 32,
while Jim Price had 2C)-all but
four in the second half.
Dave Bing (ueled Detroit's
atljtck with 28, including the
l'ivo that let hbn slip past Bill
Rusaell's career total of 14,522
points in!D19th place on the all·
time NBA scoring list. Bing
now baa 14,541.
Lanier added 21 but was
ineffective when he could have
,helped lri the second and third
quarters. He got 12 points in the
final period.
lltll1eU 1112, Salll 15:
· Washlngtoo, led by Mike
Riordan, Elvin Hayes 'lind Phil
Chenier's combined 84 points,
, -extended Phoenix's losini!

•

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row - Sam Curry , Lydia Sharb , Ami Portofe and Buzzy
B11rksdale. Third row - Lori Mlller, Debbie Walsh and Jane
Stowers.

•

in field trial paces
ByDAVEBOWRJNG
discard? By fii!lding your dogs
Written for UP!
at either hunts or trials.
"It's like gettin' all dressed
I used to own a handsome
up with no place to go."
little beagle dog, a black
This is the way a hunter blanket 13-incher which seldom
friend of mine described his failed to bring his cottontails
idea of what takes place at the around to the gon. I bragged
average field trial.
that dog every chance I got, as
And while my frlenli's. mis· will most proud owners of good
conception shows a little dogs.
·
humor, it also shows that he'd
What kept that dog away
never attended a field trial.
from stud chores was the result
To the average rabbit or bird of one field trial circuit.
hunter, I suppose field trials
Trial judges discovered that
appear to be a total waste of the hound had two basic faults
tune. After all, the purpose Is behind a rabbit. He trailed off
to put dogs through their paces, to the side instead of runmng
· not hunt game:
on line, and he often moved a
So what's the purpose?, they rabbit so fast that he missed
ask.
checks In the scent trail and
To improve the very breeds hild to circle to relocate.
of dogs that make a day of
Put a hound like that to ' tud
hunting more enjoyable and and you'd get pups with the
productive, if nothing else.
same faults. The trial Judges'
Fellowship and pride aside, keen eyes permitted m~ to
field trialers want above all avoid producmg litters with my
else to improve the breed of hound 's faults.
Who do you think field
dog in which they're interested: Be it pointer, setter, champions, those dogs who
spaniel, basset or cooner, all have finished their points at
breeds can be made better field trials, command such
through selective breedlDg.
high fees for stud or for pups?
j)iscover Traits
For the same reason that foals
And how do you discover the sired· by Secretariat come so
traits to keep, and those to high : Potential.

KSU edges by Penn State

By United Press Internallonal
Senior captain Rick Gates
and
freshman Tony Jamison
Hlgh-prlc~ Pups
The high-priced do g has combmed to giVe Kent State an
already proven his ability outstandin g backcourt duo
afield and those seeking pups Wednesday night en route to
with sunilar traits are willing the Golden Flashes 61-&lt;i9 comefrom-behind victory over Penn
to pay the going rate.
State
in one of H Ohio college
But getting back to basics,
basketball
games.
wouldn't you, as a hunter,
Only three games are scherather use a dog which did the
duled
for tonight, including
JOb right? I mean never miss a
Cleveland
State at Wri ght
rabbit's check, or busted a
state,
Wilberforce
at Central
covey of quail or failed to
locate a dowmed mallard on a State and Northwood (Mich.)
at Tiffin .
bhnd retrive ?
Gates pumped m 18 points
These are the types of per·
forman ces engendered by field and Jamison added 17 more
trials. Only the best are coupled with eig ht assists and
awarded ribbons, and only the an outstanding floor game to
very best become champions give KSU only it.&lt;; second
and are sought after so highly victory in eight outings this
to pass on their blood to .future season .
Penn State pulled withm two
generations.
with
only a minute left in the
My hunter friend who scoffs
game,
but Randy Felhaber
at field trails may be willing to
make do with low performance calmly sank two foul shots to
dogs. But I'm not, and I don 't msure the KSU victo~ .
Randy Meister with 16 pomt.&lt;;
think' the average hunter is,
and
Kevin Burke with 12 paced
either.
You can get a complete list of the Nittany Lions, now· 4-4 for
names and addresses of field the season.
Wilmington's Bob Blanton
trial clubs and specialty breed
club in your area by contacting scored two free throws with 17
the American K~ nnel Club, 51, seconds remaming Wednesday
Madison Ave., New York 10010. night to snap a 6~ deadlock
and the Quakers held on for a

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DEVOTED T'l THE

Publi~hmg

The Hcdmen, at 2-6·. travel to

Brokaw leads Milwaukee

have several civil affairs units
which are supposed to prepare
to run govenunent services in
mythical countries as the
Army advances.
A few years ago an officer in
New England tried to make the
work more interesting by
picking a real country-Tanzania-and having his men do
rea~c preparation for kee~
ing railroads running and
sewerage faCilities
operating,
After the uproar from the
Africans, the men returned to
their mythical counlries ,
Military officers have looked
into the possibilities of using
force in the oiHields; some feel
It is a feasible solution, but
most apparently view it as
lnipractical. Even if lhe United
State&amp; could take over the
oilfiel-ds, the latter say, the
posaibillties of sabotage are
infinite.

Exec . Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
Pub I istled da11v except
Sat urday by The Oh lo Valley

eacy, John Myers 15 and
Thacker IL
Nue and Bollinger controlled
the backboards w1th 16 and 15
bounds respec ti ve ly, while
Reep and Thacker each pulled
m 8 lor Cedarville.

pressure shots and Pri c e

rebounded as Rio's Albanese
sig nalled frantic ally for a
timeout with 4 seconds showing
on the clock, However, the
official failed to stop the clock
before the other official called
Price for a traveling viola bon
wi th one second remaimng.
The Redmen, with Noe , Jim
Stewart and Bollinger leadmg
the wa y with 23, H and 10
pomt.&lt;; respectively, got off 87
shot.&lt;; from the floor to just 64
for the Yellow Jackets .
The Redmen also controlled
the backboards at both ends or
the court, out-rebounding the
visitors 53-36.
But Ce}larville canned 21 of
31 free tli'rows to 10 of 12 for the
Redmen to make the difference
m the scoring colwnn.
Cedarville placed lour men
in double ligures with Steve
Young and Reep gettmg -16

NEW PRFSIDENT
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Darrell Royal, head coach of
Texas, has been named the
new president of the American
Football Coaches Association.
Others elected were Eddie
Robir!Son of Gramblh1g as first
vice president, Ben Martin of
Air Force as second vice
president and Carmen Cozza of
Yale as _third vice president.

a

INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON ~REA
CHESTER L TANNE.611Ll

out.
The inbounds pa!.s nearly
went out of bonds with Smith
JUSt sa vmg It before Price
intentionally fouled Thacker
with 5 seconds remaining.
Thac ker missed both

WASHINGTON TBADED
ATLANTA (UP!) - Jim
Washlrigton, a (().year veteran
of the National Basketball
Association, was traded to the
Buffalo Braves by the Atlanta
Hawks Wednesday for cash
and future considerations.
Washington, 31, averaged
seven points and five rebounds
in 38 Jtlallonal Basketball
Association games this season.

Petrolandia games frightened no one

\

. '• '

be gomg toward the Grand
Canyon and Southwest; and
after that I'll be takihg in the
Midwest to Yellowstone l&gt;ark."
Besides the usual sign
distribution, 'Mayes will continue the erection of 200 concrete crosses, · each weighing
1,400 pounds. "I've got 85
distributed already. I plan to
have four of them outside each
capital by 19 and 90, if there is a
19 and 90."
Indeed, if there is a 1990
Mayes may be even more
prolific and wandering than
now. Not content with pluggmg
God in Tulsa, not sallsfied with!
the erection of "36 of the signs
on the mack Sea where Russia
can get a whiff/' Mayes has
greater expectations.
"Well, there are nine
planets," he explains, leafing
through an old Life magazine
layout of the heavens.
Silly ? No way. As Mayes sees
it, "Everybody in the Universe
is under God, and maybe the
people on Mats need a little
religious prodding, too."
May he. And maybe they have
energy woes, inflation and ·
painted ladies. "can you see
it?" Mayes smiles, "right in a
crater, translated, 'Get Right
With God'."
God would be pleased . But as
lor the Martian Highway
Department....

Joe C. Circle to James B.
Patterson, Linda L. Patterson,
25 Acres, Lebanon .
W. J. Reeves, Belle Reeves
to Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Elec. Co., Ease., Orange.
Vernon Donahue, Lucy
Donahue to Colwnbus and
Southern Ohio Elec. Co ., Ease.,
Letart .
Milo B. Hutchir!Son, Betty A.
Hutchinson to Fred B. Cassady to Gary E. McDonald,
Goeglein ,
Barbara
A. Betty R. McDonald, Lot 6,
starved my tumor by not considered anunal protein?
Goeglein, Lot 19, Hutchir!Son Arbaugh's Sub ., Tuppers
eating any animal protein. I
My surgeon said these Sub., Rutland.
Plains.
abstained from all meat for twnors may shrink alter the
Paul McElroy, Neva M.
Milo B. Hutchir!Son, Betty A.
over two years . My twnor men~ause because of lack of HukjliMQn to Fred B, McElroy to Colwnbus and
vanished. So did the doctors hormones. He said it could he Goeg'Fe1il,
Barbara
A. Southern OhiO Elec. Co., Ease.,
that wanted to give me a 10 years before that happened, Goegleln, Lot 20, Hutchir!Son Salisbury.
hysterectomy."
and fibroids can grow a lot in Sub., Rutland.
Frank C. Lynch, dec . to
Is it posSible such a diet that lime. Mine is already the
Leota
Lynch, Arthur Lynch,
Nora D. Cassady, formerly
could-save me and others•from size of a grapefruit.
Aff.
for
trans., Salisbury.
Nora D. Guthrie, Raymond C..
a hysterectomy ? I have always'
DEAR READER - Gloria
eaten a great deal or meat, but Swanson is certainly a
would be willing to lry this. remarkable woman and has
After talking to others, I have done a lot to publicize her
been surprised by the nwnbe~ commercial interests in health
of women with this condition . lt foods and health food products. By WARREN L. N~N
Eastern oil fields to insure begin any more than the dusty
seems almost epidemic in I can't condemn !Do strongly
WASHINGTON (UP!)
continuing and cheap fuel files of satellite photographs
numbers.
though , the irresponsible quote Every week or so there's supplies.
with markings for suitable
Since we must find sub- if it is really as you state it.
another hint in the press that
Secretary of State Henry A. paratroop landing . areas
stitutes for the protein in meat,
Such an idea is an~xpression the administration may use Kissinger recently called such around Ulan Ba!Dr means the
what do we use ? Vegetarians of total ignorance or how the force lo take over the Middle an. idea "reckless" but did not United StateS is about to attack
have eaten beans and the like body handles food . Your body
rule it out if an extreme Outer Mongolia.
for their. protein. How could a needs essenijal amino acids
The services are instructed
situation arose.
tumor tell the difference in the and an adequate supply of body of these ammo acids
A year ago, it was revealed to prepare the basic in_type of protein? Are cheeses protein . If you deprive Y?ur found . in protein enough tD the Marines had held a huge formation for thousands of
cause any fibroid to shrink, you exercise in desert warfare at • contingencies so they don't
can seriously damage your their - base at Twentynine have to mowit another 0-Day
health . I suspect the post Palms, Calif. More recently, with a hodgepodge of data.
. 7
menopausal shrinking of
Knowledge of the Normandy
- - -- ' - - - " ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - fibroids may have occurred In
invasion zone was so limited
Gloria Swanson 's case , if Wa.~hill~,'ton window when World Warn began that
things occurred as you report.
Britons who had vacationed
Your body breaks down all the military magazlrie Soldiers there were asked to turn in
the protein you eat into it.&lt;; ran an article describing a war their tourist photographs
building blocks of amino acids •game in which the enemy is showjng the lay of the land.
before the amino a~ids that called uPetrolandia."
During the uproar over the
build meat are in the other
Some perspective is added Marine desert training, · this
proteins of your food from when it is realized the Marine reporter asked an Arab miliother sources. When proteins exercise was held In August tary attache in Washington if
are broken down in the in- 1973, two months before the he-or his fellow Arab attaches
testine in!D the amino acid Yom Kippur War and the oil were disturbed. He leaned
building blocks, it makes no crisis lroke out. The Marine back in his chair and laughed.
difference whether the amino Corps has been holding desert
"We're professional military
acids are from meat, cheese or warfare exercises at Twenty- men,U he said. "We know that
beans. Some proteins do not nine Paimsfoc I5Y.,ars; It built the Marine .Corps-like any
con lain all the 8mino acids you the base on th_e Mojave Desert good military organization•
need.
in 1959 partly so it could hold trains fO\' all types of warfare.
Learn to think of amino acids 911Ch training.
"We don't worry if the
as letters in the alphabet.
As for Petrolandla, the Army .Marines practice desert war·
Proteins are like words. Just as said the article contained a fare ; we do worry about what
letters are used tD form words, misprint and th~ mythical decisions' the White House
&lt;lifferent amino acids are used opposition was actually called might make. And we know that
to build different proteins. But, ·patrolandia. The Soldiers' if the White House decides to
when you break words down , article made clear desert take over the oll fields for.
into their building blocks of warfare wasn't involved; lhe cefully, they will try It even if
letters, the letters_ are just . exercise was held on a Kansas the Marinesha\&gt;en't trained for
letters regardless of which farm, involved • all of three it."
.
words they come from. An A is helicopters and was pari of a
If any military units are
an A, while a B is a B. Breaking continuing series of adventure prepared for an oil field
down proteins yields about 20 training exercise in patrolling, takeover, it Wllll't ·be done 110
to 2$ 8mino acids, al!lj lhese hence Pa~landia.
Obviously as naming a war
basic amino acids form all the
In the Pentagon, bowever, game Petrolandla . Military .
"I don~ know- maybe he has laryngitis!"
protein you eat. ' ,
there are CQntingency plans for officers are very aware of
Don't endanger. your health military operations against _the foreign sensitivities. They've
with bad advice and a poor oU areas. But that doesn 't been stung in the past.
diet.
mean an invasion is about to · For exaiiiple, the reserves

1

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Tumor immune to protein diet
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

The Rio Grand e Redmen,
winning just about everythmg '
but the battle or th e
scoreboard, lost the heartbreaker of all heartbrakers, 7170 m overtime tD the Cedarville
Yellow Jackets in the MOC
opener at Lyne Center Wednesday night.
The Redmen, controlling the
tempo of the action for the first
30 minutes, saw the Yellow
Jacket.&lt;; storm back to take a 5
point lead with 4 minutes
remammg,
before
Rio
managed to knot the count at
59-59 at the end of regulation
play.
Redman Andy Davenport
sank a long jwnper to put Rio.,
up 61-59 in overtime before
Yellow Jacket Rock Thacker
sank the fron t end of a one-and·
one to pull within 1 at 61-60.
Davenport connected a minute
later before Cedarville's Jeff
Reep hit the front end of a oneand-nne to make 11 63-ii1 Rio.
Cedarville 's John Myers
connected on the first part of a
one-and-one and Gil Pnce hit a
layup to give Rio a 65-92 lead
before Thacker cashed in a
pair of charity tosses. Redman
Jim Nue responded with a pair
of free throws before Don
Srruth hit a jwnper and Reep
sank a charity toss to tie the
score at 67-67.
The tide quickly turned . in
Cedarvill.e's favor, as Thacker
hit a layup with 55 seconds
remaining, followed by another
by Dan Coomes with 30 seconds
lelt tu boost the Yellow Jacket
margin to 71-67.
Noe hit one free throw before
lobbing a perfectpass lor a Elan
Bollinger layup to pull Rio to
within 1 at 71-70 with 9 secpnds
lert as the Redmen called time

streak to five games. Riordon
finished with 31 points, Hayes
with 27 and Chenier with 26.
The Bullets clinched the win
when they outscored the Suns
22-4 In a 10-mlnute span
starting with three minutes left
In the third period. Charlie
Scott led Phoenix with 26
points.

Celtlcs 104, Hawks 96:
Paul Westphal's spirited
play an~ 23 points helped
Boston tD it.&lt;; fourth win in as
many games · against the
Hawks this season and increased the Celtics' hold on
first place in Ill• Atlantic
Division to II&gt; games over
Buffalo. John Havlicek backed

.
C {1'Gmes

'h ee S~~
slated this week

rp
.L j - •...'

.Three league encounters dot
the SVAC schedule this week as
NorthGallia travels to Eastern
and Kyger Creek hosts Hannan
·Trace in loop games Friday.
Saturday night Eastern hosts
Southwestern in the only
league game and Fairland
visits Symmes Valley.
Friday night's non-league
action has Southern hosting
Hannan, W. Va., and Symmes
Valley traveling to Rock HilL
Friday's Pirate-Eagle battle
should be the weekend's
highlight, as the Bucs try tD
stay within a game's reach of
league-leading Hannan Trace.
The Eagles, on the other
hand, are having one of their
most dismal seasons in recent
years , certainly the worst
under the tutelage _of coach Bill
Phillips whose squads have
never finished lower than
second in the league race.
It will be Greg James and
Mike Camden, Jim Foster's
top boardmen and scorers,
against Tim Spencer, the lone
Eagle tD crack the backboards
this season with any kind of
rebounding authority.
At Kyger-Creek the Bobcats
goal will most likely tie to keep
the Wildcats from keeping the
sc&lt;reboard clicking all mght.
Mark Swain, Hannan Trace 's

up Westphal with 22 point.&lt;; and
Dave Cowens added 19. Tom
Henderson led the Hawks w1th
25 points and Tom VanArsdale
contributed 20.
Lakers 106, 76ers 98:
Gail Goodrich scored 24 of
his 34 points in the second half
as Los
An_geles beat
Philadelphia lor the 15th
straight time since last losing
to the Sixers Feb. 19, 1971 at
Los ~geles: Fred Carter led .
the SIXers With 26 pomts while
All..Star Steve Mix added 21
ints and aiso ulled down 24
pob d
P
reouns.
Knlcks 113, Sonlcs 102 ,
Earl Monroe scored 14 point.&lt;;

0

all-state guard, is the top
scorer in southern

Ohio,

averaging 25.8 points per
game.
The Bobcats have one of the
lowest scoring averages in the
area, They simply have not
been able to put' the ball
through tpe hoop this season.
Southern, a two.point winner
over Symmes Valley last week,
will host · Hannan, W. Va.
Friday night. The Tornados '
Mike Roberts and Dan Brown
led Coach' Carl Wolfe's offense.
Wayne Richardson is the top
offensive .star lor Coach
Bogard Napora's Wildcats.
· At Rock Hill, Coach Ferret!'
Hesson's Vikings will seek that
allusive first victory . The I
Redmen defeated SV earlier
this winter.
·
SVAC STANDINGS
ALL· GAMES
Team
L POP
-Hannan Trace
8 2 6-IQ 534
North Gallia
5 1 415 323
Southwestern
5 4 549 544
Southern
4 4 392 429
Kyger Creek
I 6 320 397
East..-n
I 7 41l7 473
Symmes Va l ley
0 7 364 463
SVAC ONLY
W L POP
Teom
'.
Hannan Trace
6 0 395 291
Nortfi Gallia
5 1 415 232
Southwestern
3 2 275 284,
Southern
3 3 299 327
Easter n
1 4 261 2~
Kyger Creek
0 4 192 244
Sy mmes Va lley
D 4 211 283

w·

SVAC RESERVES
Team
W L POP
North Gallia
5 1 202 162
Hannan Tra ce
4 2 189 179
Southern
3 3 23A 212
KygerCree k
2 2 124 117
Symmes Valley
2 2 1AA 150
Southwestern
2 3 134 165
Eastern
0 5 131 177
Th1s week's games:
Friday North Ga ll ia at
Eastern ; Hannan Trace at
Kyger Creek ; Hann an, W Va
at Southern a nd Sy mm es
Valley at Rock HilL
Saturday - So uthwestern a t
Eastern ; and Q Fa 1rl a n d a t
Symmes Val ley.

•

Will

66-64 Hoosier-Buckeye Conference victory over Bluffton.
Blan!Dn scored 20 )ioints lor
the game and Fletc her Yates
had 21 to help the Quakers
come back from a 4().33 halftime deficit. Wilmington is &amp;-7
overa11 and 2-3 in the conference this season.
Led By Rcpp
Bluffton was led by Dave
Hepp wiU1 18 point.&lt;; and Gre g
Tolliver also had 18 as the
Beavers dropped their fifth

after losing star forward
Cornelius Cash wjth an ankle
inJury early in the- first half.
Jeff Montgomery led the
Falcons with 13 polrits.
Defiance got a balanced
scoring attack with three
starters finishing in double
figures Wednesday night to
take an 115-81 Hoosier-Buckeye
Conference vldory over Find-

Now We Know
Ov e rh ea r d _r a m ark ·
Automation is simply a male
chauvimst plot to make work
so eAsy that eventually women
can do it alL

and 12 each from Kevin

Bilworth and Greg Mugg.
Findlay was led by Ron
Treece and Dale Creager with
19 .points each. The Oilers
slwnped lo 6-6 for the season
and.2-2 in the loop.

consecutive conference game

in as many co ntests this
season. The Beavers are 2-9
overalL
At Oxford, Chuck Goodyear
poured m 14 points and
grabbed 11 rebounds and Steve
Fields added 11 point.&lt;; and 15
rebounds to lead Miami to a 6756 victory over Otterbein .
Miami , now 9-2 for the
season, used 10 players in the
contest and led all the way.
Otterbein could only get within
three pom ts w1th 16 mmutes
remainin g in the contest before
M1am1 pulled away.
Otterbein , down :13-29 at
halftime, has won four or nine
games this season .
Syracuse scored a 90-61 romp
over Bowling Green in a ga me
played at Syracuse. The
Orangemen opened up an early
18-4 lead and were never
headed .
\,\

sams good nslghbor.
Here 's my new State Farm office, where I can serve
you with the best value 1n car, hofn e, life an d health
insurance. I inv1te you to call or drop m an y tim e.

STEVE SNOWDEN
1258 Powell St ., Middleport, Ph . 992-7155
SUTEWIM

llkll
IHd n1/fhbor,
Stt,. F1mt II"''"·

Bowlmg Green, now 7-3,

lnt~un e•

CH pllllu

II DIII D.~~

l bMingllln ,.,_..

p 7308', 1

never got going offensive ly

•

in the third qua rter on the way
to his season high of 38 as he led
New York past Seattle.
Monroe's All..Star backcourt
partner, Walt Frazier, con·
tributed 21 points and Phil
Jackson threw in 18. The
Knicks' backcourt overshadowed a 38-point performance
by Spencer Haywood.
SERVICES SCHEDULED .
LOS ANGELES (UPI ) _
.
Pitcher Don Wilso n_ of the
Houston Astros and h1s :;.yearold son will be buried Fnday
fll
- funera 1 servtces
·
o _owmg
at
Faithful Central MISSionary
Baptist Church m south Los
Angeles .
Wilson and his son , Alexander, died of carbon monoxide
poisoning at their home m
Houston Sunday. Wilson lived
here while attending Compton
College before JOin ing the
Astros.
.,

lay.
The Yellow Jackets, now 8-4
over all and ·!Ml in the league,
got 16 points from Bob Martin

Here's New Life
For Tired Walls!

VANYL-ITE .LATEX INTERIOR
PAINT

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Ph. 992-3629

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110 W. MAIN

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�•

.,

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-!

..
'

~- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday , Jan. 9, 1975

•-The Dilly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thur9dl!y, Jan . 9, 19::;75;.,..::;&gt;..c&gt;..c&gt;..c&gt;...::&gt;...::&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;:&gt;·o- -o-o-o--o-o-o-.o-.o-.o"G~&gt;.C-c"-C&gt;..::""'::&gt;&lt;::&gt;--&lt;::;;-

Rio o-usted in overtime

I .

" I'll cover the front door, you get the back!"

RAY CROMLEY
Getting involved
can be inoolved
By Ray Cromley
WASHINGTON - In a recent colwnn I argued that the only
·way·oo get decent officials and clean politics is for all of us tD get
involved.
_
A thoughtful reader from Napa, Calif., responds: ·
"I try ... I have gone door to door campaigning ... I- have
never nm for public Office ... {It ) is not just a matter of time I
feel there are several restrictions for the average citizen ...
"( I ) In the state of California there IS a filin g fee for all but
the indigent. Evfll If the fee IS only $200 it is more than I can
lfford since in this day of inflatiOn my paycheck as a teacher
leaves me little surplus at the end of the monui.
" (2) The expense of a campaign is not realistic for one of
average income.
"(3) The filing proc-edure Itself is complicated enough to
dl$courage. Interested candidates. To insure against
disquallficallcin.lt is necessary to hire an attorney tD handle the
matter. Another expense .
"(4) All!o, certain political positions are not really available
IQ lhe aver~ge citizen. One example would be the county
supervisors in California who meet during a time which many of
111 ... have tD be on our jobs. Therefore,! think you will agree that
tJ\ose such as lawyers and merchants have the advantage of not
being tied down to certain work hours ."
That puts the problem in a nut she II.
Most of us can add other examples. The legislature in
VIrginia traditionally meets full time in January and February.
This makes II impossible for most men and women tD consider
the job. Few of us can take two months off, especially for a post
paying a part~ime salary ,
. Historically, the dates made sense. In colonial days, these
were months farmers were less busy and January-February
meeting dates thus made it possible for the average man to serve
in public office. Today, the proctlce insures that attorneys, and
others who profit directly or indirectly from membership, will
dominate the state Senate and House.
It Is not only filing for office that is complicated . For years
the laws governing political campaigns have been so confusing
!Ju!! almost eveey candidate has been in violation time and again.
Tile additional restrictions recently voted complicate this legal
labyrinth.-No one In his right mind should now run lor federal
oftlce without a battery of attorneys. Various sections of the law
are so co'i'tradictory, and contain so many ill-defined restrictions, that a sensible candidate will want tD know all reasonable
.interpretations.
There's no gainsaying these problems. But politics Is more
than electing men and women to public ofllce . It's getting them
to&amp;elher to break down rules and cus!Dms - such as those
mentioned above - which prevent good men from nmning. It's
sanring as poll watchers, to help keep the voting and vote
CQUnting honest. It's developing organizations of civic-minded
citizens willing to canvass door~o-&lt;loor, write news releases,
phone, distribute literature, do research and the thousand other
things more effective than dollars In winning political races.
It's keeping an eye on every elected and appointed .official.
Abd it's studying contracts, workmanship and spending on city,
county and state projects. These watchdog duties require a great
deal of voluntary man and woman power .
If the city council or county board or supervisors meets In the
daytime, and that proves a handicap in your community, concerned citizens should start drives to get meeting !l,mes changed.
A major prelude to the election of new blood in my county
Willa racli!allll!!!\.lh the selection of precinct judges and clerks
Of 8eC!tlon, ehMilce won by determined volunteer effort.
\This Is known as clearing away the underbrush.

a

DR. LAMB

Editorza-l .comnJ,ent,
opinion, features

DEAR DR. LAMB - My
dociiJr told~ - have a fl roid
tumor an
ould ha e a
hysterectomy. 'm 43 d we
have six childre
we don't

plan to have any more, but I
don't want this surgery.
I read in a magazine a quote
!rom Gloria Swanson about
how she shrunk her own twnor
without surgery . She said, "I

Extended
life
is
----full o( p~oblems
·--

Jly Jl:l!JlYft. 1I'IUION
1'0LsA, Okla. (UPI) - A ~

are enormous ano. unless we

come to grips with those !irs!,
)'UI'okl P'l watches with it is probably unwise tD tamper
widk)I1!CI excitement as Ule with the biological clock."
w..-Jil celelratfiS the dawn of The biological clock is the
th.-2111 century-and 100 years key to resea'rch into increasing
latet remembers that mtment life expectancy. But Hayfllck
u she sees her great11reat was .quick to point out in an
grllldcblld help usher in the interview that there is a dif.
ference between life expect• 22nd century.
There Is nothing particularly ancy and life span. The latter,
unusual about this scenerio, for controlled by the biological
the cbildren of the last decade clock, appears to be relatively
of U!is century and their fixed .
" If you cured all of the
'
diseases that you know about,
longevity would not be affected
descendants . wlll, in all significantly. Aging is a prl&gt;p:obabllity, belong tD a race of grammed series of events, just
as your development as an
cent.arlans.
Medical acience has brought infant through adolescence and
us to the edge of that adulthood are all programmed.
achievement already , but
" As far as we know, there is
lholli Who are leading the, a fixed median life span for all
..-rch In aging are in- animals. Man, let's say, is
c.nulhiiY Uldnl lbemselves about 00.100, something in that
whal ' the sociological lni· -range. What we have been
• . pllc.-.a of extended life will doing by resolving diseases is
be.
simply allowing more people to
"The most important live to the maximum age.
We're not increasing the
~tn In geronoology is what
are the goals of our research," median life span, whicb is a
said Dr. Leonard Hayflick, popular 'misconception.' '
Hayflick belleves the oldest
- professor
or
medical
microbiology at Stanford anyone could live would be
University's
School
of about 125 oo- 130 years if all
Mediein'e and one _of the diseases were curable.
"Approached in the light of
natiOD's leading researchers in
modern science, I think the
aging.
"If It is to extend human possibility of tampering with
lonptlty, then' one must, as a the biological clock is a real
respoaslble scientist, worry one," he said, adding that a
a!Jout the social consequences. person born since 1950 is likely
Is lt4ealrable to have evei-yme tD see ll COOle to pass &lt;luring his
lift • addlllllilal 10 ot 20 lifetime.
linD
Cllllld l!lritch . l!ut to make such p~;
"' II a lllluch a Hayfllck.said the nation will
,._, , t t111J Woldd not be have to spend more than the $4
IIPUIIkJIIhal addiUOnal lime mlllion now being aijocated
annually to the biology. of
u an old person?
'"'lb4 IIOcial conseonP.IIces. aging.

Scienc,e today

If;.

TOM TIEDE ,
Johnny Appleseed of good word
By TOM TIEDE
MIDDLESBORO, Ky. - In
76 years Henry Harri&lt;en
Mayes has been witness to tlve
wars, one Great Depression,
several sexual revolul!ons and
a state fair that featured
painted ladies. But he's never
seen anything tD equal the
nation 's current state of af·
fairs. "The only thing that's
_goma put things right again,"
he says, "is for every-body tD
right here and now get to know
the Lord."
Mayes, as a matter of fact,
plans to help the familiarizing
process as much as he can . And
ju&lt;Jsing from his past efforts
along the same line, his efforts
should be herculean. II has
been Henry Harrison Mayes
who, singlehandedly and like a
Johnny Appleseed of good
words, has for 56 years been
painting and planting many of
America 's roadside ad-·
vertlsements for Jesus Christ.
You've seen them, no doubt.
They are outside Middlesboro
and nearly every other community in the country. They
are . usually sizable -- things,
fashioned out of corrugated
iron or recycled Coca Cola
sheet metal. "Get Right With
(i,\1(1," they read,.or "Prepare
tOMeet God." Usually they are
straightforward commands,
but in one case - "If You Go
To Hell, It's Your Fault" Mayes adds an editorial
opinion.
Nobody, not even Mayes,
k;nows how many of the
religious billboards have been
distributed, . but
their
famillarlty attests to their
nwnbers. Mayes, a rellred coal
miner, says the posters
presently stand in "at least 50
states and 82 foreign lands."

And even though there's no
total count as to units, Mayes
has computed the energy and
money expended : 60 per cent or
his time aod $75,000 "at a
mmimwn .''

Don't ask why, Mayes says
that should be readily a~
parent. "I've got this cabinet In
my workshop what's filled with
all the nudity and pornography
ever printed. • Well, that alone
is reason for Mayes' passion
for propagandizing God. And
when today 's other troubles
are added to the equation,
" things like the Book of
Revelations predicted a long
time ago," Mayes feels he is
more dedicated than peculiar.
"Somebody's got to he a wakin'
the people up."
There is of course some
wonder whether the people
appreciate being wakened in
the Mayes mariner. Hunters
shoot the Mayes signs full of
double-ought shot, kids at
graduation disfigure them with
class numerals, and farmers
often seem less than pleased
when a Get Right With God
poster appears in the tractor
path . On this latter point,
Mayes admits, " I'm the most

wanted man in America. The
AAU has been after me for 45
years, the highway depart·
ment.&lt;;, too. The last time I
heard from New York they
wanted $43 for the cost of
removing two signs. I suppose I
could go to jail for a million
years."
But they'll have to catch him
first. And considering the
painter's schedule that doesn't
seem likely. To meet
emergency needs, Mayes plans
tD spend this summer traveling
and planting from Georgia to
Maine. "And the next year I'll

•

Meigs

Property
Transfers

Kissinger's Vietnam peace
•
m shambles 10 years later
By PHIT. NEWSOM _
UP! Forelgo News Analyst
It has taken just a little more
than 10 years for the war
Vietnam to come full circle .
It was in 1964 that President
Lyndon B. Johnson ordered the
first massive infusion of
American troops into South
Vietnam tD uphold a regime on
the verge of defeat.
' Defense Secretary Robert S.
McNamara vis&gt;ted Saigon and
drove through its streets
wrapped in a bullet-proof vest.
Americans were just beginning to hear such unfamlliar
names as Soc Trang, Danang,
Duc Tho and Hue.
Communist forces were attacking In regimental and even
division strength, launching
mortars into Danang and Hue
in the north and tightening a
circle around Saigon .
The expenditure of nearly
50,000 Am6rican lives and

·

more than $100 billion staved
· off defeat for South Vietnam
but it did not win the war.
Today the " peace with
honor"
negotiated
by
Secretary of State Henry A.
Kissinger is a shambles. The
last year turned out tD he one of
the bloodiest of the war,
costing some 75,000 lives on
both sides . And once again a
circle is tightening around
Saigon.
Beginmng with President
Dwight D. Eisenhower through
former President Richard M.
Nixon, the Indochina peninsula
has been a major preoccupation
of
American
presidents.
· As the last American troops
departed South Vietnam,
Nixon assured South ·vietnamese President Nguyen Van
Thieu of continued u. s·. su~
port and he warned North
Vietnam that the Uniied States
intended tD see that the terms
of the peace accord were kept.
When President Ford !Dok
office, he declared:
"In Indochina, we are determined to see the observance of
the Paris cease-fire and a
negotiated settlement in Laos.
We hope tD see an early
compromise settlement in
Cambodia."
It didn't work out that way.
Congress cut an administra·
tion request for $1.6 billion in

m

military aid to the Saigon
regime to $700 mlllion.
North Vietnam is stepping up
its military pressure on the
Thieu regime and believes that
balance has shifted in its favor.
It is betting the United States
will forget its pledge tD make
the Paris accords stick.
With Its gosollne supplies
limited, the South Vietnamese
air force has cut down on its
sorties. The army has abandoned scores of small outposts
and Is conserving on Its ammunition.
For only the second time of
the war a provincial capitaiPhuoc Binh-has fallen .
In Saigon, a dissident Catholic minority is demanding
Thieu's resignation, with the
majority Buddhists still mostly
on the fence. There is no sign
that Thleu 's fall might be
imminent. But to win, he must
not only protect the people of
the countryside, he also must
resto~e the economy and keep
open the lines of communication. There is no sign he can-do
that either.
So the war remains a
stalemate.
The United States seems long
ago tD have abandoned any
idea of helping North Vietnam
recover from its war damage.
What furdJer steps il take to
PrOP up Thieu remain to be
seen.

Berrw's wo·rid

•

~

\

••

.

Company ,

.

'

..

111

991 -1156 . Editorial Phone 992-

2157
Second class postage paid at
Pomeroy, Oh io.
·

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S6 50. Subscript ion pr ice '" ·
sunday
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~!"'des

.Se.rUinet.. -

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\.V h!le

Rio-Cedarville box

•••

CEDARVILLE (71)
FG -A FT-A RB PF PTS
5 14 5 7 2 3
15
6-13
44
5
4
16
0 3
12
3 1
1

PLAYER
John Myers
Ste ve Young
Bob Melford
Martin Book
Don Sm ith
Jeff Reep
Dale Thacker
Dave Brutner
Terr y Odom

0-0
3-6

0-0
2-2
46

6 12
3-10
0-1

0
6

5-8

00

0
4

8

2

8
3
I

3
0
2

0
8
16
11
0
2

1-4 0-2
1I 00 0 0
2
25-64 21 -31 36 19 71
RIO GRANDE (70)
FG-A FT-A RB PF PTS
9-29
5-6 16
3
23
5-14
0-0 15
0
10
0-3
0-0
2
0
0
5-15 4-4 8 5 14
4-10 '
0-0
6
3
8
2-8
0-0
4
I
4
1-2
I
4
5
27

Dan Coomes
TOTALS

PLAYER
Jim Noe
Dan ·Bolllnger
Mac Barbee
Jim Stewart
Gil Price
Brownie Wilson
Paul Albanese
Bob Caldwell
0 1
Andy Davenpor t
3-7
George Vickroy
0-0
TOTALS
30-87
Halftime - Rio 36 Cedarville Jl
Officials - Ron Patrick, Don Rinker -

0-0
0-0
0-0

0
I
0

2
4
1

10-12 53 23

0
6
0
70

Springfield

Huntrng dogs improved

By RICHARD L. SHOOK

Cour t St : ; Pomeroy , Ohio
45769 . Business Offlc~ Phone

National adver t is i ng
repreSentat.ve
Bot t ~neiJr.
Gallagher, Inc ., 12 Easl •2nd

Malone , Sa turd ay

Cedarville host.&lt;; Tiffin.
In Wednesday 's reser ve
ga me, the Yell Ow Jackets
pulled away in the fin al
minutes for a 74-ti7 vic tory.

RIO GRANDE COl J..EGE CHEERLEADERS
Members of the 1974-75 Rio Grande College varsity
cheerleaders squad are, front row, Marcia Martin. Second

-UP! Sports Writer
Usually the most significant
contribution a rookie makes to
a championship contending
team during an important
game is when he rosses towel
to a sweating starter. Not Gary
Brokaw.
"He's the difference," a
reluctant Coach Ray Scott of
the Pis!Dns admitted Wednesday night after the Milwaukee
Bucks scored a big 102-92
victory over Detroit.
Four Bucks scored 20 polrits
or more, including Brokaw who
netted his career best of 22.
Brokaw's fast-break layups
and short jwnpers in the
second period, when be scored
14 points and Bob Dan&lt;lrldge
scored 16, gave Milwaukee a
workable margin to carry
them tD the win.
In other NBA games, WashIngton beat Phlienix, 102-!lU,
Boston downed Atlanta, 1~.
Los Angeles defeated Philadelphia, 106-98, and New York
beat Seattle, 113-102.
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
scored 23 points and effectively
nullified Bob Lanier of Detroit
to shave the Pistons' marglri
over Mllwaukee in the Midwest
Division ol the NBA to three
games.
.
Bob Dandridge scored 32,
while Jim Price had 2C)-all but
four in the second half.
Dave Bing (ueled Detroit's
atljtck with 28, including the
l'ivo that let hbn slip past Bill
Rusaell's career total of 14,522
points in!D19th place on the all·
time NBA scoring list. Bing
now baa 14,541.
Lanier added 21 but was
ineffective when he could have
,helped lri the second and third
quarters. He got 12 points in the
final period.
lltll1eU 1112, Salll 15:
· Washlngtoo, led by Mike
Riordan, Elvin Hayes 'lind Phil
Chenier's combined 84 points,
, -extended Phoenix's losini!

•

•

--

row - Sam Curry , Lydia Sharb , Ami Portofe and Buzzy
B11rksdale. Third row - Lori Mlller, Debbie Walsh and Jane
Stowers.

•

in field trial paces
ByDAVEBOWRJNG
discard? By fii!lding your dogs
Written for UP!
at either hunts or trials.
"It's like gettin' all dressed
I used to own a handsome
up with no place to go."
little beagle dog, a black
This is the way a hunter blanket 13-incher which seldom
friend of mine described his failed to bring his cottontails
idea of what takes place at the around to the gon. I bragged
average field trial.
that dog every chance I got, as
And while my frlenli's. mis· will most proud owners of good
conception shows a little dogs.
·
humor, it also shows that he'd
What kept that dog away
never attended a field trial.
from stud chores was the result
To the average rabbit or bird of one field trial circuit.
hunter, I suppose field trials
Trial judges discovered that
appear to be a total waste of the hound had two basic faults
tune. After all, the purpose Is behind a rabbit. He trailed off
to put dogs through their paces, to the side instead of runmng
· not hunt game:
on line, and he often moved a
So what's the purpose?, they rabbit so fast that he missed
ask.
checks In the scent trail and
To improve the very breeds hild to circle to relocate.
of dogs that make a day of
Put a hound like that to ' tud
hunting more enjoyable and and you'd get pups with the
productive, if nothing else.
same faults. The trial Judges'
Fellowship and pride aside, keen eyes permitted m~ to
field trialers want above all avoid producmg litters with my
else to improve the breed of hound 's faults.
Who do you think field
dog in which they're interested: Be it pointer, setter, champions, those dogs who
spaniel, basset or cooner, all have finished their points at
breeds can be made better field trials, command such
through selective breedlDg.
high fees for stud or for pups?
j)iscover Traits
For the same reason that foals
And how do you discover the sired· by Secretariat come so
traits to keep, and those to high : Potential.

KSU edges by Penn State

By United Press Internallonal
Senior captain Rick Gates
and
freshman Tony Jamison
Hlgh-prlc~ Pups
The high-priced do g has combmed to giVe Kent State an
already proven his ability outstandin g backcourt duo
afield and those seeking pups Wednesday night en route to
with sunilar traits are willing the Golden Flashes 61-&lt;i9 comefrom-behind victory over Penn
to pay the going rate.
State
in one of H Ohio college
But getting back to basics,
basketball
games.
wouldn't you, as a hunter,
Only three games are scherather use a dog which did the
duled
for tonight, including
JOb right? I mean never miss a
Cleveland
State at Wri ght
rabbit's check, or busted a
state,
Wilberforce
at Central
covey of quail or failed to
locate a dowmed mallard on a State and Northwood (Mich.)
at Tiffin .
bhnd retrive ?
Gates pumped m 18 points
These are the types of per·
forman ces engendered by field and Jamison added 17 more
trials. Only the best are coupled with eig ht assists and
awarded ribbons, and only the an outstanding floor game to
very best become champions give KSU only it.&lt;; second
and are sought after so highly victory in eight outings this
to pass on their blood to .future season .
Penn State pulled withm two
generations.
with
only a minute left in the
My hunter friend who scoffs
game,
but Randy Felhaber
at field trails may be willing to
make do with low performance calmly sank two foul shots to
dogs. But I'm not, and I don 't msure the KSU victo~ .
Randy Meister with 16 pomt.&lt;;
think' the average hunter is,
and
Kevin Burke with 12 paced
either.
You can get a complete list of the Nittany Lions, now· 4-4 for
names and addresses of field the season.
Wilmington's Bob Blanton
trial clubs and specialty breed
club in your area by contacting scored two free throws with 17
the American K~ nnel Club, 51, seconds remaming Wednesday
Madison Ave., New York 10010. night to snap a 6~ deadlock
and the Quakers held on for a

•

•

DEVOTED T'l THE

Publi~hmg

The Hcdmen, at 2-6·. travel to

Brokaw leads Milwaukee

have several civil affairs units
which are supposed to prepare
to run govenunent services in
mythical countries as the
Army advances.
A few years ago an officer in
New England tried to make the
work more interesting by
picking a real country-Tanzania-and having his men do
rea~c preparation for kee~
ing railroads running and
sewerage faCilities
operating,
After the uproar from the
Africans, the men returned to
their mythical counlries ,
Military officers have looked
into the possibilities of using
force in the oiHields; some feel
It is a feasible solution, but
most apparently view it as
lnipractical. Even if lhe United
State&amp; could take over the
oilfiel-ds, the latter say, the
posaibillties of sabotage are
infinite.

Exec . Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
Pub I istled da11v except
Sat urday by The Oh lo Valley

eacy, John Myers 15 and
Thacker IL
Nue and Bollinger controlled
the backboards w1th 16 and 15
bounds respec ti ve ly, while
Reep and Thacker each pulled
m 8 lor Cedarville.

pressure shots and Pri c e

rebounded as Rio's Albanese
sig nalled frantic ally for a
timeout with 4 seconds showing
on the clock, However, the
official failed to stop the clock
before the other official called
Price for a traveling viola bon
wi th one second remaimng.
The Redmen, with Noe , Jim
Stewart and Bollinger leadmg
the wa y with 23, H and 10
pomt.&lt;; respectively, got off 87
shot.&lt;; from the floor to just 64
for the Yellow Jackets .
The Redmen also controlled
the backboards at both ends or
the court, out-rebounding the
visitors 53-36.
But Ce}larville canned 21 of
31 free tli'rows to 10 of 12 for the
Redmen to make the difference
m the scoring colwnn.
Cedarville placed lour men
in double ligures with Steve
Young and Reep gettmg -16

NEW PRFSIDENT
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Darrell Royal, head coach of
Texas, has been named the
new president of the American
Football Coaches Association.
Others elected were Eddie
Robir!Son of Gramblh1g as first
vice president, Ben Martin of
Air Force as second vice
president and Carmen Cozza of
Yale as _third vice president.

a

INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON ~REA
CHESTER L TANNE.611Ll

out.
The inbounds pa!.s nearly
went out of bonds with Smith
JUSt sa vmg It before Price
intentionally fouled Thacker
with 5 seconds remaining.
Thac ker missed both

WASHINGTON TBADED
ATLANTA (UP!) - Jim
Washlrigton, a (().year veteran
of the National Basketball
Association, was traded to the
Buffalo Braves by the Atlanta
Hawks Wednesday for cash
and future considerations.
Washington, 31, averaged
seven points and five rebounds
in 38 Jtlallonal Basketball
Association games this season.

Petrolandia games frightened no one

\

. '• '

be gomg toward the Grand
Canyon and Southwest; and
after that I'll be takihg in the
Midwest to Yellowstone l&gt;ark."
Besides the usual sign
distribution, 'Mayes will continue the erection of 200 concrete crosses, · each weighing
1,400 pounds. "I've got 85
distributed already. I plan to
have four of them outside each
capital by 19 and 90, if there is a
19 and 90."
Indeed, if there is a 1990
Mayes may be even more
prolific and wandering than
now. Not content with pluggmg
God in Tulsa, not sallsfied with!
the erection of "36 of the signs
on the mack Sea where Russia
can get a whiff/' Mayes has
greater expectations.
"Well, there are nine
planets," he explains, leafing
through an old Life magazine
layout of the heavens.
Silly ? No way. As Mayes sees
it, "Everybody in the Universe
is under God, and maybe the
people on Mats need a little
religious prodding, too."
May he. And maybe they have
energy woes, inflation and ·
painted ladies. "can you see
it?" Mayes smiles, "right in a
crater, translated, 'Get Right
With God'."
God would be pleased . But as
lor the Martian Highway
Department....

