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28:-The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday , !Ceb. 21 197~

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Sahd Hollow . · '15 ; K;iner Sand Hollow, 65 ,
Pitchford, '! 5. Paxton, -30; Paxton'; -35;

Its

Continued from page t
haulers at the County Engineer,'s Office.
Load I' 't ·
.
uru stgns will be J)os~ on
brtdges in the near future .
·
Here are the results of bridges inspecfed 1' h G IIi
a a County and the perc.entages of legal weight allowed. Minus
ftgures represent the amounts to be

Garfield -Blazer, -70; Blazer , -80.
Greenfield Township ·
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Of&amp; 0 , 110 ; CH &amp; D, 170; CH &amp; D. 190
CH &amp; D, 11 5; CH &amp; D, I tO; CH &amp; D; t50 ; CH
&amp; D, 130 ; CH &amp; 0 , t90 ; CH &amp; 0, -75 ; CH &amp;

D, 170 ; Camp Creek. -65 ; Camp Creek , ·10;
Camp Creek, -5; Hoodley, -45; Farney; .
80 ; Poke Patch, -55 ; Poke Patch. 40 ;
Symmes Creek . -50 ; Symmes Creek -30 ·
Symmes Creek . m : Frank Shafter: •as :·
Frank Shafter, 135;• Gall ia.Centerpoint,
105 ; ~heatwood- Wagner , -70 ; Pat Fielding.

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· m .on, 10 ; ~oush Hol low, -10 ; Long
Britllch , /0 ; Long ,Bran ch, -20 ; Ward, 60 ,
D. Grover , ·55 ; D. Grov er , 4() ; Nlorgan
Lane, 15 ; Thompson , 35 ; Thompson , 1do ;
Thompson, 80 ; White Oak , -65 : White Oak,
-50 : Up Creek , -50 ; Tom Thal(ton , BC .
Hom er McCla skey, -30; Clark Chur ch ·ss ·

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Goble Ford ·now Thompson Ford

Clark Church 140; Clark Church, ' 65 :
Clark Church .. ·45 ; Clark Church. 50;
Clark Church .. -70 ; Nibert, -40; Roy.Sp ires.

By Bob Hoeflich
on Wednesday.
MIDDI.EPOH'r. - Danny
" [ would rather be a dealer
Thompso~:,~, kn own widely in
140 , E::rnest P1per . -65 ; Wheaton , -50 ; Wifr
in Middleport than any city in
Grey, - 5~ .
M ei g~ Coun ty as an automobile
th e United States ," said
Ohio TowrJship
salesman and as a singer . bas JoThompson, who is optimistic
. Swan Creek . 115 · Swan Creek , 45 ;
purcha 5ed the Keith Goble towards the future of this area .
reduced.
·BS ; Sandfork-Peniel. 160- Sandfork -Peni el ,
Kmg, 100; Ham ilton. -65 ; Peters Branch
Ford
Agency al 461 S. Third
t30 ; Sandfork -Peniel , lOS ; Sandfork ·
105; Cargo, -10 ; Bladei1 -Mer ce r vil le 5:
" We have some plans and as
.
l,n all , :t.o bridges , whose load Peniel. .'&lt;IS ; Sandfork -Pen iel, ; 30 ; Sand
Bladen - ~ercerville ,
-50 :
Bladen ' Av e.
speCJflcations are nol known yet. are not fork -Pen ie l , -80 ; Cambria Furnace, -70 ;
the area grows we will grow
Mercerv _
1Ue, 140 ; Stewart, -75 ; Stewart,
listed,
The age ncy, Wlder several
Tom Coker . -50 ; Potter , -35.
with it. Fortunately, this
230 ; Eblm Holl ow, 155 ; Ebl in Hollow 5
Addison Township,
Elliott, -15.
· · owners, has been in the same area is in better shape
,
Guy an Township
Bulaville -Addison , -55 , \' Bulaville - .
Georges Creek , -10; Veorges Creek .
loca ttOII fur over 50 years and
ec onomically than many
Addls,on , 15 ;· Georges Creek , 135; 10 ; J. P. Haskins, -65 ; Dally. -80 ; Rocky
Perry Township
features a new car cmd service
Buiav1lle-Porter , -25 ; Bula ville-Porfer ,
metropol itan areas . The
Cora -Beaver , 110 ; Roush , 140; Rou sh, .
Fork , -70 ; Rocky Fork. 195 : Rock v Fork.
JO ;. Johnson Ridge , -35 ; 011 Hollow, 75 , Creek, -60; School Creek, -5; Lew
build ing with an ad juinin g: used
30 ; Tom Woods, -60 ; Nebo, -70 ; Saunders ,
n;bate
plan on lhe purchase
Bnck School. -35 ; Little Kyger , -60 ; Little So.tJt~ers, -30 ; Williams Creek. unknown ;
45 ; . Vernon Woods , 100 , Symmes Creek , car ~li es area.
of
new
automotllv.es has
Kyger, -15 ; Reese Hollow, 140 ; Reese Wdl 1ams Creek , unknown ; Wi lliam s
ll~ , Symmes Creek , -25 ; Cora Rodney, . • Thompson, who was general
Hollow, -75 ; Reese Hollow, 180.
be en quite effective in
Creek, unknown; Bladen -Mercerville
SS . Mud, 105; Bethel , 110 ; Bethel , t7S :
Cheshire Township
unknown ; William -Berry , -4.5 ,· Stewarl
Hol c_omb Hollow, ·50 ; Tyn Rhos , 130 : manager for the Guble Agency
bringing people into our
Cemetery. -85 ; Van Zan t,. .JO ; Ward , Chapel, -55 ; Johns Creek, -45 ; Johns
Dav 1_s Moss berger , 260 ; Dan Jones, 120: lhe pasl eighl years, compler,cl
showroom
,'' Thompson sa id.
liS ; Ward, -75 ; Ward. 20 ; Grove Hill , -25 ; Creek, -30; Johns Creek 190; Johns Creek,
Patr1ot Cadmus, -45 ; Guthrie, -60 .
the final pa per work for th e
Turkey Run , 110 : Stingy Creek . 185 ; Stingy 100 ; Mercerville, -55; Mercerville, -45; Les
Th
ompson
indica ted that no
Raccoon Township
transfer
of
th
e
agency
to
him
Creek.nO ; Little Kyger, ·40 ; Little Kyger, Gothard, -85 ; Bill ie Holley , ·65 ; Cecil
. Ple_asant Val ley , -65 ; Clark Evan s, 60 ;
major chang es in personnel
lSC; Lttlle Kyger, SO Little Kyger, 120, Sheets, 100; Fulks, -80.
T1ck R1~g e, -80 : M t . Tabor , ·55 ; Bidwe ll
are
planned. The firm, which
1
L•ttt~ Kyger , '75; Swi sher Hill. -40 ; Moore·
Woodsmtl /, -40 ; Glassburn , -85 : Tyn Rhos,
Harrison Township
Jerncho, ·85 ,· Africa . -10; Jessie Creek .
will
be
knoen as Dan Thompson
-65 ; Garners Ford , 40 : Garners Ford ·40 .
Smokey Row , -45: Smokey Row , -45 ;
SS ; Jess ie . Creek , -65 ;
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Old
Rt
.
35.
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Ford, In c., employs 18 people.
Smokey Row , -60 ; Smokey Row, ·50 ;
Capt. M ullt·n is
Clay Township
Springfi eld Township
Smokey Row. -5 , Smokey Row, 125; Teens
Former
owner, Keith Goble
Clay Chapel . Yellowtown. -65 ; Clay
un -Provldence, -35 ; Little Bullskin , -75 ;
Bu l av i ll e-Porter , -55 ; Bulav il le.
Chapel · Yellowtown , 190; Clay Chapel . R_
died
las
t April. A formai
Porter, 115 : Harrisbu rg -Kerr, -60 ; Bid
l~ttle Bullskln , 140 ; little Bul lskin, 175 ;
at
Myrtle
lka£'11
Y~ll _ow town , 180 : William s Hollow , 155 ;
opening
will
be slaged in early
Ltttle Bullsk ln, 130; Little Bullskin ·45; well -Rodney , ·50; Bidwell -Rodney, 110;
Wtll 1am s Hollow, -IS ; Williams Holl ow , . Lewis , SO ; Johnson, -50 ; Johnson , -35 ;
B1dwei~ · Rodney , -SO ; Campaign , 110 ;
s prin~ .
30 ; Rocky Run , 285 ; Teens Run . Johnson, -25 ; Carter, -35: Carter ,
MIDDLEPORT - Now
Campa1gn , 155 ; Oliver White , 110 ;
Thomp::~Orl · is married to the
Providence , -25 ; Teens Run . Providence, . Unknown; Carter, Un known; Car t er:
Everg r een Prospect , -75 ; Prospect servin~ at Myrtle Beach Af B.
65_; Teens RtJn - Providence, -10 ; Friendl y
Dan Thompson has purchased the Keith Goble Ford
forme~gise
Winebrenner of
Unknown ; Carter, Unknown, Rock Lick
Church, -40 ; Buck Ridge, -30 ; ~~thel
Rtdge , -30 ; Clark-Webster, -70; Clark · 100; Clay Li ck , -50 ; Houck -Trotter, lOS ; Church, . 140 , Mt. Zion, 120; Bidw..tJ . S. C., is Ca ptain Sean F;. Midd
Agency,
461 S. Third Ave.ln Middleport. The agency wUI now
They
have
two
Webster , -60 ,· BarclJS Hollow, 35 .
Mullen , son of ·Mr . and Mrs.
Woodsmlll, -40 ; Swango Brookman Lane
Uttle Paregon , Unk'IOWn ; Ri ce, 130 ;
he
known
as Dan Thompson Ford, Inc.
daught , Mrs. Jonnie Sue
Gallipolis Township
65 ; Swango Brookman Lane , -20: Gr e~~ Don E. Mull en of 583 S. Second
Northup-YeHowtown , -10; Lincol n Pike
Mill Creek , -85; Mill Creek, 130; Mill 130; Lincoln Pike, 140; Lincoln Pike, 120; Duly , -5; Kemper Hollow , -60 ; Kemper St., Middl epo rt. Cap1a1n Kinney of Columbus, and Miss
Creek , -SO ; Mill Creek , 110; Newsome , -50 : Mable Beaver. -75 ; Han nan Trace, 235 .
Hollow, 115 ; W. T. Wa tson, -50 : Evergreen
Nancy Thompson who is
Smith , -SO .
·50 ; Old Rt. 160, 140.
' Mullen. a pha rmacy officer, assoc iated with the Clintonville member of the Middleport
Huntington Townsh ip
pany dealers in Zone-F. A
Green Township
previously was assigned at
Walnut Town ship
Adney, 170; Adney, ·55 . Adney, 210 ;
Buhl Morton , -35 ; Mitchell , -40 ; Strong Run , 115 ; Strong Run -5: Tom
First
Bapti
st
Church
and
Federal
Savings
and
Loan
Co.
talented tenor , Thompson h3s
Cadmus Crossroads, -70 ; Cadmus Seotl AFB , 111.
F al rf I el d -CP.n l fln~r v . ·45 : Centenary
belongs
lo
.
the
MiddleportCrossroads, 125 ; German Hollow, -'15 :
Glenn , -60 ; Jackson , -80 ; Jackson ,
in
the
Columbus
area.
Mr
.
and
appeared
in many musicals
A 1966 graduate of MidChurch, -IS; Graham School , -55 ; Pleasant Unknown ; M t . Tabor , 2 15; Coal Valley , German Hollow, 120; Saunders, -80 ; Flagg
Pomeroy
Rotary
Club.
He
is
Mrs
.
Thompson,
who
reside
on
and programs across the
Hill School, -50; Pleasant Hill School. 105; 105; Coa l Valley, Unknown ; Sherman Springs· Crossroads, 110 ; Wi serr.an, -25 : dleport Hi gh School, the
Fairfteld Church, -30 ; Fairlleld Church, . Har tsook , 200 ; Lew Jones , -SS ; Lew Jones, Mudsoc -Fiag Springs, -IS ; Web Ster , 130 ; captain received hi s bachelor's Beec~ St. , in Pomeroy, have vice chairman of Ford Com- county over the past 30 years.
30 ; Nerman-Northup, 160; Ingalls, ·65 ; ·60 ; Lew Jones, 135 ; Shepherd l ane, -30 ; Webster , 135; Webster, 125 : Eakman , -40 ;
degree in 1971 from Ohto Slate two grandsons, Danny and
Norlhup-Patrlo t, 135 ; Northup-Patriot, Se lmer .Andrews , 195.
SptJ r lock, ·40 ; McCombs, -25 ; Barlow , -SO ;
Duke Kinney.
165 ; l:aylor, 150; Tay lor -60; Taylor, U-K;
P~ters Cav~. -10; Sandfork -Peniel. 125 ; Univer sity and was com·
Morgan Township
Biess!nQ , 610; Biesslno. -85 ; Bless lnq , 140;
Employed in auto sales for
Lmcoln Pi ke, -30; Lincoln Pike, ·65 · missioned the following year
E~o - VInton, 100 ; Eno-Vinton, 110;
SERVICE GROUNDED
traffic accidents, has been
Blessong, -AS ; Starcher.Holbrick, tOO ; Eno.Vmton,
Patriot Cadmus, -70 ; Bush ; Hulf Hol low , :
some 25 years with severa l
·25; Eno-Vinton , 140 ; Eno Ltncoln Pike, 140; Lincoln Pike, 140; VInton, 285; Eno·VInton, 165; Eno-Vinton ,. 10 ; Mill er, -25 ,· Hannan Trace, -30 : upon completion of Officer
COLUMBUS
(UP!)
The
suspendi!d
. Guard officials say
Lincoln Plke,-10 Lincoln Pike, -70; Kr iner. 25 ; Eno-VInton , -60 ; Eno-VInlon, 190; Eno- Drummond , -60.
Training School al Lackland agencies tn the Big Bend area, Ohio
Nationa
l
Guard's
,,
the
suspension
of the program
,.
AFB. Tex. Captain Mullen 's Thompson is a past master of Medicopter program, which followi!d receipt of a federal
13 DIE IN MOSQUE
wife, Paula, is the daughte r-of Middleport Masonic Lodge 363, involves the use of Guard directive disc ontinuin g the
caved in the roof of a mosque In
CAffiO (UP[) - Thirteen a Nile Della village Friday,
Mr. and Mrs. Paul K. Russell F &amp;AM and belongs to ·other helicopters in transp o~ting program because of a question
Masonic bodies. He is an active
Moslem worshippers were government offlvlals said
of SyraciiSe . ·
persons seriously injured in of liability responsibility.
killi!d and another 22 Injured Saturday.
Continued from page 1~
when a minaret collapsed and
a high-voltage power line,
shearing off the right wing and
leaving lhe wing tip ,hanging In
Ute structure,
The plane sliced through
trees and crashed upside down
in a boggy field two and a half
OOLI)MBUS (UP! ) - The
I
state
Public
Utilities
miles west of the airport.
"I remember one of the main Comission says Ohio gas and
guys (company officials ) electric utilites have agreed to
saying this guy (the pilot) extend credit or work out
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could land the plane on a high- budgeted payments for hard~-:11!-'.~'Lway," Mrs .. Little said, "He pressed customers rather than
said he could land It in a disconnect the servii:e.
meadow or anything. We were
The Coalition of Concerned
all tired from the long night Utility Users, however, objectsams good neighbor.
and were teas~tg and joking if ed to the budget payment plan
we would make it okay.
because it provides "no su~
Here's my new State Farm office, whore 1 can serve
"And then the next thing 1 stantive relief for beleaguered
vou with the best value in car, home, life and hea lth
knew was ~ kind of jerking rate payers." The coalition is a
insurance. I invite you to call or drop in any time.
feelin g, And I knew im- consumer group formed to
mediately, I knew. I could feel oppose the Columbus &amp; SouthCARROL K. SNOWDEN
it hitting trees and the next ern Electric Co. rate increase
24 State St.
Ph. 446-4290
.
Utlng
Iknew it was like beihg request.
SJATff411M
propelled
.
" We are concerned by
"•vnMtt..,...
Kllllllllllltu;
"This is my first and my last reporta of consumers facing
plane ride."
disconne ction . this winter because they cannot pay their
utility bills," said PUCO
member Sally Bloomfield.
"While we cannot expect Ute
companies to bear Ute burden
of noni)8yment by those who
'
CQnslstenUy fail to meet their
financial obligations, we feel
special consideration is due
.
consumers
who
hav e
historically paid their billls and
are having trouble In this time
of spiraling inflation,"said
Mrs. Bloomfield.
"We are especially pleased
that this program will help
lessen the burden on Ohio's
elderly, the low-Income consumer and aU Ohioans on fixed
$.
incomes,'' she said.
Mrs. Bloomfield said the
companies would :
-Offer customers the options of weekly or biweekly
payments as well as the
present monthly plan, · plus
L AN INCOME CHECK EVERY MONTH.
other forms of extendi!d credit.
-Send a company representative to the home prior to Ute
2. A HIGH RATE OF RETU~N ON YOUR INVESTMENT.
time the service Is to be
disconnected to see if it can be
averted.
- Tell what Ute customer can
3. NO DEPLETION OF YOUR OR.IGINAL CAPITAL
do to keep the service.
-Cooperate with consumer
groups who wish to reach gas
4. GUARANTEED SAVINGS
and electriC customers who
may not hav~ been contac~ in
oUt..- ways. ,
5. NO RISK OF MARKET LOSSES.
The coalition said " four
points provide no substantive
relief for beleaguered rate
·payers."
6. WITHDRAW ANY TIME.
"The extension of a budget
payment plan serves no PW'·
pose for low-Income or elderly
Our Monthly _Income Plan guarantees you an income check every month .
consumers
who simply can't
II also provtdes a hrgh rate of return on your investment, with no
afford the base 1!10nthly rate,"
· depletion of your original capital and no r&lt;skof market losses.
saJd Ed Harter!, attorney for
, The Plan is ideal for retired persons, wic1ows, families putting
the coalition. '
chtldren through college- and for many others whofleed a safe, steady
.
He said the PUCO under "a
mcome.
cloud of smoke" is trying to
Ea~ly American, Traditional and Modern styles. Famous Kroehler
sidetrack the real issue of
nattonally known quality, Herculon an·d nylon Kr oehler per" unreasonable · rates and
!
formance tested fabrics. ~reens, browns and golds .
hidden "utility costs by issuing
Ask us about our Month I y Income Pian .
this agreement."
He said the final three points
~top in- Elberfelds Jrd Floor F~rnitu~e Department_ See these
You work hard for your money.
of the PUOO plan, providing
fme Kroehl.er suites and save now.
·
We make it wor~ hard for you.
for noli~ ' to conswners about
available alternatives to pre.
vent diCOlUleclions, actually
pr~vide no alternatives.

Foley is third

Utilities
to offer
budgets

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
Furniture Department 3rd Floor

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ASK ABOUT OUR

MONTHLY.
INCOME
PLA·N

. 1 Sa\e·
KROEHLER 2-PIECE
svect3 orot\fl• . LIVING ROOM SUITES
eJect
,
S
Regular Price s439.00 to '489.00

35

SPECIAL SALE PRICE

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THE GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS.
and LOAN. COMPANY

·.

Opposite

PtJone 441&gt;-3832
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"Safe Savings Since 1886"
·
Gallipolis, Ohio

SIX DROWNED
NACOGDOCHE S, Tex .
(UPI) -Police .sais Saturday
six personS. drowned and 2,000 ·
others were forced from their
homes. by floodwaters which
overflowed two creeks choked
· with rain ' fro01 nightloog
storms . .·

See a!l the other. fine Kr~lller SQfas, Sli~es and ~ Seats·all at ~ prices.

ELBERFELQS IN POMEROY
·'

Who, by what book, says 5QO,OOO live or die '. daily

to admit guilt
Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach today reported Ute
arrest of a third P.rson, Craig
C. Foley, 19, Rt. 1, Reedsvllle,
. in connection with a breaking
and entering of the J . B.
O'Brien property on Owl
Hollow Road, Orange Township, on Nov, 30.
The sheriff said Foley has
also given his department a
statement admitting his part In
Ute theft of first aid kits, fire
extinguishers, flares and fuses
belonging to the Eastern local
Scbool District taken from
buses parki!d across from the
grade school at 'l'Jppers Plains
on Nov. 20.
Foley was taken before
COmmon Pleas Judge John C.
Bacon Saturday on a bill of

Information prepared by
Prosecuting Attorney Bernard
V. Fultz. Foley entered a plea
· of guilty and was remanded to
the sheriff of Athens County
where he is being · held on
charges pending there.
A pre:Oentence examination
will he conducted by the State
of Ohio to help determine
wheUter Foley should be
placed on probation. Two
othermen lnvolvi!d In the Incidents, Monte Ray Barringer
and David ArthW' Barringer,
Hockingport, are In the Meigs
County jail at this time
awaiting sentencing.
Sheriff Hartenbach said also
Saturday Utat Lonnie Ross
BlaCk, 18, Rutland Route 1,
Contitiued on page 8

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WAiiHINGTUN(UP I) - Two monU1s ago, 92 persons were
killi!d In an airplane crash. The pilots' association says the
air controller was at fault. The air controller blames the
pilot.
Evidence at the National Transportation Safety Board
hearings Into Ute Dec. 1 crash of TWA's Flight ~14 indicates
the rules are unclear. Tite pilots and controllers use separate
maps and rule books.
That difference may mean life or deaUt to any of the 5110,000
persons who fly each day,
The second week of hearings begins today. Scheduled to
tbtify w..-e the pilot of a·corporate jet who got too low on the
Same landing approach and the air controller who warni!d
him of it --unlike the pair on Dec. 1.
,.
The pilots and the air controllers aJ!I'eed .Sunday on one
point : sweeping reforms are needed at the Federal Aviation
Administration, that it s)tould become an Independent,
nonpolitical agency.
"Too frequently, the resources available to the FAA are
allocati!d as a result of political Influence," said J .J.
O'Donnell of the Air Line Pilots Association.
"The system and the regulatory agency are reactors and
not planners," said John Leyden of the Air Traffic Controllers Association. "We pay the price . By we, 1 mean the
controllers and the pilots and the flying public,"
They were Interviewed on a television show on WMAL-TV.
::OLd

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. ~· ... ac,::;:::w:;:m Q UL

VOL XXVI

'·

en tine

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-MJtson A re11
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 205

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Now You Know
Richard Ill was the only
English monarch since the
Norman Conquest to be killed
in battle.

PHONE 992-2156

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1975

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

'

Ford pleads or control on spending
WASHINGTON (UP!)- President Ford today described his
$349 billiOn federal budget for fiscal1976 as the first step "along
the permanent road to fiscal integrity" and called ujlon Congress
tojoinwiUthiminiJUttinapermanentcQntroisonspendin~,

"WiUtout question, our inunedlate task Is the restoration of
active growth In our economy -and that goal is reflected In the
projeCted budge deficit" of $52 billion, Ford said In remarks to he
deliveri!dasheslgriedthebWprlortosendingittoCongress.
The package wa.S·to Ji'Seitt to Congress at noon ,
Earlier In the day, Ford held a breakfast for Democratic and
Repulillcan congressional leaders to reiv·iew the record budget
and to urge them to support his requesta for tax rebates and a
long range energy program. He takes off for Atlanta this a!ternoon to generate public support for his program.
"To sustain our economic growth over the long haul,'' Ford

. -· ei,;~.'~in Briefi

MANILA-A'~~~~~~~ma;:oji-jetcaughtfire

~~P:d t~~~:11 ~~2b;r:~b~~~

:=ffbJ
an alrllite spokesman said, Roger Douglas Collins, a 51-year.()ld
American, crawled from Ute·burning wreckage wiUt hjs clothes
on fire.
''Help me! Help me! My legs! My legs!" he screamed. UP!
photographer Wlllle·Vi coy said rescue workers roUi!d Collins In a
dry rice paddy to douse Ute flames, He was taken to Las Plnas
·hospital, where he was listed In crltjcal condition, The HawkerSiddley prop-jet was bound for Dllgari city, about 550
tO the
south, when its right engine caught fire just after lakeoff at 6
am., according to Elazlo Adriano, vice president of the government-owned airline,
·

mlles

MARCUS HOOK, PA,- THE WRECKAGE OF an olltanker
burni!d on the Delaware River today, at least three and possibly
as many as 28 persons were dead, and a 1s.mile slick threatened
. the lives of 30,000ducks. Mllllons of gallons of oU spewed from the
Greek tanker Corinthoa after It was rammed by an Amer~
tanker Friday, resulting In a series of spectacular explosions
which killed at le~~st three persons.
· ·
At least 33 persona were lnjuri!d and a search for 25 unaccounted for crewmen was called off untU after the fire is extlngulshi!d. A Coast Guard spokesman said Ute fire would be
permitted to burn In hopes of ellmlnaUng some of Ute oU. Between liMl and 125.diving ducks had)&gt;Oj!n collected from 11181'8hes
and taken to four collection centers by late Sunday, according to
Ken Chitwood, a coordinator for the Fish and WUdllfe Service.
.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. - THE. FBI and Michigan and
Cltlo law enforcement agencies today were Jleal'ching for Robert
Young, '17, a former mental patient accused of klilnajllng a young
woman and a 10-year-old girl; The man ,reportedly stopped for
gattOtine at Toledo, Ohio, where the yoong woman escaped, An
F'Bl official said they had checked 1~ . Cincinnati area without
finding any trace of the man, also known as Robert Holland.
The WlidenWii!d child, who said she was semally molested,
was found tii!d to a tree In Clarksville, Mich., In Ionia County,
Friday night, The woman, identified 1111 Ten'\ Rock, 19, w"!' handcuffi!d and placed in the trunk of a car. The FBI obtained
unlaWful flight and kidnap warrants against YoWJg, who has a
record of mental Ulness, Kentwood City Pollee Chief Robert
Dryer said.
·

'

future national budget Into balance during perinds of good
economic growth."
·
Calling for congressional cooperation, the President said, "if
Utese were normal economic times, the ConJ!I'eSS would be
receiving a budget In balance for the coming fiscal year rather
Ulan one with such a large deficit. But these are not normal
times."
He explalni!d tllat the measures he proposes to boost Ute
economy - tax rebates and reductions and assistance to the
Wlemployed - wlll cause some of the deficit. He blamed Ute
remainder of the deficit on lagging recelpta from tax revenues.
"Despite the huge deficit we project,'' he said, "the budget
bein£ submitti!d today is a compassionate one. It has muscle as
well. It has discipline and honest self-denial, It's a start In a new
.

. .

·.I

.

,

.

•

direction along the permanent road' of fiscal integrity which
Americans must achieve for the long.term good of our country."
Ford warned that If ConJ!!'ess fails to go along with his
request for spending reductions totaling $17 billion; the deficit
will go even higher.
"If we are to achieve long range economic stability In this ·
country free from ever-l'lsing Inflation, we must put into effect
permanent reduction in program expenditures," be said.
He said Utat he firmly rejects ·the view that some government expenditures are uncontrollable. "They are controllable if
the Congress and the President joined !ogeUter to hold down
excessive spending," he said.
"This bUdget is designed to bring some of Utese a~alli!d
'uncontrollable' programs ba.ck into line. 1 alit the Collgreu to

.

.

work with me toward this objective."
He said the President and the Congress mu~t act together to
stimulate the economy and ri!duce the rate at which federal
expenditures have been growing over the past IOyears,
Ford also pralsi!d outgoing Budget Director RQy Ash for
staying until Ute 1978 budget requests were completed, He said be
looked to Ash's successor, former HUD Secretary · James T,
Lynn, to enhance fW'ther the capability of s6Ud managljrrleirl so
necessary to that office."
•
Personally previewing the budget for reporters last SatW'·
day , Ford acknowledged that he wants the United State~~ to spend
almost a billion dollars a day beginning July 1, 1975,
"ll'sa big budget," he said, "caUlng for expelllllllrel of $Me
lillian - almolt tl blilkJn • day."

.

get $340 mt.III.on
.WASHINGTON (UP!) President Ford asked Congress
today to approve $340 million
for regional development aid to
Appalachia in Fiscal 1976, and.
to give states a greater role in
choosing programs to he
financed.
The funds, administered by

Teachers
•
staymg
on jobs
COLUMBUS (UP!) - City
teachers remained on the job
today pending the outcome of
further negotiations with the
Columbus Board of Education

on a new contract.

During a lengthy SWJday
meeting, members or the
Columbus· Education Association unanimously voted, by
standing up, to reject the
board's proposal of an immediate 6 per cent pay Increase,
and another 2 per cent hike In
September. The board of
governors of the Columbus
Education Association had
·e tt'on of th
recommended reJ c
e
latest contract offer and urged
·
members to resume their strike

WASHINGTON - THE NATION'S CHIEF coal mine safety
today.
Teachers voted against walkagency was budgeted for an $11.6 mllllon Increase over.last ~
.
lng
out for the second time In a
under President Ford's Fiscal1976 budget presented to Congress
monUt.
The governors had
today. Ford asked Congreu to include $79.5 mllllon for
W'ged the walkout despite the
operations of the Mining Enforcement and Safety Administration
standing order of Common
wltich ovenees and enforces the federal mine health and safety
Pleas Court Judge Jay Flowers
law passed by Congreas in 1989, ·
..
'
t
o .remain· on th,e jOb. F1 owers
·. MESA is one of the l1l08t controv.mal agencies in governDJellt, with James Day, i!a administrator, under strong attack , issued the court order to end
the teachers' one-week strike
from tbe United Mine Workers wllon and some Capitol Hill
Jan. II ,
~ialatO..alfor his administration of the laws. One of the major
teachers have dropped
aieas of tncrease in.tbe 19'16 bUdget is lunda to ustst states in th The
·
deinanda fr'om' 20
etr
pay
per
flnandng the c0ttt of improvementa in Uteh; mining safety inI
1
9 per cen t· The board
cen
.
o.
, apection pflllll'arns. An Increase of f3,4 mlllloo was IOU8Iit for
has improved its offer since. the
Utat progi'am,
walkout ended from 4 to 6 per
t
' '
cen ·
. :·. . . ..·.·. ·.. ' .-..·.··. :.BRADBURY NOTE
A car Wit!! heaVily damaged, , an embankment, spinned
A
public meeting to
arowtd
for
another
30
feet,
Ita driver·charged with driving
dlscuSI
lbe Bradbury Scbool'
finally
striking
and
knocking
while intoxicated, as lhe result
will
be
held at 7:30 p.m. ·
down
a
utility
pole,
of an accident on Union Ave. at
Tuesday ·a l tbe Meigs Junior
Bass and a passenger, James
5:20p.m. Sun~ay.
.
'
Jligh School ID Middleport,
Milliron,
Racine,
were
taken
to
Pojneri&gt;y police said the car,
district superlatendut
driven by Gene Bass, 46, Veterans Memorial Hospital
c;&gt;eorge
Hargraves reminded
Pomeroy, went off Ute left side . where lbey were treated and •
lodliy.
'
of.the road, sideswiped a utility released.
.-:-.·:·:·:-:-:-:-:.-:-:-:·:·:·:.:·:-:.v.·.·-·
·.·· ·.
-::
pole, careeried 123 feet and hit
.I
I

Auto damaged, driver charged

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from the airport. It was 11 :09 :22 a.m.
[)ameron said his Instruction meant Brock should fly at
7,000feet for another 24 miles before descending. ~' I thought
my clearance was clear and precise, that It was not confusing," said the 20-year veteran. "I thought I knew what Ute
pilot would do.
"I think the pilot thought thesameway.lf he was confused,
he would have asked me."
Recordings of In-flight conversations show Brock thought
the clearance meant he could immediately go down to 1,800
feet. He told his·copilot, Lenard W, Kresheck, 40, to disregard
"that dumb sheet" --&lt;1 navigation chart showing a minimum
safe .altitude of 3,400 feet.
Other pilots say they would have done the same Uting.
Controllers say their responsibility is to prevent midair
CQUisions and that it is up to the pilot to keep his plane above
the J!l'ound.
Dameron, whose government approach chart did not
CQntain MI. Weather, became frightened when his yellowJ!I'een radar screen showed the plane at 2,000 feet. He tried to
get Brock on the radio.
It was too late. The jet was buffeted by wlnda tha.t pushed It
down 250 fee,t, tossed it up 150 feet and back down 200 feel in
less than a minute.
·
.
·
Th~ radar a ltimeter warning horn shrieked. "Get some
power on," Brock yelled two seconds before the crash.

• »1~~11818;fi!!HI!I'~·~SilOIS!Jig:·l!l·~o~~;::_~!! ······ \'. V 'eY:~"s;&amp;~~;~~:~:~~:~:i:~:::::~8::::::~:~:::~::::::::::::::m.-::::..\.~~"!»:."C.ai&amp;&amp;.&amp;.sm.•. j 1::~~~"'--IRIS!II~W!IN~illlllll11881!1!1111111t111

a1y

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TI1e testimony so far indicates the instrum~nt landing rules
are ambiguous, TWA complaini!d to the FAA in 1970 about
the widespread confusion. The regulations were changed,
then canceled five months later. Awitness this week will ·be
asked to explain,
In .the first 32 dai's of 197~. 12 perso~ died in instrument
landing crashes. In 1974, th e death toll was 466 in eig ht
crashes. Four, which killed 366, occurred during some phase
of landing.
Controller Merle W, Dameron, the last man to talk to the
airplane, pleaded for clarity. Discussing the different charts
and rules, he said "these publications evidently present .all
the saine information, but differently.
" If we could standardize our publications so traffic controllers and pilots are using the same book, so you don't have
50 different things you're oeferring to, then they (all) would
know what's going on.
Everyone aJ!I'ees on this : Dameron gave Flight ~14, piloti!d
by Richard L Brock, an Instrument approach Clea rance to
Runway 12 at Dulles International Airport. The "VORDME".type approach shows a pilot the course and distance
to the airport, not the angle of landing.
"You're cleared for a VOR-DME approach to Runway onetwo," said Dameron. ·
A few minutes later, the Boeing 727 hit 1,764-foot MI.
Weather, a mountaintop in the Blue Ri&lt;lge range, 23 miles

•

Weather
Chance of light snow tonight
and Tuesday. Lows tonight In
the upper 20s, highs Tuesday,
upper 30s. Probability of
precipitation 20per cent today,
30 per cent tonight, 40 per cent
Tuesday.

'

Five of 16

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·'

Kentucky, Virginia, North
Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Georgia, Mississippi,
Alabama, Pennsylvania, Ohio,
Maryland, and New York.
The ARC is·. a· federal-state
partnership which funnels fed·
eral money tq· ,the states and
oversees the programs.
Included in .,the FY 1976
budget request was $180 million
for continuation of the Appala- ·
chian Development Highway
System, designed to improve
accessibility to ' the poverty
region , reduce highway trans-·
portation costs, and provide·
•·
facilities to accelerate overall
JUBILEE TUREE STAR - Earl Hoffman, right, wiUt the "Jubilee Three" which was
developmen\ of Appalachia.
voted
the best country gospel group for 1974 by the KCZT Tape and Fan Club, Hoffman ill
The .government estimated
formerly of Pomeroy,
that 1,300 miles of highway
would be completed at the end
of FY 1976, along with _an
$II
additional 500 miles of access
~
roads,
A former Meigs County man, primarily to promoting lesser · There was a tie vote this year
No one
j ed
·•-•
The major change in aid
Earl Hoffman, is a member of known and new talent In the · between the JubUee Three and
was W' or Cl~
uld
· 1 d'
· in two traffic accidents wo
come 111 un mg area a Bellevllle, ado area group, country-western and gospel Jim and Jesse and The
.
development programs which
Investigated
over
Ute will include health and child The Jubilee Three, which music field, The club has about VIrginia Boys, a group which
weekend by the GaUia-Meigs development, community racili- recently was awarded trophies 3110 members In Ute United has been a member of Ute
Post State Highway Patr~l.
ties and-housing, vocational and for the best COWitry 80spel States and 10 foreign countries. Grand Ole Opry many yean. A
Tapes are sent to members second vote was taken with Ute
The first occurred at l1 :30p. other education , enterprise group for 1974. The trophies
by
KCZT
Tape
throughout
the year fealurlitg Jubilee Three winning ,
were
awarded
m. Saturday on Rt. 143 iri Meigs development and toW'ism, natuHoffman is the son of Mrs.
Fan
Club
.with the lesser known recording
County where Clarence M. ral resources and environment, and
Fraley, 21 , Rt. 3, Albany, lost and non-highway transporta· headquarters In Philadelphia, artists. A tape is sent In Julia Gibbs who llves· at Rt. 1,
Pa .
control of his car on a sharp .
January Utat features eligible Pomeroy, He \VSS emp!Qyed
curve. The auto left the high- ti~~- past years, the ARC has The KCZT Tape and Fan KCZT artista In each category with Robinson 's Laundry many
years before leaving Meigs
way striking a utility pole and decided the programs which the Club is an orga~~on devoted from which votes are cast,
CoWity.
tree . There was moderate
damage.
respective states would use any
A 1 h'
ASundayrru'shapoccurred
ppa ac ta money. h
- 'tn
Gallia County on McCully Rd.,
.The new concept, owever,
one and two-tenths miles west would provide $125 million In an
allocation program similar . to
of Rt. 7 where cars driven by the bloc grants of the federal
Nick C. Lagaras, 46, Gallipolis, revenue sharing program .
and James J. Armbruster, 16,
h d d
t 'd th
Addison, coiUded on a hillcrest.
T e bu get ocumen 881 e
would permit
There Was mode'rale damage allocations
"
te tate n 'bil't
· th
1 Y '"
to both cars. No ,charges were · grea t r s d ki ext
e•
d
of
filed.
amoun an
n
projects
By BERNARD BRENNER administratiQn wants an ex- Real spending on some
undertaken,"
WASHINGTON ( UP! ) - panded federal crop insurance programs was scheduled to
Another · $11:5 mllllon was
President Ford's new budget program with farmers paying Increase. A boost ·of $42 mllllon
Included In the ARC budget for
today called for cutbacks in a most · of the cost through to a new total of $592 million
. the research and local develnnwas piannect for agricultural
Meigs County .farmers have
., lilfl8 list of farm a"d rural premiums, the budget said.
ment district program whereby programs and predicted farm
The
budget
sh9Wed
total
'
r
esearch, mainly to Increase
until Feb. 15 to file for a new
planning assistance is provided pr'iee support spending .in the planned AgricultW'e Depart- farm .producti-&lt;ity; and for
corn allotiilent for 1975· Ap- tl)rough gr.ants to multi-county
year starting July 1 would drop men! spending in the 1976 fiscal allied items such as extension
plications can be securi!d at the
development districta. Grants to the lowest level in 25 years. y~r beginning Jitly 1 at $9.7 work , and grants to state
local Agriculture Stabilization
and Conservation Servi~e are llUide up to 75 per. cent of
Ford said he will try to lrim billiori, up more than $900 experiment statfons. Exjlenses
Office in the Farmers Bank administrative expenses of the farm spending even further million from the currept fisc~! for meat and poultry inspection
districts.
with legislation eliminating year, The increase, however, were also up $9 mlllloo.
Bllildlng at Pomeroy.
But for most federal· farm
· · provisions that grain and cotton was · a bookkeeping change
. Farmers who have not
growers who suffer weather produced , because of a sche· programs, the trend was down.
h8rves~ their 1974 corit due to
The budget predicted .direct .
disasters will collect about $592 duled $2 billion decline.in sales
bad weather conditions can flle
of
government·
loan
papef
to
payments
to lllf1lltr., wblc:h bit
million
this
fiscal
year
and
ail
for disaster payments not later
private
investors.
·
nearly
$4
bllllon
in u-1 19'13,
estimated $254 million in the
than 1~ days after har\testing iS
LOCAL TEMPS
' If the $2 bllllon change is .would !lroP from Sl llllllon to
compl~ted. Evidence ~~
The temperature In down- year starting July 1·
disaster must be present and ·town Pomer~y at 11 a.m. -. In place of the disaster ignored, ' actual government $401 mlllloo In the year allrbt
residue. of tbe crop cannot be · Monday ~as 38 degrees under payments linked to the crop program operations wo!lid be · July I. All price ,IIJIIPOI1,i
'destroyed.
s1111ny skies.
· Cpntinuetl 'on
price support program, the reduced $1.1 billion.
.'
. . '1
. • .
''
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' .
.,,
the Applachian Regional Commission, would equal the
estimated FY 197~ outlay.
"In 1976, Appalachia regional
development programs will
continue to undergo changes
designed to provide greajer
flexibility in meeting the
diverse problems of Appalachia,'' the budget report said.
It added that fiscal'~esources
"will be concentra~ 'on the
overall economic development
objectives of the region."
Included in the Appalachian
region is the entire state of
West Virginia, and parts of

Only autos
dam
· ued

Meigs man in award winning group .

m
'

Farm, rural problems
cut back in Fordplan

File date set

.

Pill!.!--

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�•
•

~ The Da!IY_Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Feb. 3, 197&gt;

Editorial ·c omment,
;

-

opinion, features

Great decisions·-~o. 2

Is Detente for real·?

catching on

The good old election days

"Don't Forget We're All in This Together!"

