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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

fj

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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 .

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

__ ___________

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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

•

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•

�3- The Daily Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy 0

2- The Daily Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Friday Jan 10 1975

Penalizing everyone as energy policy
The baSic law of ecology IS that everything IS hooked to
everything else Nothing happens m ISOlatiOn There IS no
away where you can throw Qrings for a diSturbance of the
erlVIronment In one pllft!e has effects m every other place
It may be a basrc law 1n human affairs as well not least m
the flel&lt;t of economics which Is proper smce both ecology and
economy are traced to the same Greek root meanmg house A
disturbance of the economy m one place has effects n every
other place
The chorus of complamts about the nations lack of an)
comprehenSive energy policy and demands that Presrdent Ford
come up With one tend to overlook the operaUbn of this law
But consider
Should heaV) add tiona! taxes he lev ed on gasolme to
discourage drrvmg and cut consumpt on wh le adversely af
feeling an already depressed auto mdustry not to mention
tourrsm wh ch 46 of the 50 state;; rank as one of therr three maJor
industries?
-Should full development of Amer cas energy resources be
encouraged or should we mpor t as n uch higher-pnP!(I forergn
orl as possible husbandmg our own energy resources for the
fut~re ?

- Should North Dakota perm t surface mmlng of coal to
provide secure energy to the East Coast part cularly n VJew of
easterners res st&lt;mco to refiner es and petroleum exploration n
therr areas
Should Louis ana he forced to sh p ts natural gas to the
North to keep factor es nmnmg m New Jetsey if t means oss of
industry and JObs n Lours Wla
These provocative quest ons put forth n a recent edition of
Continental 011 Co s Conoco 74 magazme underscore the
dilemma confronting the Pres dent h1s advisors and the new
Congress as they move toward the formulat on of a useful and
useable energy policy for this country
There are any number of conflicts both in society and wrthm
the government that much be reconcrled if that goa l s to he

achieved For example there are currently more than 60 federal
agencres havmg some responsrbrlity for oil and gas matterS
Wrth so many grouJlSmvolved coordmatron Is diff cult there
IS an absence of common purpose and duplication and IIIterfrr.ence are frequent
Wrthout an overall ener~ policy there are no gUidelines and
nobody has the responsibility for BI!Surmg that the var ous obJect ves and programs mesh or that trad...,ffs - des!,'&lt;'Jied
landscapes 1n the West for hummmg generators m the East say
- are properly evaluated and resolved
Everyone can agree that a natrona! energy pol cy rs an
llllperat ve need that must be met before the new year IS many
more weeks old But because everything IS hooked to
everythmg else whatever the prov stons of the policy we can
be sure they w II have repercussiOns not altogether pleas ng to all
Amer cans n all the states

No success like failure
Deati s from overdoses of methadone the man made nar
cot1c mtroduced to wean addrcts from herom for the first time
have exceeded deaths fro herom reports Secur ty World
magazme
Accordmg to Dr Domm1ck DiMaio actmg chief medical
exam ner 1n New York Crty while the total number of drug
related deaths there dropped for the first tlllle m a decade there
were 181 deaths dtrectly attr butable to methadone last year and
98 deaths due dtrectly to herom
Only 10 of those wh9 dred of methadone poiSOn ng however
were enrolled m methadone clin cs Accordll' to Dr Robert
Newman head of New York City s methadone program
strmgent new federal regulations limiting the length of time an
add ct can be g ven methadone m a clinic have driven many of
them back mto the streets for therr methadone mcreasmg the
I kelihood of overdose

Jacks~n ·hosts

Syracuse
News, Society
A posf..Chnstmas dmner and
g ft exchan ge was held
Saturday Dec 28 at the home
or Mr and Mrs D&lt;lnald Cot
tr II Those attendmg were Mr
and Mrs Edward Chapman
and Eddy of Picker ngton Mr
and Mrs Floyd Chapman
She lly and Krmberl y of
Columbus Mr and Mrs Eddie
VanMatre and E T Mason
W Va Mr and Mrs Gordon
West Debra Rhonda John
Melody
Rae ne
D ane
R dgeway Pomeroy Sharon
Cra g and Bruce Cottr II and
he hos t and hostess
Hoi day guests of Mrs
Jan ce Lawson and Dav d were
Terr e M Her and Tony
Rut and Mr and Mrs Tom
Laudenn I and Mrsty Dawn
Pomeroy
Mrs
Dorothy
Pa sons B lly and Kelly
Ant qurty C ndy Lawson
Fa rv ew
R ck Morr s
Middleport Mr and Mrs Ed
Lawson and Er c Plants
Roger Sayre who s enrolled
at the Un vers ty 'tf North
Flor da at Jacksonv lie spent
he ho rdays w th h s parents
M and Mrs Brooks Sayre and
other re at ves and frr ends
New Years Day guests of
M and Mrs Sampson Hall
were Mrs Ed th Teaford and
Cecrl M nersv lie Mr and
Mrs James Teaford Mrs
Jan ce Lawson and Davrd and
Penny and Edd e Wolfe
Mrs
Harold Teaford
M ddleport spent a recent
afternoon w th Mr and Mrs
James Teaford
Mr and Mrs Jerry Rowe
have moved nto the Louks
Trarler Court
M s Paul ne Morar ty spen t
Chr stmas at Lancaster w th
her son and family Mr and
Mrs Larry Morar ty
Mr and Mrs Carl Hubbard
have been vacat on ng dur ng
the hoi days at Jacksonville
For da w th Mr and Mrs B U
Wh lock and lam ly

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

Ed Note Between Two Arnues by William) Alonzo Hunt was copred by Seth F N cholson
R D Rutland from clippmgs of the Mergs County Republican weekly newspaper prm ed apparently 10 1891 The clippmgs were 10 a scrapbook kept by his mother whose marden name was
Cynthia Elizabeth Hunt oldest of the frve children of Alonzo and Clemency Robison Hunt
The story of the Lynchburg Ra1d which Hunt men!Jons near the end of his art cle apparen Jy
was not wr tten N cholson recalls his mother telling about her father bemg m that hasty retreat I
was freezmg weather h s grandfather was a cavalryman who upon bemg forced to r de his horse
across apparently the James River got his boots full of water and bemg m such desperate haste
the r was no llllle to empty out the water It froze solid and years later thiS children were taking
urns m cold weather rubhing therr fathers !ego and feet m the evenmgs to restore them to normal
war'\'th
Hunts accout of how a VtrgmJa (now West Vrrg101a) family that bel eved m the North ern cause
fared m the clash of deadly passrons of war and m the confusmg contest for the v tal control of the
western mountam counties of Vtrgm1a IS an llllportant addition to Civil War literature of eye
"rtness reports of that bloody eneounter

BETWEEN TWO ARMIFS
By W Alonzo Hunt
As fnendJackson wants some of the boystowr tea story lor the paper I w Uput 10 a short one
MAY REJOIN SHOW
The name of my story w U be Between Two Arm es I was born m Franklin County Mass
ROCKFORD lll UP!
February 8 1845 My father moved o Fayette County VrrgllUa qow West Vtrgm a) m the year of
Former U S Olymp c frgure
1851
skater Janet Lynn out dur ng
Now hemg from Massachusetts meant buS!Oess m 1861~2 They voted about three m les from
the hoi days w th v raJ
our house and the word came up that they were keepmg the men away from the polls w1th shotguns
pneum on a and pleur sy may
Father smd he would go and vote r he d ed at the polls He went and voted for Lincoln He sa d there
re1o n the Ice Folbes show by
was great excitement there
Jan 13 Mrss Lynn contracted
Gen Wrse s troops (rebels) were the frrst to pass our house He came along and pressed mto
the llnesses wh le she was
serv ce my two oldest brothers Edwm and John Henry Hunt and they marched off w1th he
home dur ng the Chr stmas
rebel army went down to Scarey where they had therr frrst fight My brothers came back up and
hoi day per od and was unable
SBid that was therr last frght wrth the rebs
to JO n the show when t opened
About the frrst thing I s~w of them they were makmg for the woods They h d while the rebs
last week n Ph ladelph a
were gomg by I carr1ed1hem grub Gen W1se reb general) came along m a two-lmrse camage a
accord ng to he moth er
darky dr VJOg He got out 10 front of our house I thought he was the madest man I ever saw Some
Florian Nowrck
off cers came along He told one of them to go to Camp Lookout and put a strong guard across the
road and f elds and to shoot the ftrst d d man that trres to pass I think he had one diVISIOn
They were desertmg hllll very fast
My brothers went down to the Kanawha and enlisted m the Umon army About that tlllle my
brother John was old enough to be a sold1er The rebels threatened to draft hun He went down to
Gauley and enlrsted m the 2nd Kentucky Infantry So you see they soon began to take notiCe of me
They thought that I was growmg up very fast
In the sprmg of 62 rt began to get pretty wann m Fayette Gen Floyd came out w1th a dJVJSJon
By RICHARD HUGHES
computer tape whrch IS cleared
of infantry There was some cavalry One company Capt McGruder camped at our house I think
UPI Business Writer
through the Federal Reserve
1t was 10 Se~ember 62 that they came m the mght and arrested Father The. next mornmg Mother
NEW YORK UP!) - A System and ultimately deposits
WASHINGTON
NEA - When the not ce of Jack Benny s
sent me to
Dog Wood Gap where WISe was buildmg fortificahons to see f I could fmd ou
dea th was bullet ned to the nati on I was motor ng on the New cashless soc ety 10 wh1ch all the wages m the worker s bank
where Father was hey told me that they had sent him to Richmond
Jersey Turnp ke I had been dr v ng for hours and as rs my curse transactiOns from buymg gro- account No paper changes
While McGruder was at our house I had to go day and mght to haul feed for them We had a
compu er programmmg would
dur ng such per ods I was endlessly turn ng the rad o d a! lor cer~es to pa) mg the telephone hands
bave to be standardized for a hrrge yoke of cattle All the way I could keep them was to do everythmg they told me to McGruder
somethmg bes des dnvel but to no ava I The end of Benny the bill are handled electromcally
A
voluntary
program
less
umform transfer A national had our parlor for h s headquarters and the soldrers had the barn
rad1o g ant not surp rs ngly was announced r ght alter a tune
Is poSSible wrthin 10 years
than
40
per
cent
of
Arr
Force
I went over to McGraw s one day to get a patr of shoes for Mother When I came home I went m
standard
for all b Us would
by someth ng cal ed Elton John and before another by yechh
according
to
a
Federal
personnel
10
the
three
test
where
McGruder was He asked me where I had been My answer was over to McGraw s He sard
Three Dog N gh t
have to he adopted so they
Reserve
bank
officer
areas
would
agree
to
take
therr
The occas on served to rem nd th s t me w th rony the depths
contamed all the necessary did you see any Yanks? I SBid no Says he if you had seen some commg over here to capture me
Thomas G Waage sen or payment 10 th s manner
to wh ch the once f ne medmm of rad o has sunk Stat ons wh ch
information and could be would you have told me so I sard No I Ubed d if I would
A Jot or people get JlSYch c translated by erther magnetic
formerly JOyed Amenca w th the presence of a Jack Benny now VJce presrdent of the Fed s New
Says he f you are not careful how you talk Ill send you to Richmond I sa1d to hllll you have
York branch told a news satlsfactron out of takmg a ape or op!Jcal scann ng my lathe there starVJOg hllll to death 11 may be that I could be of servrce to hmr but I U alk as I
broadcast nothmg more than background mus c to pass the hours
Musrc news and sports s what they callrt Gad It s double aw conference this week urdess a check
Waage sa1d For deVJces
please 10 my own house He went out and did not bother me any more
lui Wmdsh eld w pers offer more enterta mment to the travel ng new system of exchange IS example he sa d A lot or
In a short tlllle W se feU !lack to Meadow Bluff Floyd went byihe way of Fayetteville and
Under
thiS
system
an
m
listener
developed the nahon s bankmg fellows like to take therr check div1dual would take or send his formed a ]Unct on wrth W seat Meadow Bluff On W1se s retreat he camped at Dog Wood Gap a few
Th " s not understand a complamt of nostalgra The good old sytem will choke under an to a bar have a drmk and cash
b lis to the bank wh ch would days
days of rad o had Benny but they also had Capta n M dn ght avalanche of checks
t
there
He sent for me to come up w th the team I went up He SBid to me you load up w1th hospital
make drrect payments from
hokey qu z shows ( College of Mus cal Knowledge Sp1ke Jones
The
checking
acco
unt
The
Sacral
Securrty
Adminis
goods
and go to Camp Look Out He sa1d you must make two trrps today I started wrth a load and
the
md
VJdual
s
account
to
the
and H s Crty Sl ckers and dreary daytrme drama ( Backstage
system
has
been
enormously
trat1on
which
sends
out
35
JUSt
before
I left a frrend came to me and said they are gomg to eat your oxen tomght and put a gun
cred tor s bank account
W fe that polluted the I v ng room Even that was preferable to
attractive
and
successful
but
at
mrlbon
checks
a
month
deter
on
my
shoulder
today s lrddledefump but only by a b t The pr nc pal reasons
through electromc transfers of
many remember t fondly s that they no longer have to 1sten to the same time has created mmed 10 a survey last month money between the banks The
That put the bo) to studymg I began to lay plans for gettmg away I stopped along the road
serious paperwork problems that 30 per cent of the Federal Reserve would act as often to rest the oxen It was late when I got to Camp Look Out I had four b1g medtc ne chests and
t
Nor do I forget here grump ng that far from succumbmg to wtth the volume of checks recrp1ents many of them older an automated clearing house some hospital tents I looked up and down the road It was clear from rebs I stopped my team and
the llness wh ch ts programm ng sy mptom zes modem com expected to exceed 34 hilllon persons with difficulty gettmg Agam no paper would change rolled the chests and tents out m a pile along the road You could hear the bottles smashmg I turned
mere al rad o s n large part d sgustlngly healthy In Benny s this year Waage SOld
to banks would accept direct hands
the team around and ran rt back to the Meadow River road and went oqt that road about a half mile
t me (1940) there were 847 rad o stat ons n Amer c"' Tnday ac
Our problem he said Is payment to therr banks
dropped
the wagon tongue and drove them down m a large ravme Wld chamed them to a tree Then
ThiS system Waage sa d
cordmg to Nat onal Assocratron of Broadcasters f gures there to get something better
The
llllDledrate
Impact
of
the
I
went
back
and watched the rebs go by
has been used successfully m
are 7 738 NAB adds there are 353 mrll on recerv ng sets m use n
Waage said more ex
Then I came out on the road and started home went down the road about a mile and met Gen
the nat on and that manufacturers regularly sell 55 mrlhon more perllllentation s needed to direct payment systems would Europe In the Netherlands 90
save
the
governrnent
a
lot
of
per cent of all house payments Cox I got a bad rakmg from the boys They asked me where I had been I told them w1th Wrse Thev
annually We ve never had t so good say• an NABer There
probably sn t a family m the nat on wrthout a rad o most have develop electronrc methods of money but would result In even and rentals are made thrs way
wanted to know how many men they h~nd how many p1eces of artillery I told them about f1ve
paymg workers paymg bills more checking accounts and he sard
four and lrve or even more
thousand men and twelve )lleces of artillery I was telling them the truth but they would not believe
Yet g ven th e successes and the truth that radro has from ts and transferrmg funds to and checks because It would create
SUch a system could be me They sa d I was a I ar and a rebel too and that made me mad and I would not WJswer any
beg nn ng been topheavy w th yawns the gr pe tnday s that rt from checking accounts and accounts lor those who do not llllplemented n a year s tin e
more quest ons It was after dark when I got home
has almost totally abandoned the search for full lhng rts poten
banks
now have them Waage sard Waage sard if everybody
General Cox went out as far as Meadow Bluff He was so far from transportatron that he fell
tial Early soap operas alter all were the l1rst step toward ade
The Air Force recently
To reduce check volume would do t
back m a short llllle and went mto wmter quarters m Gauley
quate drama for the masses And even Sp ke Jones was an ex launched 1n three regrons a Waage proposed a system
It would be a ftrst step
I think about that llllle that Gen Rosecrans came Into the valley There was a large force a
per menter of sorts (h s orchestral ons ncluded t n cans Bronx payroll system whereby the whereby personal bills would
Fayetteville
Waage
sard
to
a
ca~hless
and some troops at Somersville The rebs ran me so close that I went down to Gauley
cheers and off wmg techn c ans who burped on key) But mus c
government
records
a be paid directly by a bank to socrety that could be reached n and gave myself up to the Union army and drove team two weeks I caught army fever and won
news and sports? There s no Sign th s format leads to anythmg worker s wages on magnetic
the creditor All bills and 10 yea s
home That was m December 62
but more mus c news and sports
True there have been a few recent rad o nnovat ons foremost
I bad not heard from Father When he went away he wore no beard and was very little gray We
among wh ch s the Nat onal Pub! c Radro Network Th s effort
were not prepared to see such a change as there was m him One evenmg about dark a man carne
funded by var ous pub! c and pr vale grants offers 40 hou rs of
mto the kitchen w th a long white heard and was a mere skeleton We d1d not know hun After he
soph st1cated programm ng a \l eek to some 170 stations n 48
told us of h s pr1son life and how fast they d1ed there we thought twas a nuracle that he ever got
sta tes Its publ c st J m Bar ett says the network Is nforma
away from that hell hole they called Lrbby PriSOn So you see 1t cost a man somethmg to be a Umon
tion or ented and ts da ly 5 to 6 30 PM news program All
man up there rn 61 and 62
Th ngs Cons dered s eas ly the f nest commun cat ons fonnat
One anny would come along one day and strrp us of everythmg and m a few days the other
on the arr NPR was the only rad o network to cover the Senate
would
come along and take everythmg we had scraped up agam Sometimes there was not a
Water£ate hea r n.l(s from f rst to last and the only network to at
bite
m
the
house for mother and three little children
tend last autumn s world food conference Its no cut and paste
G;wrence E Lamb M D
One afternoon mother came to me and sa1d there was nothmg to eat I was standmg m the
bndges the gap where he n ay ca use a mome ntary
thrng Barrett says We work at our reporting
LAMB
Woulda
kitchen
door and close to me was a hog I turned around and 10 a mmute was on top of t 1 cu ts
d
sease
rs
and
stimulates
the
So far however after three years of ex stence NPR s work
delay n the order of hun
pacemaker he p a left bundle pump ng chambers to contract dred hs of a second m con throat and skinned t w th my pocket knife and had meat m the cellar m a very short time
has gone mostly unnot ced Only about three m II on listen to the
net\lork s synd cation regu arly It s notor ety beyond that s n 1
branch block? How rs a regularly fast enou gh to traction of the blocked s de
I do not know who owned the hog If he will call around I will pay hlllll 't&gt; cents per pound
Desp te nnovat ons network surv val rs a worr some thmg
pacemaker nstalled and s t rna nta n adequate c rculat on Thrs has no mportant con
When Cox retreated back to Gauley I had to nm the oxen down to Cannelton to save them from
The pass ng of NPR energ es or the fa lure of others to copy ts
necessary to stop the heart The eleclr cal mechan sm may sequence These blocks are the rebs Father sold them after the war for one hundred dollars They had gone through a good deal
progress veness would be sad - r not for commercral rad o
DEAR READER - There be set at a g ven rate or may most y mportant only n or war serVJces for both amues
then at least for publ c Amer ca For the trmes have never begg
are numerous types of even chan ge as the rate of the relat on to what causes them
Gen Cox s men killed three fat steers for us (of ours) We never got a cel)tfor them
ed so necessarrly for w de and meanmgful commumcations as
pacemakers
They
reptesent
a
I have thought of a little fight Capt McGruder had down at Colonel Tyre s They rode r ght mto
top
of
the
heart
changes
These
If t rs a b rth defect t may not
they do no\\ Three Dog N1ght may serve some need t though I
Important
advance
n
really
Wl
ambush
I went out mto the barn to see them start and I never heard such braggmg as they dJd I
d fferences are vanahons n be Important at all If a bundle
can t 1mag ne what bu t even so there s tnday the greater m
sav
ng
lives
of
people
w
th
the types of pacemakers branch block develops because heard one of them say he could whip three Yanks I gr111ned and thought a great deal JUSt then
teres! It was nterestmgly radro s Jack Benny who helped the
heart d sease Supreme Court ava !able
They filed out m the road and went off 1n good faith Some of them were gomg to therr doom and
nation cope With some of ts past m ser es We can t call h m
of a heart attack I s m
Justice Douglas has had one n
I
knew
It but drd not care When It was about time for them to come back I went down where 1 could
back now nor would he surr ce b t h s med m s still avarlable
You can have a pacemaker portanl only r,n that rt reveals
- rf only t had the w I
place lor ) ears now W thout t mach ne outstde the bod) used the presence of the heart at see the road for about a mile All at once I saw a horse commg Without a rrder In a few mmutes
they aU began to come some horses had l1b saddles some no brrdles some no rJders It was a sigh
he could not have surv ved as a temporary devrce whrle tack
to see them
Th s s a well-pub! crzed fact the hear s recovenng from a
If you blocked all of the
so I am not revealing any state heart attack or even after electr cal I hers to the r ght
I did not learn how many men were killed I was down there 10 a few days The horses were pried
thick
along the road
secrets
heart surge!') If the heart and left s de of the heart at the
Da1~
FACTS
The pacemaker has nothing rega ns Is normal capacrty to same time you could produce a
The men stopped below our house One officer got off from hiS horse and la1d down m 8 fence
at all to do wrth bundle branch beat aut on at cally on rts own rt !om of block between the top corner he was hurt very badly I asked some man who he was he sard 1t was Gen Jenkms A horse
block It IS used when there sa can he drscontinued at that and bottom of the heart In had nm over hllllm the stampede The rebel who was bragging so came back there was a hole
senous block between the top time
emergency s tuat10ns as n a through one of hiS horse s eats the gas was taken out of that man He did not say much
and bottom of the heart Before
We could not keep any grain We went over to Mr Moores and bought a load of sheaf oats for
When the dJSease causes coronary care un t thrs IS kept
each heart beat an electr cal pennanent damage a small n m1nd and s one reason the $2S he would not take silver for pay must have Confederate pay He got 1t Father was glad to get
llllpulse passes down over the pacemaker unrt for power rs personnel there are concerned rrd of that kmd of money We got nd of the Qats JUst as qwck got home and drove m the barn
top chambe rs (a trra 1 and surg cally placed under the "hen a bundle branch block thought we would not unload that mght we had company therr names were Gen Jenkins and
enters the lower pumprn g sk n and the res from the occuts durmg the heart attack family
They never left one sheaf of oats for us They saddled up m the night and left m a hurry Reports
chambers ( venlrrcles) When unrt go to the heart ThiS rllness However they are
that the Yanks were commg across by Carnifax Ferry
came
diSease affects the area be- enables the person to go about equ pped to handle that
tween the top and bottom hiS usual bUSiness even h1k ng problem r I ar ses
•~~-~~~~~~~l~a~mthebarn~~
Dur ng fiScal year 1975 the
dropped
them down and then nailed 1t back They laid there three years When I went back after the
chambers
the
rmpulse
cannot
Veterans Admrmstrat on plans
1f he has a m nd to do so and
Send ) our questions to Dr
to spend J4 5 b Ilion n d sabrhty
thought they had been stolen (tittle JOke
get through The pumprng there are no other diSease Lamb
n care of th1s war I rrused the plank and there were our chams Father
•
and death payments to 2 6
chambers may not pump fast compl catwns
lncrdentally newspaper P 0 Box 1551 on the rebs )
m1lhon serv1ce d sabled
W1dow Eakin lived JUSt below our house Father would haul some of hiS com over there for safe
enough on the r own or even vou don t have to stop the heart Rad o Cit) StatiOn New York
veterans and surv vors of
keepmg
She bemg a Widow woman they would not take her corn They would stop somet.unes for
pumpatall When Ibis happens to pu n the pacemaker
N Y 10019 For a copy of Dr
deceased veterans The World
then there IS not enough err
Bundle branch block (rrght Lamb s booklet on cholesterol corn she would say go up to Hunt s h~ sa Uruon man take his com Up they would come and clean
Almanac says The maxrmum
Clllahon
if
any
to
the
bram
or left) refers to a problem n send 50 cents to the sa nr ad him out When they wpuld get out of the neJg!Jborh(l(id he would go down to Mrs Eakin sand get
payment IS $1 454 a month
some corn
and v1tal organs
transm1tt ng the el~ctr cal dress and ask for
wh1ch IS allowed for a totally
h
I m Ira d he editor will not prmt so much I had better close for the present I could g~ve a
The pacemaker Jrterally llllpulse o he left or r gh s de
drsabled veteran requ1r1ng con
d olesterol booklet
stant care
of the pump ng chan bers It
'
(Continued on page 9

Editorial comment,
opinion, features
Tom Tiede

Radio's last hurrah
passes the baton

Otecks will choke
system buszness today

DR. LAMB

When the heart needs a paceflUJker

WORLD ALMANAC The

Sentinel

f

I

CARVIlLE La (UP!) - Lows Boudreaux would Jove nothing
better than to he at the Super Bowl game Sunday
He s not gomg to make rt ihough
Not that Its much of a lrljl because New Orleans IS only 72
miles from here but LouiS Boudreaux has no ticket to the game
and he doesn t care to burdEII anyone w th the responSibility of
taking hllll sllllply because he happens to be blind Anyway he U
probably enJOY the whole thing JUst as much listenmg to 11 on the
radiO
I m rootmg for the Pittsburgh Steelers he says SIDiling
wrthout tellmg you abou the $2 bet he made on them The
Steelers have never made tall tile way and around here we love
the underdogs
That s perfectly understandable when you know a little b t of
the background about 5!1-year-old LouiS Boudreaux and the 300
others like hllll here rangmg mage from 22 to 90
All are pat ents 1n CarVJlle s completely modern U S Public
Health Servrce Hosprtal set less than 150 feet from the
Miss sstppr River
Some people who don t know any better refer to these patients
as lepers and call the disease they are afflicted wrth leprosy
The patients prefer the term Hansen s Disease and will talk
about 1! as read1ly as they do about Sundays Super Bowl contest
between Pittsburgh and Minnesota
I like the Steelers says Darryl Broussard Carville s 00.
year-old pat en! postmaster Broussard IS from Lake Charles
La and does he know hrs sports •
Bud Grant IS trymg to msult my mtelligence when he says
Fran Tarkenton plays better With a sore ann than he does wrth a
good one Who ever heard of anybody do ng better when he s
hurt? I have to go wrth Pittsburgh not JUS! because Bradshaw rs
a Lou srana boy but because they ve got a good ball club
I haven t bet a penny yet I wrll though if I get some sucker
Lours Boudreaux and Darryl Broussard are both considered
cured of Hansen s DISease and one of the reasons they remain m
Carville IS to rece1ve treatment
They are free to come and go as they like but that wasn t
always the case
I was 19 when Iftrst came here and although t didn t happen
to me some people used to be brought here by force says Lows
Boudreaux charrman of the editorial board for Carvllle s b
monthly magazine Star
My home IS 1n Donaldsonville La and when I frrst came here
the townsp~ple burned my siSter s and brothers books when
they learned what I had My dad who s 85 used to be a Jeweler
and people qurt trading wtth hllll
One of my brothers came here two years after I d1d and the
same thmg happened aU over agam It was a Jot worse the second
time
My name rs not Lows Boudreaux Its an alias I took when I
first came here No I drdn t take the name from the old
Cleveland second baseman I took 1t long before I ever heard of
him

What really hurls Boudreaux went on IS the prejudice and
rgnorance which exiSts among people about Hansen s Disease
To teU the truth I was JUSt as Ignorant as the rest when I first
carne here It was much different then
Today patients who come here don t know how much more
fortunate they are because they can receiVe more effective
treatment m Carville along w1th an early drscharge
CarnUe IS the only facUlty of 1ts kind m the Uruted States the
only complete treatment center
What struck me especially on my VISit a completely delightful
one was the fact I dido t see a smgle hang-dog expression among
the patrents They all looked at peace With themselves
The man who runs the nosprQII IS vr JOhn trautman a
strappmg 48-year-old nabve of Omaha Neb whose official title
IS Medical Director of Carville and who looks more like a
professional football player than many of the Vlkmgs and
Steelers
Some of the fear and miSunderstanding about Hansen s
Disease IS the result of brblical passages 10 the Old Testament
he says The general repugnance toward the word leprosy
obVJously comes from the brbllcal connotation that there IS
something unclean assocrated w1th 1t
Down through the ages leprosy has been synonymous w1th
uncleanliness and homble lookmg skm diSfigurements Some of
the patients at Carville are disfigured some are not
Lepers always have been treated as outcasts For centurres m
Europe bells were hung around the necks of tbose known to have
the diSease and when others heard the bell, they knew here came
an unclean person -stay away
A lot of our present patients are cured although we hesitate to
use the word cure the same way we do m cases of tuberculosiS
says Trautman We bave three patients here rrght now attending I.SU We don t feel they represent a public health
problem
There IS a golf course a ball field a lake stocked with fish and
a library and arr-cond1tioned theater at Carville Everything IS
provided the patrents free of charge
Everybody who VISits Carville alxl about 10 000 do each year
always wants to know how commumcable the dJSease IS
We feel if the diSease IS under treatment and IS respondmg
then the degree of commumcability IS negligible By that I mean
the riSk IS pracllcallynone-butl can tsayrtdoesn teXIS!
The patients at Carville love sports and among tbe sporls
figures who have VISited the fac1lity are Ted Lyons Dizzy Dean
Bi11 Drckey Bill Lee and AI Kaline Mel Ott learned of hiS elec
tion to Baseball s Hall of Fame durmg his frrst VISit
Tom Rickman of Chrcago Carville s chief of services used to
pttch batting practice for the Whrte Sox and serves as recreation
superviSOr for the patients
Back m 1949 the patients grew bored of playmg softball agamst
each other all the time and Rickman went to nearby Baton Rouge
to see if he could get Carville mto some league
Members of Baton Rouges police and frre departments sard
they d be willing to come and play the patients but the manager
of another team m the league called out
You got any mggers down there•
Yes we have ~e Negro pahents Rickman replied
That leaves us out sa1d the team manager
We said we d come to play the patients and we wlll sa1d the
policemen and firemen We don t care what therr color IS
At firSt the pat ents felt they were In too deep over therr heads
they thought the other teams m the league would crush them mto
little pieces
Two years after they entered the league guess who won the
championship?
Carville
You never saw such a celebration m your life
Beer though Not champagne

SEOAL FRESHMEN

ALUMINUM
FIBER

1ROOF COAT

Team

Ga I po s
logan
A hens
Wave y
Me gs

on on

ackson

'22
BAUM'S TRUE
VALUE STORE
5 Gai

985-3301

95

Chester' 0

We ls1on

W L
P
6
3 6

OP
266

316

202
25-i

6
5 2
4

J

28
266
279
216
243

J 4
2 5
2 5
0
159 295
28 28 2086 2016

TOTALS
Thursdays resu Is

Ga pol s 43 A hens 39
M e gs 49 ack son 28

logan 50

24
266
256
306

on on 30

Waverly 42 We son 24
Jan 16 games
Ga po s a We sto n
on ton- a A hens
Wave y a Me gs
Jackson a Logan

The Mergs Marauders on the
heels of a near upsef over
Athens Tuesday mght travel to
Jackson ton ght for !herr
seventh SEOAL encounter In
other area games Eastern
hos ts North Galha and
Southern entertams Hannan
W Va
Saturday the Marauders go
to Federal Hocking m Athens
County and Eastern hosts
Southwestern of Gallia County
The Ironmen of Jackson led
by M1ke McDonald and Jeff
Conroy are r&gt;-3 overall 3-3 n
the SEOAL AI Burger s
qwnte t one ol the qmckest n
the league used the r per
petual motion offense earlier n
the season n an upset wm over

Meigs frosh
are sharp
The Me gs Marauder fresh
men hr ttmg 53 pet from the
f eld rolled to a 49-28 v ctory
over th~ Jackson frosh at Rock
Spr ngs Thursday evemng
The v ctory boosted the
Marauder record to J.4 on the
season whrle Jackson fell to 2-li
The Marauders held a sl m 86 lead after the r rst period
before pull ng away n the
second quarter to lead 22 12 at
mterm SSIOn
Me gs upped the lead aga n
gomg on top by 17 37 20 gomg
nto the fmal frame
The Marauders were led by
Greg W tte w1th 10 po nts
wh le Chuck Follrod chipped m
8 For Jackson W ckl ne had 6
pomts
Bes des hrttmg 53 pet of
the r f eld shots
the
Marauders also h t at a good
clip from the char ty strrpe
cann ng 3 of 4 for 75 pet
The Marauders hauled n 17
rebounds paced by Brent
Stanley wrth 5 and Brent Ar
nold w th 4
The next game for the frosh
IS Thursday Jan 16 when
they 11 host Waverly
Me gs
a kson
MEIGS

B 4
6 6

5
8

2
8

49
28
e 50 0

49
W
Fo rod 4 0 8 S an ey 3
Gum
o 2
Haw ey
o 2
w neb enne 2 2 6 A nod 3 o
6 0 Qua s 3 0 6 B Qua s 0
2
JACKSON 28
Ha ess
0 2 Conge o 2 2 Jenk ns 2 0 4
W k ne 3 0 6
G ee
02
Fo sy he
3 0 e
0
Coy an
0 2 Be n
2 0 4
Ben ey
o2

Tomght s games

Eastern,
Southern
at home
Ga ll pol s
McDonald IS averag ng 19
po nt.s per game Qverall and s
thrrd n tJ e league w th a 17 5
ppg average
Marauder head coach Roger
Brauer s expected to go aga n
w h h s platoon type offense
se ndmg m two squads of I ve
payers each at ntervals of the
gao e
Saturday the Marauders w I

Fitzgerald 1s
promoted to

head coach JOb
KENT Oh o UP!)
J
Denn s F tzgerald delens ve
coordmator of the Kent Sta e
Un vers1ty football eam
Thursday was named head
coach to succeed Don James
who res gned to become head
coach at the Un vers ty of
Wash ngton
F tzgerald 38 a native of
Ann Arbor Mrch was a
football and wresllmg standout
at the Un vers ty of M ch gan
and also se rved on he
Wolver ne s coach ng staff He
left M ch1gan to jon the
coach ng staff at the Un ver
s ty of Kentucky and was
recru ted by James four years
ago Hrs record was 2&gt;191
over the past four seasons

Co l&gt; '\ouke ba
Re u I
By Un tPa ..-ress nternat on a

East

s v n
4 s pp y Rck 68
S F an Pa 2 ona 5~
Un on 82 Geo wn Ky 8
N hea s n 93 ve m on 9
S M hae s 96 Lemoyne 9
F a
e h ~9
De 90 Mon
S
0
K ngs P 89 Yesh a 62
South
N C S
9 W Ca
6
Ba 60 Sa sb y s 52
Roanoke 83 B oom sbg S
Rnd ph Macn 8 Md Ba

M

H dn

Hannan T a e a Kyge C eek
Othe s
Hannan W Va a Sou he n
Symmes Va ey a Rock H
M e a T mb e
Ra enswood a Po n P easa
R p ey a Wahama

!SATURDAY
SVACI

Sou hwes

e

,.!!

n a E as e n

Others
Me gsa Fed e a Hock ng
P ke Eas e n a A exande
Wa en Loca a Pa ke sbu g
ca ho c
Fa and a Symmes Va ey

(TUESDAY JAN 14

Hannan

W

Va

a

Kyge

c eek
T mb e a Sou he n
M e a Be ne Un on
Po n P easan a Ba bou

e
WEDNESDAY JAN 15

Po n

P easan

a N

o

9 L nco n Me 68

Ky S

LOU S 53 W T ex 5 5
4 C em son 2
No Ca
Ro n s 96 Wa e oo 88
Cha es on 64 Me
s 6
usk.tgee 92 A a A&amp;M
Aug us a 29 P edmon 2
Haw a
9 Cen ena y 8
aT e h9NELa92
N W La 56 S E La 53
G Webb 8 l Rhyne 58
No Geo g a 6 Be y
So Fa 89 Leh gh 62
M dwest
w gh s 58 C eve 53
Ce n s 95 W b f ce 89
Wch a S
06 D ake92
B ad ey 06
S 85
DePau 90 Manha an 5
Sup e o 83 N h nd 8
M on 9 Wh ewa er 78
nd S E ns
92 S E Mo 8
Southwe st
0 Rob e s 9
ng Bch s 86
SMU 98 Hous on Bap 6

s mmons

0 l ex A

50

53 W T ~ X S 5
West
UCL A 92 Wa sh ng on 82
San ose s 6 Po nd s 62
Pont lema Class c
at San D ego
0
e Naz 88 So Ca Co
2
Lou S

SVAC
No h Ga a a lias e n

9

56

B o a 6 Grace 5
US n 69 S oux Fal s 6
Po n lorna 84 N W Naz 65

LEFl'IES ACQUD\ED
HONOLULU (UPI)
The
Haw au Islanders of the Pacific
Coast League Wednesday ac
qurred two Jefthanded hitters
from the San Diego Padres
organrzahon
They are Jun Farrey who
also played for the Los Angeles
Dodgers Montreal Expos and
Tacoma of the PCL and Larry
Stahl who prevrously played
for PhoeJUX of the PCL

Marauders tonight

aga n f) to stop Dan B se he Ja es and Ca nd a e Z 3 n 14 ppg
second lead ng score r n SVAC scor g bel d onl)
S urd ) the Jeagles w II go
sout heastern Oh o w U a 22 3 Ha na T ace s Ma k S\\a n
ga st t e leag e s four h and
P rate F ed Logan s seven!
ppg average 1 he Go den
ten h top scorers n Terry
n SV AC scor ng w th a H 6 ppg C e a I Uoyd Wood Carter
Lancers are r&gt;-3 overall
The Eagles of B I PI I ps ave age
spo ts a 15 4 ppg ave age and
For he Eag les T n Spencer Wood s averag ng 13 2
hope to contro b g G eg Ja es
and M ke Co nden the top wo IS f f h n leag e sco ng at 4 8
F da) he 1 o nados " I
Pirate scorers and rebounders and M k Ha s s e gl t a
a c t
work c out for

North favored in Senior Bowl
MOBILE Ala UP!) - 11 e
favored North has made three
last mmute changes n s
defens vel neup for Saturda) s
Semor Bowl game becase of
InJuries
North Coach John Ralston of
the Denver Broncos sa d
I neman Way ne Baker of
Brrghal'n Young and Dave
Was ck of San Jose State and
cornerback Monte Jackson of
San D ego Sta e rece ved m
VJtatlons when three of the
scheduled North players were
hurt -&lt;~ nd all three earned
startmg ass gnments
Baker replaced Stanford All
Amer ca Pat Donavan who
hurt h s elbow m the East West
game Was ck replaced Oh o
State s Pete Cus ck "ho hur
his knee m the Rose Bowl and
Jackson replaced Southern
Cal s Charles Phillips who hur
his h1p m the Rose Bowl
The South wh ch had
already lost A I Am er ca
defens ve I neman Randy
White of Maryland who sllllply
decrded he drdn t want to play
in erther the Hula Bowl or

By United Press international
Wr ght State defeated
tieveland State 58-53 Tiffin
downed Northwood (Mich ) 81
71 and Central State whipped
Wilberforce 95 89 In Oh10
college basketball action
Thursday n ght
No games are scheduled
tomght but 27 contests are on
tap Saturday
Lyle Falknor tossed In free
thrdws for the last four po nts
to assure Wnght State of rts
wm over Cleveland State and
ts s1xth v1ctory m nme starts
Wrrght State ended the
seesaw battle after a 39-3911e m
the last half handing the
Clevelanders the1r SIXth defeat
m e ght season games
Wrrght State which had a 2625 edge at halftune was
headed by Bob Grote w1th 17
pomts and Falknor with 14
Cleveland State was paced .Py
Wilbur Starks WLth 16 pomts
and Gale Drummer wrth 15
Trff n s Robin FarriS
pumped m 24 pomts as the
Dragons pulled away from a
39 39 halfhme deadlock to
down Northwood Institute of
Mrch gan
Trffm whrch led most of the
seco nd half unpr oved Its

record to 4-11 for the season
Northwood s Gary Johnson
was the game s top scorer w th
'll po nt.s Northwood s 5-5th s

Sen or Bowl nade t YO more
changes
South Coac D ck Nolan of
the San Franc sco Forty
N ners sa d I nebacker Bo
Harr s of I ou s ana State was
replac ng Flonda s Glenn
Cameron who InJured h s k ee
m the Sugar Bowl and tha
off ens ve tackle Andy Steele of
Auburn was replacmg Tam
pa s Darr) I Carlton who had
pneumon a
Bo I coaches a nounced
the r start ng lineups today for
Saturday s natronall) teleVJsed
(NBC 1 p m est all-star
game The game marks the
profess onal debu for 62
college semors w th members
of the wmnmg team getting
$1 500 and the losers $1 250
The North w 11 have Cal
forma All Amer ca Steve Bart
kowski the No 1 college
passer 1n the nation last fall a
quarterback and Jun Germany
of New Mex co State and Andy
Jones of Wash ngton State at
runn ng backs
The South wrll have Mary
land s Bob Avell nl the
Atlantic Coas t Conference

R chords a plus 400 h tter n
his fmal two colleg ate seasons
was s gned uruned ately upon
his selec on by the San D ego
Padres
The Padres d rector of
player personnel Bob Fon
Ia ne commented
He has
that little b t of darmg m him
that makes for a good base
runner Selecting him Is JUSt
one more step toward attrumng
our goal of gett ng more
runmng speed rn the
organ zatlon
Aikens though s the man
who can earn the attentron
because of his name and
sl uggmg potential He ba Is left
and throws r ght and hit 360
w th 12 homers at South
Carolina State last season
There were 161 players
chosen n the regular phase
and another 104 10 the secon
In e na ona Hock e y
dary phase which ncluded
League Stand ngs
those players drafted last June
By Un ed P ess In e na on a
No th
who drdn t Sign and shU were
w
pts gt
el g ble The Ph ladelph a Phil
Sag naw
245564
F n
24 d 3 5
52
I es w th the r rst cho ce m the
Mu skegon
24 5
49 65
secondary phase selected and
5 n 2 32 28
Po Hu on
La n s n g
26
23 38
urunedrately srgned outfrelder
K a a mazoo
9 25 2 20 92
Barry Bonnell of M !ford Ohio
Sou h
w
1 p s gf ga
Bonnell a 6..J 190-pound
Day on
2
2 6 68
r
ghthander
was vo ed the
Co um bus
22 8
5 6
Toedo
202,2
4
54
Most Valuable Player of Oh o
Des Mo ne
8 23 2 38
0
Sta e s team last season after
F Wa yn e
5 22 0 30 39
Thu sday s Resu Is
battmg 319
No games schedu ed
lnfrelder Bump W lis son of
F days Gmes
oedoaFn
former star Maury W lis was
Sag naw a D es Mo n es
chosen In the sillth slot of the
Po
Hu on a Muskegon
Day on a co umbus
secondary draft by Texas and
Fo
Wayne a Ka am a oo
All Amer ca runnmg back An
thony
Dav s of USC was chosen
WHA S and ngs
By Un ted P ess In e na ona
as an outf elder 10 the fourth
easl
round by M111nesota
t
p
s
g
ga
w
2 4 36
New Eng nd 2
There were 12 pitchers
2 30 98
6
C e e a nd
selected
by the 24 clubs on the
29 8
Ch cago
6 89
nd anapo s
openmg round of the reguhrr
go phase and only one of them s
Hou s on
0
o lefthanded - Patr ck McGehee

NEW YORK UP! ) - W lire
Mays A kens a powerful
young man who was born to
play baseball m the flam
boyant manner of hrs
namesake was faced with the
opportunity today to move
West JUSt as Wrll e Mays drd 18
years ago to begm his pro
career
Aikens who packs a home
run punch m his muscular 6foot..J 220-pound frame was
made the second cho ce m
baseball s annual wmter free
agent draft Thursday when he
was selected by the Califorma
Angels The only player who
went ahead of the 20-year-old
frrst baseman was his former
teammate at South Carolma
State College outfielder Gene
R chords

5
0

Sa n D ego
M h gan

3

8

Quebe
To on o
Edmon o

w

nn p eg

2

3 24 3 29 02 69

Canad an

2
2

w

9

p s g

ga

5 0 46 55 9
4
60 39
6
39

6 98

36

Our Interest Is
Greater For You

5.75%
On 90.0ay

Certificates

s 75 per ceni per year
pa ld on 90 day Cer
hflcates of Deposit
S1 000 00

Interest
Quarterly

of Carson Call! who was
taken 20th by the New York
Yankees Also there was only
one catcher chosen n that
round James Slaughter of
Pasadena Calif who was
taken 21st by Cincmnat
Another oddity of the frrst
round was the selection of 21
year-old twins shortatop Tom
Brookens and ou!frelder Tim
Brookens both of Fayetteville
Pa Tom was prcked fourth by
Detro t and Tim 18th by Texas

Minimum

Payable

The Athens County
Savings &amp; Lo1n Co
296 Second Sl
Pomeroy Oh o

•

We ep esen some of the best nsu a nee com pan es n he
sta e
You Get he T u h Pus Low Ra es

FA RM AUTO HOME BUSINE SS
STATE AUTOMOB LE MUTUAL
- WESTER N RES ERVE MUTUAL
L GHTN NG ROD MUTUAL
OH 0 S FOREMOST FARM SPECIAL ST
G ve Us A Cal and Get Facts About Your lnsur•nce

Po c es

Davis Insurance Service
Phone 992 5120
114 Court Sf

•

e~tfll

at The Inn Place

~

GEO. HALL

EHI
ALF-QUARTS

and The Hallmarks
FRIDAY and SATURDAY
9:30 TIL 2:00

MEIGS INN

chen Ad
L lion (M cro
wave Oven!
Also o ..ol

ProPine SerV1ce

Ridenour's

PH 992 3629

T V &amp; Applrance
Phone 985 3307
Chester Ohto

of Southern Cal and defensive
backs Neal Colz e of Ohio State
and Randy Hughes of
Oklahoma
Both Ralston and N olan say
they are pleased wrth the
progress therr squads have
made in tile few days they have
had to put a team together
These guys are all out.
standing players or they
wouldn t be here
said
Ralston
It s JUst been a
matter of getting them func
tlon ng as a team ill the very
I ttle llllle allowed

8

Authorized dea er for Zen th
G bson
Hardw ck
K1

Gas SeiYICe

desp te a late
start a q arterback and
high y heralded Waite Pay on
of Jackson M ss Sta e and
Don Harde nan of I ex as A&amp;l a
run mgbac)(s
Bartkowsk con p e ed 182
passes for 2 580 yards th s pos
se so w e Ave lllru con
p e ed 112 for I 658 yards
Germany rusnect for I 096
yards Payton for 1 029 and
Hardeman for 9o5
Bartkowski s rece vers wrll
be En me t Edwa rds of
Kansas Pat Mclna ly of
Harvard and Rose Bowl he o J
K McKa) of So uthern Cal
Ave lin s recervers wrll be wo
tune Southeastern Conference
ieHder Lee McGnff of Flor da
Junmy Robrnson of Georg a
Tech and West V rg n a s
Dann) Buggs who s rymg to
recover rrom a mmor Jeg m
JUry
The North would appear to
have the edge on defenses nee
even wrthout D&lt;lnovan t has
four All Americas In Is
startmg defens ve lineup
Lmebackers Rod Shoate of
Oklahoma Wld Richard Wood

35

season
Ken Smrth scored 16 of hiS 23
game h gh pornts n the crucral
last half where Central State
got hot to defeat nerghbor ng
r val and w nless Wrlberforce
Wrlberlorce trail ng 49-42 at
ntenn ss on caught up at 49all and went ahead 51-49
Central State then spurted
away to a deciSive 74-53 lead
and coasted to its seventh w n
m nine starts
Wilberforce m dropping rls
e ghth game was headed by
Isaac Green w1th 21 pomts

pass ng leude

Richards, Aikens taken 1-2

Phoen x
M nn eso a

Wright State wins

them as they face the Hannan
W Ideals
The W Ideals are led by
Wayne R chardson wh le Mike
Rober ts desprte a scoreless
performance Tuesday at
Waterford s then nth leading
scorer n the SVAC wrth a 13 2
ppg average

ROYAL CROWN
BOffiiNG COMPANY
Middleport

POMEROY

�3- The Daily Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy 0

2- The Daily Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Friday Jan 10 1975

Penalizing everyone as energy policy
The baSic law of ecology IS that everything IS hooked to
everything else Nothing happens m ISOlatiOn There IS no
away where you can throw Qrings for a diSturbance of the
erlVIronment In one pllft!e has effects m every other place
It may be a basrc law 1n human affairs as well not least m
the flel&lt;t of economics which Is proper smce both ecology and
economy are traced to the same Greek root meanmg house A
disturbance of the economy m one place has effects n every
other place
The chorus of complamts about the nations lack of an)
comprehenSive energy policy and demands that Presrdent Ford
come up With one tend to overlook the operaUbn of this law
But consider
Should heaV) add tiona! taxes he lev ed on gasolme to
discourage drrvmg and cut consumpt on wh le adversely af
feeling an already depressed auto mdustry not to mention
tourrsm wh ch 46 of the 50 state;; rank as one of therr three maJor
industries?
-Should full development of Amer cas energy resources be
encouraged or should we mpor t as n uch higher-pnP!(I forergn
orl as possible husbandmg our own energy resources for the
fut~re ?