Joe C. Circle to James B.
Patterson, Linda L. Patterson,
25 Acres, Lebanon .
W. J. Reeves, Belle Reeves
to Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Elec. Co., Ease., Orange.
Vernon Donahue, Lucy
Donahue to Colwnbus and
Southern Ohio Elec. Co ., Ease.,
Letart .
Milo B. Hutchir!Son, Betty A.
Hutchinson to Fred B. Cassady to Gary E. McDonald,
Goeglein ,
Barbara
A. Betty R. McDonald, Lot 6,
starved my tumor by not considered anunal protein?
Goeglein, Lot 19, Hutchir!Son Arbaugh's Sub ., Tuppers
eating any animal protein. I
My surgeon said these Sub., Rutland.
Plains.
abstained from all meat for twnors may shrink alter the
Paul McElroy, Neva M.
Milo B. Hutchir!Son, Betty A.
over two years . My twnor men~ause because of lack of HukjliMQn to Fred B, McElroy to Colwnbus and
vanished. So did the doctors hormones. He said it could he Goeg'Fe1il,
Barbara
A. Southern OhiO Elec. Co., Ease.,
that wanted to give me a 10 years before that happened, Goegleln, Lot 20, Hutchir!Son Salisbury.
hysterectomy."
and fibroids can grow a lot in Sub., Rutland.
Frank C. Lynch, dec . to
Is it posSible such a diet that lime. Mine is already the
Leota
Lynch, Arthur Lynch,
Nora D. Cassady, formerly
could-save me and others•from size of a grapefruit.
Aff.
for
trans., Salisbury.
Nora D. Guthrie, Raymond C..
a hysterectomy ? I have always'
DEAR READER - Gloria
eaten a great deal or meat, but Swanson is certainly a
would be willing to lry this. remarkable woman and has
After talking to others, I have done a lot to publicize her
been surprised by the nwnbe~ commercial interests in health
of women with this condition . lt foods and health food products. By WARREN L. N~N
Eastern oil fields to insure begin any more than the dusty
seems almost epidemic in I can't condemn !Do strongly
WASHINGTON (UP!)
continuing and cheap fuel files of satellite photographs
numbers.
though , the irresponsible quote Every week or so there's supplies.
with markings for suitable
Since we must find sub- if it is really as you state it.
another hint in the press that
Secretary of State Henry A. paratroop landing . areas
stitutes for the protein in meat,
Such an idea is an~xpression the administration may use Kissinger recently called such around Ulan Ba!Dr means the
what do we use ? Vegetarians of total ignorance or how the force lo take over the Middle an. idea "reckless" but did not United StateS is about to attack
have eaten beans and the like body handles food . Your body
rule it out if an extreme Outer Mongolia.
for their. protein. How could a needs essenijal amino acids
The services are instructed
situation arose.
tumor tell the difference in the and an adequate supply of body of these ammo acids
A year ago, it was revealed to prepare the basic in_type of protein? Are cheeses protein . If you deprive Y?ur found . in protein enough tD the Marines had held a huge formation for thousands of
cause any fibroid to shrink, you exercise in desert warfare at • contingencies so they don't
can seriously damage your their - base at Twentynine have to mowit another 0-Day
health . I suspect the post Palms, Calif. More recently, with a hodgepodge of data.
. 7
menopausal shrinking of
Knowledge of the Normandy
- - -- ' - - - " ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - fibroids may have occurred In
invasion zone was so limited
Gloria Swanson 's case , if Wa.~hill~,'ton window when World Warn began that
things occurred as you report.
Britons who had vacationed
Your body breaks down all the military magazlrie Soldiers there were asked to turn in
the protein you eat into it.&lt;; ran an article describing a war their tourist photographs
building blocks of amino acids •game in which the enemy is showjng the lay of the land.
before the amino a~ids that called uPetrolandia."
During the uproar over the
build meat are in the other
Some perspective is added Marine desert training, · this
proteins of your food from when it is realized the Marine reporter asked an Arab miliother sources. When proteins exercise was held In August tary attache in Washington if
are broken down in the in- 1973, two months before the he-or his fellow Arab attaches
testine in!D the amino acid Yom Kippur War and the oil were disturbed. He leaned
building blocks, it makes no crisis lroke out. The Marine back in his chair and laughed.
difference whether the amino Corps has been holding desert
"We're professional military
acids are from meat, cheese or warfare exercises at Twenty- men,U he said. "We know that
beans. Some proteins do not nine Paimsfoc I5Y.,ars; It built the Marine .Corps-like any
con lain all the 8mino acids you the base on th_e Mojave Desert good military organization•
need.
in 1959 partly so it could hold trains fO\' all types of warfare.
Learn to think of amino acids 911Ch training.
"We don't worry if the
as letters in the alphabet.
As for Petrolandla, the Army .Marines practice desert war·
Proteins are like words. Just as said the article contained a fare ; we do worry about what
letters are used tD form words, misprint and th~ mythical decisions' the White House
&lt;lifferent amino acids are used opposition was actually called might make. And we know that
to build different proteins. But, ·patrolandia. The Soldiers' if the White House decides to
when you break words down , article made clear desert take over the oll fields for.
into their building blocks of warfare wasn't involved; lhe cefully, they will try It even if
letters, the letters_ are just . exercise was held on a Kansas the Marinesha\&gt;en't trained for
letters regardless of which farm, involved • all of three it."
.
words they come from. An A is helicopters and was pari of a
If any military units are
an A, while a B is a B. Breaking continuing series of adventure prepared for an oil field
down proteins yields about 20 training exercise in patrolling, takeover, it Wllll't ·be done 110
to 2$ 8mino acids, al!lj lhese hence Pa~landia.
Obviously as naming a war
basic amino acids form all the
In the Pentagon, bowever, game Petrolandla . Military .
"I don~ know- maybe he has laryngitis!"
protein you eat. ' ,
there are CQntingency plans for officers are very aware of
Don't endanger. your health military operations against _the foreign sensitivities. They've
with bad advice and a poor oU areas. But that doesn 't been stung in the past.
diet.
mean an invasion is about to · For exaiiiple, the reserves

1

..

'

.

Tumor immune to protein diet
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

The Rio Grand e Redmen,
winning just about everythmg '
but the battle or th e
scoreboard, lost the heartbreaker of all heartbrakers, 7170 m overtime tD the Cedarville
Yellow Jackets in the MOC
opener at Lyne Center Wednesday night.
The Redmen, controlling the
tempo of the action for the first
30 minutes, saw the Yellow
Jacket.&lt;; storm back to take a 5
point lead with 4 minutes
remammg,
before
Rio
managed to knot the count at
59-59 at the end of regulation
play.
Redman Andy Davenport
sank a long jwnper to put Rio.,
up 61-59 in overtime before
Yellow Jacket Rock Thacker
sank the fron t end of a one-and·
one to pull within 1 at 61-60.
Davenport connected a minute
later before Cedarville's Jeff
Reep hit the front end of a oneand-nne to make 11 63-ii1 Rio.
Cedarville 's John Myers
connected on the first part of a
one-and-one and Gil Pnce hit a
layup to give Rio a 65-92 lead
before Thacker cashed in a
pair of charity tosses. Redman
Jim Nue responded with a pair
of free throws before Don
Srruth hit a jwnper and Reep
sank a charity toss to tie the
score at 67-67.
The tide quickly turned . in
Cedarvill.e's favor, as Thacker
hit a layup with 55 seconds
remaining, followed by another
by Dan Coomes with 30 seconds
lelt tu boost the Yellow Jacket
margin to 71-67.
Noe hit one free throw before
lobbing a perfectpass lor a Elan
Bollinger layup to pull Rio to
within 1 at 71-70 with 9 secpnds
lert as the Redmen called time

streak to five games. Riordon
finished with 31 points, Hayes
with 27 and Chenier with 26.
The Bullets clinched the win
when they outscored the Suns
22-4 In a 10-mlnute span
starting with three minutes left
In the third period. Charlie
Scott led Phoenix with 26
points.

Celtlcs 104, Hawks 96:
Paul Westphal's spirited
play an~ 23 points helped
Boston tD it.&lt;; fourth win in as
many games · against the
Hawks this season and increased the Celtics' hold on
first place in Ill• Atlantic
Division to II&gt; games over
Buffalo. John Havlicek backed

.
C {1'Gmes

'h ee S~~
slated this week

rp
.L j - •...'

.Three league encounters dot
the SVAC schedule this week as
NorthGallia travels to Eastern
and Kyger Creek hosts Hannan
·Trace in loop games Friday.
Saturday night Eastern hosts
Southwestern in the only
league game and Fairland
visits Symmes Valley.
Friday night's non-league
action has Southern hosting
Hannan, W. Va., and Symmes
Valley traveling to Rock HilL
Friday's Pirate-Eagle battle
should be the weekend's
highlight, as the Bucs try tD
stay within a game's reach of
league-leading Hannan Trace.
The Eagles, on the other
hand, are having one of their
most dismal seasons in recent
years , certainly the worst
under the tutelage _of coach Bill
Phillips whose squads have
never finished lower than
second in the league race.
It will be Greg James and
Mike Camden, Jim Foster's
top boardmen and scorers,
against Tim Spencer, the lone
Eagle tD crack the backboards
this season with any kind of
rebounding authority.
At Kyger-Creek the Bobcats
goal will most likely tie to keep
the Wildcats from keeping the
sc&lt;reboard clicking all mght.
Mark Swain, Hannan Trace 's

up Westphal with 22 point.&lt;; and
Dave Cowens added 19. Tom
Henderson led the Hawks w1th
25 points and Tom VanArsdale
contributed 20.
Lakers 106, 76ers 98:
Gail Goodrich scored 24 of
his 34 points in the second half
as Los
An_geles beat
Philadelphia lor the 15th
straight time since last losing
to the Sixers Feb. 19, 1971 at
Los ~geles: Fred Carter led .
the SIXers With 26 pomts while
All..Star Steve Mix added 21
ints and aiso ulled down 24
pob d
P
reouns.
Knlcks 113, Sonlcs 102 ,
Earl Monroe scored 14 point.&lt;;

0

all-state guard, is the top
scorer in southern

Ohio,

averaging 25.8 points per
game.
The Bobcats have one of the
lowest scoring averages in the
area, They simply have not
been able to put' the ball
through tpe hoop this season.
Southern, a two.point winner
over Symmes Valley last week,
will host · Hannan, W. Va.
Friday night. The Tornados '
Mike Roberts and Dan Brown
led Coach' Carl Wolfe's offense.
Wayne Richardson is the top
offensive .star lor Coach
Bogard Napora's Wildcats.
· At Rock Hill, Coach Ferret!'
Hesson's Vikings will seek that
allusive first victory . The I
Redmen defeated SV earlier
this winter.
·
SVAC STANDINGS
ALL· GAMES
Team
L POP
-Hannan Trace
8 2 6-IQ 534
North Gallia
5 1 415 323
Southwestern
5 4 549 544
Southern
4 4 392 429
Kyger Creek
I 6 320 397
East..-n
I 7 41l7 473
Symmes Va l ley
0 7 364 463
SVAC ONLY
W L POP
Teom
'.
Hannan Trace
6 0 395 291
Nortfi Gallia
5 1 415 232
Southwestern
3 2 275 284,
Southern
3 3 299 327
Easter n
1 4 261 2~
Kyger Creek
0 4 192 244
Sy mmes Va lley
D 4 211 283

w·

SVAC RESERVES
Team
W L POP
North Gallia
5 1 202 162
Hannan Tra ce
4 2 189 179
Southern
3 3 23A 212
KygerCree k
2 2 124 117
Symmes Valley
2 2 1AA 150
Southwestern
2 3 134 165
Eastern
0 5 131 177
Th1s week's games:
Friday North Ga ll ia at
Eastern ; Hannan Trace at
Kyger Creek ; Hann an, W Va
at Southern a nd Sy mm es
Valley at Rock HilL
Saturday - So uthwestern a t
Eastern ; and Q Fa 1rl a n d a t
Symmes Val ley.

•

Will

66-64 Hoosier-Buckeye Conference victory over Bluffton.
Blan!Dn scored 20 )ioints lor
the game and Fletc her Yates
had 21 to help the Quakers
come back from a 4().33 halftime deficit. Wilmington is &amp;-7
overa11 and 2-3 in the conference this season.
Led By Rcpp
Bluffton was led by Dave
Hepp wiU1 18 point.&lt;; and Gre g
Tolliver also had 18 as the
Beavers dropped their fifth

after losing star forward
Cornelius Cash wjth an ankle
inJury early in the- first half.
Jeff Montgomery led the
Falcons with 13 polrits.
Defiance got a balanced
scoring attack with three
starters finishing in double
figures Wednesday night to
take an 115-81 Hoosier-Buckeye
Conference vldory over Find-

Now We Know
Ov e rh ea r d _r a m ark ·
Automation is simply a male
chauvimst plot to make work
so eAsy that eventually women
can do it alL

and 12 each from Kevin

Bilworth and Greg Mugg.
Findlay was led by Ron
Treece and Dale Creager with
19 .points each. The Oilers
slwnped lo 6-6 for the season
and.2-2 in the loop.

consecutive conference game

in as many co ntests this
season. The Beavers are 2-9
overalL
At Oxford, Chuck Goodyear
poured m 14 points and
grabbed 11 rebounds and Steve
Fields added 11 point.&lt;; and 15
rebounds to lead Miami to a 6756 victory over Otterbein .
Miami , now 9-2 for the
season, used 10 players in the
contest and led all the way.
Otterbein could only get within
three pom ts w1th 16 mmutes
remainin g in the contest before
M1am1 pulled away.
Otterbein , down :13-29 at
halftime, has won four or nine
games this season .
Syracuse scored a 90-61 romp
over Bowling Green in a ga me
played at Syracuse. The
Orangemen opened up an early
18-4 lead and were never
headed .
\,\

sams good nslghbor.
Here 's my new State Farm office, where I can serve
you with the best value 1n car, hofn e, life an d health
insurance. I inv1te you to call or drop m an y tim e.

STEVE SNOWDEN
1258 Powell St ., Middleport, Ph . 992-7155
SUTEWIM

llkll
IHd n1/fhbor,
Stt,. F1mt II"''"·

Bowlmg Green, now 7-3,

lnt~un e•

CH pllllu

II DIII D.~~

l bMingllln ,.,_..

p 7308', 1

never got going offensive ly

•

in the third qua rter on the way
to his season high of 38 as he led
New York past Seattle.
Monroe's All..Star backcourt
partner, Walt Frazier, con·
tributed 21 points and Phil
Jackson threw in 18. The
Knicks' backcourt overshadowed a 38-point performance
by Spencer Haywood.
SERVICES SCHEDULED .
LOS ANGELES (UPI ) _
.
Pitcher Don Wilso n_ of the
Houston Astros and h1s :;.yearold son will be buried Fnday
fll
- funera 1 servtces
·
o _owmg
at
Faithful Central MISSionary
Baptist Church m south Los
Angeles .
Wilson and his son , Alexander, died of carbon monoxide
poisoning at their home m
Houston Sunday. Wilson lived
here while attending Compton
College before JOin ing the
Astros.
.,

lay.
The Yellow Jackets, now 8-4
over all and ·!Ml in the league,
got 16 points from Bob Martin

Here's New Life
For Tired Walls!

VANYL-ITE .LATEX INTERIOR
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The MEIGS INN
Ph. 992-3629

••

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\~~~~~§\\1W:!:m::!:!I'm'i:m@iMMii¥!:~!~

Iw

'·

; L~ctil. news highlights

.

~~l

0 a... g·d e
S•nort
~
!
\
~
l
r . .r~ , "
i:~

NOV. I -'
Hansen, ~or;
Lauderdale , Fla ., and his
daughter, Chris, were . injured
when lheir light plane crashed
t&lt;'. U
. , near Cherry Ridge.
: :·
NOV. 2- Over 200 members
and gueslli of the Ohio Valley
.,, Horse Show Assn. gathered for
a dinner at Tuppers Plain~ with
many trophies and "awards
.,.. presented.
NOV. 4 - · 'rhe Pomeroy
, _ Chamber of Commerce backed
,.
the attempts of Pomeroy
"· Village to secure the Pomeroy
~· ·
Senior High School for ~ village
hall.
"
NOV . 5 - Henry Wells ,
. ~·
Howard Frank and Robert
. _ Burk were winners of con~.
tested races fo~ major county
posts in lhe November election.
Voters turned down a com, . munity school tax levy by a
wide margin.
NOV. 6 - Five persons were
injured in an accident at the
• Southern Ohio Coal Company's·
" Mine No. I.
NOV. 7 - ·-Almost 300
• members of the Meigs
Agricultural Society voted for
fair board meiflbers compared
" to only eight votes cast in 1973.
NOV. 8 - Mines of lhe
Southern Ohio Coal Co. were
down as the nation's miners
went on strike.
NOV. 9 - The Meigs High
School Spanish Club aided
hurricane stricken Honduras.
NOV. 10 - Terry Whitlatch
and Terry Qualls were named
to the All.SEOALfootballteam
with Mickey Davenport and
Lonnie Coates receiving
honorable mention.
NOV.' 11 - Drew Webster
Post 39, American Le~ion,
observed the traditional Ar·
mistiee . Day wilh services.
Mrs. Je,an Craig and cari.
Horky began filling unexpired
terms on Middleport Village
CounciL
NOV. 12-.:.. The Metgs Local
Board of Educatibn agreed to
look intO the physical condition
of the Rutland SchooL
NOV. 14 - The first multiphasic health screening
program for some 200 Big Bend
senior citizens was held at the
center in Pomeroy.
,
NOV. 15- Maxine Kesterson
and Cindy Patterson were first
place winners in the adult and
juvenile divisions, respec·
tively, of a talent show staged
in Syracuse.
• NOV.16 - TheMeigsCounty
' jail facility remodeling was
completed.
NOV. 18 - Cincinnati Bengal
Wayne Clark spoke at the
Meigs High foot~al! banquet
sponsored by the Middleport •
· Pomeroy Rotary Club.
NOV. 19- Donald Mora and
Tom Hamm received outstanding farmer awards and
Charles Theiss and son,
Tommy,
received
the
Goodyear Award for outstanding conservation prac!ices at the annual Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation
·District dinner meeting.
NOV. 21 - John Smith,
Randy Blake and Steve Holter
received outstanding · farmer
:;~wards and Charles Theiss and
. ~ son, Tommy, received the
Goodyear Award for outstanding ~onservation . practices at the annual Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation
District dinner meeting,
NOV. 21 - John Smilh,
Randy Blake and Steve Holter
received sp,ecial awards at the
annual Eastern High football
banquet. Martie Guilkey
headed a ve~y successful
holiday happening event for
county
homemakers
in
Pomergy.
NOV. 22 - Ohio Eta Phi ·
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
honored key people who had
contributed to the success 6f
the first historical homes tour
in Meigs County with a buffet
at the Meigs Inn.
NOV. 23 - Point Pleasant
Coach Dick Ware spoke at the
annual football banquet of
So~thern High · School. Babs
Wit;e was named the new
Southeast Ohio Junior Miss.
NOV. 25 - Plans were announced for securing new
uniforms for the Meigs
Marauder Marching Band.
Pomeroy officially welcomed
the Christmas season.
NOV. 26 - Pomeroy's new
radar equipment for speeding
offenses was put into