DR. LAMB

Low blood sugar
needs good diet

'

'

I

I

'

Dechan1
I

By HENRli, SHAPIRO
Union and abroad by means of
United Press lnteroallonal
demonstrations, petitions, sitThe Soviet repudiation of the down strikes, etc.
N1xon-Brezhnev trade agree- Pressure from the Western
ment has dealt a body blow but Commumst
parties
•
not a knockout to the dehcate especially those of Italy,
lS
~ocess of detente dramallzed France and Bntam- which
by the first v1sil of an alarmed by reports of an·
Amencan
Pres1dent to Moscow tisem1tism m the Sov1et Uruon,
The winter of the automakers' discontent appears to be turning mto an early and prosperous
spring
in 1971.
demanded amelioration.
Henry Kissinger character·
Gone are the Stalin era days
The b1g three of Chrysler, Ford and General Motors, plus the httle one of Amencan Motors, are
all now offering cash rebates of between $200 and $600 to auto buyers 10 an attempt to lift the mdustry !zed the development as a when fore1gn as well as
out of one of 1ts worst slumpssm~e World War II As a result, sales in the pastjfew weeks have made a "setback" to detente , but said domestic public opmion were
that It would not halt U.S ef- held m contempt.
deCided turnaround
to continue seeking unThere was no disagreement
forts
Another h1g boost 1s commg from hundreds of other compan1es, from banks and major
mauufacturers down to golf shops and cloth10g stores, who have mslltuted employe or customer ~oved relations with Moscow. between the White House,
"An unpersonable mterfer- Kissinger
and
the
rebate or d1scount plans based on the purchase of new cars. These are in add1tion to those offered by
ence in our domestic affairs CongressiOnal followers of Sen.
the auto compan1es.
For mstance, the Bel01t, W1s.,State Bank w11l reduce fmance charges for new auto loans by $100, which put the hands of the Henry Jackson on the g98l of
or around 20per cent of the typ1cal amount, and banks 10 other c1ties are offermg sunila r mcenllves. clock back," was the way Iz- obtallling the liberalization of
Gulf and Western Jndustnes 1s offenng its employes $100. D1tto Irvm Industr1es, to any of its em- vest1a , the Kremlin 's official Soviet emigration practices .
newspaper, described certain But the execullve branch, on
ployes who buy a 1975 car or truck for which the company makes seat belts
Falcon Golf, Inc. of Ferndale, M1ch., will knock $200 off a set of golf clubs w1th purchase of a new pri&gt;Vlswns in the US. Trade the ground of feasible
U. S.-rnade car, and a clothier in Brrming ham, Mich.,ts adver\ls10g a 10 per cent discount to anyone Reform Bill that was enacted a diplomacy, strenuously though
unsuccessfully objected to the
who has proof of a new carpurchase ,and the DetrOit Red Wings hockey club w11tgive two tickets to a few weeks ago.
The
bill
granted
Most
FaJackson
amendment to the
home game to anyone who buys a new car from an area dealer by Feb. 28.
Sperry and Hutchinson Co. is g1ving 50,000 S&amp;H stamps to any of 1\s employes who buy a new car vored Natwns tar1ff status to trade refonn bill with its
before March-31, and WPIX-TV in New York has announced it will run free television ads to promote the Sov1et Union on condition discruninatory provisiOns.
· auto sales
Rad the secretary of state
that itliberahze 1\s em1gration
policles
.
The
leg1slat10n
'which
been
allowed to continue his
The spark that ignited it aU seems to ha ve been struck last December when WiU1am w. Keefer,
~es1dent of Wa_rner Electric Brake &amp; Clutch Co. and Rodney F. Ackerman, vice president of auto Congress passed against pres!- qu1et d1plomacy without the
of
provocative
sales, were facmg the bleak prospect of curtailing the company's output of aii'-cond11ioner com- dential protest also iinuted the fanfare
granting
of
gov,.ernment
credits
pubhc1ty
the'
conunon
goal
~essor clutches for Chrysler and America n Motors and lay10g off lOper cent of the1rwork force.
to
the
Sov1et
Union
to
$300
would
probably
have
been
They decided to switch attention from doom and gloom to searching for a positiVe 1dea that
would perk up employe moral, help two major customers and stimulate business m local plant million in four years and achieved.
A3 specwhsts on Soviet afsubject to congresswnal
communities. They called in "Confidence in America."
review
every
18
months.
larrs
had warned, the linkage
On Dec. 16, Warner Electric proposed the program of cash rebates to Chrysler and American
Nevertheless
Izvestia
and
of
Amencan
views on civil
Motors. The rest is history.
It's estimated that more than 500,000 employes in the automobile and automobile-related m- other Soviet media hastened to · rights -the right to emigrate
dustrles - not to mention nnlllons of consumers un~er the various auto company plans-are now affinn that the Soviet Union - with tariff rules would not be
ellJllble for rebates up to $700, with more companies j01nlng the "Confidence 10 America" mcentive would not undertake a cardinal acceptable to the Russians.
reassessment of Its fore1gn
The number of emigration
program every day.
.
\
·
policy, the gwding,principle of visas for 1974 was reduced to
which is detente.
shgbtly more than one half of
I
Pres1dent Ford, Kissinger the 1973 figure and is likely to
and Soviet spokesmen have dimlmsh further as Moscow
been unanimous in declarwg smarts under the attempted
'Way back in the early 19th century, when America was a nation of fanners, legislation directed that the main imperatives of congressional humiliation .
The problem of trade will
that national elections take place during the first week of Nohember because "harvesting is over detente -the avoidance of
nuclear war and mutual an- probably be renegotiated on a
than, and winter has not yet made the roads impassable "
Tuesday was designated Instead of Monday, says the National Geographic Society's historical nihilation, the need to achieve more realistiC besis. Should
oddities division, because many voters lived a day 's journey from a polling place and objected lo strategic arms limitations and Congress be agreeable to
traveling on Sunday.
ending the arms race plus the modify the present objectionaDespite the vast changes that have overtake~ America since then, there seems no particular creation of a global clunate of ble provisions of the trade bill
reason to abandon the custom . At least one state , however, is go1ng to consider doing away w1th peace -remain unchanged. and g1ve the President a free
another rellc of the old days. '
The significance of trade as a hand, a mutually beneficial
component
of detente appears trade relationship could stlll
Ohio state Rep. John A. Galbraith plans to introduce legislation to allow liquor stores and bars in
the slate to operate normally on election day. At present, bars may open for bus10ess but ca n sell only to have been grossly inflated. develop. Provided, of course,
low-powered beer .
TheSov1etmterestin acquiring that Congress accepts a "gentThe law was apparently passed to try tu keep unscrupulous politicians from bu}'lng votes w1th American technology and ere- Iemen's agreement" with the
dits, allegedly at any price, Kremlin on emigration.
drinks. "I think we have now advanced beyond that," says Galbraith.
No ~oud, sovereign nation
Cynics would agree. These days the problem is not politicians buying votes but the other way especially has been overemaround.
phasized.
whose equality is recognized
It became clear early in the by the United States could
process of detente \hat Moscow accept foreign dictation m 1\s
was indeed prepared to pay a domestic affairs in exchange
high price for American aid rn for what, in terms of big-power
the modermzalion of its trade, is a pittance.
lagging industry. But it was
Pittance? In the popular
naive to assume that a mind Most Favored Nations
superpower, second only to the treabnentmlght be interpreted
United States, a country as as an American give-away.
ideologically committed as the Actually, taken alone, M.F.N.
Soviet Union is, would publicly mvolves no teclmical aid, no
and formally accept the cred1ts. It is not a Marshall
hu~liation of subnnllin~ to Plan. All 11 means is that the
fore1gn pressure in its Soviet exports to the United
domestic affairs.
Slates, negligible as they may
Moscow had already made be now, will not he subjected to
substantial concessions to bigger tariffs than the goods
western libertarian appeals. imported from most other
Emigration visas for Jews and countries -from Britain, Ger·
other ethnic' minorities had many and Japan to the tiny
been raised from practically banana republics.
zero m 1967 to 40,000 m 1973. A
Nor could the Russians be
punitive tax on college- tempted by the bi)l's allowance
educated would-be emigrants, of credits amounting to $75
intended to discourage ap- million a year for lour years.
plicants, was suspended. And The Russians could do better
there was every reason to than tbal in Luxembourg, a
believe, as the Soviet leaders Soviet affairs specialist quipwere reported to have ped.
privately ~omised American
The aMulment of the trade
officials, that the enngration agreement, however, has
rules would be liberalized served a number of useful
materially.
purposes which may produce a
I was personally given the more realistic American view
impression that the niunber of of detente.
visas would rise appreciably
There was no reason to
when in mld-19731 interviewed produce overnight miracles
for the UP! a number of key and convert a long smoldering
Soviet cabinet members.
cold war into a peacetime
All of this was a product alliance between two inpartly of the effectively quiet compatible powers. It is a
diplomacy pracllced by NIXon fragile process of negotiation,
and Kissinger. It also resulted ratber than confrontation for
from two unrelated develop- very high stakes. Despite the
ments which have not been failure
of
the
trade
sufficiently recogni%ed in the negotiations the balance sheet
West :
of detente is largely positive.
- The mounting agitation of
The belief that the Russians
Jewish activists in tbe Soviet were desperately in need of
American technology and were
wjlling to pay any price to get it
since some protein foods are bas been shattered. On the eve
of announcmg their new 15loaded w1th fat.
year
economic plan the RusDEAR DR. LAMB - Do you
think cancer can be cured sians could indeed profit
I
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
eating sweets the islets release related lo low blood sugar, when a person is in his or her
DEAR DR. I,.AMB - I have an lncreaud amount of insulin. some are endocrine and others 70s?
lJ!~ ~j~ Senti!lel
hypoglycemia and would Your body literally r:eleases are related to diet. A lot of
DEAR READER - Of
DEVOTED
TO THE
greatly appreciate any in- wbatever amount of insulin you people get that diagnosis who course. lt depends not so much
INTEREST OF
ME IG S·MA SON A REA
formation you could send me need to control the level of your have other conditions, in- on age as the type of cancer
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
about it. .My oldesi brother is a blood sugar.
eluding anxiety. For more and how far it has progressed.
Exec . Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH
diabetic. My endocrinologist
When the islets are defective detailed information write to An early skin cancer, for
City Editor
.
has me on a 10110-calorle high they may release insulin too me at P. 0 . Box 1551, Radio example, can be removed with
'Pub I \shed dolly exce pt
by The Oh io Valley
protein diet.
late, long after the peak sugar City Station, New .York, N. Y. a complete Oll'e. Cancer of the· Saturday
Pubi 1Sh 1ng Compahv . 111
Court St . Po mer oy.- ah;o
DEAR READER - The load. The result is the extra 10019 and ask for the booklet on prostate can be cootrolled for
BuSiness Ofl1ee Phone
interesting thing about your insulin, released into the low blood sugar. Send 50 cents years a!IA!r it is first diagnosed. 45769.
~2 · 2156. Ed•tor.a t Phone 992
2157
diagnosis is your brother's bloodstteam after the blood to cover costs.
The success in control depends
Second ctus postage pa •d at
diabetes . Sometimes glucose level bas already • It is common to put people a lot on how early it is· Pomeroy, Oh10 r
Nat 1 on a I advert i sing
hypoglycemia (low blood started to fall. The extra in- with this condition on a high diagnosed.
repr
esenta t&lt;ve BotUnen; .
Gallagher, Ind., 12 East 42nd
sugar)
precedes
the sulln drives the level lower stlll protein diet. I presume your
The best aid you have to
St , New York , New York .
development of dlabeies (high and hypoglycemia develops. · doctor thinks yoo are also survival from cancer is finding
Su b scription
rate s .
Delivered by ear ner Where
blood sugar).
As the islets become more ovenrelght and is restricting the cancer early - before it ava
ilab le 75 cents per week ;
By ~olor Route where carrier ,
In these instance9 the defect defective, they fail to produce your calories for \11&amp;1 purpoae. bas a chance to enlarge or
not fll vallab te, One
is really in the islets of enough ln.sulin. The defect In general, even foc patients spread. That means regular servrce
month . SJ 25 By matr !n Ohio
LiJI&amp;.erban's of the pancreas, literally progresses from 1vith low blood sUgar, I prefer a . checkups, particularly for l and w va , One Year, S22 00 .
Sox monChs , Sll 50 . Three
the place where ln.sulin is producing too late to also w~-balanced diet, 1vith plenty tboae who are more likaly to
months , S7 00
~tsewhera
526 00 ye ar . Si&gt;t mon ths
p-odueed. Normally when lbe producing too little. Then you of bulk and relatively low in haVe cancer. Early cancers SlJ
so . three monthS. S7 50 ' ·
Subsc:rq:Hion ~rrce mcludes
amotmt of sugar (glucose) In . bave dlsbetes.
fat. So YClU need to be careful fOilnd and treated can be
Sundov T111'1es•Senlintl · ,There are ~any facturs • where YClU get thei protein, completaly cured.
Y?ur snllu Intestine rllles after

€onfidence

Logan pinned 38-27-by Meigs
Sport Parade

prefers

!If MILTON RICHMAN

considerably from American was made by President
knowhow. Lacking that they Eisenhower when he Invited
can make a secood-best deal the late Soviet premier, Nlldta
with West Germany, their S. IO!nJshchev, to Washqton
major trading partner, as well In 1959. Despite such setbackll
. as with France, Britain, Italy as the war in Vietnam and the
and Japan. The Soviet Union, invasion of Czechoslovakia,
WASHINGTON (UPI)an oil and gold exporting detente was never renounced president of the NaU.
country, has had a windfall in and was reactivated In !970 by Farmers Union today Ill
the steep rise of the price of Brezbnev who, as General Congress to adopt a food p
those commodities and is on Secretary of the Commwli.st stability program for COlli
the wa y of achieving a party, made it bill principal ers based on higher price ftc
favorable hard currency foreign policy plank at the 29th for farmers .
balance.
Party Congress.
Tony T. Dechant, the li
Detente is for real if despite
&amp;ezhnev, more than any leader, outlined his plan
sharp ideological divergence, other Soviet leader since testimony prepared for delb
despite setbacks and zigzags, Lenin, rules by consensus. He before the Senate Agrlcull
the avoidance of a nuclear presides over the 111-man Committee today.
holocaust can be negotiated in Politburo, where decisiiHlS are
The committee bearings,
a benign and calm climate. made by majority vote. There signed to produce what ~
That climate, improved at is no evidence to SIIJlll(lrl the man Herman E. Talmadge,
Vladivostok during the belief abroad that the Politburo Ga., calls an "Agriculture 1
meeting between President is divided into hardliners and Anti-depression Acl of 181
Ford and Brezhnev, has been liberala.
will run through the week
spo1led somewhat by the
Brezhnev, much more than Feb.l7.
repudiahon of the trade K!rushchev, bas seen to It that
Dechant said the N
agreement. But the guns are he gets the full support of Ute proposal is based on sett
silent and the East-Wesl Politburo for all his major price support loans for 11111
dialogue goes on uninter- policies. Detente is not a crops at 90 per cent of
ruptedly.
personal project of his.
Trade was only one of the
A3 far as the Soviet Union traditional "fair earnl
goals of detente and not the goes, Brezhnev or not, detente power" parity price standa
most vital one.
appears to be for real.
If prices rose beyond llO 1
The negotiators of detente
cent of parity, he said slol
are marching slowly and
Henry Sbapiro was a Joamal· held in farmer or governlnc
warily sometimes making two 1st based In tbe Soviet Unloo far hands could be led back b
steps ahead and two backward. 40 yean. He was mauager of the market to moderate fo
in the brief period since the tbe UPI bureau In Moscow costs.
policy was launched we have from 1939 unlll hls rellremeol
''The net effect of our pi
seen the considerable reduc- In 1973. Shapiro is DOW !temper
lion of East-West tensions and KDapp profeuor of jourDalllpl would be to keep fanners out
the eeonornic cellar and C&lt;
degree of ·cooperation which at tbe University of WlscODSin.
somers
out of the econou
seemed Impossible not so .
attic.
We
believe it can be t
n;any years ~go. _
beginning of a truly eHecU
The relative military and
and
workable national · fo
political stabillty in Europe in
policy" Dechant said.
which Communist Russia apDechant said the plan cou
pears to have ' acquired a
cure
the "boom and bua
vested interest was highlighted
cycles
in which wheat r811j
by the West German treaties
from
a
low
of $1.32 a bushel,
wtlh the East European
43.6 per cent of parity in ml
coijnlries. Th1s and the
.1972,
to $5.25 a bushel or 141
tranquillty in West Berlin,
per
cent
of parity in early 19'i
unquestionable functions of
The January average was $4.1
detente, have prompted
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Our· or 93 per cent of parity.
Kissinger recently to say that ing 1975, the deoline in the
WUWunJ.Kubfuss,~em~
never has Europe been so nation's economy should cease,
of
the American Farm B~
peaceful.
a slight increase In business Federation, took a differet
The rapidly increasing activity may occur, and by
cultural and scientific ex- year's end real economic tack in his testimony by urgb
changes and cooperation growth should be well on Its increasing reliance on U
freemarket in most c~
further attest to the reality of way to recovery .
Kuhfuss said Congress shoul
detente.
That forecast was reported in consider legislation authorlzln
Detente bas survived the industry Week magazine today
tnals of the mining of with an analysis that the the U.S. to contribute to 1
Haiphong, the armed lnterven- recovery would probably occur international fund which woul
lion in Cambodia and the even without President Ford's buy foods for distribution t
hungry countries.
American-Soviet conflicting economic proposals.
Domestically, Kuhfuss sak
positions on the Middle
Tax rebates might make the Congress should overhaul th
Eastern war. Both countries recovery stronger than it would
worked together in obtaining a otherwise be but 'improvement grain price support system t
Mideast ceas~e in October, probably would occur without make sure the governmetl
cannot build up stockll whlc
1973, and are expected to them, the report said.
could be used to deprea
cooperate in new efforts to
And, it said, some economists market prices. He said tbl
achieve a settlement.
feel the President's latest
In May, 1973, after the proposals could reactivate infla- could be done by requlrlni
farmen to repay grain prlo
mining of Haiphong the ruling
tion late this. year or early in support loans in cash.
Soviet Politburo met for two 1976 after the downturn bottoms
The Farm Bureau leader IIIIo
days to debate whether Pres!· out.
urged an increase for 1975 b
dent Nixon's scheduled visit to
There are many signs the the support target price 101
Moscow was to be canceled.
inflation is on the run, the cotton and the minimum !ega
The Soviet leaders chose im·
report said. While the fourth support price for milk --.1
proved relations with the
quarter
of 1974 registered a 13.7 sharp departure from pa1
United states as their top
per cent rate of price increase, Farm Bureau policy on thea
priority welcomed Nixon and
it's expected the first quarter of commodities.
later rePortedlY bad a hand in
1975 will show a marked
Kuhfuss also said he support
persuading Hanoi to accept the
reduction
in
the
rate.
ed
the administration's recenl
Paris peace terms.
Tit•
drop
in
the
wholesale
order
to raise the cost of foocl
Nothing has changed in the
price
index
In
December
was
stamps for the needy. He sa1c1
basic Imperatives of detente
probably the best economic his group opposes allowq
and judging from the unanimous pronouncements In news of 1974, showing that strikers to Ulle food StamP$ and
Washington and Moscow the inflation's back was finally wants the government to· stop
setback of the aborted trade being broke, Industry Week spending ' money to inform
needy people about the food
agreement will not be per- said.
As
a
result,
the
outlook
for
stamp program.
milled to damage the progress
pnoe
changes
in
1975
has
Sen, Talmadge said the
already made and future plans.
The process wlll go on improved .,considerably. Where Agriculture Committee would
perhaps at a smaller pace and pnce indexes rose as much as consider revising food slamll
with reduced expectstlons for 11 points in a quarter last year, regulations and increases In
quick achievements. The alter- the rate should slow down to farm cOmmodity price prices to
native is return to the cold war four points per quarter or less. keep growers whose costs have
risen drastically from golne
which no one wants.
broke this year.
The dialogue will continue
and posaibly new agreements
wlll be concluded In the
foreseeable future . The in·
ternalional climate lj'lli
probably be improved but
there will ·be no quick substitution
of
friendship
forhostillty, confidence for distrust or a lowerq of lhe
defense guard on either side.
What would happen should
there be a change of guard In
the Kremlin? The question has
been raised in the past few
weeks In connection with
reports of Brezbnev's illness
and unconfirmed rumors of an
alleged -"65 for power in
the Kremlin triggered by the
setback in detente,
The short answer is that 110
I
rev slon of Soviet foreign
policy is,....,,. onv more than
.....~ -v
Nixon's resignation led to a
change in the American
stance. Foreign policy is
continUOUS in both cpwltries,
w.......H ...... in the Unl'"" sta•...--•
....
_,
andJIIOIIOilll'\(s In tbe Soviet
Union _._ the
wucre
O?mmunist
0 ,.,.......

subsidy

End of
seen

Berrys World

-·""le

~rules

ablolutely.

Soviet foreign policy has
beerJ. oontin.IKRIS;,Since Stalin's
death In ,1953 when hls ·sue-~ at llllce la"~lied 8
'-campaign to normalize
relations · with all counbiea.
The first step toward detente
0

l

"Bring me a hot fudgll sundaa - I just laarned
that tha haallh club I jolnad has declared
' bankruptcy[/,'

UPIIpartlldiiOr

NEW YORK (UP!) - The players want it both ways. You hear
the same complamt in all professional sports, particularly in
basketball. Management is doing the complalning. The front
office people say a player signs one of those multiple-year contracts, for two, three or maybe five years, and as soon as he has a
baH-way decent year, he comes banging on the door looking to
renegotiate his contract. I! he has bad year, though, he takes
the money and runs, never offering any rebate.
Red Auerbach, the Boston Cellics' boss, has his own way of
forestalling this kind of trouble . He lSil't very en\hus1astic about
handling out multiple year contracts to start with and if be has to
accommodate one ot his players wlth that kmd of agreement, he
makes sure there is a complete understanding.
"I ask the player 'are you happy with this contract?'" says
Auerbach. "He'll say, yes, he 1s. Fine, I tell him I'm happy with
11, too. We're both happy ;but I have one provision before we sign
.this contract. There will not be any renegotiation because I want
you to be aware \bat if you get hurt, we take care of you, we pay
the full contract, and if you have a bad year we're still obligated
to pay.
"The only little plus I have is if you have a real good year, but
remember you have security and peace of mine for two-three
years. You have everything. I'm the one taking the big gamble,
not you. I ask only one thmg .Don't ever ask to renegotiate a tenn
contract with me. Remember you're the one who asked for il in
the first place.... " Red says he never has any trouble .
Catfish Hunter had to change blS home phone number in
Hertford, N.C. Kept getting wakeup calls all the lime. The guy
Waking him up was Ray Kroc, San Diego's burned-up owner who
kept letting Hunter have It for not signing with the Padres even
though Kroc offered him more money tban anybody else....
Oscar Robertson says health fooder Bill Walton had better
change his diet and include some good old red meal or else he'll
never be able to take the long grind year after year .... Chris
Evert is on Bill Walton's side on this one. She's a strict
vegetarian, too ....
Capacity for the new Yankee Stadium will be less tban it was
for the old one. When the park opens next year it'll bold 61,000
compared with the previous capacity of 64,500. Each seat will be
four inches wider, though. Cars are being built smaller, but seats
in all ballparks are being buill bigger, and for the answer to thai
one you have to drive around the block a couple of times ....
One of the oldest debates in sports bas to do with what goes first
with an athlete, his legs, his concentration or hiS eyesight? With
Joe DIMaggio, it was simply his daily energy. When he
discovered it was beginning to diminish, he quit.
"I found I couldn't recoup," he says. "I'd get tired and I
couldn't get it back the next day. That's when I knew there was
no point in playing anymore.... "
Notre Dame's Moose Krause getting a laugh on the banquet
circuit with this one: "You've seen these truck drivers on the
freeways. One guy drives this big trailer, the other fellow sleeps
and then they exchange pomtions. Well, one day the driver of this
big trailer happened to stop at a restaurant and my friend said to
him, 'Are you the driver of that big trailer that's outside?' The
driver said 'Yes, I am. I've driven from coast to coast and I'm
the finest truck driver in the world.'
"So my friend said, 'If you're the best truck driver in the world,
what would you do if you were going 70 miles an hour when
suddenly you noticed a stalled Volkswagen less than 15 yards in
front of you?'
1 ''The driver said, 'I'd wake Harry up.' So my friend said, 'Why
would you wake Harry up?' The truck driver said 'Because
Harry's never seen an accident like this before.'"

a

How the@
will bounce
BY GARY PHILLIPS
As we ap~oach the end of another cage season, we hear of
winners and of losers.
At this time I'd like to congratulate Waverly for a job well
done as well as the Hannan Trace Wildcats for another fine
season. I'd congratulate the OVC champ but that one is still up
for grabs. But I would like to wish all of the teams in the area
"Good Luck" in the tournaments and "Thanks" for giving us
another exciting season of high school basketball.
Let's look at this week's games.
Tuesday, Feb. 4
(SVACI
Southwestern vs. Hannan Trace. The Wildcat offense is
really moving now. Hannan Trace 72 Southwestern 56.
North Gallla vs. Wahaina. West Virginians "just ain't got
it." Nnrth Gal1la 74 Wabama 50.
Southern vs. Eastern . Southern wins big rivalry. Southern 60
Eastern 54.
(other Games)
Oak Hill 60 Fairland 56, Olesapeake 65 Ironton St. Joe 64,
Coal GroveiiO Rock Hlll67, Pt. Pleasant 59 Ripley 49.
Frlday,Feb.7
(SVAC)
Hannan Trace vs. Trimble. Tomcats battle Wildcats all of
the way. Hannan Trace 68 Trimble 59.
North Gallla vs. Kyger Creek. No way, Bobcats! North
Gallla 84 Kyger Creek 50.
Symmes Valley vs. Southern. Vikings pull off a minor upset.
Symmes Valley 78 Southern 70.
Eastern vs. Southwestern. Highlanders win - but not by
much. Southwestern 61 Eastern 58.
other Games
Rock Hlll61 South Point 60, Ironton 72 Jackson 61, Fairland
87 Coal Grove 60, Oak Hill 70 Chesapeake 59, Logan 78 Meigs 50,
Pl. Pleasant 58 Parkersburg 50.

nom POSTPONED

LOS ANGELES (UPI) - An
1Nchll!iuled bout with the flu
h8a fcrCed world featherweight
chwnpion Bobby Olacoo to
poetp!ine his Feb. 8 fight 1vith
Patapelero Estrada.
Olyrnpic aUdltorilllll

The Meigs Marauder
wrestlers of Rax Goodman won
the1r third match of the year
Saturday ni ght, pmning
v1sitmg Logan 38-27 in
Morrison Gymnasiwn .
The Marauders got off to a
good star t w1th 98 lb. Kev m

McLaughlin decis10 r11n g
Wayne Moore 1()..6.
Mickey Lyons kept the Me1gs
lead with a1Jm of Logan's Bob
Cass1dy with 1· 0&lt;1 remam mg m
the third period
Logan came back m the 112

Vikings hand Bobcats
12th straight defeat
Led by Jye Myers' 34 points,
Coach Ferrell Hesson's
Symmes Valley V1kmgs won
the1r second game of the yea r
Saturday mght, 82~8 over the
Kyger Creek Bobcats
. The loss was KC's 12th m a
row and left the Bobcats w1th a
1-12 record overall and !1-10
slate in the SVAC. SV is 2-13
overall and 2-7 m the league
Also htttmg double figures
for the wmners were Kevin
Schafer with I&gt; and Greg Estep
w1 th 14 points
Coach Ke1th Carter's Bobcats sco red their hi ghest
number of pomts th1s win ter
behind the shoohng of semors
Doug Cottrell and Dave Wise
and jun10r B1ll Metzner . Cottrell dumped in 21 pomls, Wise
had h1s best offensive game
this year with 19 poinls and
Metzner canned 16.
Using their last-breakmg,
run and gun offense , Symmes
Valley Jumped mto a 16-9 lead
at the end of the first period
and were never senously
threatened.
Myers had 19 pomts durmg
l,he f1rst half. Helpmg the offense m lhe second period were
Schafer w1th six pomts and Jim
Myers with !1ve Cottrell and
W1se paced the Bobcat scoring
in the first half
Both teams played on even
terms m the th1rd stanza
scormg 20 poinls each Metzner
led the Bobcats w1th 10 pomts.
Schafer and Estep topped the
V1kings. Myers began hitting
from outside m the fourth
Thi s Week 's
Oh 1o College
Basketball Schedule
By Untied Press International
Monday
M1Ch1gan Slate at Oh10 State
W es tern Kentucky at Dayton
Youngstown State at H1ilsdale
{ Mt ch l
Oberlin at Defi ance
Mt
Vernon
Nazarene at
Cedarville
Tuesday
Woo ster at Bl dwtn Walla ce
Deni son at Musk1ngum
Otterbe1n at Heidelberg
Wilberforce at Cen tral State
F 1ndla y at Anderson ( lnd )
Manchester
{ l nd )
at
Wtlm 1ngton
Wednesday
Eastern M tchigan at M 1am t
Kent State at Ba l l State
Youngstown State al Ashland
Akron at Cl ev eland State
Gannon ( Pa l at Steubenv111e
Captt al at Oh 10 Wesley an
Kenyon at Wittenberg
Mount Un1on at Martella 1
Oh10 North ern at Marian { l nd J
Wheeltng (W Va .J at Xavier
B luffton at Deftan ce
Hiram at Thi el (Pa l
Case weste rn at w &amp; J ( Pa l
John Carroll at Allegheny
Walst1 at Malone
OhiO Dommtcan at R to Grande
Wnght State at Urbana
Thursday
C1nc tnnat 1 at South Flonda
M t Vernon at Wilberforce
Fnday
Denison at Ohto Nor t t1ern
Saturday
OhiO State at Mmnesota
Bowl1ng Green at Miami
Kent State at Central Mlch1gan
Toledo at Ohto Unlvers 1ty
X avier at Marquette
Cmc1nnalt at Houston
T ennessee Chattano oga
at
Dayton
Wnghl State at Cleve l and Stat e
Bellarmine (Ky I at Akron
Kentucky St a te at Central
State
Steub enville at St
Fr ancis
CP A l
Youngstown State at Buffalo
Baldwtn Wallace at Capttal
Heidelberg at Muskmgum
Kenyon at Wooster
Mar 1etta at OhiO Wesleyan
W tflenberg at Mount Un 1on
Oberlin at Otterbem
Wtlmmgton at Bluffton
Defiance at F 1nd lay
Case Western at Htr am
Carn eg 1e Mellon
at
John
Carroll
Oh1o Dom tn 1can at Cedarv111e
Malon e at R tO Grande
T1ff1n at Wi lberforce
Urbana
at
Mt
Vernon
Nazarene
Walsh at Geneva ( Pa.)

period as SV suddenly got
hotter Myers dumped in 11
points wh1le J1m Myers and
Estep had fo ur points each
Cottrell led the Bobcat fourth
period scoring w1th 12 points.
W1se dumped in seven
Symmes Valley sank 36 of 82
floor attempts for 44 pel and 10
of I&gt; free throws. Kyger Creek
held a 44-43 reboundmg edge
and Wise had 12. Ja ye Myers
led the V1kmgs w1th 15
Mark W1lson scored 16 points
to lead the Little V1kings to a
39-38 v1ctory m the resen•e
game. Ralph Baylor had 11
pomls for the Bobkittens

Bucks take on
~

MSU tonight.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) Ohio State coach Fred Taylor,
convinced nobody is going to
catch Indiana's runaway HooSiers, has set his sights Qll
second place in the B1g Ten
basketball race and the postseason tournament berth
which would go with lt.
The Buckeyes, who Saturday
night threw a big scare into
Indiana, the nation's No. I
ranked team, before bowing 7266, host Michigan State tonight.
The Spartans are one of two
other teams currently tied w1th
Ute Buckeyes for fourth place
in the Big Ten with &gt;-4 records.
There are several tournament doors open to other
conferen~ teams besides the
champion, including the NIT,
won last year by Pardue, the
Collegiate Commissioners
A:lsociation tournament, taken
last year by Indiana, and even
an NCAA berth in that event's
expanded 32-team field.
"It's pretty evident nobody 1s
going to catch them," Taylor
said of the Hoosiers. "We're
now playing for second place."
Indiana S&lt;reaklng
!Jidiana is now 2M this
season, has a 23-game winning
streak going back to last year
and is 9-0 in the Big Ten, three
games ahead of runnersup
Purdue and Minnesota.
Maybe nobody is going to
catch the Hoosiers, but the
Buckeyes came close Saturday
night.
The first 30 minutes of the
contest, played before a
capacity crowd of 13,489 in St.
Jolm Arena, Ute Buckeyes and
Hoosiers were dead even.
Ohio Stste, which is now ll-8
overall, trailed 35-34 at baH·
lime, but was up 58-57 with 9:49
remaining.
With four minutes to go, they
were stlll down only ~ and
bad the ball. But key steals by
super sub Jolm Laskowski and
Quinn Buckner put Ute game
out of Teach.
"Buckner and Laskowski
were the guys wbo really hurt
us at the lime when it meant so
much," said a disappointed but
proud Taylor.
''Our guys really played
bard," added Taylor, giving
specisl praise tq his &amp;-10 junior
center, Craig Taylor, who led
the Buckeyes with 24 points. •
"Craig really played," said

High School

Scores

Maryland 98 N C Sl 97
MemphiS St 105 Un1on 52
M 1d Tenn 102 W K y 95
NW La 75 De lt a St 7l
N Ga 72 Ga Sth ws trn 65
Old Dom 120 Ky Wslyn 87
Pte1 ff er 67 Mars Hill 65
Ru lg er s 75 Na vy 70
Sewnee 83 Cntre 68 Sun
St hws trn Tenn 68 Cntre 66
Te nnessee 105 Georg1a 69
Tenn Tec h 85 E Tenn 84
Tulane 96 Sthrn U 69
UNC Ce nt 85 Del Sf 110

East Palestine 79 L ee ton ia .5 6
Youngstown So uth 87 Nor th
Garf telct 76
Cleve land L 1n co ln West 49
Cleve land St Ig natius 48 '
Lakew ood 65 Normandy 37
Ea st Cleve lan d Shaw 92 Parm a

70
Cuy a hoga H e ight s 79 In ·
dependence 77 (otl
Mad ts on 68 Con n eaul 60
Parma Padua 80 Cleveland
Chane l 79 (of)
Western Reserv e A cademy 60
Pittsburgh S h ~ dys t de 51

set back two weeks, but a
definite rescheduling date
won 'I be decided until this
Wednesday alter lOr. Bernhart
Schwartz, a state Athletic
Commission physician, has
bad a chance to examine
Olllcon.

LEGAL

MEIGS COUNTY REAL
ESTATE OWNERS
THE TAX BOOKS WILL OPEN

Here's

my new

State Farm off1ce,

where

JANUARY 20 FOR THE FIRST HALF.
COLLE·CTION OF · 1974 · REAL ·
ESTATE
TAXES AND
FOR
DELINQUENT' TAX.ES. CLOSING
OAT~ WILL BE FEBRUARY 20, 1975.

ADULT MEAL
Btg Shef ~
Reg French Fnes
Turnover &amp;
l arge So ft Drink

FOR KIDS-

FUNMEALT"'
Fun Tray,
Funhurger·
Reg French Frtes
Svrpnse Pnze
Reg. Sort Dnnk &amp;
a Sweel Trm1l

insurance. I invite you to call or drop in any time.

STEVE SNOWDEN
1258 Powell St., ~lddleporl, Ph. 992-7155

---JTATI FAIIM

-

&lt;

.'
.I ,

1 can serve

vou with the best value in car, home, life and health '

HOWARD E. ·F RANK

'.

lb. class w1th Allen Seffins before Marauder Butch Roush
pmrung Carl Gheen with 39 pmned Dave Russell w1 th 24
seconds remammg tn the first seconds left In the second
pcn&lt;xl
pcnod of the~r 126 lb. bailie .
In the 119 lb class, Jmt ' In the 132 lb match, Jeff
Rosenba\IDl was deciSJOned by Mussel pmned Ciueftau1 Bnan
Log,w's Jan Hartman , 16..S, Hcnestofel with 34 seconds
gor1e HI ·the second penod
before
Me1gs'
Duane
McLalllJ hhn pm ned B1il Fuller
"' the 138lb v.ctgh t class wtth
43 seconds remammg m the
SCCOJld flame
Log an "on the 14&gt; lb
diVISIOn by fo• fe1l , before Bob
Musse r and Logan 's Jun F1ter·
took lo t~e mats m the 1&gt;3 lb
class. W1th Musser leadmg,
· F1ler reportedly dehvered a
Kyg er Cree k Will host punch at Musser, and the ofHannan, W Va, Wednesday ilclal stopped the1 match,
afternoon and North Gallra coiling 11 a tie 1
Omon Blankchard, at 1G7
Friday Symmes Valley goes to
ibs
, w1 csthng m Ius fi rst
Southern Fr1day
match, led Logan's Chuck Roof
ail the way tmtll the Clueftam
By Quarters
Sunt Valley
16 20 20 26- 82 got a reversal and l&lt;l ke down m
the !mal 30 seconds to edge
Kyger Creek
9 15 20 24-158 past Blanc hard &gt;-4
Marly Dugan got th e
Symmes Vall ey (87 ) - Jay e
Maraudc1 s !Jack m the sconn ~
Myer s 16 2 34, J1m M ye r s 4 1
column \\tth a 6-3 verdict over
9 , Brammer 2 2 6 , Schafer 55
M1ke Stgler m the 175 lb class,
15, E step 7 0 14, Miller 1 o 2
and Kelly l 0 2 Totals 36 10-87
before Logan's Chuck Myers
Kyger Creek ( 68) - Cott rell
pmned Shane Facemyer 111 the
10 I 21 , Metzner 7 2 16 , W1 se 9
ftrst frame of thc1r 185 lb.
I 19 , St 1dham 1-1 3, Ttm Lucas
I 0 2 , Te rr y Lu cas 3 0 6 ,
battle
Baylor 0 1· 1. Totals 31 -6-68 .
In the unlhmtcd class, M1ke
Haley pinned Logan 's Tim
Kessler with 21 seconds left m
the first penod .
Goodman was well pleased
with the Mara uder victory,
c1ling especially the efforts of
Blanchard , and Rosenbawn.
The Marauders' next ma tch
IS Thw-sday at 7:30p.m. when
Meigs will host the Fairland
Dragons m Mornson GymTaylor. "You can't say it's a naslwn.
wasted effort when a kid plays
like tbat."
Bobby Knight , Indiana's
fiery 34-year-old head coach,
who played under Taylor on the
great Buckeye teams of the
early '60s, was " very
satisfied" with his team's lrrst
Pre ss International
win at St. Jolm Arena m low· By Unti ed Saturday
tr1es.
Euc li d 58 Va ll ey Forge I Pa 51
Shaker He ig ht s 73 Garfie l d
Knight Satisfied
H e1g h rs 65
11
1 was very satisfied/' sa1d Broo k lyn 66 Brec k svtll e 44
Richmond He tghts 60 Bea ch
Knight, who was on his best WOOd
59
behavior durmg the game and Cl eveland L uth er an East 81
Berkshire 45
'
who cordially answered ques- Geneva
68
Ash t abu l a
tions after the contest. "When Edgewood 41
Bay V1llage 69 Ak r on South ss
you play a team you know is Cleve
l and
Benedt c ttne 61
really ready to play, play them Chag rin Fa ll s 52
tn gton 64 M tdview 62
on the road and win by six Well
Lor am Sou th vtcw 58 E l y ria
points, you have to be satisfied. West 44
ZaneS1J11I e 70 Wtnlersvllle 58
"They (the Buckeye~) were Zanesville
Ro sec r a n s
85
as difficult to score on at times R tdgewood 70
c kmg Val l ey 72 New ark
as anyone we've played," said L1
Catho l iC 55
Knight. "There's no question Caldwe ll 72 BeallSVIlle 56
A l ex and er 78 M i ll er~ 68
Ohio State was ready. It wall a Mad
ison Pla1ns 75 Westphal 62
very tough game for us."
Indian Va l ley Sou th 67 Jewett
SCt O J4
Scott May, a &amp;-7 junior for- H
i land 63 Da l ton 44
ward from Sandusky, Ohio, Dov er 63 Mansf ie ld Ma labar 4 1
N ew Phtladelph1a 62 Mans
paced the Hoos1ers m scoring M
adison 57
with 25 points, consistenll$' Woos ter 48 Ash land .4 3
lOUI SV Ill e Aqu inas 63 I V
hitting the key basket when the Nor
th 53
Buckeyes appeared to be Tu sc arawas Cat h ol i C 65
Brunnerdale 51
making a run.
Per r y 57 Marltngton 5 1
"I think Scott May is an Canton Ttmken 94 Ravenna SO
McK1n le y 9'1 You ng s
excellent offensive basketball Canton
town Rayen 63
player," said Knight. "And Akron Nor t h 71 Canton L eh
tonight he did a fine job man 67
Akr on B uc htel 61 Canton Cent
defensively, too."
Ca t h 54
Billy Andreas, the Big Ten's Alliance 60 Lora1n Sr 33
Canton South 64 Glenwood 48
leading scorer, chipped in with Oakwood
45 North Canton
19 points for the Buckeyes, Hoover J9
er va 59 Nor t hwest 48
despite the fact Taylor said he M1n
Ea st canton 69 Tu s/aw 64
felt his team dldn 'I "get inside Boa rdman 64 A kron Central ·
Hower 40
enough the second baH."
Sal em 86 Y oun gstown Eas t 76

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GALLIPoLIS

1503 Eilstern Ave.

Pro Standing3
NBA Standmg s
By Unttcd Press I nternationa l
Eas t ern Con l ere nce
A tl an t i c Ot vl51on
w 1 pet g b
Bos ton
35 14 7 14
Buttillo
33 18 6..t7
3
N ~w Yo rk
26 25 5 10 10
Phllrtd elpl1ra 21 30 4 12 15
(CIIfral DIVIS IOn
w 1 pet g b
Wa sh,n gton
36 1~
720
Hous ton
15 26 490 1 1' .
Cle v eland
24 '16 48 0' 12
A ll ant!'l
:11 33 389 l1 7
New Or l e-ans
6 42 125 19
Western Collference
Mtdwest D rvts to n
w 1 pet g b
De trOt l
J l 'lt S85
Ch tca go
29 ?t 580
•}
KC Omilha
,l6 ?6 500
1' '
Mtlwf'u kce
7~ 2S
~9 0
5
PolC !It c DI VISton
w 1 pet g b
Gold en Sl t1! e 30 20 600
~ ca"ltle
?'i 26 .190
S',
Pon1.1ne1
?? 28
140
tl
PhoerH)l
20 77" 4i6
B' ,
l os AngP IPS
19 30 388 10' J
Sat urd il~ s Re sult s
Ho uston 95 New York 9J
Clt&gt;ve l rtnd 112 Atlanta 109 , 01
De tr o1 t 119 Bu lf n1o 113
Seattl e 93 Po r ll and 91
Sund,ly's R esult~
PIHittd el ph•a 90 Houston 7!
Ch1 cago 97 Wash111glon 80
K C Omai1&lt;J 121 Gol den St 101
Oos l on 120 Mtl wau kee 100
Cleveland 1 16 Detro tl 96
New Or l ean s. 111.1 N ew Yo r k 11 .1
Se alfl e 119 L os Angeles 112
Monday s Gam~s
Bos l on at De tr o1t
Phr l t'ldelplllc1 v s K C Oma ha
at OmoJha

ABA Standings
By United Press lnterna,onal
East
w . 1. pet. g.b .,
N ew York
36 13 735
Kentucky
35 14 7 14
1
20 33 377 18
St L OUtS
15 36 294 22
Memphts
V1rg1nta
11 J9 22D 25 1h
West
w 1. ~ct . g b.
Den v er
42 12 7t8
san An i on tO
33 24 579 IOif2
ln dtana
24 26 480 16
Utal1
22 30 4 23 19
San Ot ego
21 J2 39 6 20 112
sa tu r day's Result s
Denv er 128 San D1ego 111
Sunday 's Results
V1 r gtn1&lt;t 109 Sl LOUIS 101
N ew York 126 San Diego 90
Snn An tonto 119 lnd1ana 100
M em ph ts 120 Denver l 0 3
Ken l u cky q6 Utah 86
Monday ' s Game s
San Otego a t V1 rgmta
N ew York at Utah
WHA Standmgs
By Un ti ed Press lnterllafiOncll
Ea!'. t
w I t ph gf 91
New Eng lnd 2J 19 2 56 165 168
Cleve land
21 26 2 44 140 157
Ch1 cngo
18 30 1 37 16 6 196
l nd•an apols 10 36 3 23 108 199
We st
w I t !)IS gf 91
Houston
J l 16 0 67 217 148
Phoen 1X
25 ?0 6 56 179 165
Mtnneso la
26 20 0 52 19 2 154
:, an Ot ego
?3 20 I
x Bnlt,more 13 33 3
Cana dt an
w 1 t.
Que b ec
32 16 0
Toronto
{] 70 2
Ed monton
74 17 2
Vancouver
2'J 23 2

47 156 15 1
29 1 17 203

pts gt
64 20 7
56 210
50' 162
46 143

ga
158

181
11.5
155

NHL Sl and tn 9s
ln terna tt onal
01\II SIOn 1
Wtnnipeg
20 22 2 42 174 15 6
w I t pi s gf gil
x Franch tse transf er red from
P11tlnr:l l p11tCI 3711 7 7 1 178 •106 M tch•gan
NY Ranger s 26 15 10 62 210 166
S&lt;tturday ' s, Res ult s
N Y lsla nders ?1 17 13 55 172 139 Houston 6 Chtcago s
Atl anta
22 20 10 54 147 149 Phoen tlt B Baltimore 1
Dtvt slon 2
Qu ebec 2 l nd 1anapol tS I
w I t . pts gf ga
Su nda y's Gam es
Van c ouver
26 20 5 57 174 159 Qu ebec 4 Cleveland l
Ctlt cago
24 21 S 53 164 148 Vancouve r 4 loron to '1
St L out s
19 22 9 47 161 179 Houston 4 Bal ltmor e 2
M1nn eso t a
13 30 6 32 133 :n 5 M i nn eso ta 5 Wlnntpeg 4, ot
Kans as City 10 3J 6 26 124 216 Edmonton 4 Ch1cago 3
OtVisiO il J
Mond ay's Games
w. I. t. piS g f ga
( No games scheduled J
Mon l reul
30 9 13 73 24 0145
Los Anqe les 29 9 13 11 178 11 2
P1tr sburglt
20 19 10 5 1 204 190 CLAIMS RECORD
Detroit
13 27 10 36 118 l96
VANCOUVER, Wash. (UPI)
Wa shtng ton
4 42 s \ 3 1011 26 5
01\/I SIOO 4
Marine recruiter Capt. Alan
w l. t.p tsgt ga
Ouflalo
33 11 7 73 215 157 Jones claimed the world's
Boston
27 14 10 64 232 15 1 record for the most free throws
T~ron to
19 25 7 45 170 200Ca l tl orn ta
12 33 9 33 141 114 in 12 hours of consecutive
Saturd ay's R es ults
basketball shooting Sunday
N Y I sland ers 4 Detro1t 1
night.
N Y Rangers 4 Chi ca go 1
Philadel phi a 6 Bu ffa lo 0
Jones,ln a lund raising drive
vancot.~ver 5 washtnglon 2
for a charity, connected on
P1tiSburgh 4 St Lou i s 4
M tnn eso l a J K&amp;nses City 2
3,802 free throws during 12
Tor onto 3 Boston 2
hours of shooting. He said be
Montreal 5 Los An ge l es 3
Sunday ' s Results
will send the results to Ute
Det r o 11 5 NY Rang er s 5
Gulness
Book of Records.
Buffalo s Kansas City 1
Boston 5 Philadelphia 1
Jones said he plans to skip
At lan ta 5 Mlnnesol a 3
rope next month and hopes· to
N Y Island ers 1 Chicag o 1
Montr eal 5 Ca l 1t orn1a 1
do 33,000 skip!! in five hoilrs for
Monday's Games
another world record.
( No g~mes scheduled I

a.,.

Un~t cd ~res s

�•
•

~ The Da!IY_Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Feb. 3, 197&gt;

Editorial ·c omment,
;

-

opinion, features

Great decisions·-~o. 2

Is Detente for real·?

catching on

The good old election days

"Don't Forget We're All in This Together!"