- Should North Dakota perm t surface mmlng of coal to
provide secure energy to the East Coast part cularly n VJew of
easterners res st&lt;mco to refiner es and petroleum exploration n
therr areas
Should Louis ana he forced to sh p ts natural gas to the
North to keep factor es nmnmg m New Jetsey if t means oss of
industry and JObs n Lours Wla
These provocative quest ons put forth n a recent edition of
Continental 011 Co s Conoco 74 magazme underscore the
dilemma confronting the Pres dent h1s advisors and the new
Congress as they move toward the formulat on of a useful and
useable energy policy for this country
There are any number of conflicts both in society and wrthm
the government that much be reconcrled if that goa l s to he

achieved For example there are currently more than 60 federal
agencres havmg some responsrbrlity for oil and gas matterS
Wrth so many grouJlSmvolved coordmatron Is diff cult there
IS an absence of common purpose and duplication and IIIterfrr.ence are frequent
Wrthout an overall ener~ policy there are no gUidelines and
nobody has the responsibility for BI!Surmg that the var ous obJect ves and programs mesh or that trad...,ffs - des!,'&lt;'Jied
landscapes 1n the West for hummmg generators m the East say
- are properly evaluated and resolved
Everyone can agree that a natrona! energy pol cy rs an
llllperat ve need that must be met before the new year IS many
more weeks old But because everything IS hooked to
everythmg else whatever the prov stons of the policy we can
be sure they w II have repercussiOns not altogether pleas ng to all
Amer cans n all the states

No success like failure
Deati s from overdoses of methadone the man made nar
cot1c mtroduced to wean addrcts from herom for the first time
have exceeded deaths fro herom reports Secur ty World
magazme
Accordmg to Dr Domm1ck DiMaio actmg chief medical
exam ner 1n New York Crty while the total number of drug
related deaths there dropped for the first tlllle m a decade there
were 181 deaths dtrectly attr butable to methadone last year and
98 deaths due dtrectly to herom
Only 10 of those wh9 dred of methadone poiSOn ng however
were enrolled m methadone clin cs Accordll' to Dr Robert
Newman head of New York City s methadone program
strmgent new federal regulations limiting the length of time an
add ct can be g ven methadone m a clinic have driven many of
them back mto the streets for therr methadone mcreasmg the
I kelihood of overdose

Jacks~n ·hosts

Syracuse
News, Society
A posf..Chnstmas dmner and
g ft exchan ge was held
Saturday Dec 28 at the home
or Mr and Mrs D&lt;lnald Cot
tr II Those attendmg were Mr
and Mrs Edward Chapman
and Eddy of Picker ngton Mr
and Mrs Floyd Chapman
She lly and Krmberl y of
Columbus Mr and Mrs Eddie
VanMatre and E T Mason
W Va Mr and Mrs Gordon
West Debra Rhonda John
Melody
Rae ne
D ane
R dgeway Pomeroy Sharon
Cra g and Bruce Cottr II and
he hos t and hostess
Hoi day guests of Mrs
Jan ce Lawson and Dav d were
Terr e M Her and Tony
Rut and Mr and Mrs Tom
Laudenn I and Mrsty Dawn
Pomeroy
Mrs
Dorothy
Pa sons B lly and Kelly
Ant qurty C ndy Lawson
Fa rv ew
R ck Morr s
Middleport Mr and Mrs Ed
Lawson and Er c Plants
Roger Sayre who s enrolled
at the Un vers ty 'tf North
Flor da at Jacksonv lie spent
he ho rdays w th h s parents
M and Mrs Brooks Sayre and
other re at ves and frr ends
New Years Day guests of
M and Mrs Sampson Hall
were Mrs Ed th Teaford and
Cecrl M nersv lie Mr and
Mrs James Teaford Mrs
Jan ce Lawson and Davrd and
Penny and Edd e Wolfe
Mrs
Harold Teaford
M ddleport spent a recent
afternoon w th Mr and Mrs
James Teaford
Mr and Mrs Jerry Rowe
have moved nto the Louks
Trarler Court
M s Paul ne Morar ty spen t
Chr stmas at Lancaster w th
her son and family Mr and
Mrs Larry Morar ty
Mr and Mrs Carl Hubbard
have been vacat on ng dur ng
the hoi days at Jacksonville
For da w th Mr and Mrs B U
Wh lock and lam ly

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

Ed Note Between Two Arnues by William) Alonzo Hunt was copred by Seth F N cholson
R D Rutland from clippmgs of the Mergs County Republican weekly newspaper prm ed apparently 10 1891 The clippmgs were 10 a scrapbook kept by his mother whose marden name was
Cynthia Elizabeth Hunt oldest of the frve children of Alonzo and Clemency Robison Hunt
The story of the Lynchburg Ra1d which Hunt men!Jons near the end of his art cle apparen Jy
was not wr tten N cholson recalls his mother telling about her father bemg m that hasty retreat I
was freezmg weather h s grandfather was a cavalryman who upon bemg forced to r de his horse
across apparently the James River got his boots full of water and bemg m such desperate haste
the r was no llllle to empty out the water It froze solid and years later thiS children were taking
urns m cold weather rubhing therr fathers !ego and feet m the evenmgs to restore them to normal
war'\'th
Hunts accout of how a VtrgmJa (now West Vrrg101a) family that bel eved m the North ern cause
fared m the clash of deadly passrons of war and m the confusmg contest for the v tal control of the
western mountam counties of Vtrgm1a IS an llllportant addition to Civil War literature of eye
"rtness reports of that bloody eneounter

BETWEEN TWO ARMIFS
By W Alonzo Hunt
As fnendJackson wants some of the boystowr tea story lor the paper I w Uput 10 a short one
MAY REJOIN SHOW
The name of my story w U be Between Two Arm es I was born m Franklin County Mass
ROCKFORD lll UP!
February 8 1845 My father moved o Fayette County VrrgllUa qow West Vtrgm a) m the year of
Former U S Olymp c frgure
1851
skater Janet Lynn out dur ng
Now hemg from Massachusetts meant buS!Oess m 1861~2 They voted about three m les from
the hoi days w th v raJ
our house and the word came up that they were keepmg the men away from the polls w1th shotguns
pneum on a and pleur sy may
Father smd he would go and vote r he d ed at the polls He went and voted for Lincoln He sa d there
re1o n the Ice Folbes show by
was great excitement there
Jan 13 Mrss Lynn contracted
Gen Wrse s troops (rebels) were the frrst to pass our house He came along and pressed mto
the llnesses wh le she was
serv ce my two oldest brothers Edwm and John Henry Hunt and they marched off w1th he
home dur ng the Chr stmas
rebel army went down to Scarey where they had therr frrst fight My brothers came back up and
hoi day per od and was unable
SBid that was therr last frght wrth the rebs
to JO n the show when t opened
About the frrst thing I s~w of them they were makmg for the woods They h d while the rebs
last week n Ph ladelph a
were gomg by I carr1ed1hem grub Gen W1se reb general) came along m a two-lmrse camage a
accord ng to he moth er
darky dr VJOg He got out 10 front of our house I thought he was the madest man I ever saw Some
Florian Nowrck
off cers came along He told one of them to go to Camp Lookout and put a strong guard across the
road and f elds and to shoot the ftrst d d man that trres to pass I think he had one diVISIOn
They were desertmg hllll very fast
My brothers went down to the Kanawha and enlisted m the Umon army About that tlllle my
brother John was old enough to be a sold1er The rebels threatened to draft hun He went down to
Gauley and enlrsted m the 2nd Kentucky Infantry So you see they soon began to take notiCe of me
They thought that I was growmg up very fast
In the sprmg of 62 rt began to get pretty wann m Fayette Gen Floyd came out w1th a dJVJSJon
By RICHARD HUGHES
computer tape whrch IS cleared
of infantry There was some cavalry One company Capt McGruder camped at our house I think
UPI Business Writer
through the Federal Reserve
1t was 10 Se~ember 62 that they came m the mght and arrested Father The. next mornmg Mother
NEW YORK UP!) - A System and ultimately deposits
WASHINGTON
NEA - When the not ce of Jack Benny s
sent me to
Dog Wood Gap where WISe was buildmg fortificahons to see f I could fmd ou
dea th was bullet ned to the nati on I was motor ng on the New cashless soc ety 10 wh1ch all the wages m the worker s bank
where Father was hey told me that they had sent him to Richmond
Jersey Turnp ke I had been dr v ng for hours and as rs my curse transactiOns from buymg gro- account No paper changes
While McGruder was at our house I had to go day and mght to haul feed for them We had a
compu er programmmg would
dur ng such per ods I was endlessly turn ng the rad o d a! lor cer~es to pa) mg the telephone hands
bave to be standardized for a hrrge yoke of cattle All the way I could keep them was to do everythmg they told me to McGruder
somethmg bes des dnvel but to no ava I The end of Benny the bill are handled electromcally
A
voluntary
program
less
umform transfer A national had our parlor for h s headquarters and the soldrers had the barn
rad1o g ant not surp rs ngly was announced r ght alter a tune
Is poSSible wrthin 10 years
than
40
per
cent
of
Arr
Force
I went over to McGraw s one day to get a patr of shoes for Mother When I came home I went m
standard
for all b Us would
by someth ng cal ed Elton John and before another by yechh
according
to
a
Federal
personnel
10
the
three
test
where
McGruder was He asked me where I had been My answer was over to McGraw s He sard
Three Dog N gh t
have to he adopted so they
Reserve
bank
officer
areas
would
agree
to
take
therr
The occas on served to rem nd th s t me w th rony the depths
contamed all the necessary did you see any Yanks? I SBid no Says he if you had seen some commg over here to capture me
Thomas G Waage sen or payment 10 th s manner
to wh ch the once f ne medmm of rad o has sunk Stat ons wh ch
information and could be would you have told me so I sard No I Ubed d if I would
A Jot or people get JlSYch c translated by erther magnetic
formerly JOyed Amenca w th the presence of a Jack Benny now VJce presrdent of the Fed s New
Says he f you are not careful how you talk Ill send you to Richmond I sa1d to hllll you have
York branch told a news satlsfactron out of takmg a ape or op!Jcal scann ng my lathe there starVJOg hllll to death 11 may be that I could be of servrce to hmr but I U alk as I
broadcast nothmg more than background mus c to pass the hours
Musrc news and sports s what they callrt Gad It s double aw conference this week urdess a check
Waage sa1d For deVJces
please 10 my own house He went out and did not bother me any more
lui Wmdsh eld w pers offer more enterta mment to the travel ng new system of exchange IS example he sa d A lot or
In a short tlllle W se feU !lack to Meadow Bluff Floyd went byihe way of Fayetteville and
Under
thiS
system
an
m
listener
developed the nahon s bankmg fellows like to take therr check div1dual would take or send his formed a ]Unct on wrth W seat Meadow Bluff On W1se s retreat he camped at Dog Wood Gap a few
Th " s not understand a complamt of nostalgra The good old sytem will choke under an to a bar have a drmk and cash
b lis to the bank wh ch would days
days of rad o had Benny but they also had Capta n M dn ght avalanche of checks
t
there
He sent for me to come up w th the team I went up He SBid to me you load up w1th hospital
make drrect payments from
hokey qu z shows ( College of Mus cal Knowledge Sp1ke Jones
The
checking
acco
unt
The
Sacral
Securrty
Adminis
goods
and go to Camp Look Out He sa1d you must make two trrps today I started wrth a load and
the
md
VJdual
s
account
to
the
and H s Crty Sl ckers and dreary daytrme drama ( Backstage
system
has
been
enormously
trat1on
which
sends
out
35
JUSt
before
I left a frrend came to me and said they are gomg to eat your oxen tomght and put a gun
cred tor s bank account
W fe that polluted the I v ng room Even that was preferable to
attractive
and
successful
but
at
mrlbon
checks
a
month
deter
on
my
shoulder
today s lrddledefump but only by a b t The pr nc pal reasons
through electromc transfers of
many remember t fondly s that they no longer have to 1sten to the same time has created mmed 10 a survey last month money between the banks The
That put the bo) to studymg I began to lay plans for gettmg away I stopped along the road
serious paperwork problems that 30 per cent of the Federal Reserve would act as often to rest the oxen It was late when I got to Camp Look Out I had four b1g medtc ne chests and
t
Nor do I forget here grump ng that far from succumbmg to wtth the volume of checks recrp1ents many of them older an automated clearing house some hospital tents I looked up and down the road It was clear from rebs I stopped my team and
the llness wh ch ts programm ng sy mptom zes modem com expected to exceed 34 hilllon persons with difficulty gettmg Agam no paper would change rolled the chests and tents out m a pile along the road You could hear the bottles smashmg I turned
mere al rad o s n large part d sgustlngly healthy In Benny s this year Waage SOld
to banks would accept direct hands
the team around and ran rt back to the Meadow River road and went oqt that road about a half mile
t me (1940) there were 847 rad o stat ons n Amer c"' Tnday ac
Our problem he said Is payment to therr banks
dropped
the wagon tongue and drove them down m a large ravme Wld chamed them to a tree Then
ThiS system Waage sa d
cordmg to Nat onal Assocratron of Broadcasters f gures there to get something better
The
llllDledrate
Impact
of
the
I
went
back
and watched the rebs go by
has been used successfully m
are 7 738 NAB adds there are 353 mrll on recerv ng sets m use n
Waage said more ex
Then I came out on the road and started home went down the road about a mile and met Gen
the nat on and that manufacturers regularly sell 55 mrlhon more perllllentation s needed to direct payment systems would Europe In the Netherlands 90
save
the
governrnent
a
lot
of
per cent of all house payments Cox I got a bad rakmg from the boys They asked me where I had been I told them w1th Wrse Thev
annually We ve never had t so good say• an NABer There
probably sn t a family m the nat on wrthout a rad o most have develop electronrc methods of money but would result In even and rentals are made thrs way
wanted to know how many men they h~nd how many p1eces of artillery I told them about f1ve
paymg workers paymg bills more checking accounts and he sard
four and lrve or even more
thousand men and twelve )lleces of artillery I was telling them the truth but they would not believe
Yet g ven th e successes and the truth that radro has from ts and transferrmg funds to and checks because It would create
SUch a system could be me They sa d I was a I ar and a rebel too and that made me mad and I would not WJswer any
beg nn ng been topheavy w th yawns the gr pe tnday s that rt from checking accounts and accounts lor those who do not llllplemented n a year s tin e
more quest ons It was after dark when I got home
has almost totally abandoned the search for full lhng rts poten
banks
now have them Waage sard Waage sard if everybody
General Cox went out as far as Meadow Bluff He was so far from transportatron that he fell
tial Early soap operas alter all were the l1rst step toward ade
The Air Force recently
To reduce check volume would do t
back m a short llllle and went mto wmter quarters m Gauley
quate drama for the masses And even Sp ke Jones was an ex launched 1n three regrons a Waage proposed a system
It would be a ftrst step
I think about that llllle that Gen Rosecrans came Into the valley There was a large force a
per menter of sorts (h s orchestral ons ncluded t n cans Bronx payroll system whereby the whereby personal bills would
Fayetteville
Waage
sard
to
a
ca~hless
and some troops at Somersville The rebs ran me so close that I went down to Gauley
cheers and off wmg techn c ans who burped on key) But mus c
government
records
a be paid directly by a bank to socrety that could be reached n and gave myself up to the Union army and drove team two weeks I caught army fever and won
news and sports? There s no Sign th s format leads to anythmg worker s wages on magnetic
the creditor All bills and 10 yea s
home That was m December 62
but more mus c news and sports
True there have been a few recent rad o nnovat ons foremost
I bad not heard from Father When he went away he wore no beard and was very little gray We
among wh ch s the Nat onal Pub! c Radro Network Th s effort
were not prepared to see such a change as there was m him One evenmg about dark a man carne
funded by var ous pub! c and pr vale grants offers 40 hou rs of
mto the kitchen w th a long white heard and was a mere skeleton We d1d not know hun After he
soph st1cated programm ng a \l eek to some 170 stations n 48
told us of h s pr1son life and how fast they d1ed there we thought twas a nuracle that he ever got
sta tes Its publ c st J m Bar ett says the network Is nforma
away from that hell hole they called Lrbby PriSOn So you see 1t cost a man somethmg to be a Umon
tion or ented and ts da ly 5 to 6 30 PM news program All
man up there rn 61 and 62
Th ngs Cons dered s eas ly the f nest commun cat ons fonnat
One anny would come along one day and strrp us of everythmg and m a few days the other
on the arr NPR was the only rad o network to cover the Senate
would
come along and take everythmg we had scraped up agam Sometimes there was not a
Water£ate hea r n.l(s from f rst to last and the only network to at
bite
m
the
house for mother and three little children
tend last autumn s world food conference Its no cut and paste
G;wrence E Lamb M D
One afternoon mother came to me and sa1d there was nothmg to eat I was standmg m the
bndges the gap where he n ay ca use a mome ntary
thrng Barrett says We work at our reporting
LAMB
Woulda
kitchen
door and close to me was a hog I turned around and 10 a mmute was on top of t 1 cu ts
d
sease
rs
and
stimulates
the
So far however after three years of ex stence NPR s work
delay n the order of hun
pacemaker he p a left bundle pump ng chambers to contract dred hs of a second m con throat and skinned t w th my pocket knife and had meat m the cellar m a very short time
has gone mostly unnot ced Only about three m II on listen to the
net\lork s synd cation regu arly It s notor ety beyond that s n 1
branch block? How rs a regularly fast enou gh to traction of the blocked s de
I do not know who owned the hog If he will call around I will pay hlllll 't&gt; cents per pound
Desp te nnovat ons network surv val rs a worr some thmg
pacemaker nstalled and s t rna nta n adequate c rculat on Thrs has no mportant con
When Cox retreated back to Gauley I had to nm the oxen down to Cannelton to save them from
The pass ng of NPR energ es or the fa lure of others to copy ts
necessary to stop the heart The eleclr cal mechan sm may sequence These blocks are the rebs Father sold them after the war for one hundred dollars They had gone through a good deal
progress veness would be sad - r not for commercral rad o
DEAR READER - There be set at a g ven rate or may most y mportant only n or war serVJces for both amues
then at least for publ c Amer ca For the trmes have never begg
are numerous types of even chan ge as the rate of the relat on to what causes them
Gen Cox s men killed three fat steers for us (of ours) We never got a cel)tfor them
ed so necessarrly for w de and meanmgful commumcations as
pacemakers
They
reptesent
a
I have thought of a little fight Capt McGruder had down at Colonel Tyre s They rode r ght mto
top
of
the
heart
changes
These
If t rs a b rth defect t may not
they do no\\ Three Dog N1ght may serve some need t though I
Important
advance
n
really
Wl
ambush
I went out mto the barn to see them start and I never heard such braggmg as they dJd I
d fferences are vanahons n be Important at all If a bundle
can t 1mag ne what bu t even so there s tnday the greater m
sav
ng
lives
of
people
w
th
the types of pacemakers branch block develops because heard one of them say he could whip three Yanks I gr111ned and thought a great deal JUSt then
teres! It was nterestmgly radro s Jack Benny who helped the
heart d sease Supreme Court ava !able
They filed out m the road and went off 1n good faith Some of them were gomg to therr doom and
nation cope With some of ts past m ser es We can t call h m
of a heart attack I s m
Justice Douglas has had one n
I
knew
It but drd not care When It was about time for them to come back I went down where 1 could
back now nor would he surr ce b t h s med m s still avarlable
You can have a pacemaker portanl only r,n that rt reveals
- rf only t had the w I
place lor ) ears now W thout t mach ne outstde the bod) used the presence of the heart at see the road for about a mile All at once I saw a horse commg Without a rrder In a few mmutes
they aU began to come some horses had l1b saddles some no brrdles some no rJders It was a sigh
he could not have surv ved as a temporary devrce whrle tack
to see them
Th s s a well-pub! crzed fact the hear s recovenng from a
If you blocked all of the
so I am not revealing any state heart attack or even after electr cal I hers to the r ght
I did not learn how many men were killed I was down there 10 a few days The horses were pried
thick
along the road
secrets
heart surge!') If the heart and left s de of the heart at the
Da1~
FACTS
The pacemaker has nothing rega ns Is normal capacrty to same time you could produce a
The men stopped below our house One officer got off from hiS horse and la1d down m 8 fence
at all to do wrth bundle branch beat aut on at cally on rts own rt !om of block between the top corner he was hurt very badly I asked some man who he was he sard 1t was Gen Jenkms A horse
block It IS used when there sa can he drscontinued at that and bottom of the heart In had nm over hllllm the stampede The rebel who was bragging so came back there was a hole
senous block between the top time
emergency s tuat10ns as n a through one of hiS horse s eats the gas was taken out of that man He did not say much
and bottom of the heart Before
We could not keep any grain We went over to Mr Moores and bought a load of sheaf oats for
When the dJSease causes coronary care un t thrs IS kept
each heart beat an electr cal pennanent damage a small n m1nd and s one reason the $2S he would not take silver for pay must have Confederate pay He got 1t Father was glad to get
llllpulse passes down over the pacemaker unrt for power rs personnel there are concerned rrd of that kmd of money We got nd of the Qats JUst as qwck got home and drove m the barn
top chambe rs (a trra 1 and surg cally placed under the "hen a bundle branch block thought we would not unload that mght we had company therr names were Gen Jenkins and
enters the lower pumprn g sk n and the res from the occuts durmg the heart attack family
They never left one sheaf of oats for us They saddled up m the night and left m a hurry Reports
chambers ( venlrrcles) When unrt go to the heart ThiS rllness However they are
that the Yanks were commg across by Carnifax Ferry
came
diSease affects the area be- enables the person to go about equ pped to handle that
tween the top and bottom hiS usual bUSiness even h1k ng problem r I ar ses
•~~-~~~~~~~l~a~mthebarn~~
Dur ng fiScal year 1975 the
dropped
them down and then nailed 1t back They laid there three years When I went back after the
chambers
the
rmpulse
cannot
Veterans Admrmstrat on plans
1f he has a m nd to do so and
Send ) our questions to Dr
to spend J4 5 b Ilion n d sabrhty
thought they had been stolen (tittle JOke
get through The pumprng there are no other diSease Lamb
n care of th1s war I rrused the plank and there were our chams Father
•
and death payments to 2 6
chambers may not pump fast compl catwns
lncrdentally newspaper P 0 Box 1551 on the rebs )
m1lhon serv1ce d sabled
W1dow Eakin lived JUSt below our house Father would haul some of hiS com over there for safe
enough on the r own or even vou don t have to stop the heart Rad o Cit) StatiOn New York
veterans and surv vors of
keepmg
She bemg a Widow woman they would not take her corn They would stop somet.unes for
pumpatall When Ibis happens to pu n the pacemaker
N Y 10019 For a copy of Dr
deceased veterans The World
then there IS not enough err
Bundle branch block (rrght Lamb s booklet on cholesterol corn she would say go up to Hunt s h~ sa Uruon man take his com Up they would come and clean
Almanac says The maxrmum
Clllahon
if
any
to
the
bram
or left) refers to a problem n send 50 cents to the sa nr ad him out When they wpuld get out of the neJg!Jborh(l(id he would go down to Mrs Eakin sand get
payment IS $1 454 a month
some corn
and v1tal organs
transm1tt ng the el~ctr cal dress and ask for
wh1ch IS allowed for a totally
h
I m Ira d he editor will not prmt so much I had better close for the present I could g~ve a
The pacemaker Jrterally llllpulse o he left or r gh s de
drsabled veteran requ1r1ng con
d olesterol booklet
stant care
of the pump ng chan bers It
'
(Continued on page 9

Editorial comment,
opinion, features
Tom Tiede

Radio's last hurrah
passes the baton

Otecks will choke
system buszness today

DR. LAMB

When the heart needs a paceflUJker

WORLD ALMANAC The

Sentinel

f

I

CARVIlLE La (UP!) - Lows Boudreaux would Jove nothing
better than to he at the Super Bowl game Sunday
He s not gomg to make rt ihough
Not that Its much of a lrljl because New Orleans IS only 72
miles from here but LouiS Boudreaux has no ticket to the game
and he doesn t care to burdEII anyone w th the responSibility of
taking hllll sllllply because he happens to be blind Anyway he U
probably enJOY the whole thing JUst as much listenmg to 11 on the
radiO
I m rootmg for the Pittsburgh Steelers he says SIDiling
wrthout tellmg you abou the $2 bet he made on them The
Steelers have never made tall tile way and around here we love
the underdogs
That s perfectly understandable when you know a little b t of
the background about 5!1-year-old LouiS Boudreaux and the 300
others like hllll here rangmg mage from 22 to 90
All are pat ents 1n CarVJlle s completely modern U S Public
Health Servrce Hosprtal set less than 150 feet from the
Miss sstppr River
Some people who don t know any better refer to these patients
as lepers and call the disease they are afflicted wrth leprosy
The patients prefer the term Hansen s Disease and will talk
about 1! as read1ly as they do about Sundays Super Bowl contest
between Pittsburgh and Minnesota
I like the Steelers says Darryl Broussard Carville s 00.
year-old pat en! postmaster Broussard IS from Lake Charles
La and does he know hrs sports •
Bud Grant IS trymg to msult my mtelligence when he says
Fran Tarkenton plays better With a sore ann than he does wrth a
good one Who ever heard of anybody do ng better when he s
hurt? I have to go wrth Pittsburgh not JUS! because Bradshaw rs
a Lou srana boy but because they ve got a good ball club
I haven t bet a penny yet I wrll though if I get some sucker
Lours Boudreaux and Darryl Broussard are both considered
cured of Hansen s DISease and one of the reasons they remain m
Carville IS to rece1ve treatment
They are free to come and go as they like but that wasn t
always the case
I was 19 when Iftrst came here and although t didn t happen
to me some people used to be brought here by force says Lows
Boudreaux charrman of the editorial board for Carvllle s b
monthly magazine Star
My home IS 1n Donaldsonville La and when I frrst came here
the townsp~ple burned my siSter s and brothers books when
they learned what I had My dad who s 85 used to be a Jeweler
and people qurt trading wtth hllll
One of my brothers came here two years after I d1d and the
same thmg happened aU over agam It was a Jot worse the second
time
My name rs not Lows Boudreaux Its an alias I took when I
first came here No I drdn t take the name from the old
Cleveland second baseman I took 1t long before I ever heard of
him

What really hurls Boudreaux went on IS the prejudice and
rgnorance which exiSts among people about Hansen s Disease
To teU the truth I was JUSt as Ignorant as the rest when I first
carne here It was much different then
Today patients who come here don t know how much more
fortunate they are because they can receiVe more effective
treatment m Carville along w1th an early drscharge
CarnUe IS the only facUlty of 1ts kind m the Uruted States the
only complete treatment center
What struck me especially on my VISit a completely delightful
one was the fact I dido t see a smgle hang-dog expression among
the patrents They all looked at peace With themselves
The man who runs the nosprQII IS vr JOhn trautman a
strappmg 48-year-old nabve of Omaha Neb whose official title
IS Medical Director of Carville and who looks more like a
professional football player than many of the Vlkmgs and
Steelers
Some of the fear and miSunderstanding about Hansen s
Disease IS the result of brblical passages 10 the Old Testament
he says The general repugnance toward the word leprosy
obVJously comes from the brbllcal connotation that there IS
something unclean assocrated w1th 1t
Down through the ages leprosy has been synonymous w1th
uncleanliness and homble lookmg skm diSfigurements Some of
the patients at Carville are disfigured some are not
Lepers always have been treated as outcasts For centurres m
Europe bells were hung around the necks of tbose known to have
the diSease and when others heard the bell, they knew here came
an unclean person -stay away
A lot of our present patients are cured although we hesitate to
use the word cure the same way we do m cases of tuberculosiS
says Trautman We bave three patients here rrght now attending I.SU We don t feel they represent a public health
problem
There IS a golf course a ball field a lake stocked with fish and
a library and arr-cond1tioned theater at Carville Everything IS
provided the patrents free of charge
Everybody who VISits Carville alxl about 10 000 do each year
always wants to know how commumcable the dJSease IS
We feel if the diSease IS under treatment and IS respondmg
then the degree of commumcability IS negligible By that I mean
the riSk IS pracllcallynone-butl can tsayrtdoesn teXIS!
The patients at Carville love sports and among tbe sporls
figures who have VISited the fac1lity are Ted Lyons Dizzy Dean
Bi11 Drckey Bill Lee and AI Kaline Mel Ott learned of hiS elec
tion to Baseball s Hall of Fame durmg his frrst VISit
Tom Rickman of Chrcago Carville s chief of services used to
pttch batting practice for the Whrte Sox and serves as recreation
superviSOr for the patients
Back m 1949 the patients grew bored of playmg softball agamst
each other all the time and Rickman went to nearby Baton Rouge
to see if he could get Carville mto some league
Members of Baton Rouges police and frre departments sard
they d be willing to come and play the patients but the manager
of another team m the league called out
You got any mggers down there•
Yes we have ~e Negro pahents Rickman replied
That leaves us out sa1d the team manager
We said we d come to play the patients and we wlll sa1d the
policemen and firemen We don t care what therr color IS
At firSt the pat ents felt they were In too deep over therr heads
they thought the other teams m the league would crush them mto
little pieces
Two years after they entered the league guess who won the
championship?
Carville
You never saw such a celebration m your life
Beer though Not champagne

SEOAL FRESHMEN

ALUMINUM
FIBER

1ROOF COAT

Team

Ga I po s
logan
A hens
Wave y
Me gs

on on

ackson

'22
BAUM'S TRUE
VALUE STORE
5 Gai

985-3301

95

Chester' 0

We ls1on

W L
P
6
3 6

OP
266

316

202
25-i

6
5 2
4

J

28
266
279
216
243

J 4
2 5
2 5
0
159 295
28 28 2086 2016

TOTALS
Thursdays resu Is

Ga pol s 43 A hens 39
M e gs 49 ack son 28

logan 50

24
266
256
306

on on 30

Waverly 42 We son 24
Jan 16 games
Ga po s a We sto n
on ton- a A hens
Wave y a Me gs
Jackson a Logan

The Mergs Marauders on the
heels of a near upsef over
Athens Tuesday mght travel to
Jackson ton ght for !herr
seventh SEOAL encounter In
other area games Eastern
hos ts North Galha and
Southern entertams Hannan
W Va
Saturday the Marauders go
to Federal Hocking m Athens
County and Eastern hosts
Southwestern of Gallia County
The Ironmen of Jackson led
by M1ke McDonald and Jeff
Conroy are r&gt;-3 overall 3-3 n
the SEOAL AI Burger s
qwnte t one ol the qmckest n
the league used the r per
petual motion offense earlier n
the season n an upset wm over

Meigs frosh
are sharp
The Me gs Marauder fresh
men hr ttmg 53 pet from the
f eld rolled to a 49-28 v ctory
over th~ Jackson frosh at Rock
Spr ngs Thursday evemng
The v ctory boosted the
Marauder record to J.4 on the
season whrle Jackson fell to 2-li
The Marauders held a sl m 86 lead after the r rst period
before pull ng away n the
second quarter to lead 22 12 at
mterm SSIOn
Me gs upped the lead aga n
gomg on top by 17 37 20 gomg
nto the fmal frame
The Marauders were led by
Greg W tte w1th 10 po nts
wh le Chuck Follrod chipped m
8 For Jackson W ckl ne had 6
pomts
Bes des hrttmg 53 pet of
the r f eld shots
the
Marauders also h t at a good
clip from the char ty strrpe
cann ng 3 of 4 for 75 pet
The Marauders hauled n 17
rebounds paced by Brent
Stanley wrth 5 and Brent Ar
nold w th 4
The next game for the frosh
IS Thursday Jan 16 when
they 11 host Waverly
Me gs
a kson
MEIGS

B 4
6 6

5
8

2
8

49
28
e 50 0

49
W
Fo rod 4 0 8 S an ey 3
Gum
o 2
Haw ey
o 2
w neb enne 2 2 6 A nod 3 o
6 0 Qua s 3 0 6 B Qua s 0
2
JACKSON 28
Ha ess
0 2 Conge o 2 2 Jenk ns 2 0 4
W k ne 3 0 6
G ee
02
Fo sy he
3 0 e
0
Coy an
0 2 Be n
2 0 4
Ben ey
o2

Tomght s games

Eastern,
Southern
at home
Ga ll pol s
McDonald IS averag ng 19
po nt.s per game Qverall and s
thrrd n tJ e league w th a 17 5
ppg average
Marauder head coach Roger
Brauer s expected to go aga n
w h h s platoon type offense
se ndmg m two squads of I ve
payers each at ntervals of the
gao e
Saturday the Marauders w I

Fitzgerald 1s
promoted to

head coach JOb
KENT Oh o UP!)
J
Denn s F tzgerald delens ve
coordmator of the Kent Sta e
Un vers1ty football eam
Thursday was named head
coach to succeed Don James
who res gned to become head
coach at the Un vers ty of
Wash ngton
F tzgerald 38 a native of
Ann Arbor Mrch was a
football and wresllmg standout
at the Un vers ty of M ch gan
and also se rved on he
Wolver ne s coach ng staff He
left M ch1gan to jon the
coach ng staff at the Un ver
s ty of Kentucky and was
recru ted by James four years
ago Hrs record was 2&gt;191
over the past four seasons

Co l&gt; '\ouke ba
Re u I
By Un tPa ..-ress nternat on a

East

s v n
4 s pp y Rck 68
S F an Pa 2 ona 5~
Un on 82 Geo wn Ky 8
N hea s n 93 ve m on 9
S M hae s 96 Lemoyne 9
F a
e h ~9
De 90 Mon
S
0
K ngs P 89 Yesh a 62
South
N C S
9 W Ca
6
Ba 60 Sa sb y s 52
Roanoke 83 B oom sbg S
Rnd ph Macn 8 Md Ba

M

H dn

Hannan T a e a Kyge C eek
Othe s
Hannan W Va a Sou he n
Symmes Va ey a Rock H
M e a T mb e
Ra enswood a Po n P easa
R p ey a Wahama

!SATURDAY
SVACI

Sou hwes

e

,.!!

n a E as e n

Others
Me gsa Fed e a Hock ng
P ke Eas e n a A exande
Wa en Loca a Pa ke sbu g
ca ho c
Fa and a Symmes Va ey

(TUESDAY JAN 14

Hannan

W

Va

a

Kyge

c eek
T mb e a Sou he n
M e a Be ne Un on
Po n P easan a Ba bou

e
WEDNESDAY JAN 15

Po n

P easan

a N

o

9 L nco n Me 68

Ky S

LOU S 53 W T ex 5 5
4 C em son 2
No Ca
Ro n s 96 Wa e oo 88
Cha es on 64 Me
s 6
usk.tgee 92 A a A&amp;M
Aug us a 29 P edmon 2
Haw a
9 Cen ena y 8
aT e h9NELa92
N W La 56 S E La 53
G Webb 8 l Rhyne 58
No Geo g a 6 Be y
So Fa 89 Leh gh 62
M dwest
w gh s 58 C eve 53
Ce n s 95 W b f ce 89
Wch a S
06 D ake92
B ad ey 06
S 85
DePau 90 Manha an 5
Sup e o 83 N h nd 8
M on 9 Wh ewa er 78
nd S E ns
92 S E Mo 8
Southwe st
0 Rob e s 9
ng Bch s 86
SMU 98 Hous on Bap 6

s mmons

0 l ex A

50

53 W T ~ X S 5
West
UCL A 92 Wa sh ng on 82
San ose s 6 Po nd s 62
Pont lema Class c
at San D ego
0
e Naz 88 So Ca Co
2
Lou S

SVAC
No h Ga a a lias e n

9

56

B o a 6 Grace 5
US n 69 S oux Fal s 6
Po n lorna 84 N W Naz 65

LEFl'IES ACQUD\ED
HONOLULU (UPI)
The
Haw au Islanders of the Pacific
Coast League Wednesday ac
qurred two Jefthanded hitters
from the San Diego Padres
organrzahon
They are Jun Farrey who
also played for the Los Angeles
Dodgers Montreal Expos and
Tacoma of the PCL and Larry
Stahl who prevrously played
for PhoeJUX of the PCL

Marauders tonight

aga n f) to stop Dan B se he Ja es and Ca nd a e Z 3 n 14 ppg
second lead ng score r n SVAC scor g bel d onl)
S urd ) the Jeagles w II go
sout heastern Oh o w U a 22 3 Ha na T ace s Ma k S\\a n
ga st t e leag e s four h and
P rate F ed Logan s seven!
ppg average 1 he Go den
ten h top scorers n Terry
n SV AC scor ng w th a H 6 ppg C e a I Uoyd Wood Carter
Lancers are r&gt;-3 overall
The Eagles of B I PI I ps ave age
spo ts a 15 4 ppg ave age and
For he Eag les T n Spencer Wood s averag ng 13 2
hope to contro b g G eg Ja es
and M ke Co nden the top wo IS f f h n leag e sco ng at 4 8
F da) he 1 o nados " I
Pirate scorers and rebounders and M k Ha s s e gl t a
a c t
work c out for

North favored in Senior Bowl
MOBILE Ala UP!) - 11 e
favored North has made three
last mmute changes n s
defens vel neup for Saturda) s
Semor Bowl game becase of
InJuries
North Coach John Ralston of
the Denver Broncos sa d
I neman Way ne Baker of
Brrghal'n Young and Dave
Was ck of San Jose State and
cornerback Monte Jackson of
San D ego Sta e rece ved m
VJtatlons when three of the
scheduled North players were
hurt -&lt;~ nd all three earned
startmg ass gnments
Baker replaced Stanford All
Amer ca Pat Donavan who
hurt h s elbow m the East West
game Was ck replaced Oh o
State s Pete Cus ck "ho hur
his knee m the Rose Bowl and
Jackson replaced Southern
Cal s Charles Phillips who hur
his h1p m the Rose Bowl
The South wh ch had
already lost A I Am er ca
defens ve I neman Randy
White of Maryland who sllllply
decrded he drdn t want to play
in erther the Hula Bowl or

By United Press international
Wr ght State defeated
tieveland State 58-53 Tiffin
downed Northwood (Mich ) 81
71 and Central State whipped
Wilberforce 95 89 In Oh10
college basketball action
Thursday n ght
No games are scheduled
tomght but 27 contests are on
tap Saturday
Lyle Falknor tossed In free
thrdws for the last four po nts
to assure Wnght State of rts
wm over Cleveland State and
ts s1xth v1ctory m nme starts
Wrrght State ended the
seesaw battle after a 39-3911e m
the last half handing the
Clevelanders the1r SIXth defeat
m e ght season games
Wrrght State which had a 2625 edge at halftune was
headed by Bob Grote w1th 17
pomts and Falknor with 14
Cleveland State was paced .Py
Wilbur Starks WLth 16 pomts
and Gale Drummer wrth 15
Trff n s Robin FarriS
pumped m 24 pomts as the
Dragons pulled away from a
39 39 halfhme deadlock to
down Northwood Institute of
Mrch gan
Trffm whrch led most of the
seco nd half unpr oved Its

record to 4-11 for the season
Northwood s Gary Johnson
was the game s top scorer w th
'll po nt.s Northwood s 5-5th s

Sen or Bowl nade t YO more
changes
South Coac D ck Nolan of
the San Franc sco Forty
N ners sa d I nebacker Bo
Harr s of I ou s ana State was
replac ng Flonda s Glenn
Cameron who InJured h s k ee
m the Sugar Bowl and tha
off ens ve tackle Andy Steele of
Auburn was replacmg Tam
pa s Darr) I Carlton who had
pneumon a
Bo I coaches a nounced
the r start ng lineups today for
Saturday s natronall) teleVJsed
(NBC 1 p m est all-star
game The game marks the
profess onal debu for 62
college semors w th members
of the wmnmg team getting
$1 500 and the losers $1 250
The North w 11 have Cal
forma All Amer ca Steve Bart
kowski the No 1 college
passer 1n the nation last fall a
quarterback and Jun Germany
of New Mex co State and Andy
Jones of Wash ngton State at
runn ng backs
The South wrll have Mary
land s Bob Avell nl the
Atlantic Coas t Conference

R chords a plus 400 h tter n
his fmal two colleg ate seasons
was s gned uruned ately upon
his selec on by the San D ego
Padres
The Padres d rector of
player personnel Bob Fon
Ia ne commented
He has
that little b t of darmg m him
that makes for a good base
runner Selecting him Is JUSt
one more step toward attrumng
our goal of gett ng more
runmng speed rn the
organ zatlon
Aikens though s the man
who can earn the attentron
because of his name and
sl uggmg potential He ba Is left
and throws r ght and hit 360
w th 12 homers at South
Carolina State last season
There were 161 players
chosen n the regular phase
and another 104 10 the secon
In e na ona Hock e y
dary phase which ncluded
League Stand ngs
those players drafted last June
By Un ed P ess In e na on a
No th
who drdn t Sign and shU were
w
pts gt
el g ble The Ph ladelph a Phil
Sag naw
245564
F n
24 d 3 5
52
I es w th the r rst cho ce m the
Mu skegon
24 5
49 65
secondary phase selected and
5 n 2 32 28
Po Hu on
La n s n g
26
23 38
urunedrately srgned outfrelder
K a a mazoo
9 25 2 20 92
Barry Bonnell of M !ford Ohio
Sou h
w
1 p s gf ga
Bonnell a 6..J 190-pound
Day on
2
2 6 68
r
ghthander
was vo ed the
Co um bus
22 8
5 6
Toedo
202,2
4
54
Most Valuable Player of Oh o
Des Mo ne
8 23 2 38
0
Sta e s team last season after
F Wa yn e
5 22 0 30 39
Thu sday s Resu Is
battmg 319
No games schedu ed
lnfrelder Bump W lis son of
F days Gmes
oedoaFn
former star Maury W lis was
Sag naw a D es Mo n es
chosen In the sillth slot of the
Po
Hu on a Muskegon
Day on a co umbus
secondary draft by Texas and
Fo
Wayne a Ka am a oo
All Amer ca runnmg back An
thony
Dav s of USC was chosen
WHA S and ngs
By Un ted P ess In e na ona
as an outf elder 10 the fourth
easl
round by M111nesota
t
p
s
g
ga
w
2 4 36
New Eng nd 2
There were 12 pitchers
2 30 98
6
C e e a nd
selected
by the 24 clubs on the
29 8
Ch cago
6 89
nd anapo s
openmg round of the reguhrr
go phase and only one of them s
Hou s on
0
o lefthanded - Patr ck McGehee

NEW YORK UP! ) - W lire
Mays A kens a powerful
young man who was born to
play baseball m the flam
boyant manner of hrs
namesake was faced with the
opportunity today to move
West JUSt as Wrll e Mays drd 18
years ago to begm his pro
career
Aikens who packs a home
run punch m his muscular 6foot..J 220-pound frame was
made the second cho ce m
baseball s annual wmter free
agent draft Thursday when he
was selected by the Califorma
Angels The only player who
went ahead of the 20-year-old
frrst baseman was his former
teammate at South Carolma
State College outfielder Gene
R chords

5
0

Sa n D ego
M h gan

3

8

Quebe
To on o
Edmon o

w

nn p eg

2

3 24 3 29 02 69

Canad an

2
2

w

9

p s g

ga

5 0 46 55 9
4
60 39
6
39

6 98

36

Our Interest Is
Greater For You

5.75%
On 90.0ay

Certificates

s 75 per ceni per year
pa ld on 90 day Cer
hflcates of Deposit
S1 000 00

Interest
Quarterly

of Carson Call! who was
taken 20th by the New York
Yankees Also there was only
one catcher chosen n that
round James Slaughter of
Pasadena Calif who was
taken 21st by Cincmnat
Another oddity of the frrst
round was the selection of 21
year-old twins shortatop Tom
Brookens and ou!frelder Tim
Brookens both of Fayetteville
Pa Tom was prcked fourth by
Detro t and Tim 18th by Texas

Minimum

Payable

The Athens County
Savings &amp; Lo1n Co
296 Second Sl
Pomeroy Oh o

•

We ep esen some of the best nsu a nee com pan es n he
sta e
You Get he T u h Pus Low Ra es

FA RM AUTO HOME BUSINE SS
STATE AUTOMOB LE MUTUAL
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Po c es

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Phone 992 5120
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GEO. HALL

EHI
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and The Hallmarks
FRIDAY and SATURDAY
9:30 TIL 2:00

MEIGS INN

chen Ad
L lion (M cro
wave Oven!
Also o ..ol

ProPine SerV1ce

Ridenour's

PH 992 3629

T V &amp; Applrance
Phone 985 3307
Chester Ohto

of Southern Cal and defensive
backs Neal Colz e of Ohio State
and Randy Hughes of
Oklahoma
Both Ralston and N olan say
they are pleased wrth the
progress therr squads have
made in tile few days they have
had to put a team together
These guys are all out.
standing players or they
wouldn t be here
said
Ralston
It s JUst been a
matter of getting them func
tlon ng as a team ill the very
I ttle llllle allowed

8

Authorized dea er for Zen th
G bson
Hardw ck
K1

Gas SeiYICe

desp te a late
start a q arterback and
high y heralded Waite Pay on
of Jackson M ss Sta e and
Don Harde nan of I ex as A&amp;l a
run mgbac)(s
Bartkowsk con p e ed 182
passes for 2 580 yards th s pos
se so w e Ave lllru con
p e ed 112 for I 658 yards
Germany rusnect for I 096
yards Payton for 1 029 and
Hardeman for 9o5
Bartkowski s rece vers wrll
be En me t Edwa rds of
Kansas Pat Mclna ly of
Harvard and Rose Bowl he o J
K McKa) of So uthern Cal
Ave lin s recervers wrll be wo
tune Southeastern Conference
ieHder Lee McGnff of Flor da
Junmy Robrnson of Georg a
Tech and West V rg n a s
Dann) Buggs who s rymg to
recover rrom a mmor Jeg m
JUry
The North would appear to
have the edge on defenses nee
even wrthout D&lt;lnovan t has
four All Americas In Is
startmg defens ve lineup
Lmebackers Rod Shoate of
Oklahoma Wld Richard Wood

35

season
Ken Smrth scored 16 of hiS 23
game h gh pornts n the crucral
last half where Central State
got hot to defeat nerghbor ng
r val and w nless Wrlberforce
Wrlberlorce trail ng 49-42 at
ntenn ss on caught up at 49all and went ahead 51-49
Central State then spurted
away to a deciSive 74-53 lead
and coasted to its seventh w n
m nine starts
Wilberforce m dropping rls
e ghth game was headed by
Isaac Green w1th 21 pomts

pass ng leude

Richards, Aikens taken 1-2

Phoen x
M nn eso a

Wright State wins

them as they face the Hannan
W Ideals
The W Ideals are led by
Wayne R chardson wh le Mike
Rober ts desprte a scoreless
performance Tuesday at
Waterford s then nth leading
scorer n the SVAC wrth a 13 2
ppg average

ROYAL CROWN
BOffiiNG COMPANY
Middleport

POMEROY

�"

.

-

'

'

I

-

'

.

I .o

~-""" flrlllv S.ntinel . M!Jdleport-Pomeroy, 0., Frtday; Jan. !O, 1975

.

.

Fran Tarkenton and startmg mmutes durmg Wednesday's about 10 pounds but I won 't game and the Super Bowl, our prachcmg there until lhe
left tackle Chatles Goodrwn, workout and his sore rtght arm have any problem putttng it saying, "1\ doesn't take ·two end of the week. But I can't
was much better for Vtkmg didn 't seem any worse lor back on ."
weeks to prepare lor a football change the schedule "
fans
havmg parttctpated, " Grant
"I tmagme he wtll ~ ready game. The coaches need ftve
Whtle the statements of
"Tarkenton threw lor 25 srud. 1 am confident he can to start," satd head Coach days and lhe players only need Gran t and Noll didn't figure to
perform his normal functions." Chuck Noll. "How long he can lhree. However, I guess lhe please NFL offiCials, those
Goodrum pulled a reg muscle go ts somelhmg we 'llllnd out." hoopla and promotiOn lor the . same Qfftcial$ couldn't have
earlier m the week but his
Noll also satd wtde recetver game may take longer."
been more annoyed than they
conditiOn was upgraded by John Stallworth, who spratned
Noll, when asked tl he would were at the conduct of Los
Grant fr om "doubtful " to a thumb Tuesday, was cat- change anythi!tg this week, Angeles Ram players Lance
"possible" for Sunday's game. chmg lhe ball normally now replied. " If it was up to me, Rentzel and Fred Dryer
" If he continues to I!Yiprove at and lhat X-rays of the lhumb we'd sl&lt;ly at home and do all
Both showed up at Thurslhts rate, he probably could were ne gattve. He also satd
play and may even start," guard Sam Davis, bothered by
a foot InJury, could play but
NEW YORK t UP!) - The Grant satd
The
Steelers
got
some
good
J IIYI Clack will start at left
Cleveland1!ndtans picked two
pttchers and two lhtrd news of lhetr own when they guard
Gran t was cnllcal of the two.
basemen among six selections were reJOined by nght defenBy Murray Oldcrman
SIVe
end
Dwtght
White
who
had
the first of a later flood of ta ien
m the regular phase of Thurs·
week period between the
Q.
I
"ould
like
to
kno\\
who
from
predo rntnantly black
been
hospitalized
smce
late
conference
cha mpt onshtp
day 's maJOr ~eague baseball
the
ltrst
black
professional
sc
hools
Sunday
mght
wtth
a
v1ral
.ndraft, , while the Cmcmnah
football player m the NFL was.
Q. What has happened to
Reds nam ed two pitchers fectiOn Whtte arrived back at
NHl
Sta
nd1ng
s
-Jack
Adams,
Oakland,
the
team's
tramtng
quarters
m
Rubba
Smith, the prtde of
among lour chmces.
Bv Un 1ted Pr ess lnternat•onal
Ca
lli.
hme
to
attend
the
club
meeting
Beaumont?
We hear so little
DI VIS IOn I
Cleveland tapped three
w I I pts gf ga
The
ltrsl
black
pro
player
of
and
practice
session
about
him
these
days. - Jose
catchers among six selections
Pll• l ad l ph•a 25 9 6 5 6 143 84
note
was
the
great
Fntz
"I'm pretty weak from not
M., Corpus Christl, Tex.
NY Ra n ger s 201 1 a 48 167 124
m the secondary phase, conAllanta
19 15 1 45 115 112 Pollard, the AJI·Amertcan
eating,"
Wh1te
sald
"I
lost
Charl es Aaron Smtih 1s
stslmg of players previously
NY Is la nder s 17 15 9 .o 1)8 1 14
halfback
at
Brown
who
JOined
commg
back fme alter that
DIVISIOn 2
drafted but who dtd not sign up.
w . 1 t pt s gf ga the Masstllon Tigers and was senous knee surgery m '72 and
Cincmnat1named two pitchers
Van c ouver
11 15 5 49 149 133
AFFLECK TO BLUES
Ch1cago
18 18 4 ·10 140 120 the spectal nemests of legen- regamed a sta rling JOb as
among three chmces.
ST
LOUIS,
Mo.
(UP!)
, 5 1 LOUIS
16 18 6 38 1311 41
delenstve left end for the
In the ltrst phase, Cleveland
M•nnesota
I I 74 5 27 10 7 176
Bruce
Affleck,
a
delensema
n,
Oakland Ratders But hts
ptcked pitchers Mike Vaughn,
measure.
was
acqwred
by
the
St.
Lows
KansaSCIIY
7~~
llf 9 3 170
Iate1al mobtllty IS not what it
DIVI SI On J
Murruy.
iJI contrast to Tmglehofl, the Santa Clara, Calif., and John Blues Thursday from the
•
•
was,
llmtting hts pass rush, and
w
1
t
pts
g
f
ga
news on MUUiesota 's other two HiUs, Camarillo, Calif ; thtrd Califorma Seals m exchange Montreal
22 6 13 57 183 11 5 dary Jtm Thorpe The early
I
would
thmk they mtght
s Angeles 22 6 12 56 126 77
ailing plafers, quarterback basemen Randall Etckenhorst, lor rtght wmg Frank Sprmg Lo
days
of
the
NFL
also
featured
cons1der
movwg
htm mstde to
Pitt Sb ur g h
14 11 8 36 157 151
Cincmnat1, and Alfonso Wtl·
and
cash
De tro •t
10 22 6 26 108 15 1 Duke Stster who played tackle
tackle where he would shll be a
Uams, Fatrfteld, Ala.; catcher
Wasllmgton
3 JJ 5 11 83 2 19
Affleck
was
the-Seals'
second
for
the
Ch
tcago
Cardmals
fr
om
te
rror over the nose of the
DI
V
IS
IOn
4
Gary Tablert, Mobtle, Ala .
draft
chmce
m
1974
and
had
w
I t pts gf ga 1926 through !931 and later
center.
Bubba IS only apand infielder Patrtck Washko,
Buffa lo
25 9 6 5 6 175 130
split
his
playmg
ti!Yie
this
gat
ned
emmence
as
a
judge
proachmg hts 29th btrthday
Boston
23 10 7 53 193 122
Bedford, Ohio.
season
between
Salt
Lake
City
Toronto
14 19 7 35 136 153 The real mliux of blacks mto
Q.Several years ago, Notre
Cincmnat1 ptcked pitchers
Cal1f orn•a
I I 24 8 JO 116167
p1
o
ball
really
began
when
Dame
employed a shill before
SUCCESS STORIES Teddy Asbill , Bunch, Okla. , and Sprmgfield
Thurs da y's Re s ult s
Sprmg
had
a
bnel
trtal
wtth
Bosto n 5 Van c ouver 1
Tank
Younger
JO
ined
the
Los
the
actual
snap of the ball and
and Bernard Plent, Lahabre,
N Y Islander s 3 Phda 1
the
Blues
this
season
but
had
Angeles Rams m 1949 alter invariably succeeded In
"Tbey Overcame
Los A ng eles 5 Bu lf a l o 2
Calif. ;
catc"er
James
been
playmg
for
thetr
Denver
Fnday 's Gam es
attending
Grambhng College . dra\\ lng an offside Infraction.
Slaughter, Pasadena, Calif.,
HeariDg Loss"
Plltsbu r gh at Atlan ta
farm
team
and outltelder Mark Cla rk,
Edwards, Calif.
. ~ret Booklet es peciall y
• Texas selected Michael Macprepared to encourage
Donald of Cincinnati.
Americans of all ages who
In the secondary phase ,
suffer from uflcorrected or
Cleveland
named catchers
. untreated hearing loss to
seek help
Ralph Jiminez, Bronx, N. Y.,
'
Steven
Van
Deren,
Baystde,
Welt-known celebrities from
Calit., and David Adeuny,
all walks of life tell their
personal stories of trium ph
West Palm Beach, Fla.; pitIn their fields because they
cher Marion Harvey, Laverne,
overcame the ir hear ing
second baseman
Okla.,
Impa irment
Michael Massa, Cincinnati ,
By CHRIS SCHERF
games.
1t the length of the court for the the game, ftrushed with 19
and infielder Wilford White,
UPJ Sports Writer
Wesley Cox scored on a tip-m wmnmg basket
pomts for North Carolina and
Mesa, Ariz.
The
Pacilic-8
Conference
is
and
Junior
Brtdgmen,
who
14
Allen
Murphy
sco
red
freshman
Phil Ford added 18.
Come 11'1 . • Vtr~te
or Ph011a
Cmclnnali took pitchers m Its natural state wtlh UCLA ftms.ied wtth 10 pomts, was pomts to lead the Cardmais'
Oemson'~ talented freshman
lor ~""' FREE COPY
Lawrence Pekarcik, Pomona. m front an!l the rest of the credited wtth a basket on a offense
duo of Skip. Wise and Stan
Wilham S. Dtles
· Calif., and Thomas Baxter, league forced to play "catch- goal-tending call to he the Mitch Kupchak scored 18 Rome led the Tigers, with Wtse
Bayonne, N. J. , and catcher up "
Dtles Heartng Aid Center
ga me. West Texas was points and grabbed 20 "ebounds scoring 25 pomts and Rome 15.
Riverside Professtonal Bldg. Mark Unsoeld, Glendora, Calif.
The Bruins opened the Pac-8 working lor the last shot when to play a key role m the Tar
ln other ma jor games,
Detroit selected pitcher basketball race Thursday mght Maurtce Cheeks drove the lane Heels' narrow deciSion over Hawati edged Centenary, 79444 W. Union St.. Athens ·
David Tobik, Lyndhurst, Ohto. aga in st 16th -ra nked and shot, only to hav e Clemson Walter Davis, who 78; Wtchtta St. topped Drake,
PHONE:
Montreal picked pitcher Mark Washington and unmediately LouiSville center Btll Bunton scored what proved to be the 106-92; Bradley ripped lllinoiS
Knose, Harrison, Ohio. Pitts- took the conference lead wtth a block the ball to Bond, who took wtnning basket wtth I :07left in State,l06-85; DePaul defeated
burgh named pitcher Timothy 92-82 vtctory.
Manhattan, 90-75 ; Oral
Burman, Cincmnatl.
UCLJI won 1ts lith straight
Roberts heat Long Beach St.,
game of the season con.
91-86, and SMU crushed
vmcmgly , b~t Bruins Coac h
Houston Baptist, 98-67.
J Qhn Wooden wasn' t tm ·
pressed
"We've been I!Yiproving almost every week but I didn 't
thtnk we showed the same
POMEROY PLANES
PHOENIX, Ariz. (UP!) - course.
Improvement tonight," he
Early Sunday M1x e d
Mahaffey, playmg late m the
Jan " 1075
S81d. "But I think much of the Johnny Miller, as everyone
Won Lost
day
when
a
21l&lt;mle-per-hour
knows,
was
the
king
of
the
tour
credit should go to Washington.
Swisher &amp; Lo hse Ph arm
wmd
swept
across
the
Arizona
a
year
ago
when
he
won
etght
18
6
They were very strong on the
Tom s Carry Ou t
12
12
lilies
and
then
went
to
Japan,
country,
had
m
some
respects,
boards and they got good
Pullms E)(cavafmg
12
12
just for good measure, and a better round. The 26-year-&lt;Jid Eagles
Club
12
12
position on us 11
Mayer &amp; Hill Barb ers
12
12
Dave Meyers, who has came home \\lth an addihonal pro from Texas, who grew up Fnendl y Tavern
6
lB
playmg
in
the
wmd,
scrambled
$30,000
for
a
$384,000
year.
H1gh lnd Game Larry
asserted himself as the Bruins •
Dugan 217, Jr
Phelps 212
key man this season, scored a • Twice during December he a bit but made the most of his Women Mary Voss 193,
m e D ugan 181
•
ga me-htgh 21 points Pete went out to practiee and qmt opportumlles. Hts best hole MaHx1gh
Senes Men
Jr
after nine holes
was
the
sixth
where
he
chipped
Trgovich added a career4ugh
Phelps 600, D1ck Dugan 569
" I was htlting 1t so good, " m from 20-leet for a b1rd.
W~omen
Mary Voss 516,
18 points to ~he UCLA offenstve
Ma x m e D ugan 500
said
the
27·year-&lt;Jid
Mtller,
wind
didn
't
bother
me,
"The
and Richard Washington also
eam H1gh Game and Ser res
"that I qutt . I didn'l see any although I don 't li~e to play in - T5wrs
her &amp; Lohse Pharma cy,
fimshed wtth 18.
part of my game that needed itt'' he said. ·"In many ways I 769 and 2 158
In other games involvmg
work, so why practice."
lhink I played better than I
nationally ranked squads,
POMEROY LANES
To prove hiS pomt, MiUer anticipated "
Wednesda y Lat e Mrxed
th1rd-ranked North Carolina
Decembe r 18 , 1974
went out and shot a four-underThompson was all over the
State toyed wtth Wester n
PIS
par 67 Thursday m the opening course but made half a dozen x Rosenbaum Meadows
94
Ca rohna , 119-61; No. 4
74
round of lhe $150,000 PhoeniX outstanding shots to grab a Fultz Bentley
Louisville edged West Texas
Rawlrngs Holter
70
Open, first event of the 1975 share of the lead. He sank a ~ Hoy t Thomas
54
State, 5:h51, and No 12 North
Owen Co r der
50
POMEROY, OHIO
Carolina nipped Clemson, 74- Tour He hit the ball as well as footer for a bird on the fourth, a Moore Mor r ow
42
ever off the tee and putted 20-footer on the nmth and
H rgh l nd Game
Men
72.
followed Wl\h a t:;.footer On the Drd . Ros enba um 214 John
AII-Amertca David Thomp. better than he expected.
Bentley 211
Women
Pat
John Mahaffey and Leonard tenth and an IS-footer on the Thomas
110. Pat Thomas 163
son scored 32 points m the
Hrghl Serres Men
D rck
Wallpack 's loth vtctory m 11 Thompson, who ranked 15th 12th.
Rosenbaum 538 , John Bentle y
and
16lh,
respectively,
on
the
"I'm
happy
because
it's
the
535 Wom en Par Thomas 460,
games this season. Phil Spence
Joan C order~ 405
money
winning
list
last
year,
best
round
I
have
ever
shot
on
had 22 pomts and 12 rebounds
Team Hrgh Game a nd Serres '
Thomas 694 and 1820
• lor N.C. State, while Moe more than $200 ,000 behmd lhe Wmter Tour," 'said the 23- - XHoyt
Frrs l H a lf Wrnne r s
Mtller, played as well as John year-&lt;Jld Thomnpson .
• Rtvers added 19 pomts, Monte 111. the openmg round to grab a
• • •
Six players- Tommy Aaron,
• Towe 12 and Kenny Carr 11
share
of
the
lead
wtth
1974's
Bob
Rosburg, J. C. Snead, Roy
Louisville guard Phil Bond
Player of the Year .
Taste,
Mtke.Reasor, and Mike
• scored a breakaway layup at
There
were
any
number
of
Mitchellwere only a shot
Tokyo and Osaka. two major
• the buzzer to preserve the
lme
rounds
played
by
the
back
at
three
under
68
while
ct
hes '" Japan, already have
• Cardinals' perfect record this
others
m
the
held,
but
all
the
~im Ahern, Dick Lotz, Pete com machtnes that dtspense a
• season. But it was the second
whtff of oxygen mto a lace
• last-second VICtory for the attention IS on MiUer, because Brown, John Schroedor, ma sk lor peoestrtans gaspmg
of
the
way
he
pinged
the
par
37·
Nevtl
and
Orville
Dwtght
: Cardinals m their last three
35-71 Phoerux Country Oub Moody. were at 69. PGA champ am td tralhc fumes
Lee Tr~vino, another noted
wind player, didn't do well. He
opened with a 73, but that was
two shots better than U.S. Open
champ Hale Irwin
Ih all, 46 players m the !50man held shot par or better
over a course that at best could
be descnbed as not difficult.
The cut will he made after
Spend your feed dollars wisely ... get
the second round today, with
the low 71ls gomg on to play the
more from your money, and more
final
two roWtds
profits, too. Our feeds . . . for every
14

Reds make
draft picks

day's mterview sessions wtth
lhe Pittsburgh and Minnesota
players and coaches m !hell"
roles as wtiters for a national
sports magazme. They were
dressed IIJ&lt;e newsmen of the
1920s.
Several of the Vtkmgs and
Steelers, the1r patience Wllrn
thm by the vartous distractions
of lhe past week, became up:;f(
wt lh the turmoil caused by tl're

Mrs. A. R. Kntght, Pomeroy,
Is the 1975 gtrl scout cookie sale
• chairwoman for Metgs County .
The cookte sale will begin
Jan 31 and continue througb
Feb. 9 wtth orders only temg
tak en durin g that time
Delivery date wtll be Apnl 12
wtth the sale to b&amp;completed
by April 23
Thts year lhe cooktes are
being obt&lt;lmed from Little
Browme Bakers and each box
wtll cost $1 ~ The vaneties
are butter trefm ls, assorted
cremes, mints, peanut butter
and samoa.

antics of Rentzel and Dryer
and several newsmen also
obJected to their clowning
·
tactics.
"There's not much we can do
about tl," said Jun KensU,
executive director ,of the NFL.
"They're accredited. But we
will make 11 clear to the
magaZlne's editors that news
conferences are to report news,
not to make news "

Massillon .Tiger first black pro

}uslask

12
•

•

Washington's title hopes are
•
smashed 92-82 by UCLA B rulns

It "as called everythmg from

unsportsmanlike to illegal.
May we have your opinion and

have rules been passed to
preclude this type of action?
George Walker, Alameda,
Calif.
It may be apocryphal but
Knute Rockne mvented lhe
Notre Dame shtft supposedly
after watching a Broadway
chorus line m actwn. More
than drawmg opponcots olfstde, tt gave the Insh a hell of
a runmng start on lhetr plays
So football passed a rule, shll
tn effect, that teams shiftmg
more than one player must
stop for a full second's pause
before snapping the ball Most
teams shll shift thetr backs to
keep defense off balance.
Q. About Fritz Williams, the
ex-Golden State Warriors'
guard DO\\ with the Milwaukee
Bucks, did he attend high
school In Washington D. C. or
Weirton, W. Va.? James A.
Booker, Jr., Mather AFB,
Calif.
Ron (Fntz) Wtlllams 1s a
product of Wetrton Htgh School
m hts native West Virgmta
where he sta rted at the
Umverstty and was No. I draft
pick of the Warrtors m 1966. He
was also drafted by the Dallas
Cowboys as a potenltal
defenstve back
Q. Are there any players still
left on that Green Bay Paeker
team which won the first Super
Bowl? J. I. Menominee, Wis.
And then there was one Gale Gtlhngham, then a
reserve rookte guard and now a
veteran all-pro, is the sole

592-6238

Miller retains
touch of magic

FASHION &amp; SNOW

TWO YEARS OLD - Lori
Lynn Meadows celebrated
her second birthday with a
family party at home
Christmas Eve. The party
was given by her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Meadows, Rt. 1, Letarl.
Lori's 2-year candle was lit
and burned throughout the
evening. Refreshments were
served to Bonnie and Joey
Smithson, Karen and Rich
Broadwater, Lillian Smith,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Staats
(grandparents), Don and
Bernita Meadows and the
homoree. Sending gifts were
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Meadows, Wharton, W. Va.
(paternal grandparents!.

