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20 - The Daoly Sent mel , Moddlepart-Pomeroy. 0 .. Wednesct.1 } Jan 29, 1975

Economy 1.s

pepp

·ng
1

up .;.,.,.,.,E.,.,~.,.,~.,,!~~D~~.~~Rf~~~~~;. Question
faor Friday and Saturday

Issue in doubt

Contwued from page 9

"•th a chance of ram or

'Inflation Busters!

Continued from page 1
was presented pubhcally He saod, "There IS a proce for progress.
It doesn 't cost , ot pays Lo ts are not available in the Village of
Racone and construction IS bemg done outsode tbe corporation."
The two other person who proposed the annexation were Joe
Stobart and Tom Wolfe Wolle was oll and was not able to atrend. Cleland saod the annexation could be fonanced by mortgage revenue bonds only after exhaustmg apphcations for
government funds He saod poli ce protectwn would be expanded
also All tlus lhforma toon as to how Racone should grow is on the
comprehenso ve plan
The area above Rac10e os expected to open up with the
proposed brodge at Ravenswood , a power plant, and monmg on
the area wothin the next eoght to 10 years
Porrer, actong as agent and solicotor for the vollage, saod that
thts is not the frrst tune the annexa twn had come up When tt first
came up VIllage council was approa ched wtth the tdea He saod a
large group of people 11ant to be annexed, although if the commtsswners approve, maybe counctl would turn tf down Only
VIllage council can answer, if ot gets to council Por rer satd
"Extending servoces to those who will be annexed will take time:
It wtll take wtse use of funds an advantage must be taken of
federal funds
"Racone IS at the crossroads and should not be bypassed as
other areas in the past. Racme can stay a small, plactd place, or
tl can change tts unage. The choice has to be made for Racme
now. Let people who are aHected ha ve thetr say "
A large crowd attended