DR. LAMB

Low blood sugar
needs good diet

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I

I

'

Dechan1
I

By HENRli, SHAPIRO
Union and abroad by means of
United Press lnteroallonal
demonstrations, petitions, sitThe Soviet repudiation of the down strikes, etc.
N1xon-Brezhnev trade agree- Pressure from the Western
ment has dealt a body blow but Commumst
parties
•
not a knockout to the dehcate especially those of Italy,
lS
~ocess of detente dramallzed France and Bntam- which
by the first v1sil of an alarmed by reports of an·
Amencan
Pres1dent to Moscow tisem1tism m the Sov1et Uruon,
The winter of the automakers' discontent appears to be turning mto an early and prosperous
spring
in 1971.
demanded amelioration.
Henry Kissinger character·
Gone are the Stalin era days
The b1g three of Chrysler, Ford and General Motors, plus the httle one of Amencan Motors, are
all now offering cash rebates of between $200 and $600 to auto buyers 10 an attempt to lift the mdustry !zed the development as a when fore1gn as well as
out of one of 1ts worst slumpssm~e World War II As a result, sales in the pastjfew weeks have made a "setback" to detente , but said domestic public opmion were
that It would not halt U.S ef- held m contempt.
deCided turnaround
to continue seeking unThere was no disagreement
forts
Another h1g boost 1s commg from hundreds of other compan1es, from banks and major
mauufacturers down to golf shops and cloth10g stores, who have mslltuted employe or customer ~oved relations with Moscow. between the White House,
"An unpersonable mterfer- Kissinger
and
the
rebate or d1scount plans based on the purchase of new cars. These are in add1tion to those offered by
ence in our domestic affairs CongressiOnal followers of Sen.
the auto compan1es.
For mstance, the Bel01t, W1s.,State Bank w11l reduce fmance charges for new auto loans by $100, which put the hands of the Henry Jackson on the g98l of
or around 20per cent of the typ1cal amount, and banks 10 other c1ties are offermg sunila r mcenllves. clock back," was the way Iz- obtallling the liberalization of
Gulf and Western Jndustnes 1s offenng its employes $100. D1tto Irvm Industr1es, to any of its em- vest1a , the Kremlin 's official Soviet emigration practices .
newspaper, described certain But the execullve branch, on
ployes who buy a 1975 car or truck for which the company makes seat belts
Falcon Golf, Inc. of Ferndale, M1ch., will knock $200 off a set of golf clubs w1th purchase of a new pri&gt;Vlswns in the US. Trade the ground of feasible
U. S.-rnade car, and a clothier in Brrming ham, Mich.,ts adver\ls10g a 10 per cent discount to anyone Reform Bill that was enacted a diplomacy, strenuously though
unsuccessfully objected to the
who has proof of a new carpurchase ,and the DetrOit Red Wings hockey club w11tgive two tickets to a few weeks ago.
The
bill
granted
Most
FaJackson
amendment to the
home game to anyone who buys a new car from an area dealer by Feb. 28.
Sperry and Hutchinson Co. is g1ving 50,000 S&amp;H stamps to any of 1\s employes who buy a new car vored Natwns tar1ff status to trade refonn bill with its
before March-31, and WPIX-TV in New York has announced it will run free television ads to promote the Sov1et Union on condition discruninatory provisiOns.
· auto sales
Rad the secretary of state
that itliberahze 1\s em1gration
policles
.
The
leg1slat10n
'which
been
allowed to continue his
The spark that ignited it aU seems to ha ve been struck last December when WiU1am w. Keefer,
~es1dent of Wa_rner Electric Brake &amp; Clutch Co. and Rodney F. Ackerman, vice president of auto Congress passed against pres!- qu1et d1plomacy without the
of
provocative
sales, were facmg the bleak prospect of curtailing the company's output of aii'-cond11ioner com- dential protest also iinuted the fanfare
granting
of
gov,.ernment
credits
pubhc1ty
the'
conunon
goal
~essor clutches for Chrysler and America n Motors and lay10g off lOper cent of the1rwork force.
to
the
Sov1et
Union
to
$300
would
probably
have
been
They decided to switch attention from doom and gloom to searching for a positiVe 1dea that
would perk up employe moral, help two major customers and stimulate business m local plant million in four years and achieved.
A3 specwhsts on Soviet afsubject to congresswnal
communities. They called in "Confidence in America."
review
every
18
months.
larrs
had warned, the linkage
On Dec. 16, Warner Electric proposed the program of cash rebates to Chrysler and American
Nevertheless
Izvestia
and
of
Amencan
views on civil
Motors. The rest is history.
It's estimated that more than 500,000 employes in the automobile and automobile-related m- other Soviet media hastened to · rights -the right to emigrate
dustrles - not to mention nnlllons of consumers un~er the various auto company plans-are now affinn that the Soviet Union - with tariff rules would not be
ellJllble for rebates up to $700, with more companies j01nlng the "Confidence 10 America" mcentive would not undertake a cardinal acceptable to the Russians.
reassessment of Its fore1gn
The number of emigration
program every day.
.
\
·
policy, the gwding,principle of visas for 1974 was reduced to
which is detente.
shgbtly more than one half of
I
Pres1dent Ford, Kissinger the 1973 figure and is likely to
and Soviet spokesmen have dimlmsh further as Moscow
been unanimous in declarwg smarts under the attempted
'Way back in the early 19th century, when America was a nation of fanners, legislation directed that the main imperatives of congressional humiliation .
The problem of trade will
that national elections take place during the first week of Nohember because "harvesting is over detente -the avoidance of
nuclear war and mutual an- probably be renegotiated on a
than, and winter has not yet made the roads impassable "
Tuesday was designated Instead of Monday, says the National Geographic Society's historical nihilation, the need to achieve more realistiC besis. Should
oddities division, because many voters lived a day 's journey from a polling place and objected lo strategic arms limitations and Congress be agreeable to
traveling on Sunday.
ending the arms race plus the modify the present objectionaDespite the vast changes that have overtake~ America since then, there seems no particular creation of a global clunate of ble provisions of the trade bill
reason to abandon the custom . At least one state , however, is go1ng to consider doing away w1th peace -remain unchanged. and g1ve the President a free
another rellc of the old days. '
The significance of trade as a hand, a mutually beneficial
component
of detente appears trade relationship could stlll
Ohio state Rep. John A. Galbraith plans to introduce legislation to allow liquor stores and bars in
the slate to operate normally on election day. At present, bars may open for bus10ess but ca n sell only to have been grossly inflated. develop. Provided, of course,
low-powered beer .
TheSov1etmterestin acquiring that Congress accepts a "gentThe law was apparently passed to try tu keep unscrupulous politicians from bu}'lng votes w1th American technology and ere- Iemen's agreement" with the
dits, allegedly at any price, Kremlin on emigration.
drinks. "I think we have now advanced beyond that," says Galbraith.
No ~oud, sovereign nation
Cynics would agree. These days the problem is not politicians buying votes but the other way especially has been overemaround.
phasized.
whose equality is recognized
It became clear early in the by the United States could
process of detente \hat Moscow accept foreign dictation m 1\s
was indeed prepared to pay a domestic affairs in exchange
high price for American aid rn for what, in terms of big-power
the modermzalion of its trade, is a pittance.
lagging industry. But it was
Pittance? In the popular
naive to assume that a mind Most Favored Nations
superpower, second only to the treabnentmlght be interpreted
United States, a country as as an American give-away.
ideologically committed as the Actually, taken alone, M.F.N.
Soviet Union is, would publicly mvolves no teclmical aid, no
and formally accept the cred1ts. It is not a Marshall
hu~liation of subnnllin~ to Plan. All 11 means is that the
fore1gn pressure in its Soviet exports to the United
domestic affairs.
Slates, negligible as they may
Moscow had already made be now, will not he subjected to
substantial concessions to bigger tariffs than the goods
western libertarian appeals. imported from most other
Emigration visas for Jews and countries -from Britain, Ger·
other ethnic' minorities had many and Japan to the tiny
been raised from practically banana republics.
zero m 1967 to 40,000 m 1973. A
Nor could the Russians be
punitive tax on college- tempted by the bi)l's allowance
educated would-be emigrants, of credits amounting to $75
intended to discourage ap- million a year for lour years.
plicants, was suspended. And The Russians could do better
there was every reason to than tbal in Luxembourg, a
believe, as the Soviet leaders Soviet affairs specialist quipwere reported to have ped.
privately ~omised American
The aMulment of the trade
officials, that the enngration agreement, however, has
rules would be liberalized served a number of useful
materially.
purposes which may produce a
I was personally given the more realistic American view
impression that the niunber of of detente.
visas would rise appreciably
There was no reason to
when in mld-19731 interviewed produce overnight miracles
for the UP! a number of key and convert a long smoldering
Soviet cabinet members.
cold war into a peacetime
All of this was a product alliance between two inpartly of the effectively quiet compatible powers. It is a
diplomacy pracllced by NIXon fragile process of negotiation,
and Kissinger. It also resulted ratber than confrontation for
from two unrelated develop- very high stakes. Despite the
ments which have not been failure
of
the
trade
sufficiently recogni%ed in the negotiations the balance sheet
West :
of detente is largely positive.
- The mounting agitation of
The belief that the Russians
Jewish activists in tbe Soviet were desperately in need of
American technology and were
wjlling to pay any price to get it
since some protein foods are bas been shattered. On the eve
of announcmg their new 15loaded w1th fat.
year
economic plan the RusDEAR DR. LAMB - Do you
think cancer can be cured sians could indeed profit
I
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
eating sweets the islets release related lo low blood sugar, when a person is in his or her
DEAR DR. I,.AMB - I have an lncreaud amount of insulin. some are endocrine and others 70s?
lJ!~ ~j~ Senti!lel
hypoglycemia and would Your body literally r:eleases are related to diet. A lot of
DEAR READER - Of
DEVOTED
TO THE
greatly appreciate any in- wbatever amount of insulin you people get that diagnosis who course. lt depends not so much
INTEREST OF
ME IG S·MA SON A REA
formation you could send me need to control the level of your have other conditions, in- on age as the type of cancer
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
about it. .My oldesi brother is a blood sugar.
eluding anxiety. For more and how far it has progressed.
Exec . Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH
diabetic. My endocrinologist
When the islets are defective detailed information write to An early skin cancer, for
City Editor
.
has me on a 10110-calorle high they may release insulin too me at P. 0 . Box 1551, Radio example, can be removed with
'Pub I \shed dolly exce pt
by The Oh io Valley
protein diet.
late, long after the peak sugar City Station, New .York, N. Y. a complete Oll'e. Cancer of the· Saturday
Pubi 1Sh 1ng Compahv . 111
Court St . Po mer oy.- ah;o
DEAR READER - The load. The result is the extra 10019 and ask for the booklet on prostate can be cootrolled for
BuSiness Ofl1ee Phone
interesting thing about your insulin, released into the low blood sugar. Send 50 cents years a!IA!r it is first diagnosed. 45769.
~2 · 2156. Ed•tor.a t Phone 992
2157
diagnosis is your brother's bloodstteam after the blood to cover costs.
The success in control depends
Second ctus postage pa •d at
diabetes . Sometimes glucose level bas already • It is common to put people a lot on how early it is· Pomeroy, Oh10 r
Nat 1 on a I advert i sing
hypoglycemia (low blood started to fall. The extra in- with this condition on a high diagnosed.
repr
esenta t&lt;ve BotUnen; .
Gallagher, Ind., 12 East 42nd
sugar)
precedes
the sulln drives the level lower stlll protein diet. I presume your
The best aid you have to
St , New York , New York .
development of dlabeies (high and hypoglycemia develops. · doctor thinks yoo are also survival from cancer is finding
Su b scription
rate s .
Delivered by ear ner Where
blood sugar).
As the islets become more ovenrelght and is restricting the cancer early - before it ava
ilab le 75 cents per week ;
By ~olor Route where carrier ,
In these instance9 the defect defective, they fail to produce your calories for \11&amp;1 purpoae. bas a chance to enlarge or
not fll vallab te, One
is really in the islets of enough ln.sulin. The defect In general, even foc patients spread. That means regular servrce
month . SJ 25 By matr !n Ohio
LiJI&amp;.erban's of the pancreas, literally progresses from 1vith low blood sUgar, I prefer a . checkups, particularly for l and w va , One Year, S22 00 .
Sox monChs , Sll 50 . Three
the place where ln.sulin is producing too late to also w~-balanced diet, 1vith plenty tboae who are more likaly to
months , S7 00
~tsewhera
526 00 ye ar . Si&gt;t mon ths
p-odueed. Normally when lbe producing too little. Then you of bulk and relatively low in haVe cancer. Early cancers SlJ
so . three monthS. S7 50 ' ·
Subsc:rq:Hion ~rrce mcludes
amotmt of sugar (glucose) In . bave dlsbetes.
fat. So YClU need to be careful fOilnd and treated can be
Sundov T111'1es•Senlintl · ,There are ~any facturs • where YClU get thei protein, completaly cured.
Y?ur snllu Intestine rllles after

€onfidence

Logan pinned 38-27-by Meigs
Sport Parade

prefers

!If MILTON RICHMAN

considerably from American was made by President
knowhow. Lacking that they Eisenhower when he Invited
can make a secood-best deal the late Soviet premier, Nlldta
with West Germany, their S. IO!nJshchev, to Washqton
major trading partner, as well In 1959. Despite such setbackll
. as with France, Britain, Italy as the war in Vietnam and the
and Japan. The Soviet Union, invasion of Czechoslovakia,
WASHINGTON (UPI)an oil and gold exporting detente was never renounced president of the NaU.
country, has had a windfall in and was reactivated In !970 by Farmers Union today Ill
the steep rise of the price of Brezbnev who, as General Congress to adopt a food p
those commodities and is on Secretary of the Commwli.st stability program for COlli
the wa y of achieving a party, made it bill principal ers based on higher price ftc
favorable hard currency foreign policy plank at the 29th for farmers .
balance.
Party Congress.
Tony T. Dechant, the li
Detente is for real if despite
&amp;ezhnev, more than any leader, outlined his plan
sharp ideological divergence, other Soviet leader since testimony prepared for delb
despite setbacks and zigzags, Lenin, rules by consensus. He before the Senate Agrlcull
the avoidance of a nuclear presides over the 111-man Committee today.
holocaust can be negotiated in Politburo, where decisiiHlS are
The committee bearings,
a benign and calm climate. made by majority vote. There signed to produce what ~
That climate, improved at is no evidence to SIIJlll(lrl the man Herman E. Talmadge,
Vladivostok during the belief abroad that the Politburo Ga., calls an "Agriculture 1
meeting between President is divided into hardliners and Anti-depression Acl of 181
Ford and Brezhnev, has been liberala.
will run through the week
spo1led somewhat by the
Brezhnev, much more than Feb.l7.
repudiahon of the trade K!rushchev, bas seen to It that
Dechant said the N
agreement. But the guns are he gets the full support of Ute proposal is based on sett
silent and the East-Wesl Politburo for all his major price support loans for 11111
dialogue goes on uninter- policies. Detente is not a crops at 90 per cent of
ruptedly.
personal project of his.
Trade was only one of the
A3 far as the Soviet Union traditional "fair earnl
goals of detente and not the goes, Brezhnev or not, detente power" parity price standa
most vital one.
appears to be for real.
If prices rose beyond llO 1
The negotiators of detente
cent of parity, he said slol
are marching slowly and
Henry Sbapiro was a Joamal· held in farmer or governlnc
warily sometimes making two 1st based In tbe Soviet Unloo far hands could be led back b
steps ahead and two backward. 40 yean. He was mauager of the market to moderate fo
in the brief period since the tbe UPI bureau In Moscow costs.
policy was launched we have from 1939 unlll hls rellremeol
''The net effect of our pi
seen the considerable reduc- In 1973. Shapiro is DOW !temper
lion of East-West tensions and KDapp profeuor of jourDalllpl would be to keep fanners out
the eeonornic cellar and C&lt;
degree of ·cooperation which at tbe University of WlscODSin.
somers
out of the econou
seemed Impossible not so .
attic.
We
believe it can be t
n;any years ~go. _
beginning of a truly eHecU
The relative military and
and
workable national · fo
political stabillty in Europe in
policy" Dechant said.
which Communist Russia apDechant said the plan cou
pears to have ' acquired a
cure
the "boom and bua
vested interest was highlighted
cycles
in which wheat r811j
by the West German treaties
from
a
low
of $1.32 a bushel,
wtlh the East European
43.6 per cent of parity in ml
coijnlries. Th1s and the
.1972,
to $5.25 a bushel or 141
tranquillty in West Berlin,
per
cent
of parity in early 19'i
unquestionable functions of
The January average was $4.1
detente, have prompted
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Our· or 93 per cent of parity.
Kissinger recently to say that ing 1975, the deoline in the
WUWunJ.Kubfuss,~em~
never has Europe been so nation's economy should cease,
of
the American Farm B~
peaceful.
a slight increase In business Federation, took a differet
The rapidly increasing activity may occur, and by
cultural and scientific ex- year's end real economic tack in his testimony by urgb
changes and cooperation growth should be well on Its increasing reliance on U
freemarket in most c~
further attest to the reality of way to recovery .
Kuhfuss said Congress shoul
detente.
That forecast was reported in consider legislation authorlzln
Detente bas survived the industry Week magazine today
tnals of the mining of with an analysis that the the U.S. to contribute to 1
Haiphong, the armed lnterven- recovery would probably occur international fund which woul
lion in Cambodia and the even without President Ford's buy foods for distribution t
hungry countries.
American-Soviet conflicting economic proposals.
Domestically, Kuhfuss sak
positions on the Middle
Tax rebates might make the Congress should overhaul th
Eastern war. Both countries recovery stronger than it would
worked together in obtaining a otherwise be but 'improvement grain price support system t
Mideast ceas~e in October, probably would occur without make sure the governmetl
cannot build up stockll whlc
1973, and are expected to them, the report said.
could be used to deprea
cooperate in new efforts to
And, it said, some economists market prices. He said tbl
achieve a settlement.
feel the President's latest
In May, 1973, after the proposals could reactivate infla- could be done by requlrlni
farmen to repay grain prlo
mining of Haiphong the ruling
tion late this. year or early in support loans in cash.
Soviet Politburo met for two 1976 after the downturn bottoms
The Farm Bureau leader IIIIo
days to debate whether Pres!· out.
urged an increase for 1975 b
dent Nixon's scheduled visit to
There are many signs the the support target price 101
Moscow was to be canceled.
inflation is on the run, the cotton and the minimum !ega
The Soviet leaders chose im·
report said. While the fourth support price for milk --.1
proved relations with the
quarter
of 1974 registered a 13.7 sharp departure from pa1
United states as their top
per cent rate of price increase, Farm Bureau policy on thea
priority welcomed Nixon and
it's expected the first quarter of commodities.
later rePortedlY bad a hand in
1975 will show a marked
Kuhfuss also said he support
persuading Hanoi to accept the
reduction
in
the
rate.
ed
the administration's recenl
Paris peace terms.
Tit•
drop
in
the
wholesale
order
to raise the cost of foocl
Nothing has changed in the
price
index
In
December
was
stamps for the needy. He sa1c1
basic Imperatives of detente
probably the best economic his group opposes allowq
and judging from the unanimous pronouncements In news of 1974, showing that strikers to Ulle food StamP$ and
Washington and Moscow the inflation's back was finally wants the government to· stop
setback of the aborted trade being broke, Industry Week spending ' money to inform
needy people about the food
agreement will not be per- said.
As
a
result,
the
outlook
for
stamp program.
milled to damage the progress
pnoe
changes
in
1975
has
Sen, Talmadge said the
already made and future plans.
The process wlll go on improved .,considerably. Where Agriculture Committee would
perhaps at a smaller pace and pnce indexes rose as much as consider revising food slamll
with reduced expectstlons for 11 points in a quarter last year, regulations and increases In
quick achievements. The alter- the rate should slow down to farm cOmmodity price prices to
native is return to the cold war four points per quarter or less. keep growers whose costs have
risen drastically from golne
which no one wants.
broke this year.
The dialogue will continue
and posaibly new agreements
wlll be concluded In the
foreseeable future . The in·
ternalional climate lj'lli
probably be improved but
there will ·be no quick substitution
of
friendship
forhostillty, confidence for distrust or a lowerq of lhe
defense guard on either side.
What would happen should
there be a change of guard In
the Kremlin? The question has
been raised in the past few
weeks In connection with
reports of Brezbnev's illness
and unconfirmed rumors of an
alleged -"65 for power in
the Kremlin triggered by the
setback in detente,
The short answer is that 110
I
rev slon of Soviet foreign
policy is,....,,. onv more than
.....~ -v
Nixon's resignation led to a
change in the American
stance. Foreign policy is
continUOUS in both cpwltries,
w.......H ...... in the Unl'"" sta•...--•
....
_,
andJIIOIIOilll'\(s In tbe Soviet
Union _._ the
wucre
O?mmunist
0 ,.,.......

subsidy

End of
seen

Berrys World

-·""le

~rules

ablolutely.

Soviet foreign policy has
beerJ. oontin.IKRIS;,Since Stalin's
death In ,1953 when hls ·sue-~ at llllce la"~lied 8
'-campaign to normalize
relations · with all counbiea.
The first step toward detente
0

l

"Bring me a hot fudgll sundaa - I just laarned
that tha haallh club I jolnad has declared
' bankruptcy[/,'

UPIIpartlldiiOr

NEW YORK (UP!) - The players want it both ways. You hear
the same complamt in all professional sports, particularly in
basketball. Management is doing the complalning. The front
office people say a player signs one of those multiple-year contracts, for two, three or maybe five years, and as soon as he has a
baH-way decent year, he comes banging on the door looking to
renegotiate his contract. I! he has bad year, though, he takes
the money and runs, never offering any rebate.
Red Auerbach, the Boston Cellics' boss, has his own way of
forestalling this kind of trouble . He lSil't very en\hus1astic about
handling out multiple year contracts to start with and if be has to
accommodate one ot his players wlth that kmd of agreement, he
makes sure there is a complete understanding.
"I ask the player 'are you happy with this contract?'" says
Auerbach. "He'll say, yes, he 1s. Fine, I tell him I'm happy with
11, too. We're both happy ;but I have one provision before we sign
.this contract. There will not be any renegotiation because I want
you to be aware \bat if you get hurt, we take care of you, we pay
the full contract, and if you have a bad year we're still obligated
to pay.
"The only little plus I have is if you have a real good year, but
remember you have security and peace of mine for two-three
years. You have everything. I'm the one taking the big gamble,
not you. I ask only one thmg .Don't ever ask to renegotiate a tenn
contract with me. Remember you're the one who asked for il in
the first place.... " Red says he never has any trouble .
Catfish Hunter had to change blS home phone number in
Hertford, N.C. Kept getting wakeup calls all the lime. The guy
Waking him up was Ray Kroc, San Diego's burned-up owner who
kept letting Hunter have It for not signing with the Padres even
though Kroc offered him more money tban anybody else....
Oscar Robertson says health fooder Bill Walton had better
change his diet and include some good old red meal or else he'll
never be able to take the long grind year after year .... Chris
Evert is on Bill Walton's side on this one. She's a strict
vegetarian, too ....
Capacity for the new Yankee Stadium will be less tban it was
for the old one. When the park opens next year it'll bold 61,000
compared with the previous capacity of 64,500. Each seat will be
four inches wider, though. Cars are being built smaller, but seats
in all ballparks are being buill bigger, and for the answer to thai
one you have to drive around the block a couple of times ....
One of the oldest debates in sports bas to do with what goes first
with an athlete, his legs, his concentration or hiS eyesight? With
Joe DIMaggio, it was simply his daily energy. When he
discovered it was beginning to diminish, he quit.
"I found I couldn't recoup," he says. "I'd get tired and I
couldn't get it back the next day. That's when I knew there was
no point in playing anymore.... "
Notre Dame's Moose Krause getting a laugh on the banquet
circuit with this one: "You've seen these truck drivers on the
freeways. One guy drives this big trailer, the other fellow sleeps
and then they exchange pomtions. Well, one day the driver of this
big trailer happened to stop at a restaurant and my friend said to
him, 'Are you the driver of that big trailer that's outside?' The
driver said 'Yes, I am. I've driven from coast to coast and I'm
the finest truck driver in the world.'
"So my friend said, 'If you're the best truck driver in the world,
what would you do if you were going 70 miles an hour when
suddenly you noticed a stalled Volkswagen less than 15 yards in
front of you?'
1 ''The driver said, 'I'd wake Harry up.' So my friend said, 'Why
would you wake Harry up?' The truck driver said 'Because
Harry's never seen an accident like this before.'"

a

How the@
will bounce
BY GARY PHILLIPS
As we ap~oach the end of another cage season, we hear of
winners and of losers.
At this time I'd like to congratulate Waverly for a job well
done as well as the Hannan Trace Wildcats for another fine
season. I'd congratulate the OVC champ but that one is still up
for grabs. But I would like to wish all of the teams in the area
"Good Luck" in the tournaments and "Thanks" for giving us
another exciting season of high school basketball.
Let's look at this week's games.
Tuesday, Feb. 4
(SVACI
Southwestern vs. Hannan Trace. The Wildcat offense is
really moving now. Hannan Trace 72 Southwestern 56.
North Gallla vs. Wahaina. West Virginians "just ain't got
it." Nnrth Gal1la 74 Wabama 50.
Southern vs. Eastern . Southern wins big rivalry. Southern 60
Eastern 54.
(other Games)
Oak Hill 60 Fairland 56, Olesapeake 65 Ironton St. Joe 64,
Coal GroveiiO Rock Hlll67, Pt. Pleasant 59 Ripley 49.
Frlday,Feb.7
(SVAC)
Hannan Trace vs. Trimble. Tomcats battle Wildcats all of
the way. Hannan Trace 68 Trimble 59.
North Gallla vs. Kyger Creek. No way, Bobcats! North
Gallla 84 Kyger Creek 50.
Symmes Valley vs. Southern. Vikings pull off a minor upset.
Symmes Valley 78 Southern 70.
Eastern vs. Southwestern. Highlanders win - but not by
much. Southwestern 61 Eastern 58.
other Games
Rock Hlll61 South Point 60, Ironton 72 Jackson 61, Fairland
87 Coal Grove 60, Oak Hill 70 Chesapeake 59, Logan 78 Meigs 50,
Pl. Pleasant 58 Parkersburg 50.

nom POSTPONED

LOS ANGELES (UPI) - An
1Nchll!iuled bout with the flu
h8a fcrCed world featherweight
chwnpion Bobby Olacoo to
poetp!ine his Feb. 8 fight 1vith
Patapelero Estrada.
Olyrnpic aUdltorilllll

The Meigs Marauder
wrestlers of Rax Goodman won
the1r third match of the year
Saturday ni ght, pmning
v1sitmg Logan 38-27 in
Morrison Gymnasiwn .
The Marauders got off to a
good star t w1th 98 lb. Kev m

McLaughlin decis10 r11n g
Wayne Moore 1()..6.
Mickey Lyons kept the Me1gs
lead with a1Jm of Logan's Bob
Cass1dy with 1· 0&lt;1 remam mg m
the third period
Logan came back m the 112

Vikings hand Bobcats
12th straight defeat
Led by Jye Myers' 34 points,
Coach Ferrell Hesson's
Symmes Valley V1kmgs won
the1r second game of the yea r
Saturday mght, 82~8 over the
Kyger Creek Bobcats
. The loss was KC's 12th m a
row and left the Bobcats w1th a
1-12 record overall and !1-10
slate in the SVAC. SV is 2-13
overall and 2-7 m the league
Also htttmg double figures
for the wmners were Kevin
Schafer with I&gt; and Greg Estep
w1 th 14 points
Coach Ke1th Carter's Bobcats sco red their hi ghest
number of pomts th1s win ter
behind the shoohng of semors
Doug Cottrell and Dave Wise
and jun10r B1ll Metzner . Cottrell dumped in 21 pomls, Wise
had h1s best offensive game
this year with 19 poinls and
Metzner canned 16.
Using their last-breakmg,
run and gun offense , Symmes
Valley Jumped mto a 16-9 lead
at the end of the first period
and were never senously
threatened.
Myers had 19 pomts durmg
l,he f1rst half. Helpmg the offense m lhe second period were
Schafer w1th six pomts and Jim
Myers with !1ve Cottrell and
W1se paced the Bobcat scoring
in the first half
Both teams played on even
terms m the th1rd stanza
scormg 20 poinls each Metzner
led the Bobcats w1th 10 pomts.
Schafer and Estep topped the
V1kings. Myers began hitting
from outside m the fourth
Thi s Week 's
Oh 1o College
Basketball Schedule
By Untied Press International
Monday
M1Ch1gan Slate at Oh10 State
W es tern Kentucky at Dayton
Youngstown State at H1ilsdale
{ Mt ch l
Oberlin at Defi ance
Mt
Vernon
Nazarene at
Cedarville
Tuesday
Woo ster at Bl dwtn Walla ce
Deni son at Musk1ngum
Otterbe1n at Heidelberg
Wilberforce at Cen tral State
F 1ndla y at Anderson ( lnd )
Manchester
{ l nd )
at
Wtlm 1ngton
Wednesday
Eastern M tchigan at M 1am t
Kent State at Ba l l State
Youngstown State al Ashland
Akron at Cl ev eland State
Gannon ( Pa l at Steubenv111e
Captt al at Oh 10 Wesley an
Kenyon at Wittenberg
Mount Un1on at Martella 1
Oh10 North ern at Marian { l nd J
Wheeltng (W Va .J at Xavier
B luffton at Deftan ce
Hiram at Thi el (Pa l
Case weste rn at w &amp; J ( Pa l
John Carroll at Allegheny
Walst1 at Malone
OhiO Dommtcan at R to Grande
Wnght State at Urbana
Thursday
C1nc tnnat 1 at South Flonda
M t Vernon at Wilberforce
Fnday
Denison at Ohto Nor t t1ern
Saturday
OhiO State at Mmnesota
Bowl1ng Green at Miami
Kent State at Central Mlch1gan
Toledo at Ohto Unlvers 1ty
X avier at Marquette
Cmc1nnalt at Houston
T ennessee Chattano oga
at
Dayton
Wnghl State at Cleve l and Stat e
Bellarmine (Ky I at Akron
Kentucky St a te at Central
State
Steub enville at St
Fr ancis
CP A l
Youngstown State at Buffalo
Baldwtn Wallace at Capttal
Heidelberg at Muskmgum
Kenyon at Wooster
Mar 1etta at OhiO Wesleyan
W tflenberg at Mount Un 1on
Oberlin at Otterbem
Wtlmmgton at Bluffton
Defiance at F 1nd lay
Case Western at Htr am
Carn eg 1e Mellon
at
John
Carroll
Oh1o Dom tn 1can at Cedarv111e
Malon e at R tO Grande
T1ff1n at Wi lberforce
Urbana
at
Mt
Vernon
Nazarene
Walsh at Geneva ( Pa.)

period as SV suddenly got
hotter Myers dumped in 11
points wh1le J1m Myers and
Estep had fo ur points each
Cottrell led the Bobcat fourth
period scoring w1th 12 points.
W1se dumped in seven
Symmes Valley sank 36 of 82
floor attempts for 44 pel and 10
of I&gt; free throws. Kyger Creek
held a 44-43 reboundmg edge
and Wise had 12. Ja ye Myers
led the V1kmgs w1th 15
Mark W1lson scored 16 points
to lead the Little V1kings to a
39-38 v1ctory m the resen•e
game. Ralph Baylor had 11
pomls for the Bobkittens

Bucks take on
~

MSU tonight.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) Ohio State coach Fred Taylor,
convinced nobody is going to
catch Indiana's runaway HooSiers, has set his sights Qll
second place in the B1g Ten
basketball race and the postseason tournament berth
which would go with lt.
The Buckeyes, who Saturday
night threw a big scare into
Indiana, the nation's No. I
ranked team, before bowing 7266, host Michigan State tonight.
The Spartans are one of two
other teams currently tied w1th
Ute Buckeyes for fourth place
in the Big Ten with &gt;-4 records.
There are several tournament doors open to other
conferen~ teams besides the
champion, including the NIT,
won last year by Pardue, the
Collegiate Commissioners
A:lsociation tournament, taken
last year by Indiana, and even
an NCAA berth in that event's
expanded 32-team field.
"It's pretty evident nobody 1s
going to catch them," Taylor
said of the Hoosiers. "We're
now playing for second place."
Indiana S&lt;reaklng
!Jidiana is now 2M this
season, has a 23-game winning
streak going back to last year
and is 9-0 in the Big Ten, three
games ahead of runnersup
Purdue and Minnesota.
Maybe nobody is going to
catch the Hoosiers, but the
Buckeyes came close Saturday
night.
The first 30 minutes of the
contest, played before a
capacity crowd of 13,489 in St.
Jolm Arena, Ute Buckeyes and
Hoosiers were dead even.
Ohio Stste, which is now ll-8
overall, trailed 35-34 at baH·
lime, but was up 58-57 with 9:49
remaining.
With four minutes to go, they
were stlll down only ~ and
bad the ball. But key steals by
super sub Jolm Laskowski and
Quinn Buckner put Ute game
out of Teach.
"Buckner and Laskowski
were the guys wbo really hurt
us at the lime when it meant so
much," said a disappointed but
proud Taylor.
''Our guys really played
bard," added Taylor, giving
specisl praise tq his &amp;-10 junior
center, Craig Taylor, who led
the Buckeyes with 24 points. •
"Craig really played," said

High School

Scores

Maryland 98 N C Sl 97
MemphiS St 105 Un1on 52
M 1d Tenn 102 W K y 95
NW La 75 De lt a St 7l
N Ga 72 Ga Sth ws trn 65
Old Dom 120 Ky Wslyn 87
Pte1 ff er 67 Mars Hill 65
Ru lg er s 75 Na vy 70
Sewnee 83 Cntre 68 Sun
St hws trn Tenn 68 Cntre 66
Te nnessee 105 Georg1a 69
Tenn Tec h 85 E Tenn 84
Tulane 96 Sthrn U 69
UNC Ce nt 85 Del Sf 110

East Palestine 79 L ee ton ia .5 6
Youngstown So uth 87 Nor th
Garf telct 76
Cleve land L 1n co ln West 49
Cleve land St Ig natius 48 '
Lakew ood 65 Normandy 37
Ea st Cleve lan d Shaw 92 Parm a

70
Cuy a hoga H e ight s 79 In ·
dependence 77 (otl
Mad ts on 68 Con n eaul 60
Parma Padua 80 Cleveland
Chane l 79 (of)
Western Reserv e A cademy 60
Pittsburgh S h ~ dys t de 51

set back two weeks, but a
definite rescheduling date
won 'I be decided until this
Wednesday alter lOr. Bernhart
Schwartz, a state Athletic
Commission physician, has
bad a chance to examine
Olllcon.

LEGAL

MEIGS COUNTY REAL
ESTATE OWNERS
THE TAX BOOKS WILL OPEN

Here's

my new

State Farm off1ce,

where

JANUARY 20 FOR THE FIRST HALF.
COLLE·CTION OF · 1974 · REAL ·
ESTATE
TAXES AND
FOR
DELINQUENT' TAX.ES. CLOSING
OAT~ WILL BE FEBRUARY 20, 1975.

ADULT MEAL
Btg Shef ~
Reg French Fnes
Turnover &amp;
l arge So ft Drink

FOR KIDS-

FUNMEALT"'
Fun Tray,
Funhurger·
Reg French Frtes
Svrpnse Pnze
Reg. Sort Dnnk &amp;
a Sweel Trm1l

insurance. I invite you to call or drop in any time.

STEVE SNOWDEN
1258 Powell St., ~lddleporl, Ph. 992-7155

---JTATI FAIIM

-

&lt;

.'
.I ,

1 can serve

vou with the best value in car, home, life and health '

HOWARD E. ·F RANK

'.

lb. class w1th Allen Seffins before Marauder Butch Roush
pmrung Carl Gheen with 39 pmned Dave Russell w1 th 24
seconds remammg tn the first seconds left In the second
pcn&lt;xl
pcnod of the~r 126 lb. bailie .
In the 119 lb class, Jmt ' In the 132 lb match, Jeff
Rosenba\IDl was deciSJOned by Mussel pmned Ciueftau1 Bnan
Log,w's Jan Hartman , 16..S, Hcnestofel with 34 seconds
gor1e HI ·the second penod
before
Me1gs'
Duane
McLalllJ hhn pm ned B1il Fuller
"' the 138lb v.ctgh t class wtth
43 seconds remammg m the
SCCOJld flame
Log an "on the 14&gt; lb
diVISIOn by fo• fe1l , before Bob
Musse r and Logan 's Jun F1ter·
took lo t~e mats m the 1&gt;3 lb
class. W1th Musser leadmg,
· F1ler reportedly dehvered a
Kyg er Cree k Will host punch at Musser, and the ofHannan, W Va, Wednesday ilclal stopped the1 match,
afternoon and North Gallra coiling 11 a tie 1
Omon Blankchard, at 1G7
Friday Symmes Valley goes to
ibs
, w1 csthng m Ius fi rst
Southern Fr1day
match, led Logan's Chuck Roof
ail the way tmtll the Clueftam
By Quarters
Sunt Valley
16 20 20 26- 82 got a reversal and l&lt;l ke down m
the !mal 30 seconds to edge
Kyger Creek
9 15 20 24-158 past Blanc hard &gt;-4
Marly Dugan got th e
Symmes Vall ey (87 ) - Jay e
Maraudc1 s !Jack m the sconn ~
Myer s 16 2 34, J1m M ye r s 4 1
column \\tth a 6-3 verdict over
9 , Brammer 2 2 6 , Schafer 55
M1ke Stgler m the 175 lb class,
15, E step 7 0 14, Miller 1 o 2
and Kelly l 0 2 Totals 36 10-87
before Logan's Chuck Myers
Kyger Creek ( 68) - Cott rell
pmned Shane Facemyer 111 the
10 I 21 , Metzner 7 2 16 , W1 se 9
ftrst frame of thc1r 185 lb.
I 19 , St 1dham 1-1 3, Ttm Lucas
I 0 2 , Te rr y Lu cas 3 0 6 ,
battle
Baylor 0 1· 1. Totals 31 -6-68 .
In the unlhmtcd class, M1ke
Haley pinned Logan 's Tim
Kessler with 21 seconds left m
the first penod .
Goodman was well pleased
with the Mara uder victory,
c1ling especially the efforts of
Blanchard , and Rosenbawn.
The Marauders' next ma tch
IS Thw-sday at 7:30p.m. when
Meigs will host the Fairland
Dragons m Mornson GymTaylor. "You can't say it's a naslwn.
wasted effort when a kid plays
like tbat."
Bobby Knight , Indiana's
fiery 34-year-old head coach,
who played under Taylor on the
great Buckeye teams of the
early '60s, was " very
satisfied" with his team's lrrst
Pre ss International
win at St. Jolm Arena m low· By Unti ed Saturday
tr1es.
Euc li d 58 Va ll ey Forge I Pa 51
Shaker He ig ht s 73 Garfie l d
Knight Satisfied
H e1g h rs 65
11
1 was very satisfied/' sa1d Broo k lyn 66 Brec k svtll e 44
Richmond He tghts 60 Bea ch
Knight, who was on his best WOOd
59
behavior durmg the game and Cl eveland L uth er an East 81
Berkshire 45
'
who cordially answered ques- Geneva
68
Ash t abu l a
tions after the contest. "When Edgewood 41
Bay V1llage 69 Ak r on South ss
you play a team you know is Cleve
l and
Benedt c ttne 61
really ready to play, play them Chag rin Fa ll s 52
tn gton 64 M tdview 62
on the road and win by six Well
Lor am Sou th vtcw 58 E l y ria
points, you have to be satisfied. West 44
ZaneS1J11I e 70 Wtnlersvllle 58
"They (the Buckeye~) were Zanesville
Ro sec r a n s
85
as difficult to score on at times R tdgewood 70
c kmg Val l ey 72 New ark
as anyone we've played," said L1
Catho l iC 55
Knight. "There's no question Caldwe ll 72 BeallSVIlle 56
A l ex and er 78 M i ll er~ 68
Ohio State was ready. It wall a Mad
ison Pla1ns 75 Westphal 62
very tough game for us."
Indian Va l ley Sou th 67 Jewett
SCt O J4
Scott May, a &amp;-7 junior for- H
i land 63 Da l ton 44
ward from Sandusky, Ohio, Dov er 63 Mansf ie ld Ma labar 4 1
N ew Phtladelph1a 62 Mans
paced the Hoos1ers m scoring M
adison 57
with 25 points, consistenll$' Woos ter 48 Ash land .4 3
lOUI SV Ill e Aqu inas 63 I V
hitting the key basket when the Nor
th 53
Buckeyes appeared to be Tu sc arawas Cat h ol i C 65
Brunnerdale 51
making a run.
Per r y 57 Marltngton 5 1
"I think Scott May is an Canton Ttmken 94 Ravenna SO
McK1n le y 9'1 You ng s
excellent offensive basketball Canton
town Rayen 63
player," said Knight. "And Akron Nor t h 71 Canton L eh
tonight he did a fine job man 67
Akr on B uc htel 61 Canton Cent
defensively, too."
Ca t h 54
Billy Andreas, the Big Ten's Alliance 60 Lora1n Sr 33
Canton South 64 Glenwood 48
leading scorer, chipped in with Oakwood
45 North Canton
19 points for the Buckeyes, Hoover J9
er va 59 Nor t hwest 48
despite the fact Taylor said he M1n
Ea st canton 69 Tu s/aw 64
felt his team dldn 'I "get inside Boa rdman 64 A kron Central ·
Hower 40
enough the second baH."
Sal em 86 Y oun gstown Eas t 76

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GALLIPoLIS

1503 Eilstern Ave.

Pro Standing3
NBA Standmg s
By Unttcd Press I nternationa l
Eas t ern Con l ere nce
A tl an t i c Ot vl51on
w 1 pet g b
Bos ton
35 14 7 14
Buttillo
33 18 6..t7
3
N ~w Yo rk
26 25 5 10 10
Phllrtd elpl1ra 21 30 4 12 15
(CIIfral DIVIS IOn
w 1 pet g b
Wa sh,n gton
36 1~
720
Hous ton
15 26 490 1 1' .
Cle v eland
24 '16 48 0' 12
A ll ant!'l
:11 33 389 l1 7
New Or l e-ans
6 42 125 19
Western Collference
Mtdwest D rvts to n
w 1 pet g b
De trOt l
J l 'lt S85
Ch tca go
29 ?t 580
•}
KC Omilha
,l6 ?6 500
1' '
Mtlwf'u kce
7~ 2S
~9 0
5
PolC !It c DI VISton
w 1 pet g b
Gold en Sl t1! e 30 20 600
~ ca"ltle
?'i 26 .190
S',
Pon1.1ne1
?? 28
140
tl
PhoerH)l
20 77" 4i6
B' ,
l os AngP IPS
19 30 388 10' J
Sat urd il~ s Re sult s
Ho uston 95 New York 9J
Clt&gt;ve l rtnd 112 Atlanta 109 , 01
De tr o1 t 119 Bu lf n1o 113
Seattl e 93 Po r ll and 91
Sund,ly's R esult~
PIHittd el ph•a 90 Houston 7!
Ch1 cago 97 Wash111glon 80
K C Omai1&lt;J 121 Gol den St 101
Oos l on 120 Mtl wau kee 100
Cleveland 1 16 Detro tl 96
New Or l ean s. 111.1 N ew Yo r k 11 .1
Se alfl e 119 L os Angeles 112
Monday s Gam~s
Bos l on at De tr o1t
Phr l t'ldelplllc1 v s K C Oma ha
at OmoJha

ABA Standings
By United Press lnterna,onal
East
w . 1. pet. g.b .,
N ew York
36 13 735
Kentucky
35 14 7 14
1
20 33 377 18
St L OUtS
15 36 294 22
Memphts
V1rg1nta
11 J9 22D 25 1h
West
w 1. ~ct . g b.
Den v er
42 12 7t8
san An i on tO
33 24 579 IOif2
ln dtana
24 26 480 16
Utal1
22 30 4 23 19
San Ot ego
21 J2 39 6 20 112
sa tu r day's Result s
Denv er 128 San D1ego 111
Sunday 's Results
V1 r gtn1&lt;t 109 Sl LOUIS 101
N ew York 126 San Diego 90
Snn An tonto 119 lnd1ana 100
M em ph ts 120 Denver l 0 3
Ken l u cky q6 Utah 86
Monday ' s Game s
San Otego a t V1 rgmta
N ew York at Utah
WHA Standmgs
By Un ti ed Press lnterllafiOncll
Ea!'. t
w I t ph gf 91
New Eng lnd 2J 19 2 56 165 168
Cleve land
21 26 2 44 140 157
Ch1 cngo
18 30 1 37 16 6 196
l nd•an apols 10 36 3 23 108 199
We st
w I t !)IS gf 91
Houston
J l 16 0 67 217 148
Phoen 1X
25 ?0 6 56 179 165
Mtnneso la
26 20 0 52 19 2 154
:, an Ot ego
?3 20 I
x Bnlt,more 13 33 3
Cana dt an
w 1 t.
Que b ec
32 16 0
Toronto
{] 70 2
Ed monton
74 17 2
Vancouver
2'J 23 2

47 156 15 1
29 1 17 203

pts gt
64 20 7
56 210
50' 162
46 143

ga
158

181
11.5
155

NHL Sl and tn 9s
ln terna tt onal
01\II SIOn 1
Wtnnipeg
20 22 2 42 174 15 6
w I t pi s gf gil
x Franch tse transf er red from
P11tlnr:l l p11tCI 3711 7 7 1 178 •106 M tch•gan
NY Ranger s 26 15 10 62 210 166
S&lt;tturday ' s, Res ult s
N Y lsla nders ?1 17 13 55 172 139 Houston 6 Chtcago s
Atl anta
22 20 10 54 147 149 Phoen tlt B Baltimore 1
Dtvt slon 2
Qu ebec 2 l nd 1anapol tS I
w I t . pts gf ga
Su nda y's Gam es
Van c ouver
26 20 5 57 174 159 Qu ebec 4 Cleveland l
Ctlt cago
24 21 S 53 164 148 Vancouve r 4 loron to '1
St L out s
19 22 9 47 161 179 Houston 4 Bal ltmor e 2
M1nn eso t a
13 30 6 32 133 :n 5 M i nn eso ta 5 Wlnntpeg 4, ot
Kans as City 10 3J 6 26 124 216 Edmonton 4 Ch1cago 3
OtVisiO il J
Mond ay's Games
w. I. t. piS g f ga
( No games scheduled J
Mon l reul
30 9 13 73 24 0145
Los Anqe les 29 9 13 11 178 11 2
P1tr sburglt
20 19 10 5 1 204 190 CLAIMS RECORD
Detroit
13 27 10 36 118 l96
VANCOUVER, Wash. (UPI)
Wa shtng ton
4 42 s \ 3 1011 26 5
01\/I SIOO 4
Marine recruiter Capt. Alan
w l. t.p tsgt ga
Ouflalo
33 11 7 73 215 157 Jones claimed the world's
Boston
27 14 10 64 232 15 1 record for the most free throws
T~ron to
19 25 7 45 170 200Ca l tl orn ta
12 33 9 33 141 114 in 12 hours of consecutive
Saturd ay's R es ults
basketball shooting Sunday
N Y I sland ers 4 Detro1t 1
night.
N Y Rangers 4 Chi ca go 1
Philadel phi a 6 Bu ffa lo 0
Jones,ln a lund raising drive
vancot.~ver 5 washtnglon 2
for a charity, connected on
P1tiSburgh 4 St Lou i s 4
M tnn eso l a J K&amp;nses City 2
3,802 free throws during 12
Tor onto 3 Boston 2
hours of shooting. He said be
Montreal 5 Los An ge l es 3
Sunday ' s Results
will send the results to Ute
Det r o 11 5 NY Rang er s 5
Gulness
Book of Records.
Buffalo s Kansas City 1
Boston 5 Philadelphia 1
Jones said he plans to skip
At lan ta 5 Mlnnesol a 3
rope next month and hopes· to
N Y Island ers 1 Chicag o 1
Montr eal 5 Ca l 1t orn1a 1
do 33,000 skip!! in five hoilrs for
Monday's Games
another world record.
( No g~mes scheduled I

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Un~t cd ~res s

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The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy; o., Monday, Feb. 3, 1975

":::·.!~~:: .~~ ~1:1~:::~·:.