Packer remammg from the
loam whtch tromped Kansas
City, 35-10, on Jan. 15, 1967
There are several others
though such as Donme Anderson ~nd Marv Flemmg still
qw te active m the NFL.
Q. I think Andy Messersmith
Is a super pitcher. Could you
please give me background on
him and an address where I
could write him. - Uzabelh
White, Tulare. Calif.
I can 't gtve you a life's
htstory but John Alexander
(Andy) Messersmith was born
m Toms Rtver, N. J . and went
to htgh school m Anahetm,
Calif. where he later pitched
for the Cahlorma Angels alter
a varsity career at the
Universtty of California at
Berkeley. The Angels traded
htm to the neighboring
Dodgerstn 1973 He comes off a
fme 20-6 season (ERA of 2.59)
and 1s one of !he lew pttchers m
major league history to win 20
games m both leagues. He IS
dtvorced and 29 years old

Werrys host
breakfast
Mr. and Mrs. Phihp Werry
entertained wtth a breakfast at
• their home, Rtdgeview Farm,
following the annual ftremen's
ball on New Year's Eve
Fried potatoes, scrambled
eggs, bacon, ham loaf, smoked
• · sausade, toast, assorted JUICes,
milk and coffee were served
: Thetr guests were Mr and
; Mrs. Thomas Werry, Armand
· • Turley, and Jtm Stewart,
Pomeroy; Mr and Mrs. Jtm
Werry, Mr. and Mrs Don
Grueser, and Mr. and Mrs. BtU
Grueser, Mmersville, R.F.D ;
Mr and Mrs. Gary Smt th and
Barbara Sargent, Chester; Mr
and Mrs. Roger Wmebrenner.
Syracuse; Mr and Mrs. Harley
Farley, Belpre; Mr. and Mrs
Don Weese, Racine ; Mr and
• Mrs. Earl Ftelds, Hartford, W.
Va .; Mr. and Mrs JameJ
Proffttt, Mason, W. Va ; Ralph
; Stewart, Pomt Pleasant; John
~ Smtih, New Haven , Mary
· VanMatre, West Colwnbta, W.
' Va.; Fred Chapman, Coolville.

FLOWERS
For AIL~ .
· We Wire Flowers
Evervwhere

992-2039
Pomeroy Flower Shop
Mrs. M1llard Van Meter
Ph. 992-203'

.

Ph . 992-57"'

Real, Live, Stretchable Rubber. Won't crack or stiffen in
cold weather.

Local Bowlhlg

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TINGLEY
'

THE

BOOTS

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AND

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~SUGAR RUN

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The W•lllngton aroUfld waterproof
men, boys, and
Easy to clean

An all

boot for
youths
- long

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•

WHrlng

BeC.utifu'
New Spring
Fabrics In
Stock for
Spring
We Still Have
A Good Selection
Of JanuafY Sale
Fabrics

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Also

~

•

udles Fur Lined
usno-Belu"
Boots

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12" -

Giant After X-mas
'
Savings Throughout
The Store

By Conme ,
Thom MeAn

,,

MISS Wonderlu I

Values
tom."

$500

heritage
house

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

!!

Middleport, 0 .

:a ahr Cloth·iBrs

9:15 to 5:00

Middleport, Ohio

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

for members of Bethel 62,
lnternat10nal Order of Job's
Daughters, and guests was
held recently at the Pomeroy
Masomc Temple.
A potluck supper in the
dmmg room decorated in the
Christmas theme preceded th.e
gtft exchange and games
conducted by Paula Eichinger.
Paul Darnell gave the blessi~g .
Attendmg were
June
Stanley, Brenda Stanley,
Barbara Fultz , Ruby Kautz,
Pat Wood, Vanessa. Folmer
Paula Eichinger, Becky Fultz,
June Wamsley, Rick Couch,
Kun Sebo, Steven Walburn,
Don Thomas, Dan Thomas,
Greg Thomas, Susan Zirkle,
Bruce Ztrkle, Rhonda Zirkle,
Jackie Ztrkle, Dallas DeBord,
John Nash, Mildred Nash,
Trent Nash, Ltsa Nash,
Tammy DeBord, Mandte
Si sson , Lori Wood, Conme
Romme, Sandy Curtis, David

HOUSE PLANT

FLUFFY RUFFLE FERN
SCHEFFLERA I Umbrella Treel

50% oH

'

I

9:15 to 8:00

I .

..

Cash &amp;

Car~y

·------------------------. ALL OTHER GREEN

FOLIAGE PLANTS

O/ AND TERRARIUMS

2 5 /0

Off Cash

&amp; Carry

SALE EFFECTIVE THRU"JAN. 31st

Dudle.y 's

______., .__
.

Agam," and Mrs Gronmger

had prayer Plans were made
lor the class to ]luy two t&lt;lbles
for the church social room.
Members related lheir ex·
perience of Christmas The
next meeting wtll be at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Ftelds.
Refreshments were served
by the hostess to Mr. and Mrs.
Groninger , Mrs
Louis
Osborne, Mrs. Edward Vcnoy,
Mrs Bowers, Mrs. Evelyn
Smtih, Mrs.Ftelds, Mrs. Clyde
Andrews, Mrs Charles Eskew,
Mrs. Kapple and Mrs Me·
Dame I

membership will be acted on at
the next meeting
The collect 10 unison opened
the meeting conducted by Mrs
Wallace. Reports were gtven
by the officers For the
program, Mrs. Nap Moore
reviewed "One Man's Way" by
Arthur Gordon, the life story of
Norman Vmcent Peale and hts
messages The book is the
story of Peale's life, the lrtals
he faced , and the God-given
strength he had to overcome
them .

Bernard and Betty Fultz, Paul
and Peggy Taylor, Brenda
Taylor, Debbte Taylor, Vera
Roberts, Leann Sebo and Rose
Ann Sebo.

SON BORN
RACINE - EN2 and Mrs
Mtchael Rush, Charleston, S
C., announce the b1rUl of a son,
Lonnie Michael, Dec 21 at the
Naval Hospital at Charleston
Mr and Mrs Rush have
another son, DaVId Neal, two.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Lonme Rush, Rayne, La.,
and Mr. and Mrs Harold Btrd,
Rt 2, Racme.

HOS:r PARTY
RACINE - Mr and Mrs.
George Netgler, Rae me, entertained wilh a holiday dinner
party Sunday, Dec. 29. Their
guests were Mr and Mrs
Robert Palmer, Goldsboro, N.
C.; Mr. and Mrs. Phtllip Miller,
Wapakoneta ; and Mrs .
Frankie Netgler, Racme Mr.
and Mrs. Oyde Cross and Ray
were v1s1tors at the Netgler
home during the holidays

I will be

ab~t

from my office

•

NOW IN PROGRESS

treasurer . and pubh ctty
chatrwoman; and Mrs. BtU
McDaniels, flower fund .
Devotions to open the
mee ting were gtven by Mrs.
Ftelds who took her scripture
from Proverbs 4 1·13 Terry
Gronmger read "Beginmng

]abies enjoy Christmas patty
.
The annual Christmas party

SPECIALLY PRICED

'

SHOES

Up-front speaker, controls, antenna. handle

In other busmess, Mrs.

Harold Sauer was re-elected
prestdent {or the 1975-76 year.
Other offtcers named were
Mrs Dwight Wallace, vtce
prestdent; Mrs. Charles McDaniel, secretary; and Mtss
Luctlle Smtlh, treasurer. Two
more names submttted lor

SALE

January
Clea-rance ·sale

· WOMEN'S

Solid State chassis I!Kcept only 2 chassis tubes )
Solid State 70 Detent " CI1ck ' " UHF Tuner ·
Picture Control

Mrs. Stbley Slack and Mrs.
Bert Gnmrn were welcomed
mto the membership of the
Mtddleport Literary Club at a
meeting Wednesday at the
home of Mrs. Robert Ftsher.

BRIGHTEN YOUR HOME AT
ASAVINGS!

ONEGRO~P

•

:

Gardens

DECORATOR TVI
PORTABL! TV

Quasar Portable Black and White TV

.

3" W. Ma1n St. •
H2-2164
P.omeroy, Ohio
The Store With " ALL KINDS OF STUFF"
For Pets Stables Large &amp; Small Animals Lawns

Stained patent
defies cleanup
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I cannot remove some lipstick stams from
an expenstve white patent purse I bought in Europe. There is no
chance o{ contacting the store for information. These stains are
from my hands after I had applied the lipstick and not straight
from the lube. I have tried bleach. polish remover and detergents
as well as the polish I bough\ wtth the bag but nolhmg helps. I
also have shoes to match and hate to wear them soiled.- ROSE
DEAR ROSE - I do not toow whether there now Is a dlf·
ference In foreign made patent but ours Is usuaUy a vinyl. I have
had great luck removillg spots of many kinds from white vinyl
patent shoes and purses by n1bblng with a cloth thai bad beeo
dipped In n~bbillg alcohol. -POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is wtth people and
organizations who insist on offering candy to children. I always
have had trouble and resulting great expense wtlh my teeth and
am trying to save my children from the same. Our kids do get
candy on holidays and special occasions so they are not deprived
of it. On a day-to-day basis it is not available to them at home. It
is hard to explain to a child that your reason lor havmg them
refuse 1\ IS for their own well-bemg. Tbey cannot Wtdersta nd
when they are offered it by the banker, at Sunday School for
havmg been good and even by the doctor
My Pointer IS along the same line as for lhe above reason
plus llif htgh cost of sugar. I cut down on the amount of sugar
used m desserts made at home. I use JUSt enough to satisfy that
"sweet tooth." - LIZ.
DEAR UZ - Since candy Is also bec&lt;Jmlng more expensive
due to the high cost of sugar perhaps your Peeve will be
eliminated since candy may not be offered so freely. -POLLY.
- DEAR POLLY - Before I go grocery shopping I put my very
STURDY rectangular plastic clothes basket in the back of the
station wagon. Two brown grocery bags fit rucely m the basket.
When they are put m at the grocery I am sure that one conU.ins
the "lragiles." The support of the basket keeps them from tip.
ping over and spilling durmg the drive home. Put basket m the
car tast so 11 comes out first and carry groceries into the house m
the basket. You have handles for a good grip and there is no
danger of a torn paper bag. I seem to get the job done laster or
perhaps it is the elimination of the frustration I used to feel. Do
be sure yours is a heavy-duty basket and It wtll last a long, long
time. - MRS R.M.M.

Two ladies welcomed by club

Thomas and Angie Sisson.
June Etchmger, Carolyn
Thomas, Marla Romme, Paul
Darnell, !Ia Darnell, Audrey
Wood, Mary Folmer, Dan Will,
Btll , Donna and Heather
Bauman, Tom Edwards ,

MODERN SUPPLY

•

DINNER POSTPONED
Aplanned bean dmner by the
Metgs Chapter, Order of
DeMolay, bas been postponed
unhl Saturday, Jan. 18,
beca use of a smorgasbord to be
held by the Middleport
Volunteer Fire Department at
the Middleport Elementary
School begmmng at 4 p.m.
Saturday

BY POLLY CRAMER

area busmess sections.

Class officers selected
New officers were elected at
the Tuesday night meeting of
the Golden Rule Class of the
Pomeroy Church of Christ at
the hom e of Mrs. Betty
Spencer.
Elected were Mrs. Elwood
Bowers, president; Mrs. Jerry
Fields, vtce president; Mrs
Denver Kapple, secretary -

.POllY'S POINTERS

cookies and particularly encouraged thts year are the use
of bootha and cupboards'for the
sale of addthonal cooktes m

The annual cookie sale gtves
gU"l scouts an opportumty to
raise funds for thetr troop
activthes, to help gtrls participate m specta l opportumhes, and to gtve direct
services to purchase equipment and property in their
behalf
Cos t of the cookies ts 50 cents
a box wtth 62 cents going to the
Black Diamond Gtrl Scout
As m previous yea rs, Counctl, 12 cents to the troop
Browmes wtll not be pernu tted a nd one ce nt toward adto sell the cooktes. Patches will mtmstrahon cost, making lhe
be offered to all scouts selling total sale pnce $1.25.

Swisher, Mark Morris , Lisa

•

MILLS~ WERNER RADIO &amp; TV

180 Mulberry'Ave. 992-2115 P'meroy

•

THE WEWNGTON

......,•

need ... are scientifically com pounded, fortified with :vitamins and
minerals and enriched with protein to
protect health, encourage growth and
boost gains. Plan your feeding
program here .. you'll be glad you
did.
.

•

MEN'S &amp; BOYS' KNEE BOoT
MEN'S HI-TOP WORK lOOT
AND WOMEN'S STYLE BOOT.

SIMON'S PIC-A-PAIR

•••••••••••••••••••••••
•• Always Your BeSt Buy
••
••
••
••
•••
•••
•••
••
••

Sew Now
For
'Spring'

•

ODDS &amp; ENDS
TABLE
CHILDREN'S, TEENS'
&amp; LADIES' •1.00

~

Mrs. Knight heads drive

Vikings, Steelers counting down fOr Finale IX

•200

•

'.

4- The DaUy Sentinel, Mtddlepo'rt-Pomeroy, 0 , Frtday,' Jan 10, 1975-

NEW ORLEANS {UP!) The tapering down for -Sunday's Super Bowl IX betw"'ln
the Pittsburgh Steelers and
Minnesota Vtkmgs begms
tOOay.
The Vikings, hopmg to
aveng~ the losses they suffered
m their two previous Super
Bowl appeara nces, wen t
through the1r hard'est workout
of the week Thursday.
"Thursday's alwa ys our
hardest day of the week for
workouts even during the
regular season," satd Vtkmg
coach Bud Grant. "Everybody
is taped up and wears pads and
pants. We practice our blitz
drUis If you're near the field
you can hear the hitlmg but
there's no tackling."
The only casualty from the
4().minute pra.ctice sesston was
center Mick Tmglehoff who
suffered a slightly spramed
right ankle shortly alter the
workout began and sa t out the
remainder of the sesswn .
Tlnglehoff had hts ankle
wrapped in Ice by the team
trainer as a precautionary

I

59 N. Second St

Mrs 0 B Stout rev tewed
" Whtte House China " by
Manan Flamkm, a story of the
preservation of Whtte House
chma and other things of
histo rtc al signifi ca nce . She
noted that most of the articles
used by the early prestdents
were brought from foreign
COU11trles smce there were no
kilns m thts country, but that
now all is made m this country.
The book pmnted out lhat many
of the articles of value are now
preserved in museums
The hostess served can,!ly.

D of A council names _officers
CHESTER - ElectiOn and
mstallalton of officers for 1975
and the appmnllnent of comtml lees htghlighted a meetmg
or the Chestc1 . Counctl 323,
Daughters of Amer tca,
Tuesday mght at the hall
Mrs
Dorothy Rtlciue,
deput)• state cnun c1l, was the
tn stalhng offwcr -Installed
wet'e lnzy Newell , state
rcprcsenlattvc, Mary Hayes,
alternate represe ntative;
E1leen Marti n, instde senlt nel,

Karla Chevalter . outstdc
senttnel; Helen Wolf, trustee;
Ethe l Orr, \1 easurcr, Zelda
Webet , ass1st ant fman c1al
sec ret a1y; Ada Neutzhng,
assistant recordmg secreta1y;
Ada Van Meter , linanctal
secretary; Mary Jo Pooler.
recordtng sec retary. Ada
Btssell, warden, Mae McPeek.
conductor . Thelma Whtle,
us·soctate vtce counci lor,
Leona Hensley, assoc 1ate
..counctlor; Erma Cleiand,
JUniOr past counctior , Opal
Holton, assoc tate junior past
councilor, Dorothy Lawson,
vtce councilor, and Marc1a
Keller, counctlor.

Commtltees appomted were
Ada Van Meter, Ethzl Orr, and
Zelda Weber , de linquent ;
Erma Cleland, Opal Hollon,
and Ethel Orr , resolu\ton,_
Dorothy
Ritcht e, Dorts
Gr uese r , Margaret Tuttle,
Cha rl otte Gra nt, Marc ta
Keller, Dorothy Lawson, Opal
Hollon and Helen Wolf, ways
and means; Erma Cleland,
Dorothy
Myers ,
Opal
Etchinger, Laura Mae Ntce,
Doris Koemg, Mary Newell,
Mary Showalter and Mary
Hayes, good of lhe order; Mary
K Holter and Mary Jo Pooler,
reporter; Mrs. Dorothy Ritchte, team captam ; Mary
Showalter, counc tl ca plaln;
Betty Roush, Jean Summerfteld. Etlee n Martin, Leona
Hensley, Ada Bissell, Mae
McPeck, Mary Jo Pooler,
Karla Chevalier, Letha Wood
and Ada Morris, kttche n
commtttee; Mary K Holter,
Dons
Koemg,
Goldte
Frederick, flower committee.
Mary Holter, Thelma White,
Sadie Trussell, Ada Neutzling,
Fern Moms, and lnzy Newell,
orphans. Margaret Tuttle ts the
ftrst flagbearer wtlh Goldie
Fredenck as her asststant;
and Dorothy Myers IS the
second flagbearer wtlh Doris
Grueser as her assistant.
Recogmtion was gtven Hatlte
Frederick, a member of the
Coun ctl for 40 years. Mrs.
Frederwk
restgned
as
recordmg secretary a posllton
she has held lor 21 years Slie
also se rved three years
as treasurer In tribute to Mrs.
Fredertck who was escorted
by the flagbearers to the altar,

FRIDAY
MARY SHRINE 37, Order of
the Whtte Shnne of Jerusalem,
7 30 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Masomc Temple Potluck
refreshments followmg the
meeting.
DANCE at Southern Htgh
SChool following the SouthernHannan game from 12 p.m . to
12 mtdntght MUSIC by
"Moonvtlle" of Nelsonvtlle
Adm1ss10n $1 a person
Sponsored by semor class
RETURN Jonathan Metgs
Chapter, DAR, 2 p.m . at home
of Mrs Dale Dutton , Middleport. Mrs. Vernon Weber
wtll revtew "The Battle of
EAST LETART - The UMW Pomt Pleasant" and discussiOn
met Tuesday at the church on meamng and use of DAR
wtth Hazel Fox, newly el~ted mstgma; delegate to state
conference, Cleveland, March
pre&gt;ident, prestdmg
CHILO BORN
Thank-you notes were read 17-19, to be named Mrs .
Mr and Mrs Revna Curtis
from restdents who recetved Charles McDamel, ass1stmg Kmg lll , Mmersvllle, are
frUit baskets, and from hostess.
GOSPEL CONCER T announcing the btrlh of thetr
Gallipolis State Institute for
first child, a son, Paul Curtis,
gifts given lour patients the songfest, 7·30 p m., Laurel Dec . 30 at the O'Bleness
untt has adopted . A gift was Cltlf Free Methodtst Church, Hospttal, Athens Grandpurchased for Mr. and Mrs co-sponsored by church and parents are Mr . and Mrs. Paul
Gregory Donohew who were Southeasten Ohto Gospel Baer, Mmersville, and Mr and
Music Assn Main features wtll
recently married.
he
the Gospel Messe ngers, Mrs Revna Curbs Kmg, Jr.,
Mrs Fox presented Mrs.
New Haven, W Va . GreatBertha Robinson with a special Gallipolis , the Chrtslpan Five "grandparents are Mrs. BarFerne of Pmnt Pleasant and the bara Baer, Mrs. R. C Kmg,
membership pm
Hayman gave a report on Shaffer Family, Crown Ct ty. Sr., and Donald Gnmm
nusswns and set a pledge of Public mvited ; freewill of.
fe nng
$200 for 1975
It was announced that a
SATURDAY
meeting for Evangelism ktckSMORGASBORD by Mtdoll wtll be held at the Syracuse dleport Fire Department at
FIRST CHILO BORN
MethodiSt Church Jan. 16 at Middleport Elementary School
WNG BOTTOM - Sp-1 and
6· 30 p m
begmmng at 4 p m Saturday r Mrs. Davtd M. Btssell, Buffalo,
A program, "Jonah," was All customer can eat, adults. W Va , announce the btrlh of
presented by Mrs. Fox and $2; chtldren, $1.25. Dona\tons thetr ftrst child , a son, Jeremy
,Mabel Shtelds. · Jonah 4 was are asked and those wtshing to - Davtd, Dec 30, 1974, at H J
read followed by a playlet ThiS gtve food should call 992-3145 Thomas Memorial Hospita l,
was a forerWtner to the book of alter 5 P m
South Charleston. The mfant
Jonah to be studted by the
OFFICERS and The Com- wetghed 4 lbs. and 6 oz
members and l&lt;lught by Dr. munity co mmittee . of the Grandparents are Mr and
Mtddleport . Pomeroy Area Mrs Charles L. Btssell, Long
Kathenne Philson.
Week of prayer and self· Branch of the AAUW wtll meet Bottom, and Mr and Mrs
demal was set for some lime for a planmng sesston, Metgs Henry DaviS, Buffalo. The
the latter part of January wilh Inn, 11 'l.m.
lather IS servmg wtth the U S
the date to be announced. 'J'he
Army and IS statiOned at Ft
birthdays of Ferne Hayman,
SPEECH and Hearing Clinic Knox
Barbara Dugan and Doris wtll resume at Pomeroy
Adams were observed
Elemenl&lt;lry School from 9 a m
Others attending in addition to 12 noon. All chents
to those named were Mtldred previOUsly enrolled wtll attend
Donohew, Becky Donohew, regular ly sc heduled ttme
Lucy Donohue, Sue Beegle, unless no\tfted otherwtse. Any
Marlene Fisher, Margaret child or adult is welcome to
Gloeckner, Eilee_n Roush and attend.
Eula Wolle Refreshments
MONDAY
were served by Mar ~are t
BETHEL 82, International
Gloeckner
and
Bertha Order of Job's Daughters, 7·30
Robinson .
•
p.m., at the Pomeroy Masomc

East Letart
ladies meet

lA BS

prayer

fo1

lawson, Hattte Frederic~, Ada
Neutz-lmg, Helen Wolf
Ma rgare t Tuttle, Mary
Holter, Sadie Trussell, Opal
Etchmger, Charlotte Grant,
Ad.! Btssell and Ada Morris.

K:

Mrs .

Fredenck and silen l prayer
lm the Elizabeth Wtckham
lamtly Margaret Tuttle sang
""Gdd Wtll Take Ca re of You •
\\ tth He len Wolf as ptamst, and
Mrs Morns concluded the
progt am wtlh prayet
Mrs
Fredenck
was
presented w1th u decorated

ca ke tnscnbed ·· To Stster
Halite 111 Apprcctahon of Yottr
21 Yea rs of l.oyai Servtce,
Chestet Counctl 323, Daughters
of Amcncu " The ca ke was

se rved wtth tee cream and
coffee .
Dunng the meeting the death
of Mrs. Wtckham was noted
an d 1t was reported that
Audrey Torrence 1s home from
the hospttai followtng surgery .
The audttmg report was read
by Opal Hollon
It was noted that at the Jan.
21 mee tmg, the charter will be
draped 111 memory of Mrs.
Wtckham and members were
asked to wear whtte.
-Preced mg the mee tmg, 37
members met at the Ewmg
Funera l Home lor servtces lor
Mrs Wickham
Attendmg were Joe Btssell,
Goldie
Dons "Grueser,
Fredenck, Ma ry Hayes,
Marcia Keller, Leona Hensley ,
Mae McPeek, Mabie Van
Meter, Doris Koentg, Letha
Wood, Eileen Martin, Mary
Newell, Karla Chevalier, lnzy
Newell, Mary Jo Pooler, Mae
Spence r, Betty Roush, Dorothy
Myers, Ethel Orr. Ada Van
Meter, Zelda Weber, Dorothy
Rttchte, Erma Cleland, Opal
Hollon , Goldte Frederick,
Thelma Wht te, Dorothy

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Women , 7:30 p m at the
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will be the theme of the
program Hostesses, Mrs.
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Brewmgton , Mrs. James
Crtswell
and
Mrs.
Elizabeth Hibbs

SUNDAY MENU
SALADS - 7 up. cottage cheese, tossed. slaw.
MEAT - l'{teat loaf. roast beef, dinner ham,
roast pork

It's Back To School

VEGETABLES - Green beans, peas. carrots,
noodlas . potaotes (baked. home fries .
mashed) .
'
DESSERT ~ Pie. graham cracker. cherry, Ice .
cream and fruit .

-SADDLES•

Mrs . Cleland read a poem
written by Ada Morris
Members moved mto a ctrcle
whet·e lhey clasped hands to
smg " B!est Be th e Tte,"
and on beha lf of the counctl,
Mrs Cleland presented Mrs.
Fredertck wtlh a gtfl. There

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~-""" flrlllv S.ntinel . M!Jdleport-Pomeroy, 0., Frtday; Jan. !O, 1975

.

.

Fran Tarkenton and startmg mmutes durmg Wednesday's about 10 pounds but I won 't game and the Super Bowl, our prachcmg there until lhe
left tackle Chatles Goodrwn, workout and his sore rtght arm have any problem putttng it saying, "1\ doesn't take ·two end of the week. But I can't
was much better for Vtkmg didn 't seem any worse lor back on ."
weeks to prepare lor a football change the schedule "
fans
havmg parttctpated, " Grant
"I tmagme he wtll ~ ready game. The coaches need ftve
Whtle the statements of
"Tarkenton threw lor 25 srud. 1 am confident he can to start," satd head Coach days and lhe players only need Gran t and Noll didn't figure to
perform his normal functions." Chuck Noll. "How long he can lhree. However, I guess lhe please NFL offiCials, those
Goodrum pulled a reg muscle go ts somelhmg we 'llllnd out." hoopla and promotiOn lor the . same Qfftcial$ couldn't have
earlier m the week but his
Noll also satd wtde recetver game may take longer."
been more annoyed than they
conditiOn was upgraded by John Stallworth, who spratned
Noll, when asked tl he would were at the conduct of Los
Grant fr om "doubtful " to a thumb Tuesday, was cat- change anythi!tg this week, Angeles Ram players Lance
"possible" for Sunday's game. chmg lhe ball normally now replied. " If it was up to me, Rentzel and Fred Dryer
" If he continues to I!Yiprove at and lhat X-rays of the lhumb we'd sl&lt;ly at home and do all
Both showed up at Thurslhts rate, he probably could were ne gattve. He also satd
play and may even start," guard Sam Davis, bothered by
a foot InJury, could play but
NEW YORK t UP!) - The Grant satd
The
Steelers
got
some
good
J IIYI Clack will start at left
Cleveland1!ndtans picked two
pttchers and two lhtrd news of lhetr own when they guard
Gran t was cnllcal of the two.
basemen among six selections were reJOined by nght defenBy Murray Oldcrman
SIVe
end
Dwtght
White
who
had
the first of a later flood of ta ien
m the regular phase of Thurs·
week period between the
Q.
I
"ould
like
to
kno\\
who
from
predo rntnantly black
been
hospitalized
smce
late
conference
cha mpt onshtp
day 's maJOr ~eague baseball
the
ltrst
black
professional
sc
hools
Sunday
mght
wtth
a
v1ral
.ndraft, , while the Cmcmnah
football player m the NFL was.
Q. What has happened to
Reds nam ed two pitchers fectiOn Whtte arrived back at
NHl
Sta
nd1ng
s
-Jack
Adams,
Oakland,
the
team's
tramtng
quarters
m
Rubba
Smith, the prtde of
among lour chmces.
Bv Un 1ted Pr ess lnternat•onal
Ca
lli.
hme
to
attend
the
club
meeting
Beaumont?
We hear so little
DI VIS IOn I
Cleveland tapped three
w I I pts gf ga
The
ltrsl
black
pro
player
of
and
practice
session
about
him
these
days. - Jose
catchers among six selections
Pll• l ad l ph•a 25 9 6 5 6 143 84
note
was
the
great
Fntz
"I'm pretty weak from not
M., Corpus Christl, Tex.
NY Ra n ger s 201 1 a 48 167 124
m the secondary phase, conAllanta
19 15 1 45 115 112 Pollard, the AJI·Amertcan
eating,"
Wh1te
sald
"I
lost
Charl es Aaron Smtih 1s
stslmg of players previously
NY Is la nder s 17 15 9 .o 1)8 1 14
halfback
at
Brown
who
JOined
commg
back fme alter that
DIVISIOn 2
drafted but who dtd not sign up.
w . 1 t pt s gf ga the Masstllon Tigers and was senous knee surgery m '72 and
Cincmnat1named two pitchers
Van c ouver
11 15 5 49 149 133
AFFLECK TO BLUES
Ch1cago
18 18 4 ·10 140 120 the spectal nemests of legen- regamed a sta rling JOb as
among three chmces.
ST
LOUIS,
Mo.
(UP!)
, 5 1 LOUIS
16 18 6 38 1311 41
delenstve left end for the
In the ltrst phase, Cleveland
M•nnesota
I I 74 5 27 10 7 176
Bruce
Affleck,
a
delensema
n,
Oakland Ratders But hts
ptcked pitchers Mike Vaughn,
measure.
was
acqwred
by
the
St.
Lows
KansaSCIIY
7~~
llf 9 3 170
Iate1al mobtllty IS not what it
DIVI SI On J
Murruy.
iJI contrast to Tmglehofl, the Santa Clara, Calif., and John Blues Thursday from the
•
•
was,
llmtting hts pass rush, and
w
1
t
pts
g
f
ga
news on MUUiesota 's other two HiUs, Camarillo, Calif ; thtrd Califorma Seals m exchange Montreal
22 6 13 57 183 11 5 dary Jtm Thorpe The early
I
would
thmk they mtght
s Angeles 22 6 12 56 126 77
ailing plafers, quarterback basemen Randall Etckenhorst, lor rtght wmg Frank Sprmg Lo
days
of
the
NFL
also
featured
cons1der
movwg
htm mstde to
Pitt Sb ur g h
14 11 8 36 157 151
Cincmnat1, and Alfonso Wtl·
and
cash
De tro •t
10 22 6 26 108 15 1 Duke Stster who played tackle
tackle where he would shll be a
Uams, Fatrfteld, Ala.; catcher
Wasllmgton
3 JJ 5 11 83 2 19
Affleck
was
the-Seals'
second
for
the
Ch
tcago
Cardmals
fr
om
te
rror over the nose of the
DI
V
IS
IOn
4
Gary Tablert, Mobtle, Ala .
draft
chmce
m
1974
and
had
w
I t pts gf ga 1926 through !931 and later
center.
Bubba IS only apand infielder Patrtck Washko,
Buffa lo
25 9 6 5 6 175 130
split
his
playmg
ti!Yie
this
gat
ned
emmence
as
a
judge
proachmg hts 29th btrthday
Boston
23 10 7 53 193 122
Bedford, Ohio.
season
between
Salt
Lake
City
Toronto
14 19 7 35 136 153 The real mliux of blacks mto
Q.Several years ago, Notre
Cincmnat1 ptcked pitchers
Cal1f orn•a
I I 24 8 JO 116167
p1
o
ball
really
began
when
Dame
employed a shill before
SUCCESS STORIES Teddy Asbill , Bunch, Okla. , and Sprmgfield
Thurs da y's Re s ult s
Sprmg
had
a
bnel
trtal
wtth
Bosto n 5 Van c ouver 1
Tank
Younger
JO
ined
the
Los
the
actual
snap of the ball and
and Bernard Plent, Lahabre,
N Y Islander s 3 Phda 1
the
Blues
this
season
but
had
Angeles Rams m 1949 alter invariably succeeded In
"Tbey Overcame
Los A ng eles 5 Bu lf a l o 2
Calif. ;
catc"er
James
been
playmg
for
thetr
Denver
Fnday 's Gam es
attending
Grambhng College . dra\\ lng an offside Infraction.
Slaughter, Pasadena, Calif.,
HeariDg Loss"
Plltsbu r gh at Atlan ta
farm
team
and outltelder Mark Cla rk,
Edwards, Calif.
. ~ret Booklet es peciall y
• Texas selected Michael Macprepared to encourage
Donald of Cincinnati.
Americans of all ages who
In the secondary phase ,
suffer from uflcorrected or
Cleveland
named catchers
. untreated hearing loss to
seek help
Ralph Jiminez, Bronx, N. Y.,
'
Steven
Van
Deren,
Baystde,
Welt-known celebrities from
Calit., and David Adeuny,
all walks of life tell their
personal stories of trium ph
West Palm Beach, Fla.; pitIn their fields because they
cher Marion Harvey, Laverne,
overcame the ir hear ing
second baseman
Okla.,
Impa irment
Michael Massa, Cincinnati ,
By CHRIS SCHERF
games.
1t the length of the court for the the game, ftrushed with 19
and infielder Wilford White,
UPJ Sports Writer
Wesley Cox scored on a tip-m wmnmg basket
pomts for North Carolina and
Mesa, Ariz.
The
Pacilic-8
Conference
is
and
Junior
Brtdgmen,
who
14
Allen
Murphy
sco
red
freshman
Phil Ford added 18.
Come 11'1 . • Vtr~te
or Ph011a
Cmclnnali took pitchers m Its natural state wtlh UCLA ftms.ied wtth 10 pomts, was pomts to lead the Cardmais'
Oemson'~ talented freshman
lor ~""' FREE COPY
Lawrence Pekarcik, Pomona. m front an!l the rest of the credited wtth a basket on a offense
duo of Skip. Wise and Stan
Wilham S. Dtles
· Calif., and Thomas Baxter, league forced to play "catch- goal-tending call to he the Mitch Kupchak scored 18 Rome led the Tigers, with Wtse
Bayonne, N. J. , and catcher up "
Dtles Heartng Aid Center
ga me. West Texas was points and grabbed 20 "ebounds scoring 25 pomts and Rome 15.
Riverside Professtonal Bldg. Mark Unsoeld, Glendora, Calif.
The Bruins opened the Pac-8 working lor the last shot when to play a key role m the Tar
ln other ma jor games,
Detroit selected pitcher basketball race Thursday mght Maurtce Cheeks drove the lane Heels' narrow deciSion over Hawati edged Centenary, 79444 W. Union St.. Athens ·
David Tobik, Lyndhurst, Ohto. aga in st 16th -ra nked and shot, only to hav e Clemson Walter Davis, who 78; Wtchtta St. topped Drake,
PHONE:
Montreal picked pitcher Mark Washington and unmediately LouiSville center Btll Bunton scored what proved to be the 106-92; Bradley ripped lllinoiS
Knose, Harrison, Ohio. Pitts- took the conference lead wtth a block the ball to Bond, who took wtnning basket wtth I :07left in State,l06-85; DePaul defeated
burgh named pitcher Timothy 92-82 vtctory.
Manhattan, 90-75 ; Oral
Burman, Cincmnatl.
UCLJI won 1ts lith straight
Roberts heat Long Beach St.,
game of the season con.
91-86, and SMU crushed
vmcmgly , b~t Bruins Coac h
Houston Baptist, 98-67.
J Qhn Wooden wasn' t tm ·
pressed
"We've been I!Yiproving almost every week but I didn 't
thtnk we showed the same
POMEROY PLANES
PHOENIX, Ariz. (UP!) - course.
Improvement tonight," he
Early Sunday M1x e d
Mahaffey, playmg late m the
Jan " 1075
S81d. "But I think much of the Johnny Miller, as everyone
Won Lost
day
when
a
21l&lt;mle-per-hour
knows,
was
the
king
of
the
tour
credit should go to Washington.
Swisher &amp; Lo hse Ph arm
wmd
swept
across
the
Arizona
a
year
ago
when
he
won
etght
18
6
They were very strong on the
Tom s Carry Ou t
12
12
lilies
and
then
went
to
Japan,
country,
had
m
some
respects,
boards and they got good
Pullms E)(cavafmg
12
12
just for good measure, and a better round. The 26-year-&lt;Jid Eagles
Club
12
12
position on us 11
Mayer &amp; Hill Barb ers
12
12
Dave Meyers, who has came home \\lth an addihonal pro from Texas, who grew up Fnendl y Tavern
6
lB
playmg
in
the
wmd,
scrambled
$30,000
for
a
$384,000
year.
H1gh lnd Game Larry
asserted himself as the Bruins •
Dugan 217, Jr
Phelps 212
key man this season, scored a • Twice during December he a bit but made the most of his Women Mary Voss 193,
m e D ugan 181
•
ga me-htgh 21 points Pete went out to practiee and qmt opportumlles. Hts best hole MaHx1gh
Senes Men
Jr
after nine holes
was
the
sixth
where
he
chipped
Trgovich added a career4ugh
Phelps 600, D1ck Dugan 569
" I was htlting 1t so good, " m from 20-leet for a b1rd.
W~omen
Mary Voss 516,
18 points to ~he UCLA offenstve
Ma x m e D ugan 500
said
the
27·year-&lt;Jid
Mtller,
wind
didn
't
bother
me,
"The
and Richard Washington also
eam H1gh Game and Ser res
"that I qutt . I didn'l see any although I don 't li~e to play in - T5wrs
her &amp; Lohse Pharma cy,
fimshed wtth 18.
part of my game that needed itt'' he said. ·"In many ways I 769 and 2 158
In other games involvmg
work, so why practice."
lhink I played better than I
nationally ranked squads,
POMEROY LANES
To prove hiS pomt, MiUer anticipated "
Wednesda y Lat e Mrxed
th1rd-ranked North Carolina
Decembe r 18 , 1974
went out and shot a four-underThompson was all over the
State toyed wtth Wester n
PIS
par 67 Thursday m the opening course but made half a dozen x Rosenbaum Meadows
94
Ca rohna , 119-61; No. 4
74
round of lhe $150,000 PhoeniX outstanding shots to grab a Fultz Bentley
Louisville edged West Texas
Rawlrngs Holter
70
Open, first event of the 1975 share of the lead. He sank a ~ Hoy t Thomas
54
State, 5:h51, and No 12 North
Owen Co r der
50
POMEROY, OHIO
Carolina nipped Clemson, 74- Tour He hit the ball as well as footer for a bird on the fourth, a Moore Mor r ow
42
ever off the tee and putted 20-footer on the nmth and
H rgh l nd Game
Men
72.
followed Wl\h a t:;.footer On the Drd . Ros enba um 214 John
AII-Amertca David Thomp. better than he expected.
Bentley 211
Women
Pat
John Mahaffey and Leonard tenth and an IS-footer on the Thomas
110. Pat Thomas 163
son scored 32 points m the
Hrghl Serres Men
D rck
Wallpack 's loth vtctory m 11 Thompson, who ranked 15th 12th.
Rosenbaum 538 , John Bentle y
and
16lh,
respectively,
on
the
"I'm
happy
because
it's
the
535 Wom en Par Thomas 460,
games this season. Phil Spence
Joan C order~ 405
money
winning
list
last
year,
best
round
I
have
ever
shot
on
had 22 pomts and 12 rebounds
Team Hrgh Game a nd Serres '
Thomas 694 and 1820
• lor N.C. State, while Moe more than $200 ,000 behmd lhe Wmter Tour," 'said the 23- - XHoyt
Frrs l H a lf Wrnne r s
Mtller, played as well as John year-&lt;Jld Thomnpson .
• Rtvers added 19 pomts, Monte 111. the openmg round to grab a
• • •
Six players- Tommy Aaron,
• Towe 12 and Kenny Carr 11
share
of
the
lead
wtth
1974's
Bob
Rosburg, J. C. Snead, Roy
Louisville guard Phil Bond
Player of the Year .
Taste,
Mtke.Reasor, and Mike
• scored a breakaway layup at
There
were
any
number
of
Mitchellwere only a shot
Tokyo and Osaka. two major
• the buzzer to preserve the
lme
rounds
played
by
the
back
at
three
under
68
while
ct
hes '" Japan, already have
• Cardinals' perfect record this
others
m
the
held,
but
all
the
~im Ahern, Dick Lotz, Pete com machtnes that dtspense a
• season. But it was the second
whtff of oxygen mto a lace
• last-second VICtory for the attention IS on MiUer, because Brown, John Schroedor, ma sk lor peoestrtans gaspmg
of
the
way
he
pinged
the
par
37·
Nevtl
and
Orville
Dwtght
: Cardinals m their last three
35-71 Phoerux Country Oub Moody. were at 69. PGA champ am td tralhc fumes
Lee Tr~vino, another noted
wind player, didn't do well. He
opened with a 73, but that was
two shots better than U.S. Open
champ Hale Irwin
Ih all, 46 players m the !50man held shot par or better
over a course that at best could
be descnbed as not difficult.
The cut will he made after
Spend your feed dollars wisely ... get
the second round today, with
the low 71ls gomg on to play the
more from your money, and more
final
two roWtds
profits, too. Our feeds . . . for every
14

Reds make
draft picks

day's mterview sessions wtth
lhe Pittsburgh and Minnesota
players and coaches m !hell"
roles as wtiters for a national
sports magazme. They were
dressed IIJ&lt;e newsmen of the
1920s.
Several of the Vtkmgs and
Steelers, the1r patience Wllrn
thm by the vartous distractions
of lhe past week, became up:;f(
wt lh the turmoil caused by tl're

Mrs. A. R. Kntght, Pomeroy,
Is the 1975 gtrl scout cookie sale
• chairwoman for Metgs County .
The cookte sale will begin
Jan 31 and continue througb
Feb. 9 wtth orders only temg
tak en durin g that time
Delivery date wtll be Apnl 12
wtth the sale to b&amp;completed
by April 23
Thts year lhe cooktes are
being obt&lt;lmed from Little
Browme Bakers and each box
wtll cost $1 ~ The vaneties
are butter trefm ls, assorted
cremes, mints, peanut butter
and samoa.

antics of Rentzel and Dryer
and several newsmen also
obJected to their clowning
·
tactics.
"There's not much we can do
about tl," said Jun KensU,
executive director ,of the NFL.
"They're accredited. But we
will make 11 clear to the
magaZlne's editors that news
conferences are to report news,
not to make news "

Massillon .Tiger first black pro

}uslask

12
•

•

Washington's title hopes are
•
smashed 92-82 by UCLA B rulns

It "as called everythmg from

unsportsmanlike to illegal.
May we have your opinion and

have rules been passed to
preclude this type of action?
George Walker, Alameda,
Calif.
It may be apocryphal but
Knute Rockne mvented lhe
Notre Dame shtft supposedly
after watching a Broadway
chorus line m actwn. More
than drawmg opponcots olfstde, tt gave the Insh a hell of
a runmng start on lhetr plays
So football passed a rule, shll
tn effect, that teams shiftmg
more than one player must
stop for a full second's pause
before snapping the ball Most
teams shll shift thetr backs to
keep defense off balance.
Q. About Fritz Williams, the
ex-Golden State Warriors'
guard DO\\ with the Milwaukee
Bucks, did he attend high
school In Washington D. C. or
Weirton, W. Va.? James A.
Booker, Jr., Mather AFB,
Calif.
Ron (Fntz) Wtlllams 1s a
product of Wetrton Htgh School
m hts native West Virgmta
where he sta rted at the
Umverstty and was No. I draft
pick of the Warrtors m 1966. He
was also drafted by the Dallas
Cowboys as a potenltal
defenstve back
Q. Are there any players still
left on that Green Bay Paeker
team which won the first Super
Bowl? J. I. Menominee, Wis.
And then there was one Gale Gtlhngham, then a
reserve rookte guard and now a
veteran all-pro, is the sole

592-6238

Miller retains
touch of magic

FASHION &amp; SNOW

TWO YEARS OLD - Lori
Lynn Meadows celebrated
her second birthday with a
family party at home
Christmas Eve. The party
was given by her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Meadows, Rt. 1, Letarl.
Lori's 2-year candle was lit
and burned throughout the
evening. Refreshments were
served to Bonnie and Joey
Smithson, Karen and Rich
Broadwater, Lillian Smith,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Staats
(grandparents), Don and
Bernita Meadows and the
homoree. Sending gifts were
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Meadows, Wharton, W. Va.
(paternal grandparents!.

Packer remammg from the
loam whtch tromped Kansas
City, 35-10, on Jan. 15, 1967
There are several others
though such as Donme Anderson ~nd Marv Flemmg still
qw te active m the NFL.
Q. I think Andy Messersmith
Is a super pitcher. Could you
please give me background on
him and an address where I
could write him. - Uzabelh
White, Tulare. Calif.
I can 't gtve you a life's
htstory but John Alexander
(Andy) Messersmith was born
m Toms Rtver, N. J . and went
to htgh school m Anahetm,
Calif. where he later pitched
for the Cahlorma Angels alter
a varsity career at the
Universtty of California at
Berkeley. The Angels traded
htm to the neighboring
Dodgerstn 1973 He comes off a
fme 20-6 season (ERA of 2.59)
and 1s one of !he lew pttchers m
major league history to win 20
games m both leagues. He IS
dtvorced and 29 years old

Werrys host
breakfast
Mr. and Mrs. Phihp Werry
entertained wtth a breakfast at
• their home, Rtdgeview Farm,
following the annual ftremen's
ball on New Year's Eve
Fried potatoes, scrambled
eggs, bacon, ham loaf, smoked
• · sausade, toast, assorted JUICes,
milk and coffee were served
: Thetr guests were Mr and
; Mrs. Thomas Werry, Armand
· • Turley, and Jtm Stewart,
Pomeroy; Mr and Mrs. Jtm
Werry, Mr. and Mrs Don
Grueser, and Mr. and Mrs. BtU
Grueser, Mmersville, R.F.D ;
Mr and Mrs. Gary Smt th and
Barbara Sargent, Chester; Mr
and Mrs. Roger Wmebrenner.
Syracuse; Mr and Mrs. Harley
Farley, Belpre; Mr. and Mrs
Don Weese, Racine ; Mr and
• Mrs. Earl Ftelds, Hartford, W.
Va .; Mr. and Mrs JameJ
Proffttt, Mason, W. Va ; Ralph
; Stewart, Pomt Pleasant; John
~ Smtih, New Haven , Mary
· VanMatre, West Colwnbta, W.
' Va.; Fred Chapman, Coolville.

FLOWERS
For AIL~ .
· We Wire Flowers
Evervwhere

992-2039
Pomeroy Flower Shop
Mrs. M1llard Van Meter
Ph. 992-203'

.

Ph . 992-57"'

Real, Live, Stretchable Rubber. Won't crack or stiffen in
cold weather.

Local Bowlhlg

••
•&lt;
'

TINGLEY
'

THE

BOOTS

'

AND

••

•
:
•

••

••
••
•••

•

~SUGAR RUN

!

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•
•

The W•lllngton aroUfld waterproof
men, boys, and
Easy to clean

An all

boot for
youths
- long

•
•

WHrlng

BeC.utifu'
New Spring
Fabrics In
Stock for
Spring
We Still Have
A Good Selection
Of JanuafY Sale
Fabrics

~

'

Also

~

•

udles Fur Lined
usno-Belu"
Boots

••
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•••
•••
•••
••
•••
•••
••
•

12" -

Giant After X-mas
'
Savings Throughout
The Store

By Conme ,
Thom MeAn

,,

MISS Wonderlu I

Values
tom."

$500

heritage
house

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

!!

Middleport, 0 .

:a ahr Cloth·iBrs

9:15 to 5:00

Middleport, Ohio

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

for members of Bethel 62,
lnternat10nal Order of Job's
Daughters, and guests was
held recently at the Pomeroy
Masomc Temple.
A potluck supper in the
dmmg room decorated in the
Christmas theme preceded th.e
gtft exchange and games
conducted by Paula Eichinger.
Paul Darnell gave the blessi~g .
Attendmg were
June
Stanley, Brenda Stanley,
Barbara Fultz , Ruby Kautz,
Pat Wood, Vanessa. Folmer
Paula Eichinger, Becky Fultz,
June Wamsley, Rick Couch,
Kun Sebo, Steven Walburn,
Don Thomas, Dan Thomas,
Greg Thomas, Susan Zirkle,
Bruce Ztrkle, Rhonda Zirkle,
Jackie Ztrkle, Dallas DeBord,
John Nash, Mildred Nash,
Trent Nash, Ltsa Nash,
Tammy DeBord, Mandte
Si sson , Lori Wood, Conme
Romme, Sandy Curtis, David

HOUSE PLANT

FLUFFY RUFFLE FERN
SCHEFFLERA I Umbrella Treel

50% oH

'

I

9:15 to 8:00

I .

..

Cash &amp;

Car~y

·------------------------. ALL OTHER GREEN

FOLIAGE PLANTS

O/ AND TERRARIUMS

2 5 /0

Off Cash

&amp; Carry

SALE EFFECTIVE THRU"JAN. 31st

Dudle.y 's

______., .__
.

Agam," and Mrs Gronmger

had prayer Plans were made
lor the class to ]luy two t&lt;lbles
for the church social room.
Members related lheir ex·
perience of Christmas The
next meeting wtll be at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Ftelds.
Refreshments were served
by the hostess to Mr. and Mrs.
Groninger , Mrs
Louis
Osborne, Mrs. Edward Vcnoy,
Mrs Bowers, Mrs. Evelyn
Smtih, Mrs.Ftelds, Mrs. Clyde
Andrews, Mrs Charles Eskew,
Mrs. Kapple and Mrs Me·
Dame I

membership will be acted on at
the next meeting
The collect 10 unison opened
the meeting conducted by Mrs
Wallace. Reports were gtven
by the officers For the
program, Mrs. Nap Moore
reviewed "One Man's Way" by
Arthur Gordon, the life story of
Norman Vmcent Peale and hts
messages The book is the
story of Peale's life, the lrtals
he faced , and the God-given
strength he had to overcome
them .

Bernard and Betty Fultz, Paul
and Peggy Taylor, Brenda
Taylor, Debbte Taylor, Vera
Roberts, Leann Sebo and Rose
Ann Sebo.

SON BORN
RACINE - EN2 and Mrs
Mtchael Rush, Charleston, S
C., announce the b1rUl of a son,
Lonnie Michael, Dec 21 at the
Naval Hospital at Charleston
Mr and Mrs Rush have
another son, DaVId Neal, two.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Lonme Rush, Rayne, La.,
and Mr. and Mrs Harold Btrd,
Rt 2, Racme.

HOS:r PARTY
RACINE - Mr and Mrs.
George Netgler, Rae me, entertained wilh a holiday dinner
party Sunday, Dec. 29. Their
guests were Mr and Mrs
Robert Palmer, Goldsboro, N.
C.; Mr. and Mrs. Phtllip Miller,
Wapakoneta ; and Mrs .
Frankie Netgler, Racme Mr.
and Mrs. Oyde Cross and Ray
were v1s1tors at the Netgler
home during the holidays

I will be

ab~t

from my office

•

NOW IN PROGRESS

treasurer . and pubh ctty
chatrwoman; and Mrs. BtU
McDaniels, flower fund .
Devotions to open the
mee ting were gtven by Mrs.
Ftelds who took her scripture
from Proverbs 4 1·13 Terry
Gronmger read "Beginmng

]abies enjoy Christmas patty
.
The annual Christmas party

SPECIALLY PRICED

'

SHOES

Up-front speaker, controls, antenna. handle

In other busmess, Mrs.

Harold Sauer was re-elected
prestdent {or the 1975-76 year.
Other offtcers named were
Mrs Dwight Wallace, vtce
prestdent; Mrs. Charles McDaniel, secretary; and Mtss
Luctlle Smtlh, treasurer. Two
more names submttted lor

SALE

January
Clea-rance ·sale

· WOMEN'S

Solid State chassis I!Kcept only 2 chassis tubes )
Solid State 70 Detent " CI1ck ' " UHF Tuner ·
Picture Control

Mrs. Stbley Slack and Mrs.
Bert Gnmrn were welcomed
mto the membership of the
Mtddleport Literary Club at a
meeting Wednesday at the
home of Mrs. Robert Ftsher.

BRIGHTEN YOUR HOME AT
ASAVINGS!

ONEGRO~P

•

:

Gardens

DECORATOR TVI
PORTABL! TV

Quasar Portable Black and White TV

.

3" W. Ma1n St. •
H2-2164
P.omeroy, Ohio
The Store With " ALL KINDS OF STUFF"
For Pets Stables Large &amp; Small Animals Lawns

Stained patent
defies cleanup
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I cannot remove some lipstick stams from
an expenstve white patent purse I bought in Europe. There is no
chance o{ contacting the store for information. These stains are
from my hands after I had applied the lipstick and not straight
from the lube. I have tried bleach. polish remover and detergents
as well as the polish I bough\ wtth the bag but nolhmg helps. I
also have shoes to match and hate to wear them soiled.- ROSE
DEAR ROSE - I do not toow whether there now Is a dlf·
ference In foreign made patent but ours Is usuaUy a vinyl. I have
had great luck removillg spots of many kinds from white vinyl
patent shoes and purses by n1bblng with a cloth thai bad beeo
dipped In n~bbillg alcohol. -POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is wtth people and
organizations who insist on offering candy to children. I always
have had trouble and resulting great expense wtlh my teeth and
am trying to save my children from the same. Our kids do get
candy on holidays and special occasions so they are not deprived
of it. On a day-to-day basis it is not available to them at home. It
is hard to explain to a child that your reason lor havmg them
refuse 1\ IS for their own well-bemg. Tbey cannot Wtdersta nd
when they are offered it by the banker, at Sunday School for
havmg been good and even by the doctor
My Pointer IS along the same line as for lhe above reason
plus llif htgh cost of sugar. I cut down on the amount of sugar
used m desserts made at home. I use JUSt enough to satisfy that
"sweet tooth." - LIZ.
DEAR UZ - Since candy Is also bec&lt;Jmlng more expensive
due to the high cost of sugar perhaps your Peeve will be
eliminated since candy may not be offered so freely. -POLLY.
- DEAR POLLY - Before I go grocery shopping I put my very
STURDY rectangular plastic clothes basket in the back of the
station wagon. Two brown grocery bags fit rucely m the basket.
When they are put m at the grocery I am sure that one conU.ins
the "lragiles." The support of the basket keeps them from tip.
ping over and spilling durmg the drive home. Put basket m the
car tast so 11 comes out first and carry groceries into the house m
the basket. You have handles for a good grip and there is no
danger of a torn paper bag. I seem to get the job done laster or
perhaps it is the elimination of the frustration I used to feel. Do
be sure yours is a heavy-duty basket and It wtll last a long, long
time. - MRS R.M.M.