Jdhn

""
,.,

'
NCAA 'dele-

By SAM FOGG
Wednesday, the
disbar for up to two years coaches dinner honoring the order to cOmply with pending nary action has been on
UPI Sports Writer
gates · adopted a resolution individual ·coaches found -guilty two .
federal regulatio113 in the field. penalizing the colleges by
Controversy
over
the
WASHINGTON (UP! )- Top putting off until next year's of unethical practices, particuBacktracking, the delegates placing them on probation. This
·
women's righlli issue' flared adopted a resolution putting off will be retained but in the.
, @ officiais of lhe National Collegi· convention any nfa jor action on larly r~cruiting abuses .
ate Athletic Association closed providing a grea ter role to
Meanwhile ,
attention when a moVe was announced until the 1976 convention any futiD'e couches will be subject
~
~~~~~~~~NF.~:~~MAN
. W!!!1 the book&amp; on their annual ~omen athletes but directing .switched to the companion that the NCAA might try to
action to initiate .NCAA ch;tm- to sanction and prevented from
NEW ORLEANS (UP! ).- A had winning teams when I convention today , hopeful they the NCAA's governing council meeting of the American initiate championship competi- pionship events for women on a finding jobs with olher schools .
famous figure in the arts, played at lhe University of· had taken stjme of lhe steam · to work with the independent Football Coaches Association tion. for several Y?Omen's sports pilot program basis until next for up to two years ,
out of the 'tiot-potato issue of Association for Intercollegiate which will announce its univer- lhts spring . The . women 's autumn at lhe earliest.
poll lies or sports , say someone Missouri.
The delegates took lhese
like lhe late Vince Lombardi,
"Maybe losing pulls you women 's sports on the nation 's Athletics for Women on the sity and college coaches as' athletic directors protested that
The coaching ethics proposal other actions :
issue.
sociation in late afternoon. the all-male NCAA was trying was sponsored by a group of
comes up with a CB!chy phrase together. When times were campuses .
- Voted to almost double dues
In a final voting session
The convention also voted to President Ford will attend the to ·take over their bailiwick ~in college presiaents attending the -payments with the ·additional
and lhe immediate tendency hard wilh the Steelers, we were
with many people is to accept always very close, a lot closer
tbree-&lt;lay meeting. In the past revenue . eannarked for init, frequently unchallenged, as lhan we are now . That's a fact.
the emphasis of NCAA discipli- creased policing of recruiUng
lhe absolute gospel.
The one chief regret I have is
abuses and olher violations.
That was pretty much lhe lhat a lot of lhe fellows who
- Rejected a proposal that
wayitworkedoutduringVince were here lhen, areri't now. I
would have curbed scholarships
Lombardi's salad days with lhe wish IIley were . I'm talking
for
foreign studerilll in such
POMEROY BOWLING
Green Bay Packers when, about guys like Jerry HilleLANES
sports ' as hockey, soccer,
MORNING GLORIES
Cllught up in lhe spirit of the brand, John Campbell, Ben
skiing, gymnastics, cross counDec . 10, 1974
COLUMBUS (UP!) - It and Delphos St . John's (8-&lt;l ).
Urnes, he proclaimed "winning McGee, Paul Martha, Chuck
AAA poll champion, received
McKlnley (3) (9-1) 219 2.
Standings
try and track and field .
Team
Rounding out lhe AA top ten only three first place votes
Middletown (11) (8-&lt;l) 215 3. E)(celsior
isn't everything, it's the only Allen, Henry Davis, Bruce Van looked like old home week at
- Pigeon-holed without a fight
Co .
89
lhe top of the first United Press were Buckeye South (il-0 ), compared with 11 for lhe
Cincinnati Elder (5) (6-1) 116 4. G &amp;J . AutoOilPart
thing !" ·
Dyke.
s
72
an
economy move to return to
Toledo Scott 13) (1&lt;&gt;&lt;1) 183 5. G ibbs G rocery
70
A lillie research reveals
"Those guys are the ones International Ohio High School Waverly (8-1), Canton Lehman Middies, but outpolled them 219
one-platoon football.
48
Kettering Alter (i) (9-1) 150 6. Newell Sunoco
other coaches said sub- who paid the price . . They Board of Coaches' basketball ( 6-4 ), Rossford (9-1) and points to 215. Middletown, still
W .M . P .O .
44
- Voted down a proposal to
Cleveland
Eaot
Tech
(2)
(8-1)
Spen cer's Mark e t
37.
Circleville (1&lt;&gt;&lt;1).
stantially the same thing played lheir guts out. I wish ratings.
coached by veteran Paul
1%2 7. Barberton (2) (9-0) 119 8.
increase
the regular college
High Ind . Game
Ellen
Mansfield St. Peter's and
St. Peter's, sporting a 7-2 Walker, is ~ on the year.
before Lombardi did, fellows IIley could be here."
Dayton Roosevelt (1) (8-1) 101 Rou_g ht 189, Mary Porter 181. basketball season one game to
H1gM Ser i es Marg.!lret
9. Newark (3) (11-4) 99 10.ilie)
like Jock Sutherland, ·Frank
The basic difference between Canton, · two of the three record despite being hampered
In third place in AAA was
a total of 27.
Fo
l
l
r
od
496,
E
l
len
Rough
t 478 .
Cincinnati
Hughes
11)
(7-4)
67
Leahy and Red Sanders, to lhe Steelers of those days and defending poll champions, and by an injury to one of its top two-time defending slate tourTeam
High
Game
- Rejected a proposal to cut
10. (tie) Cincinnati Roger W .M . P .O. 805 .
name only a few.
the Steelers of today is con- perennial contender Wellsville players, Greg Givins, received nament champion Cincinnati
off
granlli-in-aid beyond tuition
Bacon (6-1) 67
T eam
H i gh
Series
Actually, there Is no real fidence, the kind of confidence held down the top spots in their si x first place votes and piled Elder with 176 points. The only
W .M .P.O . 2313 .
and fees for all sports
up 158 points from the 33 Class loss for the Panthers, 7-1, was
evidence to suppory the slate- born of winning instead of respective classifications .
scholarships except football and
Wellsville, ·which has turned A coaches who participated in to tenth rariked Cincinnati
Claso AA
ment that winning is every- losing.
basketball.
Team· Polnts I. Wellsville (5)
Hughes (7.{1).
thing, much less the only thing,
"Confidence is a funny out unbeaten seasons with lhis week's balloting.
:::-Approved banning any di(6-o) 173 2. Columbus Mohawk
Second was unbeaten Norand a young man like Andy tiling ," says Andy Russell, who regularity under Coac h
Toledo Scott (10-0) was (6)
rect recruiting contacts with a
(7-1)
136
3.
Warsa!Y
Rivt!r
Russell, who'll be showing up captains Pittsburgh's defen- Bobby Dawson , Is a third of the walk St. Paul ( 10..0), noted fourlh, followed in fifth by View (6) (9.{1) 120 4. Springfield TEAM FOR SALE
high school athlete until he has
way through another wilh a 6-o more in recent years for its Kettering Alter (9.{1). The rest Shawnee ( 4) ( 8-0) 116 5.
in the Super Bowl Sunday with sive unit.
PAWTUCKET, Rl (UP!)- finished his junior year.
.
football teams, wilh 88, fol- of the top 10, in order, were DelpbosSt.John's (4) (8-&lt;l) 106 The Pawtucket Red Sox are for
the Pittsburgh Steelers ,
" In lhe last game we played, mark .
The
Tigers
received
only
five
lowed in a tie for IJlird _by Cleveland East Tech (8-1), 6. Buckeye South (2) (11-0) 91 7. sale, but the current owner
doesn't mean to sound lhe one with Oakland, we were
first
place
votes,
but
held
a
173Lorain Clearview (7-1) and Barberton ( 9..0 ), Dayton Waverly (2) (8-1) 89 8. Canton says he will not part with the
iconoclastic, but he really can 't ahead, 17-13, there wasn 't
136 margin over runnerup Canal Winchester(~) with 84 Roosevelt (8-1), Newark (11-1) Lehman (I) (6-4) 69 9. Rossford team unless lhe new owners
UGLY~FAT
' see what there is so obscene much time left and the officials Columbus
Mohawk in Class AA points and Wynford (8-1 ) with and Hughes and Cincinnati (9-1) 88 lO.Circleville (2) (1&lt;&gt;&lt;1) (H'Omise io keep lhe team in Start losi'!U_ weight today or money
about losing.
took a TV lime out. Ken Stabler
53
back. MONADl:X ila tiny tlbtlt
Oh, sure, he wants to win (Oakland quarterback) hap- in the first of eight weeks of 81.
Rhode Island.
Roger Bacon (6-1 ) tied for
•nd
10 tak1. MONADEX will
help curb your desire for ••~
The rest of the top 10 were tenth.
Sunday. He wants to beat lhe pened to catch my eye from balloting.
Owner Joe Buzas says he has food.
E.t 1811- weigh 1•. Cont1l111
Class A
Although Mohawk, 7-1, re- Continental ( 11-1 ), Upper
Minnesota Vikings the same over in his huddle, and you
met several Urnes with Philip no dangerous drug~ end will not
Team Points I. Mansfield St. L. Anez,'an advertising execu- make you ntrYOUL No strenuous
way all the other Steelers do, know what he did? He 1\rinked. ceived one more first place Scioto Valley (11-1), Minster
College ratings
exerci.,. Change your life •.• ltert
Peter's (6) (7-2) 158 2. Norwalk
vote
than
Wellsville,
the
Indi(8-&lt;l), Sebring (7-1) and Anna
!Jut U you try · to make him Like you guys know I'm going
MONADEX cost $3.00 lor
COLUMBUS
(UP!) - The St. Paul (3) (If).{)) 88 3. (Ue) tive from Smithfield, Rl "but •todov.
20 da_y supply. Laroe economy
believe an individual is dtnlin- to take this ball down 'and put it ans didn 'I have lhe second and ( 11.()),
as
yet
tbe
deal
hasn't
been
first weekly United Press Lorain Clearview (2) (7-1) 84 3.
~ze is $5.00. Also try AOUATABS:
Canton McKinley, 9-1, got lhe International Ohio High School (tie) Canal Winchester (2) (8- realized."
ished by tlie process of losing, in the end zone. Seeing him lhird place votes the Tigers
·
they work gfntly to help you 1011
AQUA TABS -1 "weter
he'll argue that with you.
wink like that just blew my enjoyed .
most severe challenge of the Board of Coaches' basketball 0) 84_5. Wynford (4) (8-1) 816.
Pawtucket, a minor league weter·bloat.
pill.. thet workt - $3.00. . Both
ContinenUII
(I)
(
Il-l)
67
7.
ratings
(with
first
place
votes
In
third
was
unbeaten
WarAndy Russell is something of mind."
lhree top teams from a longaffiliate of the Boston Red Sox, guenntted and sold by:
an authority on being with a
Russell also recalls another saw River View (9-0), aiso with lime Buckeye State basketball and wonlost records in Upper SCioto Valley (3) (11..0) is a member of lhe Internation- · Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy,
parentheses) :
66 s, Minster (3) (8-&lt;l) 84 9.
E . Main, Pomeroy, 0.,
losing professional football example of sheer bald confi- six first place votes, followed power, Middletown,
al League and won lhe Junior 112
Class AAA
Dutton Drug Store, Middleport,
Sebrmg
(2)
17-1)
57
IO.Anna
The Bulldogs, last year's Team Polots 1. Caoton (II.()) 45
team. The durable 32-year~ld dence shown by Fran Tarken- by Springfield Shawnee ( ~ ) ,
o .. Mail orders filled. -adv.
World Series in 1973.
linebacker first joined the ton, who'll be at the controls for
Steelers In 1963 and since then the Vikings against the
they've fashioned such fancy Steelers Sunday, Only this
single season records as 2-12, I· occurred when Tarkenton still
13 and 2-11-1. Until two years was with the New York Gianlli.
For
. ago, the Sleelers put together
"It wasn 't a particularly big
only one winning season from game, only an exhibition in
the time Russell-first reported Montreal, as a matter of fact,
to lhem,
and we were beating the Giants
By STU CAMEN
" I'm not worried knowing his anyhow. I expect him to be Vikings will be 15-year veteran
Bad days and hard Urnes by about four points with a
UP! Sports Wriler
record over 14 years. We'll released in time for our Grady Alderman who gained a Minnesota made illi first Super
were all Russell knew ·until a minute or so to go," Russell
NEW ORLEANS (UP!)
have him rest it a little in morning meeting today and slorter's roll following Toes- Bowl appearance but quarterrelaUvely short time ago, and, remembers.
Bud Grant. coach of the practice. Francis is like all the expect him to practice with lhe day's injury to regular left backed last year's Viking team.
surprise, he says it wasn't
"We have them backed up on Minnesoto Vikings, will take great ones--when th~y get club today, Friday and Satur- offensive tackle Charles Goa- He has never missed a game
because of injury in 14 pro
really that horrible.
· their five-yard line- this was good omens anywhere he can nicked or have a temperature day."
. drum. Goodrum, a second year seasons and tried to play down
Ring Style
" People ask me how it was Allie Shennan's last game with find them -even in lhe sore or something of that nature
However, Noll did admit pro out of Florida A&amp;M, pulled his current ailment.
No. 9()
playing for .Pittsburgh In those t~ Giants-and Tar kenton throwing arm of quarterback they work twice as hard ."
White hasn't been eating much b leg muscle during ·a workout
Set wllh rcdiont
"The arm has been sore the
days, and to he completely goes over to lalk to him on the Fran Tarkenton .
If that be the case, , then the since he entered the hospital and was still listed by Grant as
bir1hstcmes - l)ne 1tont
honest about it, I always loved sidelines. He comes back
Gront, whose Vikings are 3 l'z Steelers seemingly would have and may have lost a few "doubtful" for Sunday's game. last six or eight · weeks,"
fl)r eoch member of tke
Tarkenton said. "I got hit in
it," says Andy Russell, who has toward his huddle, suddenly point underdogs to the Pitts- ·no need to worry over the pou,nds.
fomil~ .
uwe can wait as late as the right shoulder in one of our
never missed playing a single stops, looks at us and smiles. burgh Steelers for Sunday's condition of right defensive end
" If he does start Sunday, I Friday before determining
In prO&lt;"ious lOki. yellaw
game with lhe Steelers. "You Imagine that! He's losing, Super Bowl IX , revealed Dwight White who has been guess we 'll have to keep an eye whelher Goodie can play," early games and that may be
or white oold.
the
·cause.
It
feels
better
this
don't play for money or glory, there's only a minute or so left, Tarkenton 's injury Wednesday hospitalized the last three days. on him," said Noll who' added Grant said. "We have Alderyou play for enjoyment. True, and he smiles. He . got them but classified the ailment "a Club spokesmen have predicted that in the event White couldn't man ready to start if Goodie week because we had last week
you wouldn't play U you didn't moving, too, taking them all good omen because Francis White's release each day since he ready for the Vikings, be can't _go, with Steve Riley off. I don't do much throwing
SJ.OO odditi'6not
during practice anyway. And it
get paid, !Jut I'm not talking the way down to about our 10 always has a good day when the beginning of the week but would be replaced by Steve behind Grady.
lor •Deh
hasn't affected my throwing all
bir lhitor'A
about tlrat, I'm lalking about before we stopped them when his arm 'is sore."
he remained in the hospilal
Furness.
Alderman, a 15-year veteran,
.·
how it was being with a losing Joe Greene pulled down Joe
"If the arm is still sore on Wednesday in order to get Opposing either White or is the only remaining member year." .
team.
Morrison from behind."
· Sunday, I'm sure- he 'll have a lhree additional treatmenlli for Furness across lhe line for the of the original Viking team · Commenting on Tarkenton's
ability to avoid serious injury
"lneverwantedtohetraded.
Fran Tarkentoo remembers great day ," added Grant who the viral infection that has kept
founded
in
1961
and
will
be
for 14 years, Grant said,
I was always confident, opt!- the ball game. He also also disclosed that Tarkenton him a,way Ctnm practice since _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
making
his
third
Super
Bow
I
"Durability
is lhe best ability
mistic we'd turn it around. I remembers why he smiled the . has had periods of soreness the Steelers arrived here .
appearance.
Both
previous
apan
athlete
can
possess. You
honestly felt more team spirit way he did.
during the season. "He is like
"The extra day in the cellar-dwelling Virginia its
pearances
resulted
in
losses
-23don't achieve greatness wilhout
for the Pittsburgh Steelers in
"I have fun when I'm most quarterbacks, they have hospital won't have that much sixth straight defeat. The
7
to
Kan"'!s
City
in
1970
and
24it. The great ones are lhe ones
Colonels
moved
ahead
for
good
lhose bad old days than I ever playing, " he says.
on-and-off periods . Maybe it affect on rum," said Steelers '
~7 to Miami last year.
who
play.';
just
before
,
the
end
of
the
first
did in college, and we generally
He means win or lose , same was the rain yesterday that coach Chuck Noll. "He wasn't
"I
hear
White
's
ill
but
I
as Andy Russell.
caused the soreness.
· going to practice Wednesday quarter on a layup by Ted
McClain, and lhe issue was expect him to be there
International Hockey League
settled by halftime when Sunday," Alderman said. " I By
Unlred Press International
Kentucky led 58-46. Virginia don't know much about his
North
gf ga,
was led by rookies Uoyd Batts replacement, Furness, but lhe .. Saginaw 27w 14I I 1pis
55 164 f31
he
doesn
't
know
much
abou:
with 24 points and David
r lint
24 14 3 Sl 152 116
Muskegon 24 15 1 49 165 111
me
either.
All
I
know
is
that
Denver
and
brought
the
San
Antonio
had.
led
11
poinlli
Vaughn
with
ginia,
113-96,
St.
Louis
beat
.22
points.
By Uoltect Pren IDtel'lllltlonal
95
Port Huron 15 22 2 32 128 141
ON!r.
he's just in his lhird year and Lans
Spirits 111, SoUDds 106:
San Antonio coach Bob Bass Nuggets season record to 34-5, Memphis, lll-106, and San early in the third qwlrter, but
i ng
11 16 1 23 138 200
9 25 ~2 20 92 lJB
Pfu.-...ou;..
Diego defeated Utah , 122-113. Denver fought back and took a
GllO Kennedy and Marvin I've got 12 years experience on Kalamazoo South
almost saw his team execute best by far in either league.
him."
sf- .•
Jones' heroics WeN! set up
Spurs Coach Bob Bass said six-point lead with 8:37 left to
wtlplsgfgo .
the impossible Wednesday
Barnes had four Points each in
27 11 2 56 168 134
The Vikings, w_ith 16 players Dayton
night - beat . the Denver when Claude Terry hit a three- he was going to protest the play before San Antonio,
overtime and Barnes finished
Columbus
22 18 1 45 161 139
pointer with two seconds left game 1because when Spurs spurred by Jim Silas with 10 with 26 points and 31 rebounds, having participated in the two Toledo
Nuligets.
20 22 1 41 154 157
Moines 18 23 2 38 140 163
high rebound total in the ABA previous Super Bowl games Des
However, a crowded court, a and pulled the Nuggets, who center Swen Nater took the ball points in lhe last·three minlltes,
Fort Wayne 15 22 0 30 139 151
lhis· season, to lead St. Louis. involving Minnesota , do have
stolen pass and an 18-foot had traUed by five pqints with out of bounds with a second had gone ah~d by five with 29
Wednesday's Results
Columbus 7 Flint 1
just
29
second
left
in
the
game,
left,
the
arena
floor
was
George Carter of Memphis led the edge ·in experience., on lhe Dayton
seconds to play before Denver
jumper by Bobby Jones with
7 Des Moines 1
covered with fans and players. came back.
one second left gave the into a tie.
his team with 25 and teammate Steelers tiut Grant maintained saginaw 4 Lansing 3, overtime
Court Sf., Pomeroy
ThUrsday ' s Games ,
Elsewhere, Indiana sur"They shoul.d have called a
Nuggets a protested 131).128
Slew Johnson added 23 for lhe he is not worried about the age
Pacers 127, Nets 119:
No games scheduled
factor working against his club.
Indiana, which has had a
victory, It was the 22nd prised New York wilh a 127-119 timeout and cleared lhe floor
Sounds.
"We 've been growing old for
Q's l%Z, Slars 113: ·
straight hom~ourt victory for triumph , Kentucky ripped :Vir- from both sides," said Bass. disappointing season so far,
"We did not have an opportuni- played its "best game in at
Dwight Lamar scored 26 six years," Grant said. 11 But we
ty to get the ball in .... "
· least three weeks," according
points and Travis Grant added have more depth· now and
Bass also said the time clock, to George McGinnis, who
21 to lead San Diego, The Q's that's one of our great
which had one second left when contributed 31 points, 16 retrium,ph was the first under strengths. The secret is to grow
Nater took tbe ball out of bounds, eight assists and two
their new coach Beryl Shipley .. old gracefully."
One of those growing old
bounds, did not start until after steals while playing, at various
Utah rookie Moses . Mal&lt;ine
gracefully is lhe 34-year..,ld
official 'Ed Middleton signalled Urnes, center, forward and
sank
29
points
and
pulled
down
Pocket Fisherman ..................:19;95
that Jones' basket was good.
guard. The Pacers beat New
24 rebounds. Guard Ron Boone Tarkenton who -was with the
New York Giants in 1970 when
"None of your business, " York at its own game-ruuning
added' 28 for tbe Stars.
Battery Qp!!rated Ught Weight
Middleton
said
when lhe fast break. Larry Kenon
Sewing Mac;hine .................. . 9.98
questioned about the final play. helped New 'York stay in '
.
Jones wound up wilh a team contentioo with ooe of the best
Battery. Operated
high 27 points, while Mike . games of his career-37 points,
Green
and Ralph Simpson both -11 rebounds, five assists and
Miracle Broom •.••••.••••• ~........ 9.98 ·
had 26 for Denver. Donnie six steals.
Freeman led San Antonio with
Colonels 113, Sqolres 91:
29 and Rich Jones had 27 while
Artis Gilmore scored 26
Nater had 14 points and 14 points and Bird Averitt added
rebounds.
21 for II!• Colonels as lhey dealt

Old home week in polls

• &gt;

Local Bowling

LOSE
••v

Sore ·a rm labeled good omen

t!-•t.•-1Jr.ce
MOTHER

S26SO

Nugget home streak continues

.NEW ·
fAMILY RING

$28

·GOESSLER

JEWELRY STORE

AS SEEN ON TV

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BIG 9 SALE

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1975 DESk CALENDAR PAD &amp; STANDS
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•

5- The Daily Sentinel,Middlepor .. "omeroy, 0., Thursday, Jan , 9,1975

NCA·!.
·
tables·
Woi
i
Den
until
riext
year
w
~
'

~ Todny's ·

I~

I •

'

., .

4- The DauY Sentinel,Middleport-f{&gt;meroy, 0., Thursday, Jan. 9,1975

'

,

MASON, W. VA.

oHon

50%

..•
Df:CJ:;MBER
DEC.' 1 - Mr. and Mrs.
Millard Van Meter observed
lheir annual open house at
their Pomeroy Flower 'Shop.
DEC. 2 - Miller's Super
Market at New Haven was
wiped out by fire. Middleport
merchanlli slaged their annual parade to ofiicially ·
welcome the Christmas
season. Wallace Bradford was
reelecte d president of the
Meigs County Fair Board.
DEC. 3 - The Meigs County
Board of Education voted to
open school records of students
to parenlli or guardians.
DEC. 4
Christmas
prog rams began taking place
in schools and annoumcement
was made of the suspension of
work on a power plant at New
Haven. Hunters continued to
have good luck during the deer
season.
DEC. 5 - Fourteen Eastern
High School students were
tapped for membership i11 the
National Honor Society.
DEC. 7 - Pomeroy 's water
was declared unsafe for
drinking.
DEC. 8 - The Meig• County
Assn. of Garden Clubs held
a successful Christmas flower
show at the Pomeroy
Elementary SchooL Mrs .
Sylvia Badgl~y tlied in a fire
which struck herBroadway St.
home.
DEC. 9 - 0. 0 . Patterson,
former
Meigs
County
Superintendent of Schools and
a former representative to the
General Assembly, died.
Middiepot Council began aclion to provide approximate 10
percent_ pay increases for
Middleport Village employes.
DEC . 10 - Construction
began on Middleport's new
apartment complex at the
corner of Third and Mill Sis.
DEC. II - The Meigs County
Board of. Elections completed
its recount in the Governor's
election but found no change
from November.
DEC. 12 - The Eastern

Bashan
NeWS
Mr . and Mrs .· .George
Roberts spent last week in
.Eiorida. Also visiting relatives
in Florida a week were Mr. and
Mrs. James Bailey' and son,
Clinton.
Mr. and Mrs. Vinton Jones
spent Christmas with · their
daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Bill· Stover and
children at Charleston, W.Va.
Spending the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Trussell
were Mr: and Mrs. Harold
Trussell, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Trussell and Mr. and Mrs. Rick
Trussell of Newport News, Va.,
and Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Trussell and Dawn of Mt.
Vernon, 0. Christmas was
celebrated on-Sunday wllh Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Trussell and
Mr. and Mrs. John Ridenour
and Jason of Chester; Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Kerns, Belpre,
0 . ; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
. Trussell, Peggy Sue, Stevie,
Renee and Scotty, local, and
Miss Deidra Cowdery of
Newark, 0. present for
Christmas dinner.
Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Pitzer ..
of Beckley, w. va. spent
Tuesday with Mr. and' Mrs.
Clint Pitzer and faniily.
·
·Mr. and Mrs. Warden Ours
spent ·Christmas wilh Mr. and
Mrs. Dick Gaul and boys,
Chester, 0.
Mrs. Freda Deeter of
Columbus is vi$iting her son,
Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Deeter ljlld
family.

. Local Board .of Education set
up pr ocedures for . a irin Jl'
compla int s ag~inst sc hool
employes. Rick Werner of
Pomeroy completed ·his
engineering studies at Ohio
Slate, swnma cum laude .
' DEC. 13 - Residenlli con·
linued to boil their drinking
water while tests on the status
of the water supply continued.
DEC. ·15 - Meigs High
School speech, art; welding and
vocal students presented a
Christmas ~rts festivaL
DEC. 16- William C. Keith ,
Parkersburg , mitaculou sly ·
escaped death when his
tractor-trailer overturned on
Route 7- near the Shake Haven .
DEC. l7 - The Meigs County
Regional Planning Commission invited any additions
on objectives and goals of the
group.
DEC. 18 - Pomeroy's water
supply tested safe for consumpiion without boiling .
Rodney Allen Pierce, 3, and
Terry Pierce, 2, died in a fire
and explosion at their moblle
home near Long Bottom.
DEC. 19-20 - II was program
and party time at Meigs
County schools as students
finished their final days of
school before Christmas
vacation.
DEC. ?.1 - Becky Sams and
John Salser were crownd king
and queen at the Southern High
School Christmas dance.
DEC. 23 - The resignation of
Doneld Diener as administrator of the countyowned Veterans Memorial
Hospital was announced .
Middleport Council approved a
second reading of a pay boost
ordinance for village employes. Scott Lucas was named .
new administrator of Veterans
Memoral HospitaL
· DE&lt;;. 24 - All was quiet as
lhe county prepared to observe
the Christmas holiday .
DEC. 26 -Pomeroy business
district extremely quiet as
many stores, the courthouse
and other offices closed as a
part of the Christmas hqliday.
DEC. 27 - A GO million dollar
contract was let for dust
control at the Sporn Plant.
Shirley Mae Smith and her
dalighter, Brenda, Langsville,
hospitalized with injuries
received in an auto accident
near Langsville.
DEC. 29 - A $100,000 fire
destroyed·the .half century old
R. H. Rawlings and Sons Co.
building in Middleport.
DEC. 30 - Mrs. Genevive
Harvey resigned as clerk of the
Southern Local School Board.
DEC. 31 - Three county
officials were given their oaths
of office by Judge John c .
Bacon - Howard Frank,
county ·auditor; Robert Buck,
countyjudge,andHenry Wells,
commissioner. Many residents
ended the year as they had
started by attending the annual
firemen's New Year's Ball.

oH.

heritage
house
MIDDLEPORT OHI

&lt; ,

NOV. 28- Thanksgiving was
observed abd a football game ,
was held between alumni of
Pomeroy and Middleport High
Schools for the benefit of lhe
Meigs Cancer Unit.
NOV. 29 - · Mr. alld Mrs.
Clarence Ogdin were attacked
atlhelr hom~ on the New Lima
Road during a breaking and
entering.
NOV. 311 - Jo Ellen Diehl,
Pomeroy, ,ll!ld ' Bill Beagle,
Racine, announced, plans for
going to the Rose Bowl with the
Alumni group of the Oh;o State

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Funeral services for Mrs.

Ann a L. J ones who die d ·
Monday at Grant Hospital in
Co lu mbus, were co nducted
Wedn esday at the Ewing
t"w• eral Home . The Rev . Carl
Hicks officiated and burial was

of diStrict health meeting
18 your water safe. to drink ? Does your community
have a problem with rural waste? Doe&amp; your school
system Include envlronmentat health education lo their
curriculu,m? When was the last lime you saw, tasted,.. or
smelled carbon monoxide?
If you are concerned with the answers to any or all of
theoe q"''&amp;lloos then plan to attend this year's Jackson
Dlotrict Health Conference.
The theme of this year'• conference is "Environment
and You". The conference will be held on Wed.neoday,
January 15th from 9:30 a. m. to 3:311 p. m., at Commu,olty
Hall, Rio Grande College Campuo, Rio Grande !between
Jackson aod GaWpolis on Route 35). There Is a SOc
registration charge which can he paid at the door.
There wW be a 45 minute 8reak between morning and
afternoon sessions lor lunch. Parllcipants may choos e to
eat out or bring saek lunch. For more Information, call
lhe County Extension OHice at 992-3895.

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January Sale For Men!

WEYENBERG

DRESS SHOES
BROKEN LOTS
NOT ALL SIZES

Value of land for taxation

Values to s23

purposes will be explained
There will be an Agricultural
Use Value Taxation meeting at
St. Paul's Lutheran Church on
Second Street in Pomeroy on
Wednesda Y,, January 15 at 7:30
p. m.
The meeting, arranged for
land owners only, will help
them decide whether to file an

A(fred
Social Notes

·

1n the Beach Grove Cemetery . · Jesse Jones, Washington, D. ,
Com1~g from out-of-town for C., all houseguests of Mr. and
_the serv1ces were Mr. and Mrs., Mrs. Harry S. MOore , Mid·
Ern est A. Jones and Kenneth, dleport, a.nd Dr. · ~nd Mrs.
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs: Allan James Flsher •.~mcinnatl,
J ones , Santa Anna, Cahf. and gueslli of Mrs. Paul Fisher.

a

NOW

application to have their land
taxed on its agricultural value.
Topics to be covered will be
background information, steps
to follow , deadlines, forms fo r
filing applica tion, and how to
dete rmine the agnc ultura l
value of land .

.

SALE FOR
THE LADIES

from a recent stroke.
Recent visitors at the
Follrod-Robinson home were
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Follrod of
West Jefferson, 0 ., and Mr .
and Mrs. Gerald Swartz and ·
family of Marietta. The latter
also called on his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Hobart Swartz.

1 Lot Purses lh Price

Marguerite's Shoes
BETTY OHLINGER

102 E. MAIN

Overall
Depth

Height

POMEROY

Stop By And

"SITS FOUR SLEEPS TWO"
'72"
34 II

See Us Today II

32 ,,

'

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ONE OF THE MANY GREAT VALUES
YOU'LL FiND AT BAKER;S ANNUAL

Middleport

Baker ·Furniture

ELKS LEADER DIES
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) :_ The
senior former Grand Exalted
Ruler of the Benevolent and
Protective Order of Elks, Dr.
Edward J . .McCormick, died
Tuesday at St.
Vincent
Medical
I
.
Center here. He was 83.

Ohio

They'll Do It Evt=!rv

Wooi .Yarn

'fHE Oil roclL Oi&lt;IVER WHO

Reg. si .39 Skein

Sale 38'
SPORTSWEAR SALE
Red Eye
Aileen
Devon

'h PRICE

Ladies'

PJ.'s &amp; GOWNS
BRUSHED~YLONS

RI!I . SIO!o$4

SALE.

..,.._,..,;
RAY WILCOX .

1.:t-J NEW HARWINTON
·' • Ro&lt;t&gt;:
Cl~ ...........

.,_."'"' ..

'""

....... _. ·-· ...

$7.88 To _S2.88

Poly/Cotton Aannel
45" Wide Printed
Reg. 51.89

Sale

*1

22

Entire Stock

LADIES DRESSES

Sale

V NECK VESTS

· · SLACK ·SETS
. SAi..E

'1.99 . '2.99 .

COATS &amp; JACKETS
Ladies-Mens- Boys

98~

Ladies L.S. Tops

3-6x, 7-14
Values To 55.95

Turtle &amp; Mock Turtle
SALE

'166

'4.44 '

IN ANTS
PANT &amp; TOP SETS
REG.
SALE.
$6,95
$4.88
$3.88
$4 .95
$3.98 ('

$2.88

53.49
$2 .29

$2.00
$1 ,44

Girls: Infants

113 OFF

GIRLS DRESSES

% OFF
BOYS SHIRTS

Entjre Stock

BOYS SWEATERS

I

.

Big Lot Ladi!!s .

Bras &amp; Girdles .

$8.95.
$7.95
$6:49

SALE
$5.95
$5:.33
$4.33

S4.99

SP3

To.$8:oo
SALE
To 5

Values

'1.00

GIRLS 3-7
SPORTSWEAR·

REG. .

.
4,0Q

. UNCUT CORDUROY
MATERIAL
Reg.u1a r

. ·.

.

'

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.. ,

-- 1

(J

I' . '

.r

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OP£N TIL 5:30 MON. THRU THURS. TIL 8:00 FRI. &amp; SAT.
·•
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
•

10RRIN&amp;fON,
CONN.

,I

I
1

s2 :19

SALE 51.99

M.iddlepor,-t .~ Department
Store
.
~

I

Seroices conducted Wed,nesday for Mrs. Jones ·

Environment and You topic

Sunday School attendance on
Jan. 5 was 55, the offering
$25.60. Worship services were
held at 11 with the Rev . Meece
speaking from Ma.tt. 7:13-14 on
"The Greatest Thing In All the
World." Attendance at f the
service was 21, offering $17.91
and pledges $47 .
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D.
Woode attended the Chester
·."otch Night services held at
lhe ~ ··~ Belhel Church last
Tuesd ay evening. Also attending from here were
Thelma Henderson, Ruth
Brooks and Mr. and · Mrs.
Ellieroy Locke, the latter's
visitors from Columbus, 0 .,
who spent several days with
the Brooks family .
Friends and relatives here
attended services for Seldon
White , held at the Bearwallow
Church of Christ, Sunday afternoon . Among those attending from a distance were
Mr. and Mrs. Berkeley
Faulkner, Esther White, and
family from Circleville, Q.;
Mr. and Mrs. John Campbell
and family from Grove City,
0.; Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Jeffers and family, Athens, 0.,
and Fred Whil.tl of Athens, also
Earl White, Athens. ,
Mr.and!'4rs. Charles Barr of
Rockland, 0 ., Mr . and Mrs.
Winnie Barnhill, Guysville ;
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Atherton and family, Long
Bottom, were Christmas Day
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Atherton.
Recent· guests of Mr. and
WAUGH TO SIMPSON
Mrs. William Carr have been
INDIANOLA, Iowa (UP!)- Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hoffner of
Maury Waugh, Iowa Intercol- · Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. Roland
legiate Athletic Conference Eastman, Bearwallow, Mr.
coach of the year at Dubuque in and Mrs. Clair Woode and
1972, Wednesday was named Conni of Circleville and Mr.
head football coach and assist- and Mrs. John Hayes of
ant professor of physical Chester.
education at Simpson College.
Sherman Henderson is
Waugh, 34, repla.ces Larry Improving from a recent SJ.lell
Johnson, Simpson's athleUc of illness.
director, who led the Redmen • Friends here have learned
to a ~1 record last season lhat Mrs. Ella Yost of Sugar
after assuming the football · Grove is recovering nicely
post late in the ~ummer .
followmg the resignal!oo of AI
Paone.
"

~ration .

'

all merchandise
Many items up

to

Y~uth Choir.

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r.:...

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\~~~~~§\\1W:!:m::!:!I'm'i:m@iMMii¥!:~!~

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; L~ctil. news highlights

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~~l

0 a... g·d e
S•nort
~
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r . .r~ , "
i:~

NOV. I -'
Hansen, ~or;
Lauderdale , Fla ., and his
daughter, Chris, were . injured
when lheir light plane crashed
t&lt;'. U
. , near Cherry Ridge.
: :·
NOV. 2- Over 200 members
and gueslli of the Ohio Valley
.,, Horse Show Assn. gathered for
a dinner at Tuppers Plain~ with
many trophies and "awards
.,.. presented.
NOV. 4 - · 'rhe Pomeroy
, _ Chamber of Commerce backed
,.
the attempts of Pomeroy
"· Village to secure the Pomeroy
~· ·
Senior High School for ~ village
hall.
"
NOV . 5 - Henry Wells ,
. ~·
Howard Frank and Robert
. _ Burk were winners of con~.
tested races fo~ major county
posts in lhe November election.
Voters turned down a com, . munity school tax levy by a
wide margin.
NOV. 6 - Five persons were
injured in an accident at the
• Southern Ohio Coal Company's·
" Mine No. I.
NOV. 7 - ·-Almost 300
• members of the Meigs
Agricultural Society voted for
fair board meiflbers compared
" to only eight votes cast in 1973.
NOV. 8 - Mines of lhe
Southern Ohio Coal Co. were
down as the nation's miners
went on strike.
NOV. 9 - The Meigs High
School Spanish Club aided
hurricane stricken Honduras.
NOV. 10 - Terry Whitlatch
and Terry Qualls were named
to the All.SEOALfootballteam
with Mickey Davenport and
Lonnie Coates receiving
honorable mention.
NOV.' 11 - Drew Webster
Post 39, American Le~ion,
observed the traditional Ar·
mistiee . Day wilh services.
Mrs. Je,an Craig and cari.
Horky began filling unexpired
terms on Middleport Village
CounciL
NOV. 12-.:.. The Metgs Local
Board of Educatibn agreed to
look intO the physical condition
of the Rutland SchooL
NOV. 14 - The first multiphasic health screening
program for some 200 Big Bend
senior citizens was held at the
center in Pomeroy.
,
NOV. 15- Maxine Kesterson
and Cindy Patterson were first
place winners in the adult and
juvenile divisions, respec·
tively, of a talent show staged
in Syracuse.
• NOV.16 - TheMeigsCounty
' jail facility remodeling was
completed.
NOV. 18 - Cincinnati Bengal
Wayne Clark spoke at the
Meigs High foot~al! banquet
sponsored by the Middleport •
· Pomeroy Rotary Club.
NOV. 19- Donald Mora and
Tom Hamm received outstanding farmer awards and
Charles Theiss and son,
Tommy,
received
the
Goodyear Award for outstanding conservation prac!ices at the annual Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation
·District dinner meeting.
NOV. 21 - John Smith,
Randy Blake and Steve Holter
received outstanding · farmer
:;~wards and Charles Theiss and
. ~ son, Tommy, received the
Goodyear Award for outstanding ~onservation . practices at the annual Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation
District dinner meeting,
NOV. 21 - John Smilh,
Randy Blake and Steve Holter
received sp,ecial awards at the
annual Eastern High football
banquet. Martie Guilkey
headed a ve~y successful
holiday happening event for
county
homemakers
in
Pomergy.
NOV. 22 - Ohio Eta Phi ·
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
honored key people who had
contributed to the success 6f
the first historical homes tour
in Meigs County with a buffet
at the Meigs Inn.
NOV. 23 - Point Pleasant
Coach Dick Ware spoke at the
annual football banquet of
So~thern High · School. Babs
Wit;e was named the new
Southeast Ohio Junior Miss.
NOV. 25 - Plans were announced for securing new
uniforms for the Meigs
Marauder Marching Band.
Pomeroy officially welcomed
the Christmas season.
NOV. 26 - Pomeroy's new
radar equipment for speeding
offenses was put into

Jdhn

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'
NCAA 'dele-

By SAM FOGG
Wednesday, the
disbar for up to two years coaches dinner honoring the order to cOmply with pending nary action has been on
UPI Sports Writer
gates · adopted a resolution individual ·coaches found -guilty two .
federal regulatio113 in the field. penalizing the colleges by
Controversy
over
the
WASHINGTON (UP! )- Top putting off until next year's of unethical practices, particuBacktracking, the delegates placing them on probation. This
·
women's righlli issue' flared adopted a resolution putting off will be retained but in the.
, @ officiais of lhe National Collegi· convention any nfa jor action on larly r~cruiting abuses .
ate Athletic Association closed providing a grea ter role to
Meanwhile ,
attention when a moVe was announced until the 1976 convention any futiD'e couches will be subject
~
~~~~~~~~NF.~:~~MAN
. W!!!1 the book&amp; on their annual ~omen athletes but directing .switched to the companion that the NCAA might try to
action to initiate .NCAA ch;tm- to sanction and prevented from
NEW ORLEANS (UP! ).- A had winning teams when I convention today , hopeful they the NCAA's governing council meeting of the American initiate championship competi- pionship events for women on a finding jobs with olher schools .
famous figure in the arts, played at lhe University of· had taken stjme of lhe steam · to work with the independent Football Coaches Association tion. for several Y?Omen's sports pilot program basis until next for up to two years ,
out of the 'tiot-potato issue of Association for Intercollegiate which will announce its univer- lhts spring . The . women 's autumn at lhe earliest.
poll lies or sports , say someone Missouri.
The delegates took lhese
like lhe late Vince Lombardi,
"Maybe losing pulls you women 's sports on the nation 's Athletics for Women on the sity and college coaches as' athletic directors protested that
The coaching ethics proposal other actions :
issue.
sociation in late afternoon. the all-male NCAA was trying was sponsored by a group of
comes up with a CB!chy phrase together. When times were campuses .
- Voted to almost double dues
In a final voting session
The convention also voted to President Ford will attend the to ·take over their bailiwick ~in college presiaents attending the -payments with the ·additional
and lhe immediate tendency hard wilh the Steelers, we were
with many people is to accept always very close, a lot closer
tbree-&lt;lay meeting. In the past revenue . eannarked for init, frequently unchallenged, as lhan we are now . That's a fact.
the emphasis of NCAA discipli- creased policing of recruiUng
lhe absolute gospel.
The one chief regret I have is
abuses and olher violations.
That was pretty much lhe lhat a lot of lhe fellows who
- Rejected a proposal that
wayitworkedoutduringVince were here lhen, areri't now. I
would have curbed scholarships
Lombardi's salad days with lhe wish IIley were . I'm talking
for
foreign studerilll in such
POMEROY BOWLING
Green Bay Packers when, about guys like Jerry HilleLANES
sports ' as hockey, soccer,
MORNING GLORIES
Cllught up in lhe spirit of the brand, John Campbell, Ben
skiing, gymnastics, cross counDec . 10, 1974
COLUMBUS (UP!) - It and Delphos St . John's (8-&lt;l ).
Urnes, he proclaimed "winning McGee, Paul Martha, Chuck
AAA poll champion, received
McKlnley (3) (9-1) 219 2.
Standings
try and track and field .
Team
Rounding out lhe AA top ten only three first place votes
Middletown (11) (8-&lt;l) 215 3. E)(celsior
isn't everything, it's the only Allen, Henry Davis, Bruce Van looked like old home week at
- Pigeon-holed without a fight
Co .
89
lhe top of the first United Press were Buckeye South (il-0 ), compared with 11 for lhe
Cincinnati Elder (5) (6-1) 116 4. G &amp;J . AutoOilPart
thing !" ·
Dyke.
s
72
an
economy move to return to
Toledo Scott 13) (1&lt;&gt;&lt;1) 183 5. G ibbs G rocery
70
A lillie research reveals
"Those guys are the ones International Ohio High School Waverly (8-1), Canton Lehman Middies, but outpolled them 219
one-platoon football.
48
Kettering Alter (i) (9-1) 150 6. Newell Sunoco
other coaches said sub- who paid the price . . They Board of Coaches' basketball ( 6-4 ), Rossford (9-1) and points to 215. Middletown, still
W .M . P .O .
44
- Voted down a proposal to
Cleveland
Eaot
Tech
(2)
(8-1)
Spen cer's Mark e t
37.
Circleville (1&lt;&gt;&lt;1).
stantially the same thing played lheir guts out. I wish ratings.
coached by veteran Paul
1%2 7. Barberton (2) (9-0) 119 8.
increase
the regular college
High Ind . Game
Ellen
Mansfield St. Peter's and
St. Peter's, sporting a 7-2 Walker, is ~ on the year.
before Lombardi did, fellows IIley could be here."
Dayton Roosevelt (1) (8-1) 101 Rou_g ht 189, Mary Porter 181. basketball season one game to
H1gM Ser i es Marg.!lret
9. Newark (3) (11-4) 99 10.ilie)
like Jock Sutherland, ·Frank
The basic difference between Canton, · two of the three record despite being hampered
In third place in AAA was
a total of 27.
Fo
l
l
r
od
496,
E
l
len
Rough
t 478 .
Cincinnati
Hughes
11)
(7-4)
67
Leahy and Red Sanders, to lhe Steelers of those days and defending poll champions, and by an injury to one of its top two-time defending slate tourTeam
High
Game
- Rejected a proposal to cut
10. (tie) Cincinnati Roger W .M . P .O. 805 .
name only a few.
the Steelers of today is con- perennial contender Wellsville players, Greg Givins, received nament champion Cincinnati
off
granlli-in-aid beyond tuition
Bacon (6-1) 67
T eam
H i gh
Series
Actually, there Is no real fidence, the kind of confidence held down the top spots in their si x first place votes and piled Elder with 176 points. The only
W .M .P.O . 2313 .
and fees for all sports
up 158 points from the 33 Class loss for the Panthers, 7-1, was
evidence to suppory the slate- born of winning instead of respective classifications .
scholarships except football and
Wellsville, ·which has turned A coaches who participated in to tenth rariked Cincinnati
Claso AA
ment that winning is every- losing.
basketball.
Team· Polnts I. Wellsville (5)
Hughes (7.{1).
thing, much less the only thing,
"Confidence is a funny out unbeaten seasons with lhis week's balloting.
:::-Approved banning any di(6-o) 173 2. Columbus Mohawk
Second was unbeaten Norand a young man like Andy tiling ," says Andy Russell, who regularity under Coac h
Toledo Scott (10-0) was (6)
rect recruiting contacts with a
(7-1)
136
3.
Warsa!Y
Rivt!r
Russell, who'll be showing up captains Pittsburgh's defen- Bobby Dawson , Is a third of the walk St. Paul ( 10..0), noted fourlh, followed in fifth by View (6) (9.{1) 120 4. Springfield TEAM FOR SALE
high school athlete until he has
way through another wilh a 6-o more in recent years for its Kettering Alter (9.{1). The rest Shawnee ( 4) ( 8-0) 116 5.
in the Super Bowl Sunday with sive unit.
PAWTUCKET, Rl (UP!)- finished his junior year.
.
football teams, wilh 88, fol- of the top 10, in order, were DelpbosSt.John's (4) (8-&lt;l) 106 The Pawtucket Red Sox are for
the Pittsburgh Steelers ,
" In lhe last game we played, mark .
The
Tigers
received
only
five
lowed in a tie for IJlird _by Cleveland East Tech (8-1), 6. Buckeye South (2) (11-0) 91 7. sale, but the current owner
doesn't mean to sound lhe one with Oakland, we were
first
place
votes,
but
held
a
173Lorain Clearview (7-1) and Barberton ( 9..0 ), Dayton Waverly (2) (8-1) 89 8. Canton says he will not part with the
iconoclastic, but he really can 't ahead, 17-13, there wasn 't
136 margin over runnerup Canal Winchester(~) with 84 Roosevelt (8-1), Newark (11-1) Lehman (I) (6-4) 69 9. Rossford team unless lhe new owners
UGLY~FAT
' see what there is so obscene much time left and the officials Columbus
Mohawk in Class AA points and Wynford (8-1 ) with and Hughes and Cincinnati (9-1) 88 lO.Circleville (2) (1&lt;&gt;&lt;1) (H'Omise io keep lhe team in Start losi'!U_ weight today or money
about losing.
took a TV lime out. Ken Stabler
53
back. MONADl:X ila tiny tlbtlt
Oh, sure, he wants to win (Oakland quarterback) hap- in the first of eight weeks of 81.
Rhode Island.
Roger Bacon (6-1 ) tied for
•nd
10 tak1. MONADEX will
help curb your desire for ••~
The rest of the top 10 were tenth.
Sunday. He wants to beat lhe pened to catch my eye from balloting.
Owner Joe Buzas says he has food.
E.t 1811- weigh 1•. Cont1l111
Class A
Although Mohawk, 7-1, re- Continental ( 11-1 ), Upper
Minnesota Vikings the same over in his huddle, and you
met several Urnes with Philip no dangerous drug~ end will not
Team Points I. Mansfield St. L. Anez,'an advertising execu- make you ntrYOUL No strenuous
way all the other Steelers do, know what he did? He 1\rinked. ceived one more first place Scioto Valley (11-1), Minster
College ratings
exerci.,. Change your life •.• ltert
Peter's (6) (7-2) 158 2. Norwalk
vote
than
Wellsville,
the
Indi(8-&lt;l), Sebring (7-1) and Anna
!Jut U you try · to make him Like you guys know I'm going
MONADEX cost $3.00 lor
COLUMBUS
(UP!) - The St. Paul (3) (If).{)) 88 3. (Ue) tive from Smithfield, Rl "but •todov.
20 da_y supply. Laroe economy
believe an individual is dtnlin- to take this ball down 'and put it ans didn 'I have lhe second and ( 11.()),
as
yet
tbe
deal
hasn't
been
first weekly United Press Lorain Clearview (2) (7-1) 84 3.
~ze is $5.00. Also try AOUATABS:
Canton McKinley, 9-1, got lhe International Ohio High School (tie) Canal Winchester (2) (8- realized."
ished by tlie process of losing, in the end zone. Seeing him lhird place votes the Tigers
·
they work gfntly to help you 1011
AQUA TABS -1 "weter
he'll argue that with you.
wink like that just blew my enjoyed .
most severe challenge of the Board of Coaches' basketball 0) 84_5. Wynford (4) (8-1) 816.
Pawtucket, a minor league weter·bloat.
pill.. thet workt - $3.00. . Both
ContinenUII
(I)
(
Il-l)
67
7.
ratings
(with
first
place
votes
In
third
was
unbeaten
WarAndy Russell is something of mind."
lhree top teams from a longaffiliate of the Boston Red Sox, guenntted and sold by:
an authority on being with a
Russell also recalls another saw River View (9-0), aiso with lime Buckeye State basketball and wonlost records in Upper SCioto Valley (3) (11..0) is a member of lhe Internation- · Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy,
parentheses) :
66 s, Minster (3) (8-&lt;l) 84 9.
E . Main, Pomeroy, 0.,
losing professional football example of sheer bald confi- six first place votes, followed power, Middletown,
al League and won lhe Junior 112
Class AAA
Dutton Drug Store, Middleport,
Sebrmg
(2)
17-1)
57
IO.Anna
The Bulldogs, last year's Team Polots 1. Caoton (II.()) 45
team. The durable 32-year~ld dence shown by Fran Tarken- by Springfield Shawnee ( ~ ) ,
o .. Mail orders filled. -adv.
World Series in 1973.
linebacker first joined the ton, who'll be at the controls for
Steelers In 1963 and since then the Vikings against the
they've fashioned such fancy Steelers Sunday, Only this
single season records as 2-12, I· occurred when Tarkenton still
13 and 2-11-1. Until two years was with the New York Gianlli.
For
. ago, the Sleelers put together
"It wasn 't a particularly big
only one winning season from game, only an exhibition in
the time Russell-first reported Montreal, as a matter of fact,
to lhem,
and we were beating the Giants
By STU CAMEN
" I'm not worried knowing his anyhow. I expect him to be Vikings will be 15-year veteran
Bad days and hard Urnes by about four points with a
UP! Sports Wriler
record over 14 years. We'll released in time for our Grady Alderman who gained a Minnesota made illi first Super
were all Russell knew ·until a minute or so to go," Russell
NEW ORLEANS (UP!)
have him rest it a little in morning meeting today and slorter's roll following Toes- Bowl appearance but quarterrelaUvely short time ago, and, remembers.
Bud Grant. coach of the practice. Francis is like all the expect him to practice with lhe day's injury to regular left backed last year's Viking team.
surprise, he says it wasn't
"We have them backed up on Minnesoto Vikings, will take great ones--when th~y get club today, Friday and Satur- offensive tackle Charles Goa- He has never missed a game
because of injury in 14 pro
really that horrible.
· their five-yard line- this was good omens anywhere he can nicked or have a temperature day."
. drum. Goodrum, a second year seasons and tried to play down
Ring Style
" People ask me how it was Allie Shennan's last game with find them -even in lhe sore or something of that nature
However, Noll did admit pro out of Florida A&amp;M, pulled his current ailment.
No. 9()
playing for .Pittsburgh In those t~ Giants-and Tar kenton throwing arm of quarterback they work twice as hard ."
White hasn't been eating much b leg muscle during ·a workout
Set wllh rcdiont
"The arm has been sore the
days, and to he completely goes over to lalk to him on the Fran Tarkenton .
If that be the case, , then the since he entered the hospital and was still listed by Grant as
bir1hstcmes - l)ne 1tont
honest about it, I always loved sidelines. He comes back
Gront, whose Vikings are 3 l'z Steelers seemingly would have and may have lost a few "doubtful" for Sunday's game. last six or eight · weeks,"
fl)r eoch member of tke
Tarkenton said. "I got hit in
it," says Andy Russell, who has toward his huddle, suddenly point underdogs to the Pitts- ·no need to worry over the pou,nds.
fomil~ .
uwe can wait as late as the right shoulder in one of our
never missed playing a single stops, looks at us and smiles. burgh Steelers for Sunday's condition of right defensive end
" If he does start Sunday, I Friday before determining
In prO&lt;"ious lOki. yellaw
game with lhe Steelers. "You Imagine that! He's losing, Super Bowl IX , revealed Dwight White who has been guess we 'll have to keep an eye whelher Goodie can play," early games and that may be
or white oold.
the
·cause.
It
feels
better
this
don't play for money or glory, there's only a minute or so left, Tarkenton 's injury Wednesday hospitalized the last three days. on him," said Noll who' added Grant said. "We have Alderyou play for enjoyment. True, and he smiles. He . got them but classified the ailment "a Club spokesmen have predicted that in the event White couldn't man ready to start if Goodie week because we had last week
you wouldn't play U you didn't moving, too, taking them all good omen because Francis White's release each day since he ready for the Vikings, be can't _go, with Steve Riley off. I don't do much throwing
SJ.OO odditi'6not
during practice anyway. And it
get paid, !Jut I'm not talking the way down to about our 10 always has a good day when the beginning of the week but would be replaced by Steve behind Grady.
lor •Deh
hasn't affected my throwing all
bir lhitor'A
about tlrat, I'm lalking about before we stopped them when his arm 'is sore."
he remained in the hospilal
Furness.
Alderman, a 15-year veteran,
.·
how it was being with a losing Joe Greene pulled down Joe
"If the arm is still sore on Wednesday in order to get Opposing either White or is the only remaining member year." .
team.
Morrison from behind."
· Sunday, I'm sure- he 'll have a lhree additional treatmenlli for Furness across lhe line for the of the original Viking team · Commenting on Tarkenton's
ability to avoid serious injury
"lneverwantedtohetraded.
Fran Tarkentoo remembers great day ," added Grant who the viral infection that has kept
founded
in
1961
and
will
be
for 14 years, Grant said,
I was always confident, opt!- the ball game. He also also disclosed that Tarkenton him a,way Ctnm practice since _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
making
his
third
Super
Bow
I
"Durability
is lhe best ability
mistic we'd turn it around. I remembers why he smiled the . has had periods of soreness the Steelers arrived here .
appearance.
Both
previous
apan
athlete
can
possess. You
honestly felt more team spirit way he did.
during the season. "He is like
"The extra day in the cellar-dwelling Virginia its
pearances
resulted
in
losses
-23don't achieve greatness wilhout
for the Pittsburgh Steelers in
"I have fun when I'm most quarterbacks, they have hospital won't have that much sixth straight defeat. The
7
to
Kan"'!s
City
in
1970
and
24it. The great ones are lhe ones
Colonels
moved
ahead
for
good
lhose bad old days than I ever playing, " he says.
on-and-off periods . Maybe it affect on rum," said Steelers '
~7 to Miami last year.
who
play.';
just
before
,
the
end
of
the
first
did in college, and we generally
He means win or lose , same was the rain yesterday that coach Chuck Noll. "He wasn't
"I
hear
White
's
ill
but
I
as Andy Russell.
caused the soreness.
· going to practice Wednesday quarter on a layup by Ted
McClain, and lhe issue was expect him to be there
International Hockey League
settled by halftime when Sunday," Alderman said. " I By
Unlred Press International
Kentucky led 58-46. Virginia don't know much about his
North
gf ga,
was led by rookies Uoyd Batts replacement, Furness, but lhe .. Saginaw 27w 14I I 1pis
55 164 f31
he
doesn
't
know
much
abou:
with 24 points and David
r lint
24 14 3 Sl 152 116
Muskegon 24 15 1 49 165 111
me
either.
All
I
know
is
that
Denver
and
brought
the
San
Antonio
had.
led
11
poinlli
Vaughn
with
ginia,
113-96,
St.
Louis
beat
.22
points.
By Uoltect Pren IDtel'lllltlonal
95
Port Huron 15 22 2 32 128 141
ON!r.
he's just in his lhird year and Lans
Spirits 111, SoUDds 106:
San Antonio coach Bob Bass Nuggets season record to 34-5, Memphis, lll-106, and San early in the third qwlrter, but
i ng
11 16 1 23 138 200
9 25 ~2 20 92 lJB
Pfu.-...ou;..
Diego defeated Utah , 122-113. Denver fought back and took a
GllO Kennedy and Marvin I've got 12 years experience on Kalamazoo South
almost saw his team execute best by far in either league.
him."
sf- .•
Jones' heroics WeN! set up
Spurs Coach Bob Bass said six-point lead with 8:37 left to
wtlplsgfgo .
the impossible Wednesday
Barnes had four Points each in
27 11 2 56 168 134
The Vikings, w_ith 16 players Dayton
night - beat . the Denver when Claude Terry hit a three- he was going to protest the play before San Antonio,
overtime and Barnes finished
Columbus
22 18 1 45 161 139
pointer with two seconds left game 1because when Spurs spurred by Jim Silas with 10 with 26 points and 31 rebounds, having participated in the two Toledo
Nuligets.
20 22 1 41 154 157
Moines 18 23 2 38 140 163
high rebound total in the ABA previous Super Bowl games Des
However, a crowded court, a and pulled the Nuggets, who center Swen Nater took the ball points in lhe last·three minlltes,
Fort Wayne 15 22 0 30 139 151
lhis· season, to lead St. Louis. involving Minnesota , do have
stolen pass and an 18-foot had traUed by five pqints with out of bounds with a second had gone ah~d by five with 29
Wednesday's Results
Columbus 7 Flint 1
just
29
second
left
in
the
game,
left,
the
arena
floor
was
George Carter of Memphis led the edge ·in experience., on lhe Dayton
seconds to play before Denver
jumper by Bobby Jones with
7 Des Moines 1
covered with fans and players. came back.
one second left gave the into a tie.
his team with 25 and teammate Steelers tiut Grant maintained saginaw 4 Lansing 3, overtime
Court Sf., Pomeroy
ThUrsday ' s Games ,
Elsewhere, Indiana sur"They shoul.d have called a
Nuggets a protested 131).128
Slew Johnson added 23 for lhe he is not worried about the age
Pacers 127, Nets 119:
No games scheduled
factor working against his club.
Indiana, which has had a
victory, It was the 22nd prised New York wilh a 127-119 timeout and cleared lhe floor
Sounds.
"We 've been growing old for
Q's l%Z, Slars 113: ·
straight hom~ourt victory for triumph , Kentucky ripped :Vir- from both sides," said Bass. disappointing season so far,
"We did not have an opportuni- played its "best game in at
Dwight Lamar scored 26 six years," Grant said. 11 But we
ty to get the ball in .... "
· least three weeks," according
points and Travis Grant added have more depth· now and
Bass also said the time clock, to George McGinnis, who
21 to lead San Diego, The Q's that's one of our great
which had one second left when contributed 31 points, 16 retrium,ph was the first under strengths. The secret is to grow
Nater took tbe ball out of bounds, eight assists and two
their new coach Beryl Shipley .. old gracefully."
One of those growing old
bounds, did not start until after steals while playing, at various
Utah rookie Moses . Mal&lt;ine
gracefully is lhe 34-year..,ld
official 'Ed Middleton signalled Urnes, center, forward and
sank
29
points
and
pulled
down
Pocket Fisherman ..................:19;95
that Jones' basket was good.
guard. The Pacers beat New
24 rebounds. Guard Ron Boone Tarkenton who -was with the
New York Giants in 1970 when
"None of your business, " York at its own game-ruuning
added' 28 for tbe Stars.
Battery Qp!!rated Ught Weight
Middleton
said
when lhe fast break. Larry Kenon
Sewing Mac;hine .................. . 9.98
questioned about the final play. helped New 'York stay in '
.
Jones wound up wilh a team contentioo with ooe of the best
Battery. Operated
high 27 points, while Mike . games of his career-37 points,
Green
and Ralph Simpson both -11 rebounds, five assists and
Miracle Broom •.••••.••••• ~........ 9.98 ·
had 26 for Denver. Donnie six steals.
Freeman led San Antonio with
Colonels 113, Sqolres 91:
29 and Rich Jones had 27 while
Artis Gilmore scored 26
Nater had 14 points and 14 points and Bird Averitt added
rebounds.
21 for II!• Colonels as lhey dealt

Old home week in polls

• &gt;

Local Bowling

LOSE
••v

Sore ·a rm labeled good omen

t!-•t.•-1Jr.ce
MOTHER

S26SO

Nugget home streak continues

.NEW ·
fAMILY RING

$28

·GOESSLER

JEWELRY STORE

AS SEEN ON TV

.
JANUARY
STOREWIDE SALE!

BIG 9 SALE

•

COMING SOONI
.

I•

20%

WIDE SELECTION
.

1975 DESk CALENDAR PAD &amp; STANDS
1975 YEAR BOOKS
.1975 APPOINTMENT BOOKS

'

OF

HUFFY LAWNMOWERS
ON DISPLAY

liQd.,.~1

' 992-34911
.

OPEN FRitDiii:Y

. NIG" r•

Hours: 8:00·5: 30 Mon., T.hurs.
,
8:00io8 : oo 'Fri.- Sal.

Use-.Jur .ConYenlllllt I:ay-A-Way l'lan.
'

773-5583

'
f

.

•

5- The Daily Sentinel,Middlepor .. "omeroy, 0., Thursday, Jan , 9,1975

NCA·!.
·
tables·
Woi
i
Den
until
riext
year
w
~
'

~ Todny's ·

I~

I •

'

., .

4- The DauY Sentinel,Middleport-f{&gt;meroy, 0., Thursday, Jan. 9,1975

'

,

MASON, W. VA.

oHon

50%

..•
Df:CJ:;MBER
DEC.' 1 - Mr. and Mrs.
Millard Van Meter observed
lheir annual open house at
their Pomeroy Flower 'Shop.
DEC. 2 - Miller's Super
Market at New Haven was
wiped out by fire. Middleport
merchanlli slaged their annual parade to ofiicially ·
welcome the Christmas
season. Wallace Bradford was
reelecte d president of the
Meigs County Fair Board.
DEC. 3 - The Meigs County
Board of Education voted to
open school records of students
to parenlli or guardians.
DEC. 4
Christmas
prog rams began taking place
in schools and annoumcement
was made of the suspension of
work on a power plant at New
Haven. Hunters continued to
have good luck during the deer
season.
DEC. 5 - Fourteen Eastern
High School students were
tapped for membership i11 the
National Honor Society.
DEC. 7 - Pomeroy 's water
was declared unsafe for
drinking.
DEC. 8 - The Meig• County
Assn. of Garden Clubs held
a successful Christmas flower
show at the Pomeroy
Elementary SchooL Mrs .
Sylvia Badgl~y tlied in a fire
which struck herBroadway St.
home.
DEC. 9 - 0. 0 . Patterson,
former
Meigs
County
Superintendent of Schools and
a former representative to the
General Assembly, died.
Middiepot Council began aclion to provide approximate 10
percent_ pay increases for
Middleport Village employes.
DEC . 10 - Construction
began on Middleport's new
apartment complex at the
corner of Third and Mill Sis.
DEC. II - The Meigs County
Board of. Elections completed
its recount in the Governor's
election but found no change
from November.
DEC. 12 - The Eastern

Bashan
NeWS
Mr . and Mrs .· .George
Roberts spent last week in
.Eiorida. Also visiting relatives
in Florida a week were Mr. and
Mrs. James Bailey' and son,
Clinton.
Mr. and Mrs. Vinton Jones
spent Christmas with · their
daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Bill· Stover and
children at Charleston, W.Va.
Spending the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Trussell
were Mr: and Mrs. Harold
Trussell, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Trussell and Mr. and Mrs. Rick
Trussell of Newport News, Va.,
and Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Trussell and Dawn of Mt.
Vernon, 0. Christmas was
celebrated on-Sunday wllh Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Trussell and
Mr. and Mrs. John Ridenour
and Jason of Chester; Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Kerns, Belpre,
0 . ; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
. Trussell, Peggy Sue, Stevie,
Renee and Scotty, local, and
Miss Deidra Cowdery of
Newark, 0. present for
Christmas dinner.
Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Pitzer ..
of Beckley, w. va. spent
Tuesday with Mr. and' Mrs.
Clint Pitzer and faniily.
·
·Mr. and Mrs. Warden Ours
spent ·Christmas wilh Mr. and
Mrs. Dick Gaul and boys,
Chester, 0.
Mrs. Freda Deeter of
Columbus is vi$iting her son,
Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Deeter ljlld
family.

. Local Board .of Education set
up pr ocedures for . a irin Jl'
compla int s ag~inst sc hool
employes. Rick Werner of
Pomeroy completed ·his
engineering studies at Ohio
Slate, swnma cum laude .
' DEC. 13 - Residenlli con·
linued to boil their drinking
water while tests on the status
of the water supply continued.
DEC. ·15 - Meigs High
School speech, art; welding and
vocal students presented a
Christmas ~rts festivaL
DEC. 16- William C. Keith ,
Parkersburg , mitaculou sly ·
escaped death when his
tractor-trailer overturned on
Route 7- near the Shake Haven .
DEC. l7 - The Meigs County
Regional Planning Commission invited any additions
on objectives and goals of the
group.
DEC. 18 - Pomeroy's water
supply tested safe for consumpiion without boiling .
Rodney Allen Pierce, 3, and
Terry Pierce, 2, died in a fire
and explosion at their moblle
home near Long Bottom.
DEC. 19-20 - II was program
and party time at Meigs
County schools as students
finished their final days of
school before Christmas
vacation.
DEC. ?.1 - Becky Sams and
John Salser were crownd king
and queen at the Southern High
School Christmas dance.
DEC. 23 - The resignation of
Doneld Diener as administrator of the countyowned Veterans Memorial
Hospital was announced .
Middleport Council approved a
second reading of a pay boost
ordinance for village employes. Scott Lucas was named .
new administrator of Veterans
Memoral HospitaL
· DE&lt;;. 24 - All was quiet as
lhe county prepared to observe
the Christmas holiday .
DEC. 26 -Pomeroy business
district extremely quiet as
many stores, the courthouse
and other offices closed as a
part of the Christmas hqliday.
DEC. 27 - A GO million dollar
contract was let for dust
control at the Sporn Plant.
Shirley Mae Smith and her
dalighter, Brenda, Langsville,
hospitalized with injuries
received in an auto accident
near Langsville.
DEC. 29 - A $100,000 fire
destroyed·the .half century old
R. H. Rawlings and Sons Co.
building in Middleport.
DEC. 30 - Mrs. Genevive
Harvey resigned as clerk of the
Southern Local School Board.
DEC. 31 - Three county
officials were given their oaths
of office by Judge John c .
Bacon - Howard Frank,
county ·auditor; Robert Buck,
countyjudge,andHenry Wells,
commissioner. Many residents
ended the year as they had
started by attending the annual
firemen's New Year's Ball.

oH.

heritage
house
MIDDLEPORT OHI

&lt; ,

NOV. 28- Thanksgiving was
observed abd a football game ,
was held between alumni of
Pomeroy and Middleport High
Schools for the benefit of lhe
Meigs Cancer Unit.
NOV. 29 - · Mr. alld Mrs.
Clarence Ogdin were attacked
atlhelr hom~ on the New Lima
Road during a breaking and
entering.
NOV. 311 - Jo Ellen Diehl,
Pomeroy, ,ll!ld ' Bill Beagle,
Racine, announced, plans for
going to the Rose Bowl with the
Alumni group of the Oh;o State

I

\
'.

j·

Funeral services for Mrs.

Ann a L. J ones who die d ·
Monday at Grant Hospital in
Co lu mbus, were co nducted
Wedn esday at the Ewing
t"w• eral Home . The Rev . Carl
Hicks officiated and burial was

of diStrict health meeting
18 your water safe. to drink ? Does your community
have a problem with rural waste? Doe&amp; your school
system Include envlronmentat health education lo their
curriculu,m? When was the last lime you saw, tasted,.. or
smelled carbon monoxide?
If you are concerned with the answers to any or all of
theoe q"''&amp;lloos then plan to attend this year's Jackson
Dlotrict Health Conference.
The theme of this year'• conference is "Environment
and You". The conference will be held on Wed.neoday,
January 15th from 9:30 a. m. to 3:311 p. m., at Commu,olty
Hall, Rio Grande College Campuo, Rio Grande !between
Jackson aod GaWpolis on Route 35). There Is a SOc
registration charge which can he paid at the door.
There wW be a 45 minute 8reak between morning and
afternoon sessions lor lunch. Parllcipants may choos e to
eat out or bring saek lunch. For more Information, call
lhe County Extension OHice at 992-3895.

.

•

January Sale For Men!

WEYENBERG

DRESS SHOES
BROKEN LOTS
NOT ALL SIZES

Value of land for taxation

Values to s23

purposes will be explained
There will be an Agricultural
Use Value Taxation meeting at
St. Paul's Lutheran Church on
Second Street in Pomeroy on
Wednesda Y,, January 15 at 7:30
p. m.
The meeting, arranged for
land owners only, will help
them decide whether to file an

A(fred
Social Notes

·

1n the Beach Grove Cemetery . · Jesse Jones, Washington, D. ,
Com1~g from out-of-town for C., all houseguests of Mr. and
_the serv1ces were Mr. and Mrs., Mrs. Harry S. MOore , Mid·
Ern est A. Jones and Kenneth, dleport, a.nd Dr. · ~nd Mrs.
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs: Allan James Flsher •.~mcinnatl,
J ones , Santa Anna, Cahf. and gueslli of Mrs. Paul Fisher.

a

NOW

application to have their land
taxed on its agricultural value.
Topics to be covered will be
background information, steps
to follow , deadlines, forms fo r
filing applica tion, and how to
dete rmine the agnc ultura l
value of land .

.

SALE FOR
THE LADIES

from a recent stroke.
Recent visitors at the
Follrod-Robinson home were
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Follrod of
West Jefferson, 0 ., and Mr .
and Mrs. Gerald Swartz and ·
family of Marietta. The latter
also called on his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Hobart Swartz.

1 Lot Purses lh Price

Marguerite's Shoes
BETTY OHLINGER

102 E. MAIN

Overall
Depth

Height

POMEROY

Stop By And

"SITS FOUR SLEEPS TWO"
'72"
34 II

See Us Today II

32 ,,

'

.,

ONE OF THE MANY GREAT VALUES
YOU'LL FiND AT BAKER;S ANNUAL

Middleport

Baker ·Furniture

ELKS LEADER DIES
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) :_ The
senior former Grand Exalted
Ruler of the Benevolent and
Protective Order of Elks, Dr.
Edward J . .McCormick, died
Tuesday at St.
Vincent
Medical
I
.
Center here. He was 83.

Ohio

They'll Do It Evt=!rv

Wooi .Yarn

'fHE Oil roclL Oi&lt;IVER WHO

Reg. si .39 Skein

Sale 38'
SPORTSWEAR SALE
Red Eye
Aileen
Devon

'h PRICE

Ladies'

PJ.'s &amp; GOWNS
BRUSHED~YLONS

RI!I . SIO!o$4

SALE.

..,.._,..,;
RAY WILCOX .

1.:t-J NEW HARWINTON
·' • Ro&lt;t&gt;:
Cl~ ...........

.,_."'"' ..

'""

....... _. ·-· ...

$7.88 To _S2.88

Poly/Cotton Aannel
45" Wide Printed
Reg. 51.89

Sale

*1

22

Entire Stock

LADIES DRESSES

Sale

V NECK VESTS

· · SLACK ·SETS
. SAi..E

'1.99 . '2.99 .

COATS &amp; JACKETS
Ladies-Mens- Boys

98~

Ladies L.S. Tops

3-6x, 7-14
Values To 55.95

Turtle &amp; Mock Turtle
SALE

'166

'4.44 '

IN ANTS
PANT &amp; TOP SETS
REG.
SALE.
$6,95
$4.88
$3.88
$4 .95
$3.98 ('

$2.88

53.49
$2 .29

$2.00
$1 ,44

Girls: Infants

113 OFF

GIRLS DRESSES

% OFF
BOYS SHIRTS

Entjre Stock

BOYS SWEATERS

I

.