(Cha mp io nship)
Holy Cron 73 Seton Hall 71

Re4m
...en con
.r ninth cane
e . win, ·76-62

Manhattan 86 Fairfield 79
east

M idd!b r y 71 Tr in ity 68
M IT. 67 Coast Guard 66
Monmouth 78 Jrsy Cty St . 6J
Mon tcl air S1. 87 .Ramapo 7"
NY Te ch 101 Hofstra 75

Albany N .V . l l l l tha ca 94
A ll ghny S6 Crngie -MIIn 54
Assumpt ion 81 LeMoy ne 70
Bthny 64 Case W es t er n 62
B i n·ghmtn o4 2 Fr dn ia St . JB
Bloom t id 60 Tr en ton St . 56

Nr thrn St . 90 Sl ppry Rck. ,B9
Penn 79 Vale 67
P ill 70 Wm&amp;Mar y, 60
Pitf . . Jh nstwl) 90 Grve Cty 81
Shipph sbg 66 Mi l lrs vt 53
So . Conn . St . 70 E . Conn . 64

Blooms.bg 89 Kutz tw n 52
Boston Colt , 91 Fordham 7 4
Brandeis 99 Bk lyn Colt 75
Bri dgepor t 79 Spr i ngfld 78
Brown 62 Pr i nceton 61
Bucknell 63 Delawa re 62
Bf lo St . 105 Crtl nd St . 62
Can lsi us 93 Pro vidence 85
Central Conn . 92 R 1u 88
Cl eve St. 68 FDU -Rthrfd 61
Colby 84 Norw ic h 52
Connect icut 100 Ma ine 90
Cornell 71 Dartmouth 60
Cur ry 5q N ichOls 78
0uQu$ne 83 Vllnv a 81 Sun .
W .Va . 97 Davidson 92
Detroit 86 St . Bonn ie 82
Di ck i nson 79 Queens 78
Ed i"nboro Btltnd " Pa 70
Eliztown 88 Susq uehn na 80
Frnktn&amp;Mrshii 70Mravian 61
Gannon 57 Scranton 56
Geneseo St . 17 U Bflo 70
Ge0 . Wa sh . 68 Bos ton U 62
Hartford 102 CC N Y 90
Harvard 80 Columbia 17
H iram 97 Wa$h&amp; Jeff 64
Houghton 78 Bapt B ibl e 72
Howar d 80 Cheyney 78
Jun iat a 7J A l lian ce 69
K i ng ' s NY 79 Brrngtn 62
K i ng ' s Pa . 62 St. Vin e 50
LlU 103 tona 80
L afayel!e 82 R ider 71
Lehigh 72 Gettysburg 61

S1. Joh n's. NY 105 Army 77
St. Lawren ce~ Ut ica 76
St. M i chael'S
Arn I nti 85
Th ie l 12 J Ca r oil 61
Westmmtr 79 Gen eva 70
W id ener 61 Del . Vat 39
Sou th
Atacama 77 Auburn 53
A l a St . 95 Ala . A&amp;M 77
A lbny St . Ga . BJ Bndct 76
A Peay 80 Murr ay St . 10
Be r ea 81 Union 78
Berry 70 Shorter 69
Bow i e Sf. 66 Wash&amp;Le e 57
Catawba 71 Leno ir Rhyne 59
Cat'h U 75 Btmn l Abby 73
Cn tnry 105 So . M is s. 81
Ci tade l 75 Ri c hmond 80
Clems on 80 No . C&amp;r . 72
Dr exe l 83 J . Hopkins 79
E . Ky . 86 Morhed St . 82
Fayttv l St . 63 UN( W i lm 60 •
Flo r ida 10 1 Vanderbitt90
Fla . St . 111 UT -Chat 70
Fu rman 86 East Car . 76
Ga Sthrn 104 App lc hn Sl. 83
Geo l own DC 11 ~enn St 66
Gui l ford 8 1 E l on 11
Haver:tor d 82 Wash . 74
High Pt . 58 Pembroke 49
J .C Sm i th 97 Livngstn 91
Ky 11 2 Mi ss . St 79
1\.y St . 90 Cr sn Nwmn 67
L SU 94 MiSSISS ipp i 86
Lou isv l 112 N . fe~t . St . 67

JCo n solalio r~ )

CEDARVILLE - It's been
said that taking the 1big battle
goes a long way toward winning the war.
Such was the case here
Satw-day night as the Rio
Grande Redmen swept the
beards for a 66-36 rebounding
margin and added some timely
shooting by Dan Bollinger and
Mac Barbee in rolling past the
Cedarville Yellow Jackets 7662.
For the Redmen it was their
ninth win in 17 outings and
fow- th Moe triumph against 2
defeats. Cedarville dropped to
10-8 overall, 3-3 in the league'
Despi te that overwhelming
beard advantage, it was a long
haul overtaking the host
Jackets . Rio jw-nped out to an
early 1().8 lead and held the
upperhand for 12 minutes and
20 seconds before Cedarville's
Dan coomes broke free for a
layup to give the Jackets the
lead at 29-28 wi th I : 55
remaining in the first half.

.Cowens subdues Kareem
By GIL PETERS
UPI SpOrta Writer
Boston Celtlcs' guard Jo Jo
White said las t week he
"wouldn't trade Dave Cowens
for any center In the league,
not even Kareem."
Cowens, as If using a national
television audience and
capacity Boston Garden crowd
to prove Whit~ right,
dominated the big Bucks'
center with marksman-like
i!hootlng and sharp elbows,
giving the Celtlcs their ninth
stralgbt win, a 120-102 trlw-nph
over Alxlul.Jabbar and his
Milwaukee Bucks.
Cowens had 24 points, one
more than Alxlui.Jabbar, and
22 reboums to Kareem 's six In
the lopsided win. He hustled
where Alxlul.Jabbar lagged,
stormed the boards whtle his
opponent laid back and shot 11
for 23 whtle his opponent hit on
10 of 28 shots.
"When Dave does the job,
he 's the nucleus of the club,"
981d forward Piul Silas, who
contributed 12 points and 15
reboums. "We can lose anyone
oot him and sUII ~ aU rlgbt.
He does as good a job as a
center does for his club and
probably does It better."
White, with 20 points, and
John Havllcek, with 17 points In
his 1000111 NBA game, ablY.
supported, &lt;;owens' play.

"They're all great competitors and they're a great team,"
said Milwaukee Coach Larry
·Costello. ''They've got the fast
break, the good shooters, the
big guards who can rebound,
they play defense-good defense. They're great competitors.
They've got It aU."
The Bucks, unllke the past
few years, are not shoo-Ins for
the playoffs. The loes Sunday
put them In last place In the
Midwest Division with a 24-25
record, one-half game behind
Kansas City-Omaha.
fn other NBA games Sunday,
New Orleans defeated New
York, 1111-114; Kansas CityOmaha trounced Golden State,
127-101; Chicago topped Washington, 97-«1; l'hlladelphla
tripped Houston, 9M7; Cleveland dw-nped Detroit, 116-96,
and Seattle beat !.Ds Angeles,
119-112.
Jazz 111, KDteta 114:
Pete Maravlch scored 33
points and handed out 12
assists, while newly acquired
Henry Bibby added 13 points
against his former Knick
teammates aa the Jazz won
their sixth game of the season.
Bibby, along with New York's
ftrst-ro\Dld choice In this year's
college draft, was acquired
Saturday night In exchange for
Neal Walk and Jim Barnett.
Walk played only eight minutes

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How long can
you live ·on love?

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Basketb•lf· Resu Its

Bv United Press Internationa l
Satu r day

Ind ians 72 Oh io St at e 66
Bowl i no Green 67 To l edo 63
Wes tern M lc hlgsn 86 -M iam i 73
K en t State 74 Oh io Un iv er s it y
69
. Cayton 76 L oy ola ( 111 . 1 6l
No t r e Da me 96 Xavie r 58
Cinc innati 85 North ern Ill i no is

69

A kron 65 Young stown St a te 6 1
Cl eve land St at e 68 F DU .

R 4t her ford 61
Wrigh.t State 87 F r a n k l in Ond . l

60

Han ov er ( Ind.) 13 Fi n d l ay 6S

lot i

H ira m 97 Wash . &amp; Jeff . ( Pa .)

"

Bethan y (W . Va . l 64 Case
Western 62
Po in t Park ( ~ a .) 82 As hla nd n
Fai rm ont Sta te f W . v a . J 11 3
Central Stat e 97
Baldw in -Wa llace 61
Wit - 1
t enberg S9
Ober lin 72 Ca p ita l 64
Mount
Un ion
lOS
Oh io
w esleyan 87
Musk lngum 49 Woo ste r .41
Oen l $on 90 Otterbein 69
Ken yon 42 Oh io North e rn 38
M ar ietta 67 Heid elberg s.c
Defi ance 102
M an ~: hes. te r
( Ind . ) B3
T h iel ( Pa . ) 12 Joh n Ca r r o ll 61
Ma lon e 69 Da vis &amp; E lki n s (W.

Love. It can move mountains.
But it can't run a household ..
Or meet a ll the bills. Or put
kids through college.
· That ta kes monev.
And one good way to make
sure your money will grow
along Wit h your marriage is bv
signing up now for t he Payroll
Savings Plan where you wor.k.
Then an amount vou specifv
will be set aside from each PaY·
check and used to buy U.S.
Savings Bonds.
1
. You don't have to worry so
much about t he fut ure. And
you'll have a tittle more time
for love.

va .1 54

Oh io Dom i n ica n 83 Ur bana 79
Merc v ( N. Y .) .11 T iffin 66
R fo Gra nd e 76 Ceda rv ille 62
Earlh am ( Ind .) 79 Wil m in gton
65
.

Fort Story, Va., is the only
Army Installation In the center
of a ll,l'ge east,coast Naval
complex:

a} in te rmission. -

The Yellow Jackets kept
their lead for the next 14
minutes, never pulling more
than 4 points away from the
Redmen, before Rio ma de its
move with 8:31 r emaining.
Barbee hit fr om 20 and 7 feet

to kn ot the score at 411-48 and
Jim Noe responded wi th a pair
of lree throws to give the
Redmen a 50-48 lead.
( Cedarville's Don Smith, the
. leading scorer on the nig hKvith
25 points, hit from 12 feet to tie
the score again before Smith
hit a free throw seconds later to
give the hosts the lead for the
. at ol-50.
last tune
Barbee got a layup at the
5:39 mark to put the Redmer.
on top lor goqd before

-

Bollinger, with'22 poin ts pnd 13
rebounds on the evening, hit
from 12 feet to give Rio a 54-51
lead .
Barbee followed with, a steal
at midcow-t , flipping a pass
over his head with his hack to
the Rio basket as a breaking
Bollinger got an easy layup.
·Bollinger hit from 15 ·feet
moments later as Rio opened
up a 58-01 margin.
Cedarville pulled within 6 at
00-54 before Jim Stewart hit 4
str aight free throws and
Barbee connected once at the
line to put the game out of
reach at 6:&gt;-54.
Bollinger's 22 points were
compl emented by 19 by
Stewart, while Noe hi t for 16
and Barbee 13.
Stewar t, a 6-7 junior , led the
Rio board assaul t with 17
re bounds, while Noe and
Bollinger added 13 apiece.

R io-Cechrville box.

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DRY

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1 DAY

Robinson's

Fezler

seeking
crown

FORTH£
PROTECTION
YOU NEED-

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Har-

f to

for shoe shops In the~

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Hours 9:00A.M. to 4:00P.M. daily except Saturday when office close.s .a t Noon.
TI,X Books will open January 15, 1976 to February 16, 1975.
·
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HOWARD E. FRANK, .Meigs Co. Treu;

Join the Payroll Savings Plan.

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Social
Calendarl

, Kyger

Committee for
MR will meet

I

The U. S. Army offers tuition
assistance to volunteers . who
pw-sue college courses from
approved schools.

Octogenerians get corsages
An orchid corsage was
presented to Mrs. Stella
Grueser, Middleport, the oldest
birthda y honoree,· at the
monthly party Thursday at the
Senior Citizens Center ,
Pomeroy.
.
others presented flowers, aU
over 80, were Mrs. Mlna Hart
and Mrs. Lena Baxter,
Pomeroy, and Karl Owens,
Middleport. Others with birthdays In January at the ·party
were Allen Hughes, Inez
Turner, Caralee Bailey, Edith
Spencer, Ruth Euler and Glenn
Lambert, Middleport ; Evelyn
Rife and Goldie Graham,
Rutland ; , Lillie Starcher,
Minersville ; Helen Howell,
Katherine
White,
Eva
Dessauer, Jewell Cqrtls and
Orville Graham, Pomeroy.
Presented a peace rose were
Glenn and Anna Cline, Carpenter, who celebrated their

LAFF - A - DAY

the · book, "Thmnaa
Jeffersm" by Fawn Brodie,
and Mill' Kathryn f!lllson to
review '"lbe Cabin" by Walter
Collins o'Kane. Ron caU 'wlll
be a ctmment m the book.

NaHe~nwlde ha• 1 fam ily
pl.., that ean gUirll'll"

rour rtght to mo,. ure
lna~p~ranee a rou grow
ohMr, r-aard.._ of your
hMith. C.ll todiY.

P. J. PAULEY

loT Spring Avo.; POmeroY

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industry needs gas .10 keep
.qperating. By keeping your
therm•ost:lt set at 68 degre~s or lower
. heating season, 'and
conserving gas in .other ,~ays, you'll
not only save some money, but you'll .
help provide gasthat will keep, .
peqple on the job.
. Saving gas in your home can help
.save jbbs.

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•4 DRAWER CHESTS.................•38
eSOFA BEDS ...... ,............. :.....'88
e5 PC. DINETTE SET.................

blood·thirsty violence?",

9-9, SAT. 9-4 '

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e3 PC. BEDROOM SUITE ......... ~138

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

10 FOR
1 MONlH

MON.-FRI.

FROM BAKER'S BUDGET
·SHOP•••

"Do you wa nt mode rate
violence, violent violence, or .,....,...,,..,..,...__.__.__,..,..,..,.."WW"WW"WW"WW"WW~"""""

1

992-515~

•

BAKER FURNITURE

SIGN UP

TRIM· ,

Middleport, Ohio

SPECIAL VALUES ON MA-1'-TRESS&amp;
BOX SPRING5-ALL SIZES.

is designed to

work painlessly.

YaurThom

eADMIRAL REFRIGERATORS .......~.199

our easy program

MEIGS
SLIM

'
51st wedding anniversary
In
January.
Grace preceding the potluck
dinner served at qoon was
given by Mrs. Bertha Robinson. The approrlmately 145
attending enjoyed music by
'Jerry Ward on the gul\81', and
readings by Sallie Byers and
Marcia Karr. Square dancing
was also enjoyed.

Beautif ul fab r ics, good co li spring construction .

Fathers:

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Plans for.' a therapy program
with the Rutland special
ecucatlon class later this
month were · made by the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners at,
the home of Mrs. Marjorie
Davis Wednesdsy night.
Mrs. Doima Williamson and
Mrs. Davis will be Instructors
for the therapy program. The
children will make bird feeders
out of bleach bottles.
For devotions. to open the
nieeting, Mrs. Davis read !rom
a hook, ''Golden Verses." The
program conslste,d of the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubo'
"Favorite Wild Flowers."
Mrs. Davis served as auctioneer for an auction held as a
fund raising project at the
meeting. Terrarium
organization was discussed by
Mrs. Marjorie Bishop.
· The travellng prize was won
by Mrs. Bishop and Mrs·. Davis
served ref r eshm e n t s .
Following the meeting a
layette shower was held for
Mrs. !.Dis Walker.

WEDDING PLANS ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs.
David Bumgardner, Middleport, are announcing the
engagement and approaching nuirrlage of their daughter,
Terri, above, to Gene Davis, son of Mr. and Mrs. David
Davis, Pomeroy. The bride-elect Is a senior at Meigs High
School. Her fiance graduated from Meigs In ·1973 and Is
employed al Kroger's ln Pomeroy. The open church wedding
will he an event of March 23.

I

Discover A Slimmer••• Happier New Year!

.

club meets

.. ..

111UR8DAY
Ct- TROlJC Womeit'a Club,
sec: 'II Heart Plrlab cburcb
ball, 8 p.m. Thur~day,
preceo .1 by Mala at 7:30 p.m.
CO.MJ.&gt;ilTTEI!; FOR the
Mentally Retarded, 'I'IIuilday,
7:3!) p.m. MeiCI County courtroom. Public Invited. i
\•

.Real Estate ta."tes wh ich have not been paid at the close of each collect.ion carry .
a penalty of ten per cent. Taxes may be paid at the office of , the county treasurer
or by mail. Please bring your last tax ,...eipt and if you pay by mail be sure to locate your property by taxing district and enclose stamped. self addressed envelope.
Aiways exnmine your t8x rec·eipf to s~ that it cover.s all your property. Offic_e

•

,I

In 19?4 the Retired Senior · Hos pital, Meigs-Jac kson- Bloodmobile, Meigs Co un ty
Volunteers of Meigs Coun ty, a Vinton Bookmobile, Me igs He11 ith Department, Meigs
program carried out by the Community, Sc hool, Se ni or Coufity Home, · Elmwood
Me igs County Council on CitiZ&lt;~ns Center, Harrisonville Nurs ing Home, Syr a'cli~e
Aging,.lnc. exceeded the goals Golden Ci rcle Club , the Nw-sing Home, COAD nutrition
set for the second year of the Rutland Silver Circle Club, prog ram , Me igs County
POLLY'S PROBLEM
one dOl'S not get nearly enough prog ram, according to Mrs. Teac her Co rps Readi ng Muse um , Meigs County
DEAR POLLY-I save my protection from the sun when Pearl Welker, director.
Pro g r a m , .sa 1i s b u r y Historical Society, Tubergarbage, except 'for bones and driving into it. - LUCY.
The report from .the director Elementary School, Mid- culosis Assoc latian, Ca nce r
fat, and work it into the soil
DEAR POLLY - To keep shO)Ys that 198 senior citizens dleport Kindergarten.
~ocie ty, Hea rt Fund Drive,
, around my garden plants. They an ironing cord from needing · volUn teered 28,450 hours of
Pome roy Kindergarten, Raci ne Emergency Squad,
love the fertilizer , se wag e replacement because . it rubs service to the community.
Meigs Hig h School (Special Pomeroy Fire De partment ,
waste is cut down , the ground against the board and wears I
The following .places were Educa tion), Meigs County Salisbw-y Pf A, Southeast Ohio
is worked and I get exercise carefully wrap a soft long piece ass is ted by the senior volun- Hu ma ne Socie ty, Pe rsona l, Junior Miss Pageant, and the
and sunshine and even new of cord around the iron cord for tee rs: Veterans Memorial Advocacy Prog ram, Red Cross Pomeroy Library.
" free " plants sprout oc· a couple of fee t where it rubs.
casionally. DW'ing the winter Make the " winds" close
garbage can be worked into a together so the' cord completely
compost heap . My problem is I covers the iron cord. You save
do Mt have a good place to the ""l!"nse of having ' to
SYRACUSE - Awards were Wednesdsy at the home of Mrs. annual blue and gold baJ)quet
keep the garbage until I am replace it so often. - MR~.
presented at the Cub Scout Donna Wolfe to plan lor the to be held later this month .
ready to SPade It into the earth. W.E.T.
- SHIRLEY.
DEAR POLLY - MRS. Pack 243 meeting held recently
DEAR SHIRLEY · - I F.O. can keep a wet blotter at the Syracuse Elementary
would think you could put this over each of the decals on her School.
Receiving wolf patches were
garbage In plastic trash bags steel cabinets until they loosen.
Randy
Arms, Ricky Chancey,
A
razor
blade
might
be
touched
secured with twist lies and
Robbie
Gibbs, Jerry Wolfe,
keep It in the garage or outalde on each edge, but use carefully
Brian
Allen,
Cory McPhail,
near the garden· If It Is to avoid scratching, after they
Greg Devaull, Eugene Jeffers,
protected from dogs and other are loosened. - MRS. M.S.
By Helen Hottel
DEAR POLLY - We all Todd Cundiff, Roger Hubbard,
animals. Any other Ideas,
accw-nulate an oversupply of Lee Dill, Tony Deem and Eric
anyone? - POlLY.
wire coat hangers that come Philson .
Daughter Is Her Enemy
Awarded denner pins were
DEAR POLLY - My Pet from the cleaners. We always
Dear Helen :
Peeve Is with the car keep several in the trunk of ow- Brian Allen, Roger Hubbard,
1 My 14-year-old daughter flaunts it.
manufaciW'ers who do not car since we often stay in Ricky Chancey and Eric
She's "anybody's glrl," and I think she'd Uke to make it with
Philson with Donna Wolfe,
make the windshield sun visors motels where there· is a
her
stepfather.
She wears nothing to bsd, goes bra4ess to school,
Judy Gibbs, assistant den
deep enough or wide enough so scarcity of hangers. We leave
runs around In a brief towel especially when my husband Is at
these extras-behind for the next mothers, and Irene Cundiff home.
person who occupies the room. receiving den mother patch.
She kisses up to him and his 15-year-old son, and when I show
:·:·:-.-:-:-:·:·:···:•,•,•:·:·:·.·.·:···:·:·...-:.....
Approximately 50 scouts,
- MARIE .
I'm upset she says it's all in the family. She runs In and out of her
DEAR POLLY - I have parents and fl'lends attended step-brother's room tempting him to God knows what.
just made a discovery or the meeting . Roger Hubbard,
I trust my husband (we've been married for three years),
rather solved a problem that I Brian, Allen and Ricky but not my dall8hter, When I'm away at night school, I wonder
want to share with the other Chancey led .the pledge to the how much he can withstand.
readers . Three years ago flag and the !.Drd's Prayer, and
Last week I came home at noon and caught her In bsd with a
someone dropped a cigarette the scouts sang "Be a Cub high school boy. They'd ditched school. I'm not exlll!gerating,
on ow- hi-lo sculptw-ed rug and Scout."
Helen . My daughter Is a threat to my marriage and, at this point,
A program on SPace and
MONDAY
this left a bw-n about an inch
my marriage Is much more Important than a girl! can't control
SALEM CENTER PTA 7:30 · wide. Ever since then I have planets was held with each ... and can 't love, not any longer. She's Incorrigible.
p. m. Founder's Day program been trying to do something scout telling abouLthe project
. If she stays here until she 's 18, I'll have lost my chance at
by Miss Triplett's third grade about this ugly sight. Just he displayed.
But she's my legal charge. What can I do 7 - TIRED
happiness.
Mrs. Betty Templeton, den
students. Past presidents will today I took a regular screw
AND FAILED
be recognized and nominating driver and started scraping leader coach, read "How
across the burn mark. After ·Parents and Friends Can Help Dear T and F.:
committee announced.
POMEROY CHAPTER 186, quite a bit of work and a bit of In Scouting." The closing song
Why not give It to yow- daughter straight? Either she retires
Order of the Eastern Star, 7:45 time all the black came off and was "Good Night Cub Scouts" aa an adolescent sex symbol, or you tell the authorities she is
p. m. at the Pomeroy Masonic the rug fibe rs blended and refreshments were served. Incorrigible and ''retire" her to a foster home.
Temple, Ins tea.~ of Tuesday . together. Now one cannot tell it Mrs. Cundiff had prayer and
... Since you admit you "''n't control her, sh.e would be much
night due to meeting conflicts. was ever bw-ned. Our rug is the birthdays of three cub bstter off away from you. - H.
olive green but I think it should. scouts and the · den leader
+++
HARRISONVILLE PTO 7:30 work as well on any other coach were observed with a Dear Helen :
large birthday cake . being
p.m. Robert Snowden, guest -color. - MRS. R.S.
We've had Women's Liberation around for some time now.
served.
speaker. Refreshments.
Would you consider coming out for Parents' Lib too :
It waa announced that the
OHIO Association of Public
Parenta are entitled to certain rlghta, I think. For example :
den mothers and the den leader
School Employes special ·
1. The right to use the phone occasionally.
coach 'will meet at 1 p. m.
meeting at 7:30p.m. at Meigs
2. The right to talk at the table.
A birthday party was held on
Junior High, Middleport.
.
.
3. The right to keep their car In the garage.
REGULAR meeting, Meigs Jan. 16 at the ho111e of Mr. and
4. The rlgbt to find the pen, l!Clssors, and tape In the drawers
County Fair Board, 8 p.m., Mrs. Arnold Stump celebrating
where they left them.
secretary's office on Rock the birthdays of Amy Roush
5. 1be right to find the dessert still In the refrigerator.
who was 9 years old on Jan. 16
Springs Fairgrounds.
6. The right to an allowance for doing chores such as
and Arnold, David and Barton
Regular monthly meeting of shoveling snow, raking leaves, setting the table or taking out,the
POMEROY Garden Club, Stump who aU had birthdays the Commlttee for the Mentally
•7:30 pm. at home of Mrs. Ir- Jan . 17. Refreshments of ice Retarded will be held at 7:30 garbage. (Paid by "forgetful" members of the family who
already get an allowance for doing these taslal.)
ving Karr.
cream, cake and soda pop were Thursday night In the Meigs
7. The right to get rid of the orphan pup who rewards their
EASTERN Athletic Boosters · served to Mr. and Mrs. Joe County Cow-troom.
·
hospltaUty by chewing the ends off the coffee table.
8 p.m. at the high school.
Roush, Amy and Kelly, Mr.
Mrs. Fay Sauer, chair8. The rlgbt to turn on·the car radio and hear "Moon River"
MIDDLEPORT Garden and Mrs. Barton Stump and woman,
asks
that or "Autumn Leaves" Instead of "Kung Fu Fighting" or "Who
Club, 7:30p.m. at the home of, family, Mr. and Mrs. Arnold . organizations
send
·
Mrs. Roy Cassell, 721 Hooker Stump, David and Tommy, representatives to the meeting. Shot the Sheriff?"
9. The rlgbt to show concern and not stand accused of being a
St., Middleport. Co-hostesses, Mrs. Mary Dee! and Terry Everyone Interested in the
oosybody,
overprotective, or "not trusting them."
Mrs. Walter HayesruJd Mrs. E. Hall.
continuance of the education of
to:
The
right to say "NO!" - DOROTHY
D. Tewksbary. Mrs. Jwnes
Mrs. !.Dulse Roush was a the mentally re,!arded In Meigs
Titus, Sr ., to demonstrate . recent SUnday dinner gullS! of County is urged to attend. The
Dear Dorothy:
creating dried arrangements. Mrs. Cora Rupe. Mrs. Mildred public is welcome.
ffiGHT!
Members to take their own Stevens of ·Billwell Rt. vis! ted
And finally : The right to be considered a real live person, not
materials, containers and frog with them in the afternoon.
"just
a parent." -- H.
or styrofoam .
Eddie Swisher of More~ad
.
.
+++ .
RACINE Chapter 134, OES, 8. State U. called on Mr. and Mrs.
Fort Oil!, N. J., Is the largest
PERSONAL
TO
''Tired
of
His Bragging": fn Bill Mauldin's
p.m. at the Masonic Temple. Ralph Bales, Mrs. Irma Bales · military base In the northWorld
Warn
cartoon,
WUUe
says
to Joe: ''The hell this lsn~ the
TUESDAY
and Mrs. Muriel · Spires eastern United States, oc- tnost Important for hole In the world. I'm In It !" Does that an·
CHESTER Council 323, D of recently.
cupying 55 square miles.
awer your questlm? - H.
A 7:30 pm., at the hall.
Russell Porter of Gallipolis
Balloting to take place. Silent who underwent sUrgery at
auction by the home and or- Holzer Medical Center Jan. 20,
phans commlttee .
was discharged on Jan. 25, and
SOUTHEASTERN Ohio Is Convalescing at home. He Ia
Gospel Music Association at · the father of Mrs. Carolyn
home of Larry McGraw, SR 180 Elldns .
north of Holzer Medical · An overnight guest of Mr.
Center. Potluck at 6 p.m. and Mrs. Ralph Bales recently
was her brother, Kevin Gibbs
meetln~ at 7 pm.
Rutland.
omo Eta Phi Chapter, Beta ofThe
friends and co-workers Gl
Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30 p.m. Arnold Stump honored him
We'll Help You
at the Colmnbus and Southern with a birthday party Friday
To Build leolity
Ohio Electric Co. "Bakeless" , evening, Jan. 17, In the lounge
bake 981e. Cultural report by of the Skyllne Lanes Bowllng
Firmer muscles, bette r
Mrs. Sharon Bailey, with Alley
·
posture, new slenderness
h!Jll!esses, Mrs. Bailey and
~Bales and Connie Bales
Kathy Cumings.
d buslne88 trl to T ~an
and slrenglh can be
MEIGS County Chapter of rna e a
P -•
· yours. Come in for a
the American Red CrOss, 7:30 recenUy.
free consullalion . We 'll
p.m. at Veterans Memorial
show you lhe way lo a
H01pltal cafeteria. AU board
members asked to be present.
lovelier, happier you !
WEDNESDAY
A thought for the day:
Shed Excess
MIDDLEPORT .. Firemen's Hora'ce. Greeley ·.said, "Tbe
Weight Where
Auzlllary, 7:30 p.m. at the illusion that Urnes that were
You Need ltl
firehouse. r.,rs . Euvelle are better than th~ that are
Bechtle , and Mrs. Emma has probably pervaded aD
Hippy? Rolls
·
Wayland,
hostesses . ages."
at the waist? Be
Nomination of offlcera.
rid of unwant ~
POMEROY Lodge 164 F&amp;AM
od bulges ...
7:30 p.m. AU Master Masons
Fitness Is fun I
Invited.
Let Us Show You
., .
MIDDLEPORT UTERARY
' l osing pounds
Club, 2 p.m. Wedneoday at the
Insure your
and inches can be.
h&lt;me of Mrs. Foreat Bachtel.
insurability
like a gam~ ...
Mrs. Thereon Johnson to
If rou·.- under 31, ,

Awards are.presented cub scouts

again In the closing minutes on 12-M ; Larry Harrison scored 16
teams competing foe the the scoring of freshman Tony points to lead Musklngum to a
championship have at least Jamison , who was high In the 4~7winover Woost~ ; Todd
CLEAI'.IING
three losses.
game with 24 points.
Harris scored 29 points to pace
Bowling Green is on top with
Walter Luckett paced OU Denison to a ~ victory over
a 6-3 m~rk, followed by with 20 points, but the league's Otterbein; Zettle Sims' 24 (ON REQU EST)
Western Michigan at S-3 , leading scorer went without a polnta led Mount Union to a 105Miami 4-.'!, Central Michigan ~ point for 13 minutes In the m trlwnph over Ohio · Wes3, Ohio University and Toledo second half.
. leyan ; and Kenyon tripped
4-4 and Eastern Michigan z..l.
Flyers Win
Ohio Northern 42-.'!8, paced by
Seven In Contention
Dayton snapped a three- Tim Appleton with 12 points.
Those seven teams all game losing streak and upped
In other games It was
SERVICE .JN
remain In contention, with its record to 11-9 with a 76-83 Cleveland State over FDUKent State, now U after a pair victory over !.Dyola of Chicago. Rutherlord 68-61; Wright State
SHIRT
of conference wins last week, Sophomore guard Johnny over Franklin (Ind.) ffl-«1;
the only team out of the run- Davis' 22 points led the Flyers, Hanover (Ind.) over Findlay
ning.
who were In front 39-23 at ~ In overtime; Hiram over
FINISHING
The Ohio Conference race is halftime.
w &amp; J 97-64; Bethany (W.Va).
jlL!t as confusing, although
Clnclnnstl picked up Its 12th over Case Western 6U2; Point
In by 10, Out at !i
Marietta appears to be In the win In 17 games with an 85-69 Park (Pa .) over Ashland 82-7'1;
driver's seat alter Saturday's win over Northern rutnots. The F~lrmont State (W.Va.) over
action.
Bearcats, paced by Mike Central State 113-97; Defiance
The Pioneers, who have run Franklin with 17 points a,nd over Manchester (Ind.) IOU3;
off seven wins In a row after Mike Jones with 15, pulled Thiel (Pa.) over John 'Carroll
dropping their first two confer- away after leading oly 37.J5 at ~1 ; Malone over Davis &amp;
ence games, are 7-2 and alone Intermission.
DRY ClEANING
Elkins (W.Va.) 119-64; Ohio
In first place. ·
Notre Dame jw-nped to an 11-0 Dominican over Urbana 83-79;
Wittenberg , the pre-season lead over Xavier and things Mercy (N.Y.) over Tiffin 77-M;
lAUNDRY
favorite, and Heidelberg, both didn't get much better for the Rio Grande over Cedarville 76·
losers Saturday night, are 6-3, Musketeers as they dropped a 62; and Earlham (fnd.) over
while ·four other teams, 96-58 decision 'to the Fighting Wilmington '19-&amp;.
MIL!klngum;- _Kenyon, Denison
Irish.
which
trailed
and Mount Union; are 6-3.
25 at Xavier,
halfUme,
was
led 54In ·. I.,.-------~~~~~~~~~~~~~------.....
HONOLULU (UP! )
Marietta, which beat Heidei- scoring by Gary Deldrlck with
Forrest Fezler, the 25-year-old berg 67-M Satw-day nlgbt, has 15 points and Mike Plunkett
San Jose winner of the uno!- four games remaining. Two of with 13.
Akron handed Youngstown
ficlal Confidence Open, goes the · games are against first
State
its first home loss of the
after his second victory of the diviSion teams Musldngw-n and
year today' one stroke ahead of Mount Union. They are . at season all\f only its third In 17
the pack In the rainillagued " home. The other two, aglllllBt games, ~1. behind Greg
_.....
$220,000 Hawaiian Open.
Baldwin-Wallace and Ohio 1'1\rham's 22 points. Freshman
Covington
led
the
·
center
Jeff
. Fezler, who was hot on the Wesleyan, are on the road. The
Play it oa£e and' sure.
heels of front-runner AI Gel- Yellow Jack~ts and Bishops Penguins with 24.
It may be time to
Ohio Conference
bsrger for the first two days have won ~nly four conference
have your preoenti
In
Ohio
Coilference games,
was 204 after 48 holes Sumay' games between then;.
policy updated,
.
·
Bowling Green's big viclory Marietta's Jeff Faloba got a
Tied at 205 were Arnold at Toledo came without the career-high 26 points In the
let's .rcrlk Scron
~lmer and fast finisher !.Du services of 6-8 senior Cornetlus Pioneers' 87-54 win over
Cash, the Falcons' leading Heidelberg ; Baldwin-Wallace
G aham.
Gelberger' who nursed his scorer and reboumer, who was stunned Wittenberg 61-59
DALE C. WARNER
pr~carlous lead throlJ8h the 0\lt with an Injury.
· behind Don Jutte's 21 points;
ramy first day and windy ..
Rockets Cold
992-2143
Oberlin, behind 29 points by
Friday, slipped Into a tie for
,
Pomeroy
t02W.
Main
Merlln
Friend,
stopped
Capital
third at 206 when he shot a 71
Toledo, which was also
Sunda
Inc! din b'18 fir8 t hampered by tnjurles to
y,
u g
centersJlmBrownandRusseU
bogey of the rain-dela yed Fr0 st gr bbed 39-33 halftime
• a
tournament
a
The big hero Sunday was lead, but shot only 28 per cent
'
Rates of Taxation for 1974
Graham who harveirted a 33- from the floor the second half.
The Rockete never led after
'
:IU:i, Including an eagle on the basketa by Andre Richardson
In· purs uance of Jnw, I, H_oward E. Fran k, Treasurer of Meigs Count y, Ohio do
18th hole to jump back In the and Mark Cartwright gave the
hereby give notice t·hat th e n umber of Mills levied on each dolJa r of property shown
pack to his tie for second with FalcOns a 55-91lead with 8:59
on the General Tax Du plicate of Real Estate, Pu blic Utility and Personal Property
within said County for t he year 1974 is as follows:
Palmer·
remaining. Cartwright led the
Defending Hawaiian Open BG scoring with 14 points ~
champ Jack Nicklaus shot a 70 Howard had 13 and Richa~dso~
Sunday whlch gave him 212, and Steve Coo
11 ch
TOWNSHIPS
eight strokes off the pace.
Junior gu:Jmu:e
Palmer• who charged In~ vey's career-high 21 points led
SCHOOL DISTRICTS
contention Friday, was quite Western Michigan to Its win
pleaaed to be only one putt over Miami
A)ID CORPORATIONS
behind Fezler.
The R~ trailed only 53"The rain didn 't help mat- 48 with 14:47 to go, but tbe
ters Sunlsy," he said, "but I
BEDFORD
don't mind going Into the final Broncos, .IJBced by Harvey,
Mei g, Local S. D... 3.80
scored 11 stralgbt points to put
25.50 .20 .20 .20 .20 1.00
32.60
Eastern Local S. D. __ 3.80
roum just me stroke behind." the game out of reach. Cluck
25.50 .20 .20 .20
.20 1.00
32.60
Palmer had five birdies and Goodyear scored 17 and Steve
CHESTER
Ea stern Local S. D. __ 3.80 2.30 25.50 .20 .20 .20
two bogies Sunday. One of his Flelds 18 to lead Miami.
.20 1.00
33.40
bogie• came when his shot over
Meigs Local S. D. ... 3.80 2.30 25.50 .20 .20 .20 .20 1.00
33.40
a tree just failed to clear the
At Kent, the Golden Flashes
COLUMBIA
took their second win after six
Alexander Local S.D ..3.80 1.50 25.40 .20 .20 .20 .20 1.00 1.90
top and bounced off to the side. stralgbt defeats, handing Ohio
34.40
Fezler had five birdies and University a 74-89 setback.
LEBANON
two bogeys on his Sunlsy
lash
Eastern Local S. D, __ 3,80 1.90 25.50
.20 .20 .20 .20 1.00
33.00
round too. He trapped his tee
The F
es saw a 35-20 lead
Southern Local S.D... 3.80 1.90 22.70 .20 .20 .20 .20 1.00
30.20
vanish when tbe Bobcats went .
LETART
shot on the par lour sixth and ahead 46-45, but pull.ed away .
Southern Local S.D...3.80 2.50 22.70 .20 .20 .20 .20 1.00
12th holes.
30.80
OLIVE
Eastern LocalS. D... 3.80 1.50 25.50 .20 .20 .20 .20 1.00
32.60
•
ORANGE .
.
OPTOMETRIST '
Eastern Local S. D... 3.80 2.2_0 25.50 .20 .20 .20 .20 1.00
s3.3o I
OFFICE HOURS9:30to 12,
5 I CLOSE AT
RUTLAND
NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.,
Meigs Local S. D... 3.80 2.10 25.50 .20 .20 .20 .20 1.00
33.20
·POMEROY.
Rutland village ---· 3.80 !.00 25.50 ·.20 .20 .20 .20 1.00
7.60 39.70
SALEM .
' Meigs Local S. D. _.3.80 1.50 25.50 .20 .20 .20 .20 LOO
32.60
SALISBURY
llleigs Loc;U S. D... 3.80 '1.30 25.50 .20 .20 .20 .20 1.00
32.40
Middleport Village ..3.80 .20 25.50 .20 .20 .20 .20 !.00
3.60 34.90
Pomeroy Villag&lt; .... 3.80 .20 25.50 .20 .20 .20 .20 1.00
6. 60 37.90
SCIPIO
Meigs Local S. D. .. !1.80 2.20 25.50 .20 .20 .20 .20 1.00
83.30
SUTTON
Southern Local S.D ... 3.80 1.90 22.70 .20 .20 .zo .20 1.00
30.20
. Racine Village .... 3.80 .60 22.70 .20 .20 .20 .20 1.00
7.10 36.00
Syracuse Village .... 3.80 .60 22.70 .20 ..20 .20 .20 1.00
. 8.40 87.30
SUTTON
Meigs Local S. D..•3.80 1.90 25.50 .20 .20 .20 .20 1.00 .
'
83.00
Some ·of the pre-season
fa vorites In both the MidAmerican and Ohio Conference
basketball races continued to
SPin their wheels Satw-day
night.
Toledo , the co-favorite along
with Bowling Green In the
MAC, dropped a 67-63 decision
at home to the Falcons, the
Rockets' second straight loss,
and feU all the way Into a tie for
fourth place In the jw-nbled
title chase.
Miami, which went Into play
Saturday leading the conference with a 4-2 record, got
dumped 86-73 at Western
Michigan and slipped to third,
behind BG and the Broncos.
So ,asthey head Into the final

Gardeners

Daily garbage
makes co"!post

2 HR.

aU eight

RSVP.exceeded in 1974

BYPOLLYC~

Smith was joined in doubl~ ·.;.:-:-:·:·.··.· ·.·.· ··..•.·.··.· .-"·:-··:·· ···:·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.····:-:-:-: : .·.·.···.·... ··.·.·.·.·.
·.···
figw-es by just one Jacket,
Steve.Young who connected for
12 points.
Smith pace d Cedarville
CEDARVILLE (621
rebounding with 11 caroms .
FG-A FT·A RB PF TP
PLAYER
The Redmen hit just 30 of 80 Dan Coomes
2- 4
2
3
8
3· 9
l 25
11 -28 3- 4 11
from the noor for 38 pet.' while Don Smith
2· 2
3
1
6
2- 9
the Jackets hit 23 of 8(} for a Jetf Reep
o. o 5 4
0
0- 5
Bob Melford
dismal 29 pet.
o. o 0 0 0
0- 0
Rock Thacker
2· 2
9
3 12
5-18
Rio canned 16 of 22 charity Ste ve Y oung
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2
2
6
15
Dave
Burtner
chances with the hosts cashing
o.
1
0· 0 0 3
0
Dale
Thatcher
in on 16 or 20.
1· 2
3
3
3
1· 3
Martin Book
o. 2 2· 2 1 0 2
. Wednesday the Redmen try Kevin Wal ter s
16-20 36 20 62
23-80
TOTALS
to stretc h their cw-rent win
RIO GRANDE {761
streak to 3 games as they host PLAYER
FG· A FT· A RB PF TP
Ohio Dominican in an Moe J im Noe
5·16 6- 7 13 3 16
2- 3
~~
2 22
Dan
Bollinger
10-20
contest belore entertainin g
1'1
4
19
5- 6
J
im
Stewart
7-17
leag u e· iead in g Ma lon e Gil Price
2
0- 0 6 0
1- 5
Satirrday.
2 13
6
3· 6
Ma c Barbee
5-11
4
1
4
0· 0
2· 6
In Saturday's preliminary, Andy Davenport
3
0
6
0·
0
Bob
Caldwell
03
Cedarville topped the Rio Gary Sw ineha r t
1
2
0
0· 0
0· 1
rese rves, 81-70. The Redman George VI ckroy
1
0
0
0· 0
0· I
30·80 16·22 66 18 76
junior _varsity was led by TOTALS
Halltlme: Ceda rville 33 Rio 28.
Chuck King with 1.7 points and
a. a.am ue
b bbbbdbbd
Artie DeStephens with 15. ·

Favorites held by losing habit
By Unit~ Press International month of the season,

and drew four personal fouls .
Kings 127, Warrton 101:
Nate Archibald scored 30
points as the Kings dealt the
Warriors their fourth straight
loss. Jimmy Walker added 22
points for the Kings, becoming
the 61st NBA player to score
10,000 career points. Rick
Barry had 34 points for Golden
State.
Buill 97, Bullete 80:
Bob !.Dve s'cored 24 points
and Chet Walker 19, enabling' to
the Bulls to win their third
straight game. The loss
snapped Washington's sevengame wlnnirlg streak.
7fen 90, Rockete 7'1 :·
DougCollinsscored13ofhis
28 points In the final quarter to
lead the 76erspast the Rockets.
Fred Carter had 25 points for
Phllly , while Rudy Tomjanovlch led Houston with 18.
Cavatlm 118, PlatoUI 198\
The Cavaliers won !heir
second straight game after
losing eight In a row, paced by
a 22-polnt perfonnance by
Jimmy Cleamons and 21 from
Dick Snyder. Bob Lanier was
top scorer for Detroit with 29
points.
SuperSonics 119, La ken II%:
Reserves Rod Derllne, John
llrlaker and Tom Burleson
scOred the key points In the
second half as the Sonics
gained their fifth consecutive
win without the services of
Spencer Haywood. Derllne
scored 10 points In the third
period and Burleson and
Brlaker each had elgbt points
In the final quarter . Archie
Clark was high scorer for
Seattle with 22 points, while
Lucius Allen had 23 for the
Lakers.
Ohio College

Cedarville got a pair of fo\)1
shots and another basket
before the half to take its
largest lead of the night at 33-28

POllY'S POINTERS

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The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy; o., Monday, Feb. 3, 1975

":::·.!~~:: .~~ ~1:1~:::~·:.