1

now the turn of the orl-nch
countr oes to shoulder most of
th e aod bW"den of helpong to
feed the hungry " Th ey 'r~
startm g from zer o,,. U S
Ambassador Edwon M Martin
saod
Nme of the 13members of the
Org an tza tton of Petr oleum
Exporttng eountnes Jomed on
proposmg th e development
Contmued from page 1
fund, ratstng hopes that they
endorse the Meogs Museum for moght make substantial contrta $5,000 grant apphcatwn to be butwns of petrodollars when
the ttrne for pledgmg arn ves
made woth the Ohoo Amen ca n
Although no goal has been set
Revolulton Bocentenmal Adye t- tllat IS up to the new
VIsory Comm tssion Openmg of
World Food Councol- FAO
the mu seu m has
bee n
esttrnates that the fun cl will
esta blished as a BJcentenmal
need at least $5 btlhon to meet
goal The group also voted to
tis ta rget of spW"rmg a 4 per
app
ly for r ecogmhon as an
PORTSMOlJ.l1L Em· TransportatiOn , Cholhcothe,
cent a yea r mmunum growth
plo)m cnt
of two
ad- and m his new posolton wtll be offtcoal Bocenlennoal Co m. rat e Ul agnculture productiOn
rm n ts trat tve spectalt sts for - responsoble for housmg related m1 ss10n whtch \\ Ould quahfy by the developmg countroes
mer!) wolh the Slate of Ohoo by ac ltvtltes, Mr Balmer! stated the county to recetve plaques to
Chtef FAO spokesman
lh c Ohoo Vall ey Reg oonal Weber ts a 1937 graduate of be a ttac hed to corporatiOn Mohamed Ben Aissa satd he
executive satd the worst of the
Development Commtss1on m the Ohoo Umverstty of JOW'· stgns
was encouraged by Saudt
Mrs Sheets , who has served
Por tsmouth was a nnoun eed nhsm and fo r over 30 years was
Arabta's r ecent donatiOn of $10
today by Frank C Balmert edtlor of the McArthur as c hairperson for the com- molhon to a Near East
Exeeuhve D1rector
' Demo cra t-Enquirer and mtsswn 's ftr st year of acCooperahve Program m the
Earl M 1Moke l Applegate, a busin ess manager of th e ltvoltes presoded over the \\ ell FAO regwn mcludmg the Arab
Por tsmouth na h ve a nd now a . Wellston Datly Sentmel He attended meetong Tiwse at.
countrtes, Iran, Paktstan, AfgClulhcothe area resodent wtll was Advertlsmg Director of tendong vre W"ged to retlU'n to hanistan and Cyprus
Continued from page I
JOin the OVRDCstaff Feb 14 as Sttffler Stores In c , Jackson. their varwus commWlthes and
"Thts could be an tnlerpretaplan
100 years old Miss Fuller recetved the check from .he Soctal
Co mmuntty
Development for the past loW" years was org antzatwns a nd
tion of the state of mond and
Btcentenmal
proJects
Several
Specoahsl
Security
fund on Jan 31, 1940. She satd recently she had conA specoal mee tong for the
Governmental and Publt c
sptrtt of some of tile countrtes
Teams also are bemg Conned
of
those
attendong
commented
tributed
$22
to the fund and had recetved more than $20 oo on
Appl egat e IS a 1962 graduate Relaloons Coordmator for the
PW"pose of sogmng players on Ath ens, Jackson, Pomeroy.
that have the funds, " Ben
benefits Her ftrst check was $22.54.
'
mterested m formmg an In· r eder al Hoc kon g, Von ton of Por tsmouth Wes t Ho gh Ohoo Depr tment of Trans- on lentaltve plans
Aissa saod
By-laws
ov
the
commissiOn
Known
as
Aunt
Id~
to
her
frtends
,
Mtss
Fuller
attended
Black·
School
and
reeeoved
hos
BA
on
dependent football team for County , Mason County and
portatiOn, and ots ad"I see tl as a rather postltve
were changed to the effect that gesture Let's face ot, $10 Rtver Academy on her home town of Ludlow Calvin Coolidge
pohtteal
sco
ence
from
Ohoo
Galha Co un ty wtll be held Ropley, W Va Team memb.,rs
mmtstrattve assistant.
one of two Vermonters elected to the presidency, was one of he;
SWlday at Galloa Academy wtll be former h1gh school, Umversoty on 1967, and atHIS new OVRDC dutoes wtll any orgamzation may select mtlhon ts rather symbohc but classmates.
High School Stgn·up woll be college and ex-semt pro playes tended law sc hool at Capo tal mclude handhn g pubh&lt; one of ots members and report tl 's a begihning alld there are
held for men Ill-years of age Anyone meehng the age hmot Umvers1ty He IS marned to rela toons for the Ohto Valley 11 to the commossoon before a other countrtes hke Iran which
and up who are !ugh school os al so onvoted to parhcopale the form er Kathy Edwards
Reg oonal Development regul ar me etong and that nught follow thts example
member wtll rematn on the
He was Labor Relatwns
graduates or the equivalent.
"We say on my country, a b1g
Accordong to Polcyn, PW'· Coordmator and Equal Op- Commossoon, Mr Balmer! commissiOn wtttl the name Is
RUTLND - Andrew Jeffers and Mrs. Richard (Judy )
nver IS made up of drops "
concluded
Stgn-up will be conducted pose of the league woll he to
wtlhdrawn by the organozatoon
Hatftel&lt;l,
86, died Wednesday Stmons, Brookvtlle ; two
from 9 to II am and from 3 to 5 expose more talent to the area portunoty Offocer for DIStroct
Boerma, too, ts optumsttc.
All sueh organtzatwnal
Non e , Ohoo Department of
morning
at
his Rt. I, Rutland, grandsons, Charles R. Hatfield
p.m
If nothing else, he saod
colleges m addoto on to the
HOSriTAL
NEWS
members
shall
have
full
votmg
restdence.
and Ketlh A. Page, and nine
recently, the conference has
The team ts beong organozed phys ical fi tness and cornprlVllege.
Mr.
Hatfield
was
born
March
great.grandchildren.
made tl hard for governments
by Jom Polcyn and Robert pe ltttve sptrot onvolved on Former librarian
Holzer Medical Center
ntght's
Attendtng
last
Funeral sevtces will be at 2
20,
1888,
at
Inez,
W.
Va.,
a
son
"to go back to the preVIous
Polcyn, both former football football
(Dioeharged, Jan. 20)
the
organtzalton
meeting
and
p.m.
Frtday at the Rawlingsof
the
!are
Henry
J
and
Mary
players at Kyger Creek, Pete
Darla Angel, Mrs Wilbert or area represented were atttlude of benevolent halfThe team woll be operated as of Pomeroy dies
Butcher
Hatfield.
He
was
Coats Funeral Home with Rev.
Neal, former runnmg great of a non-proftl effort Team
Batley and son, Alice Barn- No cklots L Leonard, 4-H Ad- heartedness whoch characterpreceded
in
death
by
hts
wife
Robert Bumgardner ofIzed
the
way
m
whtch
so
many
Galloa Academy, and Dave eqwpment, wuforms and tn·
DARWIN - Mrs. Jean Hart, house, John Bevan, Georgia
visory
Counctl;
Lollis
Osborne,
Lelia
Adkins
Hatfteld
,
ml965
~
ftctating
Burtal will be in
of them tackled the problem.
Rule, a Gallipohs resodent who SW'ance woll be pW"chased 65, Darwin, librarian at the Bowles, Jarvts Burke, Deborah
Pomeroy
Vtllage
Coun
ctl
,
sister
and
two
brothes
'
Rivervtew
Cemetery, Mid'~ As far as I am concerned "
played htgh school foo tball at through varwu fund ratsmg Pomeroy Public Library for a Burnett, Marjorie Callicoat,
Henry
W
ells,
Metgs
County
He
was
a
member
of
the
Fatrland
dleport. Frtends may call at
he satd , "I am prepared, ~~
number of years, died Wed- Helen Cameron, Mrs. Joey
projects.
Commissioners;
Chuck
BarRutland
Umted
Methodtst
the funeral home at any time
least
for
the
tone
bemg,
to
ln~ependent
"league "
Polcyn satd a meeltng for all nesday at the St Joseph Crabtree and daughter, Oma tels, Pomero y Emergency
Church
and
before
hts
after 10 a.m. Thursdy
con stder what governmen ts
games woll be played on coaches wtll be held Saturday, Hospttal , Parkersburg.
Cratg, Arnold Dean, Bertha
Squad;
Bob
E
Byer,
Mtdhad
served
as
a
retirement
saod
m
good
fatth
Sunday afler~oons from Sept. 7 Feb I m Pomeroy The group
Mrs. Hart was the daughter of Diehl, Kathern Howell
"After all, it was the grader operator for the Ohio
through November, 1975. Plans wtll meet wtth an attorney to the late Charles and Hattie Florence Johnson, Eunic~ dleport Ftre Department,
Charles
W
Legar
,
Pomeroy
governments
themselves Department of Highways and
call for an etght game schedule outhne all legal aspects of the Lyman Nesselroad. She was a Kmnard, Herschel Manuel
Ftre
Department
Charles
E
under no vtstble pressW"e, that for Rutland Township. He also
and post season playoffs.
member of Pomeroy Chaprer Margie Meadows, Mrs:
Independent footb all league
Blakeslee
,
Btccntenmal
called this conference And had been a farmer .
Order of Eastern Star, the Richard
Metzger
and
Survtving are two daughters,
FILES SUIT
ladies auxtliary of Drew daughrer, Mrs. Earl Nichols Commtsston; Roberta O'Bnen. spectal encouragement can be
Preceptor
Chap
ter,
Beta
Mrs.
Thomas (Frances )
drawn from the fact that one of
Deborah Ferguson, LaW"el
Webster Post 39, American and son, Diana Puckett, Ruth
Lettie Ridenour
Legion, and the Untied Robbins, Mrs Ricky Roberts Stgma Pht Sororoty , Nancy the chief sponsors was the Hendrtx, Columbus, and Mrs Cltff, Pomeroy, foled swt for
Reed, Episcopal Chur ch Uruted States, n0t only the Ohve Page, Langsville; a son, do~or ce m Metgs County
Methodist Church, Pometoy and
daughter,
Tammy
died on Monday
Women
and Pomeroy Chamber world's rtchest country but by Raymond
F
Hatfield
Common Pleas Court agamst
Surviving are her husband, Sauvage, Eileen Searls, Della
of
Commerce
,
Rev
Dwtght
L
SISler,
Mrs.
Ma~ James E Ferguson, Jr , Rt 4,
Rutland;
a
far the mam food producer:
Lester , and a son, Eric, Simpson, Wtlliam Walters
Gordon Ridenour, Tuppers
"Perhaps I am bemg too Clagg, Milton, W. Va.; two Pomeroy , on charges of gross
Pomeroy.
Charles Williams
' Zavotz, Unored Presbyteroan
Monistry on Metgs County , opiUlllsttc, but I hope not. '
granddaughters, Mrs Duane neglec t of duty and extreme
Plains, has received word of
Funeral servtces will be at I
(Births)
(Joyce Ann) Johnson Kansas cruelty.
June
S.
and
Manmng
Kloes,
the death of his aunt, Letti
p.m. Friday at the Ewing
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
'
'
Moddleport
Chamber
of
Ridenour, at ber home In
Funral Home with Rev Carl Armantrout, a son, Point
Columbus Monday morning.
Hicks officiating. Burtal Will be Pleasant; Mr and Mrs Commerce , Mendal Jordan
County
Pomon~
Mrs. Ridenour Is survived by
RIO GRANDE - The nine in Beech Grove Cemetery. Charles Wtillam Buck, ni, a Meigs
Grange,
Fred
Goegleon
,
he~ husband, Delmar. Mrs
member Rio Grande College, Friends may call at the funral daughter, Cheshtre; Mr. and
Ridenour was the former Rio Grande Commumty home at any time.
SahsbW"y
Townshtp
and
Rock
Mrs. Robert Blankenship, a
Lettie Adams of Keno in Meigs College Presidential Search
daughter, Kitts Hill; Mr. and Sprtngs Grange; Frances
County.
Committee looked over 160
Mrs. Richard G. Dillon, a son, Goegleon, Rock Spnngs Better
Graveside rtres will be held applications at a regular
Crown City; Mr. and Mrs. Health Club ; Gerald and
at 2 p.m., Thursday at tile scheduled meeting Monday
Pr Pleasant, w Vii
Calvin Fox, a daughter, Cot- Elizabeth Htlferty , Meigs
Chester Cemetery.
Jan 25, 1975
WORK WEAR
evening on the campus.
tageville, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs Museum and the commiSstow'
HOGS - Sows , U S 1 3 300 500
Leo
R
Story,
Bedford
TownCommittee Chairman Joseph l bs 32 85 JS so. Boar s JOO 600 William Garnes, Jr., a
SPORTSWEAR
Bltonte of Columbus said the lbs 22 25 50, Pr gs f by h ead) 20 daughter, Dexter; Mr. and shtp; Helen Qlllvey, Hemlock
lbs 5 12. 400 oo lbs 13 20. 60
160 applications are now being 40
lbs plu s 23
Mrs. Mark Johnsbn, a Grove Grange , ![enneth Imconsidered including four from
YEA R LING STEER S - Good daughter, Patriot ; Mr. and boden, Middleport Emergency
1ce { b y h ea d ) 500 600 l bs
the campus, and that ap. &amp;100Cho
125
Mrs. Luther McCarty, a son, Squad; Earl Cross, Racme
THE FLAMINGO
Eber Pte kens,
pltcattons are still coming
Y E A RLING H EIF ER S Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Grange;
CLUB PRESENTS
Good &amp; Ch o1ce 500 600 lbs 18
daily.
Syracuse
Ftre
Department;
20 80
Spencer, a son, Middleport.
'QUINT
Paulone
Atkins,
HarriSonville
To dare, the committee has
STE ER CA L V E S - Go od &amp;
Ch0 1c e und er 300 lb s 19 21 300
WED.· THURS.
Presbyterian ChW'ch; Norman
recetved applications from 400
lb s 15 19 so
]I'actlcally every state in the
C. Will, Harnsonvtlle Grange ;
HEI F E R CALVE S - Good &amp;
FRI. thru SUN.
Ch01 ce und er 300 lbs 19 2) J OO
unton along wtth two from 400
DaiSy Blakeslee , Merry
lb s 20 '2 1. 400 500 lbs i6J9
"BAD MOUNTAIN
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Canada and one from Hong Co w s &amp; Calv es ( by h ead l 23 4,
Munchers 4-H Club , Mary E.
ADMISSIONS
Antla
BOOGIE"
w s f by h ead J 104 112 so
Kong. Many of the candidares CoBA
Bacon and Karolyn Black, both
B Y CALVE S ( by head I Harless, Langsville; Jessie
are currently presidents or Beef n 42 Ho lstem &amp; Br own Holtz,
Moddleport Busoness and
Mtddieport, Darts
deans of other onsUtutions and Swrss 10 28
Professtonal Women's Club.
Haynes
,
Pomeroy;
Jeffrey
they represent both liberal arts
Maye
Mora ,
Return
Roush, Syracuse ; Gladys
Rt. 7
Kanauga and community colleges
MAN FINED
Jonathan Metgs DAR , Leota
Fmed m the coW"t of Mid- Gouldmg, New Haven; Oswell Young, Chester Garden Club,
In addition to the ninedleport Mayor Fred Hoffman DW"ham , Mtddleport; Clarence Metgs Sot! and Water Conmember search committee,
Dr. Raymond Young, a con- Tuesday mght were Clyde A Massar, Pomeroy , Johnny servalton Distrtct , Ruby Diehl.
Taylor, 31, Mtddleport. $50 and Gould , Shade; Altce Riffle Rutland Garden Club ; Eula
sultant with the Arthur D.
costs of destruchon of property Syracuse; Joseph Stewart Wolfe , Letart Townshtp,
Little Company of Cambridge
charge, and John W Kapp, 20, Btdwell , Ada Hess, Pomeroy, Wtima Reece , Ohto ETA Pht
Massachusetts has been
TONIGHT thru THURSDAY
JANUARY 29.JO
West Columbta, $15 and costs Rebecca Hess, Pomeroy
to assist m the selectiOn
Chaprer of Beta Stgma Pht;
DISCHARGES - Ltnda Merle Johnson , Rutland Gtrl
'
NOT OPEN
excessive speed
process.
Baoiey , Hugh Bush, Mary
Scouts and
Emer gency
Hackney, Antta Harless ,
MEETING
PLANNED
FRI , SAT , SUN
Medocal
Servtce
,
Iva Powell ,
FISH TO FRY
Loutse Eilts , Nina Yates ,
Jan 31 thru Feb 2
The
trustees
of
the
Metgs
Cloff
Better
Health
Laurel
The
Moddleport
Fire
Calvm Imboden, Celesta
THE TRIAL OF
County
Pioneer
and
Histortcal
Club; Elozabeth Burkett ,
Department wtll hold a public
BILLY JACK
Society wtll meet at 7 30 p m Pickens
Amateur Garden Club, Midftsh
fry
startmg
at
II
30
a
m
(Techntcolor)
at
the
Metgs
Thursday
dleport;
Edward BW"kett, OhSaiW"day at the fore house.
Starr ing Tom Lau ghlm
Museum,
Butternut
Av
e
..
Kan Coin Club; Nellie Vale,
Show Starts 7. 00 p .m .
Both fish sandwoches and
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Pomeroy
County Superontendent of
donners wtll be sold
Discharges - Mrs. Wolliam Schools Offtce , Avane!
Bahr, Btdwell ; Mrs Fred Holliday, Salem Townshtp and
Colder tomght and Thursday. Ftelds, Hartforq , Mrs Jack
Laurel Grange; Wanetta
chance of showers tomght Juntper, Pomt Pleasant; Mrs.
Radekin , Star Garden Club ,
Lows m the lower 30s , htghs Lawrence Cunmngham and
Elizabeth Jordan , Columbta
Thursday m the 40s The daughter, Letart ; Frankhn Grange . Anna Rice and John
~ P:·llfl~ yt~~;:he wartnt$t vest made S Blanket lined 1acket 6S U- For wllfk or play IJ Blanket bned coat 68lC _
probabohty of rain 60 per cent Grtmm , Pomeroy, 8irdte
Rice, Extension Servtce Of.
I
29C~
.._ ~r~ and sturdy ~I :~le lmed ranc: h coat 34C8 - l u• unous Ptle lmmt lor real style Iii Pile ~ned western jacket
today. 40 per tent tomght, and Queen , Southsode; David ftce, Carne M. Neutzling ,
Q
uilt
hMJ
coat 6QLC - ~tyl~a "~ ~~su~: Q~~~~~ 1m~~~ ;n~li~~et~t ~n~l a~\on gJves yoo mobility ~ Insulated
20 per cent Thursday
Tucker,
Robertsburg
LegiOn
Auxiliary
M back oven lis 66f8 - De~ped lor the ProfessiOnal craftsmen IIi] F Jl D:a k a around work PiAt mCarpe~~ter
•3 PC. BEDROOM SUITE ..........~
drNm stlll puXII and wmd r~tant Ill lnSt~lattd- coveralls •996Q - ulot:/~ overalls 6F8 - AWDrkinc nun's
.
snap.oo hood - Milchmg hood l'il~ble lor aM IItke~ c.o.at and coveraU styles - match•ng l•:&amp;sanl~ ~I warmth., (! lined
PEN TERM BEGUN
•S PC. DINIDE SET.................
For \ our Dining and Listening
The Metgs County Shenff's
rugged ea t:he men
Department today transpor~
Pleasure ...
who wear t:hem
e4 DRAWER CHESTS .................
Wayne Peyton to Chillicotlle to
b.,gon servong his term of 2 to 15
•SOFA BEDS..........................
years. for trespassing m an •
occupted
structure Dec. 23,
Beaut• ful fabrics, good co11 spn ng constru ction
1974.