Big Lot Ladi!!s .

Bras &amp; Girdles .

$8.95.
$7.95
$6:49

SALE
$5.95
$5:.33
$4.33

S4.99

SP3

To.$8:oo
SALE
To 5

Values

'1.00

GIRLS 3-7
SPORTSWEAR·

REG. .

.
4,0Q

. UNCUT CORDUROY
MATERIAL
Reg.u1a r

. ·.

.

'

.,

.. ,

-- 1

(J

I' . '

.r

'

'

OP£N TIL 5:30 MON. THRU THURS. TIL 8:00 FRI. &amp; SAT.
·•
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
•

10RRIN&amp;fON,
CONN.

,I

I
1

s2 :19

SALE 51.99

M.iddlepor,-t .~ Department
Store
.
~

I

Seroices conducted Wed,nesday for Mrs. Jones ·

Environment and You topic

Sunday School attendance on
Jan. 5 was 55, the offering
$25.60. Worship services were
held at 11 with the Rev . Meece
speaking from Ma.tt. 7:13-14 on
"The Greatest Thing In All the
World." Attendance at f the
service was 21, offering $17.91
and pledges $47 .
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D.
Woode attended the Chester
·."otch Night services held at
lhe ~ ··~ Belhel Church last
Tuesd ay evening. Also attending from here were
Thelma Henderson, Ruth
Brooks and Mr. and · Mrs.
Ellieroy Locke, the latter's
visitors from Columbus, 0 .,
who spent several days with
the Brooks family .
Friends and relatives here
attended services for Seldon
White , held at the Bearwallow
Church of Christ, Sunday afternoon . Among those attending from a distance were
Mr. and Mrs. Berkeley
Faulkner, Esther White, and
family from Circleville, Q.;
Mr. and Mrs. John Campbell
and family from Grove City,
0.; Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Jeffers and family, Athens, 0.,
and Fred Whil.tl of Athens, also
Earl White, Athens. ,
Mr.and!'4rs. Charles Barr of
Rockland, 0 ., Mr . and Mrs.
Winnie Barnhill, Guysville ;
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Atherton and family, Long
Bottom, were Christmas Day
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Atherton.
Recent· guests of Mr. and
WAUGH TO SIMPSON
Mrs. William Carr have been
INDIANOLA, Iowa (UP!)- Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hoffner of
Maury Waugh, Iowa Intercol- · Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. Roland
legiate Athletic Conference Eastman, Bearwallow, Mr.
coach of the year at Dubuque in and Mrs. Clair Woode and
1972, Wednesday was named Conni of Circleville and Mr.
head football coach and assist- and Mrs. John Hayes of
ant professor of physical Chester.
education at Simpson College.
Sherman Henderson is
Waugh, 34, repla.ces Larry Improving from a recent SJ.lell
Johnson, Simpson's athleUc of illness.
director, who led the Redmen • Friends here have learned
to a ~1 record last season lhat Mrs. Ella Yost of Sugar
after assuming the football · Grove is recovering nicely
post late in the ~ummer .
followmg the resignal!oo of AI
Paone.
"

~ration .

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all merchandise
Many items up

to

Y~uth Choir.

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6~ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

0., Thw-sda)'. Jan. 9,1975 ·

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7- The Daily Sentinel; Mlddleport-Pw.•eroy, 0., Thw-sday, Jan. 9, 1975

by
Sirica
.Magruder; Dean, Kalmbach, set free
.
.

.

·G

By WESLEY G. PII'PERT former colleagues in the Nixon
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Jeb adminislration .
Sluart Magruder came home to They left prison Wednesday,
find yeUow ribbons around the
•·upon consideration of the
Lree .in his front yard. Herbert defendant's motion for rerlucW. Kalmbach hoped he might Lion of sentence." U.S. Dislrict
·· practice ·law again. John w. Court Judge John J. Sirica
Dean Ill dodged reporters.
announced in terse, nearThe three had admitted , identical orders, "it is ordered
participating in the Watergate that the unexecuted and-or
cover-up and had pleaded gui lty remaining portion of the
. to assorted charges. They sentence ... is reduced to lime
helped the prosecution , and already served."
their testimony helped convict
Dean , who was Richard M.

4,\0 00 t.e achers

12 per cent increase.

still on strike
COLUMBUS, Ohio I UPI I The first teachers' strike in the
history or Columbus public
schools today kep t nearly 4,000
teachers out of classrooms for
. a fow-th consecutive day with
no new · negotiating sessions
planned .
Federal mediator Joseph
Santa-Emma sa id Wednesday
no new negotiating se.Sions

Nixon's White House counsel,
left the prison facility at Ft.
Holabird, Md .. near Baltimore;
through a rear door It&gt; escape
reporters. " I'm thrilled. I
couldn't be happier," said his
wife Maureen, reached at their
secluded canyon home in
Beverly Hills, Calif. "! con't
wait for him to come home."
Ka lmbach, once Nixon's personal lawyer, sat at a table in
his attorney's office, expressing
"profound gratitude for the

were planned between the
Columbus Education Association, represe nting the system's
teac hers in conlract negotiations, and the Columbus Board
of Education .
Teachers began the walkout
last Monday after the board
refused to increase of final
wage increase of 4.08 per cen t.
The teachers are asking for a

School board officials said
Wednesday 1,449 of the system's 5,000 teachers crossed
picket lines and about 36,000 of
the dislricts 100,000 students
showed up for classes. The
CE A said the number of
teache rs and students at the 170
schools mvolved was considerably lower than the board of
education estimate.
A hearing is set for Saturday
on a request ror a permanent
injunction filed by the board of
education in an attempt to get
the teachers back in the
classrooms.

Democrats on schedule
with 6 partisan bills

•

compassion"

of

the

judge . obviously," sa id Magruder as comment from four of Nixon's campai~n aide, will be sen·

"We 're all enthused and excited, " he salol ~ftcr talking to
his wife . Kalmba ch was to fly
to Los Angeles today .
Mogruder's wife, Gail, their
four ch ildren, and their pastor,
Louis H. Evans Jr., of
Washington's National Presbyterian Chw-ch here, drov.e to
Ft. Holabird to get him.
Colleen Townsend Evans, the
ministe r's wife and former
actress . and other women fixed
dinner in the Magruders' splitlevel horne in suburban Bethesda, Md. A brightly li t Christmas tree decor ated the picture
window and, reminiscent of the
popular song , ye llow tissue
paper wa s draped around a
barren tree in the yard.
'' I wa s vrrv ~ urnri~ d,
LOTTERY DRAW
CINCINNATI I UP ! Here are this week' s win ing
numbers in the .Jhlo lotte ·
Number 153 1 one fi ve
three) in any box un ticket
wins $20.
Numbers 487 1four eight
seven) and 616 (six one six)
in green and blue wins $500 .
Numbers 487 and 616 in
blue boxes wins $1,000.
Numbers 487 and 616 in
green boxes eligi bl e for
$300,000
drawing and
automatically wins $15,000 .

Albert Scholl
dies at age 50

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) _ The
Ohio House and Senate resume
commi ttee work today, right on
schedule lor enacting six
priority partisan bills the
Dem&lt;&gt;&lt;;rats hope to enact this
week and send to Democratic
Gov . John J. Gilligan for
signature before he leaves
office next Monday.
The Senate was to reconvene
at 9 a.m. and the House one
hour later to send 10 commitlees the bills adopted Wednes·
day, three in each chamber.
The- lawmakers spent all
Wednesday afternoon debating
the bills. Five of them passed
along strict party-line votes,
while the ~lxth -a Democratic

sa id Sen. Tony P. Hall, D· by us all - one man, one vote."
D
ha '
th
ayton, c 1rman of e Senate
But minority Republicans . .Albert Mi lton Scholl, so. Coal
Elections Committee.
dominated the debate, com- St., Pomeroy, died today at
Republicans argued the plaining the bill was "conceived Berger Hospital in Circleville.
proposal would open the way in back rooms," given insuffi· He was preceded in .death by
lor soliciting reg istrations at cient hearings and rushed to his parents, Albert (Tody ) and
"bars, bowling alleys and bingo the floor without proper study Bessie Lowden Scholl. Surparlors" and would result in or public attention .
viving are a brother, Delbert
widespreadfraud.
"This is a cynical abuse of (Deb) Becker of Middleport
"We're trying to sweep from ra w political power, written in arid several uncles and aun ts.
under the rug every body we a back room and foisted on Mr. Scholl was a member of
can find, and it opens up this us," said Rep. Michael G. the St. Paul Lutheran Church.
S!!Cred privilege to the worst Oxley, R-Find!ay. " This wasn' t Funeral services will be held
frauds lmagi.nable," argued done with a scalpel, it was done at 10 a.m. Saturday at the
Sen. William H. Mussey, R- with a meat axe . If this is Ewing Funeral Home with the
Batavia.
politics as usual, frankly, it Rev. William Middleswar!h
"Sw-e, they can go from makes me sick." .
.officiating. Burial will be in
h":'~e ,to ddhoduse to h register
Various Rep,ubhcans com- Beech Grove Cemetery.
vo..,rs,' a e Sen. T omas A. plained the hi I would divide. Friend s may ca.ll at the fune ral
Van Meter, R-Ashland, "but counties they represent in to two home anytime after i this
they can also .go to the saloons congressional districts unneces- evening .
and graveyards."
sarlly. They also claimed the
congressional redistricting bill
Government's Obllgallon
bill was masterminded by
-was adopted by a scant three
''I feel it is the government's Democratic coun ty chairmen
voles as four House Democrats
obligation to take the initiative and state party officials.
broke ranks and joined Republl· to make it easier to register," • "This plan has been orches·
cans in opposition.
counte red Hall.
!rated by a public official who
The Democrats, con trolling
Democrtssystematicallybeat has been rejected at the polls,"
CHRISTMAS PARTY
the Senate 21-12 and the House back a se ries of nine Republi' said Rep. 'Joseph P. Tulley, R· Donna Im boden. t eac her,
by 59-IO, allowed the full range can amendments along party- Mentor, referring to Gilligan . ente rtained her Nursery Class
of flO{)r debate and the GOP did line votes. A tenth, to provide
of the Syracuse Churc h of lh e
Purchasing Titanic Ticket
not try to take advantage of it fund s fo r training the regis·
·'You are purchasing a ticket Nazarene with a Christmas
with
filibuster
tactics.
·
th e parsona ge
·
Lrars, failed on a vote of 14-16. on the Titanic as far as your pa rt Y 10
But the Republicans were
Democrats "fear failure to political caree rs are concerned basement. The Kindergarte n
clearly outmanned, and their . e'nact the bills by next Monday if·you vote lor this bi ll ," Tulley children were guests.
onh.~ recourse was to write a
Eb er
will allow incoming Republican continued. " I call on you to All e~ d'1n g
•&lt;'ere
record of opposition ·for use in Gov . James A. Rhodes to veto resist dancing to the swan song Pickens. Jr., Wayne, Brian and
an expected future court case. them.
of the Pled Piper from Ricky Parsons, D,oug and
They !lied formal protests
Other bills adopted by. the downstai rs...
Becky Lavender, Rodney and
about abuse of legislative rilles Senate Md sent to the House
Tulley's statements were Robin Ste'wart , Steven Bass,
and the committee process, for committee hearings would : ec hoed by House Minority Wendy Triplett, Angela Davis.
which they felt has been ·
- Authorize extension of Leader Charles F. Kurfess, R· ~ayne Imboden and Harvey
Mar tin. Unable to attend due to
circumvented by the week's .. l.!"employment compensa tion Bowling Green.
swift action.
,
· t.me Bass.
be~efits to workers idled by
" Beware of fo llowing the ·11ness was ·c h ns
Roadblock Attempt
strikes"llrrelaae.~ industries.
political advice of someone who Adult helpers and guests were
The GOP 's main attempt at 8
- Transfer a con!Umer pro- won_'t be around when we are Mary Pickens, Linda Parsons,
roadblock may come hi1e tectio n division in the stat!!" ·-called to accoun.t," Kurfess· Mar Y J amce Lavender. o. ra
Friday or Satw-day, when Commerce Department to the
Bass. Corky Dav1s , Gera ldme
Republican Lt. Gov. John W. attorney general's office. savRepublicans pointed out that Ma~tin and Elma Imboden.
Brown is asked to certify the ing some 22 Democratic jobs.
aside from Cook's presentation Hlghhght of the even mg was
legislation as presid,ing officer
Bills approved by the House there was no testimony in the appearan ce of Santa Claus.
of the Senate after it has and sent to the Senate for the support of the bill in corrunit- The teacher thanks everyone ·
cleared both chambers.
start of committee hearings tee. House Majority Leader who donated and helped.
If Brown takes too long to would :
William L. Mallory. D-Cinclnsign. the Democrats may hand
- Limit the power of the nati, spoke briefly in behalf of
the bills to Senate President
Pro Tempore Oliver Ocasek, 1). secretary of state to appoint the bill on the floor .
and dismiss membe rs of coun ty
Dissatisfied Democrats. join·
Akron. Senate rules adopted by boards of election.
1ng the Republicans in opposiVETERINAR~
·lhe Democrats Monday night
-Transfer the state income ti·on, were Reps. John E.
empower Ocasek to sign the tax collection division of the Johnson of Orrville. Paul R.
~ · SUPPLIES
bills, but Republicans believe state Taxation Department to · Leonard of Dayton, Robert A. for lar~• &amp; Small Animals
Brown is delegated exclusive the state treasw-er's office, Nader of Warren and Rona ld H.
power in this area by the state saving an estimated 300 ful l- Werahdt of Akron.
Constitution.
·
time and part-time Democratic
...•doption of the rules in this
The congressional redistrict- jobs.
chamber was Act One of this
ing plan is designed to give the
Gel Better Balance
theatrical production," said
· Democrats solid n.ew congres·
sional districts in Columbus and
Rep. Vernon Cook. D-Cuyaho- Senate Minority Leader Michaga Falls, the redistricting bill's el J . Maloney, R-Cincinnati, a·s
Cincinnati, and possiblr two chief 'sponsor, called it "an Dem&lt;&gt;&lt;;rats won a party line
more seats in western Ohio in
the 1976 election.
equal representa'tion act de· vote ·on the bill transferring the
signed to get a better popula- consumer fraud section to the
II cleared the HoUSe by 53-13. ti on ba rance to more closely state attorney general's office .
'with 50 votes required for adhere to the doctrine revered "This is Act Two.' '
&amp;
passage. rwo !Jemocrats were
absent, while lour others
crossed over.
In the Senate; Democrats
ZENITH
Ask to ~heck our
pushed ,through legislation providing ojor permanent voter
"MERCK VITERINARY
registration,
house-to-house ·
. MANUAL"
registration, and registration by
•
• • •
mail. The vole was 21-11,
strictly alonS party lines. •
•BLACK
Give Voters Chance
. Del)locrats said the bill. would
WHITE TV
atve more eligible voters a
chance to participate in the
elective process arid would. be
. •STfREO
less expen.ive, with neighbor·
Your Prescrrp~ion
hOOd registrars being paid 10
Druq S ,Oft'.,
cents.for each voter registered.
the state wO\lid make reiri:Jbw-sement.
'
Easy Terms!
"This,bill ,.;outd' make voter
HERMAN 'GIJATE
Free
Delivery!
registration inore efficient,
l7J-S592··
MAS'lN, W. VA .
more accurate and less c&lt;&gt;Stly," • . ,_ _ _ _ _ _!!!'!_ _ _"""_ _ _ _'I-~-~

he crawled out of their station closest aides, convicted a week
wagon . " I'm glad to b&lt; back ago of conspiracy in the
with my family," he sa id over Watergatecover-up.
and over.
. John N. Mitchell, who had
Magruder, Nixon 's deputy been attorney general and
campaign director, said he had ciimpaign director; H. R.
lost 20pounds because of prison Haldeman, White House ch i ~f
food and had done "a tremen- ·of staff: John D. Ehrlichrnan,
dous amoiUlL"• of writing and Nixon's domestic affairs chief,
reading - philosophy, theology and Robert C. Mardian , assistand novels.
ant attorney genera l and
Magruder said the release
order ca ught him by surprise.
"! have had no chance to think
about the future," he said.
Kalmbach sa id , "My hope is •
to be reinstated' ' in the
Robert W. Cornell, 52, .a
practice of law. He had been
of Calcutta the · past
resident
disbarred in Califor nia .
None of them would comment several years and formerly of
Meigs County, died Wednesday
on Watergate matters.
at
City Hospita l in East
There was no immediate
Liverpool. He was the son of
the late Robert and Eunice
Jones Cornell.
He retired as a welder wi~
the Patterson Foundry in East
Liverpool in May, 1974, due to
ill health.
Surv iving are hi s wife,
Shelton Troy Hendrix, oneday-old infant' of Franklin Barbara Bass Cornell: two
(Pete )' and Phyllis (Smith ) sons, Robert Ray and Rodney
Hendrix, Syracuse, Ohio, died Jay, bo th at home; two
Wednesday in Holzer Medical brothers, Clarence of Portland
Center. He was born Jan uary 7. and Herman Larkins of
Graveside rites will be Colum bus, and six sisters,
conducted Friday at 2 p. m. at Louella Reisi nger and Kathryn
the Mt. Carmel Cemetery, Culp, East Liverpool; Wynema
Raci ne, Ohio, the Rev. Bradey Ne lli, Helen DeLong and
Eileen DeSarro, all of
Spencer officiating.
Survivors in addition to the WeUsville, and Virginia
parents include one sister, Pickens, Portland.
Funeral services will be held
Barbara Jean: two brothers,
at
1 p. m. Saturday at Ewing
Frankl in and Robert Ray; ·
Funeral Home with the Rev.
p~ternal grandparents, Mr.
Herman
Jordan officiating .
and Mrs. Woodrow Hendrix, of
Burial
will
be in the Browning
Milwa4 kee, Wis. Mate rna l
grandparents were the late Mr. Cemetery at Portland. Friends
and ·Mrs . Walter . Smith of omay call at the funeral home
Hartford. F un eral ar range- anytime after 7 this evening.
ments are under the direction
of Foglesong Funeral Home at
Mason.
SERVICE SET
Rev ." Morris Wolf, former
pastor of the Racine Nazarer1
Church, w1ll be preaching and
singing Sunday morning, Jan.
12 at the Pomeroy Nazarene
Church.
Pastor of the church is
SATURDAY
PUBLIC Open house by Rev. Clyde Henderson. The '
Industrial Arts Deparlrnent of pub lic is invited to attend.
Meigs High School at school, 7
HOST GUESTS
to 9 p.m. Public invited to view
RUTLAND- Mr. and Mrs.
projects of students as well as
tools, machines, equipme nt of Ben Harvey and son, Larry,
department. Teachers will be Columbus, Mrs. Helen Sexton,
in classrooms for qUestions. Logan, and Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Refreshments will be served Sheets, Gallipolis, were
Christmas gues ts of Mrs.
and door prizes awarded.
Garnet Williamson, Rutland.
•

Robert Cornell
di d W dn d .
e
e e,S ay

Infant dies

on Wednesday

tenced in a few weeks.
and M~gruder were the
first . key members of the
conspiracy to coopera(, . with
prosecutors as the cover-up
began to unravel in April of
i973.
Dean, 36, was the Jead.Qff
witness in the Wate r_gate coverup trial. He had . coordinated
much of the cover-up until
March 21, 1973, when he told
Nixon the full story of
. Watergate, warning him of a
"growing cancer" on the
presidency.
Dean pleaded guil ty to one
count of conspiracy to obslruct
justice and began a 1-to-4-year
sentence on Sept, 3, a month
before start of the cover-up
trial.
Magruder had participated in
the tllree meetings on G.
Gordon Liddy's intelligencegathering plans that led to the
bugging of Dem&lt;&gt;&lt;;ratic party
headquarters in the Watergate,
June 17, 1972.
He also pleaded guilty to one
coun t of conspiracy to obslruct

Dea9

justice and. began serving a 10.
.month to 4-year se~tence Jun~
4.
·
•
Kalmbach helped raise much
of the $429,500 that went to the
original Watergate defendan~
to ensw-e their silence. He
pleaded guil ty to oqe count.
involving an· illegal $.1 million
congressional campaign fund in
1970 and promising an ambassadgrship to a contril)utor. He
began serving a 6-18 month
sente nc~ July 1.
Their release left just two of
the 19 former Nixon aides
convicted for Watergate crimes
still in prison.
Former White House political
operative Charles W. Colson
began serving a 1-3 year
sentence July 8 for obstruction
of justice in the attempted
prosecution of Pentagon Papers
defendant Daniel Ellsberg. Former White House lawyer
Edward L. Morgan began
serving a four-month sentence
Jan. 6 for obslructing the
-Internal Revenue Service by
backdating Nixon's gift of his
vice presidential_ papers.

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6~ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

0., Thw-sda)'. Jan. 9,1975 ·

' '

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•

'1

7- The Daily Sentinel; Mlddleport-Pw.•eroy, 0., Thw-sday, Jan. 9, 1975

by
Sirica
.Magruder; Dean, Kalmbach, set free
.
.

.

·G

By WESLEY G. PII'PERT former colleagues in the Nixon
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Jeb adminislration .
Sluart Magruder came home to They left prison Wednesday,
find yeUow ribbons around the
•·upon consideration of the
Lree .in his front yard. Herbert defendant's motion for rerlucW. Kalmbach hoped he might Lion of sentence." U.S. Dislrict
·· practice ·law again. John w. Court Judge John J. Sirica
Dean Ill dodged reporters.
announced in terse, nearThe three had admitted , identical orders, "it is ordered
participating in the Watergate that the unexecuted and-or
cover-up and had pleaded gui lty remaining portion of the
. to assorted charges. They sentence ... is reduced to lime
helped the prosecution , and already served."
their testimony helped convict
Dean , who was Richard M.

4,\0 00 t.e achers

12 per cent increase.

still on strike
COLUMBUS, Ohio I UPI I The first teachers' strike in the
history or Columbus public
schools today kep t nearly 4,000
teachers out of classrooms for
. a fow-th consecutive day with
no new · negotiating sessions
planned .
Federal mediator Joseph
Santa-Emma sa id Wednesday
no new negotiating se.Sions

Nixon's White House counsel,
left the prison facility at Ft.
Holabird, Md .. near Baltimore;
through a rear door It&gt; escape
reporters. " I'm thrilled. I
couldn't be happier," said his
wife Maureen, reached at their
secluded canyon home in
Beverly Hills, Calif. "! con't
wait for him to come home."
Ka lmbach, once Nixon's personal lawyer, sat at a table in
his attorney's office, expressing
"profound gratitude for the

were planned between the
Columbus Education Association, represe nting the system's
teac hers in conlract negotiations, and the Columbus Board
of Education .
Teachers began the walkout
last Monday after the board
refused to increase of final
wage increase of 4.08 per cen t.
The teachers are asking for a

School board officials said
Wednesday 1,449 of the system's 5,000 teachers crossed
picket lines and about 36,000 of
the dislricts 100,000 students
showed up for classes. The
CE A said the number of
teache rs and students at the 170
schools mvolved was considerably lower than the board of
education estimate.
A hearing is set for Saturday
on a request ror a permanent
injunction filed by the board of
education in an attempt to get
the teachers back in the
classrooms.

Democrats on schedule
with 6 partisan bills

•

compassion"

of

the

judge . obviously," sa id Magruder as comment from four of Nixon's campai~n aide, will be sen·

"We 're all enthused and excited, " he salol ~ftcr talking to
his wife . Kalmba ch was to fly
to Los Angeles today .
Mogruder's wife, Gail, their
four ch ildren, and their pastor,
Louis H. Evans Jr., of
Washington's National Presbyterian Chw-ch here, drov.e to
Ft. Holabird to get him.
Colleen Townsend Evans, the
ministe r's wife and former
actress . and other women fixed
dinner in the Magruders' splitlevel horne in suburban Bethesda, Md. A brightly li t Christmas tree decor ated the picture
window and, reminiscent of the
popular song , ye llow tissue
paper wa s draped around a
barren tree in the yard.
'' I wa s vrrv ~ urnri~ d,
LOTTERY DRAW
CINCINNATI I UP ! Here are this week' s win ing
numbers in the .Jhlo lotte ·
Number 153 1 one fi ve
three) in any box un ticket
wins $20.
Numbers 487 1four eight
seven) and 616 (six one six)
in green and blue wins $500 .
Numbers 487 and 616 in
blue boxes wins $1,000.
Numbers 487 and 616 in
green boxes eligi bl e for
$300,000
drawing and
automatically wins $15,000 .

Albert Scholl
dies at age 50

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) _ The
Ohio House and Senate resume
commi ttee work today, right on
schedule lor enacting six
priority partisan bills the
Dem&lt;&gt;&lt;;rats hope to enact this
week and send to Democratic
Gov . John J. Gilligan for
signature before he leaves
office next Monday.
The Senate was to reconvene
at 9 a.m. and the House one
hour later to send 10 commitlees the bills adopted Wednes·
day, three in each chamber.
The- lawmakers spent all
Wednesday afternoon debating
the bills. Five of them passed
along strict party-line votes,
while the ~lxth -a Democratic

sa id Sen. Tony P. Hall, D· by us all - one man, one vote."
D
ha '
th
ayton, c 1rman of e Senate
But minority Republicans . .Albert Mi lton Scholl, so. Coal
Elections Committee.
dominated the debate, com- St., Pomeroy, died today at
Republicans argued the plaining the bill was "conceived Berger Hospital in Circleville.
proposal would open the way in back rooms," given insuffi· He was preceded in .death by
lor soliciting reg istrations at cient hearings and rushed to his parents, Albert (Tody ) and
"bars, bowling alleys and bingo the floor without proper study Bessie Lowden Scholl. Surparlors" and would result in or public attention .
viving are a brother, Delbert
widespreadfraud.
"This is a cynical abuse of (Deb) Becker of Middleport
"We're trying to sweep from ra w political power, written in arid several uncles and aun ts.
under the rug every body we a back room and foisted on Mr. Scholl was a member of
can find, and it opens up this us," said Rep. Michael G. the St. Paul Lutheran Church.
S!!Cred privilege to the worst Oxley, R-Find!ay. " This wasn' t Funeral services will be held
frauds lmagi.nable," argued done with a scalpel, it was done at 10 a.m. Saturday at the
Sen. William H. Mussey, R- with a meat axe . If this is Ewing Funeral Home with the
Batavia.
politics as usual, frankly, it Rev. William Middleswar!h
"Sw-e, they can go from makes me sick." .
.officiating. Burial will be in
h":'~e ,to ddhoduse to h register
Various Rep,ubhcans com- Beech Grove Cemetery.
vo..,rs,' a e Sen. T omas A. plained the hi I would divide. Friend s may ca.ll at the fune ral
Van Meter, R-Ashland, "but counties they represent in to two home anytime after i this
they can also .go to the saloons congressional districts unneces- evening .
and graveyards."
sarlly. They also claimed the
congressional redistricting bill
Government's Obllgallon
bill was masterminded by
-was adopted by a scant three
''I feel it is the government's Democratic coun ty chairmen
voles as four House Democrats
obligation to take the initiative and state party officials.
broke ranks and joined Republl· to make it easier to register," • "This plan has been orches·
cans in opposition.
counte red Hall.
!rated by a public official who
The Democrats, con trolling
Democrtssystematicallybeat has been rejected at the polls,"
CHRISTMAS PARTY
the Senate 21-12 and the House back a se ries of nine Republi' said Rep. 'Joseph P. Tulley, R· Donna Im boden. t eac her,
by 59-IO, allowed the full range can amendments along party- Mentor, referring to Gilligan . ente rtained her Nursery Class
of flO{)r debate and the GOP did line votes. A tenth, to provide
of the Syracuse Churc h of lh e
Purchasing Titanic Ticket
not try to take advantage of it fund s fo r training the regis·
·'You are purchasing a ticket Nazarene with a Christmas
with
filibuster
tactics.
·
th e parsona ge
·
Lrars, failed on a vote of 14-16. on the Titanic as far as your pa rt Y 10
But the Republicans were
Democrats "fear failure to political caree rs are concerned basement. The Kindergarte n
clearly outmanned, and their . e'nact the bills by next Monday if·you vote lor this bi ll ," Tulley children were guests.
onh.~ recourse was to write a
Eb er
will allow incoming Republican continued. " I call on you to All e~ d'1n g
•&lt;'ere
record of opposition ·for use in Gov . James A. Rhodes to veto resist dancing to the swan song Pickens. Jr., Wayne, Brian and
an expected future court case. them.
of the Pled Piper from Ricky Parsons, D,oug and
They !lied formal protests
Other bills adopted by. the downstai rs...
Becky Lavender, Rodney and
about abuse of legislative rilles Senate Md sent to the House
Tulley's statements were Robin Ste'wart , Steven Bass,
and the committee process, for committee hearings would : ec hoed by House Minority Wendy Triplett, Angela Davis.
which they felt has been ·
- Authorize extension of Leader Charles F. Kurfess, R· ~ayne Imboden and Harvey
Mar tin. Unable to attend due to
circumvented by the week's .. l.!"employment compensa tion Bowling Green.
swift action.
,
· t.me Bass.
be~efits to workers idled by
" Beware of fo llowing the ·11ness was ·c h ns
Roadblock Attempt
strikes"llrrelaae.~ industries.
political advice of someone who Adult helpers and guests were
The GOP 's main attempt at 8
- Transfer a con!Umer pro- won_'t be around when we are Mary Pickens, Linda Parsons,
roadblock may come hi1e tectio n division in the stat!!" ·-called to accoun.t," Kurfess· Mar Y J amce Lavender. o. ra
Friday or Satw-day, when Commerce Department to the
Bass. Corky Dav1s , Gera ldme
Republican Lt. Gov. John W. attorney general's office. savRepublicans pointed out that Ma~tin and Elma Imboden.
Brown is asked to certify the ing some 22 Democratic jobs.
aside from Cook's presentation Hlghhght of the even mg was
legislation as presid,ing officer
Bills approved by the House there was no testimony in the appearan ce of Santa Claus.
of the Senate after it has and sent to the Senate for the support of the bill in corrunit- The teacher thanks everyone ·
cleared both chambers.
start of committee hearings tee. House Majority Leader who donated and helped.
If Brown takes too long to would :
William L. Mallory. D-Cinclnsign. the Democrats may hand
- Limit the power of the nati, spoke briefly in behalf of
the bills to Senate President
Pro Tempore Oliver Ocasek, 1). secretary of state to appoint the bill on the floor .
and dismiss membe rs of coun ty
Dissatisfied Democrats. join·
Akron. Senate rules adopted by boards of election.
1ng the Republicans in opposiVETERINAR~
·lhe Democrats Monday night
-Transfer the state income ti·on, were Reps. John E.
empower Ocasek to sign the tax collection division of the Johnson of Orrville. Paul R.
~ · SUPPLIES
bills, but Republicans believe state Taxation Department to · Leonard of Dayton, Robert A. for lar~• &amp; Small Animals
Brown is delegated exclusive the state treasw-er's office, Nader of Warren and Rona ld H.
power in this area by the state saving an estimated 300 ful l- Werahdt of Akron.
Constitution.
·
time and part-time Democratic
...•doption of the rules in this
The congressional redistrict- jobs.
chamber was Act One of this
ing plan is designed to give the
Gel Better Balance
theatrical production," said
· Democrats solid n.ew congres·
sional districts in Columbus and
Rep. Vernon Cook. D-Cuyaho- Senate Minority Leader Michaga Falls, the redistricting bill's el J . Maloney, R-Cincinnati, a·s
Cincinnati, and possiblr two chief 'sponsor, called it "an Dem&lt;&gt;&lt;;rats won a party line
more seats in western Ohio in
the 1976 election.
equal representa'tion act de· vote ·on the bill transferring the
signed to get a better popula- consumer fraud section to the
II cleared the HoUSe by 53-13. ti on ba rance to more closely state attorney general's office .
'with 50 votes required for adhere to the doctrine revered "This is Act Two.' '
&amp;
passage. rwo !Jemocrats were
absent, while lour others
crossed over.
In the Senate; Democrats
ZENITH
Ask to ~heck our
pushed ,through legislation providing ojor permanent voter
"MERCK VITERINARY
registration,
house-to-house ·
. MANUAL"
registration, and registration by
•
• • •
mail. The vole was 21-11,
strictly alonS party lines. •
•BLACK
Give Voters Chance
. Del)locrats said the bill. would
WHITE TV
atve more eligible voters a
chance to participate in the
elective process arid would. be
. •STfREO
less expen.ive, with neighbor·
Your Prescrrp~ion
hOOd registrars being paid 10
Druq S ,Oft'.,
cents.for each voter registered.
the state wO\lid make reiri:Jbw-sement.
'
Easy Terms!
"This,bill ,.;outd' make voter
HERMAN 'GIJATE
Free
Delivery!
registration inore efficient,
l7J-S592··
MAS'lN, W. VA .
more accurate and less c&lt;&gt;Stly," • . ,_ _ _ _ _ _!!!'!_ _ _"""_ _ _ _'I-~-~

he crawled out of their station closest aides, convicted a week
wagon . " I'm glad to b&lt; back ago of conspiracy in the
with my family," he sa id over Watergatecover-up.
and over.
. John N. Mitchell, who had
Magruder, Nixon 's deputy been attorney general and
campaign director, said he had ciimpaign director; H. R.
lost 20pounds because of prison Haldeman, White House ch i ~f
food and had done "a tremen- ·of staff: John D. Ehrlichrnan,
dous amoiUlL"• of writing and Nixon's domestic affairs chief,
reading - philosophy, theology and Robert C. Mardian , assistand novels.
ant attorney genera l and
Magruder said the release
order ca ught him by surprise.
"! have had no chance to think
about the future," he said.
Kalmbach sa id , "My hope is •
to be reinstated' ' in the
Robert W. Cornell, 52, .a
practice of law. He had been
of Calcutta the · past
resident
disbarred in Califor nia .
None of them would comment several years and formerly of
Meigs County, died Wednesday
on Watergate matters.
at
City Hospita l in East
There was no immediate
Liverpool. He was the son of
the late Robert and Eunice
Jones Cornell.
He retired as a welder wi~
the Patterson Foundry in East
Liverpool in May, 1974, due to
ill health.
Surv iving are hi s wife,
Shelton Troy Hendrix, oneday-old infant' of Franklin Barbara Bass Cornell: two
(Pete )' and Phyllis (Smith ) sons, Robert Ray and Rodney
Hendrix, Syracuse, Ohio, died Jay, bo th at home; two
Wednesday in Holzer Medical brothers, Clarence of Portland
Center. He was born Jan uary 7. and Herman Larkins of
Graveside rites will be Colum bus, and six sisters,
conducted Friday at 2 p. m. at Louella Reisi nger and Kathryn
the Mt. Carmel Cemetery, Culp, East Liverpool; Wynema
Raci ne, Ohio, the Rev. Bradey Ne lli, Helen DeLong and
Eileen DeSarro, all of
Spencer officiating.
Survivors in addition to the WeUsville, and Virginia
parents include one sister, Pickens, Portland.
Funeral services will be held
Barbara Jean: two brothers,
at
1 p. m. Saturday at Ewing
Frankl in and Robert Ray; ·
Funeral Home with the Rev.
p~ternal grandparents, Mr.
Herman
Jordan officiating .
and Mrs. Woodrow Hendrix, of
Burial
will
be in the Browning
Milwa4 kee, Wis. Mate rna l
grandparents were the late Mr. Cemetery at Portland. Friends
and ·Mrs . Walter . Smith of omay call at the funeral home
Hartford. F un eral ar range- anytime after 7 this evening.
ments are under the direction
of Foglesong Funeral Home at
Mason.
SERVICE SET
Rev ." Morris Wolf, former
pastor of the Racine Nazarer1
Church, w1ll be preaching and
singing Sunday morning, Jan.
12 at the Pomeroy Nazarene
Church.
Pastor of the church is
SATURDAY
PUBLIC Open house by Rev. Clyde Henderson. The '
Industrial Arts Deparlrnent of pub lic is invited to attend.
Meigs High School at school, 7
HOST GUESTS
to 9 p.m. Public invited to view
RUTLAND- Mr. and Mrs.
projects of students as well as
tools, machines, equipme nt of Ben Harvey and son, Larry,
department. Teachers will be Columbus, Mrs. Helen Sexton,
in classrooms for qUestions. Logan, and Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Refreshments will be served Sheets, Gallipolis, were
Christmas gues ts of Mrs.
and door prizes awarded.
Garnet Williamson, Rutland.
•

Robert Cornell
di d W dn d .
e
e e,S ay

Infant dies

on Wednesday

tenced in a few weeks.
and M~gruder were the
first . key members of the
conspiracy to coopera(, . with
prosecutors as the cover-up
began to unravel in April of
i973.
Dean, 36, was the Jead.Qff
witness in the Wate r_gate coverup trial. He had . coordinated
much of the cover-up until
March 21, 1973, when he told
Nixon the full story of
. Watergate, warning him of a
"growing cancer" on the
presidency.
Dean pleaded guil ty to one
count of conspiracy to obslruct
justice and began a 1-to-4-year
sentence on Sept, 3, a month
before start of the cover-up
trial.
Magruder had participated in
the tllree meetings on G.
Gordon Liddy's intelligencegathering plans that led to the
bugging of Dem&lt;&gt;&lt;;ratic party
headquarters in the Watergate,
June 17, 1972.
He also pleaded guilty to one
coun t of conspiracy to obslruct

Dea9

justice and. began serving a 10.
.month to 4-year se~tence Jun~
4.
·
•
Kalmbach helped raise much
of the $429,500 that went to the
original Watergate defendan~
to ensw-e their silence. He
pleaded guil ty to oqe count.
involving an· illegal $.1 million
congressional campaign fund in
1970 and promising an ambassadgrship to a contril)utor. He
began serving a 6-18 month
sente nc~ July 1.
Their release left just two of
the 19 former Nixon aides
convicted for Watergate crimes
still in prison.
Former White House political
operative Charles W. Colson
began serving a 1-3 year
sentence July 8 for obstruction
of justice in the attempted
prosecution of Pentagon Papers
defendant Daniel Ellsberg. Former White House lawyer
Edward L. Morgan began
serving a four-month sentence
Jan. 6 for obslructing the
-Internal Revenue Service by
backdating Nixon's gift of his
vice presidential_ papers.

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9- The Dally Sentinel, Middlepo, , . 'omeroy, o., Thursday , Jan . 9, 1975
'

.

· Architect opens display -

Husbands should aid working spouseS
Housemaid's Knee for Hubby? scrubbing baths and waxing
By GAY PAULEY
floors.
UPI Women's Editor
You ~nd I a!Bo ·know working
NEW YORK (UP I) .,.. News wives . whose
hu;;bands
item : Men should help out wouldn't stick their noses into
more in the home to share the the kitchen · except at
burden of . women who hold knife point.
outside jobs, says the Interna·
For this latter group,
tiona! Labor Organitation.
woman's place ~till is the
"Amen, " said I.
house, although she spends 40
" Xer ox it and pass it hours a week helping bring
around/' sald a co-worker home the bacon. She's alsc
when she saw the dispatch out supposed to cook it.
of Geneva.
·
The ILO's cal! for men as '
. 110, however, may have set . much at home on the (kitchen)
off open warfare in some range as on the golf course is in
docimiles.
a report, "Equality of OpYou and I know husbands portunity and Treatment for
who attempt to share equally Women Workers." ILO said
with their working wives "' one of three or the world's 1.6
household duties, taking on billion workers is female. (It
anything from the laundry to gave no breakdown on the
the heavier work such as number of married).

In the United Sta.tes alone, of
the 3H million women workers, 58 per cent are marr)ed
and living with husbands.
ILO called the problem of
overworked wives "serio~"
world-wide, ~d that studies
have shown working mothers
have less than two-thirds the
tree time enjoyed by husbands.
Equalizing the free time and
the home work load may be
difficult but we working wives
may as well start the new year
properly even if it means a new
battle of the sexes.
Begin training or retraining
with something close to his
heart- the television set. Ask
him to dust the screen, the
better to see the rootball
(hockey, basketball, baseball,
roller d~rby ) game. Encourage

him to plump the chair
cushions while he's' up.
In turn , when he's sitting.
with a newspaper and says,
"Dear, as long as you're up,
would ·Y.OU bring me-?",
pretend you don't hear . He
needs the exercise.
Encour~~ge .him .to further
cleaning chores by getting him
to empty, even better wash,
ashtrays. H he bucks, ask him
to quit smoking.
As for laundry, why
shouldn't a man run a washing
machine and dryer? Half the
clothes are his for goodness
sakes.
Tell him how much time and
trouble he saves you if he will
empty facial tissue out of his
bathrobe before it goes into the

wash-Pvc laundered dozens
of boxes of Kleenex through the
years; how it takes him only
seconds to uncurl tlte day's
socks before they go into the
laundry 1/ag; how links on
French~uffed shirts should be
removed before they go into
the laundry; tj)at hanging up
clothes takes ·no more time
than hurling them across the
bed. Pick up. Hang up.
I have a husband who is a
self-styled paragon because he
volunters to run the sweeper"lt's likemowing the lawn, yo u
can see where you've been. But
dusting is a detail I ha te." ..
TeU hubby about one man
who enjoys doing dishes in
small batches by hand or 'in
quantity in the dishwasher
"because it's a time for cOn~ ,

templation."
lie has " selecti've biind·
ness " , however. He washes
what is on the sink counter and
ignores the pans behind on the
stove although he's the one who
got them dirty making pancakes.
WhY can't a man who runs a
corporation sew on a button•
Why cJn't he ever find the
toilet soap or the lightbulbs
when they've been in the same
place for years? And for a trip,
wily can't he pack his own
sui tcase without the wife
having to ask, "Aren't you
taking some socks?"
You may be a more stubborn
wife than I at reformation but
I've not giving my husbapd an
ironing board. I hate to see a
grow n man cry.

...·...' -·
~ .

... .,.

0"

'11 11

,.,..

scenes in and aroUnd Athens

~

L KOE-ItROMPECHER

'

By JANET MA(lGIED
Of special interest to
residents of Gallipolis is the
· ~· fact that Laszlo G. Koe '·~. Krompecher, Athens, who is
~-·
- now exhibiting his collection of
::;;', watercolors at Riverby is a
~:· . member of the architectural
:~ firm , Koe-Krompecher
~ Associates, .Athens. They are

•

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::'· The Pomeroy-Middlepor•
.Lioll8 Club at its noon luncheon
::: meeling at the Meigs Inn
:;"'-Wednesday set Monday night
:_at7 p. nl. ·to mount flags for the
.. first djsplay of 1975 on Feb. 17.
The flags were cleaned free of
: charge by Robinson's Laundry.
,' Richard Chambers, vice
::.'president, presided during the
. ·business. session. The club
' contributed $1 per member to
' Lions International Foundation
i Week, Jan . 12-18. Money in the
t.fund is used for disaster relief.
The club also contributed $5 to
the Southeast Ohio Lung
Association.
Fifteen members attended
the meeting.

.· SIMON'·S ·PI~A-PAIR

' _y"'• ·•'':- .I f.

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;FOREMAN '&amp;- ABBOTT

· •.

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t

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.'

..

=. . .

-

!...... .

.'

'
"
', ..

,,.

'

With Blade.s
$3.50 Value

SUNBEAM

3 OZ. FREE

STEAM-DRY
IRON

heeL
No. 50-8

KORDITE

'"· Ohio Tax Commissioner
·'·Robert · J. Kogydar has an' nounced that a statewide
\lixpayer assistance program
'wlll be held this year to aid ·
·Ohioans in completing and
; ~!ling their 1974 personal In- come tax returns.
· Agents of the Ohio Depart.
' ilient of Taxation will be at
'various locations throughout
·the state up to April 15, the
·filing deadline. An agent will
be In the county auditor's office
at the courthouse in Pomeroy
Thursday, Feb. 6; March 6
aild April 3 to help local
residents.

STEREO S-TRACK TAPE PLAYER
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CAt4DY BARS

magic

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By United Presslnlernatlonal
Today is Thursday, Jan. 9,
~ the ninth day of 1975 with 356 to

3 BARS FOR 35c

~

~ follow .

SELF-ADHESIVE

DISTILLED
WATER

is approaching its

" The morning stars are Mars
--and Saturn.
"';. The evening· stars are Mer',cury, Venus and Jupiter.
~ Those born Ol) this date are .
•.under the sign of Capricorn.
,. Richard Nixon, 37th president
the United States, was born
:.1M:9, 1913. '
'. On this day in history:
. ~. In 1793, the first successful
'balloon flight in the United
~~tales was made by Jean
&lt;Bianchard over Philadelphia.
,: In 1861, Mississippi 8eceded
lrom the Union.
~ In 1945, American troops
lpvaded the Philippine island o!
f.Uzon and went on to liberate
~

SHELF PAPER
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49

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;, In 1968, Surveyor 7 made a

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Ideal

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A MUST!

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Help coming

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ODDS &amp; EN.DS
.TABLE
·CHILDREN'S, TEENS'
&amp;. LADIES' •1.00

•I

~'.. he on show
•

'\)

'

Valuable Coupon

RAGU
SPAHffil

~;' Flags will

SPEGib! SALE!

can

Soci~ty !SCOPS) . He is a
member of the Ohio Historical
Society, American Society of
Architectural Historians. and
on the Board of Trustees of !he
Architects Socie ty or Ohio. He
has participated in expositior\s
includin g_ the Colu mbus

"

','

Y'S POINTERS

AND

Bi-Cenlermia! Com mi ssion and
a past prcsidcn t of South
Central Ohi o Prese r vation

.... '

holiday meal

$300

member and co mmittee
chairman of th~ Athens County

,. , .

.ear-

-aoors

grea t interest to me, _old are open TuesdJJIS and Thursvenerable barns, proud homes days !rom 10 to 3 p.m. and
show at the Fine and Folk Art of days gone by, and public Saturdays and Sundays from.!"
Ga llery aiHI Athens National bnildings fr om an era when our to 5 p.m. Special groups can be
Bmtk . Of his watercolors Koe- pride and patriotism was accommodated at other times
Krompecher -saYs. 11Living in always.· reflected in· proud by calling 446-0547. There is no
Southeas t Ol1io two U1ings ha ve public buildings. The ljtljldings admission charge.
always been of special in terest. with age grow upon lhe' landMonitors for this week at the
The constant ever-changi ng sca pe, and the landscape upon Art Colony are Mrs. Martha
landsc&lt;\pe, from the brown in the building, and this_is what I · Cornelius, Mr~ . William
the winter, the fresh greens of often try to cap ture in my Thomas, Mrs. Frank Naskey
the spring, the lush colors of paintings. "
and Mrs . Howard Neal,
th e summer and th e· exThis exhibit can be seen · Saturday, and Mrs. Ruth
travagant gay colors of the fall. thr oughout the month of Masters, Mrs. Ava lee Cook and
As an architect buildings are of Jan uary. Galleries at Riverby Mrs. Nellie Scarberry, Sunday.