(Cha mp io nship)
Holy Cron 73 Seton Hall 71

Re4m
...en con
.r ninth cane
e . win, ·76-62

Manhattan 86 Fairfield 79
east

M idd!b r y 71 Tr in ity 68
M IT. 67 Coast Guard 66
Monmouth 78 Jrsy Cty St . 6J
Mon tcl air S1. 87 .Ramapo 7"
NY Te ch 101 Hofstra 75

Albany N .V . l l l l tha ca 94
A ll ghny S6 Crngie -MIIn 54
Assumpt ion 81 LeMoy ne 70
Bthny 64 Case W es t er n 62
B i n·ghmtn o4 2 Fr dn ia St . JB
Bloom t id 60 Tr en ton St . 56

Nr thrn St . 90 Sl ppry Rck. ,B9
Penn 79 Vale 67
P ill 70 Wm&amp;Mar y, 60
Pitf . . Jh nstwl) 90 Grve Cty 81
Shipph sbg 66 Mi l lrs vt 53
So . Conn . St . 70 E . Conn . 64

Blooms.bg 89 Kutz tw n 52
Boston Colt , 91 Fordham 7 4
Brandeis 99 Bk lyn Colt 75
Bri dgepor t 79 Spr i ngfld 78
Brown 62 Pr i nceton 61
Bucknell 63 Delawa re 62
Bf lo St . 105 Crtl nd St . 62
Can lsi us 93 Pro vidence 85
Central Conn . 92 R 1u 88
Cl eve St. 68 FDU -Rthrfd 61
Colby 84 Norw ic h 52
Connect icut 100 Ma ine 90
Cornell 71 Dartmouth 60
Cur ry 5q N ichOls 78
0uQu$ne 83 Vllnv a 81 Sun .
W .Va . 97 Davidson 92
Detroit 86 St . Bonn ie 82
Di ck i nson 79 Queens 78
Ed i"nboro Btltnd " Pa 70
Eliztown 88 Susq uehn na 80
Frnktn&amp;Mrshii 70Mravian 61
Gannon 57 Scranton 56
Geneseo St . 17 U Bflo 70
Ge0 . Wa sh . 68 Bos ton U 62
Hartford 102 CC N Y 90
Harvard 80 Columbia 17
H iram 97 Wa$h&amp; Jeff 64
Houghton 78 Bapt B ibl e 72
Howar d 80 Cheyney 78
Jun iat a 7J A l lian ce 69
K i ng ' s NY 79 Brrngtn 62
K i ng ' s Pa . 62 St. Vin e 50
LlU 103 tona 80
L afayel!e 82 R ider 71
Lehigh 72 Gettysburg 61

S1. Joh n's. NY 105 Army 77
St. Lawren ce~ Ut ica 76
St. M i chael'S
Arn I nti 85
Th ie l 12 J Ca r oil 61
Westmmtr 79 Gen eva 70
W id ener 61 Del . Vat 39
Sou th
Atacama 77 Auburn 53
A l a St . 95 Ala . A&amp;M 77
A lbny St . Ga . BJ Bndct 76
A Peay 80 Murr ay St . 10
Be r ea 81 Union 78
Berry 70 Shorter 69
Bow i e Sf. 66 Wash&amp;Le e 57
Catawba 71 Leno ir Rhyne 59
Cat'h U 75 Btmn l Abby 73
Cn tnry 105 So . M is s. 81
Ci tade l 75 Ri c hmond 80
Clems on 80 No . C&amp;r . 72
Dr exe l 83 J . Hopkins 79
E . Ky . 86 Morhed St . 82
Fayttv l St . 63 UN( W i lm 60 •
Flo r ida 10 1 Vanderbitt90
Fla . St . 111 UT -Chat 70
Fu rman 86 East Car . 76
Ga Sthrn 104 App lc hn Sl. 83
Geo l own DC 11 ~enn St 66
Gui l ford 8 1 E l on 11
Haver:tor d 82 Wash . 74
High Pt . 58 Pembroke 49
J .C Sm i th 97 Livngstn 91
Ky 11 2 Mi ss . St 79
1\.y St . 90 Cr sn Nwmn 67
L SU 94 MiSSISS ipp i 86
Lou isv l 112 N . fe~t . St . 67

JCo n solalio r~ )

CEDARVILLE - It's been
said that taking the 1big battle
goes a long way toward winning the war.
Such was the case here
Satw-day night as the Rio
Grande Redmen swept the
beards for a 66-36 rebounding
margin and added some timely
shooting by Dan Bollinger and
Mac Barbee in rolling past the
Cedarville Yellow Jackets 7662.
For the Redmen it was their
ninth win in 17 outings and
fow- th Moe triumph against 2
defeats. Cedarville dropped to
10-8 overall, 3-3 in the league'
Despi te that overwhelming
beard advantage, it was a long
haul overtaking the host
Jackets . Rio jw-nped out to an
early 1().8 lead and held the
upperhand for 12 minutes and
20 seconds before Cedarville's
Dan coomes broke free for a
layup to give the Jackets the
lead at 29-28 wi th I : 55
remaining in the first half.

.Cowens subdues Kareem
By GIL PETERS
UPI SpOrta Writer
Boston Celtlcs' guard Jo Jo
White said las t week he
"wouldn't trade Dave Cowens
for any center In the league,
not even Kareem."
Cowens, as If using a national
television audience and
capacity Boston Garden crowd
to prove Whit~ right,
dominated the big Bucks'
center with marksman-like
i!hootlng and sharp elbows,
giving the Celtlcs their ninth
stralgbt win, a 120-102 trlw-nph
over Alxlul.Jabbar and his
Milwaukee Bucks.
Cowens had 24 points, one
more than Alxlui.Jabbar, and
22 reboums to Kareem 's six In
the lopsided win. He hustled
where Alxlul.Jabbar lagged,
stormed the boards whtle his
opponent laid back and shot 11
for 23 whtle his opponent hit on
10 of 28 shots.
"When Dave does the job,
he 's the nucleus of the club,"
981d forward Piul Silas, who
contributed 12 points and 15
reboums. "We can lose anyone
oot him and sUII ~ aU rlgbt.
He does as good a job as a
center does for his club and
probably does It better."
White, with 20 points, and
John Havllcek, with 17 points In
his 1000111 NBA game, ablY.
supported, &lt;;owens' play.

"They're all great competitors and they're a great team,"
said Milwaukee Coach Larry
·Costello. ''They've got the fast
break, the good shooters, the
big guards who can rebound,
they play defense-good defense. They're great competitors.
They've got It aU."
The Bucks, unllke the past
few years, are not shoo-Ins for
the playoffs. The loes Sunday
put them In last place In the
Midwest Division with a 24-25
record, one-half game behind
Kansas City-Omaha.
fn other NBA games Sunday,
New Orleans defeated New
York, 1111-114; Kansas CityOmaha trounced Golden State,
127-101; Chicago topped Washington, 97-«1; l'hlladelphla
tripped Houston, 9M7; Cleveland dw-nped Detroit, 116-96,
and Seattle beat !.Ds Angeles,
119-112.
Jazz 111, KDteta 114:
Pete Maravlch scored 33
points and handed out 12
assists, while newly acquired
Henry Bibby added 13 points
against his former Knick
teammates aa the Jazz won
their sixth game of the season.
Bibby, along with New York's
ftrst-ro\Dld choice In this year's
college draft, was acquired
Saturday night In exchange for
Neal Walk and Jim Barnett.
Walk played only eight minutes

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How long can
you live ·on love?

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Basketb•lf· Resu Its

Bv United Press Internationa l
Satu r day

Ind ians 72 Oh io St at e 66
Bowl i no Green 67 To l edo 63
Wes tern M lc hlgsn 86 -M iam i 73
K en t State 74 Oh io Un iv er s it y
69
. Cayton 76 L oy ola ( 111 . 1 6l
No t r e Da me 96 Xavie r 58
Cinc innati 85 North ern Ill i no is

69

A kron 65 Young stown St a te 6 1
Cl eve land St at e 68 F DU .

R 4t her ford 61
Wrigh.t State 87 F r a n k l in Ond . l

60

Han ov er ( Ind.) 13 Fi n d l ay 6S

lot i

H ira m 97 Wash . &amp; Jeff . ( Pa .)

"

Bethan y (W . Va . l 64 Case
Western 62
Po in t Park ( ~ a .) 82 As hla nd n
Fai rm ont Sta te f W . v a . J 11 3
Central Stat e 97
Baldw in -Wa llace 61
Wit - 1
t enberg S9
Ober lin 72 Ca p ita l 64
Mount
Un ion
lOS
Oh io
w esleyan 87
Musk lngum 49 Woo ste r .41
Oen l $on 90 Otterbein 69
Ken yon 42 Oh io North e rn 38
M ar ietta 67 Heid elberg s.c
Defi ance 102
M an ~: hes. te r
( Ind . ) B3
T h iel ( Pa . ) 12 Joh n Ca r r o ll 61
Ma lon e 69 Da vis &amp; E lki n s (W.

Love. It can move mountains.
But it can't run a household ..
Or meet a ll the bills. Or put
kids through college.
· That ta kes monev.
And one good way to make
sure your money will grow
along Wit h your marriage is bv
signing up now for t he Payroll
Savings Plan where you wor.k.
Then an amount vou specifv
will be set aside from each PaY·
check and used to buy U.S.
Savings Bonds.
1
. You don't have to worry so
much about t he fut ure. And
you'll have a tittle more time
for love.

va .1 54

Oh io Dom i n ica n 83 Ur bana 79
Merc v ( N. Y .) .11 T iffin 66
R fo Gra nd e 76 Ceda rv ille 62
Earlh am ( Ind .) 79 Wil m in gton
65
.

Fort Story, Va., is the only
Army Installation In the center
of a ll,l'ge east,coast Naval
complex:

a} in te rmission. -

The Yellow Jackets kept
their lead for the next 14
minutes, never pulling more
than 4 points away from the
Redmen, before Rio ma de its
move with 8:31 r emaining.
Barbee hit fr om 20 and 7 feet

to kn ot the score at 411-48 and
Jim Noe responded wi th a pair
of lree throws to give the
Redmen a 50-48 lead.
( Cedarville's Don Smith, the
. leading scorer on the nig hKvith
25 points, hit from 12 feet to tie
the score again before Smith
hit a free throw seconds later to
give the hosts the lead for the
. at ol-50.
last tune
Barbee got a layup at the
5:39 mark to put the Redmer.
on top lor goqd before

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Bollinger, with'22 poin ts pnd 13
rebounds on the evening, hit
from 12 feet to give Rio a 54-51
lead .
Barbee followed with, a steal
at midcow-t , flipping a pass
over his head with his hack to
the Rio basket as a breaking
Bollinger got an easy layup.
·Bollinger hit from 15 ·feet
moments later as Rio opened
up a 58-01 margin.
Cedarville pulled within 6 at
00-54 before Jim Stewart hit 4
str aight free throws and
Barbee connected once at the
line to put the game out of
reach at 6:&gt;-54.
Bollinger's 22 points were
compl emented by 19 by
Stewart, while Noe hi t for 16
and Barbee 13.
Stewar t, a 6-7 junior , led the
Rio board assaul t with 17
re bounds, while Noe and
Bollinger added 13 apiece.

R io-Cechrville box.

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DRY

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1 DAY

Robinson's

Fezler

seeking
crown

FORTH£
PROTECTION
YOU NEED-

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Har-

f to

for shoe shops In the~

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Hours 9:00A.M. to 4:00P.M. daily except Saturday when office close.s .a t Noon.
TI,X Books will open January 15, 1976 to February 16, 1975.
·
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HOWARD E. FRANK, .Meigs Co. Treu;

Join the Payroll Savings Plan.

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Helen Help
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Social
Calendarl

, Kyger

Committee for
MR will meet

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The U. S. Army offers tuition
assistance to volunteers . who
pw-sue college courses from
approved schools.

Octogenerians get corsages
An orchid corsage was
presented to Mrs. Stella
Grueser, Middleport, the oldest
birthda y honoree,· at the
monthly party Thursday at the
Senior Citizens Center ,
Pomeroy.
.
others presented flowers, aU
over 80, were Mrs. Mlna Hart
and Mrs. Lena Baxter,
Pomeroy, and Karl Owens,
Middleport. Others with birthdays In January at the ·party
were Allen Hughes, Inez
Turner, Caralee Bailey, Edith
Spencer, Ruth Euler and Glenn
Lambert, Middleport ; Evelyn
Rife and Goldie Graham,
Rutland ; , Lillie Starcher,
Minersville ; Helen Howell,
Katherine
White,
Eva
Dessauer, Jewell Cqrtls and
Orville Graham, Pomeroy.
Presented a peace rose were
Glenn and Anna Cline, Carpenter, who celebrated their

LAFF - A - DAY

the · book, "Thmnaa
Jeffersm" by Fawn Brodie,
and Mill' Kathryn f!lllson to
review '"lbe Cabin" by Walter
Collins o'Kane. Ron caU 'wlll
be a ctmment m the book.

NaHe~nwlde ha• 1 fam ily
pl.., that ean gUirll'll"

rour rtght to mo,. ure
lna~p~ranee a rou grow
ohMr, r-aard.._ of your
hMith. C.ll todiY.

P. J. PAULEY

loT Spring Avo.; POmeroY

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industry needs gas .10 keep
.qperating. By keeping your
therm•ost:lt set at 68 degre~s or lower
. heating season, 'and
conserving gas in .other ,~ays, you'll
not only save some money, but you'll .
help provide gasthat will keep, .
peqple on the job.
. Saving gas in your home can help
.save jbbs.

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•4 DRAWER CHESTS.................•38
eSOFA BEDS ...... ,............. :.....'88
e5 PC. DINETTE SET.................

blood·thirsty violence?",

9-9, SAT. 9-4 '

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e3 PC. BEDROOM SUITE ......... ~138

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

10 FOR
1 MONlH

MON.-FRI.

FROM BAKER'S BUDGET
·SHOP•••

"Do you wa nt mode rate
violence, violent violence, or .,....,...,,..,..,...__.__.__,..,..,..,.."WW"WW"WW"WW"WW~"""""

1

992-515~

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BAKER FURNITURE

SIGN UP

TRIM· ,

Middleport, Ohio

SPECIAL VALUES ON MA-1'-TRESS&amp;
BOX SPRING5-ALL SIZES.

is designed to

work painlessly.

YaurThom

eADMIRAL REFRIGERATORS .......~.199

our easy program

MEIGS
SLIM

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51st wedding anniversary
In
January.
Grace preceding the potluck
dinner served at qoon was
given by Mrs. Bertha Robinson. The approrlmately 145
attending enjoyed music by
'Jerry Ward on the gul\81', and
readings by Sallie Byers and
Marcia Karr. Square dancing
was also enjoyed.

Beautif ul fab r ics, good co li spring construction .

Fathers:

~ew

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Plans for.' a therapy program
with the Rutland special
ecucatlon class later this
month were · made by the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners at,
the home of Mrs. Marjorie
Davis Wednesdsy night.
Mrs. Doima Williamson and
Mrs. Davis will be Instructors
for the therapy program. The
children will make bird feeders
out of bleach bottles.
For devotions. to open the
nieeting, Mrs. Davis read !rom
a hook, ''Golden Verses." The
program conslste,d of the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubo'
"Favorite Wild Flowers."
Mrs. Davis served as auctioneer for an auction held as a
fund raising project at the
meeting. Terrarium
organization was discussed by
Mrs. Marjorie Bishop.
· The travellng prize was won
by Mrs. Bishop and Mrs·. Davis
served ref r eshm e n t s .
Following the meeting a
layette shower was held for
Mrs. !.Dis Walker.

WEDDING PLANS ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs.
David Bumgardner, Middleport, are announcing the
engagement and approaching nuirrlage of their daughter,
Terri, above, to Gene Davis, son of Mr. and Mrs. David
Davis, Pomeroy. The bride-elect Is a senior at Meigs High
School. Her fiance graduated from Meigs In ·1973 and Is
employed al Kroger's ln Pomeroy. The open church wedding
will he an event of March 23.

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Discover A Slimmer••• Happier New Year!

.

club meets

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111UR8DAY
Ct- TROlJC Womeit'a Club,
sec: 'II Heart Plrlab cburcb
ball, 8 p.m. Thur~day,
preceo .1 by Mala at 7:30 p.m.
CO.MJ.&gt;ilTTEI!; FOR the
Mentally Retarded, 'I'IIuilday,
7:3!) p.m. MeiCI County courtroom. Public Invited. i
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.Real Estate ta."tes wh ich have not been paid at the close of each collect.ion carry .
a penalty of ten per cent. Taxes may be paid at the office of , the county treasurer
or by mail. Please bring your last tax ,...eipt and if you pay by mail be sure to locate your property by taxing district and enclose stamped. self addressed envelope.
Aiways exnmine your t8x rec·eipf to s~ that it cover.s all your property. Offic_e

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In 19?4 the Retired Senior · Hos pital, Meigs-Jac kson- Bloodmobile, Meigs Co un ty
Volunteers of Meigs Coun ty, a Vinton Bookmobile, Me igs He11 ith Department, Meigs
program carried out by the Community, Sc hool, Se ni or Coufity Home, · Elmwood
Me igs County Council on CitiZ&lt;~ns Center, Harrisonville Nurs ing Home, Syr a'cli~e
Aging,.lnc. exceeded the goals Golden Ci rcle Club , the Nw-sing Home, COAD nutrition
set for the second year of the Rutland Silver Circle Club, prog ram , Me igs County
POLLY'S PROBLEM
one dOl'S not get nearly enough prog ram, according to Mrs. Teac her Co rps Readi ng Muse um , Meigs County
DEAR POLLY-I save my protection from the sun when Pearl Welker, director.
Pro g r a m , .sa 1i s b u r y Historical Society, Tubergarbage, except 'for bones and driving into it. - LUCY.
The report from .the director Elementary School, Mid- culosis Assoc latian, Ca nce r
fat, and work it into the soil
DEAR POLLY - To keep shO)Ys that 198 senior citizens dleport Kindergarten.
~ocie ty, Hea rt Fund Drive,
, around my garden plants. They an ironing cord from needing · volUn teered 28,450 hours of
Pome roy Kindergarten, Raci ne Emergency Squad,
love the fertilizer , se wag e replacement because . it rubs service to the community.
Meigs Hig h School (Special Pomeroy Fire De partment ,
waste is cut down , the ground against the board and wears I
The following .places were Educa tion), Meigs County Salisbw-y Pf A, Southeast Ohio
is worked and I get exercise carefully wrap a soft long piece ass is ted by the senior volun- Hu ma ne Socie ty, Pe rsona l, Junior Miss Pageant, and the
and sunshine and even new of cord around the iron cord for tee rs: Veterans Memorial Advocacy Prog ram, Red Cross Pomeroy Library.
" free " plants sprout oc· a couple of fee t where it rubs.
casionally. DW'ing the winter Make the " winds" close
garbage can be worked into a together so the' cord completely
compost heap . My problem is I covers the iron cord. You save
do Mt have a good place to the ""l!"nse of having ' to
SYRACUSE - Awards were Wednesdsy at the home of Mrs. annual blue and gold baJ)quet
keep the garbage until I am replace it so often. - MR~.
presented at the Cub Scout Donna Wolfe to plan lor the to be held later this month .
ready to SPade It into the earth. W.E.T.
- SHIRLEY.
DEAR POLLY - MRS. Pack 243 meeting held recently
DEAR SHIRLEY · - I F.O. can keep a wet blotter at the Syracuse Elementary
would think you could put this over each of the decals on her School.
Receiving wolf patches were
garbage In plastic trash bags steel cabinets until they loosen.
Randy
Arms, Ricky Chancey,
A
razor
blade
might
be
touched
secured with twist lies and
Robbie
Gibbs, Jerry Wolfe,
keep It in the garage or outalde on each edge, but use carefully
Brian
Allen,
Cory McPhail,
near the garden· If It Is to avoid scratching, after they
Greg Devaull, Eugene Jeffers,
protected from dogs and other are loosened. - MRS. M.S.
By Helen Hottel
DEAR POLLY - We all Todd Cundiff, Roger Hubbard,
animals. Any other Ideas,
accw-nulate an oversupply of Lee Dill, Tony Deem and Eric
anyone? - POlLY.
wire coat hangers that come Philson .
Daughter Is Her Enemy
Awarded denner pins were
DEAR POLLY - My Pet from the cleaners. We always
Dear Helen :
Peeve Is with the car keep several in the trunk of ow- Brian Allen, Roger Hubbard,
1 My 14-year-old daughter flaunts it.
manufaciW'ers who do not car since we often stay in Ricky Chancey and Eric
She's "anybody's glrl," and I think she'd Uke to make it with
Philson with Donna Wolfe,
make the windshield sun visors motels where there· is a
her
stepfather.
She wears nothing to bsd, goes bra4ess to school,
Judy Gibbs, assistant den
deep enough or wide enough so scarcity of hangers. We leave
runs around In a brief towel especially when my husband Is at
these extras-behind for the next mothers, and Irene Cundiff home.
person who occupies the room. receiving den mother patch.
She kisses up to him and his 15-year-old son, and when I show
:·:·:-.-:-:-:·:·:···:•,•,•:·:·:·.·.·:···:·:·...-:.....
Approximately 50 scouts,
- MARIE .
I'm upset she says it's all in the family. She runs In and out of her
DEAR POLLY - I have parents and fl'lends attended step-brother's room tempting him to God knows what.
just made a discovery or the meeting . Roger Hubbard,
I trust my husband (we've been married for three years),
rather solved a problem that I Brian, Allen and Ricky but not my dall8hter, When I'm away at night school, I wonder
want to share with the other Chancey led .the pledge to the how much he can withstand.
readers . Three years ago flag and the !.Drd's Prayer, and
Last week I came home at noon and caught her In bsd with a
someone dropped a cigarette the scouts sang "Be a Cub high school boy. They'd ditched school. I'm not exlll!gerating,
on ow- hi-lo sculptw-ed rug and Scout."
Helen . My daughter Is a threat to my marriage and, at this point,
A program on SPace and
MONDAY
this left a bw-n about an inch
my marriage Is much more Important than a girl! can't control
SALEM CENTER PTA 7:30 · wide. Ever since then I have planets was held with each ... and can 't love, not any longer. She's Incorrigible.
p. m. Founder's Day program been trying to do something scout telling abouLthe project
. If she stays here until she 's 18, I'll have lost my chance at
by Miss Triplett's third grade about this ugly sight. Just he displayed.
But she's my legal charge. What can I do 7 - TIRED
happiness.
Mrs. Betty Templeton, den
students. Past presidents will today I took a regular screw
AND FAILED
be recognized and nominating driver and started scraping leader coach, read "How
across the burn mark. After ·Parents and Friends Can Help Dear T and F.:
committee announced.
POMEROY CHAPTER 186, quite a bit of work and a bit of In Scouting." The closing song
Why not give It to yow- daughter straight? Either she retires
Order of the Eastern Star, 7:45 time all the black came off and was "Good Night Cub Scouts" aa an adolescent sex symbol, or you tell the authorities she is
p. m. at the Pomeroy Masonic the rug fibe rs blended and refreshments were served. Incorrigible and ''retire" her to a foster home.
Temple, Ins tea.~ of Tuesday . together. Now one cannot tell it Mrs. Cundiff had prayer and
... Since you admit you "''n't control her, sh.e would be much
night due to meeting conflicts. was ever bw-ned. Our rug is the birthdays of three cub bstter off away from you. - H.
olive green but I think it should. scouts and the · den leader
+++
HARRISONVILLE PTO 7:30 work as well on any other coach were observed with a Dear Helen :
large birthday cake . being
p.m. Robert Snowden, guest -color. - MRS. R.S.
We've had Women's Liberation around for some time now.
served.
speaker. Refreshments.
Would you consider coming out for Parents' Lib too :
It waa announced that the
OHIO Association of Public
Parenta are entitled to certain rlghta, I think. For example :
den mothers and the den leader
School Employes special ·
1. The right to use the phone occasionally.
coach 'will meet at 1 p. m.
meeting at 7:30p.m. at Meigs
2. The right to talk at the table.
A birthday party was held on
Junior High, Middleport.
.
.
3. The right to keep their car In the garage.
REGULAR meeting, Meigs Jan. 16 at the ho111e of Mr. and
4. The rlgbt to find the pen, l!Clssors, and tape In the drawers
County Fair Board, 8 p.m., Mrs. Arnold Stump celebrating
where they left them.
secretary's office on Rock the birthdays of Amy Roush
5. 1be right to find the dessert still In the refrigerator.
who was 9 years old on Jan. 16
Springs Fairgrounds.
6. The right to an allowance for doing chores such as
and Arnold, David and Barton
Regular monthly meeting of shoveling snow, raking leaves, setting the table or taking out,the
POMEROY Garden Club, Stump who aU had birthdays the Commlttee for the Mentally
•7:30 pm. at home of Mrs. Ir- Jan . 17. Refreshments of ice Retarded will be held at 7:30 garbage. (Paid by "forgetful" members of the family who
already get an allowance for doing these taslal.)
ving Karr.
cream, cake and soda pop were Thursday night In the Meigs
7. The right to get rid of the orphan pup who rewards their
EASTERN Athletic Boosters · served to Mr. and Mrs. Joe County Cow-troom.
·
hospltaUty by chewing the ends off the coffee table.
8 p.m. at the high school.
Roush, Amy and Kelly, Mr.
Mrs. Fay Sauer, chair8. The rlgbt to turn on·the car radio and hear "Moon River"
MIDDLEPORT Garden and Mrs. Barton Stump and woman,
asks
that or "Autumn Leaves" Instead of "Kung Fu Fighting" or "Who
Club, 7:30p.m. at the home of, family, Mr. and Mrs. Arnold . organizations
send
·
Mrs. Roy Cassell, 721 Hooker Stump, David and Tommy, representatives to the meeting. Shot the Sheriff?"
9. The rlgbt to show concern and not stand accused of being a
St., Middleport. Co-hostesses, Mrs. Mary Dee! and Terry Everyone Interested in the
oosybody,
overprotective, or "not trusting them."
Mrs. Walter HayesruJd Mrs. E. Hall.
continuance of the education of
to:
The
right to say "NO!" - DOROTHY
D. Tewksbary. Mrs. Jwnes
Mrs. !.Dulse Roush was a the mentally re,!arded In Meigs
Titus, Sr ., to demonstrate . recent SUnday dinner gullS! of County is urged to attend. The
Dear Dorothy:
creating dried arrangements. Mrs. Cora Rupe. Mrs. Mildred public is welcome.
ffiGHT!
Members to take their own Stevens of ·Billwell Rt. vis! ted
And finally : The right to be considered a real live person, not
materials, containers and frog with them in the afternoon.
"just
a parent." -- H.
or styrofoam .
Eddie Swisher of More~ad
.
.
+++ .
RACINE Chapter 134, OES, 8. State U. called on Mr. and Mrs.
Fort Oil!, N. J., Is the largest
PERSONAL
TO
''Tired
of
His Bragging": fn Bill Mauldin's
p.m. at the Masonic Temple. Ralph Bales, Mrs. Irma Bales · military base In the northWorld
Warn
cartoon,
WUUe
says
to Joe: ''The hell this lsn~ the
TUESDAY
and Mrs. Muriel · Spires eastern United States, oc- tnost Important for hole In the world. I'm In It !" Does that an·
CHESTER Council 323, D of recently.
cupying 55 square miles.
awer your questlm? - H.
A 7:30 pm., at the hall.
Russell Porter of Gallipolis
Balloting to take place. Silent who underwent sUrgery at
auction by the home and or- Holzer Medical Center Jan. 20,
phans commlttee .
was discharged on Jan. 25, and
SOUTHEASTERN Ohio Is Convalescing at home. He Ia
Gospel Music Association at · the father of Mrs. Carolyn
home of Larry McGraw, SR 180 Elldns .
north of Holzer Medical · An overnight guest of Mr.
Center. Potluck at 6 p.m. and Mrs. Ralph Bales recently
was her brother, Kevin Gibbs
meetln~ at 7 pm.
Rutland.
omo Eta Phi Chapter, Beta ofThe
friends and co-workers Gl
Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30 p.m. Arnold Stump honored him
We'll Help You
at the Colmnbus and Southern with a birthday party Friday
To Build leolity
Ohio Electric Co. "Bakeless" , evening, Jan. 17, In the lounge
bake 981e. Cultural report by of the Skyllne Lanes Bowllng
Firmer muscles, bette r
Mrs. Sharon Bailey, with Alley
·
posture, new slenderness
h!Jll!esses, Mrs. Bailey and
~Bales and Connie Bales
Kathy Cumings.
d buslne88 trl to T ~an
and slrenglh can be
MEIGS County Chapter of rna e a
P -•
· yours. Come in for a
the American Red CrOss, 7:30 recenUy.
free consullalion . We 'll
p.m. at Veterans Memorial
show you lhe way lo a
H01pltal cafeteria. AU board
members asked to be present.
lovelier, happier you !
WEDNESDAY
A thought for the day:
Shed Excess
MIDDLEPORT .. Firemen's Hora'ce. Greeley ·.said, "Tbe
Weight Where
Auzlllary, 7:30 p.m. at the illusion that Urnes that were
You Need ltl
firehouse. r.,rs . Euvelle are better than th~ that are
Bechtle , and Mrs. Emma has probably pervaded aD
Hippy? Rolls
·
Wayland,
hostesses . ages."
at the waist? Be
Nomination of offlcera.
rid of unwant ~
POMEROY Lodge 164 F&amp;AM
od bulges ...
7:30 p.m. AU Master Masons
Fitness Is fun I
Invited.
Let Us Show You
., .
MIDDLEPORT UTERARY
' l osing pounds
Club, 2 p.m. Wedneoday at the
Insure your
and inches can be.
h&lt;me of Mrs. Foreat Bachtel.
insurability
like a gam~ ...
Mrs. Thereon Johnson to
If rou·.- under 31, ,

Awards are.presented cub scouts

again In the closing minutes on 12-M ; Larry Harrison scored 16
teams competing foe the the scoring of freshman Tony points to lead Musklngum to a
championship have at least Jamison , who was high In the 4~7winover Woost~ ; Todd
CLEAI'.IING
three losses.
game with 24 points.
Harris scored 29 points to pace
Bowling Green is on top with
Walter Luckett paced OU Denison to a ~ victory over
a 6-3 m~rk, followed by with 20 points, but the league's Otterbein; Zettle Sims' 24 (ON REQU EST)
Western Michigan at S-3 , leading scorer went without a polnta led Mount Union to a 105Miami 4-.'!, Central Michigan ~ point for 13 minutes In the m trlwnph over Ohio · Wes3, Ohio University and Toledo second half.
. leyan ; and Kenyon tripped
4-4 and Eastern Michigan z..l.
Flyers Win
Ohio Northern 42-.'!8, paced by
Seven In Contention
Dayton snapped a three- Tim Appleton with 12 points.
Those seven teams all game losing streak and upped
In other games It was
SERVICE .JN
remain In contention, with its record to 11-9 with a 76-83 Cleveland State over FDUKent State, now U after a pair victory over !.Dyola of Chicago. Rutherlord 68-61; Wright State
SHIRT
of conference wins last week, Sophomore guard Johnny over Franklin (Ind.) ffl-«1;
the only team out of the run- Davis' 22 points led the Flyers, Hanover (Ind.) over Findlay
ning.
who were In front 39-23 at ~ In overtime; Hiram over
FINISHING
The Ohio Conference race is halftime.
w &amp; J 97-64; Bethany (W.Va).
jlL!t as confusing, although
Clnclnnstl picked up Its 12th over Case Western 6U2; Point
In by 10, Out at !i
Marietta appears to be In the win In 17 games with an 85-69 Park (Pa .) over Ashland 82-7'1;
driver's seat alter Saturday's win over Northern rutnots. The F~lrmont State (W.Va.) over
action.
Bearcats, paced by Mike Central State 113-97; Defiance
The Pioneers, who have run Franklin with 17 points a,nd over Manchester (Ind.) IOU3;
off seven wins In a row after Mike Jones with 15, pulled Thiel (Pa.) over John 'Carroll
dropping their first two confer- away after leading oly 37.J5 at ~1 ; Malone over Davis &amp;
ence games, are 7-2 and alone Intermission.
DRY ClEANING
Elkins (W.Va.) 119-64; Ohio
In first place. ·
Notre Dame jw-nped to an 11-0 Dominican over Urbana 83-79;
Wittenberg , the pre-season lead over Xavier and things Mercy (N.Y.) over Tiffin 77-M;
lAUNDRY
favorite, and Heidelberg, both didn't get much better for the Rio Grande over Cedarville 76·
losers Saturday night, are 6-3, Musketeers as they dropped a 62; and Earlham (fnd.) over
while ·four other teams, 96-58 decision 'to the Fighting Wilmington '19-&amp;.
MIL!klngum;- _Kenyon, Denison
Irish.
which
trailed
and Mount Union; are 6-3.
25 at Xavier,
halfUme,
was
led 54In ·. I.,.-------~~~~~~~~~~~~~------.....
HONOLULU (UP! )
Marietta, which beat Heidei- scoring by Gary Deldrlck with
Forrest Fezler, the 25-year-old berg 67-M Satw-day nlgbt, has 15 points and Mike Plunkett
San Jose winner of the uno!- four games remaining. Two of with 13.
Akron handed Youngstown
ficlal Confidence Open, goes the · games are against first
State
its first home loss of the
after his second victory of the diviSion teams Musldngw-n and
year today' one stroke ahead of Mount Union. They are . at season all\f only its third In 17
the pack In the rainillagued " home. The other two, aglllllBt games, ~1. behind Greg
_.....
$220,000 Hawaiian Open.
Baldwin-Wallace and Ohio 1'1\rham's 22 points. Freshman
Covington
led
the
·
center
Jeff
. Fezler, who was hot on the Wesleyan, are on the road. The
Play it oa£e and' sure.
heels of front-runner AI Gel- Yellow Jack~ts and Bishops Penguins with 24.
It may be time to
Ohio Conference
bsrger for the first two days have won ~nly four conference
have your preoenti
In
Ohio
Coilference games,
was 204 after 48 holes Sumay' games between then;.
policy updated,
.
·
Bowling Green's big viclory Marietta's Jeff Faloba got a
Tied at 205 were Arnold at Toledo came without the career-high 26 points In the
let's .rcrlk Scron
~lmer and fast finisher !.Du services of 6-8 senior Cornetlus Pioneers' 87-54 win over
Cash, the Falcons' leading Heidelberg ; Baldwin-Wallace
G aham.
Gelberger' who nursed his scorer and reboumer, who was stunned Wittenberg 61-59
DALE C. WARNER
pr~carlous lead throlJ8h the 0\lt with an Injury.
· behind Don Jutte's 21 points;
ramy first day and windy ..
Rockets Cold
992-2143
Oberlin, behind 29 points by
Friday, slipped Into a tie for
,
Pomeroy
t02W.
Main
Merlln
Friend,
stopped
Capital
third at 206 when he shot a 71
Toledo, which was also
Sunda
Inc! din b'18 fir8 t hampered by tnjurles to
y,
u g
centersJlmBrownandRusseU
bogey of the rain-dela yed Fr0 st gr bbed 39-33 halftime
• a
tournament
a
The big hero Sunday was lead, but shot only 28 per cent
'
Rates of Taxation for 1974
Graham who harveirted a 33- from the floor the second half.
The Rockete never led after
'
:IU:i, Including an eagle on the basketa by Andre Richardson
In· purs uance of Jnw, I, H_oward E. Fran k, Treasurer of Meigs Count y, Ohio do
18th hole to jump back In the and Mark Cartwright gave the
hereby give notice t·hat th e n umber of Mills levied on each dolJa r of property shown
pack to his tie for second with FalcOns a 55-91lead with 8:59
on the General Tax Du plicate of Real Estate, Pu blic Utility and Personal Property
within said County for t he year 1974 is as follows:
Palmer·
remaining. Cartwright led the
Defending Hawaiian Open BG scoring with 14 points ~
champ Jack Nicklaus shot a 70 Howard had 13 and Richa~dso~
Sunday whlch gave him 212, and Steve Coo
11 ch
TOWNSHIPS
eight strokes off the pace.
Junior gu:Jmu:e
Palmer• who charged In~ vey's career-high 21 points led
SCHOOL DISTRICTS
contention Friday, was quite Western Michigan to Its win
pleaaed to be only one putt over Miami
A)ID CORPORATIONS
behind Fezler.
The R~ trailed only 53"The rain didn 't help mat- 48 with 14:47 to go, but tbe
ters Sunlsy," he said, "but I
BEDFORD
don't mind going Into the final Broncos, .IJBced by Harvey,
Mei g, Local S. D... 3.80
scored 11 stralgbt points to put
25.50 .20 .20 .20 .20 1.00
32.60
Eastern Local S. D. __ 3.80
roum just me stroke behind." the game out of reach. Cluck
25.50 .20 .20 .20
.20 1.00
32.60
Palmer had five birdies and Goodyear scored 17 and Steve
CHESTER
Ea stern Local S. D. __ 3.80 2.30 25.50 .20 .20 .20
two bogies Sunday. One of his Flelds 18 to lead Miami.
.20 1.00
33.40
bogie• came when his shot over
Meigs Local S. D. ... 3.80 2.30 25.50 .20 .20 .20 .20 1.00
33.40
a tree just failed to clear the
At Kent, the Golden Flashes
COLUMBIA
took their second win after six
Alexander Local S.D ..3.80 1.50 25.40 .20 .20 .20 .20 1.00 1.90
top and bounced off to the side. stralgbt defeats, handing Ohio
34.40
Fezler had five birdies and University a 74-89 setback.
LEBANON
two bogeys on his Sunlsy
lash
Eastern Local S. D, __ 3,80 1.90 25.50
.20 .20 .20 .20 1.00
33.00
round too. He trapped his tee
The F
es saw a 35-20 lead
Southern Local S.D... 3.80 1.90 22.70 .20 .20 .20 .20 1.00
30.20
vanish when tbe Bobcats went .
LETART
shot on the par lour sixth and ahead 46-45, but pull.ed away .
Southern Local S.D...3.80 2.50 22.70 .20 .20 .20 .20 1.00
12th holes.
30.80
OLIVE
Eastern LocalS. D... 3.80 1.50 25.50 .20 .20 .20 .20 1.00
32.60
•
ORANGE .
.
OPTOMETRIST '
Eastern Local S. D... 3.80 2.2_0 25.50 .20 .20 .20 .20 1.00
s3.3o I
OFFICE HOURS9:30to 12,
5 I CLOSE AT
RUTLAND
NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.,
Meigs Local S. D... 3.80 2.10 25.50 .20 .20 .20 .20 1.00
33.20
·POMEROY.
Rutland village ---· 3.80 !.00 25.50 ·.20 .20 .20 .20 1.00
7.60 39.70
SALEM .
' Meigs Local S. D. _.3.80 1.50 25.50 .20 .20 .20 .20 LOO
32.60
SALISBURY
llleigs Loc;U S. D... 3.80 '1.30 25.50 .20 .20 .20 .20 1.00
32.40
Middleport Village ..3.80 .20 25.50 .20 .20 .20 .20 !.00
3.60 34.90
Pomeroy Villag&lt; .... 3.80 .20 25.50 .20 .20 .20 .20 1.00
6. 60 37.90
SCIPIO
Meigs Local S. D. .. !1.80 2.20 25.50 .20 .20 .20 .20 1.00
83.30
SUTTON
Southern Local S.D ... 3.80 1.90 22.70 .20 .20 .zo .20 1.00
30.20
. Racine Village .... 3.80 .60 22.70 .20 .20 .20 .20 1.00
7.10 36.00
Syracuse Village .... 3.80 .60 22.70 .20 ..20 .20 .20 1.00
. 8.40 87.30
SUTTON
Meigs Local S. D..•3.80 1.90 25.50 .20 .20 .20 .20 1.00 .
'
83.00
Some ·of the pre-season
fa vorites In both the MidAmerican and Ohio Conference
basketball races continued to
SPin their wheels Satw-day
night.
Toledo , the co-favorite along
with Bowling Green In the
MAC, dropped a 67-63 decision
at home to the Falcons, the
Rockets' second straight loss,
and feU all the way Into a tie for
fourth place In the jw-nbled
title chase.
Miami, which went Into play
Saturday leading the conference with a 4-2 record, got
dumped 86-73 at Western
Michigan and slipped to third,
behind BG and the Broncos.
So ,asthey head Into the final

Gardeners

Daily garbage
makes co"!post

2 HR.

aU eight

RSVP.exceeded in 1974

BYPOLLYC~

Smith was joined in doubl~ ·.;.:-:-:·:·.··.· ·.·.· ··..•.·.··.· .-"·:-··:·· ···:·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.····:-:-:-: : .·.·.···.·... ··.·.·.·.·.
·.···
figw-es by just one Jacket,
Steve.Young who connected for
12 points.
Smith pace d Cedarville
CEDARVILLE (621
rebounding with 11 caroms .
FG-A FT·A RB PF TP
PLAYER
The Redmen hit just 30 of 80 Dan Coomes
2- 4
2
3
8
3· 9
l 25
11 -28 3- 4 11
from the noor for 38 pet.' while Don Smith
2· 2
3
1
6
2- 9
the Jackets hit 23 of 8(} for a Jetf Reep
o. o 5 4
0
0- 5
Bob Melford
dismal 29 pet.
o. o 0 0 0
0- 0
Rock Thacker
2· 2
9
3 12
5-18
Rio canned 16 of 22 charity Ste ve Y oung
•.•
2
2
6
15
Dave
Burtner
chances with the hosts cashing
o.
1
0· 0 0 3
0
Dale
Thatcher
in on 16 or 20.
1· 2
3
3
3
1· 3
Martin Book
o. 2 2· 2 1 0 2
. Wednesday the Redmen try Kevin Wal ter s
16-20 36 20 62
23-80
TOTALS
to stretc h their cw-rent win
RIO GRANDE {761
streak to 3 games as they host PLAYER
FG· A FT· A RB PF TP
Ohio Dominican in an Moe J im Noe
5·16 6- 7 13 3 16
2- 3
~~
2 22
Dan
Bollinger
10-20
contest belore entertainin g
1'1
4
19
5- 6
J
im
Stewart
7-17
leag u e· iead in g Ma lon e Gil Price
2
0- 0 6 0
1- 5
Satirrday.
2 13
6
3· 6
Ma c Barbee
5-11
4
1
4
0· 0
2· 6
In Saturday's preliminary, Andy Davenport
3
0
6
0·
0
Bob
Caldwell
03
Cedarville topped the Rio Gary Sw ineha r t
1
2
0
0· 0
0· 1
rese rves, 81-70. The Redman George VI ckroy
1
0
0
0· 0
0· I
30·80 16·22 66 18 76
junior _varsity was led by TOTALS
Halltlme: Ceda rville 33 Rio 28.
Chuck King with 1.7 points and
a. a.am ue
b bbbbdbbd
Artie DeStephens with 15. ·

Favorites held by losing habit
By Unit~ Press International month of the season,

and drew four personal fouls .
Kings 127, Warrton 101:
Nate Archibald scored 30
points as the Kings dealt the
Warriors their fourth straight
loss. Jimmy Walker added 22
points for the Kings, becoming
the 61st NBA player to score
10,000 career points. Rick
Barry had 34 points for Golden
State.
Buill 97, Bullete 80:
Bob !.Dve s'cored 24 points
and Chet Walker 19, enabling' to
the Bulls to win their third
straight game. The loss
snapped Washington's sevengame wlnnirlg streak.
7fen 90, Rockete 7'1 :·
DougCollinsscored13ofhis
28 points In the final quarter to
lead the 76erspast the Rockets.
Fred Carter had 25 points for
Phllly , while Rudy Tomjanovlch led Houston with 18.
Cavatlm 118, PlatoUI 198\
The Cavaliers won !heir
second straight game after
losing eight In a row, paced by
a 22-polnt perfonnance by
Jimmy Cleamons and 21 from
Dick Snyder. Bob Lanier was
top scorer for Detroit with 29
points.
SuperSonics 119, La ken II%:
Reserves Rod Derllne, John
llrlaker and Tom Burleson
scOred the key points In the
second half as the Sonics
gained their fifth consecutive
win without the services of
Spencer Haywood. Derllne
scored 10 points In the third
period and Burleson and
Brlaker each had elgbt points
In the final quarter . Archie
Clark was high scorer for
Seattle with 22 points, while
Lucius Allen had 23 for the
Lakers.
Ohio College

Cedarville got a pair of fo\)1
shots and another basket
before the half to take its
largest lead of the night at 33-28

POllY'S POINTERS

)

.