Two ladies welcomed by club

Thomas and Angie Sisson.
June Etchmger, Carolyn
Thomas, Marla Romme, Paul
Darnell, !Ia Darnell, Audrey
Wood, Mary Folmer, Dan Will,
Btll , Donna and Heather
Bauman, Tom Edwards ,

MODERN SUPPLY

•

DINNER POSTPONED
Aplanned bean dmner by the
Metgs Chapter, Order of
DeMolay, bas been postponed
unhl Saturday, Jan. 18,
beca use of a smorgasbord to be
held by the Middleport
Volunteer Fire Department at
the Middleport Elementary
School begmmng at 4 p.m.
Saturday

BY POLLY CRAMER

area busmess sections.

Class officers selected
New officers were elected at
the Tuesday night meeting of
the Golden Rule Class of the
Pomeroy Church of Christ at
the hom e of Mrs. Betty
Spencer.
Elected were Mrs. Elwood
Bowers, president; Mrs. Jerry
Fields, vtce president; Mrs
Denver Kapple, secretary -

.POllY'S POINTERS

cookies and particularly encouraged thts year are the use
of bootha and cupboards'for the
sale of addthonal cooktes m

The annual cookie sale gtves
gU"l scouts an opportumty to
raise funds for thetr troop
activthes, to help gtrls participate m specta l opportumhes, and to gtve direct
services to purchase equipment and property in their
behalf
Cos t of the cookies ts 50 cents
a box wtth 62 cents going to the
Black Diamond Gtrl Scout
As m previous yea rs, Counctl, 12 cents to the troop
Browmes wtll not be pernu tted a nd one ce nt toward adto sell the cooktes. Patches will mtmstrahon cost, making lhe
be offered to all scouts selling total sale pnce $1.25.

Swisher, Mark Morris , Lisa

•

MILLS~ WERNER RADIO &amp; TV

180 Mulberry'Ave. 992-2115 P'meroy

•

THE WEWNGTON

......,•

need ... are scientifically com pounded, fortified with :vitamins and
minerals and enriched with protein to
protect health, encourage growth and
boost gains. Plan your feeding
program here .. you'll be glad you
did.
.

•

MEN'S &amp; BOYS' KNEE BOoT
MEN'S HI-TOP WORK lOOT
AND WOMEN'S STYLE BOOT.

SIMON'S PIC-A-PAIR

•••••••••••••••••••••••
•• Always Your BeSt Buy
••
••
••
••
•••
•••
•••
••
••

Sew Now
For
'Spring'

•

ODDS &amp; ENDS
TABLE
CHILDREN'S, TEENS'
&amp; LADIES' •1.00

~

Mrs. Knight heads drive

Vikings, Steelers counting down fOr Finale IX

•200

•

'.

4- The DaUy Sentinel, Mtddlepo'rt-Pomeroy, 0 , Frtday,' Jan 10, 1975-

NEW ORLEANS {UP!) The tapering down for -Sunday's Super Bowl IX betw"'ln
the Pittsburgh Steelers and
Minnesota Vtkmgs begms
tOOay.
The Vikings, hopmg to
aveng~ the losses they suffered
m their two previous Super
Bowl appeara nces, wen t
through the1r hard'est workout
of the week Thursday.
"Thursday's alwa ys our
hardest day of the week for
workouts even during the
regular season," satd Vtkmg
coach Bud Grant. "Everybody
is taped up and wears pads and
pants. We practice our blitz
drUis If you're near the field
you can hear the hitlmg but
there's no tackling."
The only casualty from the
4().minute pra.ctice sesston was
center Mick Tmglehoff who
suffered a slightly spramed
right ankle shortly alter the
workout began and sa t out the
remainder of the sesswn .
Tlnglehoff had hts ankle
wrapped in Ice by the team
trainer as a precautionary

I

59 N. Second St

Mrs 0 B Stout rev tewed
" Whtte House China " by
Manan Flamkm, a story of the
preservation of Whtte House
chma and other things of
histo rtc al signifi ca nce . She
noted that most of the articles
used by the early prestdents
were brought from foreign
COU11trles smce there were no
kilns m thts country, but that
now all is made m this country.
The book pmnted out lhat many
of the articles of value are now
preserved in museums
The hostess served can,!ly.

D of A council names _officers
CHESTER - ElectiOn and
mstallalton of officers for 1975
and the appmnllnent of comtml lees htghlighted a meetmg
or the Chestc1 . Counctl 323,
Daughters of Amer tca,
Tuesday mght at the hall
Mrs
Dorothy Rtlciue,
deput)• state cnun c1l, was the
tn stalhng offwcr -Installed
wet'e lnzy Newell , state
rcprcsenlattvc, Mary Hayes,
alternate represe ntative;
E1leen Marti n, instde senlt nel,

Karla Chevalter . outstdc
senttnel; Helen Wolf, trustee;
Ethe l Orr, \1 easurcr, Zelda
Webet , ass1st ant fman c1al
sec ret a1y; Ada Neutzhng,
assistant recordmg secreta1y;
Ada Van Meter , linanctal
secretary; Mary Jo Pooler.
recordtng sec retary. Ada
Btssell, warden, Mae McPeek.
conductor . Thelma Whtle,
us·soctate vtce counci lor,
Leona Hensley, assoc 1ate
..counctlor; Erma Cleiand,
JUniOr past counctior , Opal
Holton, assoc tate junior past
councilor, Dorothy Lawson,
vtce councilor, and Marc1a
Keller, counctlor.

Commtltees appomted were
Ada Van Meter, Ethzl Orr, and
Zelda Weber , de linquent ;
Erma Cleland, Opal Hollon,
and Ethel Orr , resolu\ton,_
Dorothy
Ritcht e, Dorts
Gr uese r , Margaret Tuttle,
Cha rl otte Gra nt, Marc ta
Keller, Dorothy Lawson, Opal
Hollon and Helen Wolf, ways
and means; Erma Cleland,
Dorothy
Myers ,
Opal
Etchinger, Laura Mae Ntce,
Doris Koemg, Mary Newell,
Mary Showalter and Mary
Hayes, good of lhe order; Mary
K Holter and Mary Jo Pooler,
reporter; Mrs. Dorothy Ritchte, team captam ; Mary
Showalter, counc tl ca plaln;
Betty Roush, Jean Summerfteld. Etlee n Martin, Leona
Hensley, Ada Bissell, Mae
McPeck, Mary Jo Pooler,
Karla Chevalier, Letha Wood
and Ada Morris, kttche n
commtttee; Mary K Holter,
Dons
Koemg,
Goldte
Frederick, flower committee.
Mary Holter, Thelma White,
Sadie Trussell, Ada Neutzling,
Fern Moms, and lnzy Newell,
orphans. Margaret Tuttle ts the
ftrst flagbearer wtlh Goldie
Fredenck as her asststant;
and Dorothy Myers IS the
second flagbearer wtlh Doris
Grueser as her assistant.
Recogmtion was gtven Hatlte
Frederick, a member of the
Coun ctl for 40 years. Mrs.
Frederwk
restgned
as
recordmg secretary a posllton
she has held lor 21 years Slie
also se rved three years
as treasurer In tribute to Mrs.
Fredertck who was escorted
by the flagbearers to the altar,

FRIDAY
MARY SHRINE 37, Order of
the Whtte Shnne of Jerusalem,
7 30 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Masomc Temple Potluck
refreshments followmg the
meeting.
DANCE at Southern Htgh
SChool following the SouthernHannan game from 12 p.m . to
12 mtdntght MUSIC by
"Moonvtlle" of Nelsonvtlle
Adm1ss10n $1 a person
Sponsored by semor class
RETURN Jonathan Metgs
Chapter, DAR, 2 p.m . at home
of Mrs Dale Dutton , Middleport. Mrs. Vernon Weber
wtll revtew "The Battle of
EAST LETART - The UMW Pomt Pleasant" and discussiOn
met Tuesday at the church on meamng and use of DAR
wtth Hazel Fox, newly el~ted mstgma; delegate to state
conference, Cleveland, March
pre&gt;ident, prestdmg
CHILO BORN
Thank-you notes were read 17-19, to be named Mrs .
Mr and Mrs Revna Curtis
from restdents who recetved Charles McDamel, ass1stmg Kmg lll , Mmersvllle, are
frUit baskets, and from hostess.
GOSPEL CONCER T announcing the btrlh of thetr
Gallipolis State Institute for
first child, a son, Paul Curtis,
gifts given lour patients the songfest, 7·30 p m., Laurel Dec . 30 at the O'Bleness
untt has adopted . A gift was Cltlf Free Methodtst Church, Hospttal, Athens Grandpurchased for Mr. and Mrs co-sponsored by church and parents are Mr . and Mrs. Paul
Gregory Donohew who were Southeasten Ohto Gospel Baer, Mmersville, and Mr and
Music Assn Main features wtll
recently married.
he
the Gospel Messe ngers, Mrs Revna Curbs Kmg, Jr.,
Mrs Fox presented Mrs.
New Haven, W Va . GreatBertha Robinson with a special Gallipolis , the Chrtslpan Five "grandparents are Mrs. BarFerne of Pmnt Pleasant and the bara Baer, Mrs. R. C Kmg,
membership pm
Hayman gave a report on Shaffer Family, Crown Ct ty. Sr., and Donald Gnmm
nusswns and set a pledge of Public mvited ; freewill of.
fe nng
$200 for 1975
It was announced that a
SATURDAY
meeting for Evangelism ktckSMORGASBORD by Mtdoll wtll be held at the Syracuse dleport Fire Department at
FIRST CHILO BORN
MethodiSt Church Jan. 16 at Middleport Elementary School
WNG BOTTOM - Sp-1 and
6· 30 p m
begmmng at 4 p m Saturday r Mrs. Davtd M. Btssell, Buffalo,
A program, "Jonah," was All customer can eat, adults. W Va , announce the btrlh of
presented by Mrs. Fox and $2; chtldren, $1.25. Dona\tons thetr ftrst child , a son, Jeremy
,Mabel Shtelds. · Jonah 4 was are asked and those wtshing to - Davtd, Dec 30, 1974, at H J
read followed by a playlet ThiS gtve food should call 992-3145 Thomas Memorial Hospita l,
was a forerWtner to the book of alter 5 P m
South Charleston. The mfant
Jonah to be studted by the
OFFICERS and The Com- wetghed 4 lbs. and 6 oz
members and l&lt;lught by Dr. munity co mmittee . of the Grandparents are Mr and
Mtddleport . Pomeroy Area Mrs Charles L. Btssell, Long
Kathenne Philson.
Week of prayer and self· Branch of the AAUW wtll meet Bottom, and Mr and Mrs
demal was set for some lime for a planmng sesston, Metgs Henry DaviS, Buffalo. The
the latter part of January wilh Inn, 11 'l.m.
lather IS servmg wtth the U S
the date to be announced. 'J'he
Army and IS statiOned at Ft
birthdays of Ferne Hayman,
SPEECH and Hearing Clinic Knox
Barbara Dugan and Doris wtll resume at Pomeroy
Adams were observed
Elemenl&lt;lry School from 9 a m
Others attending in addition to 12 noon. All chents
to those named were Mtldred previOUsly enrolled wtll attend
Donohew, Becky Donohew, regular ly sc heduled ttme
Lucy Donohue, Sue Beegle, unless no\tfted otherwtse. Any
Marlene Fisher, Margaret child or adult is welcome to
Gloeckner, Eilee_n Roush and attend.
Eula Wolle Refreshments
MONDAY
were served by Mar ~are t
BETHEL 82, International
Gloeckner
and
Bertha Order of Job's Daughters, 7·30
Robinson .
•
p.m., at the Pomeroy Masomc

East Letart
ladies meet

lA BS

prayer

fo1

lawson, Hattte Frederic~, Ada
Neutz-lmg, Helen Wolf
Ma rgare t Tuttle, Mary
Holter, Sadie Trussell, Opal
Etchmger, Charlotte Grant,
Ad.! Btssell and Ada Morris.

K:

Mrs .

Fredenck and silen l prayer
lm the Elizabeth Wtckham
lamtly Margaret Tuttle sang
""Gdd Wtll Take Ca re of You •
\\ tth He len Wolf as ptamst, and
Mrs Morns concluded the
progt am wtlh prayet
Mrs
Fredenck
was
presented w1th u decorated

ca ke tnscnbed ·· To Stster
Halite 111 Apprcctahon of Yottr
21 Yea rs of l.oyai Servtce,
Chestet Counctl 323, Daughters
of Amcncu " The ca ke was

se rved wtth tee cream and
coffee .
Dunng the meeting the death
of Mrs. Wtckham was noted
an d 1t was reported that
Audrey Torrence 1s home from
the hospttai followtng surgery .
The audttmg report was read
by Opal Hollon
It was noted that at the Jan.
21 mee tmg, the charter will be
draped 111 memory of Mrs.
Wtckham and members were
asked to wear whtte.
-Preced mg the mee tmg, 37
members met at the Ewmg
Funera l Home lor servtces lor
Mrs Wickham
Attendmg were Joe Btssell,
Goldie
Dons "Grueser,
Fredenck, Ma ry Hayes,
Marcia Keller, Leona Hensley ,
Mae McPeek, Mabie Van
Meter, Doris Koentg, Letha
Wood, Eileen Martin, Mary
Newell, Karla Chevalier, lnzy
Newell, Mary Jo Pooler, Mae
Spence r, Betty Roush, Dorothy
Myers, Ethel Orr. Ada Van
Meter, Zelda Weber, Dorothy
Rttchte, Erma Cleland, Opal
Hollon , Goldte Frederick,
Thelma Wht te, Dorothy

VI!.NTURA
C AR IOQ A
ELOOR A OO

Rtngs trorn 1 100 to 110 000

Keepsakt·
Keepsake engageme nt dra
mond s h ave pe r fec l color, c ut
and cla n ty Choose f rl'&gt;m our

beautiful holrday select•on

Reg. 569£15 Upright
with Reg.s1gss
Alilove·The·Fioor

Cleaning Tools

Regular 58990
COMBINATION FOR ONLY

. ..

~ ~

~
E:JOE

'"'

liL(flt!~

4 WA~
n 4 l .ltrUP

t:l u nt th o!
l t fl lowt~

Hu .. nr.., .

1oo

r.Mt" rt om luw

n~" 11 ~n1
I ~· h .. bQ.ICI

riiJ• lo ""'G •~••

P OW(HIHI(I IO ..-teull on lhe IIOO&lt;
or olllovc lhr• I no• 'i&gt;&lt; l it fe wer
slr u ku s ll ug!J dl ~ ll flS, t iJlo rlu ~ t
h~ q h il S ~60 (;U
n U»il i:l l !J
c apM, 11~
L tel• m &lt;&gt; l ull r• • :-rled
rno tor nllver nueos 1111 nq

CLEANS SHAGS!
INGELS
FURNITURE
992-2635

MIDDLEPORT

STEAMBOAT INN

beginning Jan. 17
until
Feb. 10, 1975.

...

J. J.• DAVIS, M. D.
.

'Pamily Dining At Its Best"

...---~----------"!'"'----.,Temple
HEATH United Methodtst
Women , 7:30 p m at the
c.hurch "What IS Worshtp?"
will be the theme of the
program Hostesses, Mrs.
Euvette Bechtle, Mrs. James
Brewmgton , Mrs. James
Crtswell
and
Mrs.
Elizabeth Hibbs

SUNDAY MENU
SALADS - 7 up. cottage cheese, tossed. slaw.
MEAT - l'{teat loaf. roast beef, dinner ham,
roast pork

It's Back To School

VEGETABLES - Green beans, peas. carrots,
noodlas . potaotes (baked. home fries .
mashed) .
'
DESSERT ~ Pie. graham cracker. cherry, Ice .
cream and fruit .

-SADDLES•

Mrs . Cleland read a poem
written by Ada Morris
Members moved mto a ctrcle
whet·e lhey clasped hands to
smg " B!est Be th e Tte,"
and on beha lf of the counctl,
Mrs Cleland presented Mrs.
Fredertck wtlh a gtfl. There

.

Sizes 8% up

The natton's first " bikeway"
orgmated m Homestead, Fla. in
·~c2 s,,,ce then, some 25 1000 to
30,000 mtles of ' the ,pect ~ l
M ;:: - •&lt;!j:&gt;~rt, •...Ha o l:oadways have been estabttsh·
...,;...-:::;;::;-.-J.. ed '" the Umted States.

THE SHOE BOX
L.-•"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'.;.,.._.,.___

'•

Sunday, Jan•. l2 Hrs. 8:00-2:00
Weekdays 6:00-8: 30· .
Ph. 949-3551

3rd St.

Racine, Ohio

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•

�7- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepon-Pomeroy, o , Friday, Ja 10, 1975
GRAHAM

POMEROY
POMEROY TRINITY
Rev w H Perrm pastor Ro'(

Mayer

Sunday

Church

schoo l

school

sup !

9 15 a n

worsh•P service 10 IJ a rn
Youth cho• r reh earsal Mon
day 3 JO p m under d rect•on
ol Mary Skmner sen or cho r
1

rehearsal 1 30 p m Thursday
With
Mrs
Paul
Nea se

d•redbr

POMEROY CHURCH OF

THE NAZARENE Corn er
Unv' n and Mulber r y
R e\'
Clyde V Henderson pa stor
Sunday school 9 30 am G len
McClung
supt
morn tn g
worship 10 30 am
even ng
service 1 30 mtd week se r
VICe Wedn esday 7 30 p m
GRACE EPISCOPAL - The
Haro ld Deeth
re ct or
R ev
Ch ur ch serv 1ces 10 30 a m
Holy commun on f•n.l Sunday
of month churclif school 10 30
a m for nursery thr ouQh 12

POM EROY CHURCH OF
CHR 1ST -

Ter r el l Gran ng er

pastor B bie schOol 9 JO a m
worsh i p
10 30 am
adu lt
worship serv te e and youn g
peoples

meet•ng

7 30

p m

Combtned B1ble study and
prt~yer
meefm g Wednesday
730pm

THE SALVATION ARMY -

E nvoy Ray W Wining off1 cer
In charge Sunday 10 am
Holiness meeting 10 30 am
Sunday School Young People ~
Leg1on 7 p m Tt1ursday 1 to
P m La,dies Hom f!' League
P m Prep c l asses
ST
PAUL
LUTHERAN
CHURCH Corn er o f Sycamore
and Se cond Sts Pomeroy The
Rev'- Wilham Mlddleswar t h
Pastrtr Sunday School at 9 45
am
d Church Sr-r11 [ es 11
am
SACREO H EART
Rev
Father Pau l D Welton pastor
Phon e 992 28 25
Sa !urday
evenmg Mass 7 30
Sunday
Mass 0 and 10 am
Con
fesslon Sat urd ay 7 7 30 p m

Dorcas
Social Notes

POMEROY F IR ST BAP
TIST - Roberl Kuhn pastor
Wlil1am Wat so n Sunday school
sup! Sunday sc nool 9 30 am
B¥F
6 p m
B bl e study
Wednesday
7 p m
cho 1r
prac t ce Wedr1esday 8 30 p m
POMERO '
WESLEYAN
HOLINES
CHURC H Harr! sonvll e Rev
0 De l l
M"'nl e y Pa sror Henry Eb l 1n
Sunday Sc hool Supt Sunday
Sc hool 9 30 am
Even ng
Pr ayer and
w or Sh ip 7 30 p m
P ra1 se ser v ce Thu rsd ay 7 30
p m
SYRACUSE
FtR«iT
CHURCH OF GOO
R ev
George Oile r pa sror Sunday
sc hoo l
9 l 'i a n1
morn ng
pr eac n n g
lI
&lt;1 m
ell i'I!1Q ei! SI C SN VI ( e 7 ]0 p rn
Pr .=~ ycr m c e ! n q
T t u r "&gt; day
7 30 p l
POMENOY
WESTSIDE
CHURCH OF CHR IS T 200 W
Ma n 51
J err y Paul
m n sr er
ptlon f"- 991 76 6 6
Con s erva11ve
non
nstrume-n l a Sunday worsh1p
10 a m
B bl e study 11 am
worsh lp 6 p m
Wedne sday
B1ble s tudy 7 p m
MIDWAY
COMMUNITY
CHURCH
(non
denom lnat1ona 1
Langsville
Dexter Road the Re'J Worley
Haley pastor Sunday tchoo
10 a m
e'Jer11ng worsh 1p 7 30
p m
Prayer
meetmg
Tuesd~y
7 30 p m
youth
group Fr day 7 30 p m
RUTLAND
FREEWILL
BAPTIST
Roger Turner
pa stor Sunday S[hoo 10 a m
Sunday e'J enmg serv ce 7 30
Wedne sday B blc sludy 7 JO
P m
OLD
DEXTER
BIBLt.
CHR I ST I AN CHURCH - Rev
Ron Terry
pas1or
Sunda
sc hool 10 a m Mrs Worle
Fran c 1s
super1nl enden1
Mornmg worS hip
11 am
Sunday e11 enmg ser\11 c e 7 3\

CELEBRATES ALONE
MEMPHIS, Tenn (UP!)
ElVIs Presley spent hiS 4oth
birthday Wednesday alone 1n
his 'Memphis mansion, reportedly ba ttlmg a we1ght problem
Friends of the rock 'n' roll
recording and mov1e star say
Elvis basn 't left his bedroom in
his "Graceland" mansion on
Elvis Presley Boulevard since
retummg to Memphis three
weeks ago
He has canceled an appearance scheduled for Las Vegas,
Nev , on Jan 29
"Elvis thmk:s too much of his
appea rance to see anybody or
appear in public until he gets
his wetght back down, " sa1d a
fnend of the singer

ne$day 7 30 p m
U M W
f1rst Wednesday 7 30 p m
WESLEYAN (Ractne) Su nda y sct1oo(
10 a m
worst11p 11 am
B tble study
Thursday
7 p m
chOir
p ra c t 1ce Thu rsda y o p m
f e llowShip
supper
f rst
Wednesday 6 30 p m u M w
fourth Monday 8 p m

UNITED

METHOD IST
PreachmO
9 30 a m tJ t~r\t and second
Sundays of each month th1rd
and four th Sun days each
month worsh1p se nnce at 7 30
p m Wednesday evenmgs at
7 30 Prayer_!.nd 81b le C:1t1t1v
SEVENTh
DAY
~u
VE NTI ST
Mu l berry
He1ght s
Pomeroy
Pastor
G rard SetM Sabba th sct1oo l
e... ery Saturday at 2 p m and
worsh1p sen11ce fol low ng at
p m
Open
B ble
) 15
d scuss on 7 30 p m at the
church each Thu rsday
FIRST SOUT HERN BAP
TIST 282 Mulberry Ave
Pom e roy
affll ated
W1lh
the Rev
Brad l ey
S B C
Spencer pa stor Troy Zw ll1ng
Sunday sc hool supt Sunday
sc hool
9 30 a m
morn ng
worsh1p
10 30
Sunday
evange l 1stt c meetmg 7 30 p m
Prayer mee tmg Wednesday
7 30 p m

Television Log

7 30 p m

MT. UNION BAPTIST -

Rev Cec11 Cox pas tor Sunday
Sc hoo l supt
Joe Sayre
Sun day sc hool 9 .45 a m
Sunday evenmg worsh i p 7 30
Wednesday prayer and B1ble
study 7 30 p m

FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, 1975
6 00--News H 8,10 13.15 ABC News 6 Elec Co 20 Per
sonallty &amp; Behavioral Development 33
6 30-NBC News 3,4 15 , ABC News 13 Bewrtched 6 CBS News
8,10 Zoom 20
7 00--Truth or Cons 3,4, Bowling tor Dol lars 6 WCHS TV
Report 8 Aviation Weather 20, News 10 Jrmmy Dean 13 1
Spy 15, Aviation Weather 33

TUPPERS
PLAIN!
CHRISTIAN CHURCH

t: ugene Under-wood , pa~tor
GREAT BEND - Worsh 1p 11 Howard Caldwell Jr SuJl day
a m
2nd and 4th Sundays
School Supt
Sunday School
Chu r ch Sct1ool 10 a m
Morn1ng Sermon
9 30 am
LETART FALLS - WorShiP
10 30 a m
Sunday even 1ng
lOam Churcf1 school 9a m
serv1ce 7 p m
B'lble study 7 30 p m e'Jery
LETART FALLS UNITED
Tuesday
BRETHREN - Rev Free land
MORNING STAR - Worsn p NorriS pastor Floyd Norr1s
9 30 a m Church Sc hool 10 30 supt Sunday school 9 30 a m
a m
M1d Week
Service
morn i ng sermon 10 30 a m
Wednesday 8 p m
Prayer serv1ce Wednesday ,.
MORSE CHAPEL Wor
p m
Shtp \ 1 a m
lst and 3rd
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF
Sundays Church Schoo l 10 GOO OF PROPHECY - G P
am
Smith pas tor Sunday Sc*lool
PORTLAND - Wor shi p 7 30 10 am Arthu r Henson Supt
Pm
Church Sct1 oo1 9 30 a m
Mornmg WorShip
11 am
SUTTON - WorShip 11 am
Young People 's sent1ce 7
2nd and 4th Sundays Church
p m
Evenmg se r v 1ce 7 30
MIDDLEPORT
Schoo! 10 11 m
p m Wedn esday Mid Week
MT MORIAH BAPTIST NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Prayer Service 7 30 p m
Co rner Fourth and Main
R ev Rob er t Meece
You t h meet ng
6 30 p m
M1ddleport Rev Henry Key
Rev Stanley Brandum
Even ng worst11p 7 30 p m
Jr pastor Sund ay Sch ool 9 30
JOPPA - WorShip 10 am
CHESTER CHURCH OF
am M rs Er\lln Baumgard
Church Sc t10ol 9 a m
Prayer
THE NAZARENE
Rev
ner sup t
Morning worship
10 45 a m
Meet m g Wednes day 8 p m
Herber t Grat e pastor Wor
LONG BOTTOM - Church
Ship service 11 a m and 7 30
JEHOVAH 5 WITNESSES serv 1ces
9 a m
Sun day
P m Sunday Sunday School
Larry Carneha n presiding
Schoo l 9 45 a m B1ble Study 9 30 ' am
Richard Barton
mm 1sler Sunday Bible lee
e\lery Thu r sday 7 30 p m
supt Prayer meet1ng
Wed
lure 9 30 am
Watchtower
nesday 7 30 p m
NORTH BETHEL Wor
study 10 30 am
Tuesday 1
aRAOBURY CHURCH OF
sh1p 11 am Church Sc hool tO
Bib l e stuely 7 30 p m
Thurs
am
CHRIST Cl iffOrd Sm1 th
day
m1 n l s l ry schoo l 7 30
ALFRED - Sunday school
mlniSJer Sunday School 9 30
p m
serv i ce meetmo 8 JO
pm
am
mornmg church 10 30
9 45
a m
eolc h
Sunday
preachi ng a t 11 am
each a m Sunda y even1ng ser\l1ce
MI DDLEPORT CHURCH of
Chnst i n Christian Unton Sunday Prayer meeting 7 45 7 30 p m Wednesday serviCe a
pm
fl m Wednesday WSCS 8 p m
lawren ce Manley pastor
on t f1.rd Tuesday each month
Mrs Russell Young Sunday
LAUREl CLIFF FREE
REEOSVILL : Sunday
Sc hool Supt Sunday Schoo l
METHOCIST Rev F loy d
school 9 30 preect1mg 7 30
9 JO a m
E\len mg wo r sh iP
F
SMook
pastor
L loyd
P m Sunda y prayer meetmg
7 30
Wednesday
prayer
Wr:~gh t
Sunday sc t1 oo 1 su pt
meet1ny 7 30 p m
7 30 p m T uesday WS CS 7 30
Su nday school 9 30 a m
f 11'"S I Thur sday each month
MT MORIAH CHURCH Ofo
mornmg worsh p 10 JO am
GOO - Racme Route 2 lhe
SILVER RIDGE - WorShiP
even1ng worsh1p
7 30 p m
10 a m Church Sct1ool 9 a m
Re'J James M Muncy pastor
Wednesday Christ1a n Youtt1
TUPPERS
PLAIN S
Sun day sc hool 9 4~ a m
Crusade
6 30 p m
C ho~r
Wor s h 1p 9 a m
Churc h
morn1ng worshtp
11 am
pr act1ce Thursda y 17 p m
What was the Mona L1sa thmkmg about when Leonar
Schoo l 10 a m
e\o'en mg worshiP 7 30 p m
do
da
Vmc1 pamted her' Was she smiling' Some say that
KENO
CHURCH
OF
Prayer mee tmg T uesday 7 30
DEXTER CHURCH OF
CHRIST - George Frederick
P m Young p eoples m eet i ng
CHRIST Charl es Russell
she was actually closer to tearsl
supt Ser'J1 ce week l y 9 30 am
7 30 P m Thursday
Sr mm1ster Norm an C W1ll
on SUnday Preach1ng f r :St and s upt
Sun day school 9 30
It 1s centunes s1 nce Leonardo and his model lived,
MIDDLEPORT
FIRST
th lr d Sundays of mon th by am
wo r sf1ip serv 1ce 10 30
but
throngs
still stand before the pamtmg m the Louvre
BAPTIST - Corner S1x l h and
Cl ifford Sm1th 9 30 am
am
Bib l e study Tuesda y
Palmer
the
R e'J
Steve
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN
7 30 p m
and
wonder
at
1t It IS much smaller than people expect,
Skaggs
pa s tor
Danny
UNION - Darre ll
Ooddri l t
REORGANIZEC
CHURCH
but
that
m
no
way
d1m1mshes 1ts attraclmn For the Mona
Thompson Sunday schoo l supt
pastor Sunday School
9 30
JESUS CHRIST OF
WMPO rad10 program
7 4.7
a m
Le onard Gilmore fir st OF
L1sa symbolizes the mystery of life No matter how great
am Sunda y school 9 15 am
elder
e'Jenmg se r vice 7 30 LATTER DAY SAINTS our
cunos1ty, we can never know all the answers
Portland
Rac1ne
Road
morn m o worsh i p 10 15 am
p m
Wed nesda y
p ra yer
Wlll 1am Roush pastor Denn y_
You th actlv1 11es and fel l owsh ip
m eeti ng 7 30 p m
There IS a great deal of mystery m the Church too
Sunday
Sc h()Or
lor fun tor and senior h gh
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF Evans
Co p~ tg hl 1975
Director Sunday Sc hool 9 30
students 6 p m Bible sludy
Often
th1s bolhers those who would seek a log1cal explanaGOD - Racine Rou te 2 The
am
Morn 1ng worsh i P 10 30
Keisler A dvt~ rl s ng Serv ce Inc
7 30 p m
M id week prayer
Rev
Charl es Hand pastor
tmn
for
everythmg That 1s where we need fa1th-for fa1th
a m Sunday evening serv 1ce 7
serv 1ce Wednesday 7 30 p m
Slrub urg Vllg n a
Sunday sc hool 9 45 a m
P
m
Wednesday
e'Jen1
ng
IS m part an acceptance of what we mherently fnl but
mo rni ng worsh 1p
11 am
Evening serv1ces Tuesday and Drayer ser\o'lces 7 30 p m
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST
can't
prove m ordmary, everyday terms
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Friday 7 30
M iddlepor t .5 th and Main
Re\1
Ea
r
l
Shuler
pastor
Scrlplu
es
selected
b~
aEARWALLOW
RlOGE Worsh 1p se rv1ce 9 30 am
George
Glaze
minister
Where to fuid fa1th' Admittedly, 11 can be qu1te a
CHURCH OF CHRIST - Bi ble
James Sheets superi ntenden t
The Arur C8 n Bible Soc el~
Sunday
sc
hoo
l
10
30
am
quesl
But a good place to start that quest 1s m church
Study
9 30 am
morning
9 30 a m
B i ble schoo l
Sunday evenmg serv1ces 7 30
worsh1p 10 30 am
evenmg
m ornmg worship 10 30 am
P m B1ble study and pra yer
worship 6 30 p m Wednesday
evenmg worst1Jp 7 30 p m
se rviCe Thursday 7 30 p m
Mondav
B1bl e Stu dy 7 30 p m
prayer servi c e 7 p m Wed
nesdav
MT
OLIVE CHURCH K lngsbury
t(oad
Su ni:tay
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH
Long Bottom Sunday School
Sc hool 9 30 a m Ra l pt1 Carl
OF THE NAZAR E NE - Rev
tO am w ith W i llard P 1gott
supt worSh i P serv1ce 10 30
Don Co t e
pa stor
A lfr ed
su pt Evangelistic message
a m and 7 30 p m alternate ly
Rusche / Sunday School sup!
each Sunday evenmg 7 30 p m
Prayer meetmg' Wednesday
Sunday sc hqol 9 30 a m
by
Elder
Russe l l
Cl1n e
7 30 p 1ll
Rev
Jay Stiles; f
morn ng wor:shtp 10 30 a m
mmister ol th e Apostolic F a th
pastor
Sunday evangelistic mee t ng
B ible Study Wednesday 7 30
O LD
DEXTER
CON
7 30 p m
prayer meet ng
pm
GREGATIONAL CHURCH Wed n esday 7 30 p m
STIVERSVILLE COM Mrs
Worley Franc ts Sundoly
MUNITY CHURCH - Sunda y
school sup l Sunday sc hool 10
W1th the hope 11 wil l, m some measure. foster and help sustam that
sc hool service 10 a m Prayer
THE
UNITED
PRES
am
meet mo Tt1ursday 7 p m
BYTERIAN
MINISTRY
wh1ch IS good 1n family and commun1ty l1fe, th1s feature IS sponsored by
LOI'IG
BOTTOM
Sunday evenin g ser'J 1ce 7 p m
OF MEIG S COUNTY, Ow1ght
CHRISTIAN
M
r
Robert
'
the
busmess f1rms and orgamzat1ons whose names appear be low
ZION
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST
L Zavltz Pastor Director
Pomeroy
Harr tsonvt ll e Wyatt pastor Sunday Sc hool
HARRISONVILLE
supf
Ronald Osborne Bible
Road R 1ck Morr1son pastor
Sunday Church Schoo l 9 30
Sc
hool
9 30 am
preachmg
Sunday
sch
ool
supt
Steven
am Mrs Hom er Lee S!o!PI
Even1ng serv1ces
St an l ey Sunday sc hool 9 30 10 415 a m
Mornmg Worship 10 30 am
am
monung worshiP an d 7 30 p m
MIOOLEPOR'f Sunday
communton
10 30
am
Church Schoo l 9 30 a m Joh n
HYSELL RUN
FREE
Sun day
eve nm g
yout h METHODIST CHURCH F
Fultz
SuQt
Morn tnQ
Worshlp 10 30 am
Chr1Sf1an E nd eavor 6 30 p m
Re'"' P aul N e'JIIIe pastor
wor ~ h 1 p ser v tce Sun day
7 30 Sunday Sc t1oo l 9 30 a m
SYRACUSE
Morning
p
m
Wedn
esday
e'Jen1ng
Wors.h l p
9 am
Sunday
se r v 1c e 10 30 am
pra")'er meeting and B1ble) Morn1ng
700 E Matn
Chur ch Sch oo l 10 a m
M rs
Dral 992 2101
you th serv1 ce
6 45 p m
study
7
30
p
m
Bakers of Good Bread
Sampson Hall Sup t
Evange li stiC serv1ce 7 30 p m
Pome roy
ST
JOHN
LUTHERAN P raye r m ee tmg Thursday
Hunhngton 1 W Va
CHURCH
Pme Grove
The 7 30 p m
.
Rev
WJ! I1am M 1ddleswart h
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
Paslor Churct1 Serv1ces 9 30
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
GOO - Phi l l i P Wh1ttey pa stor
a m Sunday_ School 10 30 a m
MISSION - Bald Knobs Rev
Sun day
school
10 a m
6NADBURY CHURCH OF
worsh t p service
7 p m
L R G lu esencamp pastor
C,!:1.$1ST
B1bl e School 9 30
Roger Wilfred
Sr
Sunday
Prayer meetin g Wedn esday
am
morning
worsh1p
10
30
M1nor Repa1rs &amp; Tune up
,
7 30 p m
School Supt Sun_pay School
am Sunda y e\o'enmg Wot'"Sh1p
The Store w1th A Heart
9
30
am
Sunday
evenmg
Beech
&amp;
Locust
Middleport
•
Serv1ce
7 30 p m
c ho~r
Rac1ne
Phone 949 3342
worShiP 7 30 Prayer m eet mg
Ph 992 2366
'
p ractice ~ Sunday
and Wed
Tuesday
7 30 p m
Ernest
esday
7
p
m
prayer
meeting
n
'
HAZEL
COMMUNITY
Dee ter class lead er
Youth
Bible St udy Wednesday ,
:
CHURCH - Near Long Bol and
meet1ng
Wednesday
7
30
7 30 p m
tom Estl t Hart pastor Roy
p m
Ernest Deeter reader
.
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST Brown
ass1stant
pastor
MT HERMON CHURCH OF
Rev
Free-l
and
Norris
pastor
Sunday sc hoo l 10 am Church
THE UNITED BRETHREN IN
Sunday SChOOl TO am Church
7 30
p m
eech
Sunday
CHRIST Rober t Shoo k
:
serv1ce
7
p
m
Wednesday
Dial 992 3284
eveni ng prayer m eeting 7 30
Mrddleport
pastor Sunday sch ool 9 30
Bibl
e
Study
7
~ m
p m Thursday
'
a m
Russell Spencer supt
Mrddleport, Ohio
RACINE
CHURCH
OF
MIOOLEPORT
PEN
worsh i P service 10 45 am ,
I HE NAZARENE Rev
TECOSTAL - Th ird Ave, the
even 1ng worsh1p alternatmg
Wi l liam Bartholomew pastor
Re'J W11i111m Kn1tte1 pastor
W1th c E at 7 30 p m on
9 30 a m
Rona ld Dugan Sunday Sc hool Sunday sc hool
Sunday Prayer meet 1ng 7 30
morning
Ge r a l d We lls supt
Sup t Classes for all ages
p m Wednesday Alfred Wolf e
wo r shiP
10 JO a m
Wed
evening serv1ce 7 JO p m
lay leader
nesday
ser
v1ce
7
p
m
Bible study Wednesday 7 30
WHITE"S CHAPEL
Bu1ck Ponhac Opel G M C Dealer
Pm
yo uth ser 'J1ces Friday
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST Coo i 'JII Ie R D Rev Roy Deeter
500 E Marn 51
Ph 992 2174
'1 30 p m
past or
Sunday sc hool 9 30
Walter P Btkacsan pa stor
337 N 2nd
MrddlepOf"t
Ph 992 2550 ·:
FREEWILL BAPTIST - Ronn1e Sa lse r Sund ay sc hool am worship serv1 ce 10 30
Corn er Ash and Plum Mid
a m Btble st udy and prayer
supt Sunday schoo l 9 30 a m
dlepor t
No el
Herrman
morn1ng
worsh tp
10 40
ser'J ke Wednesday 7 30 p m
pastor
Saturday evenmg
:
Sunda y even 1ng worShip 7 30
RUTLAND
serv1ce 7 P' m Sunday school
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
Wednesday even1 n g B 1bl e
:
10 a m
Sunday eveni ng s tud y 7 30
CHRIST - Rod K asl er pastor
worship 7 p m
Bakers
of
Gay
90 s Bread
•
•
V H Braley Sun day sc hool
DANVILLE WESLEYAN Rae me
Ph 949 9S91
supt Sunday school 9 30 a m
Mrddleporl
Ph 992 3030 ,
Re\l Lelon Glasure pastor
worsh
p
servt[e
and
com
Sunday Sc ho ol 9 30 a m
mun1on
10 30 a m
youth
youth and tun l or youth serv1ce
meetmg
6 p m
Sunday
6 .45 p m
evenmg worshiP
.,
even1ng senn ce 7
r eg ular
7 30 p m
prayer and pra 1se
board meetmg th1rd Saturday
Wednesday 7 30 n rn
MEIGS
.
I p m
SILVER
RUN
FREE
COOPERATIVE
RUTLAND COMMUNITY
BAPTIST - Rev Ralph Dean
PAR ISH
Lou 1s W Osborne
CHURCH Sunday School
eastor Sunda y Schdol 10 am
:~
THE UNITEO
Mrddleport Ohro
Pomeroy
Ph 992 2178
9
30
1!11 m
WorShiP
service
11
220
E
Matn
ng
eon
Miller
sup
t
Even
1
METHODIST CHURCH
a m
Wednesday
pra yer
,.,
7
30
p
m
Prayer
ser'J1Ce
Robert T BIHY1garner
mee..!_mg Thulsday 7 30 0 m
D~rector
30 7 p30mp mSund ay · lf--------~----------+--~---------------1
nmeetmg
ght worsh7 lp,

7 30-Porter Wagoner 3. P1

Goes the Coun try 8 New Cand1d
Camera 6, Treasure H1 1t 10, To Tell the Truth 13 Black

Perspective on the News 20,33
8 00--Famrly Theatre " The County of Monte Cristo" J 4, 15
Night Stalker 6 13, Stowaway to the Moon 8 10 Washrngton
Week rn Revrew 20 33
8 30-Watl Street Week 20,33
9 00--Srx Million Dollar Man 6,13 Masterprece Thealre

r3o

Consumer Survival Kit 33

30-Asslgnment America 33
10 00--Frank Sinatra 3,4 15, Adams of Eagle Lake 6 13 CBS
Reports 8 10, News 20, Paul nchrms 33
10 3()-..World Press 20
11 00--News 3.4.6 8,10,13,15, ABC News 33
11 J()...Johnny Carson 3 4,15 Wrde World Myslery 13 Movre
' 0 S S 117 6. Movie 'Jailhouse Rock 8 Movre The War
of the Worlds 10 , Janak! 33
1 00--Modnlght Specia l 3 4,15 Wrde World Specral 6 News 13
9

l 15-Movle " The 'Maze" 10

2 30-Mov te ' How I Spent My Summer
DO-Movie ' Pressure Pomt • 4

SATURDAY, JANUARY 11 , 1975
6 3()--...:Fun For Everyone6, TV Classroom 8 Treehouse Club 10

Kentucky Afield 13
7 00--5aturday Report J Aware 6 Treehouse Club 8 World
Around Us 10. In Touch 13
7 30--Jabberwocky J, Farm Front 4 Eddie Saunders 6 Abbott
&amp; Costello 8, Man From COS! 10 Tennessee Tu&lt;edo 13
Sesame St 20
8 00--Addams Family 3,4,15 Yogr"s Gang 13 Jabberwocky 6
Speed Buggy 8, Popeye 10
8 30--Wheelie &amp; the Chopper Bunch 3,4 15 Bugs Bunny 13
Speedracer 6 Mister Rogers 20
00--Emergency 3,4,15 , Hong Kong Phooey 6 13 , Jann1e 8 10
Sesame Sf 20
9 30--Run, Joe, Run 3,,4, 15, Ad..,entures of Gllllgan 13 61g Blue
Marble 6 Partridge Fam rly 2200 A D 8,10
10 00--Land of the Lost 3,4, 15 Devl1n 6 13 Valley of the
n,nosaurs 8 10, Elec Co 20
10 J()...S rgmund 3,4, 15 Kord. 6 13 Shazam 8 10 Walsh s
Animals 20
11 OO--P1nk Panther 3 4.1S Super Frrends 613 Harlem
Globetrotters 8, 10, Carrascolendas 20
11 30-Star Trek3,4,15. Hudson Brothers Razzle 8,10 Zoom 20
12 00--Bob Daniels Basketball J. American Bandstand 6,13
Go 4,15, Fat Albert 8,10
1 00--Senlor Bowl3,4,15, College Basketball8 , Chrldren s Frlm
Festival 10
1 30-Soul Train 6, Other People Other Places 13
Popeye 10, Movie " The Grrl Rush" 13
2 30-Movle "The Wrong Box" 6, Movie "The Lrttle Fugrtrve"
3 00--VIewpolnt 8
3 30-Pro Bowlers Tour 13, To Be Announced 8
4 00--College Basketball 3 NHL Hockey 4.15 Wrestling 8
Movie "The Mountain'" 10. Making Things Grow 33
4 30-NFL Championship Games 6, Sewrng Sk11fs 33
5 00--Wlde World of Sports 6, 13., News 8 , A Bilwlth Knrt 33
5 30--High School Bowl8, Course of our Times 33
6 OG--News 3,10, Lawrence Welk 8 Catch 33
6 30--NBC News 3,15, Reasoner Report 13, News 4,6 CBS News
10, Zoom 33
7 oo--Treasure Hunt 3, Lawrence Welk 4 15, Hee Haw 6.8
$25,000 Pyramid 10, Newsmaker '74, 13 , World Press 33
7 JO-Jeopardy J, Animal World 10, Celebrity Sweepstakes 13
8 00--Emergency 3 4 15. Kung Fu 13, College Basketball 6 Ali
In The Family 8, 10 .. Book &amp;eat 33
8 30-The 2000 Year Old Man 8,10, Brography 33
9 oo--Movle "Chisum" 3,4,15 Movie 'The Cowboys' 13 Mary

ALL WEATHER ROOFING
AND CONSTRUCTION CO.

ROSEBERRY'S SERVICE STATION

Pm

I~

LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH
Ted Jo ne s
pastor Sunday schoo l 9 JO
am
ROy S1gman
sup !
morn1ng
worshiP
10 30
Sunday even1ng serv 1ce 7 30
serv1ce
Wed
m1d week
nesday 7 30 p m
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE Rev
Howard C Bl ack pastor Bob
Moore Sunday Schoo l Supt
Sunda y School classes for all
ages 9 30 a m
mornmg
worshlfl 10 45 NYPS Sunday
6 30 p r11 evangeliStic serv1ce
Sunday 7 30 p M M 1d week
prayer meetmg Wednesday
7 30 p m M1SS1onarv meetmg
second Wednesdav 7 30 o m
UNITED
FAITH
NON

OENOMINATIONAL -

R•v

Robert Sm 1lh pastor Sunday
school 9 30 a m class header
Leo H i ll
w orsh1p service
30 am
chu,.,..h 7 30 .2._m
EDEN UNITED bf&lt;t:: 1 fi
REN IN CHRIST - Elden R
Blake pastor Sunday School
m
Howard M cCoy
10 a
supt
Morning sermon 11 a
m
Sunday night servtees
:hr1st1 an Endeaver 7 30 p
n
Song serv1ce 8 p m
Preaching 8 30 p m
M id
we~k Prayer meetmg
Wed
nesl1ay 7 p m , Ray Adams
lay leader
CHURCH
o...
.tt::)US
CHRIST - Located at Rutl and
on New L 1m a Road next to
Forest Acre Pa rk Rev Ray
Rouu .pastor Robert Musser
Sunday Schoo l supf Sunday
sc hoo / 10 30 a m
worsh 1p
7 30 P m Bib le study Wed
nesaav 1 30 p m
Saturda
n1ght prayer se-rv i ce , 7 30 p my

20

HEMLOCK

GROVE

CHRISTIAN - Roger Watson
Pastor , R ay Whaley supt '
Mornmg worsh1p 9 31l a m
church School , 10 30 a m
young people s meelmg 6 30
Pm
even1ng worlsh1p 7 30
P m Btble study, Wednesdav

RUTLANO CHURCH OF

Sunday School 9 30 a m
Morn1ng worSh i P 10 30 am
Y oung peQple s serv 1ce 6 45
P m
EvangeliStiC serv1ce
7 30 p m Wednesday evenmg
servt c e 7 30 p m

'
Chester Ohi o

"
We Fill All Doctors Prescr iptions
,,
992 2955
Pomeroy ,

(

M e1gs County Branch

296 W Second

MASON FIRST BAPTIST -

CHURCH

I

Pomero y

TWO LOCATIONS
59 N Second St
Middleport, 0
46 Court Sf
Gallipolis, 0

Ph 992 3863

THE DAILY SENTINEL

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Nat1onw lde Insurance Co of Columbus, 0

Devoted To the Interest

Of The Meigs Mason Area

OF

CHRIST P 0 Bo x .487 Miller
St , Mason W Va Sunday
Bi ble Stu dy 10 a m
Worsh •P
11 a m and 7 p m Elible Study
Wednesday 7 p m
Vocal
mUSIC

307 Spring Ave

.
WAID CROSS SONS STORE

TIST - Corner of Second and
Anderson , Mason
Pastor ,
Walter Cloud Sunday school
9 .4.5 am worShiP service 11
1 m and 7 30 p m
Weekly
Btble st udy , Wednesday , 7 30

Rac ine

Pomeroy

Ph

m

u

..."

.,
Attend the Church of Your Choice
Pomeroy
Ph 992 3498

7034

&lt;

,; I .
'

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

SADIE'S MARKET
Ph m 3986

Ph 985 3308

• KQ 7
.953
t862
"K7 32
SOUTH IDI
• A6 32
.AK6

Home hie 5aws
Chester ••

NEW YORK aDTIIING HOUSE

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
_,_
'll'i

.

Kerm's Korner

Church and Offoce Supplres Gills
Mrl l St
Moddleport

.·

.

.

.

Kermll Walton
Pomeroy

We1t

North llaol

.

•

•

Tell yourself In advance that e. I
your p lans wont wo rk l1ke
clockwork You wont be so
fru strated when they get snarl

GEMINI IMay 21 June 20)

ed
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Doc

II
wouldn t be w1 se tor you to take
nsks on thmg s others tlav~
more d1rect control O'Jer than
you do

1 15-Mov te The Young Doctors • 4, Don Kirshner's Rock
Concert 6
I

I 31}--Movle

Gaby'

10

Movre

l atrs are very compliCated or
you 11 be drawn mto the m ire

~.. "tl~

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
2 Pasternak
I Poorest

21) Be careful regardmg fln an
c1al transac hons you co nduct
Don I deal wtlh st range per
sons or ftrm s

CANCER (June 21 July 22)

CAPRICORN (Doc 22-Jan

Neither you nor your partn er
are co operat '.'8 enough wtlh
each o th er Th1 s could put your
learn m trouble tod ay

19) You 11 1ake 100 unyielding a
pos1tlon today m the face of op
posit1on Bac k off a b1t and

fam11) thinks 11 e are marned At first, we had to wa lt for his
divorce, and then, wel11t just didn't seem unportanl , s1nce people
assumed we were married anyway
Now we've moved back to Callforrua near our folks, and we
wanllt off1c1al But 1f the bans are published m the paper my
folks will see them We went down to the license bureau' and
asked that our names be omitted m the v1ta l stahsllcs column
and they very snoollly sa1d "No 'So we cancelled the license '
I've heard of a sunple way to gel mart1ed "secretly " Can
you help? - ALMOST A MRS
DEAR AM
Sec 4213 of the callforma Civil Code permits certrun people
to marry-without a license, health certificate or publicatiOn
A clergyman may perform the ceremony on the spot 1f the
man and woman are adults, know of no legal reason why they
should not marry and state that they have been liv1ug together
The mm1ster furmshes the confidential record form, fills 11 out
and mails 1l to the COIB1ty clerk w1th the required $5 fee Best
wishes - H

Jlt!JllOOID~;II.J •••••'u -.J
,_
"" t
hy Ill Nlll 1\IIN(llll

11()11 \1 t

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to
form (our ordmary words.

3 Increment
4 Looked m
wonder
5 NUISance
6 Carpenter
or
soldier
7 Warning
8 Begtn
( 2 wds )
10 Cloth or
fabnc
12 Prmc1pie
16 Russian
c1ty
19 Do
22 Paleolithic
creatures

fleece
4 Kmd of
sUit 01 age
9 Chamber
11 Inhabitant
13 Venezuelan
copper
center
14 Shrewd
15 MISrepresent
17 Sawbuck
18 Cubic meter
19 Exhaust
ZG Cornell's
color
Zl Cheer
!2 Prov1de w1th
a roof
!4 "Suddenbrooks"
author
IS Festive
26 Color of a
palonuno
27 Elliptical
28 Stairway part
31 Butterfly
cawher
32 Behind time
34 "Othello'
character
36 Burn
37 Change back
38 Head (Fr )
39 Indigent
40 Uncooked

Yesterday's Allllwer
23 SuperlatiVe
m grarrunar
24 Let~rs

25 One
beyond
help
26 Compact

211 Anesthetic
30 CISco
Kid's rope
32 Songster
33 Ended in
stalemate
35 - Rermck

DOWN
1 Romaman
city

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

II

One letter aimply atonda for another In thla •ample A 11
used for the three L's, X for the two O's etc Single letters,
•r,ostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
h nta Eaeh day the code letters ore dill'erent

0() I I I
HIGH ON THE LI5T
OF "TOURIST

OHFTWKLFW

CRYPfOQUOTE
TBBJLS

HZQPI

WPTLFS

CJLF

SF-

ATTRACTIONS.

~USANE~

J I J [J

Now

arr._ the circled !etten

to form ttie 1urprle anawer. u
aurre•ted by the above cartoon

'Frankenstein's Bloody

Terror" 13
3 oo-Mov1e The Las Vegas Story11 4, News 13

(4Mwef"' lomorraw)

Ye1\erday'•

I

JYmble•1MAIZE SWAMP ENSIGN PIGEON
AIK•er1 .4 ""'lrmrng way lo gef mone11- WIN·SOME

NPFU

IJ

FURJX

T

SLFTLX

IPFC

ZU

IPZUQ-

NZIP

JlPFLW;

WJHZIKSF
SZJ

ZW

A P LX W JW·

IJ C
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: NOTHING IS MORE IRRITATING
THAN NOT BEING INVITED TO A PARTY YOU WOULDN'T
BE CAUGHT DEAD AT - BilL VAUGHAN
((&gt; 1871 Klaa FMIUI" S•adloatt. lac.)

CAPTAIN EASY

Soulh

R!I=IJELING

Pass

3 NT

Pass

Pass

Pass

Openmg lead- K •

•

.

t Nt:WSI'AI '~

BORN LOSER

'ICOR F/IJH~R 1'5 BRt~I~IO

OOIJ'T~,

A~R'f \MFORTANT W~JIT

I'LL I&lt;EEiP
M'l MOUTH

100!21?

&lt;;;J.IUT I

...

''

•

ALLEY OOP
I WRECKED aAJ'ITOLI :S
FA?HION 5HOW BEr:a&lt;f
ANYONE COULD SEE
-mE D£Si6N5 HE
rtJPPED OFF FROM

.. Wli'LL TAKE THIS ONE
UP "TO "THE CAVE AN'
COME BA.CK ~ FOR
ANO"THEI': ONE I

M15$ WINKLE I

I!:NT/:!:HI'HlSt: ASSN I

ru:B;!
:l•Jt!bf./1 U
•
••

The b1dding has been

•• Wetl

Nortl\ Easl

1•

• Pus
: Pass

Zt

Pass
~ass

10

Soulh
1-tt

t•

BARNEY

2•

LANDS,NO!!

• (&gt;ass ZNT Pass '
:- You, Soulh bold
: 611.71U.AZ U6AK732

I LET HIM OUT
THIS MORNIN'

What do you do ,.,..,
• A-Pia. Tllil 11 lllo Ume 10 re• malo • Uve ....ani""" . , t t : • - llaJ . .bled yaL

TODAY'S QUESTION
: Jostead of b1dd1ng two
•cJiamoDdl your partner hils b1d
notrump direcUy over your
~-spade What do you do now'

••
•
•

.'

DIDN'T I,
OL' FELLER"
HOWA60UT

A SKAIE'
SWEETIE'

\

•

I

th e l}JOrld to get along )Nith to
day Don t blame tf1e rebulfs
you get on oth ers

!NT

:two

"'

M o v1e ' A Degree of Murder ' 6
12 OO-Mov1e 'The Astro Zomb1es" 13

For your own good steer clear

YOUR COMPANY
J&amp;-T WOLJLO HAV.E
TO 5TOP FOR.