By RICHARD HUGHES
UPI Business Writer
Thongs are looking up
The stock market ts rebounding. Cars are selling agaon
Some furlou ghed workers are
bemg called back to theor JObs
Sugar prtces are droppmg
The good news brongs predtctions tha t the recesston could
be over m six months.
"The behaVIor of the stock
market smce early Decemb.,r
suggests that, if the past 18 any
guide, the recessoon could end
close to mtd·year' " said lrwm
Kellner,
economist
at
Manufacturers Hanover Bank
in New York
"Histortcall: ," Kellner sao d
"an upttck on the stock marke;
has led the end of an economtc
recession by an average of SIX
montlls
In Detrmt , a Ford Motor Co

auto slump seems to be over
Robert J Hampson, voce
presodent for NorU1 Amencan
operatoons, srud by March
Ford could recall some ots
33,125 workers on ondefontte
layoffs
"I hope that by March and
April we wtll see some recall of
people on mdefmote layoffs and
then a gradual unprovement m
the sprmg," Hampson satd
In an another mdtcation of
growmg strength m the econOmy, AT&amp;T 's $600mJllton sale of
loan notes was snapped up
wtthon hoW's after the offer was
made Under the long-term
debt program, AT&amp;T on effect
borrows money from the pubhc
and agrees to PaY ot back wtth
onterest when the notes rna lure
in 7 and 32 years
In Lowell, Vt , employes and
others are tryong to buy for $2 5

mtlhon the GAF Corp asbestos
mme to save 180 Job; An attorney sa od agreement ts near
wtth the company, whoch saod
ot would close the mme rather
than pay $1 moUton to meet
federal atr pollution standards.
Sugar, on short supply and at
record prtces JUSt two months
ago , today ts bloatmg ware-

houses Sugar eomparues ar.e
cuttmg the prtce and reducong
produ ction to unload the
supply Majo~ refmers put mto
effect Mr nday the thtrd
wholesale proce cut on grocery
sugar on three months In the
latest cut, a pound of sugar was
reduced to 49 cents from 57
cents. '

snow on Sunday Hoghs woll
"" 10 the 30s in northern
countoes to the 40s on the
southern sect1on of the
state. Overnight lows w•ll
b., 10 the 20s.

•a1
•
8 ICentenni

Applegate, Weher
on OVRDC staff

Gridders wanted
to signup Sunday

News.

• •

in Briefs

Andrew j. Hatfield, 86, dies

Many want

president's

job at Rio

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

.

Market Report

Brawn ·DuEk

THE AAMINGO
ClUB

MEIGS THEATRE

hired

Weather

FROM BAKER'S BUDGET
SHOP••.
138
'58
'38

as

•aa

,. eADMIRAL REFRIGERATORS .......~,199
SPECIAL VALUES ON MATTRESS&amp;
BOX SPRINGS...,..ALL SIZES.

.'

'
'

, BAKER fURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO.

GEO. ttALL

AND THE HALLMARkS

TONIGHT 8:0Q TO 12:30

.The MElGS INN
(,.

SALE

ASK TOWED
Paul Thomas Sechrest
21 , Ft. Campbell, Ky ,'
Deborah Kay Harden ,
Syracuse.

Jr
and
17,
,

LOCAL TEMPS
' The temperature on downtown Pomeroy at II a.m. today
was 64 degrees under cloudy
skies.

PRlCES

'

SINCE 1889

Take advantage of .the special January Sale Prices all over the store
- wo~ens and chtldrens ready to wear - mens and boys
t
and sutfs • womens sleepwear- jewelry womens gloves_ ,swe~ters
on the 3rd floor.
urm ure

ELBERFE
•

".

carhartt

IN .POMEROY
.I

..

D~llar

Days Bargains Today! Check the Ads!
~

•

Weather

at y

Lows tonoght m the nud 30s
w1th ram Hoghs Fnda} lo\\ er
40s
Pr obabolol y
of
prec opt tatwn 30 per cent toda1 ,
60 ll&lt;'r cent tomght ;md 70 per
cent Fnd ay

VOL. XXVI NO 203

POMEROY MIDDLEPORT OHI O

lH UK ~ UA Y

•

enttn e

February 13 m Pome1O}
~&gt;Grtevan re Da} ·
about h1ghwa ys on Meogs
Coun t}
In other words, a day to
- Impress
the
Oho o
Department of Transpm lati on
there are gri evous htg hway
needs here
- Add up htghwa} bods sold
of the last four years m the
county , a figure that would
please - tl os reporred - only
people who prefer to do lottie oo
nothmg
- Let the people m Columbus
and in the Dtvlslon Offtce m
Martella know what lughway
work Meigs Countians !honk
has pnonty .
Burlene Henhne, Dostn ct
Ten planner, saod today
" Metgs Coun ty resodents are
encoW"aged to attend a public
meeting and mr their vtews
about transportation needs 10
thetr county "
Speaking for the District Ten
Plannmg Department, whose
JOb entatls coilectmg "c1t1zen

mpu t for Tran spor ta tiO n
Syste ms Ptann mg . ' part of
ODOT 's Ach on Plan, the
spo kesman emph as tzed th e
Import a nce of th e publtc
meetmg to be held Feb ru aoy
13 , at 7 30 p m on the Cour troom of the Metgs Coun ty
Courthouse
'Tra nspor ld t1 on
proJ ec ts for se veral years rna ~
be 10!luenced by the outcome of
the mee tmg," he saod
·Although fundmg foo any
htghwa~ prOJCt may be 111
doubt at thiS lime, we hav e an
es ttmated cost for prese ntly
programmed proJeCts of $200
mtlhon 10 thiS dostnct Dur10g
the years from 1963 to 1973 ''"
averaged around $14 mtiloon
per year , exclus1ve of our Ill·
ter s ta te co n s t r uc tio n ,
however ,
th e pr ese ntl y
programmed proJects may be
more local m nature and
theref ore , grea tly affected by
ctbzen mvolvement," Henlme
sa od
The public meeton g "a'

st:hcdu ted dun ng a mee tmg
w1th the Mctgs Count\ Citizen
G1oup 1epresentatlves on
J it nuary 22 c~ nd 111 \\ hte h
d1scusswn ce ntl' red a r oun d
seve1 a ! p1 csenth p1 ogu mu ued
pt o)ects m Me1gs County ~wd

add1toonal pr OJCCio that mog ht
be added
P re sen t ly pr og1a mm ed
proJects mclude U S Route 3:l
- from Da rwm to near the
Me tgs Count y Iwe ( Metgs
Coun t)' por twn of thP Jm provement of U S Route .!3
from Darwon to Athens] , U S
Route 33 - brodgc 1eplacement
on exts tlpg ro ute a pprox tmately tv. o miles south of
Ath ens County lone, State
Route 7 - nev.. c.: onst1 uctwn
from U S Ro ute 33 ncar Rock
Sprongs to Fove Poo nts , Slate
Route
124
brod ge
replacement between Syracuse
and Racme at Bowma ns Run ,
U S Route 33 - brodge repau
I Ohto RIV er Bndge 1 and Sla te
Routes 160 and 124- omproved

dhgnrnent and g1c1de from
Radchff
to
Pomer oy
\ Pt ehrntn ary Engtnee rtng
Study only)
Henhne noted ll ~al on ad·
d1t10n to express mg the needs
mHl prtontJ es ol then county,
Meigs County 1 e~ td cn ~ attendmg the meetmg wtll also
help exp ose any soc 1al,
econon uc a nd envu·onmental
fa ctor s whoch JTia ) be on v~J v ed
m the county s transpor tatwn
systems planmng
~ttendon g the Januar) 22
mectong as part of the Me1gs
County Ci tize ns G1oup were
Hober t Bowen, Charles F.
Blakeslee. James E Roush
On un W ftou sh and John
Hal li day Otheo s attendon g
we re Fred W Crow, Edoson
Ba ke•, Beulah Jones, Henry
Wolls and Charl es Kno ght
Dtsh tct Ten Transporta tion
Plann er He nlm e and hts
ass ostant Donald E Johnson
represented the Ohto Department of Transpor tatoon

w::-::m::.&lt;:~:&gt;.~:;;:::::-;:::::::::&gt;.~&gt;.~~-.'

, . ::;::,:,~:;&gt;,&gt;.&gt;.:,~~::;;;,-;;:::;:::"''l

11 ~ews .. in BriefS~
By United Preos International

PHNOM PENH- A BATTERED SUPPLY convoy steamed
through a gauntlet of guerrilla guns into besieged Phnom Penh
today with the first food shipment for the capttal in more than a
month. A government spokesman said SIX vessels docked at
dawn and workers began unloadong 2,000 tons of rice to replemsh
the city's dwmdling food stocks.
Military sources satd two other shtP.S were sunk durmg the
convoy's perilous, day-long, 71.mile trip up the winding Mekong
River from South Vietnam. The arrival of the shtps lessened the
likelihood of an American atrlift to supply the refugee-swollen
capttal. U.S. officials had raised the possibility of a Berlin.,o;tyle
airlift if the ctty ran ol!) of food.