)
'•

•

.

;)i
1.

MBIAGA&amp;.
.
·'; ..t

�..

I

I

1'

6- The Daljy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday, Feb J.1~75

Pets For Sale

Telephone rate

llLf\LI&lt;.

For Fast Results Use Sentinel Classifieds

1an and wh1te Beaq l€!
1

~~~~;;er~ d "'.!'~~7~,?~~ ~;~~
B•ng
J J 57

/

Aradbury

or c all 9'17
I 31 JIC

boost approved

Auto Sales

.

Employment

REMODELING
plumbtng
h~altng
and al l typ~s ot
general
re p a tr
Work
gua r anteed 20 years ex
penence Phone 99'2 2409

COLUMBUS ( UP!)
General Telephone Co has
' authortzed
. by the Public
been
Utilities Commlsston of Ohto to
ratse rates by $13 4 mtllion a
year One commlssaon member
soundly crttictzed Ute ultlit} 's
ftnanclal dealings.
Sally Bloomfield satd ·the
management of General
Telephone mtscalculated the
ftnanctal market by deferrmg
long-term fundtng and tn·
debhng Itself to an excesstve
degree wtth short-term, htgh·

@)

2 SIGNS
OF

'

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

@)

100 Kerr Street

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

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

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

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

Local Bowling

Tyree 23-t, Hatfleltl 225, Bowen

215

High Teem Game - Land
mark 905
Landmark 894
Steam Boat Inn 890

MORNING GLORIES

TO WHOM

Jan 21 1975
Standmg s

Tum
ExcelsiQr Oil Co
Gibbs Grocery
G &amp; J. Auro Parts
Newell Sunoco

WMPO

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE

111
86
84
68

M

Spencer's Market
41
H l gh lnd Golme
Marlene
Wilson 207. Ellen Rought 205
H igh Series - Ellen Rought
S.. 6. Marlene Wtlson 523
Te~m Htgh Game Newel l
Sunoco 85&lt;&amp;
Team HtOh Senes - Newel l
Sunoco 2476

Notice
1 MEIGS muule loaders publ tc
shoot. lzaak Walfon Farm .
Chester Ohto Sunday Feb 9,
1975 at 1 p m
2 3 6tc

IT MAY

CO N

CERN
,
Nof tce IS hereby QtVen ftlat On
Febr uary lOth 1975 at 10 oo
AM a publrc sa l ewlll beheld at
Pomeroy Motor Company
Pomeroy Oh•o to sell for ca sh
the following collatere,l • .to Wtf
197-l Chevrolet Fteetstde PU
Ser No CCV I4&lt;&amp; FJ72540 satd
collateral bemg held to \.secure
lln obltgatton an smg under a
retatl
tnstatment securttY
agreement held by General
Motors Acceptl'lnce Corporation
as secu r ed parry Satd public
s~!Jie 1S to be conducted accord
•ng to the laws of the State of
Ohto
General Motors Ac
ce ptance Corporation reserves
the r ight t o b1d at lhtS sale
The collateral •S presently
slored and may be seen at
Pomeroy Motor Company ,
Pomeroy otuo

GENERAL MOTOR S

ACCEPTANCE

CORPO RATION
(21 3

lfc

proposes to •ssue a perm II for
the dlscherge subject to certain
effluent conditions and spectal
co ndtttons
The
proposed
determ Ina lion Is tentm tl ve but
shall become final on the ef
tecllve date unless (1) an act
iud tcatl on hearing Is requested
or (2) the Director wtthdraws
and revises the proposed perm 1t
after cD'nslderatlon of the
re cord of a publtc meeting or
written cQmrnents. or upor
d•sapprov'Af ' by
the
Ad ·
m tnistrator 10.f the U "S En
v l ronmen~al
Prote c t to n
Agencv
Jt:ny person may
submtt a w~ltten statement
wlthtn thtrty davs of the date of
the Fl'ubl1c Notice as to why tht
Otrector shoultl revise the
proposed action If significant
publtc mteres.t Is shown a public
meeting may be held on motion
of the Director prior to ftnal
Issuance
of
the
perm •t
Follow i ng llnal action bV the
D trector any party has the
nght to appeal to the En
v tronmenta l Board of Revtew
Interested persons are mvited
to submtt written comments
upon the proposed dtscharge
permit Comments should be
subm ttted In person or by ma ll
no later than JO days after t he
date of th ts Public Notice
Del •ver or mall all commen ts

to

SIDE GLANCES

Pomeroy O"•o Call 9927760
10 7 74

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

J uNK autos
complete and
delivered to our yard Wept c k
up auto bodtes and buy alt
ktnds of scrap metels and
•ro n Rider's Sa lvag e, St Rt
124 Rt 4, Pomeroy . Ohto
Call 992 5468
10 17ffc

--------------CASH pad for all makes and
models of mobtle homes
Phone area code 614 423 9531
4 13 ttc

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

WANTED to buy a used
Grave ly Tractor with Mower
and rtdtng sulky and plow
attachments Phone (3(14} 882
2525 or eventngs 882 2344
1 26 12tc
for Metgs County s only
monthly com auct10n Call Ed
Burkett 992 3476 after 5 30

pm

1 31 12tc

-------------CONSIG NMENTS welcome at
P&amp;J Auct i on
215
Second Mtddleport

Nor t h

.

Phone 742 3182
NPOES Permtt Section
2 2 6tp
Oh t o
Env i ronmental
c
0
u
s
Protect•on tgencv
p o Box 104\t
Complete . FRYE 'S TRUCK
361 Emst Brollld Street
AND AUTO PARTS . Rutland
Columbus. Oh i o 43216
Phone 742 6094
The OEPA permit number
1 22 26tp
and Publtc Not i ce numbers
ShOuld appear ne)(t to the above
address on the enve lope and on
each page of any submttted
com ments
All
comment!
HOMES FOR SALE
rece tv e&lt;i no tater than 30 days MOBILE
NOTICE•
Due
to
the
after the date of this Public
foreclosure on one of Ohto's
Notice wtll be considered In fhe
largest Mob1le Home Dealers
formutat l on of f i nal dettr
we Wtll offer for Solle the
mn)alton
followmg M ob 1le Homes at a
The applications. fact sheets.
verv . very large d tsc ount
proposed permtt .ncluCI•no
1- 6&lt;&amp;xl2 Ltberty , 3 bedroom
proposed effluent llm•tatt ons
60x 12 Ltberty , 2 bedroom
spec •al cond itions. comments 1recetved and oJher dOcuments I - SOx12 Rtchardson , 2 bedroom
1- 60)(12 PMC , 3 bedroom
are available for •nspectton and
may be copied at a cost of 15 1- 60Xl2 T ttan, 2 bedroom
cents per page at the Ohto l - 60xl2 Parkwood . 2 bedroom
6()x 12 Elcona , ~ bl?drooms,
Envrionmental
Protect ton 1- central
air
Agency at the address shown
R tchardson ,
3
olbove any t tme between the 1- 6Sx 12
t&gt;edroom , 2 full battts. Bx12
h..ours of 8 00 a m to 4. 30 p m
eJCpando
Monday through Frtdav Coptes We al so ttave a good selec tion or
of the Publ tC Not1ce are
ottter 8, 10 and 12 W1de Mobtle
avallable at no charge at the
l-lomes These are .mostly all
same olddress
late model Homes Csome have
Madmg l i sts are ma tnlatned
never been lived tn) If you
for persons or qroups who
are Interested In a good
destre to rece-ivl? Public Nortc e
Mob•le Home at a very large
for all appllcat tons in the stat!?
discount . don 't watt Stop tn
or for certam geooraphtca l
loday JJt BERRY MILLER
areas Persons or groups may
MobHe Home Sales, 705
also request cop tes of tact
Farson Street . Belpre , Ohio.
sheets. applicat ions or other
pttone A23 9531 1
documents
pertaining
to
1 JO lOfc
!peclttc appltcatlons Persons
or groups may. have their
names put on such a ll sl by
making a written request to the 10x55 Par tt ally carpeted , a c :
52 gallon hot water tteater,
Agency at me address shown
underp lnnmg Call 992 5153
above
,_
1 30 12tc
(21 3, lie

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

"Good morning, Ma'am! My, but you loo~
must be wearing your best rollers!"

You

4 ROOM house

Rutland

furnished tn
Phone 742 3751
1 31 Jtp

FURN I SHED
1
bedroom
lralier , all ufdtltes, 493
Broadway Street. Mtddleport
1 28 lfc
north of Me•gs High School on
old Rt 33 Phone 992. 2941
1 23 tfc

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

COU NTRY Mobile Home Park 1
R t 33 ten m lies north of
Pomeroy
Large lots Wlth
concrete pattos , Sidewa l ks ,
runners
and
off
st reet
park.tng PhOne 992 7419
1231 tfc

1 9 30tc
--------------700 BALES of good da1rv hay -------------5 RM AP T furnished , utt1 1tles

Mobile Homes For Sale

,

tab le top range wall oven,
real n• ce and c lean modern
Located
tn.
Pomeroy
overlookmg the Ollto River
Phone Gatl tpolts , day 446
1699, eventngs -4 ~ 6 9539
1 26 tfn

Jf.t.

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

,

--------------APT 3 rooms all electrtc has

---------------------------mtle
OLD COINS and paper money TRAILER SPACE,

ASHUIS-F RJ NKCAR

. ..

TRAILER space, 2 mtles. from
Pomerov Rt 143, Phone 992
5858
10 27 ttc

__ ___________ _

'
\

patef no Ch tldren or pets
Phone 992 5811) 814 ~ East
Ma tn Pomeroy
2 2 6tp

--------------3 and
ROOM furntshed and
A

unfurntslled
apartments
Phon e 992 5434 1
412tfc

------...,-------PRIVATE meeting room for
anv oroan tzatton , phone 992

3975

Phone

992 3874
11 1-t tfc

--------------HOUSE FOR RENT . 1634
L•ncoln Hgts , Pomeroy , or
Phone Pomerov 9"92 3575 or
Galltpol ts -446 2749
2 2 tfc

--------------NEWLY furn tshed apt
2
bedrooms ,· reference
9.49 3783

Phone

2 2 liP
-----·---------

FURNISHED apt 3 r ooms and
bat" · newly decorated Phone
992 2937

2 2 6lp
IHoUS.:~;;;;-~:-77oOms
and bath , n ice Phone '192 2780
or 992 3432
1 9 tfc

-------------Will ted I 0 Hent

WANTED ola upright p1anos ,
any condttton
Paying SID
each f'1rst floor only Wrtte
and give dtrect10ns to Wttten
Ptano Co • Box ise, Sard ts,
Oh10 09.t6
1 29 6tp

949 3832 or 843 2667

Blown Into Walls
and Attics
Free Estimates

Insulation

PHONE

All Types of

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

BUILDING
and REMODELING

Ref•n•shtng
Repatrtng Burntsh1ng . Cantng Upholstenng
We Also Buy Ant1ques
Ptck up Servtce Available

From a shelf to a house
Patnttng, stdmg, roofing,
paper hangmg , ltttchen
cabmets, expert carpeting,

elc .

15

'

" ·~·
'" . .
··

Gunsmoke 8, 10, An Eames Celebrat ion 20,33 , Movie

6.

CAPTAIN EASY

lany Lavender

HO'D IT. &amp;Ul.L l
WHEI&lt;E DO YOU
TH INK 'fOU J&lt;:E'
GOI'-16 'l'

Phone 992-3993
Datly After 5: 00

- GEEIN AG YER TH ' YOUN.S

LADY'!' E7C0Rf. YOU MU5-T
!&lt;NOW WHERE HEr&lt; CABIN I?!
50 wE ''- t.ET YOU LE'A D
;H' WAY:

HE.5 A TF::ICK Y. S l.. I GH T~R. H-1!$ ONE!

IM CO VEI'!I'D
FAUD ~ AND IF H~
ANY TRO UBLE - &lt;"7-:: .

KE~ P

Ml'-IUTEo

\,!5

· Doclor's Wives" 3.4.1S Movie "The Only Game In Town"
13 Maude 8,10
9 lii- Rhoda 9,10. Romantic Rebellion 20,33
10 llO-Movle " The Only Game In Town" 6, Medical Center
8,10 News 20, Washington Straight Talk 33
10 311-Behlnd the Lines 33
11 llO-News 3,4,8, 10, 11,15, ABC News 33
11 311-Johnny 'CarsOn 3,4,15 Wide World Mystery 13, Movie
" Penelope'' 8 Movie ' Of Human Bondage' 10. Janak I 33
12 oo-News 6

1

The Fumiture Fixer
843-2824 or 843-2293
Portland, Ohto

I

REPAIR-Broken
Parts Mended
STRIPPING-By
Hand
NO DIP TANKS
Supplies· Strippers
Stains· Ftnslhes
Free Ptekup and Oehvery

_- L - - - - - - - - - - - '
WILL trtm or cut trees or
Shrubbery
cle an
out
ba se ments atttes etc Pllane
949 32'1 1 or 742 -4441
1 26 26tc

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

CARPET tnsl allatton, $1 25 per
ya rd Phone R •chard West
843 2667
12 24 26fp

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

Real Estate For Sale
Approxtmalefy one acre m
Rutland , set up for mobtle
home Phone ( 1) 446 9662
1 30 7tc

--------------BUILDING lot , 80 ft frontage
by 165ft The second lot on left
on Rtverv lew Drtve , Lmcoln
Hill Pomeroy Ohto If tn
teres ted call 99 2 3230 after 5 p
m

10 11 tfc

--------------For Sale

HOOVER Otal A Mat te Wtth
power drtve and atta c hments
S75 Phon e 985 4132
1 29 10tp
STEREO RADIO 8 track ta pe
combtnatton am fm rad1o, 4j
way spea ker sound system
Balance $107 89 or use our
budget terms Call 992 3965
1 29 ftC
GROCERY busmess for sale
Bulldmg for sale or lease
Phone77J5618from8 30p m
to 10 p m for appo tntment
3 10 tfc

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

1

HE.L
RACINE PWMBING
&amp;HEATING
·complete plumbing &amp;
heating servtce and
general sheet metal
works .
Free
Estimates.
Phone 949-5961
Emergency 992-3995
or 992-5700
P&amp;J
Home
Matntenance
h ea ttng
coo l tng, refrtg ,
plumbtng
electrtcal ap
pltan ces. We se rvi ce and
repatr anytmg tn the home or
bustness
215 N
Second,
Mtddleport Phone 992 3509
I 9 30tc

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
- Sweeper s. toasters, Irons
all small appliances Lawn
mowers, next ro Stat e High
way Garage on Route 7 Home
Phone 985 38'15
2 2 26tC

-------------EXCAVATIP.,G , dozer loader

ltvered Mondav through
Saturday
and
eventngs
Phone 446 1142
6 13 tfc
EXPERT tree serv1ce. free
est tmates
20 years e)(
pertence Call (1) 667 3041 or
992 3057
1 21 26tp

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

STEREO rad10 8 t ra ck ta pe
com__btnahon AM F M ra~:ho. 4
way speaker sound system
Balance 1101 89 or use our
budget terms Call 992 3965
2 J tfc

!JEPTIC
TANKS
cleaned
Modern San1tatton, 992 3954 or
992 7349
'
9 18 tfc

USED FUEL OIL

HEATER, $50
All New Heaters
Now
Discounted!
New Wood Burnmg

- - - --------- -Real Estate For 5ale

HOUSE for sate 1n Portland 6
roo ms and bath , good well 2
acres S6,100 Call 843 2292
I 28 6tc

- -------------5 ROOM house Darwtn t-'none
J

B

0 Brten

attorney, 992

2720
5 ROOM house
992 5871

2 2 6tp

ss 000

HEATER------5239.95

Phone

2 2 12tp

Deluxe model with cabtnet

Wall hned.
POMEROY LANDMARK
• • ,: Jack W Carsey, Mgr .
~
Phone 992-2181
_
3 PIECE bedroom suite, Vantty
dresser . good condtt ton, prtce
S45 New dmette s utte , 7 p1ece
S75 12Kll 1h ny lon rug. new
wtth pad S60 Stng le bed $10
other Items
Call 667 3333
after 3 p m
2 2 3tc

Concerns &amp; Comments 10. Rev Cleophus Robinson 13

On Slate Rl 124, t;., m1 from
Route 1 by pass towards

6 35-Columbus Today 4
6 45-Mornlng Report 3. Farmtime 10
7 llO-Today 3,4,t5, AM America 6 13. CBS News 8,10
B ll0-Lassle6, Capt Kangaroos. PopeyeiO, Sesame St 33
a H)--Your Future Is Now 20
8 25-Capl Kangaroo 1C

Rutland
Ph. 992-5682 or 992-7121
All Mechanica I Work
Open Mon Sat
8AM 6PM.

8 311-Big Valley 6
9 oo-A M 3, Phil Donahue 4,15. Rocky&amp;. Friends 8, Morning
with D J 13
9 25-Chuck White Reports 10
9 311-Not For Women Only 3, Dinah 6, Galloping Gourmet 8,
Tattletales 10. New Zoo Revue 13
10 llO-Ceiebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4, 15, Joker's Wild B.10, Movie
"The Busy Body" 13
10 30-Wheet of Fortune 3.~.15; Gambit 8 10
11 llO-High Rollers 3,4,15, One Life to Live 6, Now You See It
8.10

EXPERIENCED
.-'
Radlato
I
I
'
Service ·,_, I

r»&amp;MIDL!J£;"'-' ==~~ ..J=

From the largest Truck or

Bulldozer Radiator to the
smallest Heater Core

Nathan Btggs
us

Radtator Spectals•t

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

\OU EAT FIRST,
THEN THE

OTHERS

'COSTAM

I

Iii

;
,
,,
u

foundation on good quiet street,

1965 JOHN Deere Dozer , 4 out of high water
CVItnder , de tsel , 8' blade
canopy ,
New
clutches. BARGAIN - 5 room frame
br..akes
and tracks
A 1 with basement , c1ty water,
condttton S6,500 Phone 985
natural gas and electric on
359A
1 2 7tp corner lot $3,000 00

POMEROY- Nice renovated
3 bedroom home Lots ol nice
panelmg, wall to wall car
petmg, 2 porches, basement,

and fenced yard $17,500 00
1972 YAMAHA 175CC. 21" front
wheel Phone 992 7869
HAVING TROUBLE
2 2 lip SELLING,
CALL
A
PROFESSIONIIL
SALESMAN
NEW Accortl i on and case.

San-

12 Biblical

came
ntqht
h(Wr()w m\j SUit·

are
lookinq

10·110-Pollce Story 3. ~.15 , Marcus Welby MD 6, 13; Barnaby
Jonos8. Tom Jonerto, News20, Soundstage33
10:30-Your Future Is Naw 20
11 oo-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,151 ABC News 33
11.30-Johnny Carson3,4,15, Wide World Mystery 1313. FBI6.
Movie "Th• Lawyer" 8, Movie "The Great Sioux Massacre"
10; Jonakl 33
12 30-Wtdt World Mystory "Tho Centerfold Murders" 6.

oo-Tomorrow 3,4,;

News 13

U~COMFORTABLE

IT MUSf 6E TH
WITH TH' I Q OF

PLACE ON

"

CHICKEN

sets

edgment
9 Extenllve

property
lllnhlblt

UFamoua

film c:riUe

underatandlng with

use materials or designs that

are more artistic than func -

tional
LEO (JUir 23·AutJ. U) If you lei
your heart rule your head thia
evening, you'll make some
movea you11 later regretr Use
your sharp Iagle Instead

' '

VIRGO (Alii· U·ltpt. 21) A

beat poaltlon
to advleo you regarding family

chum Is not In the

finances Her Impractical
solutions wont help

LIIRA (lopt. · 23-0cl. U)

ZO Apostate
21 Remainder
IIi Vindicator
Z3 Wife of
Barnachandra
Z4 Soapmaking
tncredlent

way lor
15 Mortal or
venial
zt Relative
of bravo

15 Greek

Wand
Z7- ml8non
28 tntlmale
21 Up to
30 Rent

You'd be wise to keep some

----a--,
SJIIIIJah
queen

NORTH
.1062

3

¥&amp;
tQ9B64
• 913 2

WEST

Eoal

•KQH17S
¥8 7 3

+5

Z7 Portentous;

• 84

crucial

.4

¥ KJ 82
tA 10

.AKQI065
SOVTH (DI
• A3
¥AQI094
tKJ732

.J

North-South vulnerable

15 Brazilian
tapir
at Dramatic

Weal

segments

HELlO POI.ICE DEPAm'MENT&lt;' TH IS.
JOEY DELL,AUA51HECHAMELEON
WANT TU~NMySELF IN.'

ASKING just $.4,000
ALL CASH FOR YOUR
PROPERTY - LET US
KNOW WHAT YOU HAVE
-PROPERTY IS SELLING
FAST AT THIS TIME.
992-2259 or 992-2568

ro

'

-------------ELECTROLUX Sweeper L..!tl.o e

'
•

~nss

12 18 tfc

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

••'
"f
"•'

..

•

North Eut

Pau Pau
Pau PUI Dble
Pass Pa11
Opening lead - K •

4•

1'1 Platform
S8 City In
Afghan!Btan
S8 She (Fr.)

member will be hurl She
believes you're more considerate ol a friend than you
are or her

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon.
1•) You think vou \1 have to
beat
tion
The
best

about the bush In a situayou re reluctant to l ace
direct approach Is your
route

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 11)
Impulsively, you're going to do
something lor a friend that wlH
dent your wallet Reflect a bit
before volunteering aid

PISCES (Fob. 20-Morcb 20) A
goal Important to you wi ll not
be achieved on lhe first try It
can be reached II you re persistent enough on the second

~~
Fob. 4, 1875

Contacts and new associations
you·u make this year through a
group Interest wm be or Immense value In furthering your:
hopes Get out and mix

34 Laat

name

WHILE IM WAITING f01l.1HEM
10 ARRIVE. ; rnERE$ ONE
MORE DOCENT THING
IiniKE 10 ro .

IAGITTARjUB (Nov. 23-Doc.
21) Feelings of a family

It helps to see al/4 hands

shade

WINNIE

surplus use It to pay off old
obligations before ~uylng
anything new

WIN AT BRIDGE

3Z Suppose
33Itallan
boy's

"

loved

Somethln,g you're InVolved In
with another Is gcHng to taka
more concerted effort by e1ch
ot you to be aucceaatul.

11 Sboe

SO THEY 15 CONVINCED-

a

one
TAURUS (AprU ft•Mof H)

CANCill (June 21·Jutr 21) II
you're doing pertonal
decorating at home now, don t

5 Man
and
woman
IConunand
to a horse

After you've reviewed the situation, you II &amp;ee you weren t entirely blamelesa In a mfa-

nion than you will on your own
Co-operation's the key word

ptece

3 Violently
4 Like
some TV

'"' Tundoy, '""· 4, tin
ARIU (March 21-Aprll II)

You'll accompllah much more
today with a partner dr compa-

DOWN
1 Best
part
2 Mantel-

81110Wlt
19 Jujube

Minor
rellgioul
body
Z4 Make

E'ARTH,

areas, good blacktop road .

I

8'110, America 20,33

GEMINI (May 21-Juno H)

thr11-UYE IN THE CITY

7 Caustic
8 Acknowl-

Q

CO&gt;IPUTE'R CE'~TER IN WASHINGT'?"J
WANTS TO KNOW IF YO' WILL GUIDE A
GROJP 0' HEALTH NUTS TO LOWEST'
5LC880VIA ~ IT:S TH' MOST

Whole works at just S-4,700.
NEAR LANGSVILLE About 10 acr... on good
fishing creek, close to mine

SSO REWARD for the return of
our Black and Decker electnc
saw 7112 1n blade- Pttone (l)
667 3737 V1.vtan Max.ey
I 31 6tp

to form the aurpriH uawer. u

17House
holds
18 SmaU

Z1 Btmdle

house needs some repair

CLOSE OUT on new Z10 Zag
sewmg m"chtnes For sewi ng
stretch fabrics , buttonholes.
fancy destgns. etc
Pamt
slightly blemtshed Choice of
carrying cast or sewing
stand U9 80 cash or ferms
avaflable Phone 992 1755
12 18 uc

16~

20Mature

TH'

baths,

regton
13 Awatt
14 DiscomIrvin

ULABNER

model
Conwlete with all
clean.ng attachments and
uses paper bags Sltghfly used
but cleans and looks like new
Will sell for S37 25 ca!h or
terms avatlab/e Phone 992

tllTIIIP the circled !etten
I. I Now
aurreated by the above cartoon.

.-\nn•~r. People who hate tile CDtmtr11 often do

11 Low cards

5 room

4 BR, 1112

I

A.CROSS
1 Applaud
5 Participate
10 Italy's

'

NEW HOMES No Money Down ,
Payments according to
•ncome on Farmers Home
Adm tntStratJOn loan Con •
venttonal ftnanctng
a l so
available Wtth mmtmum
down Lovely homes •n three
locations tn Metgs County '
SO'me homes w rth wooded
lots
Call for more m
format ton 992 5976
1 15 26tc

frame,

I

by THOMAS JOSEPH

GASOUNE ALLEY

dining R. porches, storage
bldg 2 garages. about 2
acr... $8,000 00
POMEROY - Business R.
and furnished apartment
Located on Main Sf In good
traffic area Good Income
Investment. Priced to sell
PORTLAND - 4 nice lots,
good drilled well and water
system. block garage,
storage building, 2 story

!I

PROFIT6 WHE!a: THEY
5ELL I:'RINK5.

~IHiWl'tr'

Stubbs

6' MOWER 3 pt h ttch ftts Ford bedroom home. bath. gas heat,
or Ferguson tractor S100 rural water Quiet w1th
New culttvator , Sl25 Phone onvacv $12.000 00
985 3594
'
2 2 7tp BUILDING LOT - W1th stone

I

b._ _A

Saturday'•

J

2 story

Times

1 30-Holl of Famo3,4,15; Mash8,10, Ascent of Man 20,33
9 oo-Hawall Ftve-0 B.
9 30-Woman 20. Witness to Yesterday 33

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov 22) II
your present budget has a little

1:::=""'==...~-=-:::::::'::...=:-1~"lli-:-.;.~J-( I I I I)"

---~ --~- ~---,--

CARPENTER -

5 311-News 6, Beverly Hillbillies 8 Hodgepodge Lodge 20. Get
Smart 1S. Etec Co 33
6 llO-News 3,4,8,1 0,13, 15, ABC News 6, Elec Co 20, lTV
Utilization 33.
6 30-NBC News 3.~. 15. ABC News 13. Bewitched 61 CBS News
8, 10, Zoom 20; Your Future Is Now 33
7·oo-.,Truth or Cons 3,4, Bowling for Dollars 6, What's My Line
a.. News 10, Name That Tune 13; High School TV Honor
Society 15, Antiques20, Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33
7 30-Hollywood Squares 3; .~; Wild Wild World of Animals 6.
Buck Owens B, New Prlce.Js Rtgh!IO, To Tell the Ttuth 13,
Spring Street USA 15, RFif201 Morco Sportilte33
8 oo-Adam-12 M.151 Movie "Death Be Nof Proud" 6.131 Good

:J I I

rrJ

for.

NEW LISTING -

r

1

Jumllle•. LUSTY CHIDE DEFINE INVENT

home, bath, gas furnace, lots of
paneling and ce~llng tile. City

Bonanza 15

5 oo-F BI 3, Andy Griffith 8, Mister Rogers Neighborhood
20,33, Ironside 13

distance between yourself and
anyone work ing for you now
Make It a slrlct employeremploye relationship

(Aiuwen ••-nw)

Real Estate For 5ale

Gilligan's Is 6, Tattletales B, Sesame St 20,33 Movie "Gu ns
of the Timberland" 10 Mike Oouglas ll
4 311-Bewltched 3, Merv Grlflln 4, Mod Squad 6, , Lucy Show 8,

1

EXCAVAliNG ,
dozer. ~
backhoe,
and
dltcher , •
waterltne tooters, drains .~
roads. and brush cleaning, no •
lOb too small. no wea th er toot :
bad Charles R Hatfield Rt 1 1
Rutland 0 Phone 7426092
1 7 26tc
-tOME
Improvement
and
Repa tr Serv 1ce Anythmg
f1XI?d around the home from
roof to basement You Wtll
ltke our work and rates
Phone 742 5081
12'191fc

Tomorrow 8,10, To Be Announced 33

12 45-Eiec Co 33
12 55-NBC News 3
1 llO-News 3, All My Children 6, 13, Phil Donahue 8, Young &amp;
the Restless 10. Nol For Women Only IS
1 30-How To Survive a Marriage 3,4, 15, Lei's Make a Deal
6,13. As the World Turns 8,10
2 llO-Days of Our Lives 3 4,15, $10.000 Pyramid 6.13, Guiding
Light 8,10
2 30-Doctors 3.~.15. Big Showdown 6.13. Edge of Night 8.10
3 llO-Another World l,4,15, General Hospital 6 13, Price Is
Right 8.10. Lilias Yoga II. You 20
3 »-&lt;lne Life to Live 13, Lucy Show 6, Match Game B.10. Your

1

UTI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

water, with large level lot

original prtce S350 W'tll sell
for $175 Phone 1 (304) 773
5.t27
2 2 3tc •
.......- - - - - - 1957 CHEVY parts
NEW
Lolkewood tractton bars. h•
racker a.r shocks, hooker
headers , wtth 3" collectors fo'
small block
Call 992 349t
after 6 p m BEST OFFER
'
10 11 ttc

ALLEY OOP

BUTSOE
Y: ~

DOZER work land clearing by '
tile acre, hourlv or contrac t
Farm ponds roads , etc
Large dozer and operator
Wtfh over 20 years ex
perlence Pullins Excavatmg,
Pomeroy, Ohto Phone 992
2478
12 19 ffc

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

1953 30 FERGUSON tractor
&lt;l11v 510,000 oo
new motor , good rubber new
pamt Sl,200 Phone 985 359-t NEW LISTING - 48 acres, Bof
2 2 7tp bottom, the rest In woods, 2

EXTRA n 1ce corn fed freezer
beef, your choice Phone 949
4762
2 2 3tc

Unscramble these four Jumblet,
one leiter to each square, to
form four ordanar) v.ord1.

I'll (Ill

CREMEANS CONCRETE de

C BRADF-ORD, Aucttoneer
Complete Servtce
Phone 949 3821 or 949 3161
Ractne Oh10
Crt It Bradford
5 1 tfc

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

GARAGE

11 311-Hollywood Squares 3, 15;, Brady Bunch 6, News 4; Love
of Life 8,10.
11 5~Take Kerr with Graham Kerr 8 Dan Imel's World 10,
News 13
12 Oil-Jackpot 3.15, Password All Stars 6,13. Bob Braun's SO SO
Club •· News 8,10
12 311-Btank Check 3.15. Split Second 6,t3, Search for

Future is Now 20
,. oo-Mr Cartoon 3, I Dream of Jeannie 4, Somerset 15,

3,-4, News 13

6 oo--sunrlse Seminar 4. Sun rise Se'rlester 10
6 2.5--Farm Report 13
6 30-Five Minutes to Live By 4, News 6. Bible Answers 8.

and backhoe work
septte
tanks mstalled dump trucks..
and lo boys for htre , Wi ll haul
Ph. 992-2174
Pomeroy
ftll d1rt, top sotl. l tmestone &amp; L-~----------------~ ,
gravel Call Bob or Roger
READY MIX CONCRETE de :
Jeffers day pttone 992 7089
livered nght to your project •
ntght phone 992 3525 or 992
Fast
and
easy
Free •
5232
estim ales Phone 992 3284 '
2 11 tfc
Goeglem Ready M1x Co, ,
M 1ddl eport Oh lo
EXCELSIOR Salt Works East
630tfc •
Mam St Pomeroy A ll ktnds
of salt, water pellets, water - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - I
nuggets block salt and own SEWING MACHINE Repairs. :
serv tce all makes, 992 2284 ,
Oh10 Rtver Salt Phone 992
The Fabnc Shop, Pomeroy, ,
l891
A~.;thorlzed Singer Sa les and •
6 5 ttc
Service We sharpen Setssors 1
329tfc '

STEREO RADIO 8 track tape
combtnatton am fm rad1o , 4
way speaker sound system
Balance SlOB 74 or use our
budget terms Ca ll 992 3965
l 21 tfc

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

oo- Tomorrow

TUESDAY. FEBRUARY4.197S

ROGER HYSELl'S

--------- ------ ------------I

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 3,197S
7 llO-Trulh or Cons 3,4, Bowling for Dollars 6, What's My Line
8 News 10. New Candid Camera 131 Wally's Workshop IS,
OhloThls Week20. Lllas Yoqa II. You 33
7 311-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3 Masquerade Party 4•
Pollee Surgeon 6, S25 000 Pyramid B • Municipal Court to.
To Tell the Truth 13 , Untamed World 15, Washington
Straight Talk 20. Episode Action 33
B oo-Smothers Brolhers 3,4, 15, Rookies 13. College Basketball

12 311-FBI 6

3 11 lfc
--------------------FURNISHED apt Adults only
Middleport

Fire Retardant

Pomeroy, Ohto

--------------1

0&amp;0
CONSTRUCTION

Phone (6141 992-2798

Television log for·easy viewing

.

i

Bashan
News

~

.

J

THIS PAPIER
lrr1DY YOU MADE, TRACY,
NOT DEDICATE IT
OUR OWN

l

•

Pomeroy
Motor Co. Modem Chemicals

fact the compan} Itself was
solely responsible "
1 19 lie
She accused the compan) of
.
pursuing pohctes ' wholly
For
Sale
or
Trade
tnconslstent wtth provtdtng
3 pf htt ch post llole
thetr customers the best 8 dINCH
1974 CHEVELLE
$3095
fgger or lrade for 3 pt httch
Maltbu HT Cpe , 350 V a engine power steer tng, fac tory
possible servtce '
ptckup dtsc Phone 742 5322
a~r. tmfed glass. radto , whee l covers good t•res, blk
'1 1 31p
The Ohto Supreme Court
lntermr . sliver grey fmrsh
ruled earher thts week that
1972 CHEVROLET 2 TON H DUTY
$5895
General Tele phone had
10 Ft Manon Dump, 2 speed 900 ttres
Illegally collected htgher rates l h44 NEW Moon mobtle home
durmg three months of 1972 In
19!0 model Phone 991 7385
1971 CHEV 2 TON CAB
S349S
I 31 JIC
350 angtne 2 speed 825 t1res
the optnton of State Senator
Gene Slagle ( D·Galton), 1974 GREENB RIER 2 bedroom
1972 CHEV "'TON
$2250
all elect r c \to 900 Call 992
General Telephone subscnbers
8' Fleetslde 4 speed V a
7328
may be ehgtbie for refunds
mterest bearmg notes "
] 2 Jrc
rangtng
from $1 mtllion to $12
Mrs
Bloomfield
also
crttictzed General Telephone mtlhon
'
Accordmg to Ted \ ~rostko,
for "publicly blammg the PUC
OPEN EVES. 8:00PM.
for its ftnanctal phght and tts Oh to Scnpps Howard News
POMEROY, OHIO
NOTICE OF
detenorated. serv ice, when ~ m Bureau, reported by the Ctltzen
APPOINTMENT
Journal Saturday, th~
Case No 21399
E ABBOTT
dtd not deal wtth the queslton of EslateoiMARTIN
Deceasec:l
19 73 OL DS MOBILE Cutlass S
Notice
whether the subscrtbers should
Not tce •s hereby Qtven tha t
P B and facto ry atr
P s
Mmn
te
M
Abbott
of
27
6
Ash
rec~tve refunds since Slagle
AUCTION Sale Every Fr tday
25 50 0 miles
Call 99 2 391 4
Street Mtdd teport , Ohto has
1 p m Vtllage Aucl on 215 N
alter 5 p m
dtd not ratse that tssue m hts been duly appotnted Executrtx
Second Mtddleporr
2 2 6tp
th e Estate of Mart•n E
sutt Slagle esltmates th e ot
2
20
30tc
Abbot! deceased late of Metgs
--------------- IY 73 CUTLASS S 2 dr
uttltty owes 'about $1 mtlhon ' Co ull I V Oh o
INCOME TAX Prepared by
automa t c Power Steer tng
Credtlors
are
requ•r
ed
to
file
appotntmen t Phone 99 2 3388
brakes and Wtndows crutse
Mrs Ltlhan Penn and for three month penod - June thet r c la•m s wt l ll satd r ductary
2
2
61C
21, 1972 to Sept 29 1972
w thtn four months
control
ldt wheel
am fm
- -------------daughter of New Vtenna spent
stereo tape player
new
Dated th•s 15th ctay of
The senator also charges January
AUCTION Thur sday ntghl 7
1975
brakes
and
shocks
radials
Monday mght wtth her brother,
p m
at Mason Auctton
that General has been Illegally
and tow h ttch Metal! c blue
Horton St In Mason W Va
Mr and Mrs Thomas Whtte
W1th black tnter or
Wor th
Mannmg
0
W«:bste
r
collectmg
the
htgher
rates
Constgnments wel come
S3 400 se ll for S2 ,500 Call 99 2
and famtly
Judge
Phone
1301)
773
5471
3453 or 992 3381
smce Sept 29, 1972 He
Cour l of Common Pleas
'1 2 tfc
Mark Hall of Chestster spent
1 31 5tc
DIVISIOn --------------estimates subscribers should ( I l 20 27 (21 3Probate
31c
the weekend wtth hts grandSHOOTING match , Ractn e Gun 19 71 FORD Ptnto 2 dr sedan
recetve "about $11 mtllion" tn
parents, Mr and Mrs Warden
Club Sunday 1 p m Assorted
new engtne new t tre s, $1 000
refunds from that date through
m
eats and factory choke guns
or wtll tra de for a van Call
Ours
only
the end of the moo th
949 5741 after 5 p m
Mr. and Mrs Albert Htll of
11 22 tfc
1 31 3tc
Slagle based hts claun of
Racme were supper guests of
PUBLIC
NOTICE
1
)llegal collection smce SJlpl 9, OEF!.A Par.mit No l 027 AD
NOW selling Fuller Brush 1969 IMPALA Custom
Mr and Mrs Stanley Trussell
good
Produc ts phone 992 3410
1972 on the fact •c,Gensral Elfecltva Date May 5 1975
condttlon
Factory
atr
p s
on Thursday evemng
1 '14 He
Natu1na1 Pollutant D1scharge
p b pr ced to se ll Phone 992
Telephone allegedly fililed" ld Eitrhtnatton
System (NPDES)
7617
Mr and Mrs Rodney Tuttle
Pe f mtt Program
file a rate schedule r ' 1
INCOME Tax Prepared both
I 29 6tc
have moved mto a house on the
~
PUBLIC NOTICE
Federal and State Tax.es wt ll
General
Telephone's
atProposed NPDES Permtf to
Arvtl Holter farm
be done by appotntments 1960 MGA 2 dr convertib le
toryey , John R Jones of Dls c tlarge to Stale Walen
on
ly Please phon e 992 2212 or
very good conddton Phone
Mr and Mrs Da.my Flinner
OhtO
Environmental
see Mrs Wanda Ebltn Laurel
992 7737 after 5 p m
Colmnbus,
satd
he
felt
'the
Protectton
Agenc.y
Cliff Rd Pom eroy Ohto
and chtldren spent Sunduy
1 29 6tc
P 0 BO)( 1049
dec aston ts m error and we'll do
1 J JOtc
evenmg wtth Mr and Mrs ,
361 East Broad Street
19 73 F=ORD Country Squt r e
everythmg we can to
Columbus Oh to 43216
James Batley and son
wagon
20 000 m ties
all
AUL TION
Thursday
and
614 466 4891
straighten thmgs outJJ ·
eQutpment S3 500 Phone 992
Saturday ntgtlt 7 p m at
The scho ols were closed
3493 or 992 2720
Jones satd he wtll probably
Mason Auctwn Hor ton St m
PubliC Nottce No OEPA 75
Monday due to sno"
-----------Ma
son
W
va
ConStgnments
02 017
welcome
Phone
(3041
773
Mrs Stanley Trussell and ask the Supreme Court to
D.it t e of I ssue ~of Pub lt c
For Sale
5411
Mrs Ora Hill of Racine spent rehear the case He declined to NoUce Febcuary l i' 1975
10 J tfc
discuss
the
next
step
should
the
INT 3 bon 14 ' plow No U F
Friday at Lucasville wtth Mrs
Name and Address of Ap
20&amp;80 Also 3 pi htlch trac tor
Supreme
Court
refuse
to
FOR your
0 I of Mtnk"
Plt
cant
Ada Cramlet. a pahent at a
oarr•er I ft H D
~hone
CosmeltCS
Phone
BROWN
S
Souther n Ohto Coal Company
tl.
7425113
992
5113
rest home there. She ts qmte rehear
Me tgs Mine Number 1
I 3 I 3t p
'
General
Telephone's present
l 7 tfc
P 0 Sox 91
poorly
Albany
OhtO
45710
MILLIONS of rugs have been
Mrs Thelma Whtte VISited trouble occurred beca\tse tl
cleaned Wtth Blue Lus tr e II s
not
sattsfted
with
an
Aug
was
Help
Wanted
Name and Address of Factlrty
her slster-m-law, Mrs. lrts
Amertca s
f1ne st
Rent
where Dtscharge Occ urs
17,1971
PUC
order
grantmg
tl
a
elect r c shampooer $1 Baker
Carr near Alfred Mrs Carr
LADIE S turn your spare ttme
Sou
thern
Oh
tO
Coal
Company
F urntture Company
rate hike
•nto money
Postlton now
MetgS Mtne Number I
has been Ill for some time
1 31 Jtc
open
for
ambtttous
person
Slate Route 124 four mtles
The utllitl ftled swt m the
Phone 992 2868
High winds on Saturday blew
west of Langsville Ohto
USED parts Frye s T ruck and
Salem Township
2 2 31(
down a new metal barn on the Supreme Court after puthng
Auto Parts Rutland 0/"110
--------------Me igs County Ohto
mto
effect
the
Increase
granted
Phone (6141 742 6094
James Batley farm whtch
R N for parlttme posd ton w 1t h
Recelvtng Wat er
by
PUC.
The
court
on
June
21,
planned parenthood cl tnlCS
I 22 78tp
Parker
Run
housed tractors and other farm
educatmn , and soc tal servtces
NOTICE The above named
1972
reversed
the
PUC
order
on
responstbtltttes 16 hour s cer 1971 YAMAHA 250, new parts
machinery
applicant has appl ted for a
groWlds
the
PUC
dtd
not
gtve
extr as . good condttton Phone
week
Call off ice 992 5912
NPDE
S
perm
it
to
diScharge
Several from here attended
992 2258 alter 6 p m
weekday s except Thursday
nto the destgnated recelvtng
reasons
on
whtch
tl
based
Its
1 30 6tc
the basketball game at Eastern
1 29 61 c
water The perm 11 Wi ll be tssuect
rate hike
by the OhiO Em11r0nment~JI
on Saturday mght
WAITRESSES needed app l y m GRAVELY tractor Pre season
On Sept. 29, 1972 the PUC re- Protect•on Agency
spectal Pur chase any new
person Crows St eak House
Th is
appltcant
Is
a
issued the same rate Increase manufacturer of coa l and has 5
Pomeroy
Gravely conver tible tractor
at regular list pr.ce and we
1 7 tfc
and stated tis reasons to extsting discharge PO•nts The
wtll g1ve you a new 30 • rotary
cur renl operations of th ts -------...-- --- - comply wtth the high court. On ct ischarger res ult In an average
mower attachment, FREE
INDUSTRIAL LEAGUE
No trade m and no del •verv on
Sept 5, 1973, Slagle filed his ef fluent flow Of 300.000 gallons Wanted To Buy
Won Lost
lhts offer goocf th rougll Feb a,
per
dav
Key
par&amp;meters
to
be
Steam Boat Inn
24
8 sutt setting up the stage for hmded In tne proposed permtt
1975 Grave l y Tractor Sa les
K C Jewe ler!
24
a Wednesday's declSlon The are as fOllows Total Suspendect WANTED Ol d upr tghl PIANOS , Pomeroy , Oh10 Phone (614 1
any
condtt•on
Paymg
S10
Mllhone Soh to
16
16
99'1 2975
Restdual
Sol td s, Total Iron
each First floor on l y Wrtle
Landmark
16
16
Supreme Court satd when the Chlorine.
1 29 6tc
Biochemical O xyg~
and
gtve
dtrecttons
to
Wttten
Team 4
10 22
Demand
,
Ammon
ta
,
and
Total
Aug
17,
1971
PUC
order
"was
Ptano Co , Bo)( 188. Sardts
Jack's Place
6
26
A I k.alln tty
TABLE saw and 10mter for
Oh•o 43946
H tgh Team Series - Land
reversed by this court, the
sale Phone 843 2292
l
30
6tp
mark 2668 , I( C Jewelers 2579,
On the b&amp;S1S of prel tmlnary
mcreased rates pursuant to staff
1 28 6tc
St&amp;am Boat Inn 2541
r eview and olppllcaHon of
Hl9h Inti Series - Smith 620
such order could no longer be standards and regulat tons th e OLD furntture , Ice boxes brass --------------Hatftela 618 ~ Tyree 578
Dtre c tQr of the Ohto En
beds , or complete households
lawfully charged "
High lnCI Game - Smith and
vlronm~atal Protection Agency
Wrtte M 0 Mtller , Rl 4, For Rent

QUALITY

B usmess serv1ces
•

I

Wante~

The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Mond11y , Feb. 3, 1975
•• 7DICK

Soulb
1¥
5t

lla11

take a heart nnesse against
Ealt, discard one of dummy's
spades on the ace of hearts, ruff
a heart, ruff a club, ruff another
heart to set up the last one, ruff
111other club, discard dummy's
last spade on the last heart, ruff
his three of spades In dummy
and make his contract "
Oswald ''I see the unusual
defensive pia~ East can beat
the contract
letttng South's
kllljl hold the trst dtamond "
Jtm "Let's leave It to our ,
readers to see why thta duck
play Will leave South one tnck
short They are looking at all
the cards. No expert at San An·
tonto looking at just his own
hand and dummy made the
play"
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN l

'z:a:t:1,!M\'tD
The btddmg has been

3

L-J_..J-.J-..1-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTB- Here's how
AXYDLBAA.Xa
II LONGJ'BLLOW

to work It:

By OIIWaltl &amp; James Jacoby

Jim "i:ler~ 11 a hand from
the 18'14 Fall Nalionall which
cave oome Eut players a
One letter almp)J atandl for another. In thla umplt A II Chance to make a most UDUiual
used for the three L'a, X for the two O'a, e~ Sln&amp;le letteta, , deff!llllive play."
apoatrophea, the lenJ(h and formation of the words are aU • O.Wald "It wouldn't be too
bbttJ. EliCh day the code letters are dlferent
many of them, becaUJe at 111011t
tablet South would either be
CRYPTOQUOTE
playlnl rour dlamondl or Weot
four spadeo doubled "
BPU GMTXF LS SXAKB WLJU Xlt playlnl
Jim: "Wheu Wut Jumped tD
four spades 81111 Soulh refUHd
LHA XTRLAMRFU BPMB XB FMR to sell out, it waa automaUc for
Eut to doable South would win
UJUA
URI.-QURDMGXR
I X I tbe spade openmc and put tbe
kine Of dlamonclll on the ta~le
Ealt woUld take bll ace and
AMUWX
lead out two top clulnt South
would ruff the seCond club, lead
YISiaclal'a Ctjpli ,- lei tJiJ!: LIME liE!!!!!!:~
a lnlmp to dummy's queen,
AND ANGER IS A THIN LINE. - JOHN Duwn.._

Wett

Nortb

t•

Eatt

Paos
Pass
P11s 31
Pass
Paas 4 t
Pass
You, South, bold

South

I t

t•

Uo
?

.AQ76¥2 tKJH.AQ&amp;2
Wltat &lt;!o you do now

A-

Ju1t bid four spadet You

••e made a alom try.
TODAY'S QUESTION
You do bid four spades Your
partner continues to five spades
Wbat do you do'
Aaswer Tomorrow

Send $1 for JACOBY MODERN
book to

'Wm at Br~oge

' (c/o

th1s newspaper! P 0 Box 489.
RadiO C1ty St~110n New York.
NY 10019

�..

I

I

1'

6- The Daljy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday, Feb J.1~75

Pets For Sale

Telephone rate

llLf\LI&lt;.

For Fast Results Use Sentinel Classifieds

1an and wh1te Beaq l€!
1

~~~~;;er~ d "'.!'~~7~,?~~ ~;~~
B•ng
J J 57

/

Aradbury

or c all 9'17
I 31 JIC

boost approved

Auto Sales

.