••

fAIRVIEW
BIBLE
CHURCH. Lelart. W Va Rl

" The
Victors' 10 News 13
11 45-Movoe Valley of Mystery" 3. Movie 'Bedtime Slory' 4,

]ASDL!Nil ALLEY

•

Furn1ture and Hardware

Meats and Grocenes

SCORPIO lOci 24-Nov 22)

You won t be the eas1st guy In

Both vulnerable

:

;

TAURUS (April 20 Moy 20)

11, 1175

A great deal of your time this
year will be spent bringing to
fruition long term projects
Lady Luck wtll flOW get In a rew
hcks lor you

ol an occas onal pal whose af

LIBRA (Sept 23·0ct 23)

11 15-News J .4 12 Don K1rshner's Rock Concert 15
11 J()--ABC News 6 Movie The Jayhawkers" 8 Movie

3 JO--Mov1e ' Nothing but the Best" 10
4 4.5--Mov re • The Woman on the Beach" 4

L----------------------~
: By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
: It 1s a good prmctple of defen·
• s1ve play to stick to leadmg the
: SUit you have started With lt•s
• a pretty good general prmc1ple
: but there are limes when you
: must abandon 11 and try for ULABNER
• something better
: West opens the k1ng of
AH DOtJe RecoNSTRi.JCT"£=D
• diamonds agamst Souths three
TH' MC)I.JSTSR WHAT'S
: no-trump contract South can't
611.J LeAVIN' IT6
• afford to wm that tnck smce he
CLOTHeS
: must take a club f1nesse later
AAOIJND
POG""-TGH• West contmues w1th the 10 and
: agam South must duck
• At thJS pomt a West w1th a
: one-track mmd w11llead a th1rd
: d1amond South wtll wm , take
• and lose the club fmesse and
•• watch East suffer, smce ~ast
: won't be able to do anythmg to
• get West mto the lead
: Before leadmg that th1rd dia·
~ mond West must realize that
: the play is hopeless Maybe
• nothmg else w11l be any better,
: but a sh1ft to the 10 of spades
• might Just be a w1nner He
~ should make that sh1ft
" It will be a wmner' South wtll
; have lost two d1amonds and w11l
~ have to lose two spades and a
• club later

•II.

-•

I

Syracuse, 0

·

BEN FRANKLIN STORE

The Fmest tn Mob1le Homes

1100 E Main

HARTFORD CHURCH OF
CHRIST In Chrl•tlon Union - _

1 Rev
George Hoschar ,
pastor
Sunday School 9 30
a m Prayer -and Btble study
7 30 p m
Cottage Pr~yer
Servtce Tuesday, 10 a m
Worshep Service , Thursda)'
7J&amp; pm

Ph 949 5n2

KINGSBURY HOM( SALES
&amp; SERVICE, INC.

pm
MASON ASSEMBLY OF
GOD - Sec ond Sf , Mason , w

The Rev W i lltlm Campbell ,
pastor Sunday School, 9 30
il m
James Hug-hes supt ,
even i ng service, 7 30 p m
Wednesday eventng prayer
meeting , 7 30 p m
Yo-uth
prayer serv1ce each Tuesday

• The Frrendly Folks
Pomeroy, Ohio

Grocer 1es &amp; General Merchand.se

..

I (!

POWELL'S SUPER VAW

Domestic pressures wtll be a
bit heav1er most of the day Try
not to le.t them D'ler power you
The stram won t last

Jon

PISCES (Fob 2D·Morch 201

EAST

•A94
... J 8 6

.•

Pomeroy D1al 992 2318

FIRST SOUTHERN BAP

V a Chester Tennant , pastor
Sunday school
10 a m
morn1no worsh1p. 11 am
•
evangellstt c&lt;J.serv tce 7 30 p m
81ble study and prayer serv ice
Wednesday , 1 30 p m Phone
713 5133

•
••
•••
••
••
•
••

c

1~

DEAR HELEN
Tom and l have been ltvmg together for three years, and mv

ARIES (Morch 21·Aprll 11)
Don t discuss your al ms 1n I rant
a t persons whose support
you re unsure ol They may try
t o place some stumb l ng
block s

Though annoying they will
offer some fo rm of reward

10

WEST
•1098
.8742
tKQJ103

•
••
•• "5
••
•

"
'

DUDLEY'S

THE ATHEMS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.

George Ca sto pastor Sunday
School 9 30 even1na worshtD
7 J0Thui=Sday evenmo prayer
sery1ce 7 30 p m

MASON

•
•

:~

MASON COUNTY
THE HILAND CHAPE L

DEAR HELEN
Today I rece1ved m my mail a wrinkled old dirty envelope
With a $1 b11l tnSide No note or letter - JUS I a very old, npped-up
dnllar bill
.. The envelope was addressed m handwritmg that looked
disgu1sed
Somethmg ltke this can dr1ve you crazy, Helen Who would
have sent me a dollar ? Is It friend or foe' I m a 42-year-old
housewife, so tt 1sn 't a k1d prank -MYSTERY FAN
DEAR FAN
Perhaps you signed up for a cham letter you'd forgotten
about, and your name finally hit the top of the list
Other than that - well, you'll always wonder unless the
sender conlesses, v1a HHU - H

For Saturday 1 Jan. 11, 1175

You w11t have to shou lder some
dulles not of your making

•QJIO
• 75
"AQ1094

~

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY

Second and Pom eroy Sts Stan
Cr a1g pastor Sunday school
9 •5 a m
worsh•P serv ic e 11
a m
t ra1n lng unton
6 30
P m e'Jenmg worship service
7 JO p m
M td week prayer
serv ice Wednesday 1 30 p m

NORTH
.H4

MARK V STORE

GAULS MARKET

DEAR SPANKER
Okay Krafft-Ebing 1t tsn't- but I still say, 1t takes different
folks to like diflerent strokes - H

Contmue to vtew propositions
offe red you With a wary eye
Don t be 1ook1ng lor somelhmg
for nothing

AQUARIUS IJtn. 2D·Ftb 191

: WIN AT BRIDGE

:
·

~~~d ~A~:~::,~NEJr -pa~~;~

DEAR HELEN
Why' Every tune a man applies a paddle to the buttocks of
his wife or past-puberty daughter, and e'llch tune a woman
wtllmgly submits- why does the word sado-masochism pop out '
nus casts an unhealthy pallor over a sometime enjoyable,
sometunes necessary, action Men and women who spank each
other are NOT abnormal'
There IS a line between good spanking and sadtsl1c beating
Spankmg devotees abhor breakmg the skin, drawing blood,
creatin~ soreness that lasts for days, use of wh1ps clubs, etc
Used etther as oun1shment or to create excitement, 1t s a fm e
tenswn releaser More and more couples regard 1l as fun and
fello\\shlp, an exhilarating form of love play
Here's what a doctor at the PsychiatriC Clime of New York
City has to say
"Spankmg cannot be categorized as an unhealthy action on
the part of adults who enJOY1t To abolish or condemn thiS form
of pleasure-play 1s much the same J!.S abolishmg alcoholic
beverages for the reason that some use liquor to excess
"As punishment, 1t can qu1ckly diSpel tension and auger
through pseudo-vwlence The llUSdeed 1s qu1ckly forgotten by the
use of phys1cal aelton and does not grow out of proportion 1n the
rrund of the abused parties "
I thmk a ser1ous study should be made of adult spanking and
1ts related actiVIties It has been unjustly treated. And please,
Helen, don't call 1t "a mild form of sado-masochism "RENOWNED SPANKER OF GffiL FRIENDS

VIRGO IAug 23·Stpl 22)

compromise

•
•
•

BETSY ROSS BAKERY

SEARS CATALOGUE MERCHANT

33

9

••
•••

M&amp;R SHOPPING CENTER
IGA FOODLINER

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

CHTifE R CHURCH OF

Tyler Moore 8,10, Movte

"Sanjuro1 '

30--Bob Newhart 8 10
10 00--From Sea to Shining Sea 6 Carol Burnett 8,10
11 00--News 8,10 Janak! 33

-

INGLES ASHLAND SERVICE

GOEGLEIN READY MIX

GOO Rev
Dan Ayers
pastor
Sunday schoo l 9 30
a m worShip serv1ce 11 am
evenmg serv1ce 7 30 p m
you th servl(~e Wednesday 7 30

.......

HEINERS BAKERY

RACINE FOOD MARKET

In Defense of Spanking

9

saute

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

4

5 30--Movie Lady Luck • 4

il

Bill Beegle, son of Bob and
Martha Lou Beegl~ a semor at
Oh10 UmverSity, accompamed
his brother, Bruce, to
Cohunbus on the eve of the 27th
to spend the mght m Columbus
On Saturday he spent a couple
of hours at the youth cen~r
while walling for hiS fhght to
cahfornla and the Rose Bowl
On SUnday he V ISI ~d the NBC
studios and taped a show w1th
the All Oh10 smging group
hos led by Doc Severson He
VISited Universal Stud1os on
Monday and sang w1th the
group at Disneyland on Thelma Miller and daughter,
Tuesday He was m the Rose Karen Sue of East Liverpool
Jess and Seiesta Pickens
Bowl Parade on Wednesday
and attended the OhiO Stale vs were dmner guests recenUy of
USC game He left California their daugh~r Carne and
and arr1ved m Cohunbus on Cecil Bolin of Albanv
V1s1hng at the home of
Wednesday evemng
Clarence
and Ruth Bradford
Visiting with their mother,
recently
were
Terry and Leon
Emma Salser, over the
holidays were Rose Mary and Jordan and children Momca
Clyde Evans and daugh~rs . Lynn and Malt, of Columbus,
Brenda and Kelly Weller and
M~~~;garet, Sarah and Nancy of
Rio Grande : Robert and Carol daughtzr Jenmfer Lynn of
Birch and daugh~rs, Monica Arizona , Paul and Franc1s
and Janelle, of Bellevue, OhiO, Bradford and ch1ldren I.Jsa
and "Took" and Betty Salser of and Todd. of Athens, and h1s
mother, Lottie Bradford
Johnstown
Mr and Mrs Haze Me·
Kenneth and Bermcc Theiss
spent New Year's Da) w1th Murray of Portland VISited
the1r daughter Donna and Dan with Paul and Josephme Slmth
Sayre of Columbus Their son on Monday
Blythe and Nma Theiss were
Kenneth (and Debbie) of
Columbus were also guests al guests of lhe1r daughter,
Arlene and George Wallace
the Sayre home
and
daughter of Columbus over
Tom and Pam The1ss and
Chnstmas
daughters spent New Year's
Dmner guests of Mr and
Day w1th h1s aunt, Margaret
TheiSS and Betty and M1ke Mrs 0t1s Knopp on Wednesday
were Lo1s and D1ck Sterrett
Weber of Pataskala
New Year's Eve dmner and sons , Mall Mike and Max,
guests of Gorden and Marga ret Max and Sherr) Knopp and
West were Bea and B1ll Cor- son Aaron Galbpohs
Larry Roush who 1s em
ness, Esther West and John
Longsworth and the1r daughter ployed With tl;\~ Pittsb urgh SSC
on the Great Lake boats, 1s
Debbie, a student at OU
spendmg
h1s wm ~r vaca tiOn
Bea and Bill Cornell spent a
POMEROY CLUSTER
weekend w1th theu- son and w1lh h1s w1fc June al thm
Re v CarlE HICkl
Rev D Wm Sydeutrlcker
daughter-m-law, Bill and Patsy home m Dorcas
CHESTER - Worship 9 15
Tim and Lou1se Lee. children "' m
Cornell at Fort Bragg. N C
Church School 10 ~
ENTERPRISE - Wor•hlp, 9
Dav1d TheiSS, son of Bermce of Mr and Mrs Leo Lee spent
a m
Church Schoo l 10 a m
and Kenneth Theiss a student Chr1slmas vaca ti on at the
r;:LATWOOOS - Wors h ip 11
at Oh10 State spent h1s home of the1r alUlt Mar) a m Church School 10 a m
POMEROY WorShiP
vacatwn by accompan) mg a Bro\1 n Colwnbus
10 JO a m
Ct1urch Schoo! 9 15
Steve and Rhonda Da1leJ am , U MYF 6 30 p m
classmate, Don Savage, of
SPRINGS - Wo"hlp
en~rlamed
w1th a dmner at 10 ROCK
Columbus to h1s home m
a m Church School 9 a m
the1r home for h1s grand UMYF630pm
1'
Omaha , Neb
MIDDL~PORT CLUSTER
Omar
and
Wmme
parents,
Dmner guests of Laura
~ev Robert Bumgarner
Circle on Christmas Day were Daliey Floyd a11d Mane
HEATH Worsh lp~30
a m Churcf1 Schoo l 9 30 a
Jack and Paulme Bostick and Da1ley , and the Howard Ervm UMYF 7 p m
RUTLAND - WorSh i P 9 15
children In the afternoon the) fam1h
a m
School 10 a m
Mr and Mrs Bl) the Theiss UMYFChurch
VISited With uncle J1m Jackson
7 pm
SALEM CENTER Wor
at the Arcadia Nursmg Home spent Wednesda) at the home
ship 9 a m
Chu r ch School 10
of
the1r
daughter
Arlene
and
m Coolville
..,
am
UMYF Thursday 7 p tn
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Mr and Mrs Paul Bostic and Vern on Harmon and ch1ldren
R e\l R1charlf E Jarvis
children, Cheryl, Tressa and of The Pla1ns
ASBURY - WO"h lp 11
Paul and Josephine Smith a m Church School 9 so a m
Mike, Dwlbar, W Va viSited
1st Tuesday
and
son Dan, spent Fnday wscs
With hJS mother, Lizzie Wood
FOREST RUN - WorshiP 9
111th Mr and Mrs Robert a m Church School 10 1 m
recenUy
WSCS 3rd Wednesday , 7 30
Slmth
and ch1ldren, Robert, pm
Debbie and Kenneth Rizer of
MINERSVILLE - Worship
Pomeroy and Wa1d Johnson Stepha me and Paul Columbus
10
a m Clwrch School 9 11 m
Bonme and Tanurue Srmth WSCS,
and L1zz1e Wood spent
Jrd Monday 7 30 p m
SYRACUSE
Ch ur ch
Christmas with Romame and spent Tuesday w1lh the1r
Sch ool 9 30 a m
worsh ip
grandparents,
Mr
and
Mrs
Milford Fredertck Jr and
serv1~ 7 30 p m
Paul Srru th
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
family
Rev Steven Wilson
Aunt Lottie Bradford v1s1ted
Mr and Mrs Douglas
Rev Larry Poling
Rev Howard ShiveltY
Johnson spent ChrJSimas Day over Chr1stmas 1\lth her son
BETHANY
tCorcasJ
With the1r daughter, Nancy Bnan and Donna Bradford and Worship,
9 30 am
Church
Johnson and daugh~r , Con me , sons, Brent and Berry at School 10 30 a m
CARMEL WorShiP
11
Strawnsv1lle and w1th her a m
Hamden
tst and 3rd Sundays
of Chu rch Sch oo l 10 a m
Jay Kay and Marty Morar1ty brother, Reed Rose
Newark
and daughter, carne VISited
APP LE GROVE - ~unoay
Mrs Hazel Curtis and her school 9 30 a m worSh ip
on Saturday with h1s brother,
and thtrd Sunday 1 30
Larry and famtly of Lancas~r daugh~r. Margor1e Brewer of pfirst
m
prayer meeting , Wed
and Margaret TheiSS and Betty Reedsville. VISited With AWII nesday 7 30 p m Fellowship
supper f1rst S aturday ~&lt;: 6 p m
and Mike Weber of Columbus. Lothe Bradford on Sunday
U M w second Tuesday 7 30
Paul and Josepbine Slmth pm
Vls1t10g w1lh Omar and
Winnie Oatley over tl)e VISited wtth Mr and Mrs
EAST LETART - Sunda y
• holtdays were their ch1ldren Darrell Taylor of ,McKenzie school , 9 30 a m worsh•P
Second-and fourth Sunday , 7 30
f;awrence and Betty and Ridge recently
Pm
prayer meeting Wed

Vacat ton

4

Helen Help
By Helea Bottel
Us. • •

LEO (Julj 23-Aug 22 ) You
tend to bog down w1th mare
responSibilitieS than you can
manage property Set asi de th e
less urgen t ones for no w

I
I
£

•

�7- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepon-Pomeroy, o , Friday, Ja 10, 1975
GRAHAM

POMEROY
POMEROY TRINITY
Rev w H Perrm pastor Ro'(

Mayer

Sunday

Church

schoo l

school

sup !

9 15 a n

worsh•P service 10 IJ a rn
Youth cho• r reh earsal Mon
day 3 JO p m under d rect•on
ol Mary Skmner sen or cho r
1

rehearsal 1 30 p m Thursday
With
Mrs
Paul
Nea se

d•redbr

POMEROY CHURCH OF

THE NAZARENE Corn er
Unv' n and Mulber r y
R e\'
Clyde V Henderson pa stor
Sunday school 9 30 am G len
McClung
supt
morn tn g
worship 10 30 am
even ng
service 1 30 mtd week se r
VICe Wedn esday 7 30 p m
GRACE EPISCOPAL - The
Haro ld Deeth
re ct or
R ev
Ch ur ch serv 1ces 10 30 a m
Holy commun on f•n.l Sunday
of month churclif school 10 30
a m for nursery thr ouQh 12

POM EROY CHURCH OF
CHR 1ST -

Ter r el l Gran ng er

pastor B bie schOol 9 JO a m
worsh i p
10 30 am
adu lt
worship serv te e and youn g
peoples

meet•ng

7 30

p m

Combtned B1ble study and
prt~yer
meefm g Wednesday
730pm

THE SALVATION ARMY -

E nvoy Ray W Wining off1 cer
In charge Sunday 10 am
Holiness meeting 10 30 am
Sunday School Young People ~
Leg1on 7 p m Tt1ursday 1 to
P m La,dies Hom f!' League
P m Prep c l asses
ST
PAUL
LUTHERAN
CHURCH Corn er o f Sycamore
and Se cond Sts Pomeroy The
Rev'- Wilham Mlddleswar t h
Pastrtr Sunday School at 9 45
am
d Church Sr-r11 [ es 11
am
SACREO H EART
Rev
Father Pau l D Welton pastor
Phon e 992 28 25
Sa !urday
evenmg Mass 7 30
Sunday
Mass 0 and 10 am
Con
fesslon Sat urd ay 7 7 30 p m

Dorcas
Social Notes

POMEROY F IR ST BAP
TIST - Roberl Kuhn pastor
Wlil1am Wat so n Sunday school
sup! Sunday sc nool 9 30 am
B¥F
6 p m
B bl e study
Wednesday
7 p m
cho 1r
prac t ce Wedr1esday 8 30 p m
POMERO '
WESLEYAN
HOLINES
CHURC H Harr! sonvll e Rev
0 De l l
M"'nl e y Pa sror Henry Eb l 1n
Sunday Sc hool Supt Sunday
Sc hool 9 30 am
Even ng
Pr ayer and
w or Sh ip 7 30 p m
P ra1 se ser v ce Thu rsd ay 7 30
p m
SYRACUSE
FtR«iT
CHURCH OF GOO
R ev
George Oile r pa sror Sunday
sc hoo l
9 l 'i a n1
morn ng
pr eac n n g
lI
&lt;1 m
ell i'I!1Q ei! SI C SN VI ( e 7 ]0 p rn
Pr .=~ ycr m c e ! n q
T t u r "&gt; day
7 30 p l
POMENOY
WESTSIDE
CHURCH OF CHR IS T 200 W
Ma n 51
J err y Paul
m n sr er
ptlon f"- 991 76 6 6
Con s erva11ve
non
nstrume-n l a Sunday worsh1p
10 a m
B bl e study 11 am
worsh lp 6 p m
Wedne sday
B1ble s tudy 7 p m
MIDWAY
COMMUNITY
CHURCH
(non
denom lnat1ona 1
Langsville
Dexter Road the Re'J Worley
Haley pastor Sunday tchoo
10 a m
e'Jer11ng worsh 1p 7 30
p m
Prayer
meetmg
Tuesd~y
7 30 p m
youth
group Fr day 7 30 p m
RUTLAND
FREEWILL
BAPTIST
Roger Turner
pa stor Sunday S[hoo 10 a m
Sunday e'J enmg serv ce 7 30
Wedne sday B blc sludy 7 JO
P m
OLD
DEXTER
BIBLt.
CHR I ST I AN CHURCH - Rev
Ron Terry
pas1or
Sunda
sc hool 10 a m Mrs Worle
Fran c 1s
super1nl enden1
Mornmg worS hip
11 am
Sunday e11 enmg ser\11 c e 7 3\

CELEBRATES ALONE
MEMPHIS, Tenn (UP!)
ElVIs Presley spent hiS 4oth
birthday Wednesday alone 1n
his 'Memphis mansion, reportedly ba ttlmg a we1ght problem
Friends of the rock 'n' roll
recording and mov1e star say
Elvis basn 't left his bedroom in
his "Graceland" mansion on
Elvis Presley Boulevard since
retummg to Memphis three
weeks ago
He has canceled an appearance scheduled for Las Vegas,
Nev , on Jan 29
"Elvis thmk:s too much of his
appea rance to see anybody or
appear in public until he gets
his wetght back down, " sa1d a
fnend of the singer

ne$day 7 30 p m
U M W
f1rst Wednesday 7 30 p m
WESLEYAN (Ractne) Su nda y sct1oo(
10 a m
worst11p 11 am
B tble study
Thursday
7 p m
chOir
p ra c t 1ce Thu rsda y o p m
f e llowShip
supper
f rst
Wednesday 6 30 p m u M w
fourth Monday 8 p m

UNITED

METHOD IST
PreachmO
9 30 a m tJ t~r\t and second
Sundays of each month th1rd
and four th Sun days each
month worsh1p se nnce at 7 30
p m Wednesday evenmgs at
7 30 Prayer_!.nd 81b le C:1t1t1v
SEVENTh
DAY
~u
VE NTI ST
Mu l berry
He1ght s
Pomeroy
Pastor
G rard SetM Sabba th sct1oo l
e... ery Saturday at 2 p m and
worsh1p sen11ce fol low ng at
p m
Open
B ble
) 15
d scuss on 7 30 p m at the
church each Thu rsday
FIRST SOUT HERN BAP
TIST 282 Mulberry Ave
Pom e roy
affll ated
W1lh
the Rev
Brad l ey
S B C
Spencer pa stor Troy Zw ll1ng
Sunday sc hool supt Sunday
sc hool
9 30 a m
morn ng
worsh1p
10 30
Sunday
evange l 1stt c meetmg 7 30 p m
Prayer mee tmg Wednesday
7 30 p m

Television Log

7 30 p m

MT. UNION BAPTIST -

Rev Cec11 Cox pas tor Sunday
Sc hoo l supt
Joe Sayre
Sun day sc hool 9 .45 a m
Sunday evenmg worsh i p 7 30
Wednesday prayer and B1ble
study 7 30 p m

FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, 1975
6 00--News H 8,10 13.15 ABC News 6 Elec Co 20 Per
sonallty &amp; Behavioral Development 33
6 30-NBC News 3,4 15 , ABC News 13 Bewrtched 6 CBS News
8,10 Zoom 20
7 00--Truth or Cons 3,4, Bowling tor Dol lars 6 WCHS TV
Report 8 Aviation Weather 20, News 10 Jrmmy Dean 13 1
Spy 15, Aviation Weather 33

TUPPERS
PLAIN!
CHRISTIAN CHURCH

t: ugene Under-wood , pa~tor
GREAT BEND - Worsh 1p 11 Howard Caldwell Jr SuJl day
a m
2nd and 4th Sundays
School Supt
Sunday School
Chu r ch Sct1ool 10 a m
Morn1ng Sermon
9 30 am
LETART FALLS - WorShiP
10 30 a m
Sunday even 1ng
lOam Churcf1 school 9a m
serv1ce 7 p m
B'lble study 7 30 p m e'Jery
LETART FALLS UNITED
Tuesday
BRETHREN - Rev Free land
MORNING STAR - Worsn p NorriS pastor Floyd Norr1s
9 30 a m Church Sc hool 10 30 supt Sunday school 9 30 a m
a m
M1d Week
Service
morn i ng sermon 10 30 a m
Wednesday 8 p m
Prayer serv1ce Wednesday ,.
MORSE CHAPEL Wor
p m
Shtp \ 1 a m
lst and 3rd
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF
Sundays Church Schoo l 10 GOO OF PROPHECY - G P
am
Smith pas tor Sunday Sc*lool
PORTLAND - Wor shi p 7 30 10 am Arthu r Henson Supt
Pm
Church Sct1 oo1 9 30 a m
Mornmg WorShip
11 am
SUTTON - WorShip 11 am
Young People 's sent1ce 7
2nd and 4th Sundays Church
p m
Evenmg se r v 1ce 7 30
MIDDLEPORT
Schoo! 10 11 m
p m Wedn esday Mid Week
MT MORIAH BAPTIST NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Prayer Service 7 30 p m
Co rner Fourth and Main
R ev Rob er t Meece
You t h meet ng
6 30 p m
M1ddleport Rev Henry Key
Rev Stanley Brandum
Even ng worst11p 7 30 p m
Jr pastor Sund ay Sch ool 9 30
JOPPA - WorShip 10 am
CHESTER CHURCH OF
am M rs Er\lln Baumgard
Church Sc t10ol 9 a m
Prayer
THE NAZARENE
Rev
ner sup t
Morning worship
10 45 a m
Meet m g Wednes day 8 p m
Herber t Grat e pastor Wor
LONG BOTTOM - Church
Ship service 11 a m and 7 30
JEHOVAH 5 WITNESSES serv 1ces
9 a m
Sun day
P m Sunday Sunday School
Larry Carneha n presiding
Schoo l 9 45 a m B1ble Study 9 30 ' am
Richard Barton
mm 1sler Sunday Bible lee
e\lery Thu r sday 7 30 p m
supt Prayer meet1ng
Wed
lure 9 30 am
Watchtower
nesday 7 30 p m
NORTH BETHEL Wor
study 10 30 am
Tuesday 1
aRAOBURY CHURCH OF
sh1p 11 am Church Sc hool tO
Bib l e stuely 7 30 p m
Thurs
am
CHRIST Cl iffOrd Sm1 th
day
m1 n l s l ry schoo l 7 30
ALFRED - Sunday school
mlniSJer Sunday School 9 30
p m
serv i ce meetmo 8 JO
pm
am
mornmg church 10 30
9 45
a m
eolc h
Sunday
preachi ng a t 11 am
each a m Sunda y even1ng ser\l1ce
MI DDLEPORT CHURCH of
Chnst i n Christian Unton Sunday Prayer meeting 7 45 7 30 p m Wednesday serviCe a
pm
fl m Wednesday WSCS 8 p m
lawren ce Manley pastor
on t f1.rd Tuesday each month
Mrs Russell Young Sunday
LAUREl CLIFF FREE
REEOSVILL : Sunday
Sc hool Supt Sunday Schoo l
METHOCIST Rev F loy d
school 9 30 preect1mg 7 30
9 JO a m
E\len mg wo r sh iP
F
SMook
pastor
L loyd
P m Sunda y prayer meetmg
7 30
Wednesday
prayer
Wr:~gh t
Sunday sc t1 oo 1 su pt
meet1ny 7 30 p m
7 30 p m T uesday WS CS 7 30
Su nday school 9 30 a m
f 11'"S I Thur sday each month
MT MORIAH CHURCH Ofo
mornmg worsh p 10 JO am
GOO - Racme Route 2 lhe
SILVER RIDGE - WorShiP
even1ng worsh1p
7 30 p m
10 a m Church Sct1ool 9 a m
Re'J James M Muncy pastor
Wednesday Christ1a n Youtt1
TUPPERS
PLAIN S
Sun day sc hool 9 4~ a m
Crusade
6 30 p m
C ho~r
Wor s h 1p 9 a m
Churc h
morn1ng worshtp
11 am
pr act1ce Thursda y 17 p m
What was the Mona L1sa thmkmg about when Leonar
Schoo l 10 a m
e\o'en mg worshiP 7 30 p m
do
da
Vmc1 pamted her' Was she smiling' Some say that
KENO
CHURCH
OF
Prayer mee tmg T uesday 7 30
DEXTER CHURCH OF
CHRIST - George Frederick
P m Young p eoples m eet i ng
CHRIST Charl es Russell
she was actually closer to tearsl
supt Ser'J1 ce week l y 9 30 am
7 30 P m Thursday
Sr mm1ster Norm an C W1ll
on SUnday Preach1ng f r :St and s upt
Sun day school 9 30
It 1s centunes s1 nce Leonardo and his model lived,
MIDDLEPORT
FIRST
th lr d Sundays of mon th by am
wo r sf1ip serv 1ce 10 30
but
throngs
still stand before the pamtmg m the Louvre
BAPTIST - Corner S1x l h and
Cl ifford Sm1th 9 30 am
am
Bib l e study Tuesda y
Palmer
the
R e'J
Steve
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN
7 30 p m
and
wonder
at
1t It IS much smaller than people expect,
Skaggs
pa s tor
Danny
UNION - Darre ll
Ooddri l t
REORGANIZEC
CHURCH
but
that
m
no
way
d1m1mshes 1ts attraclmn For the Mona
Thompson Sunday schoo l supt
pastor Sunday School
9 30
JESUS CHRIST OF
WMPO rad10 program
7 4.7
a m
Le onard Gilmore fir st OF
L1sa symbolizes the mystery of life No matter how great
am Sunda y school 9 15 am
elder
e'Jenmg se r vice 7 30 LATTER DAY SAINTS our
cunos1ty, we can never know all the answers
Portland
Rac1ne
Road
morn m o worsh i p 10 15 am
p m
Wed nesda y
p ra yer
Wlll 1am Roush pastor Denn y_
You th actlv1 11es and fel l owsh ip
m eeti ng 7 30 p m
There IS a great deal of mystery m the Church too
Sunday
Sc h()Or
lor fun tor and senior h gh
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF Evans
Co p~ tg hl 1975
Director Sunday Sc hool 9 30
students 6 p m Bible sludy
Often
th1s bolhers those who would seek a log1cal explanaGOD - Racine Rou te 2 The
am
Morn 1ng worsh i P 10 30
Keisler A dvt~ rl s ng Serv ce Inc
7 30 p m
M id week prayer
Rev
Charl es Hand pastor
tmn
for
everythmg That 1s where we need fa1th-for fa1th
a m Sunday evening serv 1ce 7
serv 1ce Wednesday 7 30 p m
Slrub urg Vllg n a
Sunday sc hool 9 45 a m
P
m
Wednesday
e'Jen1
ng
IS m part an acceptance of what we mherently fnl but
mo rni ng worsh 1p
11 am
Evening serv1ces Tuesday and Drayer ser\o'lces 7 30 p m
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST
can't
prove m ordmary, everyday terms
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Friday 7 30
M iddlepor t .5 th and Main
Re\1
Ea
r
l
Shuler
pastor
Scrlplu
es
selected
b~
aEARWALLOW
RlOGE Worsh 1p se rv1ce 9 30 am
George
Glaze
minister
Where to fuid fa1th' Admittedly, 11 can be qu1te a
CHURCH OF CHRIST - Bi ble
James Sheets superi ntenden t
The Arur C8 n Bible Soc el~
Sunday
sc
hoo
l
10
30
am
quesl
But a good place to start that quest 1s m church
Study
9 30 am
morning
9 30 a m
B i ble schoo l
Sunday evenmg serv1ces 7 30
worsh1p 10 30 am
evenmg
m ornmg worship 10 30 am
P m B1ble study and pra yer
worship 6 30 p m Wednesday
evenmg worst1Jp 7 30 p m
se rviCe Thursday 7 30 p m
Mondav
B1bl e Stu dy 7 30 p m
prayer servi c e 7 p m Wed
nesdav
MT
OLIVE CHURCH K lngsbury
t(oad
Su ni:tay
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH
Long Bottom Sunday School
Sc hool 9 30 a m Ra l pt1 Carl
OF THE NAZAR E NE - Rev
tO am w ith W i llard P 1gott
supt worSh i P serv1ce 10 30
Don Co t e
pa stor
A lfr ed
su pt Evangelistic message
a m and 7 30 p m alternate ly
Rusche / Sunday School sup!
each Sunday evenmg 7 30 p m
Prayer meetmg' Wednesday
Sunday sc hqol 9 30 a m
by
Elder
Russe l l
Cl1n e
7 30 p 1ll
Rev
Jay Stiles; f
morn ng wor:shtp 10 30 a m
mmister ol th e Apostolic F a th
pastor
Sunday evangelistic mee t ng
B ible Study Wednesday 7 30
O LD
DEXTER
CON
7 30 p m
prayer meet ng
pm
GREGATIONAL CHURCH Wed n esday 7 30 p m
STIVERSVILLE COM Mrs
Worley Franc ts Sundoly
MUNITY CHURCH - Sunda y
school sup l Sunday sc hool 10
W1th the hope 11 wil l, m some measure. foster and help sustam that
sc hool service 10 a m Prayer
THE
UNITED
PRES
am
meet mo Tt1ursday 7 p m
BYTERIAN
MINISTRY
wh1ch IS good 1n family and commun1ty l1fe, th1s feature IS sponsored by
LOI'IG
BOTTOM
Sunday evenin g ser'J 1ce 7 p m
OF MEIG S COUNTY, Ow1ght
CHRISTIAN
M
r
Robert
'
the
busmess f1rms and orgamzat1ons whose names appear be low
ZION
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST
L Zavltz Pastor Director
Pomeroy
Harr tsonvt ll e Wyatt pastor Sunday Sc hool
HARRISONVILLE
supf
Ronald Osborne Bible
Road R 1ck Morr1son pastor
Sunday Church Schoo l 9 30
Sc
hool
9 30 am
preachmg
Sunday
sch
ool
supt
Steven
am Mrs Hom er Lee S!o!PI
Even1ng serv1ces
St an l ey Sunday sc hool 9 30 10 415 a m
Mornmg Worship 10 30 am
am
monung worshiP an d 7 30 p m
MIOOLEPOR'f Sunday
communton
10 30
am
Church Schoo l 9 30 a m Joh n
HYSELL RUN
FREE
Sun day
eve nm g
yout h METHODIST CHURCH F
Fultz
SuQt
Morn tnQ
Worshlp 10 30 am
Chr1Sf1an E nd eavor 6 30 p m
Re'"' P aul N e'JIIIe pastor
wor ~ h 1 p ser v tce Sun day
7 30 Sunday Sc t1oo l 9 30 a m
SYRACUSE
Morning
p
m
Wedn
esday
e'Jen1ng
Wors.h l p
9 am
Sunday
se r v 1c e 10 30 am
pra")'er meeting and B1ble) Morn1ng
700 E Matn
Chur ch Sch oo l 10 a m
M rs
Dral 992 2101
you th serv1 ce
6 45 p m
study
7
30
p
m
Bakers of Good Bread
Sampson Hall Sup t
Evange li stiC serv1ce 7 30 p m
Pome roy
ST
JOHN
LUTHERAN P raye r m ee tmg Thursday
Hunhngton 1 W Va
CHURCH
Pme Grove
The 7 30 p m
.
Rev
WJ! I1am M 1ddleswart h
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
Paslor Churct1 Serv1ces 9 30
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
GOO - Phi l l i P Wh1ttey pa stor
a m Sunday_ School 10 30 a m
MISSION - Bald Knobs Rev
Sun day
school
10 a m
6NADBURY CHURCH OF
worsh t p service
7 p m
L R G lu esencamp pastor
C,!:1.$1ST
B1bl e School 9 30
Roger Wilfred
Sr
Sunday
Prayer meetin g Wedn esday
am
morning
worsh1p
10
30
M1nor Repa1rs &amp; Tune up
,
7 30 p m
School Supt Sun_pay School
am Sunda y e\o'enmg Wot'"Sh1p
The Store w1th A Heart
9
30
am
Sunday
evenmg
Beech
&amp;
Locust
Middleport
•
Serv1ce
7 30 p m
c ho~r
Rac1ne
Phone 949 3342
worShiP 7 30 Prayer m eet mg
Ph 992 2366
'
p ractice ~ Sunday
and Wed
Tuesday
7 30 p m
Ernest
esday
7
p
m
prayer
meeting
n
'
HAZEL
COMMUNITY
Dee ter class lead er
Youth
Bible St udy Wednesday ,
:
CHURCH - Near Long Bol and
meet1ng
Wednesday
7
30
7 30 p m
tom Estl t Hart pastor Roy
p m
Ernest Deeter reader
.
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST Brown
ass1stant
pastor
MT HERMON CHURCH OF
Rev
Free-l
and
Norris
pastor
Sunday sc hoo l 10 am Church
THE UNITED BRETHREN IN
Sunday SChOOl TO am Church
7 30
p m
eech
Sunday
CHRIST Rober t Shoo k
:
serv1ce
7
p
m
Wednesday
Dial 992 3284
eveni ng prayer m eeting 7 30
Mrddleport
pastor Sunday sch ool 9 30
Bibl
e
Study
7
~ m
p m Thursday
'
a m
Russell Spencer supt
Mrddleport, Ohio
RACINE
CHURCH
OF
MIOOLEPORT
PEN
worsh i P service 10 45 am ,
I HE NAZARENE Rev
TECOSTAL - Th ird Ave, the
even 1ng worsh1p alternatmg
Wi l liam Bartholomew pastor
Re'J W11i111m Kn1tte1 pastor
W1th c E at 7 30 p m on
9 30 a m
Rona ld Dugan Sunday Sc hool Sunday sc hool
Sunday Prayer meet 1ng 7 30
morning
Ge r a l d We lls supt
Sup t Classes for all ages
p m Wednesday Alfred Wolf e
wo r shiP
10 JO a m
Wed
evening serv1ce 7 JO p m
lay leader
nesday
ser
v1ce
7
p
m
Bible study Wednesday 7 30
WHITE"S CHAPEL
Bu1ck Ponhac Opel G M C Dealer
Pm
yo uth ser 'J1ces Friday
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST Coo i 'JII Ie R D Rev Roy Deeter
500 E Marn 51
Ph 992 2174
'1 30 p m
past or
Sunday sc hool 9 30
Walter P Btkacsan pa stor
337 N 2nd
MrddlepOf"t
Ph 992 2550 ·:
FREEWILL BAPTIST - Ronn1e Sa lse r Sund ay sc hool am worship serv1 ce 10 30
Corn er Ash and Plum Mid
a m Btble st udy and prayer
supt Sunday schoo l 9 30 a m
dlepor t
No el
Herrman
morn1ng
worsh tp
10 40
ser'J ke Wednesday 7 30 p m
pastor
Saturday evenmg
:
Sunda y even 1ng worShip 7 30
RUTLAND
serv1ce 7 P' m Sunday school
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
Wednesday even1 n g B 1bl e
:
10 a m
Sunday eveni ng s tud y 7 30
CHRIST - Rod K asl er pastor
worship 7 p m
Bakers
of
Gay
90 s Bread
•
•
V H Braley Sun day sc hool
DANVILLE WESLEYAN Rae me
Ph 949 9S91
supt Sunday school 9 30 a m
Mrddleporl
Ph 992 3030 ,
Re\l Lelon Glasure pastor
worsh
p
servt[e
and
com
Sunday Sc ho ol 9 30 a m
mun1on
10 30 a m
youth
youth and tun l or youth serv1ce
meetmg
6 p m
Sunday
6 .45 p m
evenmg worshiP
.,
even1ng senn ce 7
r eg ular
7 30 p m
prayer and pra 1se
board meetmg th1rd Saturday
Wednesday 7 30 n rn
MEIGS
.
I p m
SILVER
RUN
FREE
COOPERATIVE
RUTLAND COMMUNITY
BAPTIST - Rev Ralph Dean
PAR ISH
Lou 1s W Osborne
CHURCH Sunday School
eastor Sunda y Schdol 10 am
:~
THE UNITEO
Mrddleport Ohro
Pomeroy
Ph 992 2178
9
30
1!11 m
WorShiP
service
11
220
E
Matn
ng
eon
Miller
sup
t
Even
1
METHODIST CHURCH
a m
Wednesday
pra yer
,.,
7
30
p
m
Prayer
ser'J1Ce
Robert T BIHY1garner
mee..!_mg Thulsday 7 30 0 m
D~rector
30 7 p30mp mSund ay · lf--------~----------+--~---------------1
nmeetmg
ght worsh7 lp,

7 30-Porter Wagoner 3. P1

Goes the Coun try 8 New Cand1d
Camera 6, Treasure H1 1t 10, To Tell the Truth 13 Black

Perspective on the News 20,33
8 00--Famrly Theatre " The County of Monte Cristo" J 4, 15
Night Stalker 6 13, Stowaway to the Moon 8 10 Washrngton
Week rn Revrew 20 33
8 30-Watl Street Week 20,33
9 00--Srx Million Dollar Man 6,13 Masterprece Thealre

r3o

Consumer Survival Kit 33

30-Asslgnment America 33
10 00--Frank Sinatra 3,4 15, Adams of Eagle Lake 6 13 CBS
Reports 8 10, News 20, Paul nchrms 33
10 3()-..World Press 20
11 00--News 3.4.6 8,10,13,15, ABC News 33
11 J()...Johnny Carson 3 4,15 Wrde World Myslery 13 Movre
' 0 S S 117 6. Movie 'Jailhouse Rock 8 Movre The War
of the Worlds 10 , Janak! 33
1 00--Modnlght Specia l 3 4,15 Wrde World Specral 6 News 13
9

l 15-Movle " The 'Maze" 10

2 30-Mov te ' How I Spent My Summer
DO-Movie ' Pressure Pomt • 4

SATURDAY, JANUARY 11 , 1975
6 3()--...:Fun For Everyone6, TV Classroom 8 Treehouse Club 10

Kentucky Afield 13
7 00--5aturday Report J Aware 6 Treehouse Club 8 World
Around Us 10. In Touch 13
7 30--Jabberwocky J, Farm Front 4 Eddie Saunders 6 Abbott
&amp; Costello 8, Man From COS! 10 Tennessee Tu&lt;edo 13
Sesame St 20
8 00--Addams Family 3,4,15 Yogr"s Gang 13 Jabberwocky 6
Speed Buggy 8, Popeye 10
8 30--Wheelie &amp; the Chopper Bunch 3,4 15 Bugs Bunny 13
Speedracer 6 Mister Rogers 20
00--Emergency 3,4,15 , Hong Kong Phooey 6 13 , Jann1e 8 10
Sesame Sf 20
9 30--Run, Joe, Run 3,,4, 15, Ad..,entures of Gllllgan 13 61g Blue
Marble 6 Partridge Fam rly 2200 A D 8,10
10 00--Land of the Lost 3,4, 15 Devl1n 6 13 Valley of the
n,nosaurs 8 10, Elec Co 20
10 J()...S rgmund 3,4, 15 Kord. 6 13 Shazam 8 10 Walsh s
Animals 20
11 OO--P1nk Panther 3 4.1S Super Frrends 613 Harlem
Globetrotters 8, 10, Carrascolendas 20
11 30-Star Trek3,4,15. Hudson Brothers Razzle 8,10 Zoom 20
12 00--Bob Daniels Basketball J. American Bandstand 6,13
Go 4,15, Fat Albert 8,10
1 00--Senlor Bowl3,4,15, College Basketball8 , Chrldren s Frlm
Festival 10
1 30-Soul Train 6, Other People Other Places 13
Popeye 10, Movie " The Grrl Rush" 13
2 30-Movle "The Wrong Box" 6, Movie "The Lrttle Fugrtrve"
3 00--VIewpolnt 8
3 30-Pro Bowlers Tour 13, To Be Announced 8
4 00--College Basketball 3 NHL Hockey 4.15 Wrestling 8
Movie "The Mountain'" 10. Making Things Grow 33
4 30-NFL Championship Games 6, Sewrng Sk11fs 33
5 00--Wlde World of Sports 6, 13., News 8 , A Bilwlth Knrt 33
5 30--High School Bowl8, Course of our Times 33
6 OG--News 3,10, Lawrence Welk 8 Catch 33
6 30--NBC News 3,15, Reasoner Report 13, News 4,6 CBS News
10, Zoom 33
7 oo--Treasure Hunt 3, Lawrence Welk 4 15, Hee Haw 6.8
$25,000 Pyramid 10, Newsmaker '74, 13 , World Press 33
7 JO-Jeopardy J, Animal World 10, Celebrity Sweepstakes 13
8 00--Emergency 3 4 15. Kung Fu 13, College Basketball 6 Ali
In The Family 8, 10 .. Book &amp;eat 33
8 30-The 2000 Year Old Man 8,10, Brography 33
9 oo--Movle "Chisum" 3,4,15 Movie 'The Cowboys' 13 Mary

ALL WEATHER ROOFING
AND CONSTRUCTION CO.

ROSEBERRY'S SERVICE STATION

Pm

I~

LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH
Ted Jo ne s
pastor Sunday schoo l 9 JO
am
ROy S1gman
sup !
morn1ng
worshiP
10 30
Sunday even1ng serv 1ce 7 30
serv1ce
Wed
m1d week
nesday 7 30 p m
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE Rev
Howard C Bl ack pastor Bob
Moore Sunday Schoo l Supt
Sunda y School classes for all
ages 9 30 a m
mornmg
worshlfl 10 45 NYPS Sunday
6 30 p r11 evangeliStic serv1ce
Sunday 7 30 p M M 1d week
prayer meetmg Wednesday
7 30 p m M1SS1onarv meetmg
second Wednesdav 7 30 o m
UNITED
FAITH
NON

OENOMINATIONAL -

R•v

Robert Sm 1lh pastor Sunday
school 9 30 a m class header
Leo H i ll
w orsh1p service
30 am
chu,.,..h 7 30 .2._m
EDEN UNITED bf&lt;t:: 1 fi
REN IN CHRIST - Elden R
Blake pastor Sunday School
m
Howard M cCoy
10 a
supt
Morning sermon 11 a
m
Sunday night servtees
:hr1st1 an Endeaver 7 30 p
n
Song serv1ce 8 p m
Preaching 8 30 p m
M id
we~k Prayer meetmg
Wed
nesl1ay 7 p m , Ray Adams
lay leader
CHURCH
o...
.tt::)US
CHRIST - Located at Rutl and
on New L 1m a Road next to
Forest Acre Pa rk Rev Ray
Rouu .pastor Robert Musser
Sunday Schoo l supf Sunday
sc hoo / 10 30 a m
worsh 1p
7 30 P m Bib le study Wed
nesaav 1 30 p m
Saturda
n1ght prayer se-rv i ce , 7 30 p my

20

HEMLOCK

GROVE

CHRISTIAN - Roger Watson
Pastor , R ay Whaley supt '
Mornmg worsh1p 9 31l a m
church School , 10 30 a m
young people s meelmg 6 30
Pm
even1ng worlsh1p 7 30
P m Btble study, Wednesdav

RUTLANO CHURCH OF

Sunday School 9 30 a m
Morn1ng worSh i P 10 30 am
Y oung peQple s serv 1ce 6 45
P m
EvangeliStiC serv1ce
7 30 p m Wednesday evenmg
servt c e 7 30 p m

'
Chester Ohi o

"
We Fill All Doctors Prescr iptions
,,
992 2955
Pomeroy ,

(

M e1gs County Branch

296 W Second

MASON FIRST BAPTIST -

CHURCH

I

Pomero y

TWO LOCATIONS
59 N Second St
Middleport, 0
46 Court Sf
Gallipolis, 0

Ph 992 3863

THE DAILY SENTINEL

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Nat1onw lde Insurance Co of Columbus, 0

Devoted To the Interest

Of The Meigs Mason Area

OF

CHRIST P 0 Bo x .487 Miller
St , Mason W Va Sunday
Bi ble Stu dy 10 a m
Worsh •P
11 a m and 7 p m Elible Study
Wednesday 7 p m
Vocal
mUSIC

307 Spring Ave

.
WAID CROSS SONS STORE

TIST - Corner of Second and
Anderson , Mason
Pastor ,
Walter Cloud Sunday school
9 .4.5 am worShiP service 11
1 m and 7 30 p m
Weekly
Btble st udy , Wednesday , 7 30

Rac ine

Pomeroy

Ph

m

u

..."

.,
Attend the Church of Your Choice
Pomeroy
Ph 992 3498

7034

&lt;

,; I .
'

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

SADIE'S MARKET
Ph m 3986

Ph 985 3308

• KQ 7
.953
t862
"K7 32
SOUTH IDI
• A6 32
.AK6

Home hie 5aws
Chester ••

NEW YORK aDTIIING HOUSE

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
_,_
'll'i

.

Kerm's Korner

Church and Offoce Supplres Gills
Mrl l St
Moddleport

.·

.

.

.

Kermll Walton
Pomeroy

We1t

North llaol

.

•

•

Tell yourself In advance that e. I
your p lans wont wo rk l1ke
clockwork You wont be so
fru strated when they get snarl

GEMINI IMay 21 June 20)

ed
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Doc

II
wouldn t be w1 se tor you to take
nsks on thmg s others tlav~
more d1rect control O'Jer than
you do

1 15-Mov te The Young Doctors • 4, Don Kirshner's Rock
Concert 6
I

I 31}--Movle

Gaby'

10

Movre

l atrs are very compliCated or
you 11 be drawn mto the m ire

~.. "tl~

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
2 Pasternak
I Poorest

21) Be careful regardmg fln an
c1al transac hons you co nduct
Don I deal wtlh st range per
sons or ftrm s

CANCER (June 21 July 22)

CAPRICORN (Doc 22-Jan

Neither you nor your partn er
are co operat '.'8 enough wtlh
each o th er Th1 s could put your
learn m trouble tod ay

19) You 11 1ake 100 unyielding a
pos1tlon today m the face of op
posit1on Bac k off a b1t and

fam11) thinks 11 e are marned At first, we had to wa lt for his
divorce, and then, wel11t just didn't seem unportanl , s1nce people
assumed we were married anyway
Now we've moved back to Callforrua near our folks, and we
wanllt off1c1al But 1f the bans are published m the paper my
folks will see them We went down to the license bureau' and
asked that our names be omitted m the v1ta l stahsllcs column
and they very snoollly sa1d "No 'So we cancelled the license '
I've heard of a sunple way to gel mart1ed "secretly " Can
you help? - ALMOST A MRS
DEAR AM
Sec 4213 of the callforma Civil Code permits certrun people
to marry-without a license, health certificate or publicatiOn
A clergyman may perform the ceremony on the spot 1f the
man and woman are adults, know of no legal reason why they
should not marry and state that they have been liv1ug together
The mm1ster furmshes the confidential record form, fills 11 out
and mails 1l to the COIB1ty clerk w1th the required $5 fee Best
wishes - H

Jlt!JllOOID~;II.J •••••'u -.J
,_
"" t
hy Ill Nlll 1\IIN(llll

11()11 \1 t

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to
form (our ordmary words.

3 Increment
4 Looked m
wonder
5 NUISance
6 Carpenter
or
soldier
7 Warning
8 Begtn
( 2 wds )
10 Cloth or
fabnc
12 Prmc1pie
16 Russian
c1ty
19 Do
22 Paleolithic
creatures

fleece
4 Kmd of
sUit 01 age
9 Chamber
11 Inhabitant
13 Venezuelan
copper
center
14 Shrewd
15 MISrepresent
17 Sawbuck
18 Cubic meter
19 Exhaust
ZG Cornell's
color
Zl Cheer
!2 Prov1de w1th
a roof
!4 "Suddenbrooks"
author
IS Festive
26 Color of a
palonuno
27 Elliptical
28 Stairway part
31 Butterfly
cawher
32 Behind time
34 "Othello'
character
36 Burn
37 Change back
38 Head (Fr )
39 Indigent
40 Uncooked

Yesterday's Allllwer
23 SuperlatiVe
m grarrunar
24 Let~rs

25 One
beyond
help
26 Compact

211 Anesthetic
30 CISco
Kid's rope
32 Songster
33 Ended in
stalemate
35 - Rermck

DOWN
1 Romaman
city

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

II

One letter aimply atonda for another In thla •ample A 11
used for the three L's, X for the two O's etc Single letters,
•r,ostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
h nta Eaeh day the code letters ore dill'erent

0() I I I
HIGH ON THE LI5T
OF "TOURIST

OHFTWKLFW

CRYPfOQUOTE
TBBJLS

HZQPI

WPTLFS

CJLF

SF-

ATTRACTIONS.

~USANE~

J I J [J

Now

arr._ the circled !etten

to form ttie 1urprle anawer. u
aurre•ted by the above cartoon

'Frankenstein's Bloody

Terror" 13
3 oo-Mov1e The Las Vegas Story11 4, News 13

(4Mwef"' lomorraw)

Ye1\erday'•

I

JYmble•1MAIZE SWAMP ENSIGN PIGEON
AIK•er1 .4 ""'lrmrng way lo gef mone11- WIN·SOME

NPFU

IJ

FURJX

T

SLFTLX

IPFC

ZU

IPZUQ-

NZIP

JlPFLW;

WJHZIKSF
SZJ

ZW

A P LX W JW·

IJ C
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: NOTHING IS MORE IRRITATING
THAN NOT BEING INVITED TO A PARTY YOU WOULDN'T
BE CAUGHT DEAD AT - BilL VAUGHAN
((&gt; 1871 Klaa FMIUI" S•adloatt. lac.)

CAPTAIN EASY

Soulh

R!I=IJELING

Pass

3 NT

Pass

Pass

Pass

Openmg lead- K •

•

.

t Nt:WSI'AI '~

BORN LOSER

'ICOR F/IJH~R 1'5 BRt~I~IO

OOIJ'T~,

A~R'f \MFORTANT W~JIT

I'LL I&lt;EEiP
M'l MOUTH

100!21?

&lt;;;J.IUT I

...

''

•

ALLEY OOP
I WRECKED aAJ'ITOLI :S
FA?HION 5HOW BEr:a&lt;f
ANYONE COULD SEE
-mE D£Si6N5 HE
rtJPPED OFF FROM

.. Wli'LL TAKE THIS ONE
UP "TO "THE CAVE AN'
COME BA.CK ~ FOR
ANO"THEI': ONE I

M15$ WINKLE I

I!:NT/:!:HI'HlSt: ASSN I

ru:B;!
:l•Jt!bf./1 U
•
••

The b1dding has been

•• Wetl

Nortl\ Easl

1•

• Pus
: Pass

Zt

Pass
~ass

10

Soulh
1-tt

t•

BARNEY

2•

LANDS,NO!!

• (&gt;ass ZNT Pass '
:- You, Soulh bold
: 611.71U.AZ U6AK732

I LET HIM OUT
THIS MORNIN'

What do you do ,.,..,
• A-Pia. Tllil 11 lllo Ume 10 re• malo • Uve ....ani""" . , t t : • - llaJ . .bled yaL

TODAY'S QUESTION
: Jostead of b1dd1ng two
•cJiamoDdl your partner hils b1d
notrump direcUy over your
~-spade What do you do now'

••
•
•

.'

DIDN'T I,
OL' FELLER"
HOWA60UT

A SKAIE'
SWEETIE'

\

•

I

th e l}JOrld to get along )Nith to
day Don t blame tf1e rebulfs
you get on oth ers

!NT

:two

"'

M o v1e ' A Degree of Murder ' 6
12 OO-Mov1e 'The Astro Zomb1es" 13

For your own good steer clear

YOUR COMPANY
J&amp;-T WOLJLO HAV.E
TO 5TOP FOR.

••

fAIRVIEW
BIBLE
CHURCH. Lelart. W Va Rl

" The
Victors' 10 News 13
11 45-Movoe Valley of Mystery" 3. Movie 'Bedtime Slory' 4,

]ASDL!Nil ALLEY

•

Furn1ture and Hardware

Meats and Grocenes

SCORPIO lOci 24-Nov 22)

You won t be the eas1st guy In

Both vulnerable

:

;

TAURUS (April 20 Moy 20)

11, 1175

A great deal of your time this
year will be spent bringing to
fruition long term projects
Lady Luck wtll flOW get In a rew
hcks lor you

ol an occas onal pal whose af

LIBRA (Sept 23·0ct 23)

11 15-News J .4 12 Don K1rshner's Rock Concert 15
11 J()--ABC News 6 Movie The Jayhawkers" 8 Movie

3 JO--Mov1e ' Nothing but the Best" 10
4 4.5--Mov re • The Woman on the Beach" 4

L----------------------~
: By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
: It 1s a good prmctple of defen·
• s1ve play to stick to leadmg the
: SUit you have started With lt•s
• a pretty good general prmc1ple
: but there are limes when you
: must abandon 11 and try for ULABNER
• something better
: West opens the k1ng of
AH DOtJe RecoNSTRi.JCT"£=D
• diamonds agamst Souths three
TH' MC)I.JSTSR WHAT'S
: no-trump contract South can't
611.J LeAVIN' IT6
• afford to wm that tnck smce he
CLOTHeS
: must take a club f1nesse later
AAOIJND
POG""-TGH• West contmues w1th the 10 and
: agam South must duck
• At thJS pomt a West w1th a
: one-track mmd w11llead a th1rd
: d1amond South wtll wm , take
• and lose the club fmesse and
•• watch East suffer, smce ~ast
: won't be able to do anythmg to
• get West mto the lead
: Before leadmg that th1rd dia·
~ mond West must realize that
: the play is hopeless Maybe
• nothmg else w11l be any better,
: but a sh1ft to the 10 of spades
• might Just be a w1nner He
~ should make that sh1ft
" It will be a wmner' South wtll
; have lost two d1amonds and w11l
~ have to lose two spades and a
• club later

•II.

-•

I

Syracuse, 0

·

BEN FRANKLIN STORE

The Fmest tn Mob1le Homes

1100 E Main

HARTFORD CHURCH OF
CHRIST In Chrl•tlon Union - _

1 Rev
George Hoschar ,
pastor
Sunday School 9 30
a m Prayer -and Btble study
7 30 p m
Cottage Pr~yer
Servtce Tuesday, 10 a m
Worshep Service , Thursda)'
7J&amp; pm

Ph 949 5n2

KINGSBURY HOM( SALES
&amp; SERVICE, INC.

pm
MASON ASSEMBLY OF
GOD - Sec ond Sf , Mason , w

The Rev W i lltlm Campbell ,
pastor Sunday School, 9 30
il m
James Hug-hes supt ,
even i ng service, 7 30 p m
Wednesday eventng prayer
meeting , 7 30 p m
Yo-uth
prayer serv1ce each Tuesday

• The Frrendly Folks
Pomeroy, Ohio

Grocer 1es &amp; General Merchand.se

..

I (!

POWELL'S SUPER VAW

Domestic pressures wtll be a
bit heav1er most of the day Try
not to le.t them D'ler power you
The stram won t last

Jon

PISCES (Fob 2D·Morch 201

EAST

•A94
... J 8 6

.•

Pomeroy D1al 992 2318

FIRST SOUTHERN BAP

V a Chester Tennant , pastor
Sunday school
10 a m
morn1no worsh1p. 11 am
•
evangellstt c&lt;J.serv tce 7 30 p m
81ble study and prayer serv ice
Wednesday , 1 30 p m Phone
713 5133

•
••
•••
••
••
•
••

c

1~

DEAR HELEN
Tom and l have been ltvmg together for three years, and mv

ARIES (Morch 21·Aprll 11)
Don t discuss your al ms 1n I rant
a t persons whose support
you re unsure ol They may try
t o place some stumb l ng
block s

Though annoying they will
offer some fo rm of reward

10

WEST
•1098
.8742
tKQJ103

•
••
•• "5
••
•

"
'

DUDLEY'S

THE ATHEMS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.

George Ca sto pastor Sunday
School 9 30 even1na worshtD
7 J0Thui=Sday evenmo prayer
sery1ce 7 30 p m

MASON

•
•

:~

MASON COUNTY
THE HILAND CHAPE L

DEAR HELEN
Today I rece1ved m my mail a wrinkled old dirty envelope
With a $1 b11l tnSide No note or letter - JUS I a very old, npped-up
dnllar bill
.. The envelope was addressed m handwritmg that looked
disgu1sed
Somethmg ltke this can dr1ve you crazy, Helen Who would
have sent me a dollar ? Is It friend or foe' I m a 42-year-old
housewife, so tt 1sn 't a k1d prank -MYSTERY FAN
DEAR FAN
Perhaps you signed up for a cham letter you'd forgotten
about, and your name finally hit the top of the list
Other than that - well, you'll always wonder unless the
sender conlesses, v1a HHU - H

For Saturday 1 Jan. 11, 1175

You w11t have to shou lder some
dulles not of your making

•QJIO
• 75
"AQ1094

~

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY

Second and Pom eroy Sts Stan
Cr a1g pastor Sunday school
9 •5 a m
worsh•P serv ic e 11
a m
t ra1n lng unton
6 30
P m e'Jenmg worship service
7 JO p m
M td week prayer
serv ice Wednesday 1 30 p m

NORTH
.H4

MARK V STORE

GAULS MARKET

DEAR SPANKER
Okay Krafft-Ebing 1t tsn't- but I still say, 1t takes different
folks to like diflerent strokes - H

Contmue to vtew propositions
offe red you With a wary eye
Don t be 1ook1ng lor somelhmg
for nothing

AQUARIUS IJtn. 2D·Ftb 191

: WIN AT BRIDGE

:
·

~~~d ~A~:~::,~NEJr -pa~~;~

DEAR HELEN
Why' Every tune a man applies a paddle to the buttocks of
his wife or past-puberty daughter, and e'llch tune a woman
wtllmgly submits- why does the word sado-masochism pop out '
nus casts an unhealthy pallor over a sometime enjoyable,
sometunes necessary, action Men and women who spank each
other are NOT abnormal'
There IS a line between good spanking and sadtsl1c beating
Spankmg devotees abhor breakmg the skin, drawing blood,
creatin~ soreness that lasts for days, use of wh1ps clubs, etc
Used etther as oun1shment or to create excitement, 1t s a fm e
tenswn releaser More and more couples regard 1l as fun and
fello\\shlp, an exhilarating form of love play
Here's what a doctor at the PsychiatriC Clime of New York
City has to say
"Spankmg cannot be categorized as an unhealthy action on
the part of adults who enJOY1t To abolish or condemn thiS form
of pleasure-play 1s much the same J!.S abolishmg alcoholic
beverages for the reason that some use liquor to excess
"As punishment, 1t can qu1ckly diSpel tension and auger
through pseudo-vwlence The llUSdeed 1s qu1ckly forgotten by the
use of phys1cal aelton and does not grow out of proportion 1n the
rrund of the abused parties "
I thmk a ser1ous study should be made of adult spanking and
1ts related actiVIties It has been unjustly treated. And please,
Helen, don't call 1t "a mild form of sado-masochism "RENOWNED SPANKER OF GffiL FRIENDS

VIRGO IAug 23·Stpl 22)

compromise

•
•
•

BETSY ROSS BAKERY

SEARS CATALOGUE MERCHANT

33

9

••
•••

M&amp;R SHOPPING CENTER
IGA FOODLINER

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

CHTifE R CHURCH OF

Tyler Moore 8,10, Movte

"Sanjuro1 '

30--Bob Newhart 8 10
10 00--From Sea to Shining Sea 6 Carol Burnett 8,10
11 00--News 8,10 Janak! 33

-

INGLES ASHLAND SERVICE

GOEGLEIN READY MIX

GOO Rev
Dan Ayers
pastor
Sunday schoo l 9 30
a m worShip serv1ce 11 am
evenmg serv1ce 7 30 p m
you th servl(~e Wednesday 7 30

.......