·-'

J'

HONG KONG _; THE ELEVAT.ION OF A TOP Communist
leader to army chie{ of staff completes a stuming political
comeback in China altd gives the party unprecedented control
over the armed {orces, diplomats satd today.
'
Diplomatic sourees on Peking satd Wednesday Teng
Hslaoplng, v1ce chairman of the Communist party and vice
]I'emier in the government, had been 1181lled chief of staff of the
People's Liberation Army. Theappomtment gsve the 70-year.ald
Teng power in the three leadong sectors of Chinese life and
capped a dramatic return to power.
It effectively makes him the third-ranking offictal on ChU18,
behind Chatrman Mao Tse-tung and Premier Chou En-lai.

WIN COMPLETION C~DS - These eoght men hsve
received completoon cards for completing a two week course
on observation of vttal stgns. Front row , I tor , are KeVIn
Oatley, K~nn eth Imboden, Wayne Davts and Thomas Darst;
standmg, Larry Baker, Robert Ftsher, Mrs Barbara E
VanMeter, the UJSiructor, Russell Mtlls and Raymond Kloes
Other Mtddleport Emergency Squad members completing
the course but not pictured are Davtd Ohltnger and Harold
Wolfe

10 men complete course

BELFAST- THE SLY AING OF A ROMAN Catholic worker
during a lunchtime chess game at a Bellas! factory has '
threatened to set off a new round of religious warfare on Northern
Ireland.
Stepped-up patrols m Bellas! followed tbe fatal shooting of
~year.ald.Robert McCUllough Wednesday in what police called
a reprisal for the bombing death of a Protestant youth.
Three masked gunmen surprised McCullough, a Catholic,
and two fellow factory repairmen during a lunchtime chess game
at a Belfast paper plant. The 89$8ilants ordered the youths to
ineel 00 the floor and then fired several shots, two of theni into
McCUllough's head.
Police said the shooting apparently was in retaliation for the
bobby-trap death Sunday of a Protestant teen-ager outside of
Belfast.
Contonucd on page 8
I

'

Spinal meningitis contracted by
power~company's John Weeks

Third meeting

called Jan. 31

Two injured
in traffic

accidents

' m
Two persons were mJured
three separ3te trafhc aca

EARL INGELS, manager
of the Athens County Savings
and Loan, Metgs Branch,
and a \ice presodent of the
finn, Wednesday resigned
both positions elfectlve
immediately. Ingels will be
accepting employment In t~e
hend area. A replacement
will be named soon, Ingels
said. He has been with the
company four years.

NOT NEEDED
RACINE - The Ractne ER
Squad was called Wednesday
at 7:05a. m to an accodent on
SR 124 outsode of Racone. The
dnver , Jeff Davos, was not
InJured
LOCAL TEMP
The rempera ture tn downtown Pomeroy at 11 a m today
was 40 degrees unMr cloudy
sktes . I

')

•

Ten members of the Mtd· Trade and Jndu stroo l Vocahon
dl eport Emeogenc y Squ ad Educatoon Se rv1ce of the State
have comple ted a two week Department of Educatw n
course on the observatwn of Moddl epo r l te chn rc ta ns
• vota l sogns skolls wtth Barbara rece1ved lhmr cou1 se comE. Van Me teo , f\ N and a pletoon cards from Mos Va11
medacal techmc1an condu d mg Mete r Wednesday mght Obthe class
se l vatwn of v1ldl s1gns InThe 10 men attended the cludes skill tn takong temclass on the1r own time smce pera tur e, pulse , respu·at!On
the service trammg IS on a and bl ood pressure The
vol un teer basls The tra mmg Middl eport te chnocoons are
\\a s provtded as part of the now hCensed m Wes t Vlrgtma
economically as well as proVIde more safety for travelers of the Pubhc Servtce Prog ram of the and Ohw
roure, tl was poonted out.
Durong the discussion on the need for a county rest home, tt
was poonted out by the comrmssooners that they will he reqUtred
to place a sprinkling system at the county mftrmary withtn the
next stx months at a cost of from $25,000 to $30,000. Stare
requirements such as the sprinkhng systems are putting rest
homes out of business because of the high cost involved,tt was
reported The legislature approved the new regulations two
John Weeks. 541 Holda Dr , Ohoo Electroc Company's R1ver
Galhpohs, son of Mrs Eldon Dtstroct comprosed of Galloa
years ago afrer tragtc losses of life m rest home fires.
The group discussed "tounsm" and an 18-eounty plan bemg Weeks, Pomeroy , and son-on· and Meigs Counhes, \HIS
developed to advertiSe southeastern Ohto as a tourtst attractiOn law of Mrs Frances Scholl, moved from Holzer Medocal
H. E. (Pere ) Shields satd the county is required to come up with Pomeroy, ts a palt ent at Center
Wedn esda y
by
$7,500 as tis share of the adverltsmg program. Thereon Johnson, Umverstly Hospttal wtlh sponal SEOEMS
chatrman of the comnuss10n, srud he felt funds should be used for memngolts
more urgent neerlo Shields and Mrs. Carolyn Thomas of the
Hts mother, Mrs Weeks, IS
Pgmeroy Chamber of Commerce wtll formally propose the $7,500 also confmed to a hosptlal on
appropriation to the comrmssioners
LouiSvtlle, Ky
Weeks , assostant manager of
Officers elected by the plaming commtsswn m 1975 are
Johnson, chatrman, Shtelds, vice chatrman; Henry Wells, the Columbus and Southern
second vtce charrman; Edtson Baker, secretary, and Nona
Cummgs, treasurer. Named to the executtve board were Bob
WINNERS TODAY
Clark, Dale Smoth and Carl Qualls.
RACINE - A th1rd public
CLEVELAND (UP!)
The group revtewed tis amual report reviewing the status of
meeting to atr the quesl1on of
Here are thL., \\oeek's winnlng
local county and mumctpal governments, townshtp operations,
annexatiOn of suburban land to
numbers m the Ohio loltery:
county central committees, and schools.
Ractne V1llage w1ll be held at
Number 846 (eight four
Ameetmg of the executive commttree was set for 3 p.m. next
the Club House at Roush 's
six)
In
any
box
on
ticket
wins
Wednesday.
Landtng here Friday, Jan 31 ,
$20.
at 7 p m E A Winge tt anNumbers 225 (two two
nounced today
fovc ) and 992 (nine nine t"o)
Wmgett, chairperson of a
m green and blue wins $500.
group oppos mg the annexa to on,
Numbers 225 and 992 in
IS extendmg an mv1ta hon to
blue boxes wins $1,000.
attend and hear the 1ssue
Numbers 225 and 992 in
doscussed A pubhc heanng
green boxes eligible for
was conducted by the board of
$300,000 drawing and
comm tss toners Tuesday It
automatically wins $15,000.
was contonued to Feb L1

ctdents mveshgated Wednesday by the Galha-Meogs
Post State Htghway Patrol.
The ftrst acctdent occurred
at 6 50 a.m. on Rt 124, stx
rentl)s of a mole east of County
Road 34 where Jeffrey L.
Da,vos, 19, Racine, apparently
fell asleep at the wheel and lost
control of his car
The patrol satd the vehtcle
ran off the right stde of the
htghway strtkmg a power pole
Davts suffered vtsable cuts but
was not ommedoately treated
There was mtnor damage to hts
car No charge was .ftled.
Another mtshap occurred tn
Meogs County on Rt 7, two
renths of a mtle from County
Road 46, where an unknown
obJect chopped the wtndshteld
of a car opera red by Richard L
Coleman, 57, of Long Bottom.
Scarlet J ohnson , 23, of
'
Vmton,
suffered mmor InJuries
10 a smgle car mtshap on the
Jackson-Keystone Rd two and
one renth mtles west of Rt. 160
m Galha County
Offtcers satd the Johnson car
went out of control, ran off the
left Side of the htghway over an '
embankment and struck a tree
There was heav) da mage to
her car

Polk

' ' ,. ~ \

Planners tap Route 124
most urgent '75 project
By Bob Hoemeh
Improvement of RoJile 124 m western Metgs County,
development of industrial st~, a rest home and new housmg and
encouragement of the recreation industry got top priortty in 1975
by the Metgs County Regional Plannmg Connmosswn Wednesday.
While other irems, particularly new Metgs County plat books
were regarded of htgher prtortly as to need, tl was generally
agreed to accept the pnonty projects about which something can
be done.
The group, meetmg of the courthouse in tile afrernoon,
dlacussed the W"gent need for county plat books, the ones
currently used haVIng been made on 1920. However, there was no
way of coming up with $150,000 needed for the new books. The
county COIJUlllSSioners, two of whom were present (Henry Wells
and Warden Ours) satd money from the county "apparently"
would not be available. They said the county government is on the
position of being required to provtde funds for operation of the
county school for the retarded since voters turned down an
operating levy for the school last fall.
County Treasurer Howard Frank - audttor elect - said the
plat hooks are desperarely needed, but he also said the county
commissooners fonanctal ptcture is not good. He suggested that
perhaps next year some revenue sharing money may be used for
new plat books, but also pomted out that no one knows the status
of what revenue sharing funds Will be next year.
Route 124 Project
The Route 124 improvement was stressed as the top proprity
project for 1975. The trnprovement would help the county

(,as loghl' were turned on m
the Wh ole House for the ftrst
trme on Dec 29, 1848, durmg
the adminostraiJOn of James K

PHONE 992-2 156

JANUARY 30. 1Y75

Highway priorities
invited for Meigs
could be

Now You Know

:;:

Nation's problems demand
Science, politics team up

··

..