...

PTA winter carnival successful

FASHION &amp; SNOW·

hullcry uf f.'ine · Arts, Ohio
Sl&lt;1tc F'air, had a o ne~man

a

"

Michaels host

I

is

".U i•

Miss Patty !{Jarst

Mothers march scheduled

watercolor . His pictures are

colorful and graceful. revealing
the artist's archi tec tural skills.
I found lhe old lioQses and rural

Koe-Krompechcr

"'

Church has election

F:

in,prove the appearance of
building backs. This was a first
review clnct plans are not
finalized .
.Koe-Krompecher 's m.edia is

Universit y.

~

Miss Beverly Ann Roush

H

.

'"""
,.

Syracuse com·munity
SYRACUSE - The Primary Mumaw from the Least Coin.
returned to the municipal
an d junior classes of the
Missionaries to be prayed.!or building for a program and gift
Syra cuse
First
United are in Arizona, New Mexico
THURSDAY
Presbyterian Church were and th e Southwest. HOjo exchange.
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs. Detner
The
fprogram
prepared
by
MEIGS
County Humaoe
guests of their teachers, Mrs. DeDios (God's Eye)" was read
Roush , Jr., New Haven, are announcing the engagement or
their daughter, Beverly Ann, to Ronald Rickord, Jr., son of
James Teaford and Mrs. by Ruth Zavitz; "The Three Janice Lawson opened with a Society important meeting,
M . and Mrs. Ronald H. Rickord, West Columbia . Miss
Sampson Hall, at Crow 's Steak Wise Men " , ~ Susie Fischer; reading, ''Christmas Time" by 7:30 p.m. Middleport Village
Roush is a junior nt Wahama High School and is employed at
Hou se for their Christmas "Birth of JeSus" , Laura Vicki Rizer, Marie Rizer, Clara Hall. Annual report to be given.
the Dairy Hi&lt; ven. ,Hckard is a 1973 graduate of Wahama High
supper . After supper they Pickens ; " May We Keep Lavender, Eleanor Bohram Public Invited .
REGULAR Meeting, Shade
returned to the church annex Christmas in Our Heart " , and Agnes White; a song, "Joy
School and aL.J a grnduate of Au to-Diesel College, Nashville,
to
the
W
orld
";
"The
Precious
Lodge
453 , F&amp;AM at temple,
Tenn. He will resume work at the Southern Coal Co. Wedding
lor a gift exchange an~ cookies Frankie Mumaw, and "Voices
Story"
by
Edith
Hood
and
7:30
p.m.
All Master Masons
plans are incomplete.
and ice cream. Attending were at Christmas", by Agnes
Elizabeth Stewart ; song, "It invited .
Cindy Neutzliug, Shelly Con- White.
Came Upon the Midnight
ROCK Springs Grange, 7:30
nelly , Brian Connelly, Juanita
Clear";
"A
Lullaby
",
Thelma
p.m.
at the home of Mr . and
Guinther. Gregory Nease ,
&lt;CLUB DINES OUT
Grueser
and
Myla
Hudson
;
Mrs.
Amox Leonard.
Malcolm Guinther , Eric
The Third Wednesday song, " Away in the Manger";
PRECEPTOR Beta Beta
Cunningham, David Lawson, Homemakers Club dined at the
"Peace
,"
by
Nancy
Neutzling,
Chapter,
Beta Sigma Plii
Tina Pierce, Diana Nease, Red Ca rpet Inn at Point
'
Charlo
tte
Nease
,
Adrienne
Sorority.,
7:45p.m.
at the home
New officers were elected at Manning Kloes, Lacy Barton, Donna Hubbard.
Pleasant for their Christmas Hubbard, Jenny Lou Davis and of Mrs . Mar;y Morris.
the annual business meeting o! Willis Anthony, and Harold E.
outing. A turkey dinner with aU Mildred Pierce ; song, " I
MISSIONARY Society of MI.
the Middleport First Baptis~ Hubbard, board of deacons ;
the trimmings was served at Heard the Bells on Christmas,.- Moriah Baptist Church; 7:30
Church Wednesday night.
6:30 p.m. and after the meal · Day "; "Little Town of p.m. at the home of Mrs. Nellie
Mrs. Eva Hartley, Mrs. Eloise
CIRCLE MEETS
Elected for one year terms Wilson, Marla Neutzling, Mrs.
The Emily Missionary Circle the group returned to the Bethlehem ", Sue Rice, Winston.
were Mrs. Marjorie WalbU¥, Don Wilson, Mrs. Charles of the Syracuse First United . Syracuse Municipal building
CATHOLIC ·Women 's Club ,
clerk , with Mrs. Mannin g Sa uer, Mrs. G. G. Werner, Presbyterian
Church met in for a progr11m and girt ex- Elizabeth Rice, Mary Pickens;
h h h
song
,
"0,
Little
Town
of
Sacred
Heart Church, 8 p.m.
Kloes, assistant; Miss Freddie board or d'eaconesses.
t e c urc annex for their noon change.
Bethlehem"
;
"
It
Came
to
preceded
by Mass at 7:30p.m.
Houdashelt, treasurer, Mrs.
Mrs. Beu lah White, John Christmas dinner prepared at
The program, prepared by
. AFTERNOON CirCle, 2 p.m.
Willis Anthony, assistant; Mrs. Werner, Paul Smart, Gerald the annex by some of the Margaret Cottrill, president, Working Men", Jean Hall,
Jane
Teaford;
a
at
the Heath United Methodist
Elva
Dailey,
Gerald Anth ony , organist; An thony, Tony Fowler, Mrs. members .
opened .with group singing of
so
ng,
"The
First
Noel"
;
Church
. Mrs : Beulah Hayes to
Served were
Frankie Silent Night. Luke 2: 1·20 was
MrS': ' Fred Gibbs. Jr .. Mi Iton Hood, Mrs. Danny
assistant; Danny Thompson. Thompson, Ted Riley, and Bob Mumaw, Laura Pickens; Susie read by Jane Teaf&lt;frd . ."Sweet Silent Night", by present the lesson . Mrs. Nan
Janice Lawson, and the song, Moore and Mrs . Mildred
church school superintendent; Lewis bo·.rd of trustees. Mr
Fischer, Florence •Potts , Jane Readings, " Christmas Time
Zeigler to be hostesses.
Trina Gibbs, assistant; Mrs . Fred ' Gibbs, Jr ., Cllffor~ Teaford, Ruth Zavitz, Agnes Is", by M~rgaret Eichinger; "Silent Nigh l". _
After th e gift exc han ge, . ELEANOR Circle, 7:30p.m.
Tony Fowler, secretary· Hayes, Kenneth Imboden, John - White,
Jamce
La.wson , song, "0 Little Town of.
refreshments
of cookies and at the Heath United Methodist
. ANNOUNCE BE'I'HHOTAL - Budd Junior Darst, Rt. 1,
treasurer ; Judy Owen, Riley , Mrs. Lacy Bartdn, Charlotte. Nease , Mildred Bethlehem"; "'Twas the Night
punch
were
served
by Mary Church. Hostesses, Mrs. Helen
Middleport, and Mrs. Pauline,Snowden, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, are
assistant ; Mrs. Willis Anthony, Milton Hood , tinance coin- P1erce, Ri chard Du~kworth After Christmas" by Pauline
Pickens , Charlotte Nease and Byer and Mrs. Jo~ce Blake.
announcmg the approaching marriage of their daughter,
church mission treasurer ; mittee
and Rev. Dw1ght Zav1tz.
Morarity; song, "Away In a
Mildred
Pierce.
OHIO
Valley
Grange
2612,
Patty Darst, to Pearl A. Smith, son of Mr.'Md Mrs. James
Mrs. Lettie Roush, assistant.
Nam.ed ushers for the yea r
After dinner a meeting was Manger "; ~~ the Chri stmas
Letart Falls, 7:30p.m. at home
Smith, Rt. 2, Pomeroy. The wedding will be an event of Jan.
Elected to the various boards were Gerald Anthon
J
·conducted by the president, Mouse", Eileen Clark; song,
15.
.
"
of
Mrs.
Erma
Wilson.
Potluck
of the church for three year Anthony, · Willis A:ihon~ Laura Pickens, opened by the "Hark, the Herald Angels
CLASS HAS PARTY
refreshments.
terms were Mrs. Steve Skaggs, Edison Baker David Dar t group readmg m unison, the Sing" ; " A Winter Token" ,
The Teenage Class of the
ASa Jordan, Mrs . Richard Mark Fultz G;eg Hayes
d Purpose of Presbyterian Agnes White ; and a song, "Joy Syracuse First United WILKESVILLE Pythian
Owen, Miss Jerry Pullins, Mrs. Hoffman Milton Hood
o~d Women. The thought for the to th.e World " and "I Resolve" , Presbyterian Church had itS Sisters, installation, 8 p.m. at.
'
the temple. Grand Temple
David Darst, and Mrs. John E. Hub~rd, Harold T. ~ub- month was "Christmas is a by Margaret Co ttrill. The
Christmas party at the home or officers to be the installing
NEW HAVEN - The winter · Loan, Moore's, Citizens
Werner, board of Christian bard, Kenneth Imboden, Asa story .of love which began program closed with prayer by
ll)eir teacher, Mrs. Janice officers. Potluck dinner. All festival recently staged by the National Bank, City Card Shq),
e'ducation: Robert Parker, Jordan , Ge ne Kauff, John ce nturies ~~o and spread to all Edith Hood.
Lawson.
knights, sisters and friends New Haven PTA was a success · People's Bank, Fruth P~­
Edison Baker, Fred Russell , Riley, Ted Riley imd David the world. The roll call was
Light refreshments were
Kim invited.
Attending
were
and the unit extends its ap- macy, Johnson's Market, Poj pt
answered w1th a Chnstmas served by Charlotte Nease,
David 12arst, Gene Kauff, Wilcox
Winebrenner,
Bobbi
Chapman,
predation
to the merchants of Serv
lru
·
reading.
FRIDAY
. 1·ce Store , Haynes Jewe"d,
Nancy Neutzling and Margaret Debbie Harden, Paul Sechrist
MARY SHRINE 37, Order of New Haven and Point Pleasant Halls Drug Store, Rardill!s
The nominating committee Eichinger.
and a guest, David Lawson. the White Shrine of Jerusalem, for con tributions .
Shoe Center, Almedas,
report proposed for president,
Unable to attend was Bruce 7:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy
The
group
includes
the
New
ter's Menswear, Tiffin Creil)t
Laura Pickens ; vice-president,
Cottrill.
·
Masonic Temple. Potluck Haven Furniture Store, Jewelers , G.. c. Murphy,
Frankie Mumaw; secretary,
CHRISTMAS SUPPER
refreshments
following the Miller's Insurance,' Sayre Midtown Market, Point
The
Syracuse
Ladies
The annual Mother's March Wilma Reece, Middleport, for Agnes White ; assistant, Janice
Hardware , Dairy Haven, Pleasant _Texaco, Vi's Bea~ly
meeting. ·
of Dimes will be conducted by U1e mai n course . and from Lawson ; treasure r , Jane Auxiliary of the Volunteer Fire
Miller's
Market, J&amp;F Pizza Shop, Mason County ji,.
DANCE at Southern High
enjoyed
a
members of the Ohio Eta Phi there to Mrs. Debbie Buck's Teaford , and assistant, Department
Sohool following the Southern· Hut, Flescher Service Center, surance, Hall's Barber Shop,
delicious chicken dinner at
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi home, Pomer oy, for the · Florence Potts .
"Who Is My Neighbor ?-The Crow's Steak House for
'Hannan game from 12 p.m. to Greene Sales, Mason County Buck and John's Bar!:!~ Sh&lt;m,
Sorority in Pomeroy and dessert.
incurable, the aged, the un- Christmas.
12 midnight. Music by Bank, Ben Franklin Store, New Busy Beauty Shop, LaMar~
Syracuse Jan. 23, 5 to 9 p.m.
At Tuesday night 's meeting, ' !ortunate," was read by Miss
" Moonville" of Nelsonville . Hayen Supermarket, Sonya's Beauty Shop, Russ's Vanit,y
After dinner the group
Announcement of the date Betty Newton, home economist
Mr . and Mrs. J . L. Micha·el, Admissio n $1 a perso n. Kut and Kurl, Bordman s~op, Stiffler's, Econoll!~
was made by Mrs. Janet lor the Columbia Gas Co.
Sr., were hosts lor a Christmas Sponsored by senior class.
Furniture Co., Dale's Kitehen Market, Franklin Shoe Store
Downie, service chairperson demonstrated food preparation
dinner at their home on the old
Center, Carolina Lumber, and Broughton's Dairy.
··
RETURN Jonathan Meigs Pomt Pleasant Building and
lor the chapter at a meeting · and also ~ave tips on saving
Chester Road .
held Tuesday night at the energy . The cultural report
Their guests were Mr. and Chapter, DAR, 2 p.m . at home
9ol umbia Gas Co . office, was presented by Mrs. Karen
Mrs . W. S. Michael, Mr. and of Mrs . Dale Dutton, MidMiddleport. Mrs. Carol Jean McGraw.
Mrs. Wilbur Parker, Lenora dleport. Mrs. Vernon Weber
Adams is campaign director
Michael, Tim Voris, Louise will review "The Battle of
for the county's dr ive to raise
Michael, home from Ohio State Point Pleasant" and discussion
funds for the light against birth
University, and Patsy· Barney, on meaning and use of DAR
defects.
Columbus. Afternoon callers insignia; dele gate to state
' '
'.
. -. ..
' .
Mrs. Wilma Reece volunFAMILY VISITS
.were Mr. and Mrs. Gary conference, Cleveland, March
17-19, to be named . Mrs.
teered to serve as represenMr _ and Mrs. Albert Roush,
/
Michael and Mathew.
·POLLY'S PROBLEM
Charles
McDaniel, assist(ng
tative to the Meigs County R.D ., Pomeroy, entertain ed
Dec . 27, Mr. and Mrs .
DEAR POLLY - Not too long ~~go I saw a purse made of
Bicentennial Comn1ission st a with a family party over
Michael observed their 66th hostess.
cigarette
papers
shown
on
a
midday
television
program.
I
hope.
GOSPEL
CONCERT
meeting scheduled for later Chri s tm as . Present were
wedding anniversary which
some
reader
can
tel!
me
how
such
purses
are
made.
MRS.
L.K.
this month.
songfest,
7:30
p.m.,
Laurel
Kentl)' and Becky Roush, Mr1'
was ce lebrated during the
D~
MRS.
L.K.
-1bla
Is
a
really
oew
Idea
to
me.
What
Cliff
Free
Methodist
Church,
Plans were made for • and Mrs . Charles Kessinger,
holiday observa nce. The
progressive dinner and get- Kim and Lois Roush, Mrs . will they tblllk of aest? Surely 110me of our maay readers will couple was married Dec. 27, ca-gponsored by church and
acquainted party for the new Kathern Smith, Christi and · enlJchten us oa the subject and by so dohlg help .the ecology 1908, at Mead, · Wash . Other Southeasten Ohio Gospel
problem. - POLLY.
.
pledges, Jan. 21. The dinner K&lt;&gt;vin , all of the Pomeroy
visitors during the holidays Music Assn. Main featlll'es will
"
be the Go'iJlel Messengers,
will begin at the home of Mrs: area: Mr. aiHI Mrs. Larry
DEAR POLLy _ My Pet Peeve is with women friends who were Eric and Randy Parker, Gallipolis; the Cl1ristpan Five.
Kathy Cumings, Syracuse. Flowers. Columbus ; Mr. and
drop by, come in the kitchen door and set thlili' purses on the North Aurora, Ill., and Edward
of Point Pleasant and the
where the appetizers
be Mrs . Roger Roush and
.~
. to put them down on the Parker, Columbus.
ki t~nen.counter
or
table
and
then
go
on
m
Shaffer Family, Crown City.
served, then to the ho'll,t of Dougla s, Pataskla: and Mr.
Public invi ted; freewill ofMrs. Dottie Mlisse i\ " Muf~ry and Mrs. o'aie Roush, Sherri · dining room table. lHlndbags are not clean on the bottom. One ·
BALL PLANNED
'eri ng.
Heights, for the salad, to Mrs. and David, St. Albans. W, Va. _never thinks where they may have been put down before they are
put on a clean table .
\
MASON - The Wahama
SATURDAY
My sec6nd Pet Peeve is with the Iuke~~;ann cup of water one Band Boosters are in the
SMORGASBORD by Mid:
gets with a packllge of Instant coffee in many restaurants. Since process of planning the annual dleport Fire Department at
. so m'!lly of us life now going the de-cafeinated way it seems they "Sweetheart Ball" at the West Middleport Elementary School
could brew it and lll'\ng it to the table hot like any other coffee. - Virg inia Natiorial Guard Ar· beginning at 4 p.m. Saturday.
MRS. P.L.C.
mory in Point Pleasant, All customer can eat, adults,
DEAR POLLY -' My suggestion lor June whose covered Saturday, Feb. 16, 9 p.m. to I $2; children, $1.25. Donations
4 fabulous frogrances
plastic.indoor garbage pail reeks with a bad odor is to put a layer a.m. Music w(U be provided by are asked and those wishing to
in
elegant spray
of newspaper in the bottom and then several moths balls. The the Gary Stewart Quartet. give food should call 992-3145 .
plastic or paper t&gt;ag UuiLactual!y holds the garbage can be · Locations lor the sale of tickets -after 5 p.m.
'
_f]g~Ons •.. anlv
removed without :discarding the odor pnventive until it needs will be announced Iilter.
chaJ\ging. - A GRANDMDnfER.
· .
l'llUy note ,- Freqaeotly .apny tile iaalde of the
with a
liMITED TIM£ ONlY
'
•
bo,.ehold dlslnftictaat ud remove the lll'bage bel atlealt oaee•
aday. ~...
'
DEAR FOLLY - My daugbter,'5, keeps the spaces under the
,--.
. - .
refrigerator, stove and waSher free of lint Jnd dirt and thinlts She
is pll\)'jng. After wal!-to-wall carpeting was Installed I gave her a
'·
piece about 8x36 inches and .She turns this upside down and
pushes it under the appliance$ with her foot . She ~ does the
"twist" for a fel' minutes and then retracts the carpet strip.
When 'turned over It has. Jn amazing amount of dust adherin&amp; to
it. I easUy dispose of this by shaking, sweeping or vacuuming. .·
"
CECILLE.
·
•• 1
0 ...............
DEAR. POLLY - When the preparation of, a meal requtfes
a,..
................ opening a can do not discard the can until after mealtime. In the
•. r ,...,_... a........
meantime rinse and set the can on the stove, drop your~oolting
PRE$CRIPTIOiliS. · .. . . PH. ftJ;IftJ
I
· spoons, etc. in It, You will find you an 'saved from having to .·
Frt11111tt lp tiCI
· , · 1: ; ,\ ;
POMEROY, OHIO
· wash your spoon rest or that estra dirty spot on the stove or
~---~....-"""'.__ _ _ _..,.._ _ __, counter.- JUDY.
U2 E.
tlOMIROY, Q.

presently working with U1e
Gallipolis Downtown Reta il
Merchants Assn .. to beautify
downtown Gallipolis . Koe·
Krompecher has demonstrated
to community leaders plan&amp;to
call attention to the lovely roofs
and mouldin gs on Second
Avenue building fronts now
mostly unnoticed, and was to

Ctiu nt y
and
Co lumbus
·especially appealing.
Son of Professo• Dr. Pedro L.
Koe -Krompec her , also of
Athens, and the fir.m of KoeKrompecher Associates, the
artist was born ln Budapest,
Hun ga ry and educated in
Austria, Spain, Trinidad and
Venezuela. He attended Ohio
State University where he
completed post grad uat e
studies in 1965. In 1966 he
be came a Fallout Shelter
Analys t for Ohio Sta te

4 oz.

75c Value

�•

['

'.

-·

'

9- The Dally Sentinel, Middlepo, , . 'omeroy, o., Thursday , Jan . 9, 1975
'

.

· Architect opens display -

Husbands should aid working spouseS
Housemaid's Knee for Hubby? scrubbing baths and waxing
By GAY PAULEY
floors.
UPI Women's Editor
You ~nd I a!Bo ·know working
NEW YORK (UP I) .,.. News wives . whose
hu;;bands
item : Men should help out wouldn't stick their noses into
more in the home to share the the kitchen · except at
burden of . women who hold knife point.
outside jobs, says the Interna·
For this latter group,
tiona! Labor Organitation.
woman's place ~till is the
"Amen, " said I.
house, although she spends 40
" Xer ox it and pass it hours a week helping bring
around/' sald a co-worker home the bacon. She's alsc
when she saw the dispatch out supposed to cook it.
of Geneva.
·
The ILO's cal! for men as '
. 110, however, may have set . much at home on the (kitchen)
off open warfare in some range as on the golf course is in
docimiles.
a report, "Equality of OpYou and I know husbands portunity and Treatment for
who attempt to share equally Women Workers." ILO said
with their working wives "' one of three or the world's 1.6
household duties, taking on billion workers is female. (It
anything from the laundry to gave no breakdown on the
the heavier work such as number of married).

In the United Sta.tes alone, of
the 3H million women workers, 58 per cent are marr)ed
and living with husbands.
ILO called the problem of
overworked wives "serio~"
world-wide, ~d that studies
have shown working mothers
have less than two-thirds the
tree time enjoyed by husbands.
Equalizing the free time and
the home work load may be
difficult but we working wives
may as well start the new year
properly even if it means a new
battle of the sexes.
Begin training or retraining
with something close to his
heart- the television set. Ask
him to dust the screen, the
better to see the rootball
(hockey, basketball, baseball,
roller d~rby ) game. Encourage

him to plump the chair
cushions while he's' up.
In turn , when he's sitting.
with a newspaper and says,
"Dear, as long as you're up,
would ·Y.OU bring me-?",
pretend you don't hear . He
needs the exercise.
Encour~~ge .him .to further
cleaning chores by getting him
to empty, even better wash,
ashtrays. H he bucks, ask him
to quit smoking.
As for laundry, why
shouldn't a man run a washing
machine and dryer? Half the
clothes are his for goodness
sakes.
Tell him how much time and
trouble he saves you if he will
empty facial tissue out of his
bathrobe before it goes into the

wash-Pvc laundered dozens
of boxes of Kleenex through the
years; how it takes him only
seconds to uncurl tlte day's
socks before they go into the
laundry 1/ag; how links on
French~uffed shirts should be
removed before they go into
the laundry; tj)at hanging up
clothes takes ·no more time
than hurling them across the
bed. Pick up. Hang up.
I have a husband who is a
self-styled paragon because he
volunters to run the sweeper"lt's likemowing the lawn, yo u
can see where you've been. But
dusting is a detail I ha te." ..
TeU hubby about one man
who enjoys doing dishes in
small batches by hand or 'in
quantity in the dishwasher
"because it's a time for cOn~ ,

templation."
lie has " selecti've biind·
ness " , however. He washes
what is on the sink counter and
ignores the pans behind on the
stove although he's the one who
got them dirty making pancakes.
WhY can't a man who runs a
corporation sew on a button•
Why cJn't he ever find the
toilet soap or the lightbulbs
when they've been in the same
place for years? And for a trip,
wily can't he pack his own
sui tcase without the wife
having to ask, "Aren't you
taking some socks?"
You may be a more stubborn
wife than I at reformation but
I've not giving my husbapd an
ironing board. I hate to see a
grow n man cry.

...·...' -·
~ .

... .,.

0"

'11 11

,.,..

scenes in and aroUnd Athens

~

L KOE-ItROMPECHER

'

By JANET MA(lGIED
Of special interest to
residents of Gallipolis is the
· ~· fact that Laszlo G. Koe '·~. Krompecher, Athens, who is
~-·
- now exhibiting his collection of
::;;', watercolors at Riverby is a
~:· . member of the architectural
:~ firm , Koe-Krompecher
~ Associates, .Athens. They are

•

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28 oz.
SJ .29 Value

~F
ehruary
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::'· The Pomeroy-Middlepor•
.Lioll8 Club at its noon luncheon
::: meeling at the Meigs Inn
:;"'-Wednesday set Monday night
:_at7 p. nl. ·to mount flags for the
.. first djsplay of 1975 on Feb. 17.
The flags were cleaned free of
: charge by Robinson's Laundry.
,' Richard Chambers, vice
::.'president, presided during the
. ·business. session. The club
' contributed $1 per member to
' Lions International Foundation
i Week, Jan . 12-18. Money in the
t.fund is used for disaster relief.
The club also contributed $5 to
the Southeast Ohio Lung
Association.
Fifteen members attended
the meeting.

.· SIMON'·S ·PI~A-PAIR

' _y"'• ·•'':- .I f.

.i

;FOREMAN '&amp;- ABBOTT

· •.

~

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With Blade.s
$3.50 Value

SUNBEAM

3 OZ. FREE

STEAM-DRY
IRON

heeL
No. 50-8

KORDITE

'"· Ohio Tax Commissioner
·'·Robert · J. Kogydar has an' nounced that a statewide
\lixpayer assistance program
'wlll be held this year to aid ·
·Ohioans in completing and
; ~!ling their 1974 personal In- come tax returns.
· Agents of the Ohio Depart.
' ilient of Taxation will be at
'various locations throughout
·the state up to April 15, the
·filing deadline. An agent will
be In the county auditor's office
at the courthouse in Pomeroy
Thursday, Feb. 6; March 6
aild April 3 to help local
residents.

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By United Presslnlernatlonal
Today is Thursday, Jan. 9,
~ the ninth day of 1975 with 356 to

3 BARS FOR 35c

~

~ follow .

SELF-ADHESIVE

DISTILLED
WATER

is approaching its

" The morning stars are Mars
--and Saturn.
"';. The evening· stars are Mer',cury, Venus and Jupiter.
~ Those born Ol) this date are .
•.under the sign of Capricorn.
,. Richard Nixon, 37th president
the United States, was born
:.1M:9, 1913. '
'. On this day in history:
. ~. In 1793, the first successful
'balloon flight in the United
~~tales was made by Jean
&lt;Bianchard over Philadelphia.
,: In 1861, Mississippi 8eceded
lrom the Union.
~ In 1945, American troops
lpvaded the Philippine island o!
f.Uzon and went on to liberate
~

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49

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ODDS &amp; EN.DS
.TABLE
·CHILDREN'S, TEENS'
&amp;. LADIES' •1.00

•I

~'.. he on show
•

'\)

'

Valuable Coupon

RAGU
SPAHffil

~;' Flags will

SPEGib! SALE!

can

Soci~ty !SCOPS) . He is a
member of the Ohio Historical
Society, American Society of
Architectural Historians. and
on the Board of Trustees of !he
Architects Socie ty or Ohio. He
has participated in expositior\s
includin g_ the Colu mbus

"

','

Y'S POINTERS

AND

Bi-Cenlermia! Com mi ssion and
a past prcsidcn t of South
Central Ohi o Prese r vation

.... '

holiday meal

$300

member and co mmittee
chairman of th~ Athens County

,. , .

.ear-

-aoors

grea t interest to me, _old are open TuesdJJIS and Thursvenerable barns, proud homes days !rom 10 to 3 p.m. and
show at the Fine and Folk Art of days gone by, and public Saturdays and Sundays from.!"
Ga llery aiHI Athens National bnildings fr om an era when our to 5 p.m. Special groups can be
Bmtk . Of his watercolors Koe- pride and patriotism was accommodated at other times
Krompecher -saYs. 11Living in always.· reflected in· proud by calling 446-0547. There is no
Southeas t Ol1io two U1ings ha ve public buildings. The ljtljldings admission charge.
always been of special in terest. with age grow upon lhe' landMonitors for this week at the
The constant ever-changi ng sca pe, and the landscape upon Art Colony are Mrs. Martha
landsc&lt;\pe, from the brown in the building, and this_is what I · Cornelius, Mr~ . William
the winter, the fresh greens of often try to cap ture in my Thomas, Mrs. Frank Naskey
the spring, the lush colors of paintings. "
and Mrs . Howard Neal,
th e summer and th e· exThis exhibit can be seen · Saturday, and Mrs. Ruth
travagant gay colors of the fall. thr oughout the month of Masters, Mrs. Ava lee Cook and
As an architect buildings are of Jan uary. Galleries at Riverby Mrs. Nellie Scarberry, Sunday.

...

PTA winter carnival successful

FASHION &amp; SNOW·

hullcry uf f.'ine · Arts, Ohio
Sl&lt;1tc F'air, had a o ne~man

a

"

Michaels host

I

is

".U i•

Miss Patty !{Jarst

Mothers march scheduled

watercolor . His pictures are

colorful and graceful. revealing
the artist's archi tec tural skills.
I found lhe old lioQses and rural

Koe-Krompechcr

"'

Church has election

F:

in,prove the appearance of
building backs. This was a first
review clnct plans are not
finalized .
.Koe-Krompecher 's m.edia is

Universit y.

~

Miss Beverly Ann Roush

H

.

'"""
,.

Syracuse com·munity
SYRACUSE - The Primary Mumaw from the Least Coin.
returned to the municipal
an d junior classes of the
Missionaries to be prayed.!or building for a program and gift
Syra cuse
First
United are in Arizona, New Mexico
THURSDAY
Presbyterian Church were and th e Southwest. HOjo exchange.
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs. Detner
The
fprogram
prepared
by
MEIGS
County Humaoe
guests of their teachers, Mrs. DeDios (God's Eye)" was read
Roush , Jr., New Haven, are announcing the engagement or
their daughter, Beverly Ann, to Ronald Rickord, Jr., son of
James Teaford and Mrs. by Ruth Zavitz; "The Three Janice Lawson opened with a Society important meeting,
M . and Mrs. Ronald H. Rickord, West Columbia . Miss
Sampson Hall, at Crow 's Steak Wise Men " , ~ Susie Fischer; reading, ''Christmas Time" by 7:30 p.m. Middleport Village
Roush is a junior nt Wahama High School and is employed at
Hou se for their Christmas "Birth of JeSus" , Laura Vicki Rizer, Marie Rizer, Clara Hall. Annual report to be given.
the Dairy Hi&lt; ven. ,Hckard is a 1973 graduate of Wahama High
supper . After supper they Pickens ; " May We Keep Lavender, Eleanor Bohram Public Invited .
REGULAR Meeting, Shade
returned to the church annex Christmas in Our Heart " , and Agnes White; a song, "Joy
School and aL.J a grnduate of Au to-Diesel College, Nashville,
to
the
W
orld
";
"The
Precious
Lodge
453 , F&amp;AM at temple,
Tenn. He will resume work at the Southern Coal Co. Wedding
lor a gift exchange an~ cookies Frankie Mumaw, and "Voices
Story"
by
Edith
Hood
and
7:30
p.m.
All Master Masons
plans are incomplete.
and ice cream. Attending were at Christmas", by Agnes
Elizabeth Stewart ; song, "It invited .
Cindy Neutzliug, Shelly Con- White.
Came Upon the Midnight
ROCK Springs Grange, 7:30
nelly , Brian Connelly, Juanita
Clear";
"A
Lullaby
",
Thelma
p.m.
at the home of Mr . and
Guinther. Gregory Nease ,
&lt;CLUB DINES OUT
Grueser
and
Myla
Hudson
;
Mrs.
Amox Leonard.
Malcolm Guinther , Eric
The Third Wednesday song, " Away in the Manger";
PRECEPTOR Beta Beta
Cunningham, David Lawson, Homemakers Club dined at the
"Peace
,"
by
Nancy
Neutzling,
Chapter,
Beta Sigma Plii
Tina Pierce, Diana Nease, Red Ca rpet Inn at Point
'
Charlo
tte
Nease
,
Adrienne
Sorority.,
7:45p.m.
at the home
New officers were elected at Manning Kloes, Lacy Barton, Donna Hubbard.
Pleasant for their Christmas Hubbard, Jenny Lou Davis and of Mrs . Mar;y Morris.
the annual business meeting o! Willis Anthony, and Harold E.
outing. A turkey dinner with aU Mildred Pierce ; song, " I
MISSIONARY Society of MI.
the Middleport First Baptis~ Hubbard, board of deacons ;
the trimmings was served at Heard the Bells on Christmas,.- Moriah Baptist Church; 7:30
Church Wednesday night.
6:30 p.m. and after the meal · Day "; "Little Town of p.m. at the home of Mrs. Nellie
Mrs. Eva Hartley, Mrs. Eloise
CIRCLE MEETS
Elected for one year terms Wilson, Marla Neutzling, Mrs.
The Emily Missionary Circle the group returned to the Bethlehem ", Sue Rice, Winston.
were Mrs. Marjorie WalbU¥, Don Wilson, Mrs. Charles of the Syracuse First United . Syracuse Municipal building
CATHOLIC ·Women 's Club ,
clerk , with Mrs. Mannin g Sa uer, Mrs. G. G. Werner, Presbyterian
Church met in for a progr11m and girt ex- Elizabeth Rice, Mary Pickens;
h h h
song
,
"0,
Little
Town
of
Sacred
Heart Church, 8 p.m.
Kloes, assistant; Miss Freddie board or d'eaconesses.
t e c urc annex for their noon change.
Bethlehem"
;
"
It
Came
to
preceded
by Mass at 7:30p.m.
Houdashelt, treasurer, Mrs.
Mrs. Beu lah White, John Christmas dinner prepared at
The program, prepared by
. AFTERNOON CirCle, 2 p.m.
Willis Anthony, assistant; Mrs. Werner, Paul Smart, Gerald the annex by some of the Margaret Cottrill, president, Working Men", Jean Hall,
Jane
Teaford;
a
at
the Heath United Methodist
Elva
Dailey,
Gerald Anth ony , organist; An thony, Tony Fowler, Mrs. members .
opened .with group singing of
so
ng,
"The
First
Noel"
;
Church
. Mrs : Beulah Hayes to
Served were
Frankie Silent Night. Luke 2: 1·20 was
MrS': ' Fred Gibbs. Jr .. Mi Iton Hood, Mrs. Danny
assistant; Danny Thompson. Thompson, Ted Riley, and Bob Mumaw, Laura Pickens; Susie read by Jane Teaf&lt;frd . ."Sweet Silent Night", by present the lesson . Mrs. Nan
Janice Lawson, and the song, Moore and Mrs . Mildred
church school superintendent; Lewis bo·.rd of trustees. Mr
Fischer, Florence •Potts , Jane Readings, " Christmas Time
Zeigler to be hostesses.
Trina Gibbs, assistant; Mrs . Fred ' Gibbs, Jr ., Cllffor~ Teaford, Ruth Zavitz, Agnes Is", by M~rgaret Eichinger; "Silent Nigh l". _
After th e gift exc han ge, . ELEANOR Circle, 7:30p.m.
Tony Fowler, secretary· Hayes, Kenneth Imboden, John - White,
Jamce
La.wson , song, "0 Little Town of.
refreshments
of cookies and at the Heath United Methodist
. ANNOUNCE BE'I'HHOTAL - Budd Junior Darst, Rt. 1,
treasurer ; Judy Owen, Riley , Mrs. Lacy Bartdn, Charlotte. Nease , Mildred Bethlehem"; "'Twas the Night
punch
were
served
by Mary Church. Hostesses, Mrs. Helen
Middleport, and Mrs. Pauline,Snowden, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, are
assistant ; Mrs. Willis Anthony, Milton Hood , tinance coin- P1erce, Ri chard Du~kworth After Christmas" by Pauline
Pickens , Charlotte Nease and Byer and Mrs. Jo~ce Blake.
announcmg the approaching marriage of their daughter,
church mission treasurer ; mittee
and Rev. Dw1ght Zav1tz.
Morarity; song, "Away In a
Mildred
Pierce.
OHIO
Valley
Grange
2612,
Patty Darst, to Pearl A. Smith, son of Mr.'Md Mrs. James
Mrs. Lettie Roush, assistant.
Nam.ed ushers for the yea r
After dinner a meeting was Manger "; ~~ the Chri stmas
Letart Falls, 7:30p.m. at home
Smith, Rt. 2, Pomeroy. The wedding will be an event of Jan.
Elected to the various boards were Gerald Anthon
J
·conducted by the president, Mouse", Eileen Clark; song,
15.
.
"
of
Mrs.
Erma
Wilson.
Potluck
of the church for three year Anthony, · Willis A:ihon~ Laura Pickens, opened by the "Hark, the Herald Angels
CLASS HAS PARTY
refreshments.
terms were Mrs. Steve Skaggs, Edison Baker David Dar t group readmg m unison, the Sing" ; " A Winter Token" ,
The Teenage Class of the
ASa Jordan, Mrs . Richard Mark Fultz G;eg Hayes
d Purpose of Presbyterian Agnes White ; and a song, "Joy Syracuse First United WILKESVILLE Pythian
Owen, Miss Jerry Pullins, Mrs. Hoffman Milton Hood
o~d Women. The thought for the to th.e World " and "I Resolve" , Presbyterian Church had itS Sisters, installation, 8 p.m. at.
'
the temple. Grand Temple
David Darst, and Mrs. John E. Hub~rd, Harold T. ~ub- month was "Christmas is a by Margaret Co ttrill. The
Christmas party at the home or officers to be the installing
NEW HAVEN - The winter · Loan, Moore's, Citizens
Werner, board of Christian bard, Kenneth Imboden, Asa story .of love which began program closed with prayer by
ll)eir teacher, Mrs. Janice officers. Potluck dinner. All festival recently staged by the National Bank, City Card Shq),
e'ducation: Robert Parker, Jordan , Ge ne Kauff, John ce nturies ~~o and spread to all Edith Hood.
Lawson.
knights, sisters and friends New Haven PTA was a success · People's Bank, Fruth P~­
Edison Baker, Fred Russell , Riley, Ted Riley imd David the world. The roll call was
Light refreshments were
Kim invited.
Attending
were
and the unit extends its ap- macy, Johnson's Market, Poj pt
answered w1th a Chnstmas served by Charlotte Nease,
David 12arst, Gene Kauff, Wilcox
Winebrenner,
Bobbi
Chapman,
predation
to the merchants of Serv
lru
·
reading.
FRIDAY
. 1·ce Store , Haynes Jewe"d,
Nancy Neutzling and Margaret Debbie Harden, Paul Sechrist
MARY SHRINE 37, Order of New Haven and Point Pleasant Halls Drug Store, Rardill!s
The nominating committee Eichinger.
and a guest, David Lawson. the White Shrine of Jerusalem, for con tributions .
Shoe Center, Almedas,
report proposed for president,
Unable to attend was Bruce 7:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy
The
group
includes
the
New
ter's Menswear, Tiffin Creil)t
Laura Pickens ; vice-president,
Cottrill.
·
Masonic Temple. Potluck Haven Furniture Store, Jewelers , G.. c. Murphy,
Frankie Mumaw; secretary,
CHRISTMAS SUPPER
refreshments
following the Miller's Insurance,' Sayre Midtown Market, Point
The
Syracuse
Ladies
The annual Mother's March Wilma Reece, Middleport, for Agnes White ; assistant, Janice
Hardware , Dairy Haven, Pleasant _Texaco, Vi's Bea~ly
meeting. ·
of Dimes will be conducted by U1e mai n course . and from Lawson ; treasure r , Jane Auxiliary of the Volunteer Fire
Miller's
Market, J&amp;F Pizza Shop, Mason County ji,.
DANCE at Southern High
enjoyed
a
members of the Ohio Eta Phi there to Mrs. Debbie Buck's Teaford , and assistant, Department
Sohool following the Southern· Hut, Flescher Service Center, surance, Hall's Barber Shop,
delicious chicken dinner at
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi home, Pomer oy, for the · Florence Potts .
"Who Is My Neighbor ?-The Crow's Steak House for
'Hannan game from 12 p.m. to Greene Sales, Mason County Buck and John's Bar!:!~ Sh&lt;m,
Sorority in Pomeroy and dessert.
incurable, the aged, the un- Christmas.
12 midnight. Music by Bank, Ben Franklin Store, New Busy Beauty Shop, LaMar~
Syracuse Jan. 23, 5 to 9 p.m.
At Tuesday night 's meeting, ' !ortunate," was read by Miss
" Moonville" of Nelsonville . Hayen Supermarket, Sonya's Beauty Shop, Russ's Vanit,y
After dinner the group
Announcement of the date Betty Newton, home economist
Mr . and Mrs. J . L. Micha·el, Admissio n $1 a perso n. Kut and Kurl, Bordman s~op, Stiffler's, Econoll!~
was made by Mrs. Janet lor the Columbia Gas Co.
Sr., were hosts lor a Christmas Sponsored by senior class.
Furniture Co., Dale's Kitehen Market, Franklin Shoe Store
Downie, service chairperson demonstrated food preparation
dinner at their home on the old
Center, Carolina Lumber, and Broughton's Dairy.
··
RETURN Jonathan Meigs Pomt Pleasant Building and
lor the chapter at a meeting · and also ~ave tips on saving
Chester Road .
held Tuesday night at the energy . The cultural report
Their guests were Mr. and Chapter, DAR, 2 p.m . at home
9ol umbia Gas Co . office, was presented by Mrs. Karen
Mrs . W. S. Michael, Mr. and of Mrs . Dale Dutton, MidMiddleport. Mrs. Carol Jean McGraw.
Mrs. Wilbur Parker, Lenora dleport. Mrs. Vernon Weber
Adams is campaign director
Michael, Tim Voris, Louise will review "The Battle of
for the county's dr ive to raise
Michael, home from Ohio State Point Pleasant" and discussion
funds for the light against birth
University, and Patsy· Barney, on meaning and use of DAR
defects.
Columbus. Afternoon callers insignia; dele gate to state
' '
'.
. -. ..
' .
Mrs. Wilma Reece volunFAMILY VISITS
.were Mr. and Mrs. Gary conference, Cleveland, March
17-19, to be named . Mrs.
teered to serve as represenMr _ and Mrs. Albert Roush,
/
Michael and Mathew.
·POLLY'S PROBLEM
Charles
McDaniel, assist(ng
tative to the Meigs County R.D ., Pomeroy, entertain ed
Dec . 27, Mr. and Mrs .
DEAR POLLY - Not too long ~~go I saw a purse made of
Bicentennial Comn1ission st a with a family party over
Michael observed their 66th hostess.
cigarette
papers
shown
on
a
midday
television
program.
I
hope.
GOSPEL
CONCERT
meeting scheduled for later Chri s tm as . Present were
wedding anniversary which
some
reader
can
tel!
me
how
such
purses
are
made.
MRS.
L.K.
this month.
songfest,
7:30
p.m.,
Laurel
Kentl)' and Becky Roush, Mr1'
was ce lebrated during the
D~
MRS.
L.K.
-1bla
Is
a
really
oew
Idea
to
me.
What
Cliff
Free
Methodist
Church,
Plans were made for • and Mrs . Charles Kessinger,
holiday observa nce. The
progressive dinner and get- Kim and Lois Roush, Mrs . will they tblllk of aest? Surely 110me of our maay readers will couple was married Dec. 27, ca-gponsored by church and
acquainted party for the new Kathern Smith, Christi and · enlJchten us oa the subject and by so dohlg help .the ecology 1908, at Mead, · Wash . Other Southeasten Ohio Gospel
problem. - POLLY.
.
pledges, Jan. 21. The dinner K&lt;&gt;vin , all of the Pomeroy
visitors during the holidays Music Assn. Main featlll'es will
"
be the Go'iJlel Messengers,
will begin at the home of Mrs: area: Mr. aiHI Mrs. Larry
DEAR POLLy _ My Pet Peeve is with women friends who were Eric and Randy Parker, Gallipolis; the Cl1ristpan Five.
Kathy Cumings, Syracuse. Flowers. Columbus ; Mr. and
drop by, come in the kitchen door and set thlili' purses on the North Aurora, Ill., and Edward
of Point Pleasant and the
where the appetizers
be Mrs . Roger Roush and
.~
. to put them down on the Parker, Columbus.
ki t~nen.counter
or
table
and
then
go
on
m
Shaffer Family, Crown City.
served, then to the ho'll,t of Dougla s, Pataskla: and Mr.
Public invi ted; freewill ofMrs. Dottie Mlisse i\ " Muf~ry and Mrs. o'aie Roush, Sherri · dining room table. lHlndbags are not clean on the bottom. One ·
BALL PLANNED
'eri ng.
Heights, for the salad, to Mrs. and David, St. Albans. W, Va. _never thinks where they may have been put down before they are
put on a clean table .
\
MASON - The Wahama
SATURDAY
My sec6nd Pet Peeve is with the Iuke~~;ann cup of water one Band Boosters are in the
SMORGASBORD by Mid:
gets with a packllge of Instant coffee in many restaurants. Since process of planning the annual dleport Fire Department at
. so m'!lly of us life now going the de-cafeinated way it seems they "Sweetheart Ball" at the West Middleport Elementary School
could brew it and lll'\ng it to the table hot like any other coffee. - Virg inia Natiorial Guard Ar· beginning at 4 p.m. Saturday.
MRS. P.L.C.
mory in Point Pleasant, All customer can eat, adults,
DEAR POLLY -' My suggestion lor June whose covered Saturday, Feb. 16, 9 p.m. to I $2; children, $1.25. Donations
4 fabulous frogrances
plastic.indoor garbage pail reeks with a bad odor is to put a layer a.m. Music w(U be provided by are asked and those wishing to
in
elegant spray
of newspaper in the bottom and then several moths balls. The the Gary Stewart Quartet. give food should call 992-3145 .
plastic or paper t&gt;ag UuiLactual!y holds the garbage can be · Locations lor the sale of tickets -after 5 p.m.
'
_f]g~Ons •.. anlv
removed without :discarding the odor pnventive until it needs will be announced Iilter.
chaJ\ging. - A GRANDMDnfER.
· .
l'llUy note ,- Freqaeotly .apny tile iaalde of the
with a
liMITED TIM£ ONlY
'
•
bo,.ehold dlslnftictaat ud remove the lll'bage bel atlealt oaee•
aday. ~...
'
DEAR FOLLY - My daugbter,'5, keeps the spaces under the
,--.
. - .
refrigerator, stove and waSher free of lint Jnd dirt and thinlts She
is pll\)'jng. After wal!-to-wall carpeting was Installed I gave her a
'·
piece about 8x36 inches and .She turns this upside down and
pushes it under the appliance$ with her foot . She ~ does the
"twist" for a fel' minutes and then retracts the carpet strip.
When 'turned over It has. Jn amazing amount of dust adherin&amp; to
it. I easUy dispose of this by shaking, sweeping or vacuuming. .·
"
CECILLE.
·
•• 1
0 ...............
DEAR. POLLY - When the preparation of, a meal requtfes
a,..
................ opening a can do not discard the can until after mealtime. In the
•. r ,...,_... a........
meantime rinse and set the can on the stove, drop your~oolting
PRE$CRIPTIOiliS. · .. . . PH. ftJ;IftJ
I
· spoons, etc. in It, You will find you an 'saved from having to .·
Frt11111tt lp tiCI
· , · 1: ; ,\ ;
POMEROY, OHIO
· wash your spoon rest or that estra dirty spot on the stove or
~---~....-"""'.__ _ _ _..,.._ _ __, counter.- JUDY.
U2 E.
tlOMIROY, Q.

presently working with U1e
Gallipolis Downtown Reta il
Merchants Assn .. to beautify
downtown Gallipolis . Koe·
Krompecher has demonstrated
to community leaders plan&amp;to
call attention to the lovely roofs
and mouldin gs on Second
Avenue building fronts now
mostly unnoticed, and was to

Ctiu nt y
and
Co lumbus
·especially appealing.
Son of Professo• Dr. Pedro L.
Koe -Krompec her , also of
Athens, and the fir.m of KoeKrompecher Associates, the
artist was born ln Budapest,
Hun ga ry and educated in
Austria, Spain, Trinidad and
Venezuela. He attended Ohio
State University where he
completed post grad uat e
studies in 1965. In 1966 he
be came a Fallout Shelter
Analys t for Ohio Sta te

4 oz.