HEINERS BAKERY

RACINE FOOD MARKET

In Defense of Spanking

9

saute

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

4

5 30--Movie Lady Luck • 4

il

Bill Beegle, son of Bob and
Martha Lou Beegl~ a semor at
Oh10 UmverSity, accompamed
his brother, Bruce, to
Cohunbus on the eve of the 27th
to spend the mght m Columbus
On Saturday he spent a couple
of hours at the youth cen~r
while walling for hiS fhght to
cahfornla and the Rose Bowl
On SUnday he V ISI ~d the NBC
studios and taped a show w1th
the All Oh10 smging group
hos led by Doc Severson He
VISited Universal Stud1os on
Monday and sang w1th the
group at Disneyland on Thelma Miller and daughter,
Tuesday He was m the Rose Karen Sue of East Liverpool
Jess and Seiesta Pickens
Bowl Parade on Wednesday
and attended the OhiO Stale vs were dmner guests recenUy of
USC game He left California their daugh~r Carne and
and arr1ved m Cohunbus on Cecil Bolin of Albanv
V1s1hng at the home of
Wednesday evemng
Clarence
and Ruth Bradford
Visiting with their mother,
recently
were
Terry and Leon
Emma Salser, over the
holidays were Rose Mary and Jordan and children Momca
Clyde Evans and daugh~rs . Lynn and Malt, of Columbus,
Brenda and Kelly Weller and
M~~~;garet, Sarah and Nancy of
Rio Grande : Robert and Carol daughtzr Jenmfer Lynn of
Birch and daugh~rs, Monica Arizona , Paul and Franc1s
and Janelle, of Bellevue, OhiO, Bradford and ch1ldren I.Jsa
and "Took" and Betty Salser of and Todd. of Athens, and h1s
mother, Lottie Bradford
Johnstown
Mr and Mrs Haze Me·
Kenneth and Bermcc Theiss
spent New Year's Da) w1th Murray of Portland VISited
the1r daughter Donna and Dan with Paul and Josephme Slmth
Sayre of Columbus Their son on Monday
Blythe and Nma Theiss were
Kenneth (and Debbie) of
Columbus were also guests al guests of lhe1r daughter,
Arlene and George Wallace
the Sayre home
and
daughter of Columbus over
Tom and Pam The1ss and
Chnstmas
daughters spent New Year's
Dmner guests of Mr and
Day w1th h1s aunt, Margaret
TheiSS and Betty and M1ke Mrs 0t1s Knopp on Wednesday
were Lo1s and D1ck Sterrett
Weber of Pataskala
New Year's Eve dmner and sons , Mall Mike and Max,
guests of Gorden and Marga ret Max and Sherr) Knopp and
West were Bea and B1ll Cor- son Aaron Galbpohs
Larry Roush who 1s em
ness, Esther West and John
Longsworth and the1r daughter ployed With tl;\~ Pittsb urgh SSC
on the Great Lake boats, 1s
Debbie, a student at OU
spendmg
h1s wm ~r vaca tiOn
Bea and Bill Cornell spent a
POMEROY CLUSTER
weekend w1th theu- son and w1lh h1s w1fc June al thm
Re v CarlE HICkl
Rev D Wm Sydeutrlcker
daughter-m-law, Bill and Patsy home m Dorcas
CHESTER - Worship 9 15
Tim and Lou1se Lee. children "' m
Cornell at Fort Bragg. N C
Church School 10 ~
ENTERPRISE - Wor•hlp, 9
Dav1d TheiSS, son of Bermce of Mr and Mrs Leo Lee spent
a m
Church Schoo l 10 a m
and Kenneth Theiss a student Chr1slmas vaca ti on at the
r;:LATWOOOS - Wors h ip 11
at Oh10 State spent h1s home of the1r alUlt Mar) a m Church School 10 a m
POMEROY WorShiP
vacatwn by accompan) mg a Bro\1 n Colwnbus
10 JO a m
Ct1urch Schoo! 9 15
Steve and Rhonda Da1leJ am , U MYF 6 30 p m
classmate, Don Savage, of
SPRINGS - Wo"hlp
en~rlamed
w1th a dmner at 10 ROCK
Columbus to h1s home m
a m Church School 9 a m
the1r home for h1s grand UMYF630pm
1'
Omaha , Neb
MIDDL~PORT CLUSTER
Omar
and
Wmme
parents,
Dmner guests of Laura
~ev Robert Bumgarner
Circle on Christmas Day were Daliey Floyd a11d Mane
HEATH Worsh lp~30
a m Churcf1 Schoo l 9 30 a
Jack and Paulme Bostick and Da1ley , and the Howard Ervm UMYF 7 p m
RUTLAND - WorSh i P 9 15
children In the afternoon the) fam1h
a m
School 10 a m
Mr and Mrs Bl) the Theiss UMYFChurch
VISited With uncle J1m Jackson
7 pm
SALEM CENTER Wor
at the Arcadia Nursmg Home spent Wednesda) at the home
ship 9 a m
Chu r ch School 10
of
the1r
daughter
Arlene
and
m Coolville
..,
am
UMYF Thursday 7 p tn
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Mr and Mrs Paul Bostic and Vern on Harmon and ch1ldren
R e\l R1charlf E Jarvis
children, Cheryl, Tressa and of The Pla1ns
ASBURY - WO"h lp 11
Paul and Josephine Smith a m Church School 9 so a m
Mike, Dwlbar, W Va viSited
1st Tuesday
and
son Dan, spent Fnday wscs
With hJS mother, Lizzie Wood
FOREST RUN - WorshiP 9
111th Mr and Mrs Robert a m Church School 10 1 m
recenUy
WSCS 3rd Wednesday , 7 30
Slmth
and ch1ldren, Robert, pm
Debbie and Kenneth Rizer of
MINERSVILLE - Worship
Pomeroy and Wa1d Johnson Stepha me and Paul Columbus
10
a m Clwrch School 9 11 m
Bonme and Tanurue Srmth WSCS,
and L1zz1e Wood spent
Jrd Monday 7 30 p m
SYRACUSE
Ch ur ch
Christmas with Romame and spent Tuesday w1lh the1r
Sch ool 9 30 a m
worsh ip
grandparents,
Mr
and
Mrs
Milford Fredertck Jr and
serv1~ 7 30 p m
Paul Srru th
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
family
Rev Steven Wilson
Aunt Lottie Bradford v1s1ted
Mr and Mrs Douglas
Rev Larry Poling
Rev Howard ShiveltY
Johnson spent ChrJSimas Day over Chr1stmas 1\lth her son
BETHANY
tCorcasJ
With the1r daughter, Nancy Bnan and Donna Bradford and Worship,
9 30 am
Church
Johnson and daugh~r , Con me , sons, Brent and Berry at School 10 30 a m
CARMEL WorShiP
11
Strawnsv1lle and w1th her a m
Hamden
tst and 3rd Sundays
of Chu rch Sch oo l 10 a m
Jay Kay and Marty Morar1ty brother, Reed Rose
Newark
and daughter, carne VISited
APP LE GROVE - ~unoay
Mrs Hazel Curtis and her school 9 30 a m worSh ip
on Saturday with h1s brother,
and thtrd Sunday 1 30
Larry and famtly of Lancas~r daugh~r. Margor1e Brewer of pfirst
m
prayer meeting , Wed
and Margaret TheiSS and Betty Reedsville. VISited With AWII nesday 7 30 p m Fellowship
supper f1rst S aturday ~&lt;: 6 p m
and Mike Weber of Columbus. Lothe Bradford on Sunday
U M w second Tuesday 7 30
Paul and Josepbine Slmth pm
Vls1t10g w1lh Omar and
Winnie Oatley over tl)e VISited wtth Mr and Mrs
EAST LETART - Sunda y
• holtdays were their ch1ldren Darrell Taylor of ,McKenzie school , 9 30 a m worsh•P
Second-and fourth Sunday , 7 30
f;awrence and Betty and Ridge recently
Pm
prayer meeting Wed

Vacat ton

4

Helen Help
By Helea Bottel
Us. • •

LEO (Julj 23-Aug 22 ) You
tend to bog down w1th mare
responSibilitieS than you can
manage property Set asi de th e
less urgen t ones for no w

I
I
£

•

�...
8-TheDaUySentrnel Middleport Pomero) 0 Fr1day J m 10 1975
oRo·~~~t'i~ 0 .,
Nollce
APPROPRIATION
SHOOl" N G
M \TCH
Cor
ORDINANC E
Hollow Gu ' Club iur 1
st

POM EROY
A R ESOLUTION To ma lo. e
appropr tat ons f or Current
E x penses
and
ot her
Ex
pend1t ures of th e vII age of
Pomeroy State of Oli lo d~r n~
the
f seal
yea r
end ng
December 31 1975
Sect on I BE IT RESOLVED
&amp;y the Counc11 tor I he v llag e of
Pomer oy Stat e of Oh o Thilt to
proll' de for the cu rr ent ex
penses and o ther e)(pend lure s
of the sad V l lage ot Pome roy
d urmg t ne f sea l year end ng
Dece mber
31
197 5
th e
follow ng sums be and they ar c
hereby set iH de and ap
propn a.ted as follow ~ v z
Sect 1on 2 That th er e b e t~p
propr ated from th e GE N ER Al
FU ND
General

•
..
-t

"'

~
~

••
~

r g J 1 Clf er

Rutla1d
qvns on y
l
p ll

M

CtlOhf'cl
1 uary

"o'

0

200 00

Tota l For Mayor
400 00
Clerk Clerk T re asurer

Personal Se r v ces
Total For Clerk
Clerk Treasurer

1 200 00
1 100 00

Tr easu r er
Personal Serv •c es

360 oo

To ta l For Treasurer
J60 oo
Sol•c•tor Lega l Adv sor
Personal Serv ces
2 500 oo

Total Fo r Sol c tor

'} soc

Legal Adv sor
Elect on '&gt;

Persona l Serv ces
To ta l Fqr E:le ct o n s

000 00
000 00

Cou nc11
Personal Se r v ces

1 000 00
I 000 00

Total For Counc 1
G eneral Adm
Persona l Serv ces

Supp lies ana Mat e r a1 s
Oth e r
To t al for General

Adm

Tota l Fo r General
Gove rnm e nta l Se r v

00

6 Cll O oo

1 200 ao

IOOoodo
11 :wooo

2 1 960 00

Security of P erso n s
And Pro p er t y

Pollee De p ar tm ent
Per sonal Se r v1 ces
60 000 oo
Supple s and Mal e r a ls 29 050 00
Total for Po l ce
Department
89 050 oo

F1re De partm ent

I

J U N K (AI-:~
RYE S 1 R UCK fl d
P td..? T S
Ru and
7609 1
1 ? :76 1p

UR NI SH E D APT
n M d
dle por l ut 1 1 es pad P none
99? 3?05 bef ore 7 n e ven ng
I 9 J c

OL D f urn LJr e ce boxe s br ass
t eels or co pie e nouseho d s
W
c M 0 M ler R t J
Po neroy Oh o Ca l l 99? noo

TWO I::I E OR OOM S Forced a r
neat
s 1orm
w ndow s
ba se m e nt
dr veway
nva tabl e after January IS
Ca l 99 2 338 or 991 345 3
9 6tp

P
TO

(o

I\

ft o e

0 7 7 &lt;I

M eet 1gs wtll be hf' ld evuy
other M onda y 'II 8 00 p m
The Soc nl Room w II be open
to :1 I m em ber s l am y Jn d
quest s every M o nday n 1gh l

U N K l u os
c ompte e and
d l l 'wl' rf'd oour y~ d We p c k
P 1 o bodes a d buy nit
k nd s o t sc rap n clal s an d
r on R ct er s Sa lv 'l g (' S Rl
1?
f.:
I
Pomeroy Oh o
( 'I ll '99? 5 68
10 17 tc

e Cc
1 n

IA

c

OPE N N G SOO l

I t l n "s To vou
Novt ll y f nbr L 'ln(J Cr f s
tJ pr e
~f )(
c1
1
SGon
Eve l y
w II
OPE'
hrr
B gt~
Crcti Ce ll
wt u
w I t:H' an
pa c J..ccl l ui ot
be~rqa
5 w" Ll th ~ p1 f !'r
tor open ' 1 d 1
I! &lt;lt C

Pets For Sale

lost

Mob1le H0''1

For Sale

Help Wanted

Carrier Wanted
NEW HAVEN

The Daily Sentinel

I

I

Auto Sales

RETIR EMEN T FUN D

Payment of Prm c lpal
1 000 oo
Pa yment of In terest
3 675 00
Totl'll For General
Bond Ret F und
10 675 00
Add1f1ona1 Fund s
Sec t ion 15 That th ere be
iiiiJYp ropr a t ed
from
t.,e

In 1925 M1 s Muwm

Ma

Ft r guson was sworn m as
gO\ ern or of Texa s U1e nation s

second woman sk'lte clud
exccutl\ c F t\JC ctm s em 1 1 ~ 1
Mrs Nellie rm Joe Ross h 1d
FEDE RAL
REVEN UE becmne go' ernm of \Vj ommg
SHARING FU N D

40 ooo oo
Fir e D ept Fund
Butldmg
Other
8 000 00
Tot11 1 f or F tre D ep t
Fund Bu ld n g
8 000 00
Total All
Appropr1 at1o ns
l 033 9 16 00
Cap

tat Out l ay

Sec t 1on 17 And the v ttage
Clerk 1S hereby author l ed To
draw h s warrant s on ! he
V1ll age Tr ~asu r er for pay menls
from any ot th e fore go ng ilp
propr1at ons upon r Pce v 1 g
proper
certlf c ates
&lt;lnd
vouchers therefor appro 1.1e&lt;1 t) y
the board or off cers author ze d
by law to approve the sam e or
an ord1nan c:e or r eso lu t on o(.
council to make the ex
pendlture s prov ded lh&lt;'t
o
warrantss haU.be drawn or pad
for salar es or wages except tD
pers ons emp eyed by author t y
of antJ In acc ord ance w th taw or
ord i nan ce Pl"ov 1ded fun he r
that the appro pr at ons for
contlngen&lt; es c an on ly be ex
pended upon appea l of tw o
thtrcls vote of Coun c11 for terns
of upens e con stltut.ng a te9a 1
obligation aga nst the v It age
and for purp oses other than
those covered by t he o lher
spe-c1f1 C llppropr at on s here 1n
made
Sec t1on 18
Th s ord nan ce
Shill take eff ect at the ea r est
per1od allowed by l aw

In 1970 a nur sang home h tl

k11led ll 111 Mdi!Ctl&lt;l Oh o
A thoug ht f01 tht tim Mdl\
Baker Edd) founde1 of the
Chmhan Scwnce Church s ud
Spmt IS the real and 'te1 nal
I11t1 tte r
IS the unreal cUHi
temporal
Jt."s.us "'H id to th ('lll

Ht ndt r
tu l H's lr l ht thmg"' thcH l r('

l.us tr .. and to

(rod

tht

thm ~ "'

lh 11 a rt llod s
\nd th~.:\ 'H rt
Hnnu d H hun - :\1 uk 1• 1

HendN

t ll l l
l It stu lht
\\Ill&lt; h ll f' l lt "' 11 ~ and

tlung"
11 to ( od th ~ th 1111!' \\ tu c h ~~ f'
Gods Onf' \\tlU ]{1 ltkt to Hi l

960 C0RVAIR qoorl body good

r LJ n s tel r uses o I $200
o
lrH1 e f or sor1e tt1 nQ ot
t:Qua l v alu e Cil l even ngs
985 35 JS
1 8 51p
~s

CHEV E LL E 317
I sp
t Vl lr&lt;l c l o 1 re&lt;'r e 1d
l ort t art y &lt;H d
t er or $650
f'l1o r 99 ?J89
1 8 .tip

96 8

p~1s

9i' 1 DODGE C01onE' 4 d r 318
o o r au to a c g r een Good
qas
eilqe qood ru nn nq
co rl 0 1 Pt one 99 2 577
1 8 41C

19 13 OL 0~ Cu !I C1SS S Ex ce l e 11
co Ci on w lh '15 000 a c uil
,, l s
J50 e g , e w tn p s
Pb
~ r
CO ldton rlg
a1d
suJ,:.er sporl Wh eels Can be
"t&gt;t
at the cor er ot Chu r c h
~ 1c1
H ubbard Streets
n
Syr&lt;1cuse Ot.l o or c &lt;~t l 99 2 391J
aflerSp •
I 7 61p
19~~ C lEVY

od

O\

n pala 321
Pon~9J94

good
1J

I 7 5t p

11m
g n t mm h1" IHtd m
m l pt r"on1 111\ h . . rt~hh ml 19t&gt;t F-ORD 352 V 8 ~ng 1e J
bMre
ebu It ne w g askets
rr l ~t( n - P ope Ptu ~ X11
I
1 o cln n p stons r ngs

f he

appr op r at on

Th e '\tate of on o Me gs CoLJnty

"

$1'0 N ew c l utch plate throw
o rt ba r r n gs S25 3 speed
trans n o;s on S25 Call 1197
1 108 afte r s p n1
1 10 6fc
CO MET
19 000 m t es
a uto ma c t a s 1t55 on I kc
H. W Cal an~
l e M ! ] JJ 2
1 5 121P

103

Jane Wet Ton Clerk of the
Passed Jan 6 197 5
V l lag e of Po n eroy
n sad
Co unty Md 1 whose c ustDd y
Attest J~ne Wal t on
The F' tes J ournals and Records
Clerk o f Counci l
are requ red by the Laws of the
State of Oh o to be kep t do
CERTIFICATE
hereby
cer t•f Y
that
the RE~'00EL N G
p i LJTlb ng
Stctlon S70S 39 R C No for ego ng Arnua Appropr at o
IH' ill " Iii
21nd all ty pes of
appropr1at10 n measur e s ha l
Ordnan ce s tak en and copes
oe f'ri\1
rt&gt;pa r
Work
become effe'C11ve unt il ther e s fr om the or g na l Ord nann•
1 arilnteect
70 years ex
f1led Wlfh the appropn atmg no \oJ on t te Wtth s a1d V Jlaoc
.&gt; r ~ n ee Phon e 99'1 2.t09
luthOrlt ~_:;lhl coun t y aud 1tor
that the for ego 19 Or-d 1ance
I 3 l1tc
a certlflcate that the tota l ap
has been comp&lt;~red by ne w h
proprlat jon s from each fund... rhe sad o gnat ana that the
ta.ken tq.ge ther wtth all o t her same sa true a nd corr ect copy
outstan&lt;t'"g appropr.a trons do thereof
not
exceed
such
oft1 c al
W 1tness my s gnature lh1s 6Th '1 B ED ROOM modern furn shed
ntlmare or amend ed off1c1al da y pf oo.J anuary 19'15
ap t no pets Ph c-ne Rob ert
estimate
When
the
ap
H 1 Rae ne 949 3811
proprlatlon does not ex ceed
Jane Wa lton
1 10 hlp
IUCh off i cia l est mate
the
Clerk of the Vdlag eol
county IUd1tor shall g ve such
Po meroy
cert1f1care forl hwtlh
upon
t BE DR OOM ra l er P none 992
Me•gs Co unty On o
975 or 992 ?57 1
receiving
from
the
ap
J ,,
proprlattng authontv a ce rt 1f1 eQ { I J 10 ltc

Employment Wanted

For Rent

..

unfurn shed 7 ro oms
and ba t h n ce Phon e 992 27 80
or 99? 343'1
I 9 tfc

TRA I LER spa ce 2m Jes f r om
Harr 'ii On l( li e Ph one 742 3821
t 5 6tc

NEW

3 and 4 ROO M furn shed and
un t urn s hed
apa rt me nts
Pnon e 991 5434
&lt;1
2 ff c

PR I VATE meet ng room for
an y or gan zat on phone 992
) 975
3 11 tfc
FU R NI SHE D apt A dults onl y
M ddleport
Phon e 992 3874
11 14 tf c

307 Spnng Avenue
Pomeroy
992 2298
CONTACT
L01s Pauley
Branch M anager

L _ _ _ __ __:__~·-

TEAFORD

V1rqll B Tl'olf ord '1
Br okl'r
110 Mrrh,llliC St n•et
Po m l•roy, Oh1o ·1Sr69

$8SOO 00 - Two bedroom frame
hom e Bath pan el ng gas F A
furnace basement and ctty
wa t er

S20 000 00

New 3 bedroom

hom e
l1v ng room 13x 19
beaut ful k ! chen ce r am c t 1le

bath

A)ta ched garage and

a lmost one acre

$12 SOO 00 - Older 4 bedroom
hom e m o dern ba th na t gas
8 CH A NN EL Bearca t Sca nner fu rna ce new blo ck garage
and 1200 W n chester sh otgun
barn and large lot
Pho e 9 &lt;~9 4573
1 7 5tc
Ph one 949
1 9 3tc

BUILDING LOTS -

Several

LIST IT WI TH US FOR BE ST
RE SU LTS

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

GR OCERY bu s nes s for sal e
Bu dmg f or sal e or tease
Phone 773 5618 fr om 8 30 p m
to 10 p m for a ppomlment
3 10 tf c

COLO N IAL MAPLE ster eo
rad o am f m 4 speak er s 4
speed a ut oma t c c hanger
Bal&lt;' n ce S1 16 78
u se ou r
bLJdge term s Ca 1 99'1 3905
1 6 He

Sl EGLER and
MONOGRAM

FUEL OIL
HEATERS
Pnced for Ou1ck Sale
t New Wood Burnmg
HEATER-13995

1

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

-

PIANO
tuning and repa r
Char l es Sc o t t 992 37 18
12 I J 32t p

C BRADFOR D Auc t oneer

Comp l et e Se r v ce
Phon e 949 38'1 1 or 949 3161
Ra c neOho
Cr 1tt Brad f ord
5 He

SE PT IC tanks
e)(cava t• ng
dum p tru ck Phon e 742 3742
122026t c
REA DY M I X CON CRErE de
I v er e d r g ht to yo u r pro 1ec1
F as t
an d
easy
Fr ee
es t mal es Phone 992 3284
Goegle n R eady M x Co
M ddleport Oh1o
6 30 tfc
SEWI NG MACHINE Repa rs
serv ce all ma kes 992 2284
Th e Fabr c Shop Pomeroy
Author zed S nger Sales a nd
Se rv ce We sharp en Sc1ssor s
_,_ 3 29 tt c

Startmg Jan 16th

Blown Into Walls
and Atttcs
Free Esttmates

NOVELTY FABRIC
&amp;CRAFTS
Belpre, Oh1o
Ph 423 5061

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCTION

Larry Lavender
Phone 992 3993
Datly After 5 00

Modem Chemicals

PHONE
949 3832 or 843 2667

100 Kerr Street
Pomeroy Ohto
Phone (6141 992 2798

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING

STRIPPING , FINISHES
FURNITURE METALS-ETC
MODERN &amp;ANTIQUE

From a
Pamhng

shelf to a house
std1ng rooltng
paper hang1ng
kitchen
cabmets expert carpeting

etc

EXCAVAT IN G
dozer
backhoe
a nd
d tc h e r
water 11 ne foot e r s drain s
roads and bru sh cl ean n g no
tob too sma ll no weather too
bad Char les R Hatf 1eld R t 1
Phone 742 6092
Ru tl and 0
1 7 26tc
WE DO char can ng and fur
n ture r ef n sh ng reaso nably
p nced Phone 949 21 89
7 5tp
WALL paper hang ng and a ll
mter~or f n1sh ng Phon e 742
5081
12 29 2tp

- - - -- -

--------

Refln1sh1ng
Burntsh1ng

Repatr~ng

Can1ng

Upholslermg
We Also Buy Antiques
P1ck

P&amp; J
Hom e
Ma nl e nan ce
h ea ting
coo ling
refrlg
p l umb ng
electr c al ap
pt1an ces we serv1ce ani!l
repa r a n y t ng n the home or
bus n ess
215 N
Sec ond
M ddleport Phone 992 3509
1 9 30tc
F UR N I TURE Upholster ng
Rea sonable
ra t es
free
e st1mates
p ckup
and
de l very
prompt serv ce
Mowrey s Uphols te ry F'lo nt
Pl easan t W Va Phone 67 5
4154

12 31 26tp

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

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

POMI'O')Y..O
POMEROY- Abou t 2 yr
old - BRICK &amp; FRAME
about l acr e 4 BR 2 bath s
lo ve l y kttch e n &amp; d n ng
utt l tt y R rec space car

peted storage bldg J UST
$26 000
OLD RT 33 - Close n i2x65
Mob1l e Home wit h expando

I v ng R 3 BR bath ca r
peted a r cond l n1 ce acr e
all el ec tr c abou t 4 yea r !&gt;

old
NEAR LANGSVi LLE - 10

2 II tf c
EX CE L SIOR Salt Works East
Mam St Pomeroy All k nd s
of sa lt wafer pell e t s wa ter
nuggets blo c k sa lt a nd own
Oh10 R ver Sa lt Phone 992
389 1
6 5 tfc
CAR PE T ns ta lla t on $ 1 25 per
ya rd Ph on e R 1ch a r d West
84] 26 67

12 2' 26tp
H OME
Imp roveme nt
and
Repa r Ser v •ce Anyth ng
f1 xed around th e hom e from
ro of to ba sem ent You Wil l
I k e our work and rates
Phon e 742 5081
12 29 ttc

acres 1dea l for home or
tra1l er approved for se phc
tank good b lacktop r oad
close to mtne a r eas JUST
$5 800

TUPPERS

PLAINS

Beaut f ul bu ldmg s1te 1h
a cres wooded TP water tti
a new a r ea S3 500

ALL CASH FOR YO UR
HOM E LET US SE LL IT
992 2259or 992 2568

!POMEROY LANDMAR
{II.:
Jilek W C:il rsev Mgr
,.at
Phone 992 2181

BARGAIN

CENTER

Tuppers Plains, 0.
SEE US

REO bone coon h ound cherry
bed and d resse r PhOne 949

FOR GREAT
DISCOUNT

]'}2 1

ELEC T ROLUX Sweeper d el uxe
lllOdel
Co mpl et e w th all
c lean n g attachmen t s an d
uses paper b ags s 1ght ly used
but c l ears etnd looks 1 ke new
W II se ll for S37 25 cash or
terms ava lab e Phone 992
n s5

ON ALL
NEW and USED

APPLIANCES

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

C HE VY.), parts
NEW
t~ c t on bars h
1a c ker a r shocks
hook er
headers w th 3 col lectors for
small blo c k.
Call 992 3496
af ter 6 p m BEST O.eFER
10 17 tfc
Lt~ ~ewood

and FURNITURE
You Can Keep
Your Cool
at Kuhl's
Bargatn Center

-----------

CLO SE O U T on n ew Z19 Zag
sew ng mach nes For sewing
stretch tabncs b uttonholes
fa ncy des.gns etc Pant
sl gh Jy b l em shed Cho ce of
c ar ry•ng c as e o ~ se w ng
st and $49 80 cash or terms
ava I abl e Phone 992 7755
12 18 tfc

' AI Caulton ltght Rt 7
Tuppers

Plams

Oh1o

Phone 667 3858
OPEN WED THRU
SUNDAY9A M 7 PM

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

Real Estate For Scile
BUIL DING lot 80 ft frontage
by 165ft Th e second tot on left
on R 1\'erv ew Dr ve L n cotn
H. II Pomerny Oh10 If m
te res ted call 99 2 3230 after 5 p
10 t7t fc

We talk to you

PB

V 8 a r cond

uuto t ran s

1974 CHEVROLET % TON ..........s2495

much

6 Cyl

1971 FORD THUNDERBIRD ........ s2795
Ai r cond

A M FM a I pwr accesson es

cruse control

long wide

V 8 P S P B auto t r a n s a r cond ra d o

But Many New Items Added
I All Items Subject to Prior Sale I

SOFA FAIRSHAPE - - -- -- - 4995
SOFA WOOD ARM
25 00
GOLD SOFA
79 95
GOLD SOFA BED
\ 0039 9005
3--2 PC LIVING ROOM SUITES ea
3--TABLES solid oak all
99 95
WOOD WARDROBE
39 95
3NEWTABLES tALLJ
5995
3 BIG TABLES MEDITERRANEAN _ _J99 95

SALE
39 9S

s 00
10 00

s 00

65 00
25 00
50 00
59 95
20 00
3995
119 85

2 SOLID OAK DRESSERS ( EACHI ~-- 88 00
WHITE BABY CHEST
49 95
MAPLE CHEST
59 95

59 95
35 00
3995

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

139 95
149 95

22 CU FT SIDE BY SIDE,IWHITEl- -395 00
18 CU FT REFRIGERATOR
GR LIKENEW
26995
2-COPPERTDNE REFRIGERATORS
288 00
liKEREFRIGER!\TOR
NEW EA ~~:;::::;===- 149
GREEN
9S
FRIGIDAIRE REFRIGERATOR
169 95

319 95
229 95
200 00
9995
139 9S

SPECIAL OF SPECIALS
-2 Wh1te Fur Sw1vel Chatrs Regular 188 00
-Black Fur Small Sofa
-2 Glass Top Tables,
Sale
All Wtth Chrome Legs

2-30 GAS RANGES GOL"-- - -...,.,-..J59 95 119 9S
30 GAS RANGE GREEN
188 00 149 95
30 GAS RANGE WHITE
149 95 99 95
36 «lAS RANGE WHIT
149 95 9995
36 GAS RANGE WHITE
119 9S 69 9S
30 GAS RANGE BLUE
119 95 8800
40 ELEC RANGE WHITE_
1-40 ELEC RANGE WHITE
30 ELEC RANGE WHITE
36 ELECTRIC, GREEN LIKE NEW -

39 95 "95
129 95 75 00
179 95 139 95 I
219 95 179 95

2-BREAKFAST SETS 4 cha!rs--,----39 95
DARK OAK DINING ROOM SUITE
179 95
4 Chairs &amp; Table
8FT LONGPINETABLE -~---43995
W1lfi 6 Chatrs hke new
I-BREAKFAST SET, 2 CHAIRS
WITH OROP LEAF TABLE

29 •s
9995
269 95
39 95

2- STOKER MATIC COAL HEATERS EA 488 00 388 00
DUNCAN PHYoE TABLE WITH4 CHAIRS 319 9S 19195
ZENITH STEREO
139 95 100 00
PHILCO STEREO LIKE NEW
WITH AM FM RECORD PLAYER ___.288 00 188 00

~

19724 PINTO WAGON ................. '1695

If you test dnv e any new or used car on our lot
~ou'll rece 1ve FREE 1 2 lb box of s ugar No
purchase necessary Only licensed dnvers
may part1c1pate Offer good through Satur
day January 18 at 5 00 p m Ltmtt 1 21b box
per fam1l y
Oealershtp open weekdays

fill

6

oo

Saturday

4 cyl

Ph 992 2174

sp

luggage r ack

4 Dr

II 8 auto

P S P B fa ct atr

1971 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE.. ...... '1495
Sebr ng 4d r sedan small 118 auto P S P B

tills oo

1972 FORD TORINO 4 DR.......... '1695
II 8 auto

Pomeroy 0

PS P B

- - - - S P E C I A L S - - - -..

1973 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL.. ~5995
Mark IV extra clean 21 000 mtles fully equ 1pped

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1972 MER. MARQUIS ............. '2395
Brougham 4 dr hardtop fully equipped new rubber

ON YOUR DIAL

J

1972 Ford Vz Ton .......................... 12595
Squire Ranchero a tr cold t oned 302 V e

One l ocal ow ner

1973 Ford Mavenck....................... 12795
2 Dr Sedan 6 cy l pow er steertng au t o tr a ns Onl y 13 40 1 easy
m1les by o ne loca l owner Showroom clean

1973 Ford V8 Vz Ton ..................... s2995
P1 c kUp Power steen ng au to t r an sm

ss on power brak es Onl y

30 381 m les by one local ow ne r L 1ke new

1974 Pinto 3 Door ...... ................. '2495
Run abo ut On ly 7 435 care f u l m les
r ear lik e station wago n

4 cyl

economy

Door m

1970 Chev. V8 Caprice ................... 11595
'2 d r hardtop a r cond ftoned Ch evy s f nest and thi S one s
n1ce

1974CHEVROLET IMPALA

1972 MERCURY MONTEGQ .........~1695

14295

4 door 1 owner ca r and only 10 400 m les V 8 eng n e w th
automat1 c power ste ertng power brakes factory a r
tmted glass del uxe body and w heel ope n ng moldmgs
sand st one v nyl seats beau ttfu l dark red f m1 sh TRULY A

4 Dr

V 8 a uto

P

S

P

2 Dr

B fact atr

2 Dr H T 350 V 8 auto

1974 OPEL MANTA Was S2895

1969 Pontiac Gran Prix.. .........~ ..... 11195

NOW $2695

1972 PLYMOUTH FURY 111.. ........ ~1795

S22SO

I&lt;EITH GOBLE FORD

1971 TOYOT~ 4 CYL 4 SPD....... '795

3rd

•19666 FORD
FAIRLANE ............... '125
cy l
2 Dr

See Ray Riggs or Roger Riebel •·

RIGGS USED CARS
985 4100

Located on St Rt 7

day was about the same as
Wednesday, but school off1c1als
srud the totals are creeprng
up About 1,450 teachers and
35 OliO students have shown up
for classes
The c1ty has 5 OliO teachers
mcludmg 4 OliO belongmg to the
CEA wh1ch bargams for all of
them The school system has
100 000 st ud ents attendmg
classes at 170 schools

N BA Stand ng s
B y Uo l ed Pre ss tnte rnat on at
Easter n Conference
AtlantiC DIVISIOn

w

I

pet

w

I

pet

g b
2
3 '
9 '

g b
6
71 '2
11' '2
23 1 1
9 b
1

2 '
3
g b

Go ld en STate
26 12 684
Seattle
19 20 487
7
Por tl and
17 21
447
9
L os A nge l es
17 23 425 10
Phoen x
15 21 405 10
Thursdays Results
Bo s on l OB Buffa lo 100
Wus n ngton 102 Hous ton 94
Go ld en St 132 New York 96
Frtday s Games
Los Ange les a t Boston
Hou st on at New Orleans
C evel and at Bulfalo
KC Omah a at Ph l ade Iph a
A tlanta at Ch cago
Det r ott at M /waukee
Por lland at Phoen x
Go ld en State at Sea ttle

2

2

ABA Sta n d1 ngs
By Un1ted Press Internati onal
Ea st
w I pet 9 b
27 11 I ll
Ken tu c k y
28 12 100
New York
17 27 386
Sl LOUIS
11 30 268
Mem ph s
9 30 231
V1rg n1a
west
w 1 pet 9 b
Denve r
34
5 872
San An tOniO
24 20 54 5 12 2
Utah
20 24 455 16 2
lnd ana
17 21 447 16 2
SanD ego
16 23 410 18
Thur~ttav s Results
Kentucky 113 St Lou s 116
l nd ana 121 Memph s 112
Fndav s Games
Denver vs V rg n1a
at Norfo lk
san o ego al N ew York

Chester, 0

Court halts
legislature
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - A
package of SIX partisim bills
Democratic state legislators
hope to pass and send to
Democratic Gov John J
G1lhgan before he leaves office
next Monday has been Jeopard·
JZed by a court order tern·
porar1ly blockmg 1ts enactment
on
constitutional
grounds
A panel of three JUdges from
the Franklrn County Court of
Appeals late Thursday granted
a temporary restramrng order
agamst certif1cahon of the
Democratic legislation by Sen·
ate President Pro Tempore
Oliver Ocasek D-Akron
A hearmg was scheduled
today on whether the restram
rng order would be made
permanent
The legiSlation, mcludmg a
congressional redistricting bill
designed to g1ve Democrats
two solid new diStricts m
Columbus and CinCJDnah and
perhaps two more rn western
OhiO was ready for final floor
action today Each bill has
already cleared one chamber
of the legiSlature
Proceed With Passage
Democrats, controlling both
the House and Senate, said
they would proceed w1th
passage of the bills They said
they d1d not know whether they
would seek to overturn the
Franklin County Court order m
another court
Time IS Important Dem&lt;»crats want to enact the bills
before lncorrung Republican
Gov -elect James A Rhodes
takes office next Monday and
brrngs With him the threat of a
vetn
The court order was granted
by three Republican JUdges at
tl!e request of Franklin County
Prosecutnr George C Smith on

Bicentennial: Between Two Armies

t

992-2196
Middleport 0.

behalf of Republican legislators Smith was the unsuccessful Republican candidate
for attorney general last fall
The order enJOins Ocasek
from signing any bills now
under study m the General
Assembly if Republican Lt
Gov John W Brown refuses to
certify them II also enJoins the
Senate clerk from glvmg them
to Ocasek and restrams Gilligan from Sigrung any bills not
certified by Brown
Senate Republicans had
sought the order on grounds a
new Senate rule pernutting
Ocasek tn certify the bills
VIOlates the state constituiJon
Senate Mmor1ty Leader Michael J
Maloney, RCincmnatl, contends the
constitution authorizes only the
lieutenant governor to certify
b!lls approved by the General
Assembly
Has Not Indicated
Brown has not ilxbcated
whether he Will certify them if
they clear both chambers, but
there has ~n speculation he
nught delay action untU after
Gilligan leaves office next
Monday
Until Thursday afternoon s
court deciSIOn tl!e Democrats
were right on schedule for
getting the bills through As1de
from
congressional
redlstr1ctng, they would
- Limit the power of the
secretary of state to appomt
and dismiss members of
county boards of election
-Transfer collection of the
state mcome tu lrom the
Department of Taxation to lhe
state treasurer's office, saving
some 300 full-tune and parttime Democratic jobs
- PrOVIde for permanent
voter registration as well as
mail regJStrahon and house.tc&gt;house registration wtth ne1g1J..
borhoodreg!Strars rece1vmg 10
cents a voter, paid for by the
state
-Transfer a d1v1s1on of
consumer protection from the
state Commerce Department
tn the slate attorney general s
o!f1ce sa~ about 22 DemO.
cratic jobs
- AuthOI'JZe unemployment
compensallon benefits to workers Idled by strikes m rela led

'I

68 Chev. BA 4 Dr., V-8, auto., P.S••••••••••• '9p5
67 Cadillac H.T. Sedan, full power, an••••••••'995

standard trans

1965 FORD 4 DR WAGON ........... '125

First session
in strike set

of I n e m Ponft ac Beauhful ca r

See Fred Blaettnar, Darrell Doddrt II
or Dan Thompson

PS P B

2 Dr hardtop V 8 auto P S P B fa ct atr

Bos to n
25 13 658
Buffalo
14 16 600
New Yor k
'12 17 564
Ph lade ph a
16 23 41 0
Cen tral 0 VI SIOn
w 1 pet
Wr~ s h n g ton
28 12 700
Cl evela nd
20 16 55 6
'1 0 19 5 13
Hous ton
Atla nta
17 24 415
New Orlea ns
3 34 081
We st ern conference
Midwe st DI VISIOO
w I pet
22 18 55 0
D etro f
Ch cag o
20 18 526
KC Omah a
21 22 488
M lwa u kee
18 20 474
PaCifiC DIVI S on

Ha rdtop Top

1972 CHEVROLET IMPALA .......... '1795

CREAM PU FF

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Re
presentahves of the Columbus
Education Assoc1atwn and the
Columbus Board of EducatiOn
were to meet w1th a federal
mediator today !or the !1rst
ser1ous contract negotiatiOn
sesswn srnce pubhc school
teachers went &gt;n stnke
Monday morrung
The CEA asked Federal
Mediator Joseph P Santa
Enuna to resume negotiations
after learmng leaders of the
new Ohio General Assembly
proposed grantmg extra school
subs1d1es early th1s year
State Rep M1ke Stinz1ano
D Columb us
sa1d
the
add1bonal
sta le
funds
would
be
more
t11an
enough to g1ve Co lu tnb us
teachers the 12 per cent wage
mcrease they sought When
negot1atwns broke off Satur
day pnor to the stnke the l\10
stdes were nearly 8 per cent
apart w1th the CEA saymg
there no other money
ava ilable
SIIIIZiano sa1d leg1slatwn to
proVIde the add1t1onal $80.90
million rn state money to local
schools this year w11l be rn
troduced before the end of the
month
nus appropnation •part of
a predicted surplus from fiscal
year endmg June 20 1975
means $3 5 to $3 7 m1llhon w1ll
be earmarked for the
Columbus school system
accordmg to the OhiO
Leg1slal!v e Servtce Com
rruss1on ' the legislator S31d
• W1th this additional money
the board now has more than
enough to meet th e teachers
request
Ill grantmg a temporary
restramw g order Tuesday
Franklin County Common
Pleas Court Judge Jay C
Flowers ordered both s1des to
continue negotiations He 1s to
hold a Saturday mormng
heanng on the sclv&gt;&lt;&gt;' l)oard's
request that tea~.~ he or
dered back to work Both s1des
met separately w1th the
mediator Tuesday so he could
evaluate therr poSJbons and
Santa·Enuna sa1d then that
they
are
hopelessly
deadlocked at th1s tUlle '
The CEA sa1d attendance by
students and teachers Thurs

of

1973 FORD GRAN TORINO ......... '2295

Smith Nelson Motors, Inc.
500 E Matn St

74 Olds Cut. Sup. Cpe., a1r, sharp ...........14795
74 Cadillac Cpe. DeVIlle, full power, alr•••• ~'7500
74 Cadtllac Cpe. DeVIlle, full power, au •••• '7500
74 Olds 98 L. Sedan, power, a1r ............ '6200
73 Vega Hatchback, 4 sp. radiO ............ 12195
73 Olds 98 LS Sedan, full power, alr....... '459573 Dodge Pol Cus. 4 Dr. HT., pow., air ••• '2895
73 Olds Cut. Sup. HT Cpe. power, air ......:3295
72 Olds 98 HT Sed , v;oof, a1r .............. 13495
72 Olds Toronado Cpe., V-roof, pow. a1r ••••• '329S
72 Chev. Imp Cpe., V.S auto. P.S.•.••••.•• '2495
72 PontiaC Cat. HT C!le. !lOWer, atr ••••••••'2695
71 Chevelle Mal. Cpe., v;oof, an .............11995
71 Volkswagen 411 4 Door, auto........... '1695
70 Olds 98 Hoi. Sed., power, a1r ••••••••••• '1495
70 Olds 88 Roy. Cpe., pow., an, v;oof , .... ,11495
70 Olds Cut. Cpe., V-8, auto., PS........... !1495
69 Olds 88 HT. Sed., v-roof, ai~ ••••• ~,........'995
69 BUick RNena, power, alr ••••••••••••••••• 11195
69 Ford LID HT. Coe. V roof, air ••••••••••• '995 '
68 Pont1ac Bonneville H.T. Sedar., power, air '595

as much as $1 000 on new 1975
$SAVE$ trucks
and cars
$SAVE$ ~~~y many dollars on OffiCials'
$SAVE$ ~:r~anuary Clearance Used

Au to Cl ean

V 8 auto tran s P S P B a 1r co nd rad to

Conl!nued from page 2
brief statement of the Lynchburg Raid but will walt and see if th1s IS prrnted Ill January 64 I
enlisted rn Compan y A 2nd West Vrrgm1a Cavalry Brother Edwrn was m Company F'2d Vt.rgmla
When we (he and other oold1ers) came back from Lynchburg we boys betng hWlgry we fed"
great many of them Mother saJd she got up at four o'clock m lhe mormng and commenced o cook
for tl!em and cooked!two days when the flour ran ou.
Febru u-v 10 1

WMP0/1390

'

1974 PINTO 4 CYL .................. '2295

•

lots of Items Sold Out-

standard transm ss 10n

USED CARS
·--·---------------------

Extra Cl

1970 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE ...... ..S1695
4 Dr

302

1971 V.W. BUS.......................!l395

1971 PONTIAC CATALINA ............ s2195
40r

11 000 miles

stan dard trans

1971 FORD
%V TON
.................. '1695
bed
8

OPEN EVES 8 00 PM
POMEROY OHIO

TWIN&amp; FULLS!
Maple Wa Inul ¥¥nne.
poster beds

Uke -a person.

p 5

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

GREEN WASHER &amp; DRYER hkenew
299 9S
GE WASHER DRYER, COPPER LIKE NEW'-~:99 95
MAYTAG DRYER
6995
MAYTAG DRYER
79 9~
, MAYTAG DRYER
125 00
MAYTAG AUTO WA&gt;ru: R
5 DO
2 NEW RANGE HEADS
'4 WHITE &amp; COPPER, EACH
25 DO

--------- -

9 Pas s
more

-AIIJ

...----TRUCKS--.....

1973 CHEVY KINGWOOD WAGON .~3595

Local 1 ow ner car &amp; on y 20 000 mt l es automat c tran s
rad to w h1te wa ll t res v ny l m ter or sharp a s a tack
Orange f ntsh

Top Freezer Frost Free

KUHL'S

For test drtvmg one of these cars at Sm 1th
Nelson Motors tn Pomeroy

1973 DA TSUN 12002 DR CPE

CHAIRS
WAS
PATCHWORK ROCKER _-:-_ _ _ _ 69 95
1 GREEN CHAIR
19 95

ELAND
608 E
REALTY
MAIN

frOP RIGHTHfRf

actual m tl es orange f msh v nyl mter or

7

CRE MEAN S CONCRE TE de
I ve red Mon da y
t hrough
Saturday
and
even ng s
Phone 446 114 2
6 13 lfc

FREE SUGAR!

2 Door 4 speed transmission bucket sea t s r adto 5 000

DOZER work land c learing by
th e a c r e hour y or contract
Fa r m ponds
roads
et c
Large dozer a nd operat or
w t h over 20 yea r s ex
per ence Pul l n s Excavat ng
Pomeroy on,o Phon e 991
247 8
12 19 t fc
W LL tr m or cut t r ees or
shru bbery
clean
out
basement s alli es et c 94 9
J2'l or 7 42 4441
12 15 26t c

9- The Daily Sentrnel, Middlepori·Pomeroy 0

up Serv1ce Available

__ _ ___ _

- ---

FO R SALE or trad e on pt ckup
or van
1967
1 !on
In
t er nat ona l
tru ck
w th
a um num furn tur e van 8
p y t r es P s
P B
50 ooo
m les Pnon e 99 '1 3509 or see at
M dd eport
308 Page S
1 6 6fc

BED F R AME
$ 10
wh t e
headboard $20 ref $40 c h est
of d raw er s S15 Ca ll after s p
m 992 7889
9 2tc

-

Fire Retardant
Insulation

locafton s $1500 00 up

J HOLS T EI N cows and 1 helfer
Pnon e 949 2119
1 9 ] IC

REFR IGERATOR d1nett e set
range st ud 1o couch bedr oom
su t platform rocker at ltke
ew An tique ch a r s ant qu e
b edroom su 1 and man y other
terns Pho 1e q9 2 3457
I 9 61 c

NE1GLER Bl.IILD JN G SUP
PLY FOR
REMODEL IN G
A ND K I TC HE N CA BINET S
CA LL GUY NE I G HLER
RAC I NE OH 0 PHONE 949
]604
2 19 26tc

SEWING AND
CRAA ClASSES
Enroll Now

SEPTIC
T A N KS
c leaned
Moder n San Tat on 99 2 3954 or
992 7349
9 18 t f c

Burl ng
2 BEDROOM S ham some c arpet ng f ur
n1ture m c luded $10 800 00

For Sale

"'

Complete plumbrng &amp;
healing serv1ce and
general ~heel metal
works
Free
Eshmates
Phone 949 5961
Emergency 992 3995
or 992-5700

16 A FARM - J m from
Harrtsonv I e large ho use
elec hea t ~ pond s Owner
w II t ake a nd con t rac t

TRAILER space 2m l es from
Pom eroy Rt 14 3 Phon e 992 SJ 000 00 - Old one floor 5 room
5858
house w t h nat gas and c t y
o 27 He wa ter on n ce corner lot

1957

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp;HEATING

ca rpeted 3
cond t on ng

a r
117 500 00

.