Employment

REMODELING
plumbtng
h~altng
and al l typ~s ot
general
re p a tr
Work
gua r anteed 20 years ex
penence Phone 99'2 2409

COLUMBUS ( UP!)
General Telephone Co has
' authortzed
. by the Public
been
Utilities Commlsston of Ohto to
ratse rates by $13 4 mtllion a
year One commlssaon member
soundly crttictzed Ute ultlit} 's
ftnanclal dealings.
Sally Bloomfield satd ·the
management of General
Telephone mtscalculated the
ftnanctal market by deferrmg
long-term fundtng and tn·
debhng Itself to an excesstve
degree wtth short-term, htgh·

@)

2 SIGNS
OF

'

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

@)

100 Kerr Street

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

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

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

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

Local Bowling

Tyree 23-t, Hatfleltl 225, Bowen

215

High Teem Game - Land
mark 905
Landmark 894
Steam Boat Inn 890

MORNING GLORIES

TO WHOM

Jan 21 1975
Standmg s

Tum
ExcelsiQr Oil Co
Gibbs Grocery
G &amp; J. Auro Parts
Newell Sunoco

WMPO

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE

111
86
84
68

M

Spencer's Market
41
H l gh lnd Golme
Marlene
Wilson 207. Ellen Rought 205
H igh Series - Ellen Rought
S.. 6. Marlene Wtlson 523
Te~m Htgh Game Newel l
Sunoco 85&lt;&amp;
Team HtOh Senes - Newel l
Sunoco 2476

Notice
1 MEIGS muule loaders publ tc
shoot. lzaak Walfon Farm .
Chester Ohto Sunday Feb 9,
1975 at 1 p m
2 3 6tc

IT MAY

CO N

CERN
,
Nof tce IS hereby QtVen ftlat On
Febr uary lOth 1975 at 10 oo
AM a publrc sa l ewlll beheld at
Pomeroy Motor Company
Pomeroy Oh•o to sell for ca sh
the following collatere,l • .to Wtf
197-l Chevrolet Fteetstde PU
Ser No CCV I4&lt;&amp; FJ72540 satd
collateral bemg held to \.secure
lln obltgatton an smg under a
retatl
tnstatment securttY
agreement held by General
Motors Acceptl'lnce Corporation
as secu r ed parry Satd public
s~!Jie 1S to be conducted accord
•ng to the laws of the State of
Ohto
General Motors Ac
ce ptance Corporation reserves
the r ight t o b1d at lhtS sale
The collateral •S presently
slored and may be seen at
Pomeroy Motor Company ,
Pomeroy otuo

GENERAL MOTOR S

ACCEPTANCE

CORPO RATION
(21 3

lfc

proposes to •ssue a perm II for
the dlscherge subject to certain
effluent conditions and spectal
co ndtttons
The
proposed
determ Ina lion Is tentm tl ve but
shall become final on the ef
tecllve date unless (1) an act
iud tcatl on hearing Is requested
or (2) the Director wtthdraws
and revises the proposed perm 1t
after cD'nslderatlon of the
re cord of a publtc meeting or
written cQmrnents. or upor
d•sapprov'Af ' by
the
Ad ·
m tnistrator 10.f the U "S En
v l ronmen~al
Prote c t to n
Agencv
Jt:ny person may
submtt a w~ltten statement
wlthtn thtrty davs of the date of
the Fl'ubl1c Notice as to why tht
Otrector shoultl revise the
proposed action If significant
publtc mteres.t Is shown a public
meeting may be held on motion
of the Director prior to ftnal
Issuance
of
the
perm •t
Follow i ng llnal action bV the
D trector any party has the
nght to appeal to the En
v tronmenta l Board of Revtew
Interested persons are mvited
to submtt written comments
upon the proposed dtscharge
permit Comments should be
subm ttted In person or by ma ll
no later than JO days after t he
date of th ts Public Notice
Del •ver or mall all commen ts

to

SIDE GLANCES

Pomeroy O"•o Call 9927760
10 7 74

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

J uNK autos
complete and
delivered to our yard Wept c k
up auto bodtes and buy alt
ktnds of scrap metels and
•ro n Rider's Sa lvag e, St Rt
124 Rt 4, Pomeroy . Ohto
Call 992 5468
10 17ffc

--------------CASH pad for all makes and
models of mobtle homes
Phone area code 614 423 9531
4 13 ttc

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

WANTED to buy a used
Grave ly Tractor with Mower
and rtdtng sulky and plow
attachments Phone (3(14} 882
2525 or eventngs 882 2344
1 26 12tc
for Metgs County s only
monthly com auct10n Call Ed
Burkett 992 3476 after 5 30

pm

1 31 12tc

-------------CONSIG NMENTS welcome at
P&amp;J Auct i on
215
Second Mtddleport

Nor t h

.

Phone 742 3182
NPOES Permtt Section
2 2 6tp
Oh t o
Env i ronmental
c
0
u
s
Protect•on tgencv
p o Box 104\t
Complete . FRYE 'S TRUCK
361 Emst Brollld Street
AND AUTO PARTS . Rutland
Columbus. Oh i o 43216
Phone 742 6094
The OEPA permit number
1 22 26tp
and Publtc Not i ce numbers
ShOuld appear ne)(t to the above
address on the enve lope and on
each page of any submttted
com ments
All
comment!
HOMES FOR SALE
rece tv e&lt;i no tater than 30 days MOBILE
NOTICE•
Due
to
the
after the date of this Public
foreclosure on one of Ohto's
Notice wtll be considered In fhe
largest Mob1le Home Dealers
formutat l on of f i nal dettr
we Wtll offer for Solle the
mn)alton
followmg M ob 1le Homes at a
The applications. fact sheets.
verv . very large d tsc ount
proposed permtt .ncluCI•no
1- 6&lt;&amp;xl2 Ltberty , 3 bedroom
proposed effluent llm•tatt ons
60x 12 Ltberty , 2 bedroom
spec •al cond itions. comments 1recetved and oJher dOcuments I - SOx12 Rtchardson , 2 bedroom
1- 60)(12 PMC , 3 bedroom
are available for •nspectton and
may be copied at a cost of 15 1- 60Xl2 T ttan, 2 bedroom
cents per page at the Ohto l - 60xl2 Parkwood . 2 bedroom
6()x 12 Elcona , ~ bl?drooms,
Envrionmental
Protect ton 1- central
air
Agency at the address shown
R tchardson ,
3
olbove any t tme between the 1- 6Sx 12
t&gt;edroom , 2 full battts. Bx12
h..ours of 8 00 a m to 4. 30 p m
eJCpando
Monday through Frtdav Coptes We al so ttave a good selec tion or
of the Publ tC Not1ce are
ottter 8, 10 and 12 W1de Mobtle
avallable at no charge at the
l-lomes These are .mostly all
same olddress
late model Homes Csome have
Madmg l i sts are ma tnlatned
never been lived tn) If you
for persons or qroups who
are Interested In a good
destre to rece-ivl? Public Nortc e
Mob•le Home at a very large
for all appllcat tons in the stat!?
discount . don 't watt Stop tn
or for certam geooraphtca l
loday JJt BERRY MILLER
areas Persons or groups may
MobHe Home Sales, 705
also request cop tes of tact
Farson Street . Belpre , Ohio.
sheets. applicat ions or other
pttone A23 9531 1
documents
pertaining
to
1 JO lOfc
!peclttc appltcatlons Persons
or groups may. have their
names put on such a ll sl by
making a written request to the 10x55 Par tt ally carpeted , a c :
52 gallon hot water tteater,
Agency at me address shown
underp lnnmg Call 992 5153
above
,_
1 30 12tc
(21 3, lie

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

"Good morning, Ma'am! My, but you loo~
must be wearing your best rollers!"

You

4 ROOM house

Rutland

furnished tn
Phone 742 3751
1 31 Jtp

FURN I SHED
1
bedroom
lralier , all ufdtltes, 493
Broadway Street. Mtddleport
1 28 lfc
north of Me•gs High School on
old Rt 33 Phone 992. 2941
1 23 tfc

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

COU NTRY Mobile Home Park 1
R t 33 ten m lies north of
Pomeroy
Large lots Wlth
concrete pattos , Sidewa l ks ,
runners
and
off
st reet
park.tng PhOne 992 7419
1231 tfc

1 9 30tc
--------------700 BALES of good da1rv hay -------------5 RM AP T furnished , utt1 1tles

Mobile Homes For Sale

,

tab le top range wall oven,
real n• ce and c lean modern
Located
tn.
Pomeroy
overlookmg the Ollto River
Phone Gatl tpolts , day 446
1699, eventngs -4 ~ 6 9539
1 26 tfn

Jf.t.

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

,

--------------APT 3 rooms all electrtc has

---------------------------mtle
OLD COINS and paper money TRAILER SPACE,

ASHUIS-F RJ NKCAR

. ..

TRAILER space, 2 mtles. from
Pomerov Rt 143, Phone 992
5858
10 27 ttc

__ ___________ _

'
\

patef no Ch tldren or pets
Phone 992 5811) 814 ~ East
Ma tn Pomeroy
2 2 6tp

--------------3 and
ROOM furntshed and
A

unfurntslled
apartments
Phon e 992 5434 1
412tfc

------...,-------PRIVATE meeting room for
anv oroan tzatton , phone 992

3975

Phone

992 3874
11 1-t tfc

--------------HOUSE FOR RENT . 1634
L•ncoln Hgts , Pomeroy , or
Phone Pomerov 9"92 3575 or
Galltpol ts -446 2749
2 2 tfc

--------------NEWLY furn tshed apt
2
bedrooms ,· reference
9.49 3783

Phone

2 2 liP
-----·---------

FURNISHED apt 3 r ooms and
bat" · newly decorated Phone
992 2937

2 2 6lp
IHoUS.:~;;;;-~:-77oOms
and bath , n ice Phone '192 2780
or 992 3432
1 9 tfc

-------------Will ted I 0 Hent

WANTED ola upright p1anos ,
any condttton
Paying SID
each f'1rst floor only Wrtte
and give dtrect10ns to Wttten
Ptano Co • Box ise, Sard ts,
Oh10 09.t6
1 29 6tp

949 3832 or 843 2667

Blown Into Walls
and Attics
Free Estimates

Insulation

PHONE

All Types of

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

BUILDING
and REMODELING

Ref•n•shtng
Repatrtng Burntsh1ng . Cantng Upholstenng
We Also Buy Ant1ques
Ptck up Servtce Available

From a shelf to a house
Patnttng, stdmg, roofing,
paper hangmg , ltttchen
cabmets, expert carpeting,

elc .

15

'

" ·~·
'" . .
··

Gunsmoke 8, 10, An Eames Celebrat ion 20,33 , Movie

6.

CAPTAIN EASY

lany Lavender

HO'D IT. &amp;Ul.L l
WHEI&lt;E DO YOU
TH INK 'fOU J&lt;:E'
GOI'-16 'l'

Phone 992-3993
Datly After 5: 00

- GEEIN AG YER TH ' YOUN.S

LADY'!' E7C0Rf. YOU MU5-T
!&lt;NOW WHERE HEr&lt; CABIN I?!
50 wE ''- t.ET YOU LE'A D
;H' WAY:

HE.5 A TF::ICK Y. S l.. I GH T~R. H-1!$ ONE!

IM CO VEI'!I'D
FAUD ~ AND IF H~
ANY TRO UBLE - &lt;"7-:: .

KE~ P

Ml'-IUTEo

\,!5

· Doclor's Wives" 3.4.1S Movie "The Only Game In Town"
13 Maude 8,10
9 lii- Rhoda 9,10. Romantic Rebellion 20,33
10 llO-Movle " The Only Game In Town" 6, Medical Center
8,10 News 20, Washington Straight Talk 33
10 311-Behlnd the Lines 33
11 llO-News 3,4,8, 10, 11,15, ABC News 33
11 311-Johnny 'CarsOn 3,4,15 Wide World Mystery 13, Movie
" Penelope'' 8 Movie ' Of Human Bondage' 10. Janak I 33
12 oo-News 6

1

The Fumiture Fixer
843-2824 or 843-2293
Portland, Ohto

I

REPAIR-Broken
Parts Mended
STRIPPING-By
Hand
NO DIP TANKS
Supplies· Strippers
Stains· Ftnslhes
Free Ptekup and Oehvery

_- L - - - - - - - - - - - '
WILL trtm or cut trees or
Shrubbery
cle an
out
ba se ments atttes etc Pllane
949 32'1 1 or 742 -4441
1 26 26tc

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

CARPET tnsl allatton, $1 25 per
ya rd Phone R •chard West
843 2667
12 24 26fp

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

Real Estate For Sale
Approxtmalefy one acre m
Rutland , set up for mobtle
home Phone ( 1) 446 9662
1 30 7tc

--------------BUILDING lot , 80 ft frontage
by 165ft The second lot on left
on Rtverv lew Drtve , Lmcoln
Hill Pomeroy Ohto If tn
teres ted call 99 2 3230 after 5 p
m

10 11 tfc

--------------For Sale

HOOVER Otal A Mat te Wtth
power drtve and atta c hments
S75 Phon e 985 4132
1 29 10tp
STEREO RADIO 8 track ta pe
combtnatton am fm rad1o, 4j
way spea ker sound system
Balance $107 89 or use our
budget terms Call 992 3965
1 29 ftC
GROCERY busmess for sale
Bulldmg for sale or lease
Phone77J5618from8 30p m
to 10 p m for appo tntment
3 10 tfc

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

1

HE.L
RACINE PWMBING
&amp;HEATING
·complete plumbing &amp;
heating servtce and
general sheet metal
works .
Free
Estimates.
Phone 949-5961
Emergency 992-3995
or 992-5700
P&amp;J
Home
Matntenance
h ea ttng
coo l tng, refrtg ,
plumbtng
electrtcal ap
pltan ces. We se rvi ce and
repatr anytmg tn the home or
bustness
215 N
Second,
Mtddleport Phone 992 3509
I 9 30tc

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
- Sweeper s. toasters, Irons
all small appliances Lawn
mowers, next ro Stat e High
way Garage on Route 7 Home
Phone 985 38'15
2 2 26tC

-------------EXCAVATIP.,G , dozer loader

ltvered Mondav through
Saturday
and
eventngs
Phone 446 1142
6 13 tfc
EXPERT tree serv1ce. free
est tmates
20 years e)(
pertence Call (1) 667 3041 or
992 3057
1 21 26tp

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

STEREO rad10 8 t ra ck ta pe
com__btnahon AM F M ra~:ho. 4
way speaker sound system
Balance 1101 89 or use our
budget terms Call 992 3965
2 J tfc

!JEPTIC
TANKS
cleaned
Modern San1tatton, 992 3954 or
992 7349
'
9 18 tfc

USED FUEL OIL

HEATER, $50
All New Heaters
Now
Discounted!
New Wood Burnmg

- - - --------- -Real Estate For 5ale

HOUSE for sate 1n Portland 6
roo ms and bath , good well 2
acres S6,100 Call 843 2292
I 28 6tc

- -------------5 ROOM house Darwtn t-'none
J

B

0 Brten

attorney, 992

2720
5 ROOM house
992 5871

2 2 6tp

ss 000

HEATER------5239.95

Phone

2 2 12tp

Deluxe model with cabtnet

Wall hned.
POMEROY LANDMARK
• • ,: Jack W Carsey, Mgr .
~
Phone 992-2181
_
3 PIECE bedroom suite, Vantty
dresser . good condtt ton, prtce
S45 New dmette s utte , 7 p1ece
S75 12Kll 1h ny lon rug. new
wtth pad S60 Stng le bed $10
other Items
Call 667 3333
after 3 p m
2 2 3tc

Concerns &amp; Comments 10. Rev Cleophus Robinson 13

On Slate Rl 124, t;., m1 from
Route 1 by pass towards

6 35-Columbus Today 4
6 45-Mornlng Report 3. Farmtime 10
7 llO-Today 3,4,t5, AM America 6 13. CBS News 8,10
B ll0-Lassle6, Capt Kangaroos. PopeyeiO, Sesame St 33
a H)--Your Future Is Now 20
8 25-Capl Kangaroo 1C

Rutland
Ph. 992-5682 or 992-7121
All Mechanica I Work
Open Mon Sat
8AM 6PM.

8 311-Big Valley 6
9 oo-A M 3, Phil Donahue 4,15. Rocky&amp;. Friends 8, Morning
with D J 13
9 25-Chuck White Reports 10
9 311-Not For Women Only 3, Dinah 6, Galloping Gourmet 8,
Tattletales 10. New Zoo Revue 13
10 llO-Ceiebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4, 15, Joker's Wild B.10, Movie
"The Busy Body" 13
10 30-Wheet of Fortune 3.~.15; Gambit 8 10
11 llO-High Rollers 3,4,15, One Life to Live 6, Now You See It
8.10

EXPERIENCED
.-'
Radlato
I
I
'
Service ·,_, I

r»&amp;MIDL!J£;"'-' ==~~ ..J=

From the largest Truck or

Bulldozer Radiator to the
smallest Heater Core

Nathan Btggs
us

Radtator Spectals•t

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

\OU EAT FIRST,
THEN THE

OTHERS

'COSTAM

I

Iii

;
,
,,
u

foundation on good quiet street,

1965 JOHN Deere Dozer , 4 out of high water
CVItnder , de tsel , 8' blade
canopy ,
New
clutches. BARGAIN - 5 room frame
br..akes
and tracks
A 1 with basement , c1ty water,
condttton S6,500 Phone 985
natural gas and electric on
359A
1 2 7tp corner lot $3,000 00

POMEROY- Nice renovated
3 bedroom home Lots ol nice
panelmg, wall to wall car
petmg, 2 porches, basement,

and fenced yard $17,500 00
1972 YAMAHA 175CC. 21" front
wheel Phone 992 7869
HAVING TROUBLE
2 2 lip SELLING,
CALL
A
PROFESSIONIIL
SALESMAN
NEW Accortl i on and case.

San-

12 Biblical

came
ntqht
h(Wr()w m\j SUit·

are
lookinq

10·110-Pollce Story 3. ~.15 , Marcus Welby MD 6, 13; Barnaby
Jonos8. Tom Jonerto, News20, Soundstage33
10:30-Your Future Is Naw 20
11 oo-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,151 ABC News 33
11.30-Johnny Carson3,4,15, Wide World Mystery 1313. FBI6.
Movie "Th• Lawyer" 8, Movie "The Great Sioux Massacre"
10; Jonakl 33
12 30-Wtdt World Mystory "Tho Centerfold Murders" 6.

oo-Tomorrow 3,4,;

News 13

U~COMFORTABLE

IT MUSf 6E TH
WITH TH' I Q OF

PLACE ON

"

CHICKEN

sets

edgment
9 Extenllve

property
lllnhlblt

UFamoua

film c:riUe

underatandlng with

use materials or designs that

are more artistic than func -

tional
LEO (JUir 23·AutJ. U) If you lei
your heart rule your head thia
evening, you'll make some
movea you11 later regretr Use
your sharp Iagle Instead

' '

VIRGO (Alii· U·ltpt. 21) A

beat poaltlon
to advleo you regarding family

chum Is not In the

finances Her Impractical
solutions wont help

LIIRA (lopt. · 23-0cl. U)

ZO Apostate
21 Remainder
IIi Vindicator
Z3 Wife of
Barnachandra
Z4 Soapmaking
tncredlent

way lor
15 Mortal or
venial
zt Relative
of bravo

15 Greek

Wand
Z7- ml8non
28 tntlmale
21 Up to
30 Rent

You'd be wise to keep some

----a--,
SJIIIIJah
queen

NORTH
.1062

3

¥&amp;
tQ9B64
• 913 2

WEST

Eoal

•KQH17S
¥8 7 3

+5

Z7 Portentous;

• 84

crucial

.4

¥ KJ 82
tA 10

.AKQI065
SOVTH (DI
• A3
¥AQI094
tKJ732

.J

North-South vulnerable

15 Brazilian
tapir
at Dramatic

Weal

segments

HELlO POI.ICE DEPAm'MENT&lt;' TH IS.
JOEY DELL,AUA51HECHAMELEON
WANT TU~NMySELF IN.'

ASKING just $.4,000
ALL CASH FOR YOUR
PROPERTY - LET US
KNOW WHAT YOU HAVE
-PROPERTY IS SELLING
FAST AT THIS TIME.
992-2259 or 992-2568

ro

'

-------------ELECTROLUX Sweeper L..!tl.o e

'
•

~nss

12 18 tfc

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

••'
"f
"•'

..

•

North Eut

Pau Pau
Pau PUI Dble
Pass Pa11
Opening lead - K •

4•

1'1 Platform
S8 City In
Afghan!Btan
S8 She (Fr.)

member will be hurl She
believes you're more considerate ol a friend than you
are or her

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon.
1•) You think vou \1 have to
beat
tion
The
best

about the bush In a situayou re reluctant to l ace
direct approach Is your
route

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 11)
Impulsively, you're going to do
something lor a friend that wlH
dent your wallet Reflect a bit
before volunteering aid

PISCES (Fob. 20-Morcb 20) A
goal Important to you wi ll not
be achieved on lhe first try It
can be reached II you re persistent enough on the second

~~
Fob. 4, 1875

Contacts and new associations
you·u make this year through a
group Interest wm be or Immense value In furthering your:
hopes Get out and mix

34 Laat

name

WHILE IM WAITING f01l.1HEM
10 ARRIVE. ; rnERE$ ONE
MORE DOCENT THING
IiniKE 10 ro .

IAGITTARjUB (Nov. 23-Doc.
21) Feelings of a family

It helps to see al/4 hands

shade

WINNIE

surplus use It to pay off old
obligations before ~uylng
anything new

WIN AT BRIDGE

3Z Suppose
33Itallan
boy's

"

loved

Somethln,g you're InVolved In
with another Is gcHng to taka
more concerted effort by e1ch
ot you to be aucceaatul.

11 Sboe

SO THEY 15 CONVINCED-

a

one
TAURUS (AprU ft•Mof H)

CANCill (June 21·Jutr 21) II
you're doing pertonal
decorating at home now, don t

5 Man
and
woman
IConunand
to a horse

After you've reviewed the situation, you II &amp;ee you weren t entirely blamelesa In a mfa-

nion than you will on your own
Co-operation's the key word

ptece

3 Violently
4 Like
some TV

'"' Tundoy, '""· 4, tin
ARIU (March 21-Aprll II)

You'll accompllah much more
today with a partner dr compa-

DOWN
1 Best
part
2 Mantel-

81110Wlt
19 Jujube

Minor
rellgioul
body
Z4 Make

E'ARTH,

areas, good blacktop road .

I

8'110, America 20,33

GEMINI (May 21-Juno H)

thr11-UYE IN THE CITY

7 Caustic
8 Acknowl-

Q

CO&gt;IPUTE'R CE'~TER IN WASHINGT'?"J
WANTS TO KNOW IF YO' WILL GUIDE A
GROJP 0' HEALTH NUTS TO LOWEST'
5LC880VIA ~ IT:S TH' MOST

Whole works at just S-4,700.
NEAR LANGSVILLE About 10 acr... on good
fishing creek, close to mine

SSO REWARD for the return of
our Black and Decker electnc
saw 7112 1n blade- Pttone (l)
667 3737 V1.vtan Max.ey
I 31 6tp

to form the aurpriH uawer. u

17House
holds
18 SmaU

Z1 Btmdle

house needs some repair

CLOSE OUT on new Z10 Zag
sewmg m"chtnes For sewi ng
stretch fabrics , buttonholes.
fancy destgns. etc
Pamt
slightly blemtshed Choice of
carrying cast or sewing
stand U9 80 cash or ferms
avaflable Phone 992 1755
12 18 uc

16~

20Mature

TH'

baths,

regton
13 Awatt
14 DiscomIrvin

ULABNER

model
Conwlete with all
clean.ng attachments and
uses paper bags Sltghfly used
but cleans and looks like new
Will sell for S37 25 ca!h or
terms avatlab/e Phone 992

tllTIIIP the circled !etten
I. I Now
aurreated by the above cartoon.

.-\nn•~r. People who hate tile CDtmtr11 often do

11 Low cards

5 room

4 BR, 1112

I

A.CROSS
1 Applaud
5 Participate
10 Italy's

'

NEW HOMES No Money Down ,
Payments according to
•ncome on Farmers Home
Adm tntStratJOn loan Con •
venttonal ftnanctng
a l so
available Wtth mmtmum
down Lovely homes •n three
locations tn Metgs County '
SO'me homes w rth wooded
lots
Call for more m
format ton 992 5976
1 15 26tc

frame,

I

by THOMAS JOSEPH

GASOUNE ALLEY

dining R. porches, storage
bldg 2 garages. about 2
acr... $8,000 00
POMEROY - Business R.
and furnished apartment
Located on Main Sf In good
traffic area Good Income
Investment. Priced to sell
PORTLAND - 4 nice lots,
good drilled well and water
system. block garage,
storage building, 2 story

!I

PROFIT6 WHE!a: THEY
5ELL I:'RINK5.

~IHiWl'tr'

Stubbs

6' MOWER 3 pt h ttch ftts Ford bedroom home. bath. gas heat,
or Ferguson tractor S100 rural water Quiet w1th
New culttvator , Sl25 Phone onvacv $12.000 00
985 3594
'
2 2 7tp BUILDING LOT - W1th stone

I

b._ _A

Saturday'•

J

2 story

Times

1 30-Holl of Famo3,4,15; Mash8,10, Ascent of Man 20,33
9 oo-Hawall Ftve-0 B.
9 30-Woman 20. Witness to Yesterday 33

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov 22) II
your present budget has a little

1:::=""'==...~-=-:::::::'::...=:-1~"lli-:-.;.~J-( I I I I)"

---~ --~- ~---,--

CARPENTER -

5 311-News 6, Beverly Hillbillies 8 Hodgepodge Lodge 20. Get
Smart 1S. Etec Co 33
6 llO-News 3,4,8,1 0,13, 15, ABC News 6, Elec Co 20, lTV
Utilization 33.
6 30-NBC News 3.~. 15. ABC News 13. Bewitched 61 CBS News
8, 10, Zoom 20; Your Future Is Now 33
7·oo-.,Truth or Cons 3,4, Bowling for Dollars 6, What's My Line
a.. News 10, Name That Tune 13; High School TV Honor
Society 15, Antiques20, Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33
7 30-Hollywood Squares 3; .~; Wild Wild World of Animals 6.
Buck Owens B, New Prlce.Js Rtgh!IO, To Tell the Ttuth 13,
Spring Street USA 15, RFif201 Morco Sportilte33
8 oo-Adam-12 M.151 Movie "Death Be Nof Proud" 6.131 Good

:J I I

rrJ

for.

NEW LISTING -

r

1

Jumllle•. LUSTY CHIDE DEFINE INVENT

home, bath, gas furnace, lots of
paneling and ce~llng tile. City

Bonanza 15

5 oo-F BI 3, Andy Griffith 8, Mister Rogers Neighborhood
20,33, Ironside 13

distance between yourself and
anyone work ing for you now
Make It a slrlct employeremploye relationship

(Aiuwen ••-nw)

Real Estate For 5ale

Gilligan's Is 6, Tattletales B, Sesame St 20,33 Movie "Gu ns
of the Timberland" 10 Mike Oouglas ll
4 311-Bewltched 3, Merv Grlflln 4, Mod Squad 6, , Lucy Show 8,

1

EXCAVAliNG ,
dozer. ~
backhoe,
and
dltcher , •
waterltne tooters, drains .~
roads. and brush cleaning, no •
lOb too small. no wea th er toot :
bad Charles R Hatfield Rt 1 1
Rutland 0 Phone 7426092
1 7 26tc
-tOME
Improvement
and
Repa tr Serv 1ce Anythmg
f1XI?d around the home from
roof to basement You Wtll
ltke our work and rates
Phone 742 5081
12'191fc

Tomorrow 8,10, To Be Announced 33

12 45-Eiec Co 33
12 55-NBC News 3
1 llO-News 3, All My Children 6, 13, Phil Donahue 8, Young &amp;
the Restless 10. Nol For Women Only IS
1 30-How To Survive a Marriage 3,4, 15, Lei's Make a Deal
6,13. As the World Turns 8,10
2 llO-Days of Our Lives 3 4,15, $10.000 Pyramid 6.13, Guiding
Light 8,10
2 30-Doctors 3.~.15. Big Showdown 6.13. Edge of Night 8.10
3 llO-Another World l,4,15, General Hospital 6 13, Price Is
Right 8.10. Lilias Yoga II. You 20
3 »-&lt;lne Life to Live 13, Lucy Show 6, Match Game B.10. Your

1

UTI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

water, with large level lot

original prtce S350 W'tll sell
for $175 Phone 1 (304) 773
5.t27
2 2 3tc •
.......- - - - - - 1957 CHEVY parts
NEW
Lolkewood tractton bars. h•
racker a.r shocks, hooker
headers , wtth 3" collectors fo'
small block
Call 992 349t
after 6 p m BEST OFFER
'
10 11 ttc

ALLEY OOP

BUTSOE
Y: ~

DOZER work land clearing by '
tile acre, hourlv or contrac t
Farm ponds roads , etc
Large dozer and operator
Wtfh over 20 years ex
perlence Pullins Excavatmg,
Pomeroy, Ohto Phone 992
2478
12 19 ffc

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

1953 30 FERGUSON tractor
&lt;l11v 510,000 oo
new motor , good rubber new
pamt Sl,200 Phone 985 359-t NEW LISTING - 48 acres, Bof
2 2 7tp bottom, the rest In woods, 2

EXTRA n 1ce corn fed freezer
beef, your choice Phone 949
4762
2 2 3tc

Unscramble these four Jumblet,
one leiter to each square, to
form four ordanar) v.ord1.

I'll (Ill

CREMEANS CONCRETE de

C BRADF-ORD, Aucttoneer
Complete Servtce
Phone 949 3821 or 949 3161
Ractne Oh10
Crt It Bradford
5 1 tfc

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

GARAGE

11 311-Hollywood Squares 3, 15;, Brady Bunch 6, News 4; Love
of Life 8,10.
11 5~Take Kerr with Graham Kerr 8 Dan Imel's World 10,
News 13
12 Oil-Jackpot 3.15, Password All Stars 6,13. Bob Braun's SO SO
Club •· News 8,10
12 311-Btank Check 3.15. Split Second 6,t3, Search for

Future is Now 20
,. oo-Mr Cartoon 3, I Dream of Jeannie 4, Somerset 15,

3,-4, News 13

6 oo--sunrlse Seminar 4. Sun rise Se'rlester 10
6 2.5--Farm Report 13
6 30-Five Minutes to Live By 4, News 6. Bible Answers 8.

and backhoe work
septte
tanks mstalled dump trucks..
and lo boys for htre , Wi ll haul
Ph. 992-2174
Pomeroy
ftll d1rt, top sotl. l tmestone &amp; L-~----------------~ ,
gravel Call Bob or Roger
READY MIX CONCRETE de :
Jeffers day pttone 992 7089
livered nght to your project •
ntght phone 992 3525 or 992
Fast
and
easy
Free •
5232
estim ales Phone 992 3284 '
2 11 tfc
Goeglem Ready M1x Co, ,
M 1ddl eport Oh lo
EXCELSIOR Salt Works East
630tfc •
Mam St Pomeroy A ll ktnds
of salt, water pellets, water - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - I
nuggets block salt and own SEWING MACHINE Repairs. :
serv tce all makes, 992 2284 ,
Oh10 Rtver Salt Phone 992
The Fabnc Shop, Pomeroy, ,
l891
A~.;thorlzed Singer Sa les and •
6 5 ttc
Service We sharpen Setssors 1
329tfc '

STEREO RADIO 8 track tape
combtnatton am fm rad1o , 4
way speaker sound system
Balance SlOB 74 or use our
budget terms Ca ll 992 3965
l 21 tfc

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

oo- Tomorrow

TUESDAY. FEBRUARY4.197S

ROGER HYSELl'S

--------- ------ ------------I

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 3,197S
7 llO-Trulh or Cons 3,4, Bowling for Dollars 6, What's My Line
8 News 10. New Candid Camera 131 Wally's Workshop IS,
OhloThls Week20. Lllas Yoqa II. You 33
7 311-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3 Masquerade Party 4•
Pollee Surgeon 6, S25 000 Pyramid B • Municipal Court to.
To Tell the Truth 13 , Untamed World 15, Washington
Straight Talk 20. Episode Action 33
B oo-Smothers Brolhers 3,4, 15, Rookies 13. College Basketball

12 311-FBI 6

3 11 lfc
--------------------FURNISHED apt Adults only
Middleport

Fire Retardant

Pomeroy, Ohto

--------------1

0&amp;0
CONSTRUCTION

Phone (6141 992-2798

Television log for·easy viewing

.

i

Bashan
News

~

.

J

THIS PAPIER
lrr1DY YOU MADE, TRACY,
NOT DEDICATE IT
OUR OWN

l

•

Pomeroy
Motor Co. Modem Chemicals

fact the compan} Itself was
solely responsible "
1 19 lie
She accused the compan) of
.
pursuing pohctes ' wholly
For
Sale
or
Trade
tnconslstent wtth provtdtng
3 pf htt ch post llole
thetr customers the best 8 dINCH
1974 CHEVELLE
$3095
fgger or lrade for 3 pt httch
Maltbu HT Cpe , 350 V a engine power steer tng, fac tory
possible servtce '
ptckup dtsc Phone 742 5322
a~r. tmfed glass. radto , whee l covers good t•res, blk
'1 1 31p
The Ohto Supreme Court
lntermr . sliver grey fmrsh
ruled earher thts week that
1972 CHEVROLET 2 TON H DUTY
$5895
General Tele phone had
10 Ft Manon Dump, 2 speed 900 ttres
Illegally collected htgher rates l h44 NEW Moon mobtle home
durmg three months of 1972 In
19!0 model Phone 991 7385
1971 CHEV 2 TON CAB
S349S
I 31 JIC
350 angtne 2 speed 825 t1res
the optnton of State Senator
Gene Slagle ( D·Galton), 1974 GREENB RIER 2 bedroom
1972 CHEV "'TON
$2250
all elect r c \to 900 Call 992
General Telephone subscnbers
8' Fleetslde 4 speed V a
7328
may be ehgtbie for refunds
mterest bearmg notes "
] 2 Jrc
rangtng
from $1 mtllion to $12
Mrs
Bloomfield
also
crttictzed General Telephone mtlhon
'
Accordmg to Ted \ ~rostko,
for "publicly blammg the PUC
OPEN EVES. 8:00PM.
for its ftnanctal phght and tts Oh to Scnpps Howard News
POMEROY, OHIO
NOTICE OF
detenorated. serv ice, when ~ m Bureau, reported by the Ctltzen
APPOINTMENT
Journal Saturday, th~
Case No 21399
E ABBOTT
dtd not deal wtth the queslton of EslateoiMARTIN
Deceasec:l
19 73 OL DS MOBILE Cutlass S
Notice
whether the subscrtbers should
Not tce •s hereby Qtven tha t
P B and facto ry atr
P s
Mmn
te
M
Abbott
of
27
6
Ash
rec~tve refunds since Slagle
AUCTION Sale Every Fr tday
25 50 0 miles
Call 99 2 391 4
Street Mtdd teport , Ohto has
1 p m Vtllage Aucl on 215 N
alter 5 p m
dtd not ratse that tssue m hts been duly appotnted Executrtx
Second Mtddleporr
2 2 6tp
th e Estate of Mart•n E
sutt Slagle esltmates th e ot
2
20
30tc
Abbot! deceased late of Metgs
--------------- IY 73 CUTLASS S 2 dr
uttltty owes 'about $1 mtlhon ' Co ull I V Oh o
INCOME TAX Prepared by
automa t c Power Steer tng
Credtlors
are
requ•r
ed
to
file
appotntmen t Phone 99 2 3388
brakes and Wtndows crutse
Mrs Ltlhan Penn and for three month penod - June thet r c la•m s wt l ll satd r ductary
2
2
61C
21, 1972 to Sept 29 1972
w thtn four months
control
ldt wheel
am fm
- -------------daughter of New Vtenna spent
stereo tape player
new
Dated th•s 15th ctay of
The senator also charges January
AUCTION Thur sday ntghl 7
1975
brakes
and
shocks
radials
Monday mght wtth her brother,
p m
at Mason Auctton
that General has been Illegally
and tow h ttch Metal! c blue
Horton St In Mason W Va
Mr and Mrs Thomas Whtte
W1th black tnter or
Wor th
Mannmg
0
W«:bste
r
collectmg
the
htgher
rates
Constgnments wel come
S3 400 se ll for S2 ,500 Call 99 2
and famtly
Judge
Phone
1301)
773
5471
3453 or 992 3381
smce Sept 29, 1972 He
Cour l of Common Pleas
'1 2 tfc
Mark Hall of Chestster spent
1 31 5tc
DIVISIOn --------------estimates subscribers should ( I l 20 27 (21 3Probate
31c
the weekend wtth hts grandSHOOTING match , Ractn e Gun 19 71 FORD Ptnto 2 dr sedan
recetve "about $11 mtllion" tn
parents, Mr and Mrs Warden
Club Sunday 1 p m Assorted
new engtne new t tre s, $1 000
refunds from that date through
m
eats and factory choke guns
or wtll tra de for a van Call
Ours
only
the end of the moo th
949 5741 after 5 p m
Mr. and Mrs Albert Htll of
11 22 tfc
1 31 3tc
Slagle based hts claun of
Racme were supper guests of
PUBLIC
NOTICE
1
)llegal collection smce SJlpl 9, OEF!.A Par.mit No l 027 AD
NOW selling Fuller Brush 1969 IMPALA Custom
Mr and Mrs Stanley Trussell
good
Produc ts phone 992 3410
1972 on the fact •c,Gensral Elfecltva Date May 5 1975
condttlon
Factory
atr
p s
on Thursday evemng
1 '14 He
Natu1na1 Pollutant D1scharge
p b pr ced to se ll Phone 992
Telephone allegedly fililed" ld Eitrhtnatton
System (NPDES)
7617
Mr and Mrs Rodney Tuttle
Pe f mtt Program
file a rate schedule r ' 1
INCOME Tax Prepared both
I 29 6tc
have moved mto a house on the
~
PUBLIC NOTICE
Federal and State Tax.es wt ll
General
Telephone's
atProposed NPDES Permtf to
Arvtl Holter farm
be done by appotntments 1960 MGA 2 dr convertib le
toryey , John R Jones of Dls c tlarge to Stale Walen
on
ly Please phon e 992 2212 or
very good conddton Phone
Mr and Mrs Da.my Flinner
OhtO
Environmental
see Mrs Wanda Ebltn Laurel
992 7737 after 5 p m
Colmnbus,
satd
he
felt
'the
Protectton
Agenc.y
Cliff Rd Pom eroy Ohto
and chtldren spent Sunduy
1 29 6tc
P 0 BO)( 1049
dec aston ts m error and we'll do
1 J JOtc
evenmg wtth Mr and Mrs ,
361 East Broad Street
19 73 F=ORD Country Squt r e
everythmg we can to
Columbus Oh to 43216
James Batley and son
wagon
20 000 m ties
all
AUL TION
Thursday
and
614 466 4891
straighten thmgs outJJ ·
eQutpment S3 500 Phone 992
Saturday ntgtlt 7 p m at
The scho ols were closed
3493 or 992 2720
Jones satd he wtll probably
Mason Auctwn Hor ton St m
PubliC Nottce No OEPA 75
Monday due to sno"
-----------Ma
son
W
va
ConStgnments
02 017
welcome
Phone
(3041
773
Mrs Stanley Trussell and ask the Supreme Court to
D.it t e of I ssue ~of Pub lt c
For Sale
5411
Mrs Ora Hill of Racine spent rehear the case He declined to NoUce Febcuary l i' 1975
10 J tfc
discuss
the
next
step
should
the
INT 3 bon 14 ' plow No U F
Friday at Lucasville wtth Mrs
Name and Address of Ap
20&amp;80 Also 3 pi htlch trac tor
Supreme
Court
refuse
to
FOR your
0 I of Mtnk"
Plt
cant
Ada Cramlet. a pahent at a
oarr•er I ft H D
~hone
CosmeltCS
Phone
BROWN
S
Souther n Ohto Coal Company
tl.
7425113
992
5113
rest home there. She ts qmte rehear
Me tgs Mine Number 1
I 3 I 3t p
'
General
Telephone's present
l 7 tfc
P 0 Sox 91
poorly
Albany
OhtO
45710
MILLIONS of rugs have been
Mrs Thelma Whtte VISited trouble occurred beca\tse tl
cleaned Wtth Blue Lus tr e II s
not
sattsfted
with
an
Aug
was
Help
Wanted
Name and Address of Factlrty
her slster-m-law, Mrs. lrts
Amertca s
f1ne st
Rent
where Dtscharge Occ urs
17,1971
PUC
order
grantmg
tl
a
elect r c shampooer $1 Baker
Carr near Alfred Mrs Carr
LADIE S turn your spare ttme
Sou
thern
Oh
tO
Coal
Company
F urntture Company
rate hike
•nto money
Postlton now
MetgS Mtne Number I
has been Ill for some time
1 31 Jtc
open
for
ambtttous
person
Slate Route 124 four mtles
The utllitl ftled swt m the
Phone 992 2868
High winds on Saturday blew
west of Langsville Ohto
USED parts Frye s T ruck and
Salem Township
2 2 31(
down a new metal barn on the Supreme Court after puthng
Auto Parts Rutland 0/"110
--------------Me igs County Ohto
mto
effect
the
Increase
granted
Phone (6141 742 6094
James Batley farm whtch
R N for parlttme posd ton w 1t h
Recelvtng Wat er
by
PUC.
The
court
on
June
21,
planned parenthood cl tnlCS
I 22 78tp
Parker
Run
housed tractors and other farm
educatmn , and soc tal servtces
NOTICE The above named
1972
reversed
the
PUC
order
on
responstbtltttes 16 hour s cer 1971 YAMAHA 250, new parts
machinery
applicant has appl ted for a
groWlds
the
PUC
dtd
not
gtve
extr as . good condttton Phone
week
Call off ice 992 5912
NPDE
S
perm
it
to
diScharge
Several from here attended
992 2258 alter 6 p m
weekday s except Thursday
nto the destgnated recelvtng
reasons
on
whtch
tl
based
Its
1 30 6tc
the basketball game at Eastern
1 29 61 c
water The perm 11 Wi ll be tssuect
rate hike
by the OhiO Em11r0nment~JI
on Saturday mght
WAITRESSES needed app l y m GRAVELY tractor Pre season
On Sept. 29, 1972 the PUC re- Protect•on Agency
spectal Pur chase any new
person Crows St eak House
Th is
appltcant
Is
a
issued the same rate Increase manufacturer of coa l and has 5
Pomeroy
Gravely conver tible tractor
at regular list pr.ce and we
1 7 tfc
and stated tis reasons to extsting discharge PO•nts The
wtll g1ve you a new 30 • rotary
cur renl operations of th ts -------...-- --- - comply wtth the high court. On ct ischarger res ult In an average
mower attachment, FREE
INDUSTRIAL LEAGUE
No trade m and no del •verv on
Sept 5, 1973, Slagle filed his ef fluent flow Of 300.000 gallons Wanted To Buy
Won Lost
lhts offer goocf th rougll Feb a,
per
dav
Key
par&amp;meters
to
be
Steam Boat Inn
24
8 sutt setting up the stage for hmded In tne proposed permtt
1975 Grave l y Tractor Sa les
K C Jewe ler!
24
a Wednesday's declSlon The are as fOllows Total Suspendect WANTED Ol d upr tghl PIANOS , Pomeroy , Oh10 Phone (614 1
any
condtt•on
Paymg
S10
Mllhone Soh to
16
16
99'1 2975
Restdual
Sol td s, Total Iron
each First floor on l y Wrtle
Landmark
16
16
Supreme Court satd when the Chlorine.
1 29 6tc
Biochemical O xyg~
and
gtve
dtrecttons
to
Wttten
Team 4
10 22
Demand
,
Ammon
ta
,
and
Total
Aug
17,
1971
PUC
order
"was
Ptano Co , Bo)( 188. Sardts
Jack's Place
6
26
A I k.alln tty
TABLE saw and 10mter for
Oh•o 43946
H tgh Team Series - Land
reversed by this court, the
sale Phone 843 2292
l
30
6tp
mark 2668 , I( C Jewelers 2579,
On the b&amp;S1S of prel tmlnary
mcreased rates pursuant to staff
1 28 6tc
St&amp;am Boat Inn 2541
r eview and olppllcaHon of
Hl9h Inti Series - Smith 620
such order could no longer be standards and regulat tons th e OLD furntture , Ice boxes brass --------------Hatftela 618 ~ Tyree 578
Dtre c tQr of the Ohto En
beds , or complete households
lawfully charged "
High lnCI Game - Smith and
vlronm~atal Protection Agency
Wrtte M 0 Mtller , Rl 4, For Rent

QUALITY

B usmess serv1ces
•

I

Wante~

The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Mond11y , Feb. 3, 1975
•• 7DICK

Soulb
1¥
5t

lla11

take a heart nnesse against
Ealt, discard one of dummy's
spades on the ace of hearts, ruff
a heart, ruff a club, ruff another
heart to set up the last one, ruff
111other club, discard dummy's
last spade on the last heart, ruff
his three of spades In dummy
and make his contract "
Oswald ''I see the unusual
defensive pia~ East can beat
the contract
letttng South's
kllljl hold the trst dtamond "
Jtm "Let's leave It to our ,
readers to see why thta duck
play Will leave South one tnck
short They are looking at all
the cards. No expert at San An·
tonto looking at just his own
hand and dummy made the
play"
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN l

'z:a:t:1,!M\'tD
The btddmg has been

3

L-J_..J-.J-..1-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTB- Here's how
AXYDLBAA.Xa
II LONGJ'BLLOW

to work It:

By OIIWaltl &amp; James Jacoby

Jim "i:ler~ 11 a hand from
the 18'14 Fall Nalionall which
cave oome Eut players a
One letter almp)J atandl for another. In thla umplt A II Chance to make a most UDUiual
used for the three L'a, X for the two O'a, e~ Sln&amp;le letteta, , deff!llllive play."
apoatrophea, the lenJ(h and formation of the words are aU • O.Wald "It wouldn't be too
bbttJ. EliCh day the code letters are dlferent
many of them, becaUJe at 111011t
tablet South would either be
CRYPTOQUOTE
playlnl rour dlamondl or Weot
four spadeo doubled "
BPU GMTXF LS SXAKB WLJU Xlt playlnl
Jim: "Wheu Wut Jumped tD
four spades 81111 Soulh refUHd
LHA XTRLAMRFU BPMB XB FMR to sell out, it waa automaUc for
Eut to doable South would win
UJUA
URI.-QURDMGXR
I X I tbe spade openmc and put tbe
kine Of dlamonclll on the ta~le
Ealt woUld take bll ace and
AMUWX
lead out two top clulnt South
would ruff the seCond club, lead
YISiaclal'a Ctjpli ,- lei tJiJ!: LIME liE!!!!!!:~
a lnlmp to dummy's queen,
AND ANGER IS A THIN LINE. - JOHN Duwn.._

Wett

Nortb

t•

Eatt

Paos
Pass
P11s 31
Pass
Paas 4 t
Pass
You, South, bold

South

I t

t•

Uo
?