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NEW YORK (UPI I - The retiring president of the
American Association for the Advancement of Science
says the time has come for scientists and politicians to put
aside their differences and team up to solve the nation's
problems.
''The threats to clvillzaUon are too real and too imminent for anything other than the closest kind of
cooperation among politicians and sclentlsts," Dr. Roger
Revelle said Wednesday night.
A step In that direction, Revelle sold, would be for
President Ford to estabUsh ,an office of White House
selenee advisers. Revelle !18id such a group is essential
"to maiD~aln the long range effectiveness of science and
technology In tbe United States."
He also called for Congress to formulate a ''National
• and Tetbnology" to guide legislative
Polley for Science
and presidential action and ensure tbat science and
tecbnology are considered In d&lt;Jmestlc and foreign pulley
plaonlng.
The outgoing head of tbe nation's largest scientific
organization said it,Js not always easy for politicians and
setentlsts to work together hecaUfle tbetr personalities,
methods, moti'llltions and orientation are each foreign to
tbe other.
"The politician Is publicly egotlstlcal, gregarious,
garrulqos and has a strong gambling instinct," Revelle
said. "The scientist, at least ID his own image, I• publicly
modest, Introverted, relatively lnartieuiate and seeks
certainty rather than J,isk."

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Ford will go
up to half way
By RICHARD LERNER
WASHIN GTON (UP! )
Prestdent Ford appears willmg
to meet Democrats halfway on
tax cuttmg leg1slaton - but far
from l'eady to compromise on
his energy conseovation proposals
Ford doscussed the situation
m an hour-long mectmg
Wedn esday wo th Re p AI
Ullman, chatrman of the Ways
and Means Commottee that
drafts tux btlls and the panel
that has approved a measure
deSigned to suspend the addi !tonal imported oil tart!! the
Prestdent IS unposing SaiW'day .
A White House spokesman
saod Ford and Ullman fa iled to
resolve thetr differences. The
Oregon Democrat said the
session was "very cordtal and
frank ," that tl helped "clear

Loretta Ours
died Tuesday
Moss Lor etta Ours, 29, of
L)nchburg, Va formerly of
Moddlepoo t, doed unexpectedly
Tuesday mormng at her home
theoe
M1ss Ours was a vocal mustc
superv1sm m the LynchbUJ g
schools She os survoved by her
parents, Mo and Mrs Ralph
OW's, Ne" Bn ghton, Pa , and
two brothers, Edwat d and
Howard
Funeral servoces wtll be held
at I 30 p m on Froday at the
New Bri ghton Funeral Hume
An aun t, Mrs Leroy Donohew
and 1\• o uncles, Woley Ours,
and Lewos Ours, all • of the
Racone area , woll attend the
servu:es.
Whole on Middleport, Moss
OW's res oded tn the apartment
at the home of Mrs James
Souders and ta ught mu soc on
the Kyge r Creek Sc hool
DIStro ct She was a member of
the Mtddl epo r t Chur ch of
Chrost where she d1recred the
cho1r , and wfl s a for mer
member of the Midd leport
Busme ss ClO d Pro fess iOna l
Women 's Club

Odessa Berg died
Jan. 17 in South
Word has been recetved of
th e death Jan 17 of Mrs
Odessa M. Berg, 80, of Orlando,
Fla , formerly of Middleport
and Akr on
Mrs Berg Y(as a member of
the Chrtsl MethodiSt Church m
St. Petersburg, Fla where she
formerly restded. She IS survived by her husband, George
W Berg . Services were conducred Monday at the Ftsk and
JoW"mgan Funeral Home at St
Cloud , Fia Buroal was on PI
Peace Cemetery.
EXTENDED FORECAST
Saturday through Monday,
chance of snow Saturday and
Sunday and fair on Monday.
Highs wtll b., in the 30s and
lows wtll be in th e 20s.
.. ,, . ·.i .. .

th e atr" and that they would be
hoI ding more talks
The President planned to
foc us on other matters today,
ge ttong an early start by attending a National Prayer
Breakfast sponsored annually
by Congress and conferring at
mtd-mornmg wtlh BritiSh
Prune Mmtster Harold Wilson.
Aides srud the two leaders
would dtscuss ISSues ranging
from East-West relaUons to
mt ernatlonal economic and
energy conditions.
Shortly before seeing
Ullman, Ford told a group of
economic wrtters at the Whtte
House that "I think the~e is
room for some fiexlbUity" on
his proposal for a 12 per cent
rebate on 1974 taxes with a
maxomum of $1,000 per return.
Ullman and other Democrats
fa vor a slightly btgger overall
ta x cut more heavily weighred
to low mcome earners. Only a
small part would·be in the form
of a rebate. Th~ rest would be
proVIded through lower wtlhholding rates.
The President also seemed to
be stgnaling a possible compromise on the tax question by
, saymg "we will do everythmg
we can to sell our program, but
we do have to end up with what •
the judgment ts of the
Congress"
In contrast, Ford told the
JOUrnahsts he would take a
firm stand on hts energy saving
legtslalton. He satd he was
gtving Congress "a very
comprehensive program" and
would do no negotiating with
Democrats untli they " come up
wtth something that is comparable." If that happens, he
added, "then wpwlll
t about
comproffilse "
'

Vinton man
•

uninjured
in mishap
Shero ff Rober t C Hartenb ac h's de partment tn·
ves ttga ted a smgle car accodent Wednesda) at 11 :53 p.
m on SR 124 south of Racme
Gtlford W Turley,26, Vtnton,
was traveling east when he
went left of center The car
struck an embankment and
turned over on tis top in the
mtddle of the highway.
There were no mjurte~ and
no cotatton was tssued. There
was moderate damage.
The shertff reported that
Cratg Allen Hanning, Rt. 2,
Albany, was ptcked up by
Athens County Sheriff's
Department on a bench
warrant from Common Pleas
Cour t on charges of reckless
operatton and leaving the
scene ol'an acctdent He posred
$200 bond
,
The shertff also reporred that
Earl Ariz, Harr.iJtonville, on a
warrant from Common Pleas
Court for contempt of court,
has been placed in Meigs
County Jail

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2 - The Dally Sentinel, l\1lddleport-1\ Jnwruy P , Th u r ~rt a ). Ja n. 30, l ~ , .,

"Maybe If We All Drag Our Feet.

"

Editorial comment,
opinion,

fe;~tures

By BRUCE E. HICKS
UP! ScleliCe Writer
HOUS'I'ON (UP!)- A Teua
research center hopes to
determine how influenza
spreads and ways people can
build inununities to ward off
the next worldwide flu
epidemic expected in about
three years. ·
Drs. Robert Couch and Julius