75c Value

�.. .

•

'.
10 - The Daily Sentlni!l, Ml&lt;ldleporl-!'omeroy, u , 1 nursaay. Jail ·•. mo

'

••
•'

Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Jan. 4, lll75
SI'EERS - 250 Ill 300 Ills 2021 75, 300 to 400 lbs 21 to 24 50,
400 to 500 lbs. 18 to 26, 500 11&gt;600
lbs. 19 to 28, 600 to 700 Ills 17 50
Ill 23.50, 700 lbs. and over 20 Ill
32 50
HEIFER CALVES - 250 Ill
300lbs. l7to22, 300to 400 lbs 18
to 23, 400 to 500 lbs 20 to 22, 500
to 600lbs.l7to 21,600 to 700 lbs.
16 to 25, 700 lbs and over 19 Ill
30
STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS (By
the head J - Stock Cows 115 to
165, Stock Cows and Calves 140
to 195, Stock Bulls 125 to 200,
Baby Calves 5 to 30; (by the
pound ) Canners &amp; Cutters
Cows 12 Ill 17.50, Holstem Cows
16 50 to 21 50, Commercial
Bulls ( 1,000 lbs. and over) .20 to
24
VEAL CALVES - Tops 220
Ills Ill 250 49 Ill 58 50, Me&lt;hum
200 Ills. to 300 36 to 40 30, Culls
36 down. Choice feeder pigs
12.50 to 30

Mrs Addle Petrel and Mr
and Mrs Ben Petrel and son,
Trevor spent New Year's Day
at Jackson with Mr and Me&gt;
Jack Feuerbacher and the!f
guest, Mrs Robert 1Ruth Ann
MARKET REPORT
Petrel ) Feuerbacher of
Pleasrutt, W. Va.
Point
Knoxville , Tenn
Jaoua ry t, 1975
Mrs Agnes Pncc of Athens,
SLAUGHTER SI'EERS
Mrs M1ke Kucsma of Gahanna
Standard 80().1100 lbs. 2.1-2.1 75
and Clifford Beaver of Grove
SLAUGHER COWS
City spent Sunday w1th Mrs
Commercial 19, Utility 17-19,
Hattie Paynter.
Canner &amp; Cutter 15.75-19.20.
, Hazel Carnahan and Frances
VEAL - Choice &amp; Pr101e 190Foster spent Tuesday and New
225 lbs 45, 22&amp;-265 lbs 50
Year's Day w1th Mrs. Loe
HOGS - U.S .1-3 190-240 Ills
Tisdale at Buckeye l.ake.
39-40, 241).260 lbs. 40, Sows, U S
Rev. Walter Bikacsan
l-3 3()().500 Ills. 30 56.35, Boars
reports his mother, who was
300-800 lbs. 23.$-25.65, Pigs (by
Injured in a fall, has improved
head) 21).40 lbs. 4-10, 40-60 Ills
remarkably and dmng very
15-20, 60 lbs. plus 22-24.50.
well . He apprecwtes the
SLAUGHTER LAMBS - Ch.
concern of everyone.
&amp; Prime 91).115 lbs. (Blue) 36.
Mr . and M·s
Rein me
YEARLING STEERS - 700
B1kacsan of Athens, Tenn. lbs. up 22-24.75.
spent the weekend w1th h1s
YEARLING HEIFERS parents, Rev and Mrs Walter Good &amp; ChOice 50()..MO Ills. 13Bikacsa,n and Sharon
22, 80().750 lbs. 26.
Mr. and Mrs Jerry Powell
SI'EER CALVES - 301).400
spent several days 1n Ills . 13-21 50
Columbus, guests of Mr and
BULL CALVES - 40().$0
Mrs. Grover Powell
lbs. 13-22.50.
Mrs. Manan Kn1ghtstep of
HEIFER CALVES - 300-400
Columbus was a weekend guest Ills. 19-20.25.
of her mother, Mrs Lavuua
BABY CALVES (By Head)
Simpson, who has been Ill, - Beef 40, Holstem &amp; Brown
accompanied her home for an Swiss 15-20.
indefimte VISit.
Mr. and Mrs Austm Wolfe,
Jerry and Aimee, aod Mrs
LEGAL NOTICE
1ce •s hereby Q•ven that
Mayme Custer of Syracuse and th eNolannual
meeltng o f the
Mr and Mrs Roger H1ll and stocktlolder s of The Fa rmers
and S~v mg s Company of
Scotty were holiday guests of 2Bank
11
West
Second
Str ee t
Mr. and Mrs . Jerry Powell
Pomeroy , Oh1o, will be hel d a t
office of Slltd bank. 1n
Mr Steve Cleland returned !he
Pomeroy Ohio. accordmg to 1ts
to his imployment In Alabama by l aws on the lh1r d Wed
of J&lt;tnuary 1975 at 4 p
alter spendmg the holidays nesday
m for th e purpose of elect mg
with hiS fam1Iy and hiS parents, d1rectors and tfle tr ~nsact,on o f
other business as may
Mr. and Mrs Frank Clel•nd such
properly co me before Sol id
Mrs. Lottie Bradford spent meeting
Paul E K loes
Christmas with Mr and Mrs
Secretary
Brian ·Bradford at Wooster. Dec 19 26 . Jan 2 9
They re'!Urned her to her home
on Frilfly and vls1ted w1th the
· BOARD OF
Clarence Bradfords
ME IGS COUNTY
COMM IS SIONERS
Mr and Mrs. Ralph Badgley
spent the weekend- wtth Mr
Notlce to
Motor · V eh• c le
and Mrs Brian Simpson and Dealers
In accordance w1th Sec 307 86
children in Baltimore and Mr ol the OhiO Rev 1sed Code ,
l ed bids wil l be rece,ved by
and Mrs. Steve Badgley and sea
The Meigs
County
Com
Kelll In Columbus
missioners m their oft1ce 1n the
Court House , Pom eroy Oh10
Cntt Bradford, Jr ., or 45769
, untll 10 00 A M on
~ Worthington spent the weekend January '28th 1975 , at WhiCh
time and place the b•ds will be
' with Mr and Mrs. A C. opened
and read aloud tor tne
Bradford
following vei11Cies

Laurel Cliff
News Notes
By Ber1ha Parker
Sabbath School attendance
Jan. 5 at the Free MethodiSt
Church was 87 Chmr members
present was 14, attendance at
worship service was 65
Rev Cecil W1se, Chester,
Rev. and Mrs Morris Wolfe,
Racine, Mr and Mrs Phtll
WISe , McConnelsvUie, attended Sunday mormng ser-

vice
MISS Barbara Klem , who 1s
attendmg college m Grayson.
Ky., spent two weeks wtth her
parents, Mr and Mrs . Cliff
Klein
Mrs. Georgia Diehl, Charles
Anthony Diehl visited recently
with Mr. and Mrs Guy Russell,
Warren and Rev and ·Mrs.
Lewis Diehl : Woodsfield.
Mr. and Mrs. Harmon Fox
left Sunday morning for
Fllrlda to spend the wmter
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell left
for their home in Indiana after
spending Christmas at the1r
hooie here.
The hymn smg will be at the
local church Jan. 10, 7:30p.m.
insle.iid of Jan . II
Mrs. Mary Atkins, Portsmouth , Mr. John Evans,
Jackson , Tenn., Mrs Janet
Hoadlln, girls, McArthur, Mr.
Kenneth Evans, Mr. Edward
Evans visited recei~tly with
Mrs. Carmon Evans.
One hwnli'ed twenty persons
attended services at the local
church Sunday, Jan. 5.

Mr. Mark Stahl, Stockdale,
Mr. and Mrs. William Perry,
Atbens, Yisited recently With
Mr . and Mrs. Norman

.Schaefer.
'

•

11-: T!lj! Daily Sentmel, Middleport..,. mer~y, 0., Thursday, Jan

M::=~=)l For Fast R(esults Use ·T he Sentinel Classifieds

By Mrs. Francis Morris
Mr . Maunce Lott 1s a
surgical pat1ent at Holzer
Medical Center ,
2nd Lt Steven Schroeder, a
meteorologiSt w1th the Air
Force, Omaha, Neb , 1s on 10
days leave at the home of h1s
parents 1n Columbus and
visited h1s grandparents, Mr
and Mrs Franci s Moms
Saturday.
Lt and Mrs Kelly Weller
and daughter, Jenmfer , of
Chandler, Am , and Mr and
Mrs. Leon Jordan, Momca and
Matt of Thornville, spent the
Christmas holidays w1th the1r
parents , Mr
and Mrs
Clar.ence Bradford Other
guests on Chmtmas Day were
Mr . and Mrs Dwighl Oliver of
Pomeroy Lt Weller IS
statiOned at W1Ihams Air

Force Base, Phoemx, Anz

.

1

Racine
Social Events

:

,

B1ds must be subm1 tted m two
propo sa l s, each proposal to
meet
th e co nd lt1ons and
speclttcattons as follows
Proposal No 1
On 1975 Model dlJmp truck
with dt~m p body 108 · X 30 · head
and ta i l gate w1th center door'"
gate •
H eavy duty 8" hOI St W1lh
P T 0 &amp; levers
:\.~
cab protector w tth 'l'
WlnQS
Cab l 1ghts , 4 corner ligh ts &amp; 6
reflectors
Mud fi8PS
Wheel base 72' cab to a&gt;~ l e or
su .table fo r body
'24 000 lbs G V W or h eavter
7,000 tb s I Beam fro nt axle
18,500 lbs 2 speed rear axle
5 speed synchromesh t rans
m 1SS10n d irec t rn hlt /1
340 cu 1n V 8 gas eng 1nl' or
filrg er

M cD an1el s Custom Butcher,ng
State and Federal 1nspect1on
K ill beets and hogs Phone
Ed1 lh M e Dan1el , (304) 882
3224
1 9 Jtc

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

AUCTIO N SALE . sta rtmg
F r 1day Jan 17 at 7, p m 215
N
Second , Middleport At
P&amp; J Odds and Ends
I 9 SIC

2 speed rear axle, good 825:.:20 t~res , clea n &amp; solid cab

1973 CHEVROLET

POMEROY, OHIO
WHOLESALE Valve, 1972 Veg a
wagon , rad 1a1s deluxe 1n
terror , rad•o 51 595 f 1rm Ca l!
8 CHANNEL Bearca t Scanner
992, 7805
and 1200 W1nchester shotgun
1 8 .tic
Phone 949 4573
1 7 5tc
1972 SU PER Beetle VolkS - - - - - - - - - - - - - wagen Phone 992 3981
(
1 8 10tc 19 72 GT 380 suzuki Phone 949
- -- - - - -- - - - - - 2828 after 5 p m
1966 CORVAIR,good body , good
1 9 Jtc
t 1re s ru,s farr , uses Oil $200,
or trade for somethmg of J HOLSTE I N cows and I herter
Phone 949 2179
equal va l ue Cal l eventng s,
985 3545
1 9 Jtc
1 8 5tp
1968 CHEVELLE 327
4 sp FOR SALE or trade on p•ckup
or van
19 67
1 ton
In
posttlve t rac t ton, rear end
ternat ronal
truck.
w 1fh
good body and Interior, t650
alumtnum f urni tu r e van, 8
Phone 991 7489
ply lrres , P s, P B , 50,000
1 8 4tp
m iles Phone99 2 3509or see at
308 Page St , M iddleport
197 1 DODGE Coronet, 4 dr 318
1 6 6tc
motor automatiC green Good ------~ --..----gas mileage, good ru,, ,ng . ,.._ _ __._ _ _ _ _ _oo&gt;J
cond 1tlon Pho,e 99'2 5771
'I
1 8 4tc 1

For Sale

SHOOTING Ma tc h Ra c1 ne Gun
Club Sunday Ja n 12, 1 p m

e 4t c

O PENING soon , Thanks to you
Novelty F abr 1c and Cra fts 1n
Belp( e 15 e~tpandmg Soon
Evellyn
wd l
open
her
Barga1n Cr aft Cellar' wh 1ch
will be lam packed full ot
ba rga•ns Wa t ch thiS paper
tor openrng dale
1 8 4IC

IN COM E Tax Pre)&gt;ared both
Federa l and State Ta&gt;-;es wrll
be don e by &amp;ppo,ntments
only P l ease phone 992 2272 or
see Mrs Wanda Eblm Lat~r e l
Cl•ff Rd , Pomeroy , Oh10 _
1 3 301c
'Ot l of M 1nk '
Pnone BROWN S

and
Sa turd ay night. 7 p m at
Mason Auction , Horton St In
Mason , w Va Cons tgnmeMs
welcome Phon e (304) 773
547 1
10 3 tfc

CAS H SSSU.FOR J UN K CARS
Comp FRYE S TRUC K an d
AUTO
P ARTS
Ru t land
Phone 742 6094
1 2 26tp
WANTED old upnghl p1anos,
any cond llton
Pay1ng $10
eac h f~r s t floor only Wr1 t e to
and gtve d1rect1ons to W ttten
P1ano Co , Box 188 , Sard1s.
Oh 10 439•16
I 7 6tp

Tire Prices

flfthe Area

1974 CUTLASS Su preme Am
Fm , tape a c , many extras .
prt ce red uced
Phone 992
9981
1 7 3tc

It's

1972 CHEV ROLET K1ngswood
Estate stat1on wagon. 3 seats,
excellent
con d 1tl on
See
Donald Smilh, Racine or ca ll
949 5194
1 1 3t c

BEND TIRE CENTER'

1973 OLOS Cutla ss S Excell en t
condttron with 25 ,000 actual
miles 350 engrne with p s,
p b , atr cond 1t1on lng
a,d
super sport wh-eels Can De
seen at the co rn er of Church
an d Hubbard Stree t s 1n
Syracuse Ohio or call 992 391 4
afte r 5 p m
I 7 611)

GROCERY Dusln ess for sale,
Bulld1ng for sa te or lease
Phone 773 5618from 8 30p m
to 10 p m for appo,,tm ent
J 10 ttc

1966 CHEVY I mpala 327, good
cond• l ion Phone 949 .4114
1 7 5fp

772-5881

M:to;on .

W va

COLON I AL MAPLE stereo
radiO , am lm , 4 speakers, 4
speed automat1c changer
Ba l ance t116 78
Use our
budget terms Call 992 3965
1 6 tfc

51 EGLER and
MONOGRAM

FUEL OIL
HEATERS

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

Employment Wanted
REMODELING
plumbl,g
heatrng , ;~nd all typ es o f
genera l
r- epai r
Work
gua r anteed 20 ye ars ex
penence Phone 992 2409
1 3 12tc

From a shelf to a house.
Parntmg , stdtng, roofing,
paper hangrng , ktfchen
cabmets, expert carpeltng,

etc

NE 00 chcl!r can1ng and fur
n1ture r elin1shmg rea sonab l y
prrced Phone 949 2189
1 } 5tp
~'--

l.qst
RED 1R I SH setter wrth wh rte on
ches t rn Lahgsvdle area
Reward Ca l l 742 5909
1 5 6t,P
---------~~--

RED lr~sh Se if er W1fh While on
ch~s t 1n LangSv i lle area
Reward Phone 742 5909
1 5 6tp

For

Priced for Quick Sale
1 New Wood Burning
HEATER-139.95
~

~ent

READY

MIX CO NCRET'E- (Ii'
lrvered r1ght to your pro1er
F ast
and
easy
Fr~e
est,m ate s Phone 992 3284
Goeglem Ready Mtx Co
Middlepor t Oh16
6 30 lfc

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

.t

bath , ut11lt1es pa1d , No
c l'r lldren or pels P11one 992
5810 or 814 East Ma~n ,
Pomeroy
'
156tp

Mobile Homes For Sale

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

1n M1d
TRA IL ER for rent or sa l e, 3 FURNISHED APT
dleport. util 1tres pa 1d Phone
bedrooms , unf..,rrushed ,
992 3205 befor e 1 In eventng
utd11 1es Paid located at new
1 9 3tc
Mobile
H ome
Park
1n
Burl1nghc1m Phone 99 2 775 1
12 31 tt c TWO BEDROOMS Forced a1r
hea L
storm
wrndows ,
ba se ment
driveway ,
twail allte after January 15
Call 992 3381 or 992 3,.5 3
1 9 6tp

Help Wanted

SEW ING MACHINE Repatrs
serv tce, al l mak.e.s. 992 2284
Tne Fabr1c Shop , Pomeroy ,
Authonzed S1nger Sales a,d
serv1ce We sharpen Sc1ssors
3 29 tfc
DOZER work , land clea r~ng by
the acre, h ourly or co, tra ct
Farm ponds , roads
etc
Large dozer and operator
w1 th over 20 years ex
penenCe Pvllrn s EKcava tmg ,
Pomeroy , Oh10 Phon e 992
2478
12 19 tic

TAP PAN Gascookstove , wh1te,
See through o~e n , broil er ,
excellent cond rtron . S25 Call
992 7147 any t rme betw een 7
a m and 12 noetn
1 73 tp
HONDA 100. good condr f•on.
se11 1ng reasonabl e Phone 992
2502
1 7 3tc
1957 CHE VY pa rts
NEW
Lak ewood trect•on bars . hi
la cker a~r shocks, hooker
headers , wrth 3" collectors for
small block
Cal! 992 3.496
after 6 p m BEST OFFER
10 17 lfc

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

cNEW HAVEN

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

-------------1~ ••c Real Estate For Sale

The Daily Sentinel

7ROOM

- HOUSE

Kaleidclcope

CALL 992-3877

FRIDAY

·AT 10:15.AM

ON WMPO

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

~tarting

HOME
Im provement
and
Repa1r Serv 1ce Anyth,,g
ftxed around the h ome, from
roo f to basement You wr11
like our work and rates
Phone 742 508 1
1229tfc

9

Jo-Benjamrn Frank tm Th e Rbe! 8.10

10 ~0G-Harry

0 6, 13 Woman 33

10 3D-Caught n the Act 33
11 DO- News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15,20. ABC News 33
11 3D-Johntiy Carson 3,4, 15 W 1de World SpeCial 13 FB I 6 ,
Mov1e " Ma chrne Gun M cCa m " 8, M ov1e ' Dark' Waters ' 10.
Janak 1 33

Belpre, Ohio
Ph . 423-5061

12 3D-Wrde World Specral 6
1 00- Tomorrow 3,4 , N ews 13

Fire Retardant

FRIDAY , JANUARY 10,1975

6 JG-- Frve Mmutes to Llv@ By 4 New s 6; B 1ble Answers 8 .

Pub lic Affatrs 10, Blue Rrdge Quartet 13
6 35-Columbus Today 4,

6 45- Mornrng Reporl 3, Farmt1me

10
7 DO-Today 3,4,15 , AM Amer rca 13.A M Amerrca 6 , CBS

Lfny Lavender

News 8, 10

8 00- Lass re 6. Capt Kangaroo 8, Popey e 10 Sesame St 33
8 25-Capt Kangaroo 10
8 3D-Brg Val ley 6 •

Phone 992-3993
Daily After 5:00

9 OQ-A M 3 Paul D1xon 4, Phil Donahue 7.15. Bullw1nkle 8,
Cartoons 12, Mornmg wit h D J lJ

P&amp; J
Hom e
Matnt enance,
h ea tmg
co o l1 ng , refrtg ,
plumb1ng, elec t rtca l ap
pl1ances We serv rce and
r epa ir an ytt ng 1n t h e hom e or
bt~sl n es~
215 N
Seco nd ,
Mtddleporl Phone 992 3509
1 9 30t c

9 25- Chuck Wh1le Reporls 10
9 3G---Not For Wo m~n Only 3, 01nah 6 Hazel 8 Tattletal es 10,
New Zoo Revue 13

10 QO-Celebrr ty Sweepstakes 3,15, Joker 's Wrld 8, 10 . Movre

"Gtr ls of Pl easure l s l an~" 13
10· JG-Wheel of Fourtune 3, 15, Phrl Donahue 4 Gambi t 8,10

II DO-Hrgh Rollers 3, 15 , One L1fe to L1ve 6 Now You See It

FURN I T URE

Upholstertng ,
rates,
free
'eSt!m at es.
p1ckup
and
de / 1ve r y , p rompt se r vtce
Mowrey's Upho lste r y , Potn t
P le asant w Va Phone 675
4154
1231 26t p

a. 10

~ Reason ab le

11 9D- Hotlywoo&lt;l Squares 3,4.15, Brady Bunch 6, Love of Lr fe
8, 10 , Sesame

St 33

II 55-CBS News B Dan Imel 's Wor ld 10 , New s 13
12 OD-Ja ckpot 3, 15 , Password Al l Stars 6 13 . Bob Braun's 50 SO
Club 4, News 8.10
12.3D-Biank Check 3,1 5 Sptrl Second 6,13 , Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10 , To Be Announced 33

12 46'--E tec Co 33
12 ~ NBC News 3, 15
I DO-News 3, All My Chrldren 6, 13 . Phil Donahue 8, Young
ifeslless 10 . Not For Women Only 15

&amp;

1 JIJ.Ill.How To St~rv 1ve a Marriage 3,4, 15, Let's Make a Deal
6. 13 ; As t he World Turns 8 10 , $10,000 Pyram1d 6, 13 , Gi.J1dmg

t;:ight 8,10
2 30- Doctors 3,4,15, Big Showdown 6,13 , Edge of Nrght 8, 10
3 O!h-Another World 3,4,15, General Hosp rfal 6,13; Pt ce is Rrght

ll ~ered
Monday thro ugh
SatlJrday
and
even1ngs
Phone 446 1142
6 13 tfc

8,10 ,

Ascent of Man 20

3 30-,f{)ne Life to Live 13. Lucy Show 6 Match Game 8,1 0
4 ()()4.Mr Cartoon 3, I Dream of Jeannie 4, Somerset 15,

EXCE L SI OR Salt Works , East
Ma m St , Pom eroy All ki nds
o f sal t , water pellets , water
nuggets, b lock salt and own
Ohro R 1ver Salt Phon e 992

3891

6 5 tfc
CA RPET mstallatton 51 25 per
yard Phone R 1chard West,
843 2667
12 24 26tp'

-------- -----Real Estate For sale

-----------

~jrds and the Bees" 10, .M1ke Doug l as 13

4 3D-Bewrlched 3, Jackpot 4, Mod Squad

Lots of Items Sold Out-

l'{e ig hborhood 20,33; Raymond Burr 13
5 3tl--'-News 6 . Beverly Hil lbr tlres B Hodgepodge Lodge. 20,
l:rar ls West 15, Etec Co 33
6 oo~ News 3,4,8.10.13. 15. ABC News 6, Elec Co 20, Per

(All Items Subject to Prior Sale)
WAS
PATCHWOR ~_R OCKER _ _ __ _ _ _ ,69 95
I GREEN CHAIR
19 95

SALE
39.95
5.00

49 95
7500
79 95
39 95
100 00

sOnallty &amp; Behavioral Developmen t 33

6 30-NBC News 3,4,15 ; ABC News 13, Bewitched 6, CBS News
8;10 . Zoom 20
7 0&lt;1-"Trulh or Cons 3,4, Bowlmg for Do llars 6; WCHS TV
Report 8. Aviat1on Weal her 20, News 10 , Jrmmy Dean 13, I

10.00
5.00
65.00
25.00
50.00

3-TABLES,soltdoak, atl
9995
WOOD WARDROBE
39 95
3 NEW TABLES, (All)
59 95
3 BIG TABLES, MEDITERRANEAN- -199 95

59.95
20.00
39.95
119.85

2 SOLID OAK DRESSERS, ( EACHl•- - - 88 00
WHITE BABY CHEST
49 95
MAPLE CHEST
59 95

59.95
35.00
39.95

3 PC. BEDROOM SUIT
199 95
3 PC BEDROOM SUITE
179 95
8 OTHER BEDROOM SUITES IN STOCK

139.95
149.95

St{y

:eo~R.O

POMEROY- About 2 yr
old - BRICK &amp; FRAME,
about !'acre, 4 BR, 2 baths,
lovely kitc hen &amp; dining ,
uttlity R , rec

space, ca r-

peted, storag~ bldg JUST
S26,000
OLD RT. 33 - Close rn 12x65
Mobrle Home w tfh expando

lr vrn g R.. 3 BR, balh, caracre,
all electric, about 4 year~.
old
NEAR LANGSVILLE - 10
acres. tdeal for home or
peted, a rr cond , 1 mce

trailer, approved for

22 CU. FT. SIDE-BY-SIDE, (WHITEl--395 00
18 CU. FT. REFRIGERATOR,
GR., LIKE NEW- - - - - - - 269 95
2-COPPERTONE REFRIGERATORS,
LIKE NEW, EA. I'i~t=====- 288.00
GREEN REFRIGERATOR
149 95•
FRIGIDAIRE REFRIGERATOR
169 95
Top

Freezer. Frost

•• NO RTH
~

S5,800
TUPPERS

PLAINS

w,

Beautiful bu1ldmg si t e,
acres, wooded, TP water. tn
~ new area S3,500

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) .A

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Doc.

.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan
19) You II be more ambitious
later tn the day than Ill the a m
You II also get you1 bes t Ideas
In t11e mornrng

CANCER (June 21-Juty 22)

AOUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob 19)

You need a httle change ol
pace now to freshen your outlook Do something on the spur
ol th e moment that s fun

LEO (July 23·AUQ

Dear Rap:
A short t101e ago you prmted a letter from a young g1rl who IS
considering gomg'mto the convent. She seemed very upset about
the reaction of her boyfnend and other friends
I received so much of that nonsense when I was ber age and
gomg mto a convent. People JUS! can't seem to understand that a
normal g1rl - especially a pretty one -who goes out on dates,
could ever make a deciSIOn like thiS.
Why can't they realize that 1t IS just possible a young woman
wants to remam unmamed so that she can be completely free w
help others ' This doesn't make her less of a friend or someone to
be avmded .
It IS so !fnportant that young girls who enter the convent
realize just what the sacrifices are, along with the blessings they
will receive through this differe)'lt way of sharing their love A
g~rl who t.as never been out With a boy or who rejects marriage
lor some abnormal reason, IS not able to make a real deciSion
about her life, and will not last long in the convent.
Poor health forced me to leave the convent . I am now happily
marr1ed, w1th a wonderful family , but I still get the same
reaction th1s g~rl rece,ved when people hear I was once mtent on
being a nun. I hope she can gel support from someone who understands, and I w1sh her a very happy life, whatever her
dec1sion may be. - A READER

21) You II manage bus1ness
· and commercta l matters much
more com pe tently today than
tom o rr o w S tay on t op o f
thmgs

serv•ce you II render spontaneo usly w111 make a favorable
1mpress1on later you II be
- repEIId untquely

11

Try not to talk to too many pea
pie of yo ur plans tn ad van ce II
you do suggested c llanges
wil l stal l your elforl s

221

PISCES (Fob 20-Morch 20)

Anythtng you tackle today of a
creat 1ve nature you II handle 1n
stnde What s more you II rn SpJre your co-workers

One you II asSOCIS!e W1111 IS
very s1n cere about helptng you
advance your Interests He II
prove 11 by acl rn g on )' O lH
behall

VIRGO (AUQ 23·Sopl 22)
Somet h ing

promtst nq

and

tllgetber. She has arranged my apartment We have the same
mterests. We hardly ever argue, and never f1ght She says she
loves me and I sure do love her
So why won't she marry me' W1th gentleness , compamonshlp, trust, and affection gomg for us, why does she say
we'd only be hurt If we marned? Should I give up' I could never
fmd anyone to take her place - RON
Ron
Why quit when you're happy together' If marriage develops,
!me, but for the present, you two have compamonsh1p, shared
mterests and love. Isn't that atmost enough, until Jan finally
makes her deciSion' - HELEN AND SUE

JJtYWID~;-~
u.....mble these rour Jumbleo,

.....

,t,J ..-~ 1 -

"II til Nlll " I I N ( )I () " " l 11 0 1\ (I I

letltr to each squlln!, to
form four ordina.ry wordt.

one

Rap jan and 1 have great conversations. We spend a lot of time

~

i,

8 30- Wall Street Week 20,33

- -..-

9 OO-S 1x Mtll1on Dollar Man 6, 13,

Masterp iece

T heatre,

Con sume r Surv1val Ktt 33
9 JO-Ass1g nment Am errca 33

10•DO-Fra nk Srnat ra 3,4,15., Adams ol Eagle Lake 6, 13 , CBS
Reports 8, 10 , News 20; Paul nchrms 33.
10 30- World Press 20
11 OO~ News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13,15, ABC News -93

11 3D-Johnny Carson 3.4.15. Wide Wor ld Mystery 13. Movre
" 0 5 S.

117

6, M ov1e "Jail house R ock"

8,

Mov1e "The War

ol lhe Worlds" 10; Janak! 33.
1 00- Mrdn tghl Special 3,4, 15, Wrde World Special 6, News 13
1 1 5 ~Movie "The Ma ze" 10
2 30~Movie " How I Spent My Summer Vacat10n 1 ' 4
4 00- Movte " Pressure Pom t" 4

'·
• 6 5·2
t Q.t105
-1&gt; K 102

,

2 Chou Enlal, for one
3 Mean busness
(4 wds.)
4 SuffiX for
Caesar
5 Gilbert or
Ruth
6 Wear away
7 God (it. )
8 Gettmg
back at
(2 wds.)
9 Burden some
10 Easter
event

Ynterday'aAillwer _
16 Row
28 Come to
19 Telegraph
Pll8l
22 Dog-faced zs Inhibit
ape
Z9 Ford fiiiiiJf

23 Shining

exlllllple
2C Pop or
Junior
25 Revolve

member

38 Prepare

:15 Eaklmo
knife
l8 Swlu rl-

\

t

'JI

•. I
AXYDLBAAXB
LONGI'ELLOW

I ,0 01

One letter simply standi for another, In thiJ lllllpll A. II
used for the three L's, X for the two 0'1, ete. Slncle !etten.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the worill are 1111
hints. Eaeh day the eode lettert are different.

IENGINS!
.
r;r) I
\INGOPEt

I I XJ

IBQOSIT
Now llrl'&amp;l1lt the clrclod !etten

QONI

ouueolod b7 the above •artoon.

DNJQZ

(.\Mwt!rt toiDOrrow)

I

J..mleo' GUILD EAGLE PMPERE IMPEDE
•

Auwen

5 30- Movte "Lady Luck" 4

SL

IBQ

WBJU

GUSIT

SJJSQNQSJT

SICSQUA

QB

N

to form the su.rprin aJUwtr, u

I PrilldlswaiNSWIIIIn I "[,......l.,. . ,.,l.,. . . ,J - rI I I J"
'Yellerday••

CRYPTOQUOTE

A CHA!W!Nt!&gt; WAY
TO e.ET MOI'JEV.

Ahorbed in buameu- MERGED

ZBM

XBMPAI'Q

GU

FNMTOQ

AUNA
NQ. GSPP
CNMTONI
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: IT IS SMALL WONDER' WHBRE
TilE SHEPHERDS HESITATE AND STUMBLE, THAT THE SHEEP DRAW BACK AFFRIGHTED. - SCOTl' NEAIUNG
I~ 1D1&amp; Ki.n1 Fta&amp;\IIH IYIIdi,.M, IM.)

DICK TRACY

ANNTTC

t A9B63
"'8 5

SOLTJI
41iAQ J 10 94
• A83

• 4

, ,f,A Q6

•

200.00
99.95
139.95

Neither vul nerable
North

Wesl

Ea!rt

SPECIAL OF SPECIALS

I NT

Pa ss

Pass

Pa ss

South

4•

l.EAVE FOR
A.Y,ERICA

Sl1m •

TOMOil~OW

mo~ed

MOR'NIN6!

I

61i:EAT, YOUFt HIGH"''E'G$··

I,

I'L.L. TELL. OUIZ JE-T CREW

TO BE ~EADY
fOFt TAI&lt;EOF~l

I)
I

out of

~

the

Opcbmg tead- Q t

storeroom,

•

- 2 White Fur Swivel Chairs Regular 188.00
-Black Fur Small Sofa
- 2 Glass Top Tables, . Sale
All With Chrome Legs

P~II\JCf5~
JA~MIN Wll.!..

\ Has

1 41i
Pass
Pass •

I

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Chtpper?
A b1~d m the hand IS known to
be w~Dth two tn the bush, but a
tr1ck 1h the hand ts not alw•ys

.I

worth even one

West's queen of dtamonds
held the first tri ck and he contmued ' the smt South ruffed,
cashed hiS ace of spades, led a
spade to dummy 's ktng played
a low club and fmessed hts
queen
West couldn 't watt to pounce
on that tr1ck wtth hiS kmg
Alter all , a b1rd tn the hand, etc
He pounced and that was hts
Side's last tnck
" Wouldn 't I have looked Silly
tf South had started w1th ace·
queen doubleton tn clubs mstead of ace·queen:sma!J?"
sa1d West
He sure would have looked
Silly but tl South had been dealt
JUSt' two clubs he probably
would have led out the ace and
then the queen before ustng
dummy 's kwg of spades
Furthermore, East had played
the CJght of clubs and South
could have been sure that etght
was e1ther a singleton (m wh1ch
case no defense would work ), or
that East was startmg a htgh·
low echo and that kmg of cl ubs

2-30" GAS RANGES, GOL.IL_ __ _~ 59 95 119.95
30" GAS RANGE, GREEN
188 00 149.95
30" GAS RANGE, WHITE
149 95 99.95
~.,GAS RANGE, WHIT
149 95 99.95
~.,GAS RANGE, WHITE
119 95 69.95
30" GAS RANGE, BLUE
119.95 88.00
40" ELEC. RANGE, WHITE
39 95 99.95
1-40" ELEC. RANGE, WHITE .
129 95 75.00
30" ELEC. RANGE, WHITE
_
179 95 139.95
- ~., ELECTRIC, GREEN, LIKE NEW- 219.95 179.95
2-BREAKFAST SETS, 4chatrs- ---39 95
DARK OAK DINING ROOM SUITE
179 95
4 Chairs &amp; Table
8 FT. LONG PINE TABLE - - - - - 43ti5
With 6 Chairs, like new.
i-BREAKFAST SET, 2 CHAIRS
WITH DROP LEAF TABLE.

29.95
99.95
269.95
39.95

2-STOKER-MATIC COAL HEATERS, EA. 488.00 388.00
DUNCAN PHYFE TABLE WITH4 CHAIRS 319.95 191.95
ZENITH STI;RE
139.95 100.00
PHILCO STEREO, LIKE NEW
WITH AM-FM RECORD PLAYER__288.00 IU.OO
GREEN WASHER &amp; DRYER , like new
299.95
GE WASHER-DRYER, COP.PER, LIKE NEW~9t.u ;
MAYTAG DRYER
69.95
MAYTAG DRYER
79.9~
MAYTAG DRYER
125.00
. MAYTAG AUTO. WASHER
5.00
2 NEW RANGE HEADS
~"WHITE &amp; COPPER., EACH
25.00

'

.

..

Rutland , 0.

ALLEY OOP

NOW 10 BE-AT A HASTY

•

RETT?EAT. WHII.E THE
GETT!Ne 15 GOOO.'

get away

-- tz:e; :J ,,rp;ta u

......

1

The b1ddmg has been
'''I

West

Norlh . East

9

South

1 -1&gt;
Pass
Pass

1•
2t
3•

Pass

Pass

16
2•

Pass

?

.'

....

SNUFFY !!

GIT OUT OF

I'M GtVtN ' 'IE
DA'r'5 OFF
FER GOOD BEHAVtN'

·.

o .D

you, South, hold
'
6K 7643 9 A2 t9. A)C732
What do you do now""

..

"'

_,

See Herb, Dave, Mike
Grate or
liene ~m1th
,

never

•

!NEWSPAPI-:H 1-;NTI:::RI'HI SI: o\SSN 1

.

Rutland Furniture
742-4211

•.u·•c• would

Pass

••

I
'

DOWN

I Sew

EAST
" 72
• K Q9 4

WESt

229.95

r
I

ACROSS
1 Infant
5 Forage
grass
11 Cruls1ng
12 Epithet for
Elizabeth I
13 Israel ( var )
14 l)eautiful
woman
(colloq J
15 St Anthony's cross
I&amp; Boy
17 Ethan Allen's
brother
18 Wreathe
20 Viti!
dreamland
21 Discovery
22 Chills and
fever
23 Dermal
aperture
24 Red planet
25 Infrequent
26 Curse
27 E:ft
28 Turn over
31 Indian
cymbals
32 Sununer
(Fr.)
33 Nigenan
city
34 Tropical
rodent
36 Vase handle
37 Provided
with instruments
36 Along in
years
39 Hold out
to Trust

II

A-Bid fou r spades. Only a

'

eeward would stop short of game oa
tb1s bicldiq sequtact. •

TODAY'S QUESTION

Instead· of b1ddmg three
diamonds your partner has ra1s·
ed you to three spades Wbjt do
you do now ? '
••

'

'I

by THOMAS JOSEPH

,

B DO-F amrty Theatre " The County of Monte Cristo" 3.4.15.
Nrght Stalker 6, 13, Stowaway to the Moon 8, 10, Wa sh mglon
W eek m Rev1ew 20,33

&amp;u.wd'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work lt:

7 30- Por ler Wago ner 3; Pop' Goes the Country 8; New Candrd
Camera 6 . Treasure Hunt 10 , To Tell the Truth 13 , Black
Persp ect ive on the News 20, 33

n

9

• a&amp;'5

septic
JUST

Your afternoon w1l l be more lnteresttng tha n the earl1er part
of th e day Somethmg of per sonal pride will be achreved

Don't hes1 tate to d1scard an unworkable plan 11 a better Idea
comes to mrnd prov1ded It
doesn 1 cost anyth1ng out -of pocket

GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20) A

",

competent

SCORPIO (Del. 24-Nov 22)

ARIES (Morch 21-Aprlt 19)

solutron you re seek tng lor a
problem con frontmg yo u wtll
come hke'a bolt out of th e blue
Don t srt on the remedy

allies

41iK 3
• .J 10 7
t K 72
,j.J974 3

•

tank , good blacktop road ,
close to mtne ar~s

ITTLE ORPHAN

For Friday, Jan. 10, 1975

moves !han In lhe put. Also
you 'll have more

•

319.95

Free

15, Av1at1 on W eather 33

WIN
,_A_T_e=R-=-=Io=-o=e=

'

MAIN!

Lucy Show 8

BOnan za 15
~
5 oo-FB I 3, Merv Gnff1n 4, Andy Gr1fflf h 8, M1ster Rogers '

But Many New Items Added

SOFA, FAIR SHAPE
SOFA, WOOD ARM
GOLD SOFA
GOLD SOFA BE
3-2 PC LIVING ROOM SUITES, ea

6,

LIBRA (Sepl. 23·0CI. 23) Thrs

Tbe Question of Toy Guns
Dear Helen:
My uncle gave all tbe small boys in our family lily guns for
ChriStmas. When I said, "That's noway to dlsco urage VIOI ence I"
he sa1d tbat we live in a VIolent world . so long as there !If• wars
and cr!fne, kids had better learn there are ways to protect
themselves. Besides, "cops and ,robbers" never, hurt HIM as a
Child.
What do you think about giving kids roy weapons on the day
that proclaims "peace and goodwill wward all men'" - "BAN
THE BANG " BEN
Dear Ben :
These days, I wouldn't give a gun as a ChriStmas gift.
(Although back when our sons were growmg up, they had the1r
share of cap piStols, lwlJilun cowboy ootfil&lt;l, etc. - without
damage to the1r psyches )
Psychologists say that playmg w1th a lily gun goesn 't equip a
ch1ld for a career of violence. Rather, "children who can handle
playthmgs of an aggresSive nature through unagmative play
seem to be less g1ven w actual VIolence than children whose

not so active

.lltn.10,1t75
Your amb i tion• will be
fu rthered faster thla year. You11
make more adventureaome

IS a good day to get ttungs
finalized Clean-u p Sttuattons
so !hat nex t week th ere are no
loose end s

By Helen aDd Sue Bottel

are

•

specula tive will ca pture your
auenuon over the next few
days Proceed ca utiously

Rap

+++

6 oo-sunnse Sem1nar 4 Sunrrse Semester 10

Blown Into Walls
and Attics
Free Estimates

CHAIRS

Generatio~

That's what they say -HELEN

6 25-Farm Report 13

CREMEANS CONCRE TE de

EXCAVATING dozer load er
sept1c
and backnoe work
tanks mstalled dump tru c ks
and lo boys for hir e , Will halJI
frli drrt , top so il , l 1mestone &amp;
graveL Ca ll Bob or Roger
Jeffers. day pllone 992 7089 ,
night phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 tfc

··

unagmatlons

Insulation

PIANO
tun1ng and reparr.
Charles Scot! . 992 37 18
1'2 13 32t p

dt~mp

8 jo-The Waltons 8,10
9 OG-Streets of San Franc1sco 6,13 M ovie 20 , Pathf inder 33

NOVELTY J~BRIC
&amp; CRAFTS

NEIGLER
BUILDING SU P
PLY FOR REMODELING
AND K IT CHEN CAB IN ETS
CAL L GUY NEIGHLER
RAC I NE OHI O PHONE 949
3604
12 19 26tc

tanks , excavat 1ng
truck Phone 7A2 3742
12 20 26tc

: venture In Amenca 6, 13 , R1k.k1 Trkk1 Tavt 8,10 , Canad Not
1 For Sale 20, Cabel l County lnservr ~e 33

Jan . 16th

Enroll Now

SE PTI C
TANKS
cleaned
Modern San1tat1on , 992 3954 or
99 2 7349
9 18 tfc

C BRAOFOR D. Allc t 1oneer
Comp lete Serv1ce
Phone 949 3821 or 949 316 1
Ractn e Oh 10
Cntl Bradford
5 1 tfc

' 10 , To Teillhe Truth 13 , Get Smarl15.
8 ~NBC News Specral " 01 Wofl\en and Men" 3,4, 15 , Ad

NI LL ln m or cu t tr ees or
shrubbery ,
clean
out
basements , attiCS , Pt e 949
322 1 or 742 444 1
12 IS 26tc

4, 000 lbs mmtmum t ron t
ALL CASH FOR YOUR
--------------spring capacrty
2 BEDROOM tla rler ad ul ts
HOME. LET US SELL IT
11.000 lbs
mm 1murn rear
on I'll Phone 992 3324
spnng capacity
9\12-2259 or 992-2568
1 9 ttc CLOSE OUT on n ew Zig Zag
Auxll•ary rear spr ings
sewmg mach 1n es For sewrng
Combmat10n rear &amp; f ront
1 HOUSE unfurnished , 1 rooms
stretch fabrtcs , buttonho l es ,
d trec trona l srgnal ! tghts
In
and bath n1ce Phone 992 2780
fancy desrgns , etc
Patnf
TraffiC hazo!'lrd SWitCh
or 992 J-432
slightly blem ished Chorce of
Dua l electriC horns
carry 1ng case or sewl n~
1 9 ttc
Hettter &amp; defroster
stand S49 80 cash or terms
2 speed w 1ndshteld w1pers &amp;
11val/able Phone 992 7755
washers
TRA
I
LER
space
,
2
mt
les
from
12 18 tfc
Age 8 or Older
Power Sleermg
Harr 1son v1tle Phone 7.t2 382 1 ~----- _ ~ -- - - - - 900 X 20 10 ply stee l belted
rad 1al front t 1res hrghWay
tread , 7" rims
4 ROOM
furniShed IP f, 2
900 x \0 10 ply steel belled
bedrooms . adults Qn l y Phone J BEDROOM house, $500 down ,
rad•o!'ll rear trres on &amp; off tread
991 2676
$90 month Phone 992 3975 or
$8500 00 - Two bedroom frame
7" r1ms
992 2571
1 5 41 c
111 Court St., Pomeroy
Bath. paneling, gas F A
home
One addit tonat 7" nm
1 3 tfc
furnace
, basemen t , and city
Phone 992-2156
Cast spoke wheels
F-URNISHED
apartment , - - - - - - - - - - - - - Hea~y duty clutch
water
ult l lties furnrshed , su rtable 7 ROOM house, bath and 1h,
Hea~y duty
brake booster
tor two work1ng me, or
excellent ne,ghborh ood , wall
wlll'r 7" rear brakes
r-et1red coup le Lr ving room ,
to w;t/1 carpetmg, large lot.
LARGE
company
tn need of full
s2o,ooo.oo - New 3 bedroom
Heavy duty bumper &amp; f ro nt
kr tchen 1 stlower and bath On
~araoe. reasonable ut!l1t1es
time personnel No layoffs .
home. l iving roo m 13x19,
two hooks
main
highway,
Mason,
w
Va
Call
992
3877
poSSible earnmg up to S250
L H &amp; R H Sr west cost
Phone 773 5147
beautiful k1tchen, ceramic tile
1 9 tf_£_
weekly
Good
future
m rrrors
10 27 ttc
A~a t lable for nght person
bath Attached garage and
70 amp battery
Call 675 3490 tor appotnrment
almost
one acre
50 amp or la r ger alternator
t -9 6tc 4 RM turn tShed apt. close to
Cab grab handles , L &amp; R
Powell's Super Va lu , phone
Full depth foam seat
99l 3658
$3,000.00- Old onelloor s room'
WAITRESSES needed , apply '"
Heavy duty factory re1n
11 20-lfc
person Crow s Steak House .
house wrth nat. gas, and city
forced frame
=-..:z-- =...,---- - -...... - - - - Pomeroy
water on n 1ce corner lot
Color Omaha Orange
3
and
-4
ROOM
furn
ished
anG
1 7 tfc
Proposal No 2
unfurn 1shed
apartments
Same as proposal No 1
• ~h one 992 -543.t
~th and 112, excellent 512,500 00 - Older 4 bedroom
" 12 tfc
neighborhood,
wall-to- home, modern bath, nat. gas
Brdder to furn1s h the1r own
County Extension Agent PRIVATE meetlnliJ room for
b1d forms a,d subm 1t b1ds for
furnace , new block garage,
wall carpeting, storm
&amp;ny organ ization , phone 992·
each proposal as numbered
MARTHA GUILKEY
windows, large lot, 3 barn, and large lot
3975
, The frcm t of the e,velope
enclosmg the brds must be
3 11 tfc
car garage, reasonable
BUILDING LOTS - Several
Will Guest On
markfld " Trucks ''
utilities.
FURNIS HED apt Adults only
The County Comm lssroners
locations. $1500 00 up.
M iddlepor t Pho,e 992 3874
may accept the lowest b 1d or
LIST IT WITH US FOR BEST
11 -l.ttlc
select the best bid for the m
RESULTS
tended purpose , and reserve the
UNF URNISHED-h;;-u,e , - • L..,_ _ _ _ _ _..:_..:_:....::___J
r1ght to rejec t any or all brds , or
rooms and bath , 165fl Lmcoln
any part thereof
BUILDING lot, 80 ft frontage
Heights Phone 992 - 387~
'
by 165ft The sec ond lot on left
11 1~ tfc
Me1gS Co
on Rfvervrew Drive, L1nco1n '
Comm•ssr.oners
Hill , Pomeroy, Ohio If in ·
TRAILER space. 2 milts from
terest~ call H2 3230after 5 p
Pomeroy , Rt 143, Phone 992
Martha ChamberS .
m
5858
Cl erk
10-17-tfc
10 27 tfc
Ill 9, 16. ?tc

Carrier Wanted

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp;HEATING
Complete plumbing &amp;

SEP TIC

Phone 9,92 -2181

2 BEDROOM trail er Phone 992 RED bone coon hound , c~oc• • v
bed and dresser Phone 949
3975 or 992 257 1
3221
1 3 tf c
1 7 6tc
5 ROOM unfurnished ~'louse
basement and yard
325 ELECTROLUX Sw eeper de luxe
model
Complete wtth all
Sprrng Ave nue R ef eren ces
clea nrng a ttac hments and
Phone 992 7660
uses paper ba gs Sl 1ghtty used
1 8 tf c
bul cleans and looks li ke new
Wi ll se ll for SJ7 25 cash or
COU NTR Y Mobile Hom e Park ,
terms ava.lallle Phone 992
Rt 33. ten m iles north of
7755
Pomeroy
Larg e lots w1lh
12 18 tfc
concre t e patros , Sidewal k s,
runne rs
and
off
street
1 - MALE hog , and 4 - 21h
parJc.rng Pnone 992 7419
mos old ptgs Phone 992 3183
1'2 31 ttc
1 7 Jtc

-------------ROOM furn ls Med apt and

SEWING AND
CRAFT CLASSES

HEIJ. ·

Qlr- Trulh or Cons 3,4; Bowlrng lor Dollars 6 Whal 's My lrne

8, News, 10 , L et's Make a Deal 13 To Be Announced 15
r-Two,Way Street 20 , Nova 33
7 ~o-Hollywood Squares 3, 4 Fred Taylor Baske tball 6 , New
, Prrce IS R1ght 8. Cpnsumer Surv1val K 1t 20, Wild Ktngdom

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WALL paper hang1ng and all
mlenor f101 Sh1ng Phone 742
5081
12 29 121p

r
FOMEROY LANDMARK
• • : Jilek W C1rsey , Mgr .