HElL

All e lec

BR

Business Services j

'---~ -

Strout Realty

F UR NI S HED
apa rtm en t
su table
uf t es furn shed
tor we work ng m en or
r e1 r ed couple L v ng roo m
k1 che n showe r and ba t h On
man h ghway Mason w va
Phon e 773 5147
tO 27 tt c

1972 SU PER B ee Tl e Vo lk s
wrtct en Ph on e 9'11 398 1
8 IOt c

G t\l unt o 11m t h ngs \\ htch lll

co py Df
mea sure

I H OUSE

197'1 G T ] 80 Suzuk
~8 '18 aft er 5 p m

I

ad u l ts

I 9 1f c

NJ\ N TED old upr Jl
p an os
1 y
conctt on
Pi'l y n 1 ~1 0
~en f r s lloor on y Wr t e to
d q ve d r ec ons To W tt en
P rt o Co
Box
6H
S r~ d s
( I o 19 16
1 7 6t p

"

B ED R OOM tra ler
only Pnone 992 332 4

H P '~ d tor at

IN CO M E T n
r r t'p&lt;HCd !loll
Feder et a d Still C' 1 ;~xtcs w 1
be do ne bv
~ ppo
~e n
only Pl ec'lse pho 1 99? ~~ ? or
J r [M ALE
AKC
York sh e
se eM r s Wca cl 'IEtlln L l ur e
Te r cr pups wormed a 1d
Cl If Rd P an er oy 0 o
l£'1 po r :~ry vacc n al o r
7
1 J ) OI L
w Ek 0 d SIUO ertc l
PI on e
9B5
00
F OR your
0 I Of M
f..
Cosmr- cs P! OH OROW N S
9 97 511]

B0 N D

'}

mn k rs and
10d C' s o f mob l e
omes
PI one a rt 1 code 0 I J 4'13 953 1
4 3 tr c

C "\

Personal Serv 1ces
1 500 oo
Sup p lies and Mat er als 2 000 00
Cap tal Outlay
30 000 oo
Other
2 080 00
Tota l For F re
Department
35 580 oo
Total For Secur1ty o-f
Perso n s and Pro p er ty
124 630 00
Ptann1ng Comm s~ii On
Personal Ser v 1c es
l ooo oo
Total For Pl anning
ro m miss on
3 000 00
UllllfV L1Qhflng
SH OO T N G 1 'IT ch Ra e e Gun
Personal Serv 1ces
I S ooo oo
Cl ub Sunda y 1 p rr A !&gt;sor ted R E 0 I R I S 1-:! Se ller w l h wn te on
Total fo r Street
0 es t 1n Lan g s v li e a r ea
11ea1s and la c ory cho ke yuns
0 ll y
f.! ewa d Cnll 7 12 5909
L ghtmg
IS 00 0 00
Transportation Fac111f1 es
I 5 6l p
11 n tc
Street Pav ng
Per sona l Serv ices
27 500 oo AUt.. T ! ON
fl u sday
&lt;1 d
Supplies and Ma te r a ls 5 000 00
Sillurday
gh t 7 p n
rt
~
Oth er
3 651 oo
Ma son At c on Hor on St 1
Total Fo r Stree t
Ma son w Va Cons g , L 1 ~ T RA L E R tor r en o sal e 3
Paving
b e oroo s
u nfu 1 s l e d
16 151 00
we co' e P t o e
104
7J
Total For Str ee t
I I CS pa d IOCil ed a t 1 ew
5 171
Construct on Mamt
Mo b l e
Ho e
Pe~rk
n
10 J Ti c
Burt 1 qQn
P t10ne 991 775 1
and Repa r Fund
46 l SI 00
State High way Fund
12 3 1 tt c
Per sonals Ser v ces
500 00
N OT I CE OF APPO IN TME N T
Cap1ta t Outl ay
" 500 oo
Total For sta te
CASE N O 11 387
Estate of J('rry Culw e ll
HIIJhWa'y I mp Fu nd
5 000 00
Decea se d
Sec tion 6 That t her e be ap
No t ce s I e r eby Q vcn t h~ t
propr l ated
from
th €
CEMETERY FUND
W t " 1 Cu l w c l o t R R J
A l baw Oh o has bee
du l y
PubliC Health Serv 1ces
appo n ted ad nm s 'ltor of he
Ce m etery Ope ra r 1on
Es t ;, c
of
Jer r y
Cu l w e ll
And Maintenance
In
Per sonal Serv ic es
10 000 00 d ece &lt;~ S f'd 11t e o f Me q s Coun ty
Supplies and M ate r al s 1 &lt;~00 00 01 0
Cred tor s are r equ r ed to f l e
Total For Cemetery
the r e ta 1 s w 1t h sn d f d ue 1ry
Op erat1on and
Maintenan ce
11 400 oo w th n four 1 o 'II s
Dr~ t f'd lh s 6ft d;~y o l Jru u&lt;~ y
Section 9 That t h ere be &lt;lp
Age 8 or Older
propr l ated fro m t h e WAT E R 1P7S
(REVEN UE ) FUND
M rt 1 1 1 g 0 Webs er
Probr~ l e J 1 dg e o f scl d Cou
,
Wat er Pumpm g
Pers on a l Se rv ices
'10 ooo oo
M e q s Co u '' ~"" Of o
0 7 'J J Jt c
Supf)IIU and Mater a ls 12 000 oo I I
1
Total F or Wat er
111 c~u·t St Pomeroy
Pump ing
J~ 000 00
Water OI Si rtb ut an
Phone 992 2156
Per sonal Serv1c es
20 ooo oo
The
Almanac
Supplies and Mat er a ls 18 000 oo
Cap ital Outla y
4 000 oo
Bv United Press lntcrnatlnnul
Other
5 000 oo
fod IJ 1s F11daJ Jan 10 the LARG'E co mpany n need of tu l
Total For Water
ne p er sonn el No layoffs
Ol str1b UI10n
47 000 00 lOth day of 1975 w1t11 105 ( o
poss b le ea r 1 1g up o $150
Total for Water
wee kly
G uod
tulur e
fo lio\\
System OperatiOn
79 000 00
Ava l1b e for r g ht person
The moon IS app1 oach1ng 1ls
Adm.n1strahon
- Wate r
Cnll 675 J490 tor appo n tme 1 t
800 oo ne\1 phase
Person a l ServIces
1 9 Me
Debt Serv ce
4 1,{100 oo
Total For Admm strat on
I he mormng s tm s 11 e Mars WAITRES SE S n ee ded app l y n
- Water
41 800 00 and Sa turn
perso1 Crows S eak H ou se
Capital Outla y
550 000 00
Po ne r oy
The evemng star s are Mer
Total For Adm n ls tr at on
1 7 lf c
550 ooo oo CUI\ Venus and Juptter
- Water
Total For wat er
1 hose bm n on th 1s date c~ re
{ Re\' enue) Fund
670 800 00
Sewer Maint enan ce
under
Ihe ~a g n of Cci Pl u.: or n
Personal Services
12 000 00
Ec11
h
\m cr 1&lt; ,1n pdtt wt 1965
PLYMOU TH
H.•eds
Supf)l les and Mater ats 18 000 oo
Total For Se w er
ra
daor
ax
l
e
md
r
1 gne
Ethan 1\lleu \Hl S born Jan 10
vork w II r &lt;lde for a vch c le
Ma ntenan ce
30 000 00
1738
1111 1 w II gr l me 10 m es a
Adm1n1 strat1on
day Phon e 99'1 3 146
- Sewage
On
thr
s
da;
w
lul
;
,
l
tm
y
Personal Serv ces
500 oo
9 2tp
In 1861 F1ond,! seceded f1 om
Debt Se rv ce
44 300 00
Total For AdmtniStrarfon
the Un 1on
W H OL E ~AL E Va lu e
97') Vega
- Sewage
44 BOO oo
Wllgo n
rad a l s d eluxe
n
h 1920 the I edguc of Nat101 s
Tota l Fo r Sewer
er or rad o s 595 1 r11 ca l
(Revenue) F und
74 800 00 t:{l rne mto bemg as Uu~ T! ent\
992 7805
Sectmn 13 That th er e be
1 8 .lie
appropria ted
from
Th e of Versailles went mto effect

G E N E R AL

!ur n shed aJJ
and
ba h
ut 1 I es pa d
No
en dr en or pe ts Pnon e 992
5810 o
8 1J East Man
Pomeroy
' 5 61 p

Wanted To Buy

EFFECT IV E I 6 IS

SHOO T N G M a c t
CubSn d ly

1 ROOM

(fl.\ I ':.':. !!.'!&gt;SF-OR

NOTICE TO
EAGLE
CLUB MEMBERS

Real Estate For Sale

ROO M un furn tshed house J BED ROOM house $500 down
I llsemc nt and
yard
315
S90 month P t on e 9cn ] 975 or
Sprmg Avenu e Re f e r en ces
9Y2 2T7
P t on e 9q '} 7660
1 3 lfc
8 lfc
7 R OOM house ba th a 1d
CO UNTRY Mob te Home Park
exce l ent ne ghbo hood wall
R t JJ Ten m l es north of
to wal carpe l ng
arge tot
Pomeroy
La r ge lot s w th
QMage r easonab le ut 1 t es
c on c re t e pat os
s dewatk s
C.J I 99? 3877
ru
er s
rt nd
o ff
s tr ee t
9 tf G
park n g Pt on e 991 7479
12 31 lf c

J 1 ul y
co 1 Ps
w tn
sad
rc 1 ers
9 I c Tl f.' day and tl e mo1 h we sha I
no l o ro c t
A U C1 O N
S\LE
s 1
I f o
ou
h art
yo
w 1
trdwJ a
7 &lt;11 7 p
)
lv ly S&lt;&gt; i'l y
N
Sec a n
M dd cpor
A
\h..Pw I ovcand r cn em ber you
P&amp;. J Otl d
1 n I Enci s
•Hry IC1y
98 (
~.HJ y n sse d b y w l e F a ye
J
Mol e r
Ell~
CONSIG N ME N l S w r com
11
) s e 5 il d f3ro h er s
P&amp;
Auc o
5 No t
0 li p
Srco d M d 1 1 0

Servtce s

11
,.

For Rent
"t

m

I 9

s

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel C!assifieds

IN O V N G n en o y o f Orv 1 e
W r~ Son
who passed awlly
' ua y 0
Y!1

M c Dn' el s Custo , Hu l et cr
S f&lt;lH' il ld Fe der &lt;l ll sp cc l o
K I beefs a1 d 1 nq&lt;;
Pho c
Ed l h Me On
I DO
SfiJ

Governm e nta l
Ma yor
Per sonal Serv ces

I

In Memory

10 7 (

•

/

•

1.2 S Ct 1 1.2 ! r y

r&lt;'l c tory
Sund'ly

/

OU students
Food stamps
teaching at
to come in
Pomeroy school more dollars
Student teachers begmmng
at Pomeroy Elemental y
School on Tuesday Jan 7 !or
the wmter quarter !1om Ohto
Umvers1ty were Beverly Ann
Brown Grade 2 Peggy S
DeN~ro, Spt Ed I Mary H
Gonder Grade 3 Thomas S
Gumpf, Grade 6 Debra L
Hedges Grade 2 Rebecca J
Scnma Grade 5 Sp Ed II
and Sharon L Sturbo1s Grade
3

Superv1smg teachers w the
order hsted are Mrs Ida D1ehl
Mrs Demse G1bson Mrs
Nonga Roberts Mrs Helen
W1lhams
Mrs
Eleanor
Blaettnar Mrs Mary Hysell
2nd pt and Mrs Grace Cheney
ls i pi and Mrs Mae Young
Ohw Umvers1ty superv1sor
!or the student teachers IS Dr
Lester M1lls

rndustnes
Opposed On Two Fronts
The last bill was opposed on
two fronts Thursday 1n
testimony before the House
Conunerce and Labor Com·
nuttee
Ralph R Adams of General
Motors Corp represenhng tl!e
OhiO Chamber of Commerce
said employers should not have
their unemployment com
pensation funds used to f1nance
strikes agamst them
It 1s not a question of
whether stnke·!dled umon
workers are gomg to rece1ve
support or benefits of some
kmd ' Adams sa1d
The
question IS who IS gomg tn pay
!or 1t '
Adams added the proposed
legiSlation would upset the
balance m labor negol!atlons
'The !awls not neutral if 11
Ullposes heavy lax penalties on
tl!e employer who IS Wlable or
unwilling to avo1d a strike by
granting the umon s de
mands " he sa1d
It would dlscr lmmate
against mull!-plant employers,
many of whom have displayed
confidence m and contributed
to the Ohio busmess clbnate by
expanding operations m the
state'
James
Z
Shrefler,
representing the Wa~r &amp;
Swasey Co , Cleveland, saJd his
company's reserves of $1 1
million could be w1ped out m
seven weeks 1f one of 1ts
diVISIOns employmg 200
workers were shut down
'ThiS bill would Ullpose a
hardship on employers but m
the long run would be
detrimental to the very people
11 was mtended to protect '
Shrefler srud

WASHING10N - The U S
Depar tmen t ol Ag ri cul ture
1USDA) w1ll replace the
current 50 ce nt $2 and $5 food
stamp sertcs w1th a $1 $5 and
$10 senes on March I
USDA s Food and Nulr!I!On
Serv1ce iFNS ) sa1d the larger
denommatlons were prompted
by the volume of coupons
needed to meet mc1eased food
slamp allotme nts paper short
ages mcreased productwn,
and sh1ppmg costs
The new food stamps brown ($1) purple ($5), and
blue gteen ($10) - use a more
soph!sl! ca ted des1gn to deter
counterfeiting They are 1n
corpora ted 1nto redes tgn ed
re,alued coupon books
All current coupons not
ISSUed by Feb 28 1975, Will be
collected and destroyed FNS
said thai food stump recipient&gt;
must spend their current food
stamps by June 30, 1975 since
retailer~ will nut accept ony old
coupons after that date
Authom.ed food stamp stores
w1ll use the $1 coupon for
rnakmg change mstead of the
current 50 ce nt coupon Credit
shps &lt;lf 99 cenL' or less will be
Issued !or cha nge for food
stamp purchases under $1
FNS adv ised retailers to
1edeem the current food
coupons &lt;:.~s soon as posslble
banks wtll contmue to accept
them for &lt;edemptlon until Aug
I , 1975

Coates goes on
off shore tour

67 Pont1ac F11eb1rd, 400-V.S, 4 sp........... '695
66 Pontiac Cat. 4 Dr., V8, auto, P.S.•••••••• '495

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
You'll Ltke Our Quality Way
of DoinQ Business"
9112 5342
GMC FINANCING
POMEROr
Open Evenmgs Untii6:GO-TII5p.m.

11

wash.tngton

'1

It

Report

lI

r-----------------------~I
I

f

Ill one of the most bnportanl
pieces of legislation passed In
the 93rd Congress (which
would benefit Soulhea81ern
Ohio), the Congress authorized
$19 9 bllhon through fiscal year
1976 for the variety of federal·
a1d highway construction,
mcluding an accelerated rural
road bwldrng program
This new law autl!orlzes an
additional $200 million In FY 76
from the Highway Trust Fund
for the Federal-aid primary
system rn rural areas, and $100
m1Ihon for the secondary
system m rural areas It also
authoriZed an additional ~
m1lhon during FY 76 under a
new federal grant program for
constructwn
and
bn·
provements of off system
roads, Including such projects
as the replacement of bridges
and the ehnunation of roadside
obstacles and hazardous
routrngs An' off-11ystem" road
1s defined as any toll free road
or bridge rna rural area that Is
not part of the Federal-aid
system, but IS maintained by a
public authority and open to
public travel
Under the bill, additional
federal highway funds will be
apportioned to each State
based on three characteristics
of the State compared to tl!e
Nation as a whole one-third
for land area, one-third for
rural popUlation, and one-third
for off -11ystem road mileage
These formula allocations
must he detennlned no later
than January 1 preceding tl!e
fiscal year for which the funds
were appropriated Moroever,
each Slal.e.'B off-aystem
mileage uas used In tbe formula must be detennlned as of

MARIETTA - Mamtta
College geology maJOr and
petroleum student Robert
Coates •f Pomeroy recently
parltclpated m a field tr1p to
offshore dr!lhng !ac1hties 111
the Gul f of Mex1co A group of
12 students and two Marietta
professors toured severa l
offshore ngs to supplement
classroom work m a course on
dnlhng des1g n w1th on-s1ght
observa lt on of workmg
fac1hlies
The tnp was made possible
by several ot l companies, m
ONE CA~L CLOSER
cludmg Marathon Chevron
EXPERIENCED ONL V.
and Texaco plus the Pressure MINIMUM GUARANTEED
WEEKLY DRAW AGAINST
Control Sc hool of l.omSiana COMMISSIONS
State UmverSIIy
N~t1onatty
advert sed com
l ook ng for specialty
Coates a 1971 graduate of pany
sa l esman such as home lm
Me1gs H1gh School 1s the son of provemen ts mutual funds
nsu r an(e land franchises
Mr and Mrs Robert Elberfeld, ve
nd1ng
freezer
p l an
educat on paint franchises
Pomeroy

N. W. COMPTON, 0. D.
ur rOMETftiST

OFFICE HOURS 9.30 TO 12, 2 TO&gt; !(;LOSE
AT NOON ON THURS J- EAST COURT ST,
POMEROY.
i

e tc Our top producers earn
S25 000 to SSO 000 c ommissions
per year Must b,. able to
trave l utens1vely and !'lave
good car Call John Vander
Kuyl t ol l tree for atldltlonal
lflfor:ma t on and personal
mtervtew at ( 800 ) 621 1006

(8001 621 81 82 (800) 621 7501

P lease t all s unday
1975

Jan

'2

By Clarence

Miller

I
I

I

the end of the calendar year
preceding the year In which the
funds are appoi'tloned Thla
latter determination lll\llt be
certified by tl!e Governor and
Is subject to the Secretary'•
approval State allotmenll
must be dlatributed to each
county on a lair and equitable
basis
Significant to the Tenth
District, the Public Workl
Committee recommended In
Its report that special fllll·
pbasls be given to rural roadll
In areas which are sub·
Btantlally affected by mining
and power generation activities which have been accelerated
to
meet
national energy demanda
I have COillistenUy pointed
out the bnportance of good
roads tn the continued
economic
growth
of
Southeastern Ohio Special
emphasis should, Indeed, be
given tn Southeastern Ohio
roadll which are serving new
Industrial sites and rural
population centers

LARRY'S
MOBILE HOME
SAl FS, INC.
"Featuring
KirkwoOd
Gowmaor
Cameron
12' &amp; 14' Wide Up
To 70' Long
24' Wide Sectlon•l
Homes up to 65' Long

SERVICE
AFTER SALE
Winter Hours: 9 •·"'·
to6p.m.

Mon. Thrll Sat.

Qond SunclaJS
PH. 992·7777
POMEROY, 0.
I

�...
8-TheDaUySentrnel Middleport Pomero) 0 Fr1day J m 10 1975
oRo·~~~t'i~ 0 .,
Nollce
APPROPRIATION
SHOOl" N G
M \TCH
Cor
ORDINANC E
Hollow Gu ' Club iur 1
st

POM EROY
A R ESOLUTION To ma lo. e
appropr tat ons f or Current
E x penses
and
ot her
Ex
pend1t ures of th e vII age of
Pomeroy State of Oli lo d~r n~
the
f seal
yea r
end ng
December 31 1975
Sect on I BE IT RESOLVED
&amp;y the Counc11 tor I he v llag e of
Pomer oy Stat e of Oh o Thilt to
proll' de for the cu rr ent ex
penses and o ther e)(pend lure s
of the sad V l lage ot Pome roy
d urmg t ne f sea l year end ng
Dece mber
31
197 5
th e
follow ng sums be and they ar c
hereby set iH de and ap
propn a.ted as follow ~ v z
Sect 1on 2 That th er e b e t~p
propr ated from th e GE N ER Al
FU ND
General

•
..
-t

"'

~
~

••
~

r g J 1 Clf er

Rutla1d
qvns on y
l
p ll

M

CtlOhf'cl
1 uary

"o'

0

200 00

Tota l For Mayor
400 00
Clerk Clerk T re asurer

Personal Se r v ces
Total For Clerk
Clerk Treasurer

1 200 00
1 100 00

Tr easu r er
Personal Serv •c es

360 oo

To ta l For Treasurer
J60 oo
Sol•c•tor Lega l Adv sor
Personal Serv ces
2 500 oo

Total Fo r Sol c tor

'} soc

Legal Adv sor
Elect on '&gt;

Persona l Serv ces
To ta l Fqr E:le ct o n s

000 00
000 00

Cou nc11
Personal Se r v ces

1 000 00
I 000 00

Total For Counc 1
G eneral Adm
Persona l Serv ces

Supp lies ana Mat e r a1 s
Oth e r
To t al for General

Adm

Tota l Fo r General
Gove rnm e nta l Se r v

00

6 Cll O oo

1 200 ao

IOOoodo
11 :wooo

2 1 960 00

Security of P erso n s
And Pro p er t y

Pollee De p ar tm ent
Per sonal Se r v1 ces
60 000 oo
Supple s and Mal e r a ls 29 050 00
Total for Po l ce
Department
89 050 oo

F1re De partm ent

I

J U N K (AI-:~
RYE S 1 R UCK fl d
P td..? T S
Ru and
7609 1
1 ? :76 1p

UR NI SH E D APT
n M d
dle por l ut 1 1 es pad P none
99? 3?05 bef ore 7 n e ven ng
I 9 J c

OL D f urn LJr e ce boxe s br ass
t eels or co pie e nouseho d s
W
c M 0 M ler R t J
Po neroy Oh o Ca l l 99? noo

TWO I::I E OR OOM S Forced a r
neat
s 1orm
w ndow s
ba se m e nt
dr veway
nva tabl e after January IS
Ca l 99 2 338 or 991 345 3
9 6tp

P
TO

(o

I\

ft o e

0 7 7 &lt;I

M eet 1gs wtll be hf' ld evuy
other M onda y 'II 8 00 p m
The Soc nl Room w II be open
to :1 I m em ber s l am y Jn d
quest s every M o nday n 1gh l

U N K l u os
c ompte e and
d l l 'wl' rf'd oour y~ d We p c k
P 1 o bodes a d buy nit
k nd s o t sc rap n clal s an d
r on R ct er s Sa lv 'l g (' S Rl
1?
f.:
I
Pomeroy Oh o
( 'I ll '99? 5 68
10 17 tc

e Cc
1 n

IA

c

OPE N N G SOO l

I t l n "s To vou
Novt ll y f nbr L 'ln(J Cr f s
tJ pr e
~f )(
c1
1
SGon
Eve l y
w II
OPE'
hrr
B gt~
Crcti Ce ll
wt u
w I t:H' an
pa c J..ccl l ui ot
be~rqa
5 w" Ll th ~ p1 f !'r
tor open ' 1 d 1
I! &lt;lt C

Pets For Sale

lost

Mob1le H0''1

For Sale

Help Wanted

Carrier Wanted
NEW HAVEN

The Daily Sentinel

I

I

Auto Sales

RETIR EMEN T FUN D

Payment of Prm c lpal
1 000 oo
Pa yment of In terest
3 675 00
Totl'll For General
Bond Ret F und
10 675 00
Add1f1ona1 Fund s
Sec t ion 15 That th ere be
iiiiJYp ropr a t ed
from
t.,e

In 1925 M1 s Muwm

Ma

Ft r guson was sworn m as
gO\ ern or of Texa s U1e nation s

second woman sk'lte clud
exccutl\ c F t\JC ctm s em 1 1 ~ 1
Mrs Nellie rm Joe Ross h 1d
FEDE RAL
REVEN UE becmne go' ernm of \Vj ommg
SHARING FU N D

40 ooo oo
Fir e D ept Fund
Butldmg
Other
8 000 00
Tot11 1 f or F tre D ep t
Fund Bu ld n g
8 000 00
Total All
Appropr1 at1o ns
l 033 9 16 00
Cap

tat Out l ay

Sec t 1on 17 And the v ttage
Clerk 1S hereby author l ed To
draw h s warrant s on ! he
V1ll age Tr ~asu r er for pay menls
from any ot th e fore go ng ilp
propr1at ons upon r Pce v 1 g
proper
certlf c ates
&lt;lnd
vouchers therefor appro 1.1e&lt;1 t) y
the board or off cers author ze d
by law to approve the sam e or
an ord1nan c:e or r eso lu t on o(.
council to make the ex
pendlture s prov ded lh&lt;'t
o
warrantss haU.be drawn or pad
for salar es or wages except tD
pers ons emp eyed by author t y
of antJ In acc ord ance w th taw or
ord i nan ce Pl"ov 1ded fun he r
that the appro pr at ons for
contlngen&lt; es c an on ly be ex
pended upon appea l of tw o
thtrcls vote of Coun c11 for terns
of upens e con stltut.ng a te9a 1
obligation aga nst the v It age
and for purp oses other than
those covered by t he o lher
spe-c1f1 C llppropr at on s here 1n
made
Sec t1on 18
Th s ord nan ce
Shill take eff ect at the ea r est
per1od allowed by l aw

In 1970 a nur sang home h tl

k11led ll 111 Mdi!Ctl&lt;l Oh o
A thoug ht f01 tht tim Mdl\
Baker Edd) founde1 of the
Chmhan Scwnce Church s ud
Spmt IS the real and 'te1 nal
I11t1 tte r
IS the unreal cUHi
temporal
Jt."s.us "'H id to th ('lll

Ht ndt r
tu l H's lr l ht thmg"' thcH l r('

l.us tr .. and to

(rod

tht

thm ~ "'

lh 11 a rt llod s
\nd th~.:\ 'H rt
Hnnu d H hun - :\1 uk 1• 1

HendN

t ll l l
l It stu lht
\\Ill&lt; h ll f' l lt "' 11 ~ and

tlung"
11 to ( od th ~ th 1111!' \\ tu c h ~~ f'
Gods Onf' \\tlU ]{1 ltkt to Hi l

960 C0RVAIR qoorl body good

r LJ n s tel r uses o I $200
o
lrH1 e f or sor1e tt1 nQ ot
t:Qua l v alu e Cil l even ngs
985 35 JS
1 8 51p
~s

CHEV E LL E 317
I sp
t Vl lr&lt;l c l o 1 re&lt;'r e 1d
l ort t art y &lt;H d
t er or $650
f'l1o r 99 ?J89
1 8 .tip

96 8

p~1s

9i' 1 DODGE C01onE' 4 d r 318
o o r au to a c g r een Good
qas
eilqe qood ru nn nq
co rl 0 1 Pt one 99 2 577
1 8 41C

19 13 OL 0~ Cu !I C1SS S Ex ce l e 11
co Ci on w lh '15 000 a c uil
,, l s
J50 e g , e w tn p s
Pb
~ r
CO ldton rlg
a1d
suJ,:.er sporl Wh eels Can be
"t&gt;t
at the cor er ot Chu r c h
~ 1c1
H ubbard Streets
n
Syr&lt;1cuse Ot.l o or c &lt;~t l 99 2 391J
aflerSp •
I 7 61p
19~~ C lEVY

od

O\

n pala 321
Pon~9J94

good
1J

I 7 5t p

11m
g n t mm h1" IHtd m
m l pt r"on1 111\ h . . rt~hh ml 19t&gt;t F-ORD 352 V 8 ~ng 1e J
bMre
ebu It ne w g askets
rr l ~t( n - P ope Ptu ~ X11
I
1 o cln n p stons r ngs

f he

appr op r at on

Th e '\tate of on o Me gs CoLJnty

"

$1'0 N ew c l utch plate throw
o rt ba r r n gs S25 3 speed
trans n o;s on S25 Call 1197
1 108 afte r s p n1
1 10 6fc
CO MET
19 000 m t es
a uto ma c t a s 1t55 on I kc
H. W Cal an~
l e M ! ] JJ 2
1 5 121P

103

Jane Wet Ton Clerk of the
Passed Jan 6 197 5
V l lag e of Po n eroy
n sad
Co unty Md 1 whose c ustDd y
Attest J~ne Wal t on
The F' tes J ournals and Records
Clerk o f Counci l
are requ red by the Laws of the
State of Oh o to be kep t do
CERTIFICATE
hereby
cer t•f Y
that
the RE~'00EL N G
p i LJTlb ng
Stctlon S70S 39 R C No for ego ng Arnua Appropr at o
IH' ill " Iii
21nd all ty pes of
appropr1at10 n measur e s ha l
Ordnan ce s tak en and copes
oe f'ri\1
rt&gt;pa r
Work
become effe'C11ve unt il ther e s fr om the or g na l Ord nann•
1 arilnteect
70 years ex
f1led Wlfh the appropn atmg no \oJ on t te Wtth s a1d V Jlaoc
.&gt; r ~ n ee Phon e 99'1 2.t09
luthOrlt ~_:;lhl coun t y aud 1tor
that the for ego 19 Or-d 1ance
I 3 l1tc
a certlflcate that the tota l ap
has been comp&lt;~red by ne w h
proprlat jon s from each fund... rhe sad o gnat ana that the
ta.ken tq.ge ther wtth all o t her same sa true a nd corr ect copy
outstan&lt;t'"g appropr.a trons do thereof
not
exceed
such
oft1 c al
W 1tness my s gnature lh1s 6Th '1 B ED ROOM modern furn shed
ntlmare or amend ed off1c1al da y pf oo.J anuary 19'15
ap t no pets Ph c-ne Rob ert
estimate
When
the
ap
H 1 Rae ne 949 3811
proprlatlon does not ex ceed
Jane Wa lton
1 10 hlp
IUCh off i cia l est mate
the
Clerk of the Vdlag eol
county IUd1tor shall g ve such
Po meroy
cert1f1care forl hwtlh
upon
t BE DR OOM ra l er P none 992
Me•gs Co unty On o
975 or 992 ?57 1
receiving
from
the
ap
J ,,
proprlattng authontv a ce rt 1f1 eQ { I J 10 ltc

Employment Wanted

For Rent

..

unfurn shed 7 ro oms
and ba t h n ce Phon e 992 27 80
or 99? 343'1
I 9 tfc

TRA I LER spa ce 2m Jes f r om
Harr 'ii On l( li e Ph one 742 3821
t 5 6tc

NEW

3 and 4 ROO M furn shed and
un t urn s hed
apa rt me nts
Pnon e 991 5434
&lt;1
2 ff c

PR I VATE meet ng room for
an y or gan zat on phone 992
) 975
3 11 tfc
FU R NI SHE D apt A dults onl y
M ddleport
Phon e 992 3874
11 14 tf c

307 Spnng Avenue
Pomeroy
992 2298
CONTACT
L01s Pauley
Branch M anager

L _ _ _ __ __:__~·-

TEAFORD

V1rqll B Tl'olf ord '1
Br okl'r
110 Mrrh,llliC St n•et
Po m l•roy, Oh1o ·1Sr69

$8SOO 00 - Two bedroom frame
hom e Bath pan el ng gas F A
furnace basement and ctty
wa t er

S20 000 00

New 3 bedroom

hom e
l1v ng room 13x 19
beaut ful k ! chen ce r am c t 1le

bath

A)ta ched garage and

a lmost one acre

$12 SOO 00 - Older 4 bedroom
hom e m o dern ba th na t gas
8 CH A NN EL Bearca t Sca nner fu rna ce new blo ck garage
and 1200 W n chester sh otgun
barn and large lot
Pho e 9 &lt;~9 4573
1 7 5tc
Ph one 949
1 9 3tc

BUILDING LOTS -

Several

LIST IT WI TH US FOR BE ST
RE SU LTS

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

GR OCERY bu s nes s for sal e
Bu dmg f or sal e or tease
Phone 773 5618 fr om 8 30 p m
to 10 p m for a ppomlment
3 10 tf c

COLO N IAL MAPLE ster eo
rad o am f m 4 speak er s 4
speed a ut oma t c c hanger
Bal&lt;' n ce S1 16 78
u se ou r
bLJdge term s Ca 1 99'1 3905
1 6 He

Sl EGLER and
MONOGRAM

FUEL OIL
HEATERS
Pnced for Ou1ck Sale
t New Wood Burnmg
HEATER-13995

1

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

-

PIANO
tuning and repa r
Char l es Sc o t t 992 37 18
12 I J 32t p

C BRADFOR D Auc t oneer

Comp l et e Se r v ce
Phon e 949 38'1 1 or 949 3161
Ra c neOho
Cr 1tt Brad f ord
5 He

SE PT IC tanks
e)(cava t• ng
dum p tru ck Phon e 742 3742
122026t c
REA DY M I X CON CRErE de
I v er e d r g ht to yo u r pro 1ec1
F as t
an d
easy
Fr ee
es t mal es Phone 992 3284
Goegle n R eady M x Co
M ddleport Oh1o
6 30 tfc
SEWI NG MACHINE Repa rs
serv ce all ma kes 992 2284
Th e Fabr c Shop Pomeroy
Author zed S nger Sales a nd
Se rv ce We sharp en Sc1ssor s
_,_ 3 29 tt c

Startmg Jan 16th

Blown Into Walls
and Atttcs
Free Esttmates

NOVELTY FABRIC
&amp;CRAFTS
Belpre, Oh1o
Ph 423 5061

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCTION

Larry Lavender
Phone 992 3993
Datly After 5 00

Modem Chemicals

PHONE
949 3832 or 843 2667

100 Kerr Street
Pomeroy Ohto
Phone (6141 992 2798

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING

STRIPPING , FINISHES
FURNITURE METALS-ETC
MODERN &amp;ANTIQUE

From a
Pamhng

shelf to a house
std1ng rooltng
paper hang1ng
kitchen
cabmets expert carpeting

etc

EXCAVAT IN G
dozer
backhoe
a nd
d tc h e r
water 11 ne foot e r s drain s
roads and bru sh cl ean n g no
tob too sma ll no weather too
bad Char les R Hatf 1eld R t 1
Phone 742 6092
Ru tl and 0
1 7 26tc
WE DO char can ng and fur
n ture r ef n sh ng reaso nably
p nced Phone 949 21 89
7 5tp
WALL paper hang ng and a ll
mter~or f n1sh ng Phon e 742
5081
12 29 2tp

- - - -- -

--------

Refln1sh1ng
Burntsh1ng

Repatr~ng

Can1ng

Upholslermg
We Also Buy Antiques
P1ck

P&amp; J
Hom e
Ma nl e nan ce
h ea ting
coo ling
refrlg
p l umb ng
electr c al ap
pt1an ces we serv1ce ani!l
repa r a n y t ng n the home or
bus n ess
215 N
Sec ond
M ddleport Phone 992 3509
1 9 30tc
F UR N I TURE Upholster ng
Rea sonable
ra t es
free
e st1mates
p ckup
and
de l very
prompt serv ce
Mowrey s Uphols te ry F'lo nt
Pl easan t W Va Phone 67 5
4154

12 31 26tp

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

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

POMI'O')Y..O
POMEROY- Abou t 2 yr
old - BRICK &amp; FRAME
about l acr e 4 BR 2 bath s
lo ve l y kttch e n &amp; d n ng
utt l tt y R rec space car

peted storage bldg J UST
$26 000
OLD RT 33 - Close n i2x65
Mob1l e Home wit h expando

I v ng R 3 BR bath ca r
peted a r cond l n1 ce acr e
all el ec tr c abou t 4 yea r !&gt;

old
NEAR LANGSVi LLE - 10

2 II tf c
EX CE L SIOR Salt Works East
Mam St Pomeroy All k nd s
of sa lt wafer pell e t s wa ter
nuggets blo c k sa lt a nd own
Oh10 R ver Sa lt Phone 992
389 1
6 5 tfc
CAR PE T ns ta lla t on $ 1 25 per
ya rd Ph on e R 1ch a r d West
84] 26 67

12 2' 26tp
H OME
Imp roveme nt
and
Repa r Ser v •ce Anyth ng
f1 xed around th e hom e from
ro of to ba sem ent You Wil l
I k e our work and rates
Phon e 742 5081
12 29 ttc

acres 1dea l for home or
tra1l er approved for se phc
tank good b lacktop r oad
close to mtne a r eas JUST
$5 800

TUPPERS

PLAINS

Beaut f ul bu ldmg s1te 1h
a cres wooded TP water tti
a new a r ea S3 500

ALL CASH FOR YO UR
HOM E LET US SE LL IT
992 2259or 992 2568

!POMEROY LANDMAR
{II.:
Jilek W C:il rsev Mgr
,.at
Phone 992 2181

BARGAIN

CENTER

Tuppers Plains, 0.
SEE US

REO bone coon h ound cherry
bed and d resse r PhOne 949

FOR GREAT
DISCOUNT

]'}2 1

ELEC T ROLUX Sweeper d el uxe
lllOdel
Co mpl et e w th all
c lean n g attachmen t s an d
uses paper b ags s 1ght ly used
but c l ears etnd looks 1 ke new
W II se ll for S37 25 cash or
terms ava lab e Phone 992
n s5

ON ALL
NEW and USED

APPLIANCES

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

C HE VY.), parts
NEW
t~ c t on bars h
1a c ker a r shocks
hook er
headers w th 3 col lectors for
small blo c k.
Call 992 3496
af ter 6 p m BEST O.eFER
10 17 tfc
Lt~ ~ewood

and FURNITURE
You Can Keep
Your Cool
at Kuhl's
Bargatn Center

-----------

CLO SE O U T on n ew Z19 Zag
sew ng mach nes For sewing
stretch tabncs b uttonholes
fa ncy des.gns etc Pant
sl gh Jy b l em shed Cho ce of
c ar ry•ng c as e o ~ se w ng
st and $49 80 cash or terms
ava I abl e Phone 992 7755
12 18 tfc

' AI Caulton ltght Rt 7
Tuppers

Plams

Oh1o

Phone 667 3858
OPEN WED THRU
SUNDAY9A M 7 PM

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

Real Estate For Scile
BUIL DING lot 80 ft frontage
by 165ft Th e second tot on left
on R 1\'erv ew Dr ve L n cotn
H. II Pomerny Oh10 If m
te res ted call 99 2 3230 after 5 p
10 t7t fc

We talk to you

PB

V 8 a r cond

uuto t ran s

1974 CHEVROLET % TON ..........s2495

much

6 Cyl

1971 FORD THUNDERBIRD ........ s2795
Ai r cond

A M FM a I pwr accesson es

cruse control

long wide

V 8 P S P B auto t r a n s a r cond ra d o

But Many New Items Added
I All Items Subject to Prior Sale I

SOFA FAIRSHAPE - - -- -- - 4995
SOFA WOOD ARM
25 00
GOLD SOFA
79 95
GOLD SOFA BED
\ 0039 9005
3--2 PC LIVING ROOM SUITES ea
3--TABLES solid oak all
99 95
WOOD WARDROBE
39 95
3NEWTABLES tALLJ
5995
3 BIG TABLES MEDITERRANEAN _ _J99 95

SALE
39 9S

s 00
10 00

s 00

65 00
25 00
50 00
59 95
20 00
3995
119 85

2 SOLID OAK DRESSERS ( EACHI ~-- 88 00
WHITE BABY CHEST
49 95
MAPLE CHEST
59 95

59 95
35 00
3995

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

139 95
149 95

22 CU FT SIDE BY SIDE,IWHITEl- -395 00
18 CU FT REFRIGERATOR
GR LIKENEW
26995
2-COPPERTDNE REFRIGERATORS
288 00
liKEREFRIGER!\TOR
NEW EA ~~:;::::;===- 149
GREEN
9S
FRIGIDAIRE REFRIGERATOR
169 95

319 95
229 95
200 00
9995
139 9S

SPECIAL OF SPECIALS
-2 Wh1te Fur Sw1vel Chatrs Regular 188 00
-Black Fur Small Sofa
-2 Glass Top Tables,
Sale
All Wtth Chrome Legs

2-30 GAS RANGES GOL"-- - -...,.,-..J59 95 119 9S
30 GAS RANGE GREEN
188 00 149 95
30 GAS RANGE WHITE
149 95 99 95
36 «lAS RANGE WHIT
149 95 9995
36 GAS RANGE WHITE
119 9S 69 9S
30 GAS RANGE BLUE
119 95 8800
40 ELEC RANGE WHITE_
1-40 ELEC RANGE WHITE
30 ELEC RANGE WHITE
36 ELECTRIC, GREEN LIKE NEW -

39 95 "95
129 95 75 00
179 95 139 95 I
219 95 179 95

2-BREAKFAST SETS 4 cha!rs--,----39 95
DARK OAK DINING ROOM SUITE
179 95
4 Chairs &amp; Table
8FT LONGPINETABLE -~---43995
W1lfi 6 Chatrs hke new
I-BREAKFAST SET, 2 CHAIRS
WITH OROP LEAF TABLE

29 •s
9995
269 95
39 95

2- STOKER MATIC COAL HEATERS EA 488 00 388 00
DUNCAN PHYoE TABLE WITH4 CHAIRS 319 9S 19195
ZENITH STEREO
139 95 100 00
PHILCO STEREO LIKE NEW
WITH AM FM RECORD PLAYER ___.288 00 188 00

~

19724 PINTO WAGON ................. '1695

If you test dnv e any new or used car on our lot
~ou'll rece 1ve FREE 1 2 lb box of s ugar No
purchase necessary Only licensed dnvers
may part1c1pate Offer good through Satur
day January 18 at 5 00 p m Ltmtt 1 21b box
per fam1l y
Oealershtp open weekdays

fill

6

oo

Saturday

4 cyl

Ph 992 2174

sp

luggage r ack

4 Dr

II 8 auto

P S P B fa ct atr

1971 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE.. ...... '1495
Sebr ng 4d r sedan small 118 auto P S P B

tills oo

1972 FORD TORINO 4 DR.......... '1695
II 8 auto

Pomeroy 0

PS P B

- - - - S P E C I A L S - - - -..

1973 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL.. ~5995
Mark IV extra clean 21 000 mtles fully equ 1pped

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1972 MER. MARQUIS ............. '2395
Brougham 4 dr hardtop fully equipped new rubber

ON YOUR DIAL

J

1972 Ford Vz Ton .......................... 12595
Squire Ranchero a tr cold t oned 302 V e

One l ocal ow ner

1973 Ford Mavenck....................... 12795
2 Dr Sedan 6 cy l pow er steertng au t o tr a ns Onl y 13 40 1 easy
m1les by o ne loca l owner Showroom clean

1973 Ford V8 Vz Ton ..................... s2995
P1 c kUp Power steen ng au to t r an sm

ss on power brak es Onl y

30 381 m les by one local ow ne r L 1ke new

1974 Pinto 3 Door ...... ................. '2495
Run abo ut On ly 7 435 care f u l m les
r ear lik e station wago n

4 cyl

economy

Door m

1970 Chev. V8 Caprice ................... 11595
'2 d r hardtop a r cond ftoned Ch evy s f nest and thi S one s
n1ce

1974CHEVROLET IMPALA

1972 MERCURY MONTEGQ .........~1695

14295

4 door 1 owner ca r and only 10 400 m les V 8 eng n e w th
automat1 c power ste ertng power brakes factory a r
tmted glass del uxe body and w heel ope n ng moldmgs
sand st one v nyl seats beau ttfu l dark red f m1 sh TRULY A

4 Dr

V 8 a uto

P

S

P

2 Dr

B fact atr

2 Dr H T 350 V 8 auto

1974 OPEL MANTA Was S2895

1969 Pontiac Gran Prix.. .........~ ..... 11195

NOW $2695

1972 PLYMOUTH FURY 111.. ........ ~1795

S22SO

I&lt;EITH GOBLE FORD

1971 TOYOT~ 4 CYL 4 SPD....... '795

3rd

•19666 FORD
FAIRLANE ............... '125
cy l
2 Dr

See Ray Riggs or Roger Riebel •·

RIGGS USED CARS
985 4100

Located on St Rt 7

day was about the same as
Wednesday, but school off1c1als
srud the totals are creeprng
up About 1,450 teachers and
35 OliO students have shown up
for classes
The c1ty has 5 OliO teachers
mcludmg 4 OliO belongmg to the
CEA wh1ch bargams for all of
them The school system has
100 000 st ud ents attendmg
classes at 170 schools

N BA Stand ng s
B y Uo l ed Pre ss tnte rnat on at
Easter n Conference
AtlantiC DIVISIOn

w

I

pet

w

I

pet

g b
2
3 '
9 '

g b
6
71 '2
11' '2
23 1 1
9 b
1

2 '
3
g b

Go ld en STate
26 12 684
Seattle
19 20 487
7
Por tl and
17 21
447
9
L os A nge l es
17 23 425 10
Phoen x
15 21 405 10
Thursdays Results
Bo s on l OB Buffa lo 100
Wus n ngton 102 Hous ton 94
Go ld en St 132 New York 96
Frtday s Games
Los Ange les a t Boston
Hou st on at New Orleans
C evel and at Bulfalo
KC Omah a at Ph l ade Iph a
A tlanta at Ch cago
Det r ott at M /waukee
Por lland at Phoen x
Go ld en State at Sea ttle

2

2

ABA Sta n d1 ngs
By Un1ted Press Internati onal
Ea st
w I pet 9 b
27 11 I ll
Ken tu c k y
28 12 100
New York
17 27 386
Sl LOUIS
11 30 268
Mem ph s
9 30 231
V1rg n1a
west
w 1 pet 9 b
Denve r
34
5 872
San An tOniO
24 20 54 5 12 2
Utah
20 24 455 16 2
lnd ana
17 21 447 16 2
SanD ego
16 23 410 18
Thur~ttav s Results
Kentucky 113 St Lou s 116
l nd ana 121 Memph s 112
Fndav s Games
Denver vs V rg n1a
at Norfo lk
san o ego al N ew York

Chester, 0

Court halts
legislature
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - A
package of SIX partisim bills
Democratic state legislators
hope to pass and send to
Democratic Gov John J
G1lhgan before he leaves office
next Monday has been Jeopard·
JZed by a court order tern·
porar1ly blockmg 1ts enactment
on
constitutional
grounds
A panel of three JUdges from
the Franklrn County Court of
Appeals late Thursday granted
a temporary restramrng order
agamst certif1cahon of the
Democratic legislation by Sen·
ate President Pro Tempore
Oliver Ocasek D-Akron
A hearmg was scheduled
today on whether the restram
rng order would be made
permanent
The legiSlation, mcludmg a
congressional redistricting bill
designed to g1ve Democrats
two solid new diStricts m
Columbus and CinCJDnah and
perhaps two more rn western
OhiO was ready for final floor
action today Each bill has
already cleared one chamber
of the legiSlature
Proceed With Passage
Democrats, controlling both
the House and Senate, said
they would proceed w1th
passage of the bills They said
they d1d not know whether they
would seek to overturn the
Franklin County Court order m
another court
Time IS Important Dem&lt;»crats want to enact the bills
before lncorrung Republican
Gov -elect James A Rhodes
takes office next Monday and
brrngs With him the threat of a
vetn
The court order was granted
by three Republican JUdges at
tl!e request of Franklin County
Prosecutnr George C Smith on

Bicentennial: Between Two Armies

t

992-2196
Middleport 0.

behalf of Republican legislators Smith was the unsuccessful Republican candidate
for attorney general last fall
The order enJOins Ocasek
from signing any bills now
under study m the General
Assembly if Republican Lt
Gov John W Brown refuses to
certify them II also enJoins the
Senate clerk from glvmg them
to Ocasek and restrams Gilligan from Sigrung any bills not
certified by Brown
Senate Republicans had
sought the order on grounds a
new Senate rule pernutting
Ocasek tn certify the bills
VIOlates the state constituiJon
Senate Mmor1ty Leader Michael J
Maloney, RCincmnatl, contends the
constitution authorizes only the
lieutenant governor to certify
b!lls approved by the General
Assembly
Has Not Indicated
Brown has not ilxbcated
whether he Will certify them if
they clear both chambers, but
there has ~n speculation he
nught delay action untU after
Gilligan leaves office next
Monday
Until Thursday afternoon s
court deciSIOn tl!e Democrats
were right on schedule for
getting the bills through As1de
from
congressional
redlstr1ctng, they would
- Limit the power of the
secretary of state to appomt
and dismiss members of
county boards of election
-Transfer collection of the
state mcome tu lrom the
Department of Taxation to lhe
state treasurer's office, saving
some 300 full-tune and parttime Democratic jobs
- PrOVIde for permanent
voter registration as well as
mail regJStrahon and house.tc&gt;house registration wtth ne1g1J..
borhoodreg!Strars rece1vmg 10
cents a voter, paid for by the
state
-Transfer a d1v1s1on of
consumer protection from the
state Commerce Department
tn the slate attorney general s
o!f1ce sa~ about 22 DemO.
cratic jobs
- AuthOI'JZe unemployment
compensallon benefits to workers Idled by strikes m rela led

'I

68 Chev. BA 4 Dr., V-8, auto., P.S••••••••••• '9p5
67 Cadillac H.T. Sedan, full power, an••••••••'995

standard trans

1965 FORD 4 DR WAGON ........... '125

First session
in strike set

of I n e m Ponft ac Beauhful ca r

See Fred Blaettnar, Darrell Doddrt II
or Dan Thompson

PS P B

2 Dr hardtop V 8 auto P S P B fa ct atr

Bos to n
25 13 658
Buffalo
14 16 600
New Yor k
'12 17 564
Ph lade ph a
16 23 41 0
Cen tral 0 VI SIOn
w 1 pet
Wr~ s h n g ton
28 12 700
Cl evela nd
20 16 55 6
'1 0 19 5 13
Hous ton
Atla nta
17 24 415
New Orlea ns
3 34 081
We st ern conference
Midwe st DI VISIOO
w I pet
22 18 55 0
D etro f
Ch cag o
20 18 526
KC Omah a
21 22 488
M lwa u kee
18 20 474
PaCifiC DIVI S on

Ha rdtop Top

1972 CHEVROLET IMPALA .......... '1795

CREAM PU FF

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Re
presentahves of the Columbus
Education Assoc1atwn and the
Columbus Board of EducatiOn
were to meet w1th a federal
mediator today !or the !1rst
ser1ous contract negotiatiOn
sesswn srnce pubhc school
teachers went &gt;n stnke
Monday morrung
The CEA asked Federal
Mediator Joseph P Santa
Enuna to resume negotiations
after learmng leaders of the
new Ohio General Assembly
proposed grantmg extra school
subs1d1es early th1s year
State Rep M1ke Stinz1ano
D Columb us
sa1d
the
add1bonal
sta le
funds
would
be
more
t11an
enough to g1ve Co lu tnb us
teachers the 12 per cent wage
mcrease they sought When
negot1atwns broke off Satur
day pnor to the stnke the l\10
stdes were nearly 8 per cent
apart w1th the CEA saymg
there no other money
ava ilable
SIIIIZiano sa1d leg1slatwn to
proVIde the add1t1onal $80.90
million rn state money to local
schools this year w11l be rn
troduced before the end of the
month
nus appropnation •part of
a predicted surplus from fiscal
year endmg June 20 1975
means $3 5 to $3 7 m1llhon w1ll
be earmarked for the
Columbus school system
accordmg to the OhiO
Leg1slal!v e Servtce Com
rruss1on ' the legislator S31d
• W1th this additional money
the board now has more than
enough to meet th e teachers
request
Ill grantmg a temporary
restramw g order Tuesday
Franklin County Common
Pleas Court Judge Jay C
Flowers ordered both s1des to
continue negotiations He 1s to
hold a Saturday mormng
heanng on the sclv&gt;&lt;&gt;' l)oard's
request that tea~.~ he or
dered back to work Both s1des
met separately w1th the
mediator Tuesday so he could
evaluate therr poSJbons and
Santa·Enuna sa1d then that
they
are
hopelessly
deadlocked at th1s tUlle '
The CEA sa1d attendance by
students and teachers Thurs

of

1973 FORD GRAN TORINO ......... '2295

Smith Nelson Motors, Inc.
500 E Matn St

74 Olds Cut. Sup. Cpe., a1r, sharp ...........14795
74 Cadillac Cpe. DeVIlle, full power, alr•••• ~'7500
74 Cadtllac Cpe. DeVIlle, full power, au •••• '7500
74 Olds 98 L. Sedan, power, a1r ............ '6200
73 Vega Hatchback, 4 sp. radiO ............ 12195
73 Olds 98 LS Sedan, full power, alr....... '459573 Dodge Pol Cus. 4 Dr. HT., pow., air ••• '2895
73 Olds Cut. Sup. HT Cpe. power, air ......:3295
72 Olds 98 HT Sed , v;oof, a1r .............. 13495
72 Olds Toronado Cpe., V-roof, pow. a1r ••••• '329S
72 Chev. Imp Cpe., V.S auto. P.S.•.••••.•• '2495
72 PontiaC Cat. HT C!le. !lOWer, atr ••••••••'2695
71 Chevelle Mal. Cpe., v;oof, an .............11995
71 Volkswagen 411 4 Door, auto........... '1695
70 Olds 98 Hoi. Sed., power, a1r ••••••••••• '1495
70 Olds 88 Roy. Cpe., pow., an, v;oof , .... ,11495
70 Olds Cut. Cpe., V-8, auto., PS........... !1495
69 Olds 88 HT. Sed., v-roof, ai~ ••••• ~,........'995
69 BUick RNena, power, alr ••••••••••••••••• 11195
69 Ford LID HT. Coe. V roof, air ••••••••••• '995 '
68 Pont1ac Bonneville H.T. Sedar., power, air '595

as much as $1 000 on new 1975
$SAVE$ trucks
and cars
$SAVE$ ~~~y many dollars on OffiCials'
$SAVE$ ~:r~anuary Clearance Used

Au to Cl ean

V 8 auto tran s P S P B a 1r co nd rad to

Conl!nued from page 2
brief statement of the Lynchburg Raid but will walt and see if th1s IS prrnted Ill January 64 I
enlisted rn Compan y A 2nd West Vrrgm1a Cavalry Brother Edwrn was m Company F'2d Vt.rgmla
When we (he and other oold1ers) came back from Lynchburg we boys betng hWlgry we fed"
great many of them Mother saJd she got up at four o'clock m lhe mormng and commenced o cook
for tl!em and cooked!two days when the flour ran ou.
Febru u-v 10 1

WMP0/1390

'

1974 PINTO 4 CYL .................. '2295

•

lots of Items Sold Out-

standard transm ss 10n

USED CARS
·--·---------------------

Extra Cl

1970 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE ...... ..S1695
4 Dr

302

1971 V.W. BUS.......................!l395

1971 PONTIAC CATALINA ............ s2195
40r

11 000 miles

stan dard trans

1971 FORD
%V TON
.................. '1695
bed
8

OPEN EVES 8 00 PM
POMEROY OHIO

TWIN&amp; FULLS!
Maple Wa Inul ¥¥nne.
poster beds

Uke -a person.

p 5

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

GREEN WASHER &amp; DRYER hkenew
299 9S
GE WASHER DRYER, COPPER LIKE NEW'-~:99 95
MAYTAG DRYER
6995
MAYTAG DRYER
79 9~
, MAYTAG DRYER
125 00
MAYTAG AUTO WA&gt;ru: R
5 DO
2 NEW RANGE HEADS
'4 WHITE &amp; COPPER, EACH
25 DO

--------- -

9 Pas s
more

-AIIJ

...----TRUCKS--.....

1973 CHEVY KINGWOOD WAGON .~3595

Local 1 ow ner car &amp; on y 20 000 mt l es automat c tran s
rad to w h1te wa ll t res v ny l m ter or sharp a s a tack
Orange f ntsh

Top Freezer Frost Free

KUHL'S

For test drtvmg one of these cars at Sm 1th
Nelson Motors tn Pomeroy

1973 DA TSUN 12002 DR CPE

CHAIRS
WAS
PATCHWORK ROCKER _-:-_ _ _ _ 69 95
1 GREEN CHAIR
19 95

ELAND
608 E
REALTY
MAIN

frOP RIGHTHfRf

actual m tl es orange f msh v nyl mter or

7

CRE MEAN S CONCRE TE de
I ve red Mon da y
t hrough
Saturday
and
even ng s
Phone 446 114 2
6 13 lfc

FREE SUGAR!

2 Door 4 speed transmission bucket sea t s r adto 5 000

DOZER work land c learing by
th e a c r e hour y or contract
Fa r m ponds
roads
et c
Large dozer a nd operat or
w t h over 20 yea r s ex
per ence Pul l n s Excavat ng
Pomeroy on,o Phon e 991
247 8
12 19 t fc
W LL tr m or cut t r ees or
shru bbery
clean
out
basement s alli es et c 94 9
J2'l or 7 42 4441
12 15 26t c

9- The Daily Sentrnel, Middlepori·Pomeroy 0

up Serv1ce Available

__ _ ___ _

- ---

FO R SALE or trad e on pt ckup
or van
1967
1 !on
In
t er nat ona l
tru ck
w th
a um num furn tur e van 8
p y t r es P s
P B
50 ooo
m les Pnon e 99 '1 3509 or see at
M dd eport
308 Page S
1 6 6fc

BED F R AME
$ 10
wh t e
headboard $20 ref $40 c h est
of d raw er s S15 Ca ll after s p
m 992 7889
9 2tc

-

Fire Retardant
Insulation

locafton s $1500 00 up

J HOLS T EI N cows and 1 helfer
Pnon e 949 2119
1 9 ] IC

REFR IGERATOR d1nett e set
range st ud 1o couch bedr oom
su t platform rocker at ltke
ew An tique ch a r s ant qu e
b edroom su 1 and man y other
terns Pho 1e q9 2 3457
I 9 61 c

NE1GLER Bl.IILD JN G SUP
PLY FOR
REMODEL IN G
A ND K I TC HE N CA BINET S
CA LL GUY NE I G HLER
RAC I NE OH 0 PHONE 949
]604
2 19 26tc

SEWING AND
CRAA ClASSES
Enroll Now

SEPTIC
T A N KS
c leaned
Moder n San Tat on 99 2 3954 or
992 7349
9 18 t f c

Burl ng
2 BEDROOM S ham some c arpet ng f ur
n1ture m c luded $10 800 00

For Sale

"'

Complete plumbrng &amp;
healing serv1ce and
general ~heel metal
works
Free
Eshmates
Phone 949 5961
Emergency 992 3995
or 992-5700

16 A FARM - J m from
Harrtsonv I e large ho use
elec hea t ~ pond s Owner
w II t ake a nd con t rac t

TRAILER space 2m l es from
Pom eroy Rt 14 3 Phon e 992 SJ 000 00 - Old one floor 5 room
5858
house w t h nat gas and c t y
o 27 He wa ter on n ce corner lot

1957

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp;HEATING

ca rpeted 3
cond t on ng

a r
117 500 00

.