Cities on the federal dole
Concern is expressed from tune to tune that we are creatmg a soc1ety of welfa re addi cL-; _
people" ho spend their h\ es on the pubhc dole and whose chtldr en repeat the pattern
The fact Js Ul at there IS much more danger of our local gove rnments becommg so accustomed
to sucking on the bounteous federal teat that they wtll never be able to wea n themselves Only m th iS
case we don't ca l1 1t welfare but ·'reven ue sharing," "Impact Cities" en d or a host of other names
for a host of other fe deral programs
Cleveland, th e natiOn 's lOt h most populous c1ty, ISa pr1me examp le
It has reached th e potnt where Cleveland has become so dependent upon federal 1and to a lesser
degree, state ) fmancia l asSistance that tt would be completely bankrupt wtthou t tt.
The ctty 's 1975 budget IS proJected at $126 mtlh on But loca l in come and property taxes are'
expected to brmg m only 174 9 mtllion, whtch IS $1.5 mtlhnn short of the amoW1t needed JUSt to run
th e police department.
The difference of some 151 1 mtlhon will be made up w1U1 federal and state gran ts and subSidies, whtch m the past two years have tota led $143 5 mtlh on and $2.\ million respectively
"!! ! were not able to get contmued fed eral fW1d s, th1s would be a one-department government
-safety, " says Mayor Ralph J Perk "There would be no money for recreatiOn hea lth servtces
parks, rubbtsh collection or anythmg else."
'
'
lt'ssa td that Perk has earned the cup wWashm gton so many ttmes he's worn a pa th
Meanwlule, property tax es in Cleveland has been permitted to decline by 151 mtllton and last
November voters, perha~ ha vtng learned that the more they pay the less ervtce th ey get, turned
down an mcome tax mcrease that would have added $16 mtlhon to the cttv's coffers
Perk is not worn ed about the Ct!y's mcreasmg addictiOn to the fed~ral dollar The money, he
says, "belongs to the people "
Cl~veland "',~ Y differ from other Amertcan ctttes only m tbe scale of tts dependency on "tbe
peoples money. But if thts ctty, wtth tts strong tndustrta l and commerctal base ca n't afford to
govern Itself, what hope is there for any ctt y''
'

~~~~~~~~===r
A. Kasel said the center at
~
science today

Crisis in energy calls for research
By LEONARD CURRY
UP! Business Writer
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Scienttftc research of the prtority
enJoyed durmg the Apollo space project of the 1960s 15 needed w
solve the nation 's energy crisiS and other problems that will arise·
m th e next decade, according to the head of the Carnegie Institution
Dr . Philip H. Abelson, president of the scientific research
organjzation smce 1971, satd energy problems will agitate
Americans for more than a decade before any meanmgful
sources other than oil and coal can be dtscovered.
He said envtronmentahsts and government bureaucracy have

Whatever happened to English
At their annual convention in New Orleans, members of the Na tional Counctl of Teachers of
English (NCTE ) de ctded that the new English usage section of the Scholastic Aptitude Test is
"linguiStically mvalid" and should be dispensed wtth .
·
., . As report~ by Education USA newsletter, the teachers agreed that the new test attempts to
lumt students IIngutstte expression wan arbttranly established correct form. "
.Horror of horrors. But that 's not all. Thts "superftctal concept of 'correctness' " ts ractally and
soctally btased, the NCTE foW1d, because it excludes the dtalects of millions of students. This IS
especially distrer •ing smce the new test IS used around the country to dcternune college admtssions
and placement in English courses.
Bye:bye Shakespeare. Bye-bye Declaration of Independence and Gettysburg Address. Junk
everything, else that rep;~sents an "arbttrartly, esta blished" literary standard and "superftctal
con ~pt of Cor~ectness And we certamly can t deny anyone college adnusston just because he
don t talk Enghsh so good, or expect llifn to toke a remedial rather than an advanced English
course.
Whatever happened to the · ~quest for excellence'' the educa tors were urg1ng on us a few years
back' Obvtously, tl ain't no more

DR. LAMB

RAY CROMLEY

By Lawrcnct• E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - After
bemg " treated" for a duodenal
ulcer for mne years my doc;:tor
te lls me my X rays show no
scarnng from ulcers but r do
have a htatal herrua. Are they
so Similar tn symptoms and

Credit programs no

business today
acted to impede sctentiftc exploration that will develop energy
resources that are alternatives to natural gas and ml.
In the next decade, the energy crisis will be Jomed by crtses of
raw .matertals, population and food , Abelson satd, and the
solutions to these problems are not munediately at hand etther.
It wtll be found, Abelson said, that a cructal component in
meeting these problems IS to utilize knowledge more effectively.
He Satd President Ford's proposals to rely heavily on higher
pr1ces to curb energy cons=ption wUI proVIde only a short term
answer because prtce increases for ml and electric power m the
past year have dampened coMumer demand only slightly.
He satd, too, one of the chief problems facmg government IS the
difficulty of convincmg the public the energy crisis IS real.
Because the oil embargo was so brtef, he satd, Americans did not
realize fully how important energy is to our existence and way

of life and were not sufficiently motivated to take action needed
to meet the long-range problems.
"Today, what basically sets us apart from less fortiUiate
people is the abthty of· the average individual to acquire and to
use the equivalent of 10 kilowatts of power," hesatd.
However, Abelsonsatd, the United States is "coming to the end
of a joyride based on petroleum. " The economy will be severely
handicapped lor the next five years by a decline in the nation's
abihty to produce ml and natural gas, he satd.
The Carnegie president, a piOneer of atomic energy research,
has spent more than a decade studying the processes by which oil
ts created m nature and various ways of extracting oil from
shale.
Solar and nuclear energy bold some promise of easing the
problems in the future, Abelson satd, "but lor at least 15 years
our economy and way of life will be cruc13Uy dependent on
hydrocarbons, especially oil."
For the short I'W1, he said, the United States must increase coal
production and conversion of coal into oil. He also proposes Increased extraction of oil from shale, but that will require
guarantees that costly oil derived from shale will not be IUidercut
by foreign oil producers.
Abelson said scientific research is fragmented and has been
since Prestdent Ntxon removed it from tts priority position two
years ago.
" President Ford is nm.; m closer c,.ct with Dr. (H. Guyford)
Stever, the science adviser, but the scientific commiUiity has
reservations concerning the effectiveness of the present
arrangement. It is hoped President Ford will fmd ways of better
utilizing the enormous scientific and technological potentials of
thts country," Abelson said.

Levzonson 's happy
he left the race
1

I~-------------------------~
Letters ul opinion ore welcomed. They should be less
1
1 than 300 "ords long (or be subject to reduction by the
,
1 editor ! attd must be sigued with the signee 's address.
I
1 Names may be withheld upon publication. However" on
:
I r.quest, names will be dlsrtosed. Letters should be in good
j

place for politics

I

t.stt·, addressing Issues. not personalities .

discomfor t?

I
€)
I
By Ray Cromley
DE AR READER - You
HOLLYWOOD - Where 's
WASHINGTON (NEA ) - There ts a proposal in Congress,
don 't have to have a sea r that
Sam Levenson been lately'
you can see on an X ray after sponsored by some of its most mnuenlial members. wh1ch would
I
••• HV[..
II Lots of people ask that
fuMe! credit to specific industries if approved.
you have had an ulcer. So the
question The answer is that he
H one looks only at the surface, the concept has great inI
I made his choice and it 's worth
present-e of a h1atal herma now
tellectual appeal. Too little of the nation's cash ts going into those
I
t
doesn't mean you may not have
exanumng
industrtes which must be expanded if the unemployed are to be
had an ulcer.
It's been 10 years since
Bntey
et.
ill.
found
right
put to work and the shortages whtch he behind much of our inNot everyone with a htatal
Levenson
stopped being an
flatiOn are to be eradtcated . It sounds proper to channel funds
herma has sympto;ns Many
ordinary entertamer. He hasn't
away from "speculative" to "vttal" Industries such as housing,
Gallipolis, Ohto 45631
· people with htatal herntas don't forming and power generation.
done
a stand-up turn on TV or
January 'n, 1975
even know they have the
worked
a nighklub date tn that
Thts ts an economic boobytrap of inunense proportions.
Dear Sir:
problem. Most of the symplong.
And
all because of a
It IS clear we need more housing, but some of the more ·
I must praise Mr. Ben Batey and the other Metgs County
wms are caused by the acid arrogant
speculation of the past decade has been in homes, residents for their letters m the Daily Sentinel and the Times- rrurror.
di ges tive JUICe m the stomach apartments and land .
"! could have had 1t all,"
Sentinel on January 26. They are a lew of the thousands of
lea kmg or being sqmrted back
Levenson
says, and he ISn't
The farmer does need atd so that be may, wtth reasonable
mto the lower esophagus. ThiS profit, reach the production levels we require of him in this day of residents in Gallia and Meigs Counties who support the bemg Immodest, JUSt factual.
VOLUNTEER emergency squads.
ac1d JUice ca n bur n the lower shortages. But bere again, speculators have moved m to achieve
I, myself, am a member of the all-volunteer Gallia County "They were after me for
esog hapus and cau se the some soectacular abuses of government assistance programs.
Emergency Squad. I am qu1te aware of the harrassment by the everything - TV, Las Vegas,
burning pam m the ptt of the
The brownouts of some recent years are convincing proof the
Southeast Ohio Emergency Medical Service towards the everythtng.
stomach JUSt at the lower ltp of utilily industry must expand .more rapidly Tbe o1l shortage
"Then one mght I came off
volW1teer squads. SEOEMS has been trying to talk the Gallia
the breastbone that pattents obvtously requires investment of capttal to shift from oil-burnin~
the
s !age in Vegas and there
VoiW1teer Squad mto merging with them for over two years.
complain about
to coal-burmng power plants, with reasonable but costly Some SEOEMS officials even made the statements that the was a man standtng there and l
The same acid digestive proVIsions lor protection of the environment. But there ts also a volunteers were dissolving their operations. That was all news to asked him what time it was. He
JUi ce pr odu ce d in exce ss strtdent battle ragtng over what types of power shall be favored
just looked at me and didn 't
the ,VOIW1teers.
quantity and qmrted out mto - conventional or nuclear The danger is that aUocation wonld
answer.
I asked him again.
Mr . Batey is absolutely correct when he refers to a person
the duodenwn can cause an favor one over the other for emotional rather than technical and
SAM LEVENSON