.AQ76¥2 tKJH.AQ&amp;2
Wltat &lt;!o you do now

A-

Ju1t bid four spadet You

••e made a alom try.
TODAY'S QUESTION
You do bid four spades Your
partner continues to five spades
Wbat do you do'
Aaswer Tomorrow

Send $1 for JACOBY MODERN
book to

'Wm at Br~oge

' (c/o

th1s newspaper! P 0 Box 489.
RadiO C1ty St~110n New York.
NY 10019

�.'

"• ' I

I ,

.

R-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Feb. 3, 1975

Report from Americ.a

·

Gigantic coupJe ·dines out
SHELBYVIU.E, Ind . (UPI)
- The tallest girl in the world
finally had her first date during
the weekend.
Nineteen-year-old Sandy
Allen went out with Dan
Gerber, 7-foot-2.
Sandy is 7-foot~ and is listed
in the Guinness Book of
Records as the world's taUest
woman.
Gerber, 22, traveled 211
.miles from Flora, !II., to take
out Miss Allen after reading a
newspaper article about her.
Despite tbe number of photograPhers and reporters pre,
sent, the couple said, "It is
possible for two people over
seven-feet tall to have a normal
date ."
Miss Allen indicated she
might like to try another date
- if they could find an inbetween meeting , place since
the 211 miles was \oo much for
either to nego ti ate with
regularity.
The date ended with a dinner
in Indianapolis. Waitress
Sandy Fisk said she served the
following :

Miss Allen had three shrimp potato, salad, two buckets of
cocktails, three lklunce filet hot rolls, hot popcorn served in
mignons, ·two giant baked salad bowls, a double pie a ia
potaines with two oversized mode - washed down with ' 19
orders of fren ch-fried mush- soft drinks. .
The couple was accompanied
rooms. a double order of
omon rings and salad. For by Dan's sister, Mrs. Judy
dessert, a dbuble order of ice Bryan, who drove him from
cream ca ke, a triple banana F1ora to Shelbyville for the
split, followed by another triple date.
version of shrimp cocktail and ' Also along was Miss Allen's
two soft drinkss.
6-year-oid brother, Mike WarGerber had a shrimp cock- ner. He settled for a hamburtali, three filets, a baked ger.

="~::~~ ·;;:;. ;:;1 Vandals hit
away your woolens soon now

.

.

:®

I

winter ~

·

-

.

·

KC 0 ££•Ice
.
.

Frank E. Gress

dieq on Friday
Frank E. Gress, 54, Chicago,
lll ., a professional musician,

died Friday at the St. Joseph
·· PUNXSUTAWNEY, Po. (UPII - Itwasa raw
Hospital in Chicago.
morning and the temperature was a ch!Uing 27 degrees. But ~
.
Mr. Gress was born Aug . 11,
PuDxsutawney Phil, the forecaster without peer saw what ~
·
1920.
He was preceded in death
his shivering foUowers could never soe and only hope for - i::
by his father, Frank Gress of
a short winter, with spring just aroWJd the corner.
·
For
the
second
time
this
found
by
Ed
Spears,
Gallia
Pomeroy, and his wife, Gladys.
AI 7:31 a . m. EST, Sunday, the famed groundhog,
year,
vandals
struck
the
office
County
Schools
Maintenance
.Mr . Gress had been a
known as 'the chief weather propostiealor In the United
of Kyger Creek High School man.
member
of the Musicians
Stales (lbe world?l " peekl-d out of bls warm, winter burrow
Principal
Robert
L.
Lanning
According
to
deputies,
Union in Chicago area the past
on Gobbler's Koob to make his annual weather predietion ..
over
the
weekend.
someone
apparently
crawled
30
years. Before becoming a
PbU looked around, concluded there was no way.he was -~
Gallia
Co
unty
sheriff's
onto
the
roof
of
the
school
and
professional
musician, during
going to see bls llhadow on such a cloudy morning, told !§]
deputies
said
th ~ entry oc- down into the closed.Jn yard . his high school years and '
Groundhog Club president Sam Light tho good news aod ;§
turred some time alter 1:30 near the principal's office. shortly after, Gress played in
went back to bed. .
~
Ugbt, 19, who for nearly a quarter'&lt;'entury bas:carried :,~ a.m. Sunday. The damage was They broke out a window next several local orchestras. His
,to the air conditioner in Lan- primary instrument was the
on the 89-year-old tradition of tappiJ;tl! on Phil's door every
ning's office.
saxophone.
Feb. 2 to ask lor a forecast, said Pb1l reaDy surprised him.
Surviving are his mother,
Once
inside,
the
intruders
"I said, 'What, no sbadow?" Ugbtsaid. "Just last night
Lillian
Gress of F'orperoy ; two
damaged
and
ransacked
I heard on the news that there was a big snowstorm in the
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
sons,
Randy
of lafayette, Ind.,
Lanning 's desk. They also
West."
February 1, 1975
entered the school's outer and Frank of Chicago; a
Ugbt, however, did nolleII Phil about the snow.
Sales Report of
office
and ransacked the desk grandson, Randy of lafay~tie;
DENVER CITY , Tex. (UP! ) door neighbor, the J. C. Patton
"Who am I to teU him about the weather," Ugh! said.
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
family
,
who
lived
ao
yards
of
high
school secretary Mrs. two sisters, Mrs. David (Betty)
- The whit&lt; cloud of poison
, : "He's tbe chief weather progoastlcator In the United
STOCKER CATTLE - Diane Bittinger.
closer
to
the
wellhead,
.
and
Ohlinger of Middleport, and
gas billowed from the ruptwed
States."
STEERS - 250 to 300 lbs. 19 to
Missing
were
keys
taken
Mrs .
Leon
(Patricia)
oil well and drifted 200 yards, prayed that he wa\m't too late.
So start putting your woolens in mothbnilo, shine up the
24 ; 300 to 400 lbs. ro to 25.50; 400 from a key cabinet and student
He was. Glenda Patton , 40,
McKnight
of
Pomeroy;
a
seeping ·into the home of Tom
golf clubo aod restring the tennis racquet. When PbU says , to 500 lbs. 20 to 25.25; 500 to 600
answered
the'
call
and
her
42files
taken
from
cabinets.
brother,
Richard
of
Middleport
Merrill . Inside Merrill, his wife
lbs.20 to 26.25; 600 to 700lbs. 19
year-old husband went outside
The vandals took time out to and several nieces and
and two sons were asleep.
to 27.50; 700 lbs. and Over 22 to write obscene language on
winter
over
',
nephews.
Essie Merrill, 31, awoke, at their home to see where the
29.75.
Lanning's desk and spilled
Funeral services will be held
first not kn owing exactly why. smell could be coming from.
HEIFER CALVES - 250 to beer over it and the office · at 10 a. m. Tuesday at the
But
the
Pattons
made
the
She looked at the clock beside
300 lbs. 17 to 2.1; 300 to 400 lbs.· carpet. Missing was a small
'
Sacred Heart Church in
their bc&gt;d It was 5 a.m. Sunday. fat al mistake of retwning to
18 to 21.75; 400 to 500 lbs. 20 to calculator and $18 in change.
the house. Mrs. Patton called
Pomeroy with the Rev. Father
There was something wrong.
24 ; 500 to 600 lbs. 19 to 24.50; 600
the
city
police
and
then
called
Deputies
also
reported
the
Paul Welton officiating. Burial
She sniffed once, twice and
to '100 lbs. 18 to 23.75; 700 lbs. school yard had been damaged
back
the
Merrill
household
to
Con
tinued
from
page
I
will be in Sacred Heart
shoo k her 33-year-old husband
and Over 20 to 26.
tell them that her husband had
by spinning car wheels.
Cemetery. Rosary services
from his slwn ber .
appeared before Judge Bacon
STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS (By
Meanwhile,
Gallipolis
aty
will
be held at 7:30 this evening
"I recognize the odor and come back inside and passed
on a bill of Information and The Head) -Stock Cows 120 to
out.
Minutes
later
they
and
Police
officers
investigated
at the Ewing Funeral Home
knew what we were up
entered a plea of guilty. He 160; Stock Cows and Calves 135
their 18-year-old daughter
three
acts
of
vandalism
and
a
where friends may · call
agai nst, " Merrill said.
pleaded guilty to depriving the to 215; Stock Bulls 115 to 165;
theft complaint over the anytime.
He and his wife scram bled Deede were dead.
owner, the Meigs Local School Baby Calves 15 to 40 ; (By The
So were six others caught in
into the next room and for ced
District of a mechanism for Poundt - Canners &amp; Cutters weekend. ,
'
ST.
WUIS
The
Second
the
deadly
cloud
of
gas
fumes
Edsel New reported someone
their children out of . bed.
Coat Guard District, including testing blood pressure, a tape Cows 15 to 18.25; Holstein Cows slashed the tires on his car
from
an
~attended
carbon
Merrill grabbed for the phone,
0
player, a set of scales and an 18 .25 to 20.60; Commercial
dialed the nun1ber of their next dioxide Injection system de- the Middle Ohio River Valley, AC-DC power supply unit Bulls ( 1,000 lbs . and Over I 20 to which was parked on Third
signed !o squeeze as much oil emergency t&lt;iephone number
Ave. near Bob Rees parking
valued at more than $150.
24.
as poSsible from a well.
'' has been changed. The switch
lot.
Black was arrested on Jan.
VEAL CA LVES - Tops 220
TWO TREATED
Tile Merrills escaped. He was made necessary by a new 30 by the sheriff's Dept. on a
Officers were called to BOb
lbs.
to
250
49
to
54.50;
Medium
Centrex
Telephone
System
The
Middleport
E·R squad
weaved his family out to his
charge of bemg an accessory to 200 lbs. to 300 31 to 42; Culls 30 Saunders' Quaker State Ser- 1111swered a caD to Rutland St.
~eing
install,ed
by
Southcar, pushed his children in the
vice Center where someone cut
a burglary which occurred on
back seat, got his wife· in the wes tern Bell Telephone Jan. 19 at Meigs High School. Down.
the air hose outside the station at 8a. m. Monday for Carl Steel
Company
.
SHOATS
8
to
12.
who was suffering a severe
passenger's seat and climbed
and placed a tire over it.
"ON~ OFTHE BfST EVER MADE!"
Black was released on his own
L~ l Mltlll fl 11111
•
Beginning
February
1st
all
behind the wheel.
Harold Ault of 39 Garfield nosebleed. He was taken to
recognizance by Judge Bacon.
Coast
Guard
numbers
had
the
"We managed to back out In
Ave. reP&lt;Irted someone broke a Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The Information affidavit was
the road and she (his wife) fell prefi~ 425 ins~ ad of.the ~ld 622. prepared by Prosecutor Fultz.
'
- glass with a B.B. gun. Phil The squad also took Roy
Dwing
an
emergency
any
over my foot, sJ8mming the
Stevers of Rodney reported the Boggs, 41, to Veterans
" Good
salesmanship
person
utilitzing
the
western
Continued from page 1
accelerator to the noor and
theft of a CB radio taken from Memorial !Jospital at 7:09 a.
consists ol selling goods
HOSPITAL
NEWS
that's the way we got to town," rivers may reach the · Coast
that won't come back, to
spending, including direct pay- his truck parked at the m. Satuday from ihe Shamrock
Guard
Rescue
Coordination
customers who will. "
Merrill said.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ments, was expected to drop in Gallipolis Electric Company. Inn.
Center
by
calling
(314)
420The Merrills were the lucky
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS fiscal 1976 to $534 million Customers that appreciate
ones . Police arrl ved to find the 4614.
- Grace Roush, Racine; lowest since 1951 - because
good quality materials at
Persons who want to obtain Charles Yonker, Letart Falls; high market prices have
dead -the three Pattoos plus
ressonable pr ices always
general
Coast Guard in- Avis McClellan.• langsville.
five others staying at their
reduced the need for crop
come back to the Pomeroy
formation
can call the Public
home: Mrs. Patton's parents, J.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES suppor t.
Cemenl Block Co., the
home ollhe " FRIENDLY
R. May, 57, of Arlington, Tex ., Mfairs Office at (314 ) 425-4628. - David Jacks, Jr., Patrick
Ford also proposed cuts in:
ONES".
57, and his 55-year-old wife; Consumers interested in ob- Jacks , Bernard Rairden ,
FltDm illl lil&lt;JOi " ""' ft 11m
"
~I
- Conservation .subsidies,
APOt ~ rlalolillni«P ~ It~
Mrs. Patton's sister and her taining recreational boating Juani ta Frederick , Ernest which would be eliminated
Ohio Power Co. customers
WEDNESDAY husband, A. L. Amerson, 53, of safety facts may inquire by Clark, Edward Buffipgton,
entirely
at
an
estimated
saving
with
a hardship in paying their
2 DAYS ONLY
Portales, N.M.; and Clara dialing ( 314) 420-5971.
Elmer Norvell, Albert Hill, of $199 million although Con- electric bills will be extended
Peevey, 18, a friend of Deede
John
Blosser,
Denn is gress is vii-tually certain to additional consideration with
to customers whose amual
Patton's.
McKinney, Jason Reyn olds, keep thell) alive.
regard to payments 1111d cutoff usage of electricity is 9,600
The ninth victim was Steve
Teresa Spencer.
992-5303
-Rw-al housing loans and of service, the Canton-based kilowatt hours or more.
SHOW TIMES 7 ~ 00 • 1:00
Sparger,
19, an · employe of
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS ' IDIUtY ND 'AUU
grants that wowd total $2.142 utility said today.
"As soon as we can make a
Atlantic Richfield.
George Clonch, Gallipolis; billion in fiscal 1976, down $120
An agreement has been change in the wording in our
Murl Ours, Long Bottom; million .
worked out between the state's rate schedule with the PUCO,
•
Leona Stewart, Pomeroy ;
Development Loans
electric and gas companies and we can expand the equal
Joseph Sayre, · Reedsville;
- Rural development loans the Public Utilities Com- payment 1Plan to cUBtomers
Joan Piokens , Portland;\ and grants that would total mission of Ohio whereby the using less ·than 9,600 KWH per
Rhoda South, Racine ; Mary
EXTON, Pa . - Foote Holter, Minersville ; Marvin $1.060 billion, down $120 million. elderly and needy may be year," the spokesman said.
-Soil conservation operations extended special credit
Other points agreed upon
Mineral Company announced Tom, Albany.
including
watershed
developarrangements,
thus
reducing
were that the company would
last week both sales and
•
SUNDAY DISCHARGES - men! would get $409 million, a the necessity of disconnecting communicate with Individuals ,
earnings reached record Sharon Covert, Warren
drop of $17 million.
service for non-payment.
and
through
local
leveJ,s. in.l974..
, Reeves.
Rural
electric
and
..
teleThe
company
said
that
most
organizations to relay in- ·
Whenev.e r you feel we can help you with any banking
'Sales froll) .contin].ling
phone loans which would drop · of the proposals agreed to are formation 'concerning the new
til'
matter and you can't come in to talk with us, just give
oP.rations were $l18.8 ,!.illion
$62 million to just under $2.4 in expansion of its normal company credit procedures,
Holzer Medical Center
. compared with $a8.4 million'in
us a ca ll! We're here tQ serve you and wel come phone
billion.
procedures. For example, the and that Ohio Power will ex- ,
(Births I
1973. Net earnings for 1974 was '
ca lls as well as your per ~ onal visits. So if you want to
company
disconnects a pand its present policy . of
Friday - Mr. and Mrs.
$11.3 million, equivalen~ to
know vour 'bank balance, the latest checks you've writcustomer's
service
only after providing the customers with
$1.47 per share; 1974 net ear- William Adkins, ·daughter ,
ten to 'riear , need information about 8 loan or any bank
extensive Investigation of the instructions to enable him to
INTEREST LOWERED
nings were reduced by J!.9 Ewing ton .
non-payment aod after having make additional credit
ser.v ke - just call us. We want to help.
Mr . and Mrs . Harry
DETROIT
(UPI)
million or $.27 per share
C!Jntacted
the customer.
· arrangements.
because of a change in the Goodrich, daughter, Wellston. Michigan National Bank of
"Ohio
Power
will
cooperate
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Thomas
Hunt,
Detroit announced il has
method : of valuing nearly all
'
•
lowered its prime interest rate with the PUCO in helping
inventories . Earnings were daughter, Ewington.
CLASS
TIME
SET
relieve
the
hardships
which
Mr. and Mrs. Terry May, on business loans to 8% per
$2.8 million equivalent to $.26
RACINE- The first training
cent from 9 per cent. A bank make it difficult for these
per share in 1973 ilnder the new daughter, Bidwell.
for the Racine EMT wiD
class
spokesman said the new rate is people to pay their electric be at 7 p.m. Wednesday at the ·
method (last out, first inPleasant Valley Hospital
believed to be the lowest in the bills," a company spokesman
LlFOI.
firehouse.
POMEROY, OHIO
said.
.
DISCHARGES
Mrs. country.
Sales from continuing
The
company
agreed
to
operations in the fourth Melvin Halstead , Point
make its equal payment plan
MEMBER FDIC
quarter 1974 were $34 million Pleasant; Richard Grinstead,
· to residential
available
CLOSINGS T04
New
Haven
;
Mrs
.
Vance
BOARD TO MEET
compared with $21.5 million in
custOmers
not
presently
MEMBER 'FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
Crow's Steak House will be
The Gallia-Meigs Comthe 1973 quarter. Net earnings Crites, West Columbia; Shirley
eligible in order to spread closed from 8 a.m. until.4 p.m.
Schartizer,
Middleport;
Steven
munity
Action
Agency
for tbe fourth quarter on a
payments more evel\ly over on Tuesday due to the death' of
UFO basis were $3.8 million, Oldaker , Hartfo rd ; Alberta executiVe board will hold its
the
period of a year. Under Dr. Thomas H. Crow, co-owner
equivalent to $.51 per share Davis, Gallipolis ; Mrs. Everett monthly meeting on Thursday,
tenns
and conditions of the
compared to earnings of $1 Schuler, daUghter, Midiueport ; F'eb . 6at 8p. m. at the Cheshire present rates, the equal with his sons, Robert H. Crow,
Syracuse, and Thomas D.
million, equivalent to $.14 per Mrs. Wilford Roush, daughter, Communit y Center . All
plan
now
Is
avaUable
payment
Crow, Pomeroy . .
share for the 1973 period on a Pomeroy ; Mrs. John Black, members are urged to att&lt;nd.
FIFO basis. Foote stated that Northup ; Mrs. Kenneth Bir·
its net earnings and net ear- chfield, Gallipolis ; Sally Allen,
nings per common share on a Fraziers Bottom; Frank
·UFO basis for the first three Bennett, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
quarters of 1974 were $1,091 ,000 lloward Cunningham, Letart;
· ($.12 per share ), $3,283,0110 Bobbi Winebrenner , West
($.43 per share) and $3,ll9,o00 Columbia ; John Beegle, Leon;
. HaD,
West
($.41 per share ) respectively. Benjamin
Columbia;
Clara
Biber!,
Wayne T. Barreti, Fresident
and Chief Executive Officer, Delaware ; Mrs. James Marsh,
.
.
stated ..... "Aithough demand Point Pleasant ; Yvonne .
Bareswilt,
Middleport;
Arthur
has been reduced for some of
our products by ' lower McCoy, Henderson ; Opal
operating levels in the Priddy, Point Pleasant.
aluminum and automotive
Industries, we continue to
ASK TO WED
operate al near capacity levels David Lee Donahue, 22,
because of strong demand Racine, and Loretta Ann
from the steel and foundry Triplert, Route 1, Racine.
industries.
.
Foote operates a plani at ,:n:::n:art:nuu.
ur,r:~
G~ Station in Mason
· EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Co)m!f, W. Va . .
W.e dnesday through
Just received a new shipment of Base
rwosurrs F1LED
Friday, cbance of showers
Cabinets - Wall Cabinets - Utility Cabinets Two actions for support
Weduesday ud a. cbance ·of
Wardrobes
and China Cabinets111der the States' Reciprocal
snow flurries mainly north
.
llipport Agreement Act have
po~a Thursday. Higba·mkf
been IUed in the Meigs County 30s to mid ·tos Wednesday
~ compl_ete new line to meet every household need- Electrically welded
OalmM Pleu Court, one by
lowering to 'the 20s by
1n on_e prece - tops are heat and stain resistant - magnetic iloor catches.
MIDdy Davis, Middleport,
Friday. ~· In the 38s ud
Stop m now- selectthe one·you need and save.
· ·
. lll!linst Richard Davis, Rt. 't,
'
.
upper 20s Wrdnesclay
Belle Vernon, Pa., and the
. '
lowering to 5 to 15 above.
~ by PatriCia Edith Smith,
Friday.

Nine caught by
·deadly white gas

.

·.

v

Market Report

~=:el ·~;:~:~ 0~11:~.::.:·$:~:~».=~**'~::J

.

..I .

Repair,,of .parking lot wall could be this year

Blda for 'the repair of thti upper parking lot wall along ihe
Ohio River in Pomeroy could be invited in March, with repair
work beginning in April, Mayor Dale E. Smith told Pomeroy
Council Monday night.
.
, Mayor Smith said he had been in touch with Cong. Clarence
Mlller, Governor James Rhodes and the U. S. Corps of Engineers
in Huntington about the rna Iter.
·
According to a letter from Col. Scott B. Smlth of the Huntington Corps office, the repair' of the upper lot has been approved by the division engineer and 235 feet of repair work and
reinforcing could be done at a cost of $50,000.
It was also pointed out that under new regulations, up to
$150,000 may be spent on the project without special legislation.
According to ti)e ~etter, tbe project could be adve~tised in
March and work to be,pn in April. Councilman Bill Snouffer said
he doubled if the parking lot wall, which officials charge is going
into the Ohio River due to erosion and the higher water level, ca n
be repaired for the maximum $150,000.
Council approved the first reading of an ordinance which will
increase the pay of the mayor, the villa ge clerk and council
membersas of Jan. 1, 1976. H given final approval, the ordinance

provides·for $2',4110 a year lor the mayor, $3,000 for the clerk, and system. They said they would upgrade service, and indicated
$10 to CQunctimen for regular and $5 for spec!al meetings.
that they bave wurked ih this direction in the operation of their
An amendment was passed aiso setting up the salary of Don bu~iness. Tbey stated that Pomeroy people perhaps would prefer
McKenzie, who was employed recenlly as street superintendent'· domg busmess With an established firm since the route Is already
and increasing wnges of other employes to meet the minimum established.
wage requirement.
Councilmen Harry Davis and John Manley indicatid that a
Mr. and Mrs. Don Griffin who operate Scientific Sanitation new firm might cause more difficulty than the town has now in
inc. which had picked up trash in the community for almost fotir . th e setting up .or a new route by • new firm . Th~y also said they
years, appeared before council to question why someone had felt that Griffm should have been notified of council's intention
been licensed to do the pickup service at the last meeting of before the late January meeting when the new firm was engaged.
council. At that meeting on Jan. 20, council agreed to issue a The Griffins indicated they would cooperate In every way for a
license to Blaine Rice of New MarShfield to operate a collt!ctlon satisfactory arrangement in Pomeroy. The new collection serservice in the town.lt was reported at that time that the license vice is scheduled to begin in March .
·
of Scientific Sanitation had 'eX pired on Dec. 31, 1974.
It was pointed out that Rice has not submitted a contract in
Councilmen said they had talked with some customers of writing, as he had indicated he would , on which he was to outline
Scientific Sanitation in town and found that there were com- services and rates. It was decided to table the matter untll Feb.
plainls aboutthe billing . Scientific Sanitation biDed three months 17 and the Griffins were asked .to have their service provisions
at a time and council members said that residents did not wish to and rates also in writing by that time. It was ngreed, too, to have
pay in advance .
a representative of the Rockwell Parking Meter Co. present at
Mr. and Mrs. Griffin indicated that they would bill in any
the Feb. 17 meeting.
manner that was satisfactory, possibly monthly , tilling a coupon
Pollee Chief Jed Webster reported he has conferred with

•

Weather
Lows tonight mid 30s, highs
Wednesday upper 30s.

Devoted To The. lntere~Sls Of The
POM EROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XXVI NO. 206

Now You Know

en tine

at

Rain likely tonight, changing

to snow, colder Wednesday.

~ompanies selling. officer ut]iforms and 18 getting several price
Usts. It was also reported th~'t Webster will hold a meeting with
officers each month to discuss work and other matters they want
presented to councll.
Mayor Smith read a communication from a Malo, N.Y.;
finn which wished to act as a conoultant for the vlllile'a ob- .
servBDce of the Bicentennial. The finn can build a statue of
Uncle Sam up' to ·1.20 feet II! height, the commualcatlon ~ald. No
action was taken.
Council again discussed the need ior a new or remodeled
village haU. Clerk Jane Walton reported several applications for
federal money which could he used in remodellrig have been
made. Councilman Davis asked that a letter from the village to
Ted Reed, Chamber of Commerce president, be sent urging the
sil!"ing of petitions for securing the former Pomeroy Senior'High
bu1ldmg for a village hall. There was some disagreement,
however, on whether the building would be satisfactory, and it
was suggested that the building committee study the senior high
building .
It was agreed again to advertise for bids on village owned
Continued on page 8

Meigs ~Ma.~on

The term mach, used In
describing supersonic speed, is
named after German physcist
Ern st Mach.

Areu
P.~QNE

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1975

992-2156

Emergency Foley
CG phone
is changed

WOIIDIR·
OriTAIJ.

Farm rural

..

·'

PREsENr:eD -

. STATE FLAG
92nd District State
Representative .'Ron James, fourth from left, Monday
presented the Cheshire ViUage Counell a new state flag.
Participating in the presentation were (1-r) Mayor Walter
(Scotty) Lucas, Marjorie Saunders, clerk; Helen Preston,
treaswer; James, Erna Cornelius and Gladys Rife, councilwomen, and Don Skaggs, Ken Wise, Harold Mack and
Grover Cremeans, councilmen.

Ohio );&gt;ower admits

hardship in customers

paying hills

J.~I§.S lH~!!~ov

Records made
in sales and

net earnings .

Give us a call.•.

.

Farmers Bank &amp;Savings Co.

FDIG

ELBERFElDS IN POMEROY
WAREHOUSE ON
MECHANIC sTREET

·. SALE PRICES
.

I.:=~~=;~=========~::;;:~:=;;;;::~~J . 1\0Y
Elkhart,
Ind.,
agaiiut C!Uford
'Smij;h,
~a~use.
.
~

·.

t .·

J\

.: t

•'

!

'

'I

hI

'

..

Elberfelds Pomeroy • Warehouse • Mechanic St.

f d.JLCLLL
. .

',

By United Press International
SOVIET FOREIGN MINISTER ANDREI GROMYKO met
with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat today to try to talk him out
of going 'along with U.S. efforts to arrange a step-by-6tep peace
settlement In the Middle East. "I am very glad to be here and to
have this po$siblilty to talk and to exchange views, this is alway~
wry useful," Gromyko told Sadat before the private meeting at
the Egyptian's vacation home on the Nile Delta north of Cairo.
The Soviet Union and Syria want a fuU-6cale peace conference - to be chaired jointly by tbe Soviets and the United
States -but the Egyptians wiU not go along, diplomatic sources
said Monday. Tbe diplomats said Sadat is determined to give
'
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger a chance to arrange limited
A total of $1,314.30 was
Arab-Israeil peace moves before reconvening the Geneva peace · collect~d in the annual
conference.
Mothers' March of Dimes in
Meigs County, Mrs. ·Carol Jean
SAIGON - POLITICIANS AND publishers today con- Adams, campaign director,.
demned the govenunent's closing of five newspapers and the announced today.
arrests of newsmen in the most severe crackdown on the press
Of that .amount, $405.92 was
since President Nguyen Van Thieu took office. Fifteen opposition collected in Pomeroy, $406.56
. repreSentatives in the National Assembly demanded, "Thieu in M.iddleport, $101.01 in
must resign at once. He is the enemy of democracy, freedom and Syracuse, $132.37 in Racine,
justice. Thleu means war and corrUption in the army.''
$86 .35 in Tupp.ers Plains,
A newspaper publishers' group called the Committee for the $105.8D in Chester and $76.29 in
Struggle of the Freedom of the Press said in a statement, "Thieu Rutland.
ldlled five papers that dared tell the truth." The government
Conducting the Mothers '
Monday revoked the licenses of five of Saigon's 11 Vietnamese- March were members of Xi
language dallies and announced it had arrested "a number of Gamma Mu and Ohio Eta Phi
Wlderground Communist cadres operating in the editor,ial of- Chapters of Beta Sigma Phi
• flees" of the papers.
Sorority, and Jan Judge, Becky
Thomas, Sally Caldwell,
OOLUMBUS - OffiO DEPARTMENT of Highway Safety Shrirley Balser, Pam Balser,
Director Donald D. Cook today announced a plan for Ohio Carolyn Tripp, Jan Cardone,
motorists to use 19761icense plates for three years in an effort to Beverly Williams, Sue Ann
save money.
Beegle, Jo Ann Willford ,
Multi-year use of license plates with updating stickers save Patricia Pape, Gene Lyons,
the state money in handling, materials and production cosls," Kay Warden, Jean Cleland,
Cook said. Cook said the decision to UBe the red and white plates Margie West, Coraiee Cum·
for three years was made because of present and projected costs mins ,
Judy
Snowden ,
of steel,. and the cost of plate manufacturing by contractors Rosemary Snowden , Lorri
outaide, the 'state. Also considered was Ohio's present plate Snowden, Debbie Williamson,
production system in the Department of Correction and Donna Williamson , Pat
RehabWtation.
Thomas , Gladys Spencer,
Betty NeweU, Judy Starcher,
G~, WIS.- FOR 34 DAYS, THEY HAD occupied a
Judy Eichinger, Jo HiU, Mrs. '
Romari Catholic abbey in the face of National Guardsmen Henry Thomas, Jenny Machie,
IUITOundlng tllem. For the 39 militant Indians, It ended Monday
Flossie MaxsQn, and Janet
night- In handcuffs, riding to jail in two school buses. Seven Ambrose.
·
.aymphatlzers were taken along with the Indians in the two buses
March of Dimes cards have
fnm the Alexlan Brothers abbey, but were released without been placed in all the schools of
.being charged. The charges facing the 39 Indians were not the county and these are yet to
diac~.
be counted and added to the
'lbe evacuation and · arrest of the Indians, who called · total along with receipts of
tbemaelves the Menominee Warrior Society, followed an canisters placed in · business
agieen)ent Wider which the Chicago Catholic group agreed to
houses.
give the facillty to the Indians for $1 and other considerations."
The Indlantt were taken from the abbey area by National Guard
·bUies. Before leaving the area, they were stopped at a guard
•clleckpolnt, photographed and handcuffed, and then transferred
to two school buses.
The Meigs County Commissioners apparently will be
DETROIT - IT TOOK A ONE-TWO ~CH of an energy asked to certify -a special
c:risll tmd a recession to pUsh General Motors - the world's election to provide an
J.rgeet auto COIIIJilllY- from ita top spot among U. S. indU!Jtrial
operating fund for the Meigs
Wipara!iCJiia. Ii lost the proC! edge to Exxon Corp. in 1973 ilnd County .Community School,
with the flnanc:!•lreport'it Issued Monday, gave up'itS hold on the accordin,g to plans made
No.lttpOtln sales. Figures~~ dollar sales in !974 off 12 pei' Monday night .by the · ·Meigs
cent but prolllo down 60 per cent from 1973'~ record levels.
(:oun ty .Board of Retardation .
'lbe- energy cri.IU tbat sent GM skidding from the top of
,Judge Manning Webster ,
the mou"'•ln (itllhed Exxon, the world's largest oil company, to chairman of \!le board , and
the flni Position. EDlin reported 1974 sales of $45.8 billion, Rick Crow wei"e ,named . ·to
ClDIIIJIU1Id .to GM'a $31.5 bWlon .while 'GM profits of $950 million secure information 011 the laws
1!lft DOt even clolle to ED:on'o $3.14 bWlon. The plunge means a governing special elections and
,redlietlan In the quarterly diYidend ~ 85 cents a share to 60 a study will be made on the
cenlo "th~llllerve needed capital';- the first time in 29 years amount of llloney heeded to
!bat GM b.u dJ qpped ill dividend rate .
operate the community school
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Dimes walk
by mothers

nets $1,314

0~~~~ . ·~------.----~~---~---. .·-~~..;.;~.;,..;~J
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Speaker coming
.with the facts

Enormity
of it all
opposed
Mrs . E. A. Wingett discussed
the proposed annexation to
Racme with Meigs County
Commissioners Warden Ours
·and Henry Wells Tuesday
morning.

J11rs. Wingett said she does
not see how the village of
Racine can finance such an
annexation and that she hates
to see the town put so heavily in
debt if the entire four mile
square mile area is annexed.
She said the water system
would have to be extended at a
considerable cost. She stated
that many people of lhl! town
11
don't really want the an~
nexation."
" We aren't against an·
nexation , but the enormity of it
all," Mrs. Wingett said .
A letter from Thereon
Johnson was presented announcing a meeting of the
Meigs County Regional
Planing Commission for 3 p.m.
Wednesday at The Farmers
Bank and Savings Co.

A representative of the state
office of the American Cancer
Society will be at the Senior
Citizens Center Wednesday to
speak on cancer facts and
figures. There will be a session
for women from 10:30 to 11:30
and a general session for both
new .and women from 12 : 15 to
12:45 p.m.
Mrs . Eleanor Thomas,
executive director of the Meigs
TWO GIVEN HELP
County Council on Aging,
reporls that the. program ·is
RACINE - The Racine
open to all residents whether or Emergency Squad was caUed
not they are senior citizens. to Long Bottom, f\oute 1, at
The center is in the former 6:00 a.m. Monday for Wilma
Pomeroy Junior High School. Anderson who was havi:Jlg
chest pains. She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 7:05p.m. Sunday the squad
went to . Hashan for Elmer
MAYOR INJURED
Mayor Fred H.offman, S. Norvell who was having difFQilrlh St., Middleport, ficulty in breathing. Oxygen
production superintendent of was administered .
the Ohio Valley Publishing Co.,
LOCAL TEMPS
suffered the loss of the tip of his
The temperature in downindex finger on his right .hand
Monday evening correcting a town Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
linotype stoppage at the Tuesday was 40 degrees with
Quality Print Shop on Mill St. rain falling .

CANDYSTRIPERS - Capped after comple\lng 10 hours of voiWlteer service with the
Vetera.ns Memorial Hospital Candystrlpers were, left to right, Kathy Campbell, Sandy
Carleton, Crystal Glaze, Tina Duffy, and Penny Landers. Mrs. Teresa Collins presided at the
capping ceremonies. Also eligible for their caps are Dena Pratt and Terri RusseU.

Center's growth, ~ervices,
reviewed at chamber
. meet
.

'
Less than two years ago of the center since attendance

when the Meig's Senior Citizens
Center opened, there were 105
visitors at its first month. In
January , 1975, there were
1,292, · ~cording to Mrs.
Eleanor Thomas , executive
director of the Meigs County
Council on Aging, who addressed the Pomeroy Chamber
of Commerce at a noon luncheon Monday at the Meigs
Inn. ,

Mrs. Thomas outlined the
use of the facilities at the
1Pomeroy Junior High School
where the .center is located .
She cited a need for expansion

Special school elections proposed

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EXTENDED FORECAST
Thursday · through
Saturday, cold with a chance
of snow or snow flurries
Thursday and a chance of
snow nurrles In northern
portions
Friday
and
Saturday. Highs will be In
the 20s or lower 30s. Overnight lows will be In the
lower 20s on Thursday and
mostly In the teens Friday
and Saturday.

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which serves the retarded of
Meigs County.
Meigs County voters turned
down last November a 2. 75 mill
levy for operating the school.
The board, hopefully, will try
to reduce the millage needed
for the operating funds when
the measure comes up at a
special election.
The board also made plans to
move its ,meetings to various
locations· In the county so that
residents in each area may
attet\d and hear first&gt; hand the
problems which confront the

,.

II

board in providing services for might be available to the board
the county's retarded. Mrs. in continuing the operation of
Grace Weber will contact the school for the remainder of
schools to see If 'facilities can · the year. Present funda of the
board will not cover the
be used free.
It was reported that sub- operations of the school for the
stitute bus drivers l!lld a Title I rest of the year and the board is
, aide are needed. ThOse 'wishing seeking some help irorrl the ·
to apply as drivers should commissioners. ·
·contact Jean Wood and Title I
Attending Monday night's
applican.ts should contact Mrs.
Margaret Ella Lewis, director · meeting in the· commissioners'
of ·the school.
· office were Judge Webster;
It was ,also reported that the Crow, Willlaln Can:, Wilma .
board has not received word Parker, Richard Chambers,
from the County Com- Mrs. Weber, Mrs. Lewis and
missioners on , what .funds the Rev. w..H. Perrin.

•

,.
'

.

Monday nlght by Mrs. Thomas M. Theiss, director, right,
were left to' right, Mrs. Rhonda Dalley, R.N., Miss Unda
stewart, L.P.N., and Mlsti Janice Evans, L.P.N.

ASSIS'I'ANT DIRECTORS ·- Installed as assistant
directors of the Veterans Memorial Hospital Candystripers

is running higher each month .
She said
woodworking
facilities and a sewing center
are among the additional
accommodations which could
be useful . Attendance at the
center during its early montha
was almost entirely women,
but now runs about half of them
men.
The executive dire ctor
pointed out that the programs
at the center are for all senior
citizens regardless of income.
She said the center makes
obvious the need for an outlet
for stiD quite capable senior
citizens.
About 60 persons take part in
a noon luncheon held at the
center each day and many about 200 .:. _ senior citizens are
active in the . volunteer
program giving their services
in schools, hospitals and
nursing homes.
Mrs. Thomas also r&amp;viewed
the program of ·the center
which refers senior citizens to
various agencies for help and
upon . the recent health
screening program attended
by almost 2110 senior citizens.
She discribed the transportatlon ' progam which
provides ways . for seniOr
citizens to get to various
locations to handle business

matters as well as out-ofcounty trips to h9spitals and
doctors .
The cooperation of other
agencies was tern1ed "wonderfl!l", by Mrs. Thomas, who
said that only through the help
.of the many agencies and
organizations is the work of the
center so successful. .
. In conclusion, Mrs. Thomas
pointed out that guidelines for
federal funding are scheduled
to change and that after next
year the center will be expeeled to be self-6upporting.
The budget runs about
$60,000 a year for aU programs.
Mrs. Thomas Invited all
chamber members having any
suggestions on . how the
program can be supported
locally to pass along their idea~
. to her:
Theodore T. Reed, Jr.,
· ,chamber president, was in
charge of the meeting. Charles
E. Blakeslee announced the .
public hearing on highways to
be conducted at the courthouse
at 7;3a on Feb. 13.
Attending were Reed,
Blakeslee, Ralph Gr~ves, Mrs.
Thomas Wendell
. Hoover Mrs
'
'
Carolyn Thomas, SO£fetary; . ·
Virgil J'eafOrd, Dale ""arner,
Ferman Moore, Fred Crow,
Jack Cl!rsey, Bill j:;rueser,
Co~tinuect · on page B

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