HElL

All e lec

BR

Business Services j

'---~ -

Strout Realty

F UR NI S HED
apa rtm en t
su table
uf t es furn shed
tor we work ng m en or
r e1 r ed couple L v ng roo m
k1 che n showe r and ba t h On
man h ghway Mason w va
Phon e 773 5147
tO 27 tt c

1972 SU PER B ee Tl e Vo lk s
wrtct en Ph on e 9'11 398 1
8 IOt c

G t\l unt o 11m t h ngs \\ htch lll

co py Df
mea sure

I H OUSE

197'1 G T ] 80 Suzuk
~8 '18 aft er 5 p m

I

ad u l ts

I 9 1f c

NJ\ N TED old upr Jl
p an os
1 y
conctt on
Pi'l y n 1 ~1 0
~en f r s lloor on y Wr t e to
d q ve d r ec ons To W tt en
P rt o Co
Box
6H
S r~ d s
( I o 19 16
1 7 6t p

"

B ED R OOM tra ler
only Pnone 992 332 4

H P '~ d tor at

IN CO M E T n
r r t'p&lt;HCd !loll
Feder et a d Still C' 1 ;~xtcs w 1
be do ne bv
~ ppo
~e n
only Pl ec'lse pho 1 99? ~~ ? or
J r [M ALE
AKC
York sh e
se eM r s Wca cl 'IEtlln L l ur e
Te r cr pups wormed a 1d
Cl If Rd P an er oy 0 o
l£'1 po r :~ry vacc n al o r
7
1 J ) OI L
w Ek 0 d SIUO ertc l
PI on e
9B5
00
F OR your
0 I Of M
f..
Cosmr- cs P! OH OROW N S
9 97 511]

B0 N D

'}

mn k rs and
10d C' s o f mob l e
omes
PI one a rt 1 code 0 I J 4'13 953 1
4 3 tr c

C "\

Personal Serv 1ces
1 500 oo
Sup p lies and Mat er als 2 000 00
Cap tal Outlay
30 000 oo
Other
2 080 00
Tota l For F re
Department
35 580 oo
Total For Secur1ty o-f
Perso n s and Pro p er ty
124 630 00
Ptann1ng Comm s~ii On
Personal Ser v 1c es
l ooo oo
Total For Pl anning
ro m miss on
3 000 00
UllllfV L1Qhflng
SH OO T N G 1 'IT ch Ra e e Gun
Personal Serv 1ces
I S ooo oo
Cl ub Sunda y 1 p rr A !&gt;sor ted R E 0 I R I S 1-:! Se ller w l h wn te on
Total fo r Street
0 es t 1n Lan g s v li e a r ea
11ea1s and la c ory cho ke yuns
0 ll y
f.! ewa d Cnll 7 12 5909
L ghtmg
IS 00 0 00
Transportation Fac111f1 es
I 5 6l p
11 n tc
Street Pav ng
Per sona l Serv ices
27 500 oo AUt.. T ! ON
fl u sday
&lt;1 d
Supplies and Ma te r a ls 5 000 00
Sillurday
gh t 7 p n
rt
~
Oth er
3 651 oo
Ma son At c on Hor on St 1
Total Fo r Stree t
Ma son w Va Cons g , L 1 ~ T RA L E R tor r en o sal e 3
Paving
b e oroo s
u nfu 1 s l e d
16 151 00
we co' e P t o e
104
7J
Total For Str ee t
I I CS pa d IOCil ed a t 1 ew
5 171
Construct on Mamt
Mo b l e
Ho e
Pe~rk
n
10 J Ti c
Burt 1 qQn
P t10ne 991 775 1
and Repa r Fund
46 l SI 00
State High way Fund
12 3 1 tt c
Per sonals Ser v ces
500 00
N OT I CE OF APPO IN TME N T
Cap1ta t Outl ay
" 500 oo
Total For sta te
CASE N O 11 387
Estate of J('rry Culw e ll
HIIJhWa'y I mp Fu nd
5 000 00
Decea se d
Sec tion 6 That t her e be ap
No t ce s I e r eby Q vcn t h~ t
propr l ated
from
th €
CEMETERY FUND
W t " 1 Cu l w c l o t R R J
A l baw Oh o has bee
du l y
PubliC Health Serv 1ces
appo n ted ad nm s 'ltor of he
Ce m etery Ope ra r 1on
Es t ;, c
of
Jer r y
Cu l w e ll
And Maintenance
In
Per sonal Serv ic es
10 000 00 d ece &lt;~ S f'd 11t e o f Me q s Coun ty
Supplies and M ate r al s 1 &lt;~00 00 01 0
Cred tor s are r equ r ed to f l e
Total For Cemetery
the r e ta 1 s w 1t h sn d f d ue 1ry
Op erat1on and
Maintenan ce
11 400 oo w th n four 1 o 'II s
Dr~ t f'd lh s 6ft d;~y o l Jru u&lt;~ y
Section 9 That t h ere be &lt;lp
Age 8 or Older
propr l ated fro m t h e WAT E R 1P7S
(REVEN UE ) FUND
M rt 1 1 1 g 0 Webs er
Probr~ l e J 1 dg e o f scl d Cou
,
Wat er Pumpm g
Pers on a l Se rv ices
'10 ooo oo
M e q s Co u '' ~"" Of o
0 7 'J J Jt c
Supf)IIU and Mater a ls 12 000 oo I I
1
Total F or Wat er
111 c~u·t St Pomeroy
Pump ing
J~ 000 00
Water OI Si rtb ut an
Phone 992 2156
Per sonal Serv1c es
20 ooo oo
The
Almanac
Supplies and Mat er a ls 18 000 oo
Cap ital Outla y
4 000 oo
Bv United Press lntcrnatlnnul
Other
5 000 oo
fod IJ 1s F11daJ Jan 10 the LARG'E co mpany n need of tu l
Total For Water
ne p er sonn el No layoffs
Ol str1b UI10n
47 000 00 lOth day of 1975 w1t11 105 ( o
poss b le ea r 1 1g up o $150
Total for Water
wee kly
G uod
tulur e
fo lio\\
System OperatiOn
79 000 00
Ava l1b e for r g ht person
The moon IS app1 oach1ng 1ls
Adm.n1strahon
- Wate r
Cnll 675 J490 tor appo n tme 1 t
800 oo ne\1 phase
Person a l ServIces
1 9 Me
Debt Serv ce
4 1,{100 oo
Total For Admm strat on
I he mormng s tm s 11 e Mars WAITRES SE S n ee ded app l y n
- Water
41 800 00 and Sa turn
perso1 Crows S eak H ou se
Capital Outla y
550 000 00
Po ne r oy
The evemng star s are Mer
Total For Adm n ls tr at on
1 7 lf c
550 ooo oo CUI\ Venus and Juptter
- Water
Total For wat er
1 hose bm n on th 1s date c~ re
{ Re\' enue) Fund
670 800 00
Sewer Maint enan ce
under
Ihe ~a g n of Cci Pl u.: or n
Personal Services
12 000 00
Ec11
h
\m cr 1&lt; ,1n pdtt wt 1965
PLYMOU TH
H.•eds
Supf)l les and Mater ats 18 000 oo
Total For Se w er
ra
daor
ax
l
e
md
r
1 gne
Ethan 1\lleu \Hl S born Jan 10
vork w II r &lt;lde for a vch c le
Ma ntenan ce
30 000 00
1738
1111 1 w II gr l me 10 m es a
Adm1n1 strat1on
day Phon e 99'1 3 146
- Sewage
On
thr
s
da;
w
lul
;
,
l
tm
y
Personal Serv ces
500 oo
9 2tp
In 1861 F1ond,! seceded f1 om
Debt Se rv ce
44 300 00
Total For AdmtniStrarfon
the Un 1on
W H OL E ~AL E Va lu e
97') Vega
- Sewage
44 BOO oo
Wllgo n
rad a l s d eluxe
n
h 1920 the I edguc of Nat101 s
Tota l Fo r Sewer
er or rad o s 595 1 r11 ca l
(Revenue) F und
74 800 00 t:{l rne mto bemg as Uu~ T! ent\
992 7805
Sectmn 13 That th er e be
1 8 .lie
appropria ted
from
Th e of Versailles went mto effect

G E N E R AL

!ur n shed aJJ
and
ba h
ut 1 I es pa d
No
en dr en or pe ts Pnon e 992
5810 o
8 1J East Man
Pomeroy
' 5 61 p

Wanted To Buy

EFFECT IV E I 6 IS

SHOO T N G M a c t
CubSn d ly

1 ROOM

(fl.\ I ':.':. !!.'!&gt;SF-OR

NOTICE TO
EAGLE
CLUB MEMBERS

Real Estate For Sale

ROO M un furn tshed house J BED ROOM house $500 down
I llsemc nt and
yard
315
S90 month P t on e 9cn ] 975 or
Sprmg Avenu e Re f e r en ces
9Y2 2T7
P t on e 9q '} 7660
1 3 lfc
8 lfc
7 R OOM house ba th a 1d
CO UNTRY Mob te Home Park
exce l ent ne ghbo hood wall
R t JJ Ten m l es north of
to wal carpe l ng
arge tot
Pomeroy
La r ge lot s w th
QMage r easonab le ut 1 t es
c on c re t e pat os
s dewatk s
C.J I 99? 3877
ru
er s
rt nd
o ff
s tr ee t
9 tf G
park n g Pt on e 991 7479
12 31 lf c

J 1 ul y
co 1 Ps
w tn
sad
rc 1 ers
9 I c Tl f.' day and tl e mo1 h we sha I
no l o ro c t
A U C1 O N
S\LE
s 1
I f o
ou
h art
yo
w 1
trdwJ a
7 &lt;11 7 p
)
lv ly S&lt;&gt; i'l y
N
Sec a n
M dd cpor
A
\h..Pw I ovcand r cn em ber you
P&amp;. J Otl d
1 n I Enci s
•Hry IC1y
98 (
~.HJ y n sse d b y w l e F a ye
J
Mol e r
Ell~
CONSIG N ME N l S w r com
11
) s e 5 il d f3ro h er s
P&amp;
Auc o
5 No t
0 li p
Srco d M d 1 1 0

Servtce s

11
,.

For Rent
"t

m

I 9

s

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel C!assifieds

IN O V N G n en o y o f Orv 1 e
W r~ Son
who passed awlly
' ua y 0
Y!1

M c Dn' el s Custo , Hu l et cr
S f&lt;lH' il ld Fe der &lt;l ll sp cc l o
K I beefs a1 d 1 nq&lt;;
Pho c
Ed l h Me On
I DO
SfiJ

Governm e nta l
Ma yor
Per sonal Serv ces

I

In Memory

10 7 (

•

/

•

1.2 S Ct 1 1.2 ! r y

r&lt;'l c tory
Sund'ly

/

OU students
Food stamps
teaching at
to come in
Pomeroy school more dollars
Student teachers begmmng
at Pomeroy Elemental y
School on Tuesday Jan 7 !or
the wmter quarter !1om Ohto
Umvers1ty were Beverly Ann
Brown Grade 2 Peggy S
DeN~ro, Spt Ed I Mary H
Gonder Grade 3 Thomas S
Gumpf, Grade 6 Debra L
Hedges Grade 2 Rebecca J
Scnma Grade 5 Sp Ed II
and Sharon L Sturbo1s Grade
3

Superv1smg teachers w the
order hsted are Mrs Ida D1ehl
Mrs Demse G1bson Mrs
Nonga Roberts Mrs Helen
W1lhams
Mrs
Eleanor
Blaettnar Mrs Mary Hysell
2nd pt and Mrs Grace Cheney
ls i pi and Mrs Mae Young
Ohw Umvers1ty superv1sor
!or the student teachers IS Dr
Lester M1lls

rndustnes
Opposed On Two Fronts
The last bill was opposed on
two fronts Thursday 1n
testimony before the House
Conunerce and Labor Com·
nuttee
Ralph R Adams of General
Motors Corp represenhng tl!e
OhiO Chamber of Commerce
said employers should not have
their unemployment com
pensation funds used to f1nance
strikes agamst them
It 1s not a question of
whether stnke·!dled umon
workers are gomg to rece1ve
support or benefits of some
kmd ' Adams sa1d
The
question IS who IS gomg tn pay
!or 1t '
Adams added the proposed
legiSlation would upset the
balance m labor negol!atlons
'The !awls not neutral if 11
Ullposes heavy lax penalties on
tl!e employer who IS Wlable or
unwilling to avo1d a strike by
granting the umon s de
mands " he sa1d
It would dlscr lmmate
against mull!-plant employers,
many of whom have displayed
confidence m and contributed
to the Ohio busmess clbnate by
expanding operations m the
state'
James
Z
Shrefler,
representing the Wa~r &amp;
Swasey Co , Cleveland, saJd his
company's reserves of $1 1
million could be w1ped out m
seven weeks 1f one of 1ts
diVISIOns employmg 200
workers were shut down
'ThiS bill would Ullpose a
hardship on employers but m
the long run would be
detrimental to the very people
11 was mtended to protect '
Shrefler srud

WASHING10N - The U S
Depar tmen t ol Ag ri cul ture
1USDA) w1ll replace the
current 50 ce nt $2 and $5 food
stamp sertcs w1th a $1 $5 and
$10 senes on March I
USDA s Food and Nulr!I!On
Serv1ce iFNS ) sa1d the larger
denommatlons were prompted
by the volume of coupons
needed to meet mc1eased food
slamp allotme nts paper short
ages mcreased productwn,
and sh1ppmg costs
The new food stamps brown ($1) purple ($5), and
blue gteen ($10) - use a more
soph!sl! ca ted des1gn to deter
counterfeiting They are 1n
corpora ted 1nto redes tgn ed
re,alued coupon books
All current coupons not
ISSUed by Feb 28 1975, Will be
collected and destroyed FNS
said thai food stump recipient&gt;
must spend their current food
stamps by June 30, 1975 since
retailer~ will nut accept ony old
coupons after that date
Authom.ed food stamp stores
w1ll use the $1 coupon for
rnakmg change mstead of the
current 50 ce nt coupon Credit
shps &lt;lf 99 cenL' or less will be
Issued !or cha nge for food
stamp purchases under $1
FNS adv ised retailers to
1edeem the current food
coupons &lt;:.~s soon as posslble
banks wtll contmue to accept
them for &lt;edemptlon until Aug
I , 1975

Coates goes on
off shore tour

67 Pont1ac F11eb1rd, 400-V.S, 4 sp........... '695
66 Pontiac Cat. 4 Dr., V8, auto, P.S.•••••••• '495

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
You'll Ltke Our Quality Way
of DoinQ Business"
9112 5342
GMC FINANCING
POMEROr
Open Evenmgs Untii6:GO-TII5p.m.

11

wash.tngton

'1

It

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Ill one of the most bnportanl
pieces of legislation passed In
the 93rd Congress (which
would benefit Soulhea81ern
Ohio), the Congress authorized
$19 9 bllhon through fiscal year
1976 for the variety of federal·
a1d highway construction,
mcluding an accelerated rural
road bwldrng program
This new law autl!orlzes an
additional $200 million In FY 76
from the Highway Trust Fund
for the Federal-aid primary
system rn rural areas, and $100
m1Ihon for the secondary
system m rural areas It also
authoriZed an additional ~
m1lhon during FY 76 under a
new federal grant program for
constructwn
and
bn·
provements of off system
roads, Including such projects
as the replacement of bridges
and the ehnunation of roadside
obstacles and hazardous
routrngs An' off-11ystem" road
1s defined as any toll free road
or bridge rna rural area that Is
not part of the Federal-aid
system, but IS maintained by a
public authority and open to
public travel
Under the bill, additional
federal highway funds will be
apportioned to each State
based on three characteristics
of the State compared to tl!e
Nation as a whole one-third
for land area, one-third for
rural popUlation, and one-third
for off -11ystem road mileage
These formula allocations
must he detennlned no later
than January 1 preceding tl!e
fiscal year for which the funds
were appropriated Moroever,
each Slal.e.'B off-aystem
mileage uas used In tbe formula must be detennlned as of

MARIETTA - Mamtta
College geology maJOr and
petroleum student Robert
Coates •f Pomeroy recently
parltclpated m a field tr1p to
offshore dr!lhng !ac1hties 111
the Gul f of Mex1co A group of
12 students and two Marietta
professors toured severa l
offshore ngs to supplement
classroom work m a course on
dnlhng des1g n w1th on-s1ght
observa lt on of workmg
fac1hlies
The tnp was made possible
by several ot l companies, m
ONE CA~L CLOSER
cludmg Marathon Chevron
EXPERIENCED ONL V.
and Texaco plus the Pressure MINIMUM GUARANTEED
WEEKLY DRAW AGAINST
Control Sc hool of l.omSiana COMMISSIONS
State UmverSIIy
N~t1onatty
advert sed com
l ook ng for specialty
Coates a 1971 graduate of pany
sa l esman such as home lm
Me1gs H1gh School 1s the son of provemen ts mutual funds
nsu r an(e land franchises
Mr and Mrs Robert Elberfeld, ve
nd1ng
freezer
p l an
educat on paint franchises
Pomeroy

N. W. COMPTON, 0. D.
ur rOMETftiST

OFFICE HOURS 9.30 TO 12, 2 TO&gt; !(;LOSE
AT NOON ON THURS J- EAST COURT ST,
POMEROY.
i

e tc Our top producers earn
S25 000 to SSO 000 c ommissions
per year Must b,. able to
trave l utens1vely and !'lave
good car Call John Vander
Kuyl t ol l tree for atldltlonal
lflfor:ma t on and personal
mtervtew at ( 800 ) 621 1006

(8001 621 81 82 (800) 621 7501

P lease t all s unday
1975

Jan

'2

By Clarence

Miller

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the end of the calendar year
preceding the year In which the
funds are appoi'tloned Thla
latter determination lll\llt be
certified by tl!e Governor and
Is subject to the Secretary'•
approval State allotmenll
must be dlatributed to each
county on a lair and equitable
basis
Significant to the Tenth
District, the Public Workl
Committee recommended In
Its report that special fllll·
pbasls be given to rural roadll
In areas which are sub·
Btantlally affected by mining
and power generation activities which have been accelerated
to
meet
national energy demanda
I have COillistenUy pointed
out the bnportance of good
roads tn the continued
economic
growth
of
Southeastern Ohio Special
emphasis should, Indeed, be
given tn Southeastern Ohio
roadll which are serving new
Industrial sites and rural
population centers

LARRY'S
MOBILE HOME
SAl FS, INC.
"Featuring
KirkwoOd
Gowmaor
Cameron
12' &amp; 14' Wide Up
To 70' Long
24' Wide Sectlon•l
Homes up to 65' Long

SERVICE
AFTER SALE
Winter Hours: 9 •·"'·
to6p.m.

Mon. Thrll Sat.

Qond SunclaJS
PH. 992·7777
POMEROY, 0.
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Jenkins death is suicide

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10 - The Dllily Sentinel, Middleport::Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Jan . IO, '1975

The death·of Walter Jenkins,
Jr., 52, Rt. 21·Jackson, toda~
was. ruled a suicide by the
Jackson Coun ty coroner.
Jenkins, a United· Slates
Department of Agri cultur e
inspecl&lt;lr, shot himself at his
home around 4: 15 p.m. WednesdaY'
Mr . Jenkins was bor~ in
-

Wellston on Dec. 3, 1922. He
had resided .in Jackson County
the past six years . He was a 22.year veteran of U1e U. S. Navy
before retiring from the service .
He. is· survived by his wife, "
Ella A. Jenkin s, Rt. 2,
Jackson ; three daughters, four
grandchildren, four brothers
and sisters and his inother.
Graveside services under the
direction of the Eisnaugle
Funeral Home will be held 11
a.m. Saturday at Green Lawn
Memory Gardens, Coalton.
,

)

so
Cowan. back·
;
,.
-are ·the Celtics

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f~
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By LEE LEONARD
. UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI) -Republican Gov.elect James A. Rhodes has already taken
the oath of office and will becom&lt;: Ohio's
. · 63rd governor at midnight Sunday,
reducing the length of time Democratic
legislators have tO enact six partisan bills.
John M. McElroy, Rhodes' chief aide ~
said Rhodes took the oath here late Friday
and flied a certified copy witll Secretary of
State Ted W. Brown.
McElroy indicated that Rhodes took the
' oath early to prevent incoming
Democratic Lt. Gov. Richard F. Celeste

from being sworn in at midnight Sunday'
and thus possibly certifing the Democratic
bills, so tlley · could be sent to outgoing
Democratic Clov. John J. Gilligan · for
signature.
.
McElroy would not elaborate on the
swearing-in ceremonies . He said he
assumed Gilligan ,would find out hefore
Sunday night that he would be relieved at
midnight ." "Gov. Rhodes wanted Gilligan
notified," McElroy said.
·McElroy declined to say who administered tlle oath, except that it "was a
persor. authorized to perform swearingins-a judge or a notary ."

about 7:30a.m. Thursday, found one of the vehicles on his
used car lot had been put onto blocks overnight and the
wheels ren10ved. The Middleport Police Department is investigating .

VOL 9 NO. 50

Reaching More
Than 12,000
Families
SUNDAY,-JANUARY 12, 1975

GALLIPOLIS·POINT PLEASANT

Midd leport·Pomeroy

PRICE 20 CENTS

School bill pushed

MEIGS THEATRE

REP. JAMES SWORN IN- Rep. Ron James (D- 92nd District) left, was
sworn Into office at the statehouse in Columbus Ia~! Monday by Judge Frank D.
Celebrezze.

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK
STORE

COLUMBUS - State Representative
Ronald James (D-92nd District ) said
Saturday legislation to provide additional
state money this year to schools will be
Introduced before the end of January.
The bill is expected to provide
$91,282,330million In additional assistance.
The money will come from a projected
surplus for the fiscal year ending June 30,
197?. Gallia schools would get $246,543.20;
Me1gs schools $197,323.20.
"The need for greater monetary
assistance for local school districts is
imperative, due ((i present inflationary
costs,'' Rep. James commented.
He said tllat one example of the strain
on school budgel.'l was due to transportation costs, which have risen at an
annual rate In excess of 10 percent.

Lawmen stop fights,. All lost by
parents are warned family of 8

Tar hits oceans', shores

GALUPOUS - Gallia County Sheriff
Oscar C. Baird Saturd~y issued a stern
warning tbat parents or guardians are
going to be held responsible for acts· of
vandsllam· and unruliness of students at
county basketbail.games and other school
functions.
The warniilg came 'following the latest
in a series of incidents Friday night when
an undetermined number o~ Kyger Creek
fans fought at least two Hannan Trace
students outside Kyger Creek school
bu~lng .
•
.
Two sheriff's deputies, Ron Lemley
and Mile Null, broke up the fight, but
apprehending one suspect only after a
chase.
One of the deputies drew his gun and
fired two warning shots in the air before
the chase began.
This apparently only excited the more
than 100 persons milling around outSide
the school foUowing the diaturbance.
Students and adults &amp;tanding by
became angry over the Incident and
shouted at the deputies.
Eventually, the disturbance forced
cancellation of the school's after game
dance. Two juveniles were taken to the
Gallia County Sheriff's Office where a
meeting was held with · Sheriff Baird, .
deputies, their parents, and Gary Bane,
prohation officer for Juvenile Court Judge
R'. William Jenkins. ·
The Sheriff's warning also followed a

POMEROY NATIONAL BANK

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
Special
January
Sale!

• Men's Double Knit

SPORT
COATS

Fisticuffs follow

·KC, Hannan Trj;lce
basketball game
recent act of vandalism to Kyger Creek
High School Principal Robert L. Lanning's
car. Lanning reported someone slashed a
rear tire and kicked a large dent in the left
rear fender of his 1974 Dodge Dart. The car
.was parked in the front parking lot under
the shadow of a night light.
The principal's car was damaged once
before when vandals scratched the paint
.with a sharp instrument and poured paint
remover on the car's hood.
·
Baird said:
"The school administration and
sheriff's office is working together .to stop
tllese incidents, but we must have the
cooperation of the public. We want
students and adull.'l alike to respect law
and order and the deputies who are trying
to enforce it."
A county school spokesman said
Saturday that if these acts don't i:ea~e,
extra curricular school activities may be
in jeopardy. The spokesman urged parents
to cooperate with the school officials and
lawmen to prevent future problems at ball
games.

Agencies may ·g et help
GALLIPOLIS - Maxine S. Plummer,
executive tlirector of the Gallla.Jackson·
Meigs Community Mental Health and
Menial Retardation Board, said Saturday
any agency Interested In being funded for
related ment;&gt;l health and mental retardation programs In Gallia, Jackson, or
Meigs Counties should ·submit their application to the Board office, P. 0. Box 292,
Gallipolis, by February 10.
To qualify . for a contraNural
agreement witll the Galiia.JackS9n-Meigs

The sources of additional funds are procedure would speed the hearing
principally the sales and use tax, the in- process so as to assure that the schools
come taxes and interest earnings, all would r&lt;ceive the new funds at the earliest
items which have been producing more possible da~ .
revenues over the past 18 montlls than
Each school district would receive the
anticipated In January, 1973.
sum resulting frnm multiplying the
The State Tax Department has been Jangergarten average dally membership
confirming the upsurge in revenue by $20, plus the result of multiplying the
receipts. In August 1974, Tax Com- average dally membership ill grades ooe
missioner Robert J. Kosydar projected to l2 by $40.
that $108 million more would be in the
County boards of education would
Treasury by June 1975, than was originally . receive an amount equal to $2 Urnes the
anticipated. Recently, these projections total numher of pupils certified.
have been confirmed, and revised upward.
School districts In tlle 92nd district will
Further, on actual receipts, according to receive the following sums:
the General Assembly's own non1&gt;artisan
Gallia County Local, $12~,280;
Legislative Budget Office, show that as of G"allipolis City District, $121,263.20; Meigs
December 31, 1974, the State Treasurer Local, $114,530; Ironton City District,
already had received $81 million more $111,824; South Point, $100,186.40; Rock
Ulan was expected by that ,time. ·
Hill, $90,720; Fairland, $79,940;
Rep. James Indicated Identical ap· Chesapeake, ~.930; Coal Grove, $68,020;
propriation biDs will be introduced In both .Alexander, Ss2,693.60; Feder!ll~Ocklng,
the House and -the Senate.
$57;740; Eastetn of ·Meigs,' $41,440;
While only one of the biDs would be Southl;rn of ~elgs, $41,353.20; and Sympassed by both bodies, the Introduction mes Valley, $43,170

in Pomeroy
POMEROY - A family of eight was
left homeless Saturday morning when
their two story frame home 81Jd all tlleir
possessions were destroyed by fire.
Charles Landers, Welshtown Hill,
Pomeroy, and his wife and six children,
lost everything they owned In a blaze that
was caused by defective wiring that
started in the attic above the kitchen,
Charles Lagar, Pomeroy Fire Chief,
reported.
.
Chief Lagar said the department was
called at I :.03 a.m. and was at the scene 212
hours. Lagar said that valuable Ume was
lost due to the fact the family first tried to
extlngoish the fire themselves, and in
sending one of tlle children to a" neighbor's
home to report the fire.
Loss was estimated at $15,iloo. There
was no insurance. Middleport assisted
with a tanker.
'
The sizes of clothing needed by the
family include: two ..year-old boy, size
three clothing, size seven shne; tliree year
old boy, size 4 or 5 clothing, size 10 shoe;
eight year old boy, size 10 clothing, one and
one-haH or two shoe; 10 year old girl, 10-12
dress and slacks, tbree or four size shoe;
IS year old girl, 36 blouse, 12-14 dress,
slacks, eight and one-llalf shoe; 17 year old
boy, 14 or 15 shirt, 32-30 slacks, nine shoe;
husband, 1412 or 15 shirt, 32-30 slacks,
seven and,.one-llalf shoe; wife, 34 blouse, 12
dress or sracks, seven and one-llalf or eight
size sboe.
Clothing may he left at Pomeroy City
Hall or pbone 992-2333. ·

Counties Community Mental Health and
Mental Relardation Board to receive state
·
reimbursement for the provision of
Community Mental Health and-or Mental
Retardation services, an age~cy must
0
meet the following: .
-Shall be a nonprofit organization. If ffi
the agency ls a volunlary agency, it is
recommended that it be incorporated as a
POMEROY _ The Meigs Soil and
nonprofit orga~ization . Should the agency Water Conservation District Board of
be a private nonprofit organization, it shall Supervisors reorganized at a recent
be exiunpt from federal Income !axes meeting With Thereon Johnson reelected
under the Internal Revenue COde.
as chairman and fiscal agent, David
_ -Shall have a .governing board (or Gloeckner, ·a new supervisor, elected as
advisory 1committee, if a public agency ) vice..chalrman, and Roy Miller secretaryrepresentative of the community served. treasurer for 1975 .
tO
Such .board shall determine the policies
Rex Shenefield, supervisor, whq. is
and dtrector of the seTVIces of the agency. also a · director for tlle Sub-Area, was
cOLUMBUS (UP!)- About 1,000 turkey
-Shall hold at least four ( 4) regularly nal)'led voting delegate to attend the Ohio
lmnting pennits will be issued for ea~ of _scheduled meetings of the governing hoard . Federation of Soil and Water Districts
the two turkey seasons, Aprll28-May 3 and each year.
·
-'
Arlnual Meeting to. he held at Scot's Inn in
May S.IO, the state divlson of wildlife .
( The agency:s progr~m shall conform Columbus ·~anuary 14-lf&gt;.l6. Roy Miller,
ann!IUIX;ed Sa)urda)\.
to the Community Plan of the Gallia' alternate,Leota Young, dJstrictsecrelljry,
4---· ~ling will..be pennitted ill Jackson-M~s Community_M.m.tal Health
and David Pan:y, district conservationist,
Adams, Athens, Qallia, Hockinfl, Jackson, and Mental Retardation Board: , ·
also plan lo attend the three day se~sion.
Lawrence, Meigs, Monroe, ·Perry,"Pike,
The Con\munity Mental Health and . Tuesday's session will feature tlle
Ross, Scioto, Vinton and WashinglorP Mental. Retardation Acl of 1967 (Ohio ) Distinctive Service AwardS presentatjons,
COU!ltles.
mandates the . Gallia-Jackson-Meigs businesS meeting and election oi officers.
Applications, accompanied by a. check Community Mental Health and Mental Speeches will be made on the fu ture of the
for $10.50,must be mailed In before March · Retardatiqn BoardAhe responsibility for distric ts, land use planning, better
\ 1. Aturkey h!Uitet also m~ ~a vaUd plannin'g and funding t~e ne ~essary drainage laws, and agricultural research .
Ohiolllntingand lrl!ppinglicense. The bag mental health and mental retardation
Wednesay morning ' he &lt;upen·isors
limit Is one bird· per seasop:·
Continued on page 2
Con tinued un page 2 ·

Johnson. repeatS
h •
h•
C a:IrlllaDS lp

2,000 turkey hunting
be issued
pe

nnits.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

I.

EVERYBODY WANTS "WHEELS" these dsys and
apparently will go to any lengths t.i get them. Tom Rue, going
to h1s motor company on South Third Ave., in Middleport,

Sunny to partly cloudy and
colder Sunday. Highs in 20s.
Partly cloudy Sunday night.
and Monday. Colder Monday
night. Lows 5 to 15. Highs in
20s.
.

Gas Co

'

Rhodes will still participate in the oathtaking cerel)lonies on the statehouse steps
Monday noon. Asked why the governor ..
elect took the oath early, McElroy replied :
"To prevent any fortuitous interruption of
business ln the governor's office."
Meanwhile, Senate Democrats "shopped" for a friendly Ohio Supreme Court
justice to set aside a lower court order
barring them from enacting a package of
six partisan bills, including congressional
redistricting, before Monday.
They sought, but were unable immediately to reach, Democratic Justice
Continued un page 2

Your Invited Guest

Delay

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Weather

Cabinet

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Flashing lights wanted ~

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on an emergency basis.
.
.
· "He believes ' the current levela authorized by Congretl are iDadeqaale," White
House Press Secretary Ron Net111en told reporters 'l11unday.
Nessen said Ford was deeply concerned by tbe recent Commllllhit takeover ol Pbnoc
Blnh, a provincial capital 75 mile.~ oortb of Saigon tbiB week, but bullcated IIL8t Ford
eoosldered U. S. aid to Indochina insl!lflclenl even before the lale1t C;&gt;mmanl•t battlelield success.
,
Nessen said requests for addJUonal aid were under "illleoslve cooaldenltiOD" bnt
ilecUned to say bow much the admlnl&amp;tratlon might a1t C;&gt;ngreoo for.

.

Rhod(!s takes ·early oath
to .b lock Celeste scheme

Knicks witll 23 points.
!ll
BuUets 10%, Rockets H :
John Havlicek was right.
j
Forward Elvin Hayes hit 23
He struggled along with the
i:~
rest of the Boston Celtics early points and grabbed 15 rebounds
in the .season while the Buffalo and Phil Chenier added 21
Braves pulled out to a big lead points to lead Washington over
:.~is::::·!!.§'o!;•.•;.;;:::::--:::~::::=:=~:W.~*-%~!2i:!:::!s~:8:~::::~:s::::::*:::::~:::::::::.:~-:::::::::::::».~~;.~:@..~~"!!s:s·:· ··· · · m:n · ··-· :
in the NBA's Atlantic Division, the errorillagued Rockets. The
but when Dave Cowens showed win gave Washington a' 28-12
Holzer Medical Center
signs of returnil}g to form after record, best in the NBA. The
(Discharged, Jan. 9)
missing the first 17 games with Rockets hurt themselves with
Roy
Allen , Leonard Bahel,
a broken foot, Havlicek said it 19 turnovers . Rudy TomLuther
Bowles , Donald
was " just a matter of Ume" janovich led Houston with 22
HARTFORD, W. Va . - business:
Fischer, ~y Hennen, Mrs.
Fines levied in
before the Celtics would be points.
- Mayor Charles Black
Town Council wiU
Hartford's
Robert Hysell and daughter,
GLENN SMITH
Colonels 123, spirits 118:
back on top.
reported
90 .tons of stone have ·
continue
il.'l
efforl.'l
to
acquire
Martha James, Asa Johmson,
NEW DffiECTOR - The
Artis Gilmore scored 28
The
Celtics,
defending
been
ordered
at an , apflashing
safety
lights
for
the
Timothy Johnson , Kathy
mayor's court
appointment of Glenn A.
league champions, showed points, pulled down 20
Leonard, Mrs. John Martin and school zone area and will proximate cO!! I of $580 for
Smith, 39, Gallipolis, as
Two defendanl.'l were fined Buffalo tllat they're still the rebounds and blocked eight
son , Vada Massie, Kathryn cooperate with the Hartford street repairs ..
Deputy Director, Division 10,
and
Bird
Averitt
con
..
shots
-Low water pressure
and two others forfeited bonds team to beat Thursday when
Ma sters, Roger McKinn ey , PTO on tlie project it decided
Ohio Department of Trang..
tributed
26
poinl.'l
to
pace
tn the court of Pomeroy Mayor they handed the Braves a 1()8.
Mrs. Roberta McCoy and at a _r~ular council meeting reported beyond the West Point
portatioo, was eonfJrmed
Dale E. Smith Thursday night. 100 defeat before the largest Ken lucky . St. Louis came back
daughter , Dorothy Metzler, Saturday evening. In other area was discussed and wiD be
today by Richard Jackson,
from deficits of 14 points in the
·
crowd
ever
to
watch
an
NBA
investigated.
Melissa Neutzling, Bertha
William Reeve8, Pomeroy,
director, Ohio Department of
first
quarter
and
13
in
the
-Thomas Anderson asked to
was aS$essed $47.70 including game in Toronto- 13,544. The
Niemeyer , Arlen Owens,
Transportation. It was ansecorl'l
quarter
to
lie
the
game
be deputized so as to control
cosl.'l on intoxication charges victory put Boston two full
Kathryn Rowland , Anna
nouncfd on Dee. 24 that
late in tlle third period but
speed
violators on West Point
and Charles Aeiker, Racine, games ahead of Buffalo .
Russell, Billie Songer, David
Smith, current Gallla County
"It's a big victory," said couldn't take the lead despite a
Road.
No
action was taken, but
was fined $5 for driving left of
Spencer , William Tackett ,
Continued from page 1
engineer, was recommended
29
points
from
game-high
center and $5 for reckless Havlicek after adding 21 points
Robert H. Taylor , Marvin Welfare Department as deputy council agreed · to study the
for the post. Division 10
problem.
operation plus cosl.'l . A E. Lee, to Cowens' 28 in the win. " It rookie Marvin Barnes.
Thoma s, Eules Turner, welfare director.
headquarters Is located in
Pacers 122, Sounds 112:
- Vernon Grinstead moved
Racine, forfeited a $30 bond moves ·US three ahead in tlle
William Walker , Melody
Marietta,
and
serves
nine
Ralph
D.
Copp,
54,
former
George
McGinnis
scored
31
posted on an assured clear loss column and winning this
!hat the town agree to make
Waugh.
southeastern Ohio counties.
deputy director of the state' application under the Federal
distance charge and Carl game moves us .one up and points and Johnny Newnann
(Births)
Agriculture Department and
.
drops d
lhem
down, , so tt's hit 15 of his 21 points In the
Shultz , Tay1or, Mi c'h., f orf e1ted
Mr.
and
Mrs . William Ed- former deputy director of the Flood Act coricerning houses to
,_lik
bl one. to
fourtll
quarter
to
lead
Indiana.
a $250 bond posted on a charge
e a ou e vic ry.
ward Bar tels , a daughter, Department of Liquor Control be built in fiood areas. The
Neumann,
a
former
prep
star
of driving while intoxicated
In other NBA action, Golden
Minersville; Mr: and Mrs. as deputy director of the action passed. Special In· State romped over New York, and professional In Memphis,
surance must be· obtained for
Darreli Livings ton, a son, Department
for
Mer- houses to he built in these areas
J32..96, and Washington beat hit a three-point play with 53 MCCALL TO TEACH
seconds to go to seal the vicSALEM, Ore. UPI) -Gov. Bidwell; Mr. and Mrs. Charles chandising.
Houston, 10:/,.94,
before loans are granted
- Fred L. Piau!, 54, a captain through the federal agencies.
Tom McCall is taking a $30,000 E. Taylor, a daughter, Pt.
In the ABA, Indiana downed tory.
in the state Highway Patrol as
job teaching journalism at Pleasant.
Memphis, 1:12..112, and KenIn addition to Mayor Bhick
ROUSH PROMOTED
(Jan. 4)
deputy director of the Depart..
Oregon
State
University.
tucky
tripped
St.
Louis,
123-116.
and
Recorder {;ary Fields,
William L. Roush, son of. Mr.
SURGERY SCHEDULED
. Roberta and Paul McCoy, a ment of Uquor Control for
McCall,
wbo
was
prohibited
by
Bob
McAdoo,
tlle
NBA's
others attending were Counand Mrs. L. L. Roush, 39
ST. PAUL, Minn. (UP!) Enforcement.
tlle state constitution from ' daughter, Pt. Pleasant.
cilmen
Donald .Fields, Vernon
Rutland St., Middleport, was leading scorer, went over the Skiing superstar Jean Claude
~Dominic J. Pullto, 54,
Grinstead
and Thomas Anpromoted ·to Army master ~.()()().point mark witll his 30- Killy undergoes surgery today seeking a third consecutive
Bellaire, deputy director of
term,
will
leave
office
Monday.
polnt
tOtal
and
now
has
~.019
sergean t while serving as a
for removal of his gall bladder.
liquor control for administra- derson.
Funds were raised privately
senior Instructor In Battery D. points in just 2~ seasons.
Greg Lewis, coordinator of
tion.
The Celtics got a balanced tlle Pro Ski Racers Association to create a Tom McCall chair
Continued from page 1
Staff and Faculty Battalion,
-Curtis Andrews, 54,
The School Brigade, U. S. effort, Including 16 points each in Aspen, Colo., said doctors of journalism. The RepUblican cracking down on foreign oil Lancaster, retired Air Force
governor
is
a
former
Portland
Army Air Defense School at Ft. from Don Chaney and Don were 7~ per cent sure tlle
tax breaks for American
Nelson. BuHalo guard Randy surgery would cure a stomach newspaper and broadcast re- companies. Long even has colonel, as registrar of the
Bliss, Tex .
Bureau of Motor .Vehlcles.
Smith notched 23 points for disorder which kept Olympic porter and commentator.
Continued from page 1
indicated he may be willing to
-Terry Drake, 54, Gallon, a •
Buffalo.
allocations bytriple gold medal winner out of
change tlle greatest foreign oil former assistant state fire reduced
Warriors 132, Knick&amp; 911: · the ·1973-74 professional protax break -the foreign tax marshal under Rhodes as state charging a $10 a thousand
Lad by Rick Barry's 33 gram. He ~as raced only once
credit - from a credit Into a fire marshal.
cubio feet penalty for all gas
MAN KILLED
points, Golden State handed this year.
above
authorized
simple business deduction,
.
- Fred E. MiUs, tl, CoJum.. used
BLAND, Va. (UP! ) -Virgil .costing the companies billions
the Knlcks their worst defeat of
11
[
am of course very
"This
is
the same
allocations.
bus, deputy assistant to Rhodes
tlle year. Barry erupted for 17 disappointed not to be racing in Lester, 50, Warren, Ohio, was of dollars per year.
FRI.- SAT.- 5UN.
would
he
levied on
penalty
that
for legislation.
of his points in the second next weekend's Hang 10 Cup at killed Thursday In a car-truck
JAN. 10·11· 12
Long likely will remain
large industrial customers If
period, helping Golden State Hunter Mountain, N.Y.," Killy collision on Interstate 77 near adamant about domestic lax
they take more gas than
roll to a 59-42 lead at the half. told Lewis, " .. .but I am looking here.
MAME
breaks,
however,
and
he
or
allocated,"
the manager said.
The mishap occurred about
Keitll Wilkes scored 18 and forward to good health. That is
(Technicotor)
BASIC COMPLETED
other sympathetic senators
He
stressed
that this Is a
John5on added 17. Reserve tlle most important thing right two miles north of this Bland might filibuster if they could
RACINE
~ Army Private
penalty to encourage con ..
Storrlng Lucille Ball
County community.·
guard Henry Bibby led the now ."
not convince the Senale to go Roger L. Durst, son of Mr. and servation and not an offer to
( PGl
Mrs. Ralph T. Durst, Route 2, sell gas at a higher rate. U
along. ·
Middleport,
A lengthy conference may he completed eight weeks of basic penalties are collected by
Show Starts 7:00p .m .
necessary hetween the House combat training at Ft. Knox, Columbia Gas of Ohio they are
Ky .
and Senate bills.
not retained by the company.
Another set of questions that
Instead \hey are used either to
By AL ROSSITER JR.
sea is largely unknown. But the will take Ume to determine
pay penalties levied on
MASONS TO MEET
UP!
Selence
Editor
board said far masses are involve exactly how to cut
Call No. 492
Columbia Gas of Ohio by ·its ·
Ularter No. IINIO
National Bank Regloo No. t
Middleport Lodge 363, F and supplier' since the company
WASHINGTON (UP!)
appearing in increasing taxes. ·Should the entire cut go
AM
wil' meet in special session itself Is also Unble for $10 a
Globs of tar are washing amounts in formerly un- to low income persons? Should
REPORT OF CONDITION, CONSOLIDATING
at
6
this evening at the temple thousand cubic feet penalty If It
ashore in more and more polluted areas such as the east · b\lsinesses be given a greater
DOMESTIC SU&amp;'iiDIARIFS, OF THE
places around tlle world and coast of Africa, the beaches of investment tax credit to spur for work in the Master Masons . overruns Its allocation, or
unless something is done about southern France and many investment? Should the cut be degree. All Master Masons are returned on a proportionate
increasing pollution of the Islands in both the Indian and accomplished through a simple invited.
basis to all customers in the
oceans, we ail will have to get Atlantic Oceans.
change In lax tables or through
affected class.
used to oil-contaminated bea·
When this oil soaks into numerous other available deCommercial and industrial
HOSPITALIZED
of Pomeroy In the Slate of Ohio, at the cl01e of buslne118 on De&lt;ember 31, 1974
ches.
coastal sands where it is vices such as changing the $750
Edward Hoeflich, 314 Condor customers that will be affected ·
published In respoose to call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under Title
That's one of the conclusions protected from oqeterioration personal exemption into a tax St., is a patient at the Holzer by the new order have not been ·· ·
12, United States Code, Seotion 1&amp;1.
reached by the Ocean Affairs caused by tlle sun ilhd oxygen, credit, thus giving low Income Medical Ce nter . His room notified, but letters are being ..
Board of the National tlle panel of scientists who persons greater breaks'
mailed to them inunediately.
number is 218. •
ASSETS
Research Council in a new · wrote the report said the oil
Cash and due from banks - - - • - - - - - - - - · - · • · .... $ 1,4:i5,201.59
report on oil in the oceans. It may stay tllere for years or
U.S. Treasury securities - - - - - • . - - - - - •
• · 2,960,~12.83
estimated
l'hat 6.1 million decades.
Obligations of other U.S. Government
"Unless steps are taken to
metric tons of petrolewn are
· • Hi6,028.50
agencies and corporations - • - .. - .. · ·
.entering
the
world's
seas
reduce
tlle input to a level that
I,H2,787.18
Obligations of States and political sub;!!visions - iumuaUy
from
all
kinds
of
can
he
assimilated through
• 37,742.50
other securities • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ..
sources.
natural degradation processes,
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
Tankers and associated we will all have to reconcile
6,750,000.00
under ngreeiuents to resell • • - • - - .
- . - operations
are the primary ourselves to oil..contamined
7,807 ,080.:;5
Loans • • .. .. • .. .. • • • • - • • • .. - - .. CUI)lfit,
pouring
an estimated beaches," the report Said.
Bank .premises, furniture and fixtures, and
2.1 million tons into the waters
Although the scientists said
- - · 270,086.03
other assets representing bank premises · • · ·
a year. This has been in- their Information was limited,
other assets • • • • • · • • - • • • • • • • • • • • 14,970.91 _..
creasing each year and u.e tlley said the effect of oil
TOTAL ASSETS - - - - - - - • - • - • - • - • • - $21,394,410.09
. panel said it may continue to contamination on human
LIABU..ITIES
increase despite stepped up health "appears not to be cause
Demand deposits of individuals, partnershipa,
efforts to control such for .alarm."
and corporations • - . - . - . - - ... • . - .. - - $ 4,572,7:;5.16
pollution.
Sea birds and bottom living
Time and savb1gs deposits of Individuals,
Oil ~nterlng the oceans from _organisms along polluted
12,748,136.06
partnerships, and corporations • - •
rivers and urban runoff ac- coastlines suffer the most from
- 208,284.22
Deposits of United States Govenunent .
counts
for 1.9 million tons of the oll in the water, the report said.
1,851.892.22
Deposi L'lofSta tesandpollt lcalsubdivlslons
annual
pollution . witll smaller Fish do not appear to be as
58,904.txi
Certified and officers' checks, etc.
coming from coastal affected as much although fish
amounts
TOTAL DEPOSITS - . • • • - •
S!9 439 971.71
refineries and municipal may acquire an oily flavor
(a) Total demand deposits ... - - - .
. $ ~.694,851.48
"laste,
atrt\ospheric fallouts, from feeding on oil..contamlned
(b) Total Ume and savings deposits • ..
,13174S 1120.23 natural oil seeps and offshore creatures.
other liabilities - • . • - • - - - · • · • • - • ·
233,444.92
wells.
"Wei of course, do not
TOTAL LIABILITIES • • • • • • - - • - • • • · • $19.673,416.63
. What happens to all this recommend eating highly conRESERVES ON WANS AND SECURITIES
petrolewn once it reaches the lllminated seafood but in most
Special purchase and sale ol
Reserve for had debt losses on loans
S49.9Sand $5'1.95 Sport Coats.
cases, because of the taste
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings) • • • - • • • • • • • • - - 114,803.50
Solid color and excellent
factor, not many will be
TOTAL RESERVES ON WANS AND SECURITIES • • - - .. 1114,803.50
pattern~.
100 per cent
tempted to do so," the report
pOlyester dooble knit. Sizes
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
said. "It is clear that tllis is an
36 to 46 in regulars and l_ongs.
Equity capital-total - - - . . • •
• • $1,606,189.96
;u-ea in which our knowledge is
• 200,000.00
Common Stock-total Mr value - • ·
grossly inadequate and that the
No. shares autllorized 8,000
contannination of seiuood by oil
Sale, p'nee
No. shares outstanding 8,000
is clearly undesirable.
Surplus - - - - - - - - • - • - - -."·. - - .. · - · 1,000,000.00
· "In general, much more
Undivided profits - .. - - - - - .. - - .. - .
• • • 406,189.96
research ·regarding the fates
.TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS • .• 1,6011,189.96
and effects of petroleum
TOTAL UABIUTlES, RESERVES, AND .
hydrocarbons in the matine
• . $21,394,410.09
CAPITAL AOCOUNTS - · • - • •
envlrorunent is needed. A basic
MEMORANDA
question which remains unanAverage of total deposits from tlle 15 calendar
sWered is, at what level of
days ending with call date ·• •• - - • • . - ·- - - - - - .. $19,t00.742.32
Big
· January
petrolewn hydrocarbon 'inpot
Average of total loans for tlle I~ calendar
Cleannce S11e brings
to the ocean might we find
savlng"s on mens shlr:ts
days ending with call dste • - .. • - • • • • .. • • • • • $ 7,800,003.09
·. boys shirts • mens
irreversible damage ocand boys jackets •
curring'?
mens double knit dren
Jel Aclion 1·18 Washer does
r
slacks - womens coati
"Until we can come closer to
1 piece to 18lbs.-no attach·
I, Maxine Griffith, Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby declare
·
girls coats • wom•ns
menls needed. Permanent
answering this basic question,
sportswear - blous.. •
that this report of condition is true and correct to tlle best of my knowlC!Ige and
Press Wash, Regular Wash,
p1nts . Visit 1-eWery
it seems wisest to continue to
and 'Automatic Soak cycles.
belief.
department - shop
make
progress
in
the
intema
..
e¥erv floor.
Gel a thorough rinse with Jet
Mulne Griffith
tiona! control of inputs and to
Circle Spray System. Detargenis, bleach. and dye ·
push forward . research to
dispensed. underwater,
reduce our · current !~vel of
dllut•rl and ready lo work.
We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this report of con·
tmcert.ainty. "
dition and declare I!!at it has been examined by us • od to the best of our
knowledge and belief is true and correct.
Open Friday and Saturday Nights Td 8 PM
Editor Hobaletter
Warrea Pid:0111
- Directors
LOCAL TEMPS
•Orton W. Rolllb
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Friday at II a.m. was '
45 degrees under rainy skies.
By United Preso.lnteruational

'

'

.
.

.

)'

P. DAVIESJR.

Father, son
•
partners m
Davies firm .

KNOW YOUR SCHOOLS is possible If booklets being presented above to GaUla
County Librarian Jonathan Louden, second left, are used by school employes,
students, parents and the public. Left to right are City SU~t. of Schools Paul F.
Kuhn, Louden, Dean Circle, president; and Paul D. Niday, vice president, of the
board of education. The booklel.'l contain GaiUpolis City Schools policies, job
descriptions, and curri&lt;;ljlWD guideS developed by the board In cooperation with
school employes and Sup!. Kuhn. Use of the hooklets by the public Is encouraged .

41-yeat bu_siness career ended
GALUPOLIS - Mrs. Mamie Niday
Robinson, Employment Service .Specialist
for the Ohio state Employment Services in
Gallipolis, has retired after 2J . years of
government service, part of a 41 year
continuous business career.
A graduate of Gallia Academy High
School in 1925, Mrs. Robinson worked the
first two years following her graduation 111 .
tlle Gallla County Produce Company,
under the supervision of Miss Edith
Hutsinpillar ·
In 1927 she was married to the late
Frank Robinson, and they became the
parenl.'l of a son,James D. Robinson, and a
daughter, Mrs. Dim C. (Charlene ) Black,
l:iotll of whom reside in GaiUpoils.
After the birth of her children, Mrs.
Robinson was a bookkeeper at
Womeldorff-Thomas until l!i44. The
following four years .she and her husband
O\l'lled and •operated Robinson's Food
Market, now iqlown as Dale's Mar~t
owned by ,Dale Russell.~ IHB, she.opened
Robinson ." He~lth StudiO.
MRS. ROBINSON
Mrs. Robmson JOmed the staff of
'
Holzer Hospital In the Credit Depar.tment Employment Services
in 1953. She expects ,
Ul IM9, and . remam.lrl there ":"til she
to continue to be active and lnvoived in her
became aff!l1ated w1tll the Ohio State cortununity , · ·

GALLIPOLIS - Paul Davies Jewelers
in downtown GaiUpolls for over a quarter
century has become a father-son
operation. Daniel P. Davies, Jr., 25, was
announced a partner and part owner of the
404 Second Ave. business effective Jan. I,
1975.
.
Davies joined the Paul Davies ;
Jeweler5 firm in October of 1974 after
being i:llscharged from the United states
Army. He graduated at Gallia Academy
High School in 1967 and from Heidelberg
College In 1971. Davies was recognized for
his excellence In varsity football and golf
at both GAHS and Heidelberg .
Upon graduation from college, Davies
enlisted in the Army. later winning his
commission as a Secon&lt;) Lieutenant
following completion of Artillery Officer
Candidate School at Fort Sill, Okla., In .
September of 1972. He completed his
militar,y service at Fort Jackson, S. C.
For the past 2,. years the younger
partner has been enrolled in studi!!B from ·
the Gemological Institute of America, Los
Angeles, Calli., and will soon he In·
traducing to the tri~unty area a complete
diamond appralsa'l service and a
gemological approach to diamond sales. ·
He recently returned from Los Arigeles '
where he ~ompieted the final part of his
diamond 11ppralsal training.
Davies, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul P.
Davies, Sr., 414 Fourtll Ave., is married to
the former Jacquelene Gilkey, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Gilkey, formerly of
GaiUpolis and Pomeroy. Paul Jr. and his
wife reside at 138 Second Ave.

ARTICLES FILED
GALLIPOLIS - Articles of in ..
corporation have been filed in Columbus
with Secretary of State Ted W. Brown by
Swisher Implement Company Inc. of
Gallipolis. Gordon H. Swisher, Sophia M.
Swisher and Thomas S. Moulton are the
incorporators . Sophia M. Swisher, Rt. I,
Clleshire, is the agent. Papers were fUed
Jan. 2by Cherrington, Moulton and Evans.

Suspe&lt;1ts, clues lacking in robbery . . .
F~nch GE portal!le color set; a GE AM·
floor near the meat department. They left
FM stereo radio and, record changer; two by a warehouse door.
. •
GE eight track tape players with AM-FM · City police . Friday evening instereo rad10 ; a Polaroid camera and case; ·vestigated ·an appar~ht assault and · bat-.
three canned hams and numerous round, · tery of a 14-year old hoy. Officers said
sirloin, T.bone,' Porterhouse and Rib Eye , SanctraM~Coy' ofPatrll?tStarRt.repi&gt;rted
meat cur..
her son, Ronnie: had been struck in the
Entry to the store was made by . forehead with a pool stick' at Rocchi's .·
removing the cap olf a vent located on the Place, 389Second An. Officers said young
roof of.U.e store. The intruders then went McCoy had a large knot over his right eye.
between. the roof and ceiling at the rear of ·
A 19-year old man is being questioned
the
building
and
droppe&lt;1
four
feet
to
the
concerning
·
• ·. '
.
.
. the incident.
&lt;
j
...
. /
~-&lt;" . 1{

GALUPOUS - City .police here
Saturday continued an'inv~tigation- lnto a
· ~bhery at the Jo.nes Boys Supermarket on
Pine St. early Friday mornmg without any
suspects and very few clues.
According, to Chief of Police Jo~
Taylor, tlle overall haul totaled over
$1,800. .
.
Missing were five television sets ineluding a 10-inch GE Portable color tv ;
lhree, 13-i~ch GE portable color sets and a.

1

.

· DANIEl.

·"'

l

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