FEMA LE AKC YorkShire
T~ rrler pups
wormed and
t emporary vaccmat10n , 1
weeks old SIOO each Phone
9854106
1 7 6t c

7

d rtligan's Is 6, 'rattleta tes 8. Ssame St 20,33 , Mov1e " Th e

19 73 COMET , 19 000 mt les
automatic tranSmiSSIOn. like
new Ca ll any lime, 667 3442
1 5 12tp

Pets f.or Sale

-

-

new fenders and pa int, duel
stack exhaust
6 CVItnder
runs go('Jd Ext r a, 327 goes 1
too Phone 992 5301
1 7 3tc

------------AUCTIO N ,
Thursday

CA SH pa1d t or all makes and
models of mobrle homes
Phone area code 614 423 9531
4 1J ltc

For the Lowest

i964C H EV Y-f7~k, S hort - bed ,

SHOOTING match, Racme Gun
Cl ub Sunday 1 p m Assort ed
meats and factory chok e guns
only
12 22 tfc

J UNK c1utos
comp lete and
d el1ver ed to our yard We p1ck
up auto bodres an d buy all
ktnds of scrap metals and
~ron R1der s Sa l vage. Sf Rt
124 Rt 4, Pomeroy Oh10
Cal l 992 5468
10 17 lfc

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING

_XCAVA TING ,
dozer ,
backhoe
and
d1tcher,
water11ne , f ooters . dra1ns .
roads, and brush cleantng, no
JOb too small , no weather too
bad Char l es R Ha tf1eld , Rt 1
Rutland 0 PhOn e 742 -6092
1 7 261 c

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

The Socia l Room w111 be open
to all members, fam11y ; and
guests every Monday nig ht

OLD furn •ture, Ice boxes brass
beds , or complete households
Wr tte M 0 M rll er , Rt 4,
Pomeroy , Ohio Call 992 7760
10 7 74

949-3832 or 843·2667

finish . spotless Interior

other Monday at 8 00 p m

Wanted To Buy

S299S

Custom Deluxe, 8' Fleetslee, 350 V 8, auto,, P S, radto,
15,500 m1Jes, loca l 1 owner, tire s show li ttle wear, gray

Meetmgs will be hel d everr

1 1 tfc

51695

1971 CHEVROLET2 TON
$349$
Cab &amp; chassis - 102" Cab to axle. 350 V 8 engine. 15,000 lb.

EFFECTIVE 1·6·75

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

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCTION
PHONE.

81lO; Zoom 20 . What Now, America 33

1

.

V 8 engine, automatic tran s, power steering, radio, spor t
custom cab, good tires , green &amp; wh1te fln 1sh.

NOTICE TO
EAGLE
CLUB MEMBERS

1

Pomeroy
Motor (o.

6 ~D-;NBC News 3 3,4,15. ABC News 13 , Bewt lched 6, CBS News

.

1970FORD8' WIDEBODY

CO N SIG NMENT S wel come at
P&amp;J Auct1on
215 No r th
~ ~ cond Middleport
I 9 JOtc

, Children w1th Spec1al Needs 33

Business Services
.I '

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

J

THURSD'AY, JANUARY 9, 1975
6·£lll=-News 3,, .8.1 0.13,1 5 ABC News 6, Etec Co 20. Teachrng

Auto Sales

Notice

FOR your
Cosmettcs
99251 13

Tel~vision ·Log

9,;Aif97~5~1AMIAMIAMIAMWiiWWWWWWWWMIM8M88MIMIMIMIM

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I \

�.. .

•

'.
10 - The Daily Sentlni!l, Ml&lt;ldleporl-!'omeroy, u , 1 nursaay. Jail ·•. mo

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••
•'

Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Jan. 4, lll75
SI'EERS - 250 Ill 300 Ills 2021 75, 300 to 400 lbs 21 to 24 50,
400 to 500 lbs. 18 to 26, 500 11&gt;600
lbs. 19 to 28, 600 to 700 Ills 17 50
Ill 23.50, 700 lbs. and over 20 Ill
32 50
HEIFER CALVES - 250 Ill
300lbs. l7to22, 300to 400 lbs 18
to 23, 400 to 500 lbs 20 to 22, 500
to 600lbs.l7to 21,600 to 700 lbs.
16 to 25, 700 lbs and over 19 Ill
30
STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS (By
the head J - Stock Cows 115 to
165, Stock Cows and Calves 140
to 195, Stock Bulls 125 to 200,
Baby Calves 5 to 30; (by the
pound ) Canners &amp; Cutters
Cows 12 Ill 17.50, Holstem Cows
16 50 to 21 50, Commercial
Bulls ( 1,000 lbs. and over) .20 to
24
VEAL CALVES - Tops 220
Ills Ill 250 49 Ill 58 50, Me&lt;hum
200 Ills. to 300 36 to 40 30, Culls
36 down. Choice feeder pigs
12.50 to 30

Mrs Addle Petrel and Mr
and Mrs Ben Petrel and son,
Trevor spent New Year's Day
at Jackson with Mr and Me&gt;
Jack Feuerbacher and the!f
guest, Mrs Robert 1Ruth Ann
MARKET REPORT
Petrel ) Feuerbacher of
Pleasrutt, W. Va.
Point
Knoxville , Tenn
Jaoua ry t, 1975
Mrs Agnes Pncc of Athens,
SLAUGHTER SI'EERS
Mrs M1ke Kucsma of Gahanna
Standard 80().1100 lbs. 2.1-2.1 75
and Clifford Beaver of Grove
SLAUGHER COWS
City spent Sunday w1th Mrs
Commercial 19, Utility 17-19,
Hattie Paynter.
Canner &amp; Cutter 15.75-19.20.
, Hazel Carnahan and Frances
VEAL - Choice &amp; Pr101e 190Foster spent Tuesday and New
225 lbs 45, 22&amp;-265 lbs 50
Year's Day w1th Mrs. Loe
HOGS - U.S .1-3 190-240 Ills
Tisdale at Buckeye l.ake.
39-40, 241).260 lbs. 40, Sows, U S
Rev. Walter Bikacsan
l-3 3()().500 Ills. 30 56.35, Boars
reports his mother, who was
300-800 lbs. 23.$-25.65, Pigs (by
Injured in a fall, has improved
head) 21).40 lbs. 4-10, 40-60 Ills
remarkably and dmng very
15-20, 60 lbs. plus 22-24.50.
well . He apprecwtes the
SLAUGHTER LAMBS - Ch.
concern of everyone.
&amp; Prime 91).115 lbs. (Blue) 36.
Mr . and M·s
Rein me
YEARLING STEERS - 700
B1kacsan of Athens, Tenn. lbs. up 22-24.75.
spent the weekend w1th h1s
YEARLING HEIFERS parents, Rev and Mrs Walter Good &amp; ChOice 50()..MO Ills. 13Bikacsa,n and Sharon
22, 80().750 lbs. 26.
Mr. and Mrs Jerry Powell
SI'EER CALVES - 301).400
spent several days 1n Ills . 13-21 50
Columbus, guests of Mr and
BULL CALVES - 40().$0
Mrs. Grover Powell
lbs. 13-22.50.
Mrs. Manan Kn1ghtstep of
HEIFER CALVES - 300-400
Columbus was a weekend guest Ills. 19-20.25.
of her mother, Mrs Lavuua
BABY CALVES (By Head)
Simpson, who has been Ill, - Beef 40, Holstem &amp; Brown
accompanied her home for an Swiss 15-20.
indefimte VISit.
Mr. and Mrs Austm Wolfe,
Jerry and Aimee, aod Mrs
LEGAL NOTICE
1ce •s hereby Q•ven that
Mayme Custer of Syracuse and th eNolannual
meeltng o f the
Mr and Mrs Roger H1ll and stocktlolder s of The Fa rmers
and S~v mg s Company of
Scotty were holiday guests of 2Bank
11
West
Second
Str ee t
Mr. and Mrs . Jerry Powell
Pomeroy , Oh1o, will be hel d a t
office of Slltd bank. 1n
Mr Steve Cleland returned !he
Pomeroy Ohio. accordmg to 1ts
to his imployment In Alabama by l aws on the lh1r d Wed
of J&lt;tnuary 1975 at 4 p
alter spendmg the holidays nesday
m for th e purpose of elect mg
with hiS fam1Iy and hiS parents, d1rectors and tfle tr ~nsact,on o f
other business as may
Mr. and Mrs Frank Clel•nd such
properly co me before Sol id
Mrs. Lottie Bradford spent meeting
Paul E K loes
Christmas with Mr and Mrs
Secretary
Brian ·Bradford at Wooster. Dec 19 26 . Jan 2 9
They re'!Urned her to her home
on Frilfly and vls1ted w1th the
· BOARD OF
Clarence Bradfords
ME IGS COUNTY
COMM IS SIONERS
Mr and Mrs. Ralph Badgley
spent the weekend- wtth Mr
Notlce to
Motor · V eh• c le
and Mrs Brian Simpson and Dealers
In accordance w1th Sec 307 86
children in Baltimore and Mr ol the OhiO Rev 1sed Code ,
l ed bids wil l be rece,ved by
and Mrs. Steve Badgley and sea
The Meigs
County
Com
Kelll In Columbus
missioners m their oft1ce 1n the
Court House , Pom eroy Oh10
Cntt Bradford, Jr ., or 45769
, untll 10 00 A M on
~ Worthington spent the weekend January '28th 1975 , at WhiCh
time and place the b•ds will be
' with Mr and Mrs. A C. opened
and read aloud tor tne
Bradford
following vei11Cies

Laurel Cliff
News Notes
By Ber1ha Parker
Sabbath School attendance
Jan. 5 at the Free MethodiSt
Church was 87 Chmr members
present was 14, attendance at
worship service was 65
Rev Cecil W1se, Chester,
Rev. and Mrs Morris Wolfe,
Racine, Mr and Mrs Phtll
WISe , McConnelsvUie, attended Sunday mormng ser-

vice
MISS Barbara Klem , who 1s
attendmg college m Grayson.
Ky., spent two weeks wtth her
parents, Mr and Mrs . Cliff
Klein
Mrs. Georgia Diehl, Charles
Anthony Diehl visited recently
with Mr. and Mrs Guy Russell,
Warren and Rev and ·Mrs.
Lewis Diehl : Woodsfield.
Mr. and Mrs. Harmon Fox
left Sunday morning for
Fllrlda to spend the wmter
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell left
for their home in Indiana after
spending Christmas at the1r
hooie here.
The hymn smg will be at the
local church Jan. 10, 7:30p.m.
insle.iid of Jan . II
Mrs. Mary Atkins, Portsmouth , Mr. John Evans,
Jackson , Tenn., Mrs Janet
Hoadlln, girls, McArthur, Mr.
Kenneth Evans, Mr. Edward
Evans visited recei~tly with
Mrs. Carmon Evans.
One hwnli'ed twenty persons
attended services at the local
church Sunday, Jan. 5.

Mr. Mark Stahl, Stockdale,
Mr. and Mrs. William Perry,
Atbens, Yisited recently With
Mr . and Mrs. Norman

.Schaefer.
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11-: T!lj! Daily Sentmel, Middleport..,. mer~y, 0., Thursday, Jan

M::=~=)l For Fast R(esults Use ·T he Sentinel Classifieds

By Mrs. Francis Morris
Mr . Maunce Lott 1s a
surgical pat1ent at Holzer
Medical Center ,
2nd Lt Steven Schroeder, a
meteorologiSt w1th the Air
Force, Omaha, Neb , 1s on 10
days leave at the home of h1s
parents 1n Columbus and
visited h1s grandparents, Mr
and Mrs Franci s Moms
Saturday.
Lt and Mrs Kelly Weller
and daughter, Jenmfer , of
Chandler, Am , and Mr and
Mrs. Leon Jordan, Momca and
Matt of Thornville, spent the
Christmas holidays w1th the1r
parents , Mr
and Mrs
Clar.ence Bradford Other
guests on Chmtmas Day were
Mr . and Mrs Dwighl Oliver of
Pomeroy Lt Weller IS
statiOned at W1Ihams Air

Force Base, Phoemx, Anz

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1

Racine
Social Events

:

,

B1ds must be subm1 tted m two
propo sa l s, each proposal to
meet
th e co nd lt1ons and
speclttcattons as follows
Proposal No 1
On 1975 Model dlJmp truck
with dt~m p body 108 · X 30 · head
and ta i l gate w1th center door'"
gate •
H eavy duty 8" hOI St W1lh
P T 0 &amp; levers
:\.~
cab protector w tth 'l'
WlnQS
Cab l 1ghts , 4 corner ligh ts &amp; 6
reflectors
Mud fi8PS
Wheel base 72' cab to a&gt;~ l e or
su .table fo r body
'24 000 lbs G V W or h eavter
7,000 tb s I Beam fro nt axle
18,500 lbs 2 speed rear axle
5 speed synchromesh t rans
m 1SS10n d irec t rn hlt /1
340 cu 1n V 8 gas eng 1nl' or
filrg er

M cD an1el s Custom Butcher,ng
State and Federal 1nspect1on
K ill beets and hogs Phone
Ed1 lh M e Dan1el , (304) 882
3224
1 9 Jtc

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

AUCTIO N SALE . sta rtmg
F r 1day Jan 17 at 7, p m 215
N
Second , Middleport At
P&amp; J Odds and Ends
I 9 SIC

2 speed rear axle, good 825:.:20 t~res , clea n &amp; solid cab

1973 CHEVROLET

POMEROY, OHIO
WHOLESALE Valve, 1972 Veg a
wagon , rad 1a1s deluxe 1n
terror , rad•o 51 595 f 1rm Ca l!
8 CHANNEL Bearca t Scanner
992, 7805
and 1200 W1nchester shotgun
1 8 .tic
Phone 949 4573
1 7 5tc
1972 SU PER Beetle VolkS - - - - - - - - - - - - - wagen Phone 992 3981
(
1 8 10tc 19 72 GT 380 suzuki Phone 949
- -- - - - -- - - - - - 2828 after 5 p m
1966 CORVAIR,good body , good
1 9 Jtc
t 1re s ru,s farr , uses Oil $200,
or trade for somethmg of J HOLSTE I N cows and I herter
Phone 949 2179
equal va l ue Cal l eventng s,
985 3545
1 9 Jtc
1 8 5tp
1968 CHEVELLE 327
4 sp FOR SALE or trade on p•ckup
or van
19 67
1 ton
In
posttlve t rac t ton, rear end
ternat ronal
truck.
w 1fh
good body and Interior, t650
alumtnum f urni tu r e van, 8
Phone 991 7489
ply lrres , P s, P B , 50,000
1 8 4tp
m iles Phone99 2 3509or see at
308 Page St , M iddleport
197 1 DODGE Coronet, 4 dr 318
1 6 6tc
motor automatiC green Good ------~ --..----gas mileage, good ru,, ,ng . ,.._ _ __._ _ _ _ _ _oo&gt;J
cond 1tlon Pho,e 99'2 5771
'I
1 8 4tc 1

For Sale

SHOOTING Ma tc h Ra c1 ne Gun
Club Sunday Ja n 12, 1 p m

e 4t c

O PENING soon , Thanks to you
Novelty F abr 1c and Cra fts 1n
Belp( e 15 e~tpandmg Soon
Evellyn
wd l
open
her
Barga1n Cr aft Cellar' wh 1ch
will be lam packed full ot
ba rga•ns Wa t ch thiS paper
tor openrng dale
1 8 4IC

IN COM E Tax Pre)&gt;ared both
Federa l and State Ta&gt;-;es wrll
be don e by &amp;ppo,ntments
only P l ease phone 992 2272 or
see Mrs Wanda Eblm Lat~r e l
Cl•ff Rd , Pomeroy , Oh10 _
1 3 301c
'Ot l of M 1nk '
Pnone BROWN S

and
Sa turd ay night. 7 p m at
Mason Auction , Horton St In
Mason , w Va Cons tgnmeMs
welcome Phon e (304) 773
547 1
10 3 tfc

CAS H SSSU.FOR J UN K CARS
Comp FRYE S TRUC K an d
AUTO
P ARTS
Ru t land
Phone 742 6094
1 2 26tp
WANTED old upnghl p1anos,
any cond llton
Pay1ng $10
eac h f~r s t floor only Wr1 t e to
and gtve d1rect1ons to W ttten
P1ano Co , Box 188 , Sard1s.
Oh 10 439•16
I 7 6tp

Tire Prices

flfthe Area

1974 CUTLASS Su preme Am
Fm , tape a c , many extras .
prt ce red uced
Phone 992
9981
1 7 3tc

It's

1972 CHEV ROLET K1ngswood
Estate stat1on wagon. 3 seats,
excellent
con d 1tl on
See
Donald Smilh, Racine or ca ll
949 5194
1 1 3t c

BEND TIRE CENTER'

1973 OLOS Cutla ss S Excell en t
condttron with 25 ,000 actual
miles 350 engrne with p s,
p b , atr cond 1t1on lng
a,d
super sport wh-eels Can De
seen at the co rn er of Church
an d Hubbard Stree t s 1n
Syracuse Ohio or call 992 391 4
afte r 5 p m
I 7 611)

GROCERY Dusln ess for sale,
Bulld1ng for sa te or lease
Phone 773 5618from 8 30p m
to 10 p m for appo,,tm ent
J 10 ttc

1966 CHEVY I mpala 327, good
cond• l ion Phone 949 .4114
1 7 5fp

772-5881

M:to;on .

W va

COLON I AL MAPLE stereo
radiO , am lm , 4 speakers, 4
speed automat1c changer
Ba l ance t116 78
Use our
budget terms Call 992 3965
1 6 tfc

51 EGLER and
MONOGRAM

FUEL OIL
HEATERS

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

Employment Wanted
REMODELING
plumbl,g
heatrng , ;~nd all typ es o f
genera l
r- epai r
Work
gua r anteed 20 ye ars ex
penence Phone 992 2409
1 3 12tc

From a shelf to a house.
Parntmg , stdtng, roofing,
paper hangrng , ktfchen
cabmets, expert carpeltng,

etc

NE 00 chcl!r can1ng and fur
n1ture r elin1shmg rea sonab l y
prrced Phone 949 2189
1 } 5tp
~'--

l.qst
RED 1R I SH setter wrth wh rte on
ches t rn Lahgsvdle area
Reward Ca l l 742 5909
1 5 6t,P
---------~~--

RED lr~sh Se if er W1fh While on
ch~s t 1n LangSv i lle area
Reward Phone 742 5909
1 5 6tp

For

Priced for Quick Sale
1 New Wood Burning
HEATER-139.95
~

~ent

READY

MIX CO NCRET'E- (Ii'
lrvered r1ght to your pro1er
F ast
and
easy
Fr~e
est,m ate s Phone 992 3284
Goeglem Ready Mtx Co
Middlepor t Oh16
6 30 lfc

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

.t

bath , ut11lt1es pa1d , No
c l'r lldren or pels P11one 992
5810 or 814 East Ma~n ,
Pomeroy
'
156tp

Mobile Homes For Sale

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

1n M1d
TRA IL ER for rent or sa l e, 3 FURNISHED APT
dleport. util 1tres pa 1d Phone
bedrooms , unf..,rrushed ,
992 3205 befor e 1 In eventng
utd11 1es Paid located at new
1 9 3tc
Mobile
H ome
Park
1n
Burl1nghc1m Phone 99 2 775 1
12 31 tt c TWO BEDROOMS Forced a1r
hea L
storm
wrndows ,
ba se ment
driveway ,
twail allte after January 15
Call 992 3381 or 992 3,.5 3
1 9 6tp

Help Wanted

SEW ING MACHINE Repatrs
serv tce, al l mak.e.s. 992 2284
Tne Fabr1c Shop , Pomeroy ,
Authonzed S1nger Sales a,d
serv1ce We sharpen Sc1ssors
3 29 tfc
DOZER work , land clea r~ng by
the acre, h ourly or co, tra ct
Farm ponds , roads
etc
Large dozer and operator
w1 th over 20 years ex
penenCe Pvllrn s EKcava tmg ,
Pomeroy , Oh10 Phon e 992
2478
12 19 tic

TAP PAN Gascookstove , wh1te,
See through o~e n , broil er ,
excellent cond rtron . S25 Call
992 7147 any t rme betw een 7
a m and 12 noetn
1 73 tp
HONDA 100. good condr f•on.
se11 1ng reasonabl e Phone 992
2502
1 7 3tc
1957 CHE VY pa rts
NEW
Lak ewood trect•on bars . hi
la cker a~r shocks, hooker
headers , wrth 3" collectors for
small block
Cal! 992 3.496
after 6 p m BEST OFFER
10 17 lfc

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cNEW HAVEN

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

-------------1~ ••c Real Estate For Sale

The Daily Sentinel

7ROOM

- HOUSE

Kaleidclcope

CALL 992-3877

FRIDAY

·AT 10:15.AM

ON WMPO

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

~tarting

HOME
Im provement
and
Repa1r Serv 1ce Anyth,,g
ftxed around the h ome, from
roo f to basement You wr11
like our work and rates
Phone 742 508 1
1229tfc

9

Jo-Benjamrn Frank tm Th e Rbe! 8.10

10 ~0G-Harry

0 6, 13 Woman 33

10 3D-Caught n the Act 33
11 DO- News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15,20. ABC News 33
11 3D-Johntiy Carson 3,4, 15 W 1de World SpeCial 13 FB I 6 ,
Mov1e " Ma chrne Gun M cCa m " 8, M ov1e ' Dark' Waters ' 10.
Janak 1 33

Belpre, Ohio
Ph . 423-5061

12 3D-Wrde World Specral 6
1 00- Tomorrow 3,4 , N ews 13

Fire Retardant

FRIDAY , JANUARY 10,1975

6 JG-- Frve Mmutes to Llv@ By 4 New s 6; B 1ble Answers 8 .

Pub lic Affatrs 10, Blue Rrdge Quartet 13
6 35-Columbus Today 4,

6 45- Mornrng Reporl 3, Farmt1me

10
7 DO-Today 3,4,15 , AM Amer rca 13.A M Amerrca 6 , CBS

Lfny Lavender

News 8, 10

8 00- Lass re 6. Capt Kangaroo 8, Popey e 10 Sesame St 33
8 25-Capt Kangaroo 10
8 3D-Brg Val ley 6 •

Phone 992-3993
Daily After 5:00

9 OQ-A M 3 Paul D1xon 4, Phil Donahue 7.15. Bullw1nkle 8,
Cartoons 12, Mornmg wit h D J lJ

P&amp; J
Hom e
Matnt enance,
h ea tmg
co o l1 ng , refrtg ,
plumb1ng, elec t rtca l ap
pl1ances We serv rce and
r epa ir an ytt ng 1n t h e hom e or
bt~sl n es~
215 N
Seco nd ,
Mtddleporl Phone 992 3509
1 9 30t c

9 25- Chuck Wh1le Reporls 10
9 3G---Not For Wo m~n Only 3, 01nah 6 Hazel 8 Tattletal es 10,
New Zoo Revue 13

10 QO-Celebrr ty Sweepstakes 3,15, Joker 's Wrld 8, 10 . Movre

"Gtr ls of Pl easure l s l an~" 13
10· JG-Wheel of Fourtune 3, 15, Phrl Donahue 4 Gambi t 8,10

II DO-Hrgh Rollers 3, 15 , One L1fe to L1ve 6 Now You See It

FURN I T URE

Upholstertng ,
rates,
free
'eSt!m at es.
p1ckup
and
de / 1ve r y , p rompt se r vtce
Mowrey's Upho lste r y , Potn t
P le asant w Va Phone 675
4154
1231 26t p

a. 10

~ Reason ab le

11 9D- Hotlywoo&lt;l Squares 3,4.15, Brady Bunch 6, Love of Lr fe
8, 10 , Sesame

St 33

II 55-CBS News B Dan Imel 's Wor ld 10 , New s 13
12 OD-Ja ckpot 3, 15 , Password Al l Stars 6 13 . Bob Braun's 50 SO
Club 4, News 8.10
12.3D-Biank Check 3,1 5 Sptrl Second 6,13 , Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10 , To Be Announced 33

12 46'--E tec Co 33
12 ~ NBC News 3, 15
I DO-News 3, All My Chrldren 6, 13 . Phil Donahue 8, Young
ifeslless 10 . Not For Women Only 15

&amp;

1 JIJ.Ill.How To St~rv 1ve a Marriage 3,4, 15, Let's Make a Deal
6. 13 ; As t he World Turns 8 10 , $10,000 Pyram1d 6, 13 , Gi.J1dmg

t;:ight 8,10
2 30- Doctors 3,4,15, Big Showdown 6,13 , Edge of Nrght 8, 10
3 O!h-Another World 3,4,15, General Hosp rfal 6,13; Pt ce is Rrght

ll ~ered
Monday thro ugh
SatlJrday
and
even1ngs
Phone 446 1142
6 13 tfc

8,10 ,

Ascent of Man 20

3 30-,f{)ne Life to Live 13. Lucy Show 6 Match Game 8,1 0
4 ()()4.Mr Cartoon 3, I Dream of Jeannie 4, Somerset 15,

EXCE L SI OR Salt Works , East
Ma m St , Pom eroy All ki nds
o f sal t , water pellets , water
nuggets, b lock salt and own
Ohro R 1ver Salt Phon e 992

3891

6 5 tfc
CA RPET mstallatton 51 25 per
yard Phone R 1chard West,
843 2667
12 24 26tp'

-------- -----Real Estate For sale

-----------

~jrds and the Bees" 10, .M1ke Doug l as 13

4 3D-Bewrlched 3, Jackpot 4, Mod Squad

Lots of Items Sold Out-

l'{e ig hborhood 20,33; Raymond Burr 13
5 3tl--'-News 6 . Beverly Hil lbr tlres B Hodgepodge Lodge. 20,
l:rar ls West 15, Etec Co 33
6 oo~ News 3,4,8.10.13. 15. ABC News 6, Elec Co 20, Per

(All Items Subject to Prior Sale)
WAS
PATCHWOR ~_R OCKER _ _ __ _ _ _ ,69 95
I GREEN CHAIR
19 95

SALE
39.95
5.00

49 95
7500
79 95
39 95
100 00

sOnallty &amp; Behavioral Developmen t 33

6 30-NBC News 3,4,15 ; ABC News 13, Bewitched 6, CBS News
8;10 . Zoom 20
7 0&lt;1-"Trulh or Cons 3,4, Bowlmg for Do llars 6; WCHS TV
Report 8. Aviat1on Weal her 20, News 10 , Jrmmy Dean 13, I

10.00
5.00
65.00
25.00
50.00

3-TABLES,soltdoak, atl
9995
WOOD WARDROBE
39 95
3 NEW TABLES, (All)
59 95
3 BIG TABLES, MEDITERRANEAN- -199 95

59.95
20.00
39.95
119.85

2 SOLID OAK DRESSERS, ( EACHl•- - - 88 00
WHITE BABY CHEST
49 95
MAPLE CHEST
59 95

59.95
35.00
39.95

3 PC. BEDROOM SUIT
199 95
3 PC BEDROOM SUITE
179 95
8 OTHER BEDROOM SUITES IN STOCK

139.95
149.95

St{y

:eo~R.O

POMEROY- About 2 yr
old - BRICK &amp; FRAME,
about !'acre, 4 BR, 2 baths,
lovely kitc hen &amp; dining ,
uttlity R , rec

space, ca r-

peted, storag~ bldg JUST
S26,000
OLD RT. 33 - Close rn 12x65
Mobrle Home w tfh expando

lr vrn g R.. 3 BR, balh, caracre,
all electric, about 4 year~.
old
NEAR LANGSVILLE - 10
acres. tdeal for home or
peted, a rr cond , 1 mce

trailer, approved for

22 CU. FT. SIDE-BY-SIDE, (WHITEl--395 00
18 CU. FT. REFRIGERATOR,
GR., LIKE NEW- - - - - - - 269 95
2-COPPERTONE REFRIGERATORS,
LIKE NEW, EA. I'i~t=====- 288.00
GREEN REFRIGERATOR
149 95•
FRIGIDAIRE REFRIGERATOR
169 95
Top

Freezer. Frost

•• NO RTH
~

S5,800
TUPPERS

PLAINS

w,

Beautiful bu1ldmg si t e,
acres, wooded, TP water. tn
~ new area S3,500

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) .A

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Doc.

.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan
19) You II be more ambitious
later tn the day than Ill the a m
You II also get you1 bes t Ideas
In t11e mornrng

CANCER (June 21-Juty 22)

AOUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob 19)

You need a httle change ol
pace now to freshen your outlook Do something on the spur
ol th e moment that s fun

LEO (July 23·AUQ

Dear Rap:
A short t101e ago you prmted a letter from a young g1rl who IS
considering gomg'mto the convent. She seemed very upset about
the reaction of her boyfnend and other friends
I received so much of that nonsense when I was ber age and
gomg mto a convent. People JUS! can't seem to understand that a
normal g1rl - especially a pretty one -who goes out on dates,
could ever make a deciSIOn like thiS.
Why can't they realize that 1t IS just possible a young woman
wants to remam unmamed so that she can be completely free w
help others ' This doesn't make her less of a friend or someone to
be avmded .
It IS so !fnportant that young girls who enter the convent
realize just what the sacrifices are, along with the blessings they
will receive through this differe)'lt way of sharing their love A
g~rl who t.as never been out With a boy or who rejects marriage
lor some abnormal reason, IS not able to make a real deciSion
about her life, and will not last long in the convent.
Poor health forced me to leave the convent . I am now happily
marr1ed, w1th a wonderful family , but I still get the same
reaction th1s g~rl rece,ved when people hear I was once mtent on
being a nun. I hope she can gel support from someone who understands, and I w1sh her a very happy life, whatever her
dec1sion may be. - A READER

21) You II manage bus1ness
· and commercta l matters much
more com pe tently today than
tom o rr o w S tay on t op o f
thmgs

serv•ce you II render spontaneo usly w111 make a favorable
1mpress1on later you II be
- repEIId untquely

11

Try not to talk to too many pea
pie of yo ur plans tn ad van ce II
you do suggested c llanges
wil l stal l your elforl s

221

PISCES (Fob 20-Morch 20)

Anythtng you tackle today of a
creat 1ve nature you II handle 1n
stnde What s more you II rn SpJre your co-workers

One you II asSOCIS!e W1111 IS
very s1n cere about helptng you
advance your Interests He II
prove 11 by acl rn g on )' O lH
behall

VIRGO (AUQ 23·Sopl 22)
Somet h ing

promtst nq

and

tllgetber. She has arranged my apartment We have the same
mterests. We hardly ever argue, and never f1ght She says she
loves me and I sure do love her
So why won't she marry me' W1th gentleness , compamonshlp, trust, and affection gomg for us, why does she say
we'd only be hurt If we marned? Should I give up' I could never
fmd anyone to take her place - RON
Ron
Why quit when you're happy together' If marriage develops,
!me, but for the present, you two have compamonsh1p, shared
mterests and love. Isn't that atmost enough, until Jan finally
makes her deciSion' - HELEN AND SUE

JJtYWID~;-~
u.....mble these rour Jumbleo,

.....

,t,J ..-~ 1 -

"II til Nlll " I I N ( )I () " " l 11 0 1\ (I I

letltr to each squlln!, to
form four ordina.ry wordt.

one

Rap jan and 1 have great conversations. We spend a lot of time

~

i,

8 30- Wall Street Week 20,33

- -..-

9 OO-S 1x Mtll1on Dollar Man 6, 13,

Masterp iece

T heatre,

Con sume r Surv1val Ktt 33
9 JO-Ass1g nment Am errca 33

10•DO-Fra nk Srnat ra 3,4,15., Adams ol Eagle Lake 6, 13 , CBS
Reports 8, 10 , News 20; Paul nchrms 33.
10 30- World Press 20
11 OO~ News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13,15, ABC News -93

11 3D-Johnny Carson 3.4.15. Wide Wor ld Mystery 13. Movre
" 0 5 S.

117

6, M ov1e "Jail house R ock"

8,

Mov1e "The War

ol lhe Worlds" 10; Janak! 33.
1 00- Mrdn tghl Special 3,4, 15, Wrde World Special 6, News 13
1 1 5 ~Movie "The Ma ze" 10
2 30~Movie " How I Spent My Summer Vacat10n 1 ' 4
4 00- Movte " Pressure Pom t" 4

'·
• 6 5·2
t Q.t105
-1&gt; K 102

,

2 Chou Enlal, for one
3 Mean busness
(4 wds.)
4 SuffiX for
Caesar
5 Gilbert or
Ruth
6 Wear away
7 God (it. )
8 Gettmg
back at
(2 wds.)
9 Burden some
10 Easter
event

Ynterday'aAillwer _
16 Row
28 Come to
19 Telegraph
Pll8l
22 Dog-faced zs Inhibit
ape
Z9 Ford fiiiiiJf

23 Shining

exlllllple
2C Pop or
Junior
25 Revolve

member

38 Prepare

:15 Eaklmo
knife
l8 Swlu rl-

\

t

'JI

•. I
AXYDLBAAXB
LONGI'ELLOW

I ,0 01

One letter simply standi for another, In thiJ lllllpll A. II
used for the three L's, X for the two 0'1, ete. Slncle !etten.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the worill are 1111
hints. Eaeh day the eode lettert are different.

IENGINS!
.
r;r) I
\INGOPEt

I I XJ

IBQOSIT
Now llrl'&amp;l1lt the clrclod !etten

QONI

ouueolod b7 the above •artoon.

DNJQZ

(.\Mwt!rt toiDOrrow)

I

J..mleo' GUILD EAGLE PMPERE IMPEDE
•

Auwen

5 30- Movte "Lady Luck" 4

SL

IBQ

WBJU

GUSIT

SJJSQNQSJT

SICSQUA

QB

N

to form the su.rprin aJUwtr, u

I PrilldlswaiNSWIIIIn I "[,......l.,. . ,.,l.,. . . ,J - rI I I J"
'Yellerday••

CRYPTOQUOTE

A CHA!W!Nt!&gt; WAY
TO e.ET MOI'JEV.

Ahorbed in buameu- MERGED

ZBM

XBMPAI'Q

GU

FNMTOQ

AUNA
NQ. GSPP
CNMTONI
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: IT IS SMALL WONDER' WHBRE
TilE SHEPHERDS HESITATE AND STUMBLE, THAT THE SHEEP DRAW BACK AFFRIGHTED. - SCOTl' NEAIUNG
I~ 1D1&amp; Ki.n1 Fta&amp;\IIH IYIIdi,.M, IM.)

DICK TRACY

ANNTTC

t A9B63
"'8 5

SOLTJI
41iAQ J 10 94
• A83

• 4

, ,f,A Q6

•

200.00
99.95
139.95

Neither vul nerable
North

Wesl

Ea!rt

SPECIAL OF SPECIALS

I NT

Pa ss

Pass

Pa ss

South

4•

l.EAVE FOR
A.Y,ERICA

Sl1m •

TOMOil~OW

mo~ed

MOR'NIN6!

I

61i:EAT, YOUFt HIGH"''E'G$··

I,

I'L.L. TELL. OUIZ JE-T CREW

TO BE ~EADY
fOFt TAI&lt;EOF~l

I)
I

out of

~

the

Opcbmg tead- Q t

storeroom,

•

- 2 White Fur Swivel Chairs Regular 188.00
-Black Fur Small Sofa
- 2 Glass Top Tables, . Sale
All With Chrome Legs

P~II\JCf5~
JA~MIN Wll.!..

\ Has

1 41i
Pass
Pass •

I

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Chtpper?
A b1~d m the hand IS known to
be w~Dth two tn the bush, but a
tr1ck 1h the hand ts not alw•ys

.I

worth even one

West's queen of dtamonds
held the first tri ck and he contmued ' the smt South ruffed,
cashed hiS ace of spades, led a
spade to dummy 's ktng played
a low club and fmessed hts
queen
West couldn 't watt to pounce
on that tr1ck wtth hiS kmg
Alter all , a b1rd tn the hand, etc
He pounced and that was hts
Side's last tnck
" Wouldn 't I have looked Silly
tf South had started w1th ace·
queen doubleton tn clubs mstead of ace·queen:sma!J?"
sa1d West
He sure would have looked
Silly but tl South had been dealt
JUSt' two clubs he probably
would have led out the ace and
then the queen before ustng
dummy 's kwg of spades
Furthermore, East had played
the CJght of clubs and South
could have been sure that etght
was e1ther a singleton (m wh1ch
case no defense would work ), or
that East was startmg a htgh·
low echo and that kmg of cl ubs

2-30" GAS RANGES, GOL.IL_ __ _~ 59 95 119.95
30" GAS RANGE, GREEN
188 00 149.95
30" GAS RANGE, WHITE
149 95 99.95
~.,GAS RANGE, WHIT
149 95 99.95
~.,GAS RANGE, WHITE
119 95 69.95
30" GAS RANGE, BLUE
119.95 88.00
40" ELEC. RANGE, WHITE
39 95 99.95
1-40" ELEC. RANGE, WHITE .
129 95 75.00
30" ELEC. RANGE, WHITE
_
179 95 139.95
- ~., ELECTRIC, GREEN, LIKE NEW- 219.95 179.95
2-BREAKFAST SETS, 4chatrs- ---39 95
DARK OAK DINING ROOM SUITE
179 95
4 Chairs &amp; Table
8 FT. LONG PINE TABLE - - - - - 43ti5
With 6 Chairs, like new.
i-BREAKFAST SET, 2 CHAIRS
WITH DROP LEAF TABLE.

29.95
99.95
269.95
39.95

2-STOKER-MATIC COAL HEATERS, EA. 488.00 388.00
DUNCAN PHYFE TABLE WITH4 CHAIRS 319.95 191.95
ZENITH STI;RE
139.95 100.00
PHILCO STEREO, LIKE NEW
WITH AM-FM RECORD PLAYER__288.00 IU.OO
GREEN WASHER &amp; DRYER , like new
299.95
GE WASHER-DRYER, COP.PER, LIKE NEW~9t.u ;
MAYTAG DRYER
69.95
MAYTAG DRYER
79.9~
MAYTAG DRYER
125.00
. MAYTAG AUTO. WASHER
5.00
2 NEW RANGE HEADS
~"WHITE &amp; COPPER., EACH
25.00

'

.

..

Rutland , 0.

ALLEY OOP

NOW 10 BE-AT A HASTY

•

RETT?EAT. WHII.E THE
GETT!Ne 15 GOOO.'

get away

-- tz:e; :J ,,rp;ta u

......

1

The b1ddmg has been
'''I

West

Norlh . East

9

South

1 -1&gt;
Pass
Pass

1•
2t
3•

Pass

Pass

16
2•

Pass

?

.'

....

SNUFFY !!

GIT OUT OF

I'M GtVtN ' 'IE
DA'r'5 OFF
FER GOOD BEHAVtN'

·.

o .D

you, South, hold
'
6K 7643 9 A2 t9. A)C732
What do you do now""

..

"'

_,

See Herb, Dave, Mike
Grate or
liene ~m1th
,

never

•

!NEWSPAPI-:H 1-;NTI:::RI'HI SI: o\SSN 1

.

Rutland Furniture
742-4211

•.u·•c• would

Pass

••

I
'

DOWN

I Sew

EAST
" 72
• K Q9 4

WESt

229.95

r
I

ACROSS
1 Infant
5 Forage
grass
11 Cruls1ng
12 Epithet for
Elizabeth I
13 Israel ( var )
14 l)eautiful
woman
(colloq J
15 St Anthony's cross
I&amp; Boy
17 Ethan Allen's
brother
18 Wreathe
20 Viti!
dreamland
21 Discovery
22 Chills and
fever
23 Dermal
aperture
24 Red planet
25 Infrequent
26 Curse
27 E:ft
28 Turn over
31 Indian
cymbals
32 Sununer
(Fr.)
33 Nigenan
city
34 Tropical
rodent
36 Vase handle
37 Provided
with instruments
36 Along in
years
39 Hold out
to Trust

II

A-Bid fou r spades. Only a

'

eeward would stop short of game oa
tb1s bicldiq sequtact. •

TODAY'S QUESTION

Instead· of b1ddmg three
diamonds your partner has ra1s·
ed you to three spades Wbjt do
you do now ? '
••

'

'I

by THOMAS JOSEPH

,

B DO-F amrty Theatre " The County of Monte Cristo" 3.4.15.
Nrght Stalker 6, 13, Stowaway to the Moon 8, 10, Wa sh mglon
W eek m Rev1ew 20,33

&amp;u.wd'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work lt:

7 30- Por ler Wago ner 3; Pop' Goes the Country 8; New Candrd
Camera 6 . Treasure Hunt 10 , To Tell the Truth 13 , Black
Persp ect ive on the News 20, 33

n

9

• a&amp;'5

septic
JUST

Your afternoon w1l l be more lnteresttng tha n the earl1er part
of th e day Somethmg of per sonal pride will be achreved

Don't hes1 tate to d1scard an unworkable plan 11 a better Idea
comes to mrnd prov1ded It
doesn 1 cost anyth1ng out -of pocket

GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20) A

",

competent

SCORPIO (Del. 24-Nov 22)

ARIES (Morch 21-Aprlt 19)

solutron you re seek tng lor a
problem con frontmg yo u wtll
come hke'a bolt out of th e blue
Don t srt on the remedy

allies

41iK 3
• .J 10 7
t K 72
,j.J974 3

•

tank , good blacktop road ,
close to mtne ar~s

ITTLE ORPHAN

For Friday, Jan. 10, 1975

moves !han In lhe put. Also
you 'll have more

•

319.95

Free

15, Av1at1 on W eather 33

WIN
,_A_T_e=R-=-=Io=-o=e=

'

MAIN!