do1ng a lot of talking trying to hold on to a JOb, especially if the Then, to my horror, I reali&gt;.ed I
uJ cer there. So, in fact, the ac1d economic reasons.
was talking to my renection in
job pays over $22,000 a year!
diges tive juice can cause an
Who then is to make the determination of where the chanthe Watergate scandal.
The Gallia County Volunteer Emergency Squad Inc. IS here a rh1rror.
ulcer tn the duodenum , wtth neled money goes? Congress? The adminiStration ? Some wstay. We have answered 90 emergency calls so far thts month!
"It was hke a scene out of
"They were aU brtlliant men.
bW"mng and pam , or it can
bureaucrat down the ltne'
Compare that with the Gallia SEOEMS station that now has Kafka. I realized how phony All had great marks in school.
cause IITI tat10n an even an
In the absence of war, how does one dectde on priortties ?
three ambulances ! The Gallipolis Ctty Commission requested my hfe was and made my And then look wbai;Jtappened
ulcer in the lower esoghagus, in
These are problems the nation's leadmg economiSts have
that SEOEMS leave the city of Gallipolis due winactivity. 1 can deciSion·. This life wasn 't for to them.! think our educational
relation to a htata l hernta .
wrestled with in vain .
me . "That was the end. "
system should teach people to
W1derstand, with just an average of about~ runs per month.
Our bodtes are not so good at
H Congress decides tbe priorities, as is lilt ely, tbe aMwer will
Now, he lives quietly tn ' love before it worries about
SEOEMS should worry about thetr own ambulance service
presenting black and whtte and be poltf,ical. Those industries favored will, if recent htstory is any while the federal funds last and not harrass the VOLUNTEER Queens , New York, m a nice whether they can read."
"either-or" s ituations Th e guide, tend to be those promoted by the stronger pressure grou~ squads by printing untrue statistics and remarks about the home with a vtew of the ' .Sam Levenson is happy with
pam and locat ton an Irritated - those with money or with the best publicity apparatus.
VOLUNTEER service.
Atlantic Ocean from every hts current way of life. The fact
lowe r es oph ag us or the Rulemaking by the executive would be no better. The enl would very much like to see the SEOEMS annual activity front window. He confines his that he ISO 't hugely famous or
duodenwn are not so spec1f1c forcement of regulations would require a host of inspectors,
report for 1974 published in this newspaper showmg the nW1flber performance to the lecture hugely rich doesn'l trouble
tha t you can al" ay s be sure regulawrs and attorneys, many of whom would have their own of actual emergency calls answered by SEOEMS (in-eounty runs circmt
him. He says he and his wife
whtch IS the problem or for thai interpretation of regulations and end up workmg at cross pur- only) in both Gallia and Meigs Counties. The tax.paying citizens
"! can be more myself lec- Esther, were Depression kid;
matter tf both condttions are poses in this most complicated field .
turmg," he says. " l can say so they never learned how to be
deserve to know what their tax-dollars are paying lor.
present at the same tnne.
The Russians have demonstrated the failure of central
Sincerely, A VOLUNTEER, Ohio certified Emergency what I want to say. I can talk spendthrifts.
There IS a lot you need to planning momtored by a combination of bureaucrats, economists
Medical Technician.
about serious subjects as well
He's con tent. What more can
knowabout the management of and pohticans. The USSR 's expertence has been that central
as
funny
ones.
And
my
a
person want?
- Name wtthheld on request.
a htatal herma . Small fre quent channehng of res ources becomes increasingly counaudience can talk back to me .
meals are Important, as we ll as terproductive as tbe economy advances and grows highly
Ask me questions . I IQve it."
what yq eat, rules abo ut sophisticated
He also writes. His latest
clothtng, sleepmg, an d exerThe secondary effects are so widespread and so unpossible
book "In One Era and Out the
cise
w calculate accurately that monstrosities result.
Other," IS 'now out in a
There
is
no
question
thai
individual
bankers,
other
money
paperback edition . It's very
Part of the treatment of both
hinders and investors make" many mistakes, some atrocious.
funny,
naturally, but there's
ul cers and htatal herma These men are subject to the same biases, pressures and Insome food for thought in it, too,
Jl!~ Daily Sentinel
symptoms are the same. Since
DEVOTED TO THE
fluences as congressmen and officials. They hBve some curious
just
as
naturally.
symptoms from both problems
INTEREST OF
It's really a pity that Sam
MEIGS·MASON AREA
are largely caused by the acid customs which make no econonuc sense. But our protection here
CHESTER L . TANNEHILL
lies in the diversity of our money markets. To a remarkable
made the decisiOn he made, for
Exec . Ed.
digestive juice formed by the
degree, the biases and other foibles balance out .
ROBERT HOEFLICH
we.
really
shouldn't
be
denied
swmach, it ts unportant to
C1tv Editor
,
In the end, fund allocation would mean a bef!Y financing of
hts wi t. In fact, a whole new
'Publ i shed dat ly. ex c ept
neutralize swmach acid. The mB.rgmal companies in the "vital" industries.tt .fould also mean
y by The Oh io Va lley
generation of kids has grown Saturda
P~Jbl t shmg
Company , 111
an !acids used for this purpose political decisions on how much capacity is needed in each field.
up wtthout knowing how !Winy Co u rt St , Pomeroy, OhiO;
work equally weU for both
45769 Business Offic e Phone
Inevitably, we 'd end up building many uneconomic plants,
he 1s, or how wise .
992 2156 Ect itor la l Phone 992 .
cooditions.
guaranteemg htgh costs for many r ears.
But he tsn 't sure how.' fW1ny 21 57
Medtcine ts sometimes used
Second cl ass po~ ag~ pa id at
he could be today. He says he Pomero y , Oh io. 1
to block the nerves to the
Nat i ona l advert t slng
doesn 't consider the current representative
Bottlnel lt
stoma~h to prevent tt from
Ga ll agher, Inc , 12 Eut .4 2ncf
time
as
particularly
amusing.
. forming so much acid. These
St , New York , New York
"! don 't make jOkes about
S!Jbscr i ption
rates :
Actually these medtc mes protected from the digestive
are very good for most case~ of
Deli vered b y carri er where
Watergate,"
he
says.
"Many
of
availab le 75 cents per week
ulcers . Their
use
is may not be all bad m hiatal action of its own juices by a
my
colleagues
do
but
1
don't.
By Motor Route where carrie~
thtck
mucus
material
over
its
hernia
,
If
'they
effectively
questionable in the treatment
serv 1ce . not ava il able, One
It's
not
fW1ny.
Actually,
I
feel
month , $3. 2S By ma,11 in Oh 1o
of hiatal hernia symptoms. decrease the amourrt of acid lining. The duodenum and
a~ d W Va , One Year , $22 .00,
the
problem
lies
with
our
They may delay the emp\ying produced by the swmach, even esophagus don't have this
Sue months , $11 SO . Three
educational system (Sam was mon t h&gt; , S7 00 E l sewhere
(l lfH511y"'EA III( ~
of the stomach allowing the tl they do delay swmach protection and that is why the
S26 . 00 year . Six months
a teacher before he became a Sl
3.SO . three mon t hs, S7 SO '
acid digestive juices ilTitate or
stomach con Ients to leak back emptying.
comedian ). That's what bred SubSc n ption pr ice includes.
"Good heaven~ ' How /ash•onabla can you gat? "
into the lower esophagus.
The stomach Itself is ulcerate them.
J Sundav T 1mes-Sentine1
';'" -:
~e amoral men who created

I

Al~fdilh
%L..

:

I

Berrys
World

.

I

I~

.,,

'

1

~

I
,. f

••

·l

'

I

'

Defense
sought
for flu

'

I

.

Bay lor College of Medicine was
funded by the Nationa! Institute of Allergy and Infectious diseases to use
Houston as a model city to
learn how influenza works.
"Houston is not unique in
what we know of past
epidemics," Couch said. "We
believe it will be applicable to
other ctties and otber parts of
the world.
"We're trying to find ways of
developing and implementing
new methods of control of
influenza in time to abort or
minimize the pandemic of
1978."
Pandemics
geographically wtdespread
epidemics -occur about every
10 to 14 years. The last one in
this country occurred In the
winter of 1968-69. In the last
three flu pandemics about
86,000 people died In the United
States.
The current influenza A
strain is called Port Chabners
F1u after a town in New
Zealand where it was first
isolated. Couch said an
epidemic of Port Chabners Flu
was expected this winter In
Houston but it didn't appear
there would be a widespread
out~reak.

"That's not ooly good for the
people but for us because we
just got started and need
another year to be better
organized," he said . .
The center was founded last
July to learn how flu enters a
community, monitor its
spread, determine duration
and disappearance.
"If we can le&amp;m that, the
Communicable Disease Center
in Atlanta will have the
responsibility of implementing
new controls," Kasel said.
The Houston center will
monitor flu spread throll8hout
the year and watch for
epidemic periods, usually In
the winter when people stay
inBide more and the disease
can more easUy spread. H they
can le&amp;m what occurrences
signal the beginning of an
epidemic it may be possible to
head off the epidemic, Couch
said.
"After all," he said, Hthe
prevention of death Is the main
thing, not just stopping nu."
The center is watching for
outbreaks of the flu through
city health clinics In mostly low
aoclo-economic areas, selected
family physicians and ctuwntown hospitals. They alao
monitor absenteeism in
schools, among city employes
and in several major depart. ·
ment chain stores.
"We presume flu spread&amp;
aroiUid a city like It does
aroiUid the country, following
trade routes," Couch said
"That's one of the things we're
looking for.
"There's no such thing as an
isolated city anymore. One
hundred years ago a port city
bad the worst problems. Now
ports mean nothing. F1u Is
spread over car, bus, truck and
airplane travel routes."

OTA layoffs
annotmced in
economy move
COLUMBUS (UPI)- About
550 erriployes of the Ohio
Department of Trllll8portatlon
will be furloughed in the next .
few weeks in an economy
move, Director Richard
Jackson announced VVednesday.
"It is a necessary move to
keep within OUr. budget," said
Jackson.
Jackson said the layoffs
would be made proportionately
in all 12 highway divisions
which amounts to a 5 per cent
staff reduction.
Jackson said the decisioo as
to whr. will be furloughed is up
to the dlreclllr ttf each divisioo
but he indicated those cuts will
be in 'design and construclloo
departments. The cutbacks
will bring the department's
payroll below 9,000 employes
for the first time In seVeral
years, said Jacbon.
I

3- The Daily Se~tinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Thursday, Jan. JO, 1975

NC rips Deacons

Tar O
He.els claim
~ACC top position
: " By United Press International

and Johnny Britt in the last 25
' When Atlantic Coast ~ooler- seconds enabled Western Ken1." ence coaches predicted at the tucky to upset LaSalle.
' " start of the season that there
Trailing most of the game
would be a close battle for the and by as many as 12 points,
'• league title, they were not Western Kentucky went ahead
merely being cautious about to stay, 87-85, on a field goal by
defending national champton Wilson James with 1:13 left.