Lucy Show 8

BOnan za 15
~
5 oo-FB I 3, Merv Gnff1n 4, Andy Gr1fflf h 8, M1ster Rogers '

But Many New Items Added

SOFA, FAIR SHAPE
SOFA, WOOD ARM
GOLD SOFA
GOLD SOFA BE
3-2 PC LIVING ROOM SUITES, ea

6,

LIBRA (Sepl. 23·0CI. 23) Thrs

Tbe Question of Toy Guns
Dear Helen:
My uncle gave all tbe small boys in our family lily guns for
ChriStmas. When I said, "That's noway to dlsco urage VIOI ence I"
he sa1d tbat we live in a VIolent world . so long as there !If• wars
and cr!fne, kids had better learn there are ways to protect
themselves. Besides, "cops and ,robbers" never, hurt HIM as a
Child.
What do you think about giving kids roy weapons on the day
that proclaims "peace and goodwill wward all men'" - "BAN
THE BANG " BEN
Dear Ben :
These days, I wouldn't give a gun as a ChriStmas gift.
(Although back when our sons were growmg up, they had the1r
share of cap piStols, lwlJilun cowboy ootfil&lt;l, etc. - without
damage to the1r psyches )
Psychologists say that playmg w1th a lily gun goesn 't equip a
ch1ld for a career of violence. Rather, "children who can handle
playthmgs of an aggresSive nature through unagmative play
seem to be less g1ven w actual VIolence than children whose

not so active

.lltn.10,1t75
Your amb i tion• will be
fu rthered faster thla year. You11
make more adventureaome

IS a good day to get ttungs
finalized Clean-u p Sttuattons
so !hat nex t week th ere are no
loose end s

By Helen aDd Sue Bottel

are

•

specula tive will ca pture your
auenuon over the next few
days Proceed ca utiously

Rap

+++

6 oo-sunnse Sem1nar 4 Sunrrse Semester 10

Blown Into Walls
and Attics
Free Estimates

CHAIRS

Generatio~

That's what they say -HELEN

6 25-Farm Report 13

CREMEANS CONCRE TE de

EXCAVATING dozer load er
sept1c
and backnoe work
tanks mstalled dump tru c ks
and lo boys for hir e , Will halJI
frli drrt , top so il , l 1mestone &amp;
graveL Ca ll Bob or Roger
Jeffers. day pllone 992 7089 ,
night phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 tfc

··

unagmatlons

Insulation

PIANO
tun1ng and reparr.
Charles Scot! . 992 37 18
1'2 13 32t p

dt~mp

8 jo-The Waltons 8,10
9 OG-Streets of San Franc1sco 6,13 M ovie 20 , Pathf inder 33

NOVELTY J~BRIC
&amp; CRAFTS

NEIGLER
BUILDING SU P
PLY FOR REMODELING
AND K IT CHEN CAB IN ETS
CAL L GUY NEIGHLER
RAC I NE OHI O PHONE 949
3604
12 19 26tc

tanks , excavat 1ng
truck Phone 7A2 3742
12 20 26tc

: venture In Amenca 6, 13 , R1k.k1 Trkk1 Tavt 8,10 , Canad Not
1 For Sale 20, Cabel l County lnservr ~e 33

Jan . 16th

Enroll Now

SE PTI C
TANKS
cleaned
Modern San1tat1on , 992 3954 or
99 2 7349
9 18 tfc

C BRAOFOR D. Allc t 1oneer
Comp lete Serv1ce
Phone 949 3821 or 949 316 1
Ractn e Oh 10
Cntl Bradford
5 1 tfc

' 10 , To Teillhe Truth 13 , Get Smarl15.
8 ~NBC News Specral " 01 Wofl\en and Men" 3,4, 15 , Ad

NI LL ln m or cu t tr ees or
shrubbery ,
clean
out
basements , attiCS , Pt e 949
322 1 or 742 444 1
12 IS 26tc

4, 000 lbs mmtmum t ron t
ALL CASH FOR YOUR
--------------spring capacrty
2 BEDROOM tla rler ad ul ts
HOME. LET US SELL IT
11.000 lbs
mm 1murn rear
on I'll Phone 992 3324
spnng capacity
9\12-2259 or 992-2568
1 9 ttc CLOSE OUT on n ew Zig Zag
Auxll•ary rear spr ings
sewmg mach 1n es For sewrng
Combmat10n rear &amp; f ront
1 HOUSE unfurnished , 1 rooms
stretch fabrtcs , buttonho l es ,
d trec trona l srgnal ! tghts
In
and bath n1ce Phone 992 2780
fancy desrgns , etc
Patnf
TraffiC hazo!'lrd SWitCh
or 992 J-432
slightly blem ished Chorce of
Dua l electriC horns
carry 1ng case or sewl n~
1 9 ttc
Hettter &amp; defroster
stand S49 80 cash or terms
2 speed w 1ndshteld w1pers &amp;
11val/able Phone 992 7755
washers
TRA
I
LER
space
,
2
mt
les
from
12 18 tfc
Age 8 or Older
Power Sleermg
Harr 1son v1tle Phone 7.t2 382 1 ~----- _ ~ -- - - - - 900 X 20 10 ply stee l belted
rad 1al front t 1res hrghWay
tread , 7" rims
4 ROOM
furniShed IP f, 2
900 x \0 10 ply steel belled
bedrooms . adults Qn l y Phone J BEDROOM house, $500 down ,
rad•o!'ll rear trres on &amp; off tread
991 2676
$90 month Phone 992 3975 or
$8500 00 - Two bedroom frame
7" r1ms
992 2571
1 5 41 c
111 Court St., Pomeroy
Bath. paneling, gas F A
home
One addit tonat 7" nm
1 3 tfc
furnace
, basemen t , and city
Phone 992-2156
Cast spoke wheels
F-URNISHED
apartment , - - - - - - - - - - - - - Hea~y duty clutch
water
ult l lties furnrshed , su rtable 7 ROOM house, bath and 1h,
Hea~y duty
brake booster
tor two work1ng me, or
excellent ne,ghborh ood , wall
wlll'r 7" rear brakes
r-et1red coup le Lr ving room ,
to w;t/1 carpetmg, large lot.
LARGE
company
tn need of full
s2o,ooo.oo - New 3 bedroom
Heavy duty bumper &amp; f ro nt
kr tchen 1 stlower and bath On
~araoe. reasonable ut!l1t1es
time personnel No layoffs .
home. l iving roo m 13x19,
two hooks
main
highway,
Mason,
w
Va
Call
992
3877
poSSible earnmg up to S250
L H &amp; R H Sr west cost
Phone 773 5147
beautiful k1tchen, ceramic tile
1 9 tf_£_
weekly
Good
future
m rrrors
10 27 ttc
A~a t lable for nght person
bath Attached garage and
70 amp battery
Call 675 3490 tor appotnrment
almost
one acre
50 amp or la r ger alternator
t -9 6tc 4 RM turn tShed apt. close to
Cab grab handles , L &amp; R
Powell's Super Va lu , phone
Full depth foam seat
99l 3658
$3,000.00- Old onelloor s room'
WAITRESSES needed , apply '"
Heavy duty factory re1n
11 20-lfc
person Crow s Steak House .
house wrth nat. gas, and city
forced frame
=-..:z-- =...,---- - -...... - - - - Pomeroy
water on n 1ce corner lot
Color Omaha Orange
3
and
-4
ROOM
furn
ished
anG
1 7 tfc
Proposal No 2
unfurn 1shed
apartments
Same as proposal No 1
• ~h one 992 -543.t
~th and 112, excellent 512,500 00 - Older 4 bedroom
" 12 tfc
neighborhood,
wall-to- home, modern bath, nat. gas
Brdder to furn1s h the1r own
County Extension Agent PRIVATE meetlnliJ room for
b1d forms a,d subm 1t b1ds for
furnace , new block garage,
wall carpeting, storm
&amp;ny organ ization , phone 992·
each proposal as numbered
MARTHA GUILKEY
windows, large lot, 3 barn, and large lot
3975
, The frcm t of the e,velope
enclosmg the brds must be
3 11 tfc
car garage, reasonable
BUILDING LOTS - Several
Will Guest On
markfld " Trucks ''
utilities.
FURNIS HED apt Adults only
The County Comm lssroners
locations. $1500 00 up.
M iddlepor t Pho,e 992 3874
may accept the lowest b 1d or
LIST IT WITH US FOR BEST
11 -l.ttlc
select the best bid for the m
RESULTS
tended purpose , and reserve the
UNF URNISHED-h;;-u,e , - • L..,_ _ _ _ _ _..:_..:_:....::___J
r1ght to rejec t any or all brds , or
rooms and bath , 165fl Lmcoln
any part thereof
BUILDING lot, 80 ft frontage
Heights Phone 992 - 387~
'
by 165ft The sec ond lot on left
11 1~ tfc
Me1gS Co
on Rfvervrew Drive, L1nco1n '
Comm•ssr.oners
Hill , Pomeroy, Ohio If in ·
TRAILER space. 2 milts from
terest~ call H2 3230after 5 p
Pomeroy , Rt 143, Phone 992
Martha ChamberS .
m
5858
Cl erk
10-17-tfc
10 27 tfc
Ill 9, 16. ?tc

Carrier Wanted

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp;HEATING
Complete plumbing &amp;

SEP TIC

Phone 9,92 -2181

2 BEDROOM trail er Phone 992 RED bone coon hound , c~oc• • v
bed and dresser Phone 949
3975 or 992 257 1
3221
1 3 tf c
1 7 6tc
5 ROOM unfurnished ~'louse
basement and yard
325 ELECTROLUX Sw eeper de luxe
model
Complete wtth all
Sprrng Ave nue R ef eren ces
clea nrng a ttac hments and
Phone 992 7660
uses paper ba gs Sl 1ghtty used
1 8 tf c
bul cleans and looks li ke new
Wi ll se ll for SJ7 25 cash or
COU NTR Y Mobile Hom e Park ,
terms ava.lallle Phone 992
Rt 33. ten m iles north of
7755
Pomeroy
Larg e lots w1lh
12 18 tfc
concre t e patros , Sidewal k s,
runne rs
and
off
street
1 - MALE hog , and 4 - 21h
parJc.rng Pnone 992 7419
mos old ptgs Phone 992 3183
1'2 31 ttc
1 7 Jtc

-------------ROOM furn ls Med apt and

SEWING AND
CRAFT CLASSES

HEIJ. ·

Qlr- Trulh or Cons 3,4; Bowlrng lor Dollars 6 Whal 's My lrne

8, News, 10 , L et's Make a Deal 13 To Be Announced 15
r-Two,Way Street 20 , Nova 33
7 ~o-Hollywood Squares 3, 4 Fred Taylor Baske tball 6 , New
, Prrce IS R1ght 8. Cpnsumer Surv1val K 1t 20, Wild Ktngdom

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WALL paper hang1ng and all
mlenor f101 Sh1ng Phone 742
5081
12 29 121p

r
FOMEROY LANDMARK
• • : Jilek W C1rsey , Mgr .

FEMA LE AKC YorkShire
T~ rrler pups
wormed and
t emporary vaccmat10n , 1
weeks old SIOO each Phone
9854106
1 7 6t c

7

d rtligan's Is 6, 'rattleta tes 8. Ssame St 20,33 , Mov1e " Th e

19 73 COMET , 19 000 mt les
automatic tranSmiSSIOn. like
new Ca ll any lime, 667 3442
1 5 12tp

Pets f.or Sale

-

-

new fenders and pa int, duel
stack exhaust
6 CVItnder
runs go('Jd Ext r a, 327 goes 1
too Phone 992 5301
1 7 3tc

------------AUCTIO N ,
Thursday

CA SH pa1d t or all makes and
models of mobrle homes
Phone area code 614 423 9531
4 1J ltc

For the Lowest

i964C H EV Y-f7~k, S hort - bed ,

SHOOTING match, Racme Gun
Cl ub Sunday 1 p m Assort ed
meats and factory chok e guns
only
12 22 tfc

J UNK c1utos
comp lete and
d el1ver ed to our yard We p1ck
up auto bodres an d buy all
ktnds of scrap metals and
~ron R1der s Sa l vage. Sf Rt
124 Rt 4, Pomeroy Oh10
Cal l 992 5468
10 17 lfc

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING

_XCAVA TING ,
dozer ,
backhoe
and
d1tcher,
water11ne , f ooters . dra1ns .
roads, and brush cleantng, no
JOb too small , no weather too
bad Char l es R Ha tf1eld , Rt 1
Rutland 0 PhOn e 742 -6092
1 7 261 c

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

The Socia l Room w111 be open
to all members, fam11y ; and
guests every Monday nig ht

OLD furn •ture, Ice boxes brass
beds , or complete households
Wr tte M 0 M rll er , Rt 4,
Pomeroy , Ohio Call 992 7760
10 7 74

949-3832 or 843·2667

finish . spotless Interior

other Monday at 8 00 p m

Wanted To Buy

S299S

Custom Deluxe, 8' Fleetslee, 350 V 8, auto,, P S, radto,
15,500 m1Jes, loca l 1 owner, tire s show li ttle wear, gray

Meetmgs will be hel d everr

1 1 tfc

51695

1971 CHEVROLET2 TON
$349$
Cab &amp; chassis - 102" Cab to axle. 350 V 8 engine. 15,000 lb.

EFFECTIVE 1·6·75

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

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCTION
PHONE.

81lO; Zoom 20 . What Now, America 33

1

.

V 8 engine, automatic tran s, power steering, radio, spor t
custom cab, good tires , green &amp; wh1te fln 1sh.

NOTICE TO
EAGLE
CLUB MEMBERS

1

Pomeroy
Motor (o.

6 ~D-;NBC News 3 3,4,15. ABC News 13 , Bewt lched 6, CBS News

.

1970FORD8' WIDEBODY

CO N SIG NMENT S wel come at
P&amp;J Auct1on
215 No r th
~ ~ cond Middleport
I 9 JOtc

, Children w1th Spec1al Needs 33

Business Services
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THURSD'AY, JANUARY 9, 1975
6·£lll=-News 3,, .8.1 0.13,1 5 ABC News 6, Etec Co 20. Teachrng

Auto Sales

Notice

FOR your
Cosmettcs
99251 13

Tel~vision ·Log

9,;Aif97~5~1AMIAMIAMIAMWiiWWWWWWWWMIM8M88MIMIMIMIM

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The Dail)r Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Jan. 9,

. .---------------.;.--.:j

!1&gt;.~~"~"""~~~~'~'~~~~,,~'$.~::.~,,~''"*'""""'''':':':&lt;&lt;'*"'~'*
"'~: ;:; .'if""!'-.-----~--~---~~-""'---------.;..----~----~--~SAIGON (UPI) - 'lbe provincial capital Tay Nlnh
12...,.

of

near lhe Cambodian border weat on 1 war foolibg today In
. expectalloa of an early Cemmunlst attack, and tho1118nda of
; ~- Oed lhe clty for the comparative safety of Saigon 55
mUeo to !he IIOUlbeast. .
'lbe stampede from Tay Nlnb, capital of the province of
the same Dilme, began with the ion of Phuoc Long Province
earlier In the week. Tay Nlnb city Is 100 mlleo weot of Phuoc •
Loag but between the two provjnceo Is 1 large stretch of
Cemnlunlst-lleld terrltoy, Including the VietCong's "capital"
of Loc Nlnb.

Market Report
COLUMBUS IUP IJ - .Feder·
al -state su mmar y of Oh io
livestock auct ions Wed nesday :
Cattle: No trend compar ison
with last week ' s holiday,

Slaughter steers : Choice and

prlme.900-1200 lb yield grade 2·
3 39-40.85, choice yield grade 3-4
36-38, good 32-35 SO, standard
23.50-31 .35.
Slaughter heifers : Choice and

prime 785-1080 lb yie ld grade 2·
435-10-38.75. good 31 -35.

Slaugh ter cows : Utility and
commercia l 1200-1600 lb 17 -

19.75, cutter 800-1150 lb 12. 10·
16.50.
Slaughter bull s: Yie ld grade 1
1365-1775 1b 25.50-28.
Vea lers: Choice- and prime

195-2 40 lb 59-64.

Feeder catt le : Choice steers

300-600 lb 20.75-28.50, good 300640 lb 16-20.25. choice heifers
300-600 lb 18.25-24.
Hogs: Barrows and gilts US

2-3 209·236 lb 39 .40-40.05.
Sows US 2·3 510-630 lb 36-37.
us 1-3 408-531 lb 34-35.25.
Feeder pigs US 2·3 30-40 lb 11 20.50 per head, 50-60' 1b 18-24.50.
Sheer.: Choi ce and prim e
Slaugh er lambs 95-118 lb 37.7041.50.
FIRSf CHILD BORN
RACINE - Airman First
Oass and Mrs. Nicholas R.
Thle, 255Euclld Ave., Fairborn,
are annoWlcing the birth of
·their first child, a daughter,
· Jan. 7 at Wright-Patterson
A.F .B. Hospital, weighing 8
lbs., 14o/4 ozs. named Nlchole
Lynn , Grandparents are Rev,
and Mrs. Olarles Norris, South
Pl&gt;lnt, and Mr. and Mrs, John
Thle, Rt. 1, Racine. Greotgrandparents are Rev. and
Mrs. Freeland Norris, Racine,
Mr. and Mrs. l.Joyd Boring,
Colwnbus, and Olester Reed,
Zanesville.

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharged Jan. 8)
Christie Days, Jt)anna Billy,
Benton
Blake , Tamm y
Brunton, Daniel Butcher. Mrs.
James Campbell and son, Anna
Cherrington, Kenneth Clark,
Mayme . Collins , Deloris
Cremeans, Fred Dauber, Oma
DeLong, Rosie Buliel, Alma
Epple. James Groth, Bessie
Helmic, Erma Hersman, Sco!l
Hineman, Bernice Howard ,
Janet Jun iper. Wayne Kemp.
~r . , Peggy Kerns, Randy King,
Eli za bet h Lam bert , Norene
Layne. Darlene Long, Minnie
Martin, Jerry Miller, Vain
Mise, Wilma Nichols, William
Perkins, Irene Polls. Aparna
Priyanath, Ed na Reibel, Polly
Richendollar, Harold Salyers,
Paul Shirley, Wayne Sisson,
Juify Sprague, Mrs. Leslie
Stapleton and daughter, Mrs.
David Tulloh and son, Albert
Turner, Co nnie VanMatre,
Shawn VanMeter, Ju anita
Wagoner,
Dock
Watts,
Kai herine Wea ver, Eva
Young~ Louise Zickefoose .
(Births)
Mr. and Mrs. Robert M.
Black, a daughter, Wellston;
Mr. and Mrs . William J . Davis,
Jr., a son, Gallipolis; . Mr. and
Mrs. Roger L. Johnson, a son,
Gallipolis; Mr . and Mrs.
Kenneth E~ - Thorne, a son,
Point Pleasant.

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Racial
(Continued from oage 1)
tember under a .:uurt ordered
plan to Integrate Boston's '
publlcachoolsbyabuslngplan . .
Buses, with the usual motorcycle pollee escorts, brought
blacks to the schools without
Incident. But Etven before
classes slarled, black and
white youths shouted epithets
, at each other.

MEIGS THEATRE
THURSDAY
JAN. P
NOT OPEN

OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIG-HTS UNTIL 8 PM

WOMEN'S SLEEPWEAR

GIRLS DRESSES

GIRLS OOATS AND SNOW SUITS

Selected from our regular stock . A good selection .

Month sizes · Toddlers sizes - Girls sizes
up to 14. Entire stock included.

Sizes 3 to 6x and 7 to 14. Infants and
toddlers sizes. Good selection of styles
and colors .

1f2 price

1f2 price

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE

WOMEN'S SPORTSWEAR
JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE!

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE ·

Spec ial group of misses, womens and junior sizes
- Slacks · jackets . tops .

WOMEN'S COATS

i -9-6tc
.::..__

::;:__•

SED FRAME , SI O, wh lfe
hea dboard , S20, r ef . $40, c hest
of drawers , $1 5. Call after 5 p .
m ., 992 -7889 .
l -9-2tli

Show Starts 7:00p.m.

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

(U~: Iil: IilO
Stock Reduction Time At Kenn's

· ALL MEN'S

OUTERWEAR

Y2 price ·

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE!

Sale Prices

WOMEN'S SHIRTS
.AND BLOUSES

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE!

Misses and Juniors Jeans
Denims · Polyesters. Entire stock included.

Sale prices

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE

DRESS SLACKS
Sizes 30 to 44 waist . Solid
colors and patterns. Includes
our entire stock of new dress
slacks.

Includes our entire stock of mens
cut and sewn shirts - mens knit
shirts. Sizes small (14-14112),
medium {15-15112), large 16-16'12)
and extra large ( 17-17112). Patterns
and solid colors .

SLACKS-------SALE 6.57

Mens $11.95

SLACKS------SALE 7.17

Mens $12.95

SLACKS------SALE 7.77
Mens $13.95
Mens $14.95

SLACKS. _____ _SALE 8.97
Mens $15,95

SLACKS------SALE 9.57
Mens 516.95

SLACKL---- SALE 10.17
Janua'r'y Clearance Sale!

. Boys Dress Slacks
Cotton, polyester blends and double knits.
Broken sizes B to lB. Limited quantity.
While They Last

112 price

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE

BOYS.SHIRTS

FA'MOUS MAKE

Boys Sweaters______ --------lh. Price

Sizes B to 20. Knits and regular sport and dress
shirts. Solid colors ·- plaids · palterns.
Includes our entire stock of boy· ~hirts.

Boys 2.95 Shirts.---------Sale 1.48
Boys 3.95 Shirts--------- Sale 1.98
.Boys 4.95 Shirts---------Sale 2.48
Boys 5.95 Shirts--------· Sale 2.98

Sizes 14'12 to 17112. Full cut and tapered
styles. Solid colors and patterns. ··

Men's 8.50 Dress Shirts·----·Sale SS.70
Men's 9.00 Dress Shifts _____ Sale 6.00
Men's 9.50 Dress Shirts_____ Sale 635
Men's 11.00 Dress Shifts. ____ Sale 7J5
Men's 12.00 Dress Shirts_..:--Sale 8.00
Men's 13.00 Dress Shirts----Sale 8.70
Men's 16.00 Dress Shirts---Sale 10.70

MEN'S DAVIS 4-D CUSHION SOLE

WORK SOCKS
Sizes 10 to 13. Solid colors while and grey.
Regular price 2 pair $1.79.
January ~le -

Boys 6.95 Shirts..--------·Sale 3.48

2 •oairs '1 39

MEN'S '12.95

Sale! Kimball Pianos

Insulated Work Jackets

1150.00 Kimba.ll Pecan Console
1125.00 Kimball Pecan Spinet
1150.00 Kimball Walnut Console
1125.00 Kimball Cherry Spinet
950.00_Kimball Walnut Spinet

50 per cent cotton, 50 per cent po 1yester twill with

100 per cent polyester red quill lhiing. Zipper
front - waist len·g th - 2 pockets . Sizes 36 to ~ in
solid colors, spruce green. charcoal and
oljvewood.

Sale 799.00
Sale 789.00
Sale 799.00
Sale 789.00
Sale 750.00

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ELBERFEL s --IN POMEROY

POME!H)Y

-KERM'S KORNER

:~e~~~~~:- d~::::y ~ol~:~!: r~.w~::;~w;:~:;:::;:;;~::~::;:;~d ..

swivel rockers, .living room suites,
love seats, occasional choirs.

Furniture Department - 3rd Floor.

New York ·Clothing House

Autos collide

Special sole prices on many_

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Weather

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oil

Suit as k ed
for money

furniture items-: Choirs, sofas,

Buy Now I Save Now At

Refinery workers seule

jobs

on the 3rd floor

-11350.00 Kimball Electric; Organ with built-in
rythm - Pre-set chords
• 949.00

School closed by
scabies outbreak

$37

V"JSit the Fumiture Dep,artment

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Delay
•
seenm
tax cut

Nixon gladdened
by aides' release

Men's Dress Shirts

Men's 27.50 Insulated Coveral~---- 21.84
_Men's and Boys Winter Jackets _____ lh Price
Juvenile Boys Sweaters _________ lf2 Price

SOUTH WEBSTER, Ohio he noticied his eyes began to be
Scioto County sheriff's
(
UPI)
A
low
flying_
,
Irritated
and
he
called
us."
deputy
Ross Phillips said the
TOLEDO - OWENS.IlliNOIS CORP. WILL raise prices
Wlidentified
aircraft
sprayed
a
Bostick
said
he
saw
the
mist
Ohio
Environmental
Protecfor jar caps by 10 per cent and cap liners by 12 per cent, effective
misty
gas
which
smelled
like
which at first was about 100 lion ·Agency was attempting to
Feb, 10, because of higher costs, "We believe we have practiced
"a
spray
for
alfalfa
weevils"
yards wide then spread out to determine what the mist was.
res~alnt in oo: appr~ch to pricing during lbe 11ast year," said
over
homes
north
of
this
south
cover
an area about a mile and
"They are running another
Kevm Hepp, Vlce pres1dent and general manager of the firm's
centra
!Ohio
village
late
Thursa
half
wide
and
about
a
mile
check
this morning," said
cap division.
day,
About
50
persons
were
long.
Phillips.
"But our principal suppliers of lin mill products again have
evacuated and several com"It looked like a fog and it
Phillips said the FAA was ~?.!-::::8!".:::~::~~~::::~::::.*'-~·.:::::.~
· raised their prices to us so that we are no longer able to absorb
plained
of
skin
Irritation
and
would
get
in
your
eyes
and
nose
also
checking to see what
the Increased cost," he said.
nausea.
and throat," said Bostick. " It planes wodld have been in 'the
Kenneth Bostick, chief of the smelled like a crop spray . Like area at that time.
COLUMBUS - LEGISLATION SPONSORED by more than
volunteer .fire department that spray for alfalla weevils.
"The folks in the area say a
half the Ohio House membl'fS proposing to scale down the
here,
said
the
first
call
was
It
looked
like
a
fine
mist.
But
I
low
flying plane with a loud
tangible personal property tax paid by businesses on equipment
made
by
Cal
Holbrook,
don't
krrow
what
anybody
motor
flew over about 8:15
. and Inventories over an eight-year period has been introduced in
farmer,
who
saw
the
mist
would be doing spraying a p.m. and dumped the gas,"
the chamber, ·
Classes at Hannan Trace person is rid of the scabie. Hair
settle
over
his
!armand
at
first
pesticide at that lime of night. said another Deputy, Archie
· The bill, authored by Rep. William E. Hinlng and coElementary School were should be washed, too.
thought his barn was on fire.
"People were scared. They Kirker.
sponsored by 49 other members from both parties; was offered
closed
today due to an outbreak
"The so-called, itch mite
"He said he heard this plane dldn'tknow what to make of it.
The evacuated persons reThursday. It would reduce the tangible personal property tax
of
scabies
(itch),
Gallia
County
causes
scabies in humans, The
going over and looked out and Children started to cry because turned to their homes early
from 50 percent to 35 percent by 1983.
.
School
Superintendent
C.
itch
mite
lays Its eggs In a
· saw the mist and .thought the of the irritation. But It just today.
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A Comer Bradbury said the tunnel that it burrows In the
COLUMBUS - STATE SEN. DOUGLAS APPLEGATE D- barn was on fire," said blew away in about three · South Webster is located major tax cut now is certain to school had been closed In order outer layer of the skin.
Bostick. "He said his dogs hours," he said. "We don't about 15 miles north of Ports- pass the new Congress, ·but
Steubenville, has Introduced three bills designed to help nur~ing
that steps can be taken to
"The mites' secretions lead
started
acting kind of sick and even know which way the plane mouth and has a population of
homes comply with a state requirement that automatic sprinkler
there are signs It could be fumigate the building.
to sensitization and intense
was going."
about 1,000 persons.
systems be Installed to extinguish fires. One of Applegate's bills
delayed for weeks or months
According to Bradbury, 26 Itching. pustules develop on the
woqld extend the deadline for Installing the systems to Jan. 1,
by squabbles over whether to p~plls and three teachers, skin. Scratching may bring
!976.
~
raise oil company taxes and including Gallla County Speech secondary infections, Scabies
The other two bills Applegate submitted Thursday would
exactly whose taxes to cut and and Hearing Therapist Kllthy is · very easily passed from
make Ohio Development Financing Corrunission loans availabie
1how.
Taylor, have contracted person lb person."
to nur~g homes.
President Ford is expected to scabies. Upon the recomThe Gallia County Health
ask for a lax cut of perhaps $10 mendation of County Health Department said the common
State Rep. Ronald James, Resources Committee, Energy
WEST VlRG!N!A'S U. S. SENATORS WILL SUPPORT
billion, and various congress- Commissioner, Dr. Francis W. symptons are small raised
Democrat, 92nd district said and Environmental Committee
plans for a major new coal conversion pi8nt which may be
men
propose cuts of up to $30 Shane, it was felt classes areas of skin containing fluid
today Vernal G. Riffe, Jr:, and Education Committee.
located In the state under a cost-sharing proposal. Possible sites
billion. Almost no voices have should be dismissed until the or tiny burrows under the skin
Speaker of the House, has
The Procterville Democrat
for the $1.5 million CoaiCon Co. development include Wood and
been raised against chopping building js cleaned.
appointed him to serve on three expressed his satisfaction with
resembling a line which appear
Behnont counties.
taxes
to stimulate the
standing committees.
the appoinhnents. He said:
Health department officials frequently on finger webs,
Sen. Robert C. Byrd met in Washington Thursday with
economy.
Rep. James, a first term
"I believe the opportunity to
today urged parents · to have inner side of wrlsts,.elbo~d
CoaiCon and Union carbide officials to try to convince them to
1'\ep. AI Ullman, D-Ore., tjle their children usc good per- arm pits, thigh and belt · e.
legislator, will serve on the serve on the three very diverse
locate the plant In West Virginia, Union Carbide owns half of
Incoming chairman of the tax- sonal hygiene and to bathe at . Itching is intense especi ly at
Agricultural and Natural committees will give me exCoaiCon. Sen. Jennings Randolph has called on the Interior
.
writing
House Ways and Means night before going to bed, then night. T-he incubation period Is
posures to crucial problems
Department to approve construction ot the facility, saying it
Conunittee, predicted his com- apply Kwell lotion to the entire several days to weeks until
UNIT CALLED
effecting my constituents and
would help the nation achieve energy self-sufficiency .
mittee would prodllce a tax cut body.
·
itching is noted.
RACINE - The Racine E-R the State of Ohio. I am looking
March
I for Individuals, couThe dise~se m~y spread by
A health deparlment spokesSquad transported Milo forward to working with my
WAS!llNGTON- ELLIOT L. RICHARDSON, who resigned
pled with some business tax man said : "Have clean bed . direct contact with infected
Nugent, Racine, RD, a medical .more experienced colleagues
as President Richard M. Nixon's attorney general during the
relief and probably an end to linen and clean ·pajamas. Put persons or indirectly by conpatient, to Holzer Medical , and learning from their
"Saturday Night Massacure," has a new job - In London, as
the
oil depletion allowance -a on clean clothes in the mor- tact with towels, clothing and
Center Thursday at 1!:30 p:m. legislative experience. The
ambassador to the Court of St. ·James's; President Ford made
major
oil industry tax break. nint This procedure must be bedding materials. '
The squad will meet the 92nd
district
includes
the appointment Thursday, saying :
·
It
is
this oil tax question repealed until the infected
second Monday of each month Lawrence, Gallia, Meigs and
"I warmly welcome Elliot Richardson back Into the service
which may bog the bill down. A
REP.JA~
jeanette Lawrence reported. part of Athens County,
of our counlcy and am confident that he will represent America
majority of committee memwith the highest distinction." His appointment as !1. S. ambers last year appeoved an end
bassador In London probably removes him as a candidate for
to the oil depletion allowance,
peesldent In 1976 or as an opponent of another eminent Bostonian,
coupled with a "windfall
DENVER (UP!) - The
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass. .
proflta" tax on crude,oil prices. nation 's 60,000-member oil contract was a "good, heavy
package" that would be used
.Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc., curtailment since November, the supply situation by setting Sentiment in the ·newly ap- refiners ' union acc~Pted a new as a "mlnimwn standard for
today asked the Ohio Public 1974.
' thermostats to 68 degrees or pointed Ways and Means two year contract'With Gulf Oil contracts with other major oil
Utilities Commissi'O n for
Koebel said the industrial lower in their homes and of- Committee is likely to be even Co., today ending threats of a and chemical companies."
permission to immediately and commercial customers flees and taking other volun- stronger against
com- nationwide walkout. Union
"II Is absolutely not inreduce .gas deliveries to 840 that would become subject to tary conservation measures," panles. Ford also may ask for officials said the settlement flationary, " said Grosplron
addition a 1 industria I curtailment for the first time he added. ·
oil tax changes including a new would be a basis for contracts after a six-hour meeting with
customers and 1,561 . com- under this new procedure are
The petition asks that · excise· tax on oil imports.
with the other major oil OCAW's national oil policy
If such a bill passed the companies.
mercia! customers throughout those that use in excess of one alloca tions established earlier
·
bargaining committee In
SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. and flowers .
Ohio and to begin enforcing the million cubic feet of natural for the 840 industrial House, it would face rough
A.
F.
Grospiron,
president
of
Denver. "There will be abPresident Ford telephoned curtailments with monetary . gas in any given month. The customers, that would be going in the Senate where
(UP!) - Former President
the
Oil,
Chemical
and
Atomic
solutely
no excuse for raising
Richard Nixon Is still very Nixon , "spoke for a few penalties beginning April L
only exceptions will be subject to curtailment for the Finance Corrunittee Chairman Workers union, said the new gasoline prices or anything like
weak and sick, but took lime minutes" and wished him a
J: M. Koebel, manager for buildings where people reside first time, be reduced ii5 per Russell Long, a Democrat
that."
out on his 6200 birthday to say happy birthday, according to a · the gas company in the Gallia- on either a full-time or tern- cent below norm al. These from the oil.producing state of
()68
•
The contract called for a75he was "glad" to hear that his White House spokesman in Meigs area, said the action is porary basis, such as apart- allocations are based on 1969-70 Louisiana, wants to maintain
'
COming
cent
hourly wage increase
nemesis, John Dean, had been Washington.
being sought to spread the ment houses, institutions, usage.
domestic oil tax breaks while
retroatively rather
effective
Korff said that although impact of the current natural nursing homes, or hotels .
let out of prison eorly, acThe
co mpany
would
Continued on page 10
OD
h~
than
the
$1.20 oompromise
cording to one of Nixon's Nixon . "appears to be
gas
shortage
more
evenly
over
The
company
is
not
establish
allocations
for
the
Meigs
county
will
receive
.
demand made Monday by
gradually recovering" from a
staunchest supporters.
·all
classes
of
customers,
and
proposing,
at
this
time,
to
1,561
commercial
customers
$37,068
in
its
first
allotment
oc~w . The _union's. origipal
Rabbi Baruch. Korff, Nix.on's number of -medleal problems
not
just
on
540
curtailable
inimpose
mandatory
allocations,
based
on
their
consumption
under
the
new
Title
Six
request
was for an hourly raise
ooly birthday visitor Thursday, following surgery "be Is on
dustrial
customers
that
·have
curtailments
or
monetary
over
the
past
three
years.
The
"Emergency
Jobs
Program"
of $1.50.
told reporters that Nixon was medication and he tires easily:
been operating under a 55 per penalties upon residential or petition asks that the company
according to Robert Clark,
Grosplron sa id the new
''very benign" when told that
Korff said Nixon has just
cent
rate
of
curtailment
since
domestic
use
customers
or
be
permitted
to
reduce
this
president
of
the
board
of
contract,
affecting , 2,250
the sentences of Dean, Jeb written a personal check for
Jan
.
I and lesser degrees of U_POn industrial and com- allocation by a maxiumu of 40
°
commissioners
who
attended
a
workers
at
Gull
planls in Port
Magruder and Herbert Kalm- $11,000 to cover his surgery at
mercia!
customers
that
u"e
per
cent
during
the
winter
meeting
in
Columbus
on
the
Arthur ; Toledo and Cleves,
bach had been commuted Long Beach, Calif., Memorial
less than one million cubic feet months (November through. A suit for money and three program Thursday.
Ohio ; and Santa Fe Springs,
Wednesday, and they were Hospital. Korff said Nixon
of gas a month, the gas com- March) and a maximum of 15 for divorce have been filed in · The allolment will be made · Calif., provided .for a 4 per cent
would not .~ccept money from a
freed.
Sheriff Robert C. Har- pany manager said.
per cent during the remainder Meigs &gt;Coun·ty Common Pleas under authority of the increase July 8 and a third
'"!bat is very gQO&lt;i for them. legal defense fund for his
ten bach's department in"However, this is not to say of the year when the customers Court.
Emergency Jobs and Unem- raise of 8 per cent ni\Xt Jan. 8.
I'm glad for them," Korff medical expenses:
vestigated
two
accidents
that
such
restrictions
may
not
are
not
using
gas
for
healing.
,
Osby
A.
Ma
rtin,
Rt.
3,
pleyment
Act of 1974, Clark
Korff, who tried to rally
quoted Nixon as saying.
Thursday
in
which
no
one
was
have
to
be
imposed
if
these
The
company
is·
also
asking
Pomeroy,
filed
a
suit
for
said.
He
did
not elaborate on
The three had been trusted support to keep Nixon in office
injured.
customers
do
not
make
a
·
that,
beginning
April
I, it be ' money in the amount of $1 ,590, how th~ money would be spent Twister hits in
Nixon ai.des who cooperated as the Watergate scandal
At 4:25 p.m . in Rutland further and immediate con- . permitted to enforce the · against Larry Ray Smith, locally .
W\th prosecutors and helped reached a heod, is in charge of
Township
on CR 3,. Maurice tribution toward helping ease
Continued on page 10
Grand Cafe, Gallipolis. The
shopping center . .
convict Nixon's imler circle In the Nixon "Justice Fund."
Veterans Memorial Hospital
George
Gagnon,
41l. Rt. I.
suit
is
for
money
loaned,
rental
He paid Nixon's lawyers
lite Watergate trial. Dean was
ADMITTED
Alfred
McCOMB, M~ . (UP!) - A
lite chief accuser linking Nixon $80,000 on Dec. 18, but the fund
to Robinson, Middleport; David tornado roared through a
to Watergate:-"·
is still $15,000 sliort of a ~.ooo
with a car driven by Lonnie R. ~
Connie Hendricks, Rt. I, Klein , Pomeroy; EmmJI suburban · shopping center and
In spite of that, the Rabbi legal bill due next Wednesday,
Black,
18,
Rl.
1,
Rutland,
~
Beginning
Monday,
Jan.
13;
the
home
delivery
price
of
'
Rutland,
filed for divorce Lyons, Racine; Erma Wright, hit a high school In the Mcsaid, Nixon's reoction to their . Korff 'said, appealing for
Charles Comb area today, apparently ·
passing on the right. There was ~
- The Dally Sentinel will be Increased to 75 cents per week. ~ agains t David H~ndrlcks, New Haven;
release -whUe the aides who contribuUons.
Neimeyer,
Pomeroy;
Sharon causing extensive damages,
slight damage to Black's. car · , · 'lb~newt!Siandprice wiD be 15 cenladaUyand %5 e~nla ill · sam" address, and John
sloOd by him face prison -was
The Pike County sheriff's
and severe damage to tile
Sunday.
?.: Krider, Long Bottom , against Stark,. Pomeroy; Trina
"that is, very good, to ease the _ '
Bachtel,
Pomeroy.
Office
said an Wldelermlned
· Motor route service wni be $3.%5 per month.
Mildred Krider , address
Gagnon's, There were no
burden of man In lime of trial
DISCHARGED
Dale
number
of persons were inNews carriers and drivers wiD receive a subslantlal
Wlknown, each charging gross
MosUy claudy, showers or arrests.
and In tlnle of trouble."
'
Walburn,
Albert
Hill,
'Sarah
·.
jured
in
'the twister, which
At 6:40 p.m. on SR 124 in
share of this increase caused by the tremendous price
neglect of duty and ex treme
Thn '!filS no .family blrlb- thundershowers 'today and
Rutland, a doe qeer was killed
lncreas!!S In newsprint, Ink and ~er supplleo used In
cruelly. Ruby A. Prater, Rt. 2, Eynon , Louise ·Eshleman·, touched dOwn about. 8:20a.m.
day celebration, but former tonight." Lows tonight in the when
•It was· not immediately
it ran into the path of a
producing yoor newspaper.
::~ Racine', filed against Donald L. Nellie Dunn, Dottie Will, Clara
press secretary Rm Ziegler, middle. 408. Variable cloudi·Phillips,
David
Kiser,
Mary
'
determined
I· whether th~re
·
..
.
,
·
· Prater, Woodman , Ky.,.
· 'Nlxon's top assistant, said the ness and cooler Sa turday )Vith car driven by Lee Edw.ard
were any deaths.
Ramey, Pomeroy.
·· ~r~~:·:-.'*:~·:·:~::!::~::«:».."?.i:;~:~:;:;x::::::::::-:·~·:·:·:·;.:·:·:·:.:-:-·.-.:.:-:.~&amp;... ......... ··:-.:.&lt;!· chf,lrging gross neglect of dUty : Jones, Elmer Norvell .
Bll18ll staff gave NIIon a cake a chance of rain.
'
,!,
l't
'
.,
~
i

GasCo wants new reductions

JanuaiJ Qearance Sale!

Men's and Boys Department lsfFioor
Men's Sweaters _____________ lh Price

ISN'T THIS THE BIGGEST dinner bell you 've ever
seen? Actually, the bell is not to summon farm hands to
dinner, but a decoration In the yard of Mr. and Mrs. Leroy
(Bud) Bartrum on Rutland Road. The bell, given to Bartrum
after it was abandoned in weeds near the former Bedford
School (purchased several years ago by area Churches of
Christ). Bartrum brought the bell to his home - it weighs
about a ton- and built the cement block pedestaiB on which
It rests. It is beli&amp;oved that the large bell, painted gold now,
was used In a Meigs County school, possibly In Bedford
Township many years ago, The l!lrge belliB cracked. Bartrum Is~ retired railroader and lormerly was Chief of Pollee
In Middleport and was also associated with the county
sheriff's office for a number of years.

James on 3 committees

SLACKL--.;,.--SALE 8.37

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE!

EXTENDED WEATHER
Sunday through Tuesday,
colder with a chance of snow
flurries Sunday and In northeas tern counties on Monday,
becoming fair Tuesday.
Highs will be mostly In the
20s, Overnight lows will be
between 15 and 25 Sunday
and between 5 arid 15 on
Tuesday.

a

Mens $10.95

Men's 14.95 Shirts----Sale 8.97
Men's U.95 Shirts ____ Sale 7.i7
Men's .10.95 Shirts. __ .;,. ,Sale 6.57
Men's 9.95 Shirts ----.Sale 5.97
Men's 8.95 Shirts ____ .Sale 5.37
Men's 7.95 Shirts---- Sale 4.77
Men's 6.95 Shifts ____ Sale 4.17
Men's 5.95.Shirts ____ Sale 3.57

;;::..;:::::::.."-::=::::;;:::::::::::;:;:.."%";&amp;~~-~-·- }::»'

By United Press International

1f2 price

MEN'S SHIRTS

TEN CENTS

FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, 1975

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 189

(Ne~s .• in Brief~ South Webster gassed

Shirts - Blouses - Pants - Coordinate
Jeans. Entire stock included.

January Sale! Mens Double Kni.t

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE

30FF

VOL XXVI

GIRLS SPORTSWEAR

1f2 price

en tine

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area

JanuaiJ Qearance Sale

Selected from our fall and winter stock.
Misses and womens size11.

'

and .
SWEATERS

a1 y

Regular colors and fabrics from our
regular stock .

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

__ ___________

•

WOMEN'S PANTS

Misses · Junior s · Womens and Pre-teen sizes.

AUTO SALES
1965
P LY MO UT H ,
needs
r a d ia tor , ax l e and engi ne
work . Wil.l trade for a ve'hicte
tha t wilt get m e 10 m iles a
day . Pl'1on e 992 -3146.
1-9 2tp

Item s . P hone 992-345 1.

has a fork lift to raise and dump 1JJe entire container.
Overflow also is creating problems . Residents are asked to
use the containers during the week rather than waiting for
the weekend to help avoid this situation. Cooperation by the
public will greatly ease the problems in the disposition of
solid wastes, officials said. The containers place at various
points throughout the county are emptio&lt;! about twice a week.

COLLECTION POINT - An excellent loca lion for the
collection of waste by the county is at this Route 7 by-pass
location where six of the metal containers are placed for the
convenience of the public, All residents are welcome to use
the containers to dispose of solid waste: However, residents
are asked to use plastic hags for their rubbish and to place
the_ ~s inside of the containers. Unless the lrash is placed
lns1de, 1\ cannot be taken away by the large equipment whirh

•

1

SQUAD AIDS
The Racine E-R Squad was
calledWednesdayat&lt;l :25p. m.
for John Sellers, Portland, Rt.
I, a medical patient, who was .
l:aken to and admitted at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

bedroom su it and many other

!PGI ·

.

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE!

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE!

FOR SALE

&lt;TechnieolorJ
Starring Lucille Ball

·.

.

.

REFRIGERATOR , d i nette set,

FRI.-SAT ••SUN.
JAN. 10-11-12
MAME

OOLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov.- of the Ohio Supreme Court.
elect James A. Rhodes today
Collins, a Columbus atnamed .the final three mem- torney, serv&lt;d-as deputy tax
hers of his cabinet Including commissioner during Rhodes'
Col. James C. Clem, 54, last administration and has
Columbus, a colonel in the Ohio also served as secretary of the
National Guard, as state Ad- Ohio Water Development
jutant General.
Authority and chairman of the
Rhodes also named Kenneth Qhio Air Quality Development
E. Krouse, 49, Upper Arlington Authority. Rhodes Thursday ·
as administrator of the Bureau nam ed F . Scott O'Donnell
of Workmen's Compensation,, senior vice president of the
and Gerald S. Collins, 35, · First National Bank and Trust ·
Colwnbus , state tax Commis- Co.,
Steubenville,
state
sioner.
banking sup eri ntendent.
Clem Is a graduate of Ohi&lt;11
O'Donnell was among eight
• State University and has persons appointed by Rhodes
served as Inspector General Thursday.
and Chief of Staff of the ONG .
Also named were:
Krouse-is a former secretary . - R&lt;&gt;bert B. canary, 66, a
to former governor 'c . William former acting director of the
O'Neill who is now chief justice
Continued on page 10

Visit every department
- Shop all three floors for exceptional values dllring th~ annual sales event.
.

FOUR REAPPOINTED
The
following
reappointments have been made In
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court . Nellie M. Brown, chief
deputy; Ruth Moore, Janet
McGalliard, and Claudia
Bartko, deputy clerks.

ran ge, stud io cou ch. bedroom
su it , platform rocker . all lik e
new . Antique chairs, antiqu e

filled
by Gov. Rhodes

Elberfelds
In
Pomeroy
January
Clearance
Sale
..

Pleasant Valley Hospital
DISCHARGES - Charles
Johnson, Mason; Mrs . David
Weaver, New Haven; Mrs.
Kenneth Holley and daughter,
Apple Grove; Mrs, Wilbur
Porter, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Homer Davis, Buffalo; Ethel
Wandling, Point Pleasant ; .
Orville
Dunlap,
Point
GROUP TO MEET
RACINE - The Auxiliary of Pleasant; Carl SetUe, Buffalo;
the Racine Fire Dept. will meet Albert Uptergraf, Gallipolis;
at 7::W this evening at the William Capehart, New
Haven ; Mrs. Jack Hendricks,
firehouse.
Point Pleasant.
MARRIAGE LICENSE
Paul Leonard McDaniel, 19,
Middleport, and Dixie Inez
Clark, 17, Rl. I, Racine.

~ cabinet

•

•

.I
•

1

• .

. I

I

.

•

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