North Carolina State.
Odemns' basket made it 89-85
Eleventh-ranked North with 25 seconds remaining. But
"' Carolina, With Mitch Kupehak then Charlie Wise scored for
.,, and Brad Hoffman hitting 21 LaSalle and it was IJ9.ll7 with 17
·1 points each, moved into the
seconds left .
0 ' lead of tbe ACC with a conOdemns was charged for
"' terence record or 5-1 after walking with nine seconds
whipping Wake Forest 101-91 remaining but Rr itf in'" Wednesday night.
;, Second-ranked North
:' Carolina State holds a 4-1 ACC
o· record while Maryland and
'' Clemson are 4-2.
The Tar Heels went into
1• second half against Wake
• Forest with a 49-48 lead on two
!' Hoffman free throws after the
... buzzer.
By United Press International
1'
North Carolina then outThere's still bope for the
scored Wake Forest, 31-12, in little man in the Natiooal
~ the first 9:14 of the second half
Basketball Association when
• to run up a ~int lead, ~ . Kansas Ctty.{)maha can beat
·: and was never seriously Milwaukee four times in six
" threatened afterwards. The meetings.
• closest the Deacons could come
The Milwaukee Bucks have
•· after the Tar Heel rampage 7-loot 2 Kareem Abdui.Jabbar,
:, 'was 96-87 with just under two of course, while the Kings'
!&gt;minutes remaining .
chief game-wumer is 6-1 Nate
Kupchak also led North Archibald.
• Carolina rebounding with nine
Abdul-Jabbar scored 43
• and Hoffman, who scored 1~ of points Wednesday night but
' his points In the second hall, Archibald and Jinuny Walker
l led in assists with eight.
took over down the stretch to
" Skip BroWn led Wake Forest give Kansas Clty.{)maha a 1061 with 32 points-22 in the fll'St
102 victory. It was the Kings'
" balf-and nine assists.
fourth victory in six meetings
' Elsewhere, Western Ken- with the Bucks.
t lucky defeated lOth-ranked
Archibald snapped a 99-W tie
LaSalle, 91-117, Niagara edged on a drive that resulted In a
• Cornell, 71-70, in overtime, layup over Abdui.Jabbar and a
' Pittsburgh scored a 70-61 foul with Nate making the free
i overtime win over Temple, throw for a three-i)Oint play.
· Penn State clipped Syracuse, Archibald scored 28 points and
88-84,
Nebraska
beat Walker 26 for the Kings.
' Oklahoma, 73-litl, Kansas State
The Philadelphia 76ers de1 ripped Iowa State, 108-93, St.
feated the New York Knicks
' Bona'l4nture routed St. 911-92, the Los Angeles Laker~
1 Francis (N.Y.), 108-89, and
beattheNewOrleansJazz, ll2KallSas dumped Colorado, 81· 108 the Detroit Pistons beat
. 59.
the' Golden State Warriors, 93Field goals by Mike Odemns 90, and the Seattle Supersonics

""

NEW YORK (UP!) - Let's get one thtng straJght right off.
!lever anybody deserves to be tn Baseball's Hall of Fame, it's
tercepted the LaSalie throw-in Robm Roberts. He did everything he was supposed to do and then
and dribbled in for the final some. HewOtked in the salt mines and toiled in the vmeyards for
basket of the game with four the Philadelphia Phillies mostly , plugging away do ggedly at his
seconds left.
trade lor 19 years.
Odemns scored 33 points for
He was a 20-game wmner sL' consecutive years and had the
the winners and made 14 of his same incredible control over a baseball Muhammad All has over
18 shots in the game with 21 a listening audience. He was the perfect gentleman wtth tt allm
points coming m tbe secood that never once dtd he ever make a pitch without first cleanmg
half.
his fingers and straightening the leg of his trousers.
Britt had 18 points for the
What I'm trying wsay is that Robin Roberts gels my vote for
wirmers who now bold a 10-5 the Hall of Fame .. . every year. He's going to keep getting tt as
record. LaSalle, which saw its
long as I keep voting because, tome, anyway, he belongs in there
ll1:ame wmning streak come wtth basebaU's elite the same way Bob Lemon does, but I also
to an end, got 22 points each think he should ease up and relax a little.
from Joe Bryant and Bill
He shouldn't allow himself to get carrted away by some of his '
Taylor.
more fervent Philadelphl8 well-wtshers, who are so upset over
his missing out by a mere nine votes in this last election that
they 're calling the balloting a poll-ish joke and throwmg around
hints that maybe the vote ISn't on the up-and-up because only one
man, Jack Lang, secretary of the Baseball Writers' Association
Of America, COW1ts the ballots in a closed room.
Next .thlng you know, someone's gomg w claim the voting is
9
cerigged, and I can just hear Babe Ruth laughing and saymg,
U
wherever he is, "Those guys down tbere are never gonna get to
heaven that way .''
ll anybody has a hcense to holler about the voting, it seems to
·. wpped the Phoenix club, 99-85,
me Bob Lemon has, but he never does.
in other games.
Take a look at some of hts figures. He pitched only 13 years, six
76ers 98 Knlcll.s 92:
Fred Carter scored 25 points, less than Robin Roberts, and was a 20-game wiMer seven times,
including two baskets in the one more time than Roberts, who pitched six years longer.
stretch, to give the 76ers their Moreover, Lemon was one of the fmest hitting pitchers ever, a
victory. Earl Monroe had 18 fellow who ranked with Charlie Ruffmg, Wes Ferrell and Doh
points for the losers while Phil Newcombe in that department, and was an exceptionalltelder as
Jackson and Mel Davis each well. He has been waiting much longer to get into the Hall of
Fame than Roberts, having retired as an active player in 1958,
had 13.
eight
years before Roberts did.
Lakers 112 Jazz 108:
Understandably, Robin Roberts is getting a little anxious.
Gail Goodrich scored 34
He sees a fellow like Ralph Kiner make it and he remembers
points and the Lakersrallied in
the second half for their win. that Kiner was among the top 10 hitters m the league averagePete Maravich was high scorer wise only twice. He doesn't knock Kiner's election, but he thinks,
and agam it's perfectly understandable, wbat about me?
for the Jazz with 32 points.
Roberts says he questions whether those writers voting now
Pistons 93 Warriors 90:
actually
know the records and backgrounds of the players
GeorgeTrapphitajurnpshot
with 10 seconds left and John they're votmg for. He says maybe they should condense the size
Mengel! sealed the Pistons' of the voting group, make it smaller, and select a neutral comwin with a pair of free throws mittee to get up a swnmary of ea_~ player and include it with the
to lift the Pistons to their win. ballot.
Robin Roberts wonders about the current writers.
Bob Lanier scored 30 points for
This isn't anything new . Ballplayers have wondered about
Detroit while Rick Barry had
writers for years and years, and writers in turn have wondered
25 for the Warriors.
about ballplayers. From my observation, both have a lot w
SuperSonics 99 SUDS 85: .
Fr.ed Brown scored. 24 pomls wonder about.
When he's elected, Robin Roberts will think the wrtters are
leading four players tn double
great.
Well, good, anyway.
;
figures as the SuperSonics
I know it's a little difficult, especially when he's this close, but
downed the Suns at Phoenix.
The Suns made only 35,of 101 Robin Roberts simply will have to be a little patient. He has
field goal attempts as they always enjoyed reading books and if I may, I'd suggest he read
dropped their second Pacific the Book E;cclesiastes from the Old Testament, particularly that
portion which goes like this :
Division game in two nights.
"There is ... a time to be born, and a time to die; a time to
plant, and a time wpluck up that which is planted; a time to kill
and a time to heal; a time to breakdown and a ttme to build up; a
time to weep, and a time wlaug)l; a time wmourn, and a tune to
Berea 66 Cumbrtnd 65
dance ... Atime wlove and a time to hate."
Va Un1on 102 N C Cent 84
Miss Valley 85 Ala St 78
Robin Roberts' time for being elected to the Hall of Fame
Elon 103 Campbell 91
simply
hasn't come yet.
J C Smith 92 Benedict 83
So La 90 Jacksnvl St Bl
It will, beyond question. Probably like Ralph Kiner satd, next
Tougaloo 79 Wm Carey 63
year.
M•dwest

Kings continue
• n
theBUC k d 0 m ln

College Basketball Results
east
W Ky . 91 LaSa l l e 87
Army 66 Ion a 60
Penn St . 88 Syracuse 84
Marshall 107 DePaul 96
FOU -Rthrfrd 77 Rider 75
St Jos (Pa.) 61 Hofstra 60
N1agara 71 Cornell 70
St Bonnie 108 St Fran 89
Boston Colt 85 Prov 77
St Fran Pe . 64 Oetro 1t 55
Pittsburgh 70 Temple 61
St. Ptr's 70 Geotwn DC 68
Nwrk Rutgers 76 NY Po ry 68
Alfred 77 Clarkson 74
lnd Pa 83 Jhnstwn - Pitt 68
Wagner 65 Kings Pomt 63
Mansfield 88 Cheyney 77
Del 80 Gettysburg 68
c.w . Post 92 Brklvn Coli. 62
Alliance 86 Wstmnstr Pa 78
Pt . Park 85 Ednbro 51 84
Allegheny 71 Bethany 64
Pratt sa Cncrdia NY 51

a.

Wash
Jeff 78 Crng 1e·MIIn 60
Queens Coli 72 Lehman 58
St Lawrence 94 P lat t sbgh St

"

Shippensbg 82 E Strdsbg 77
Haverford 57 W1dener 55
Kmg's Pa 66 Scranton 65
Binghmtn Sf 83 Houghtn 55
A l bany St. NY 99 U!1C8 84
Union NY 83 Rochstr U 72
Waynesburg 89 Geneva 1!6
York NY 59 Barucn 57
Brid~eport 86 Am Inti 78
Swrthmre 74 wash Md 70
Hartford ~0 Cent Conn 76
Tufts 78 wesleyan 60
CCNY 86 MIT 66
South
V Irginia 87 W Va . 79
Duke 113 Dav1dson 76
Clemson 106 C1tadel 75
Geo Wash 80 Navy 58
No Car 101 Wake Forest 91
Jac ksnvl 66 Richmond 58

Marquette 73 Xav1er 0 55
Kan Sf 108 Iowa Sf 93
M1am 1 0 . 74 Dayton 62
Ohio U 75 Bwlng Grn 69
Kent St 52 Toledo 48
Kansas 81 Co lorado 59
Mo 51 L 82 Lyla Ill. 75
Capital 49 Musklngum 47
Hanover 98 Bluffton 59
a Northrn 71 Oberlin 56
Mt Un1on 71! Wooster 76
R 10 Grande 86 Dyke es
lnd Sf T H 69 Evnsvt 67
Wayne St 88 Windsor 80
Ol1 vet 78 Hope 61
Alma 90 Alb1on 89

Plattvl 66 Stv s Pt 59
Wal sh 73 St V1n c cnt 70
Mill1 kn 106 North Pr k 71
Oum cy 75 N E Mo St 63
Ca l vm 105 Adnan 81
Valparai SO 88 DePauw 74
Southwest
MI SSOUri 77 Okl ahoma 66

F err 1s 74 Grand Val 54
Northwood 86 Oakland 66
Nebraska 73 Ok l a Sf 58
North Cent 54 Aurora 48
No Ill 93 Ball St 73
Gustavus 78 Ausburg 71
St Cld St 90 Moorhed 70
Mmn Oulth 73 Hamline 68
Mmn Dulth 73 Hamlin e 68
M11ton 85 St Norbert 73
So Il l Carb 91 Il l St 61
Whtwtr Sf 54 W 1S Gr B 52
Nrthlad 69 M1Ch Tec h 54

west

Ft LeWIS 73 A ir F= orce 62
Cap11a 1 49 Muskmgum 47 (otl
W1ttenb erg 90 Ohio We sleyan
58

NEW YORK (UPI) - The
Year of the Trojan even extended mto pro football this
year.
The University of Southern
California won the national
charnpwnship this year and
now will send a record nlllllber
of Its players inw the pros.
The annual National Football
League college player draft
ended Wednesday and when tt
was all sorted out, 14 Trojans
had been selected by the 26
cluba m 17 rounds .
The wt.l was one more than
the previous high of 13, set by
Ohto State tn 1971.
Southern Cal had four
players taken on the second
round alone- Anthony DaVIs
(New York J ets ), Charles
Plulltps (Oakland) , Btll Batn
(Green~Bay ) and Art Riley
(Mirmesota ) Richard Wood
(Jets) was taken on the third
round ,
Allan
Cart~r
(Cleveland) on the fourth and
Jim Obradovich (New York
Giants ) and Pat Haden (Los
Angeles) on the seventh on
Tuesday.
On Wednesday, six more
Trojans were selected, including J . K: McKay, son of USC
Coach John McKay, by Cleveland on the 16th roW1d. Others
Included Otha Bradley (San
Diego) on the lOth, Marvin
Cobb (Cincirmati) on the 11th,
Dale Mitchell (San Francisco)
on the 13th and Steve Knutson
(Atlanta) and Bob McCaffrey
(Green Bay) on the 16th.
There were 442 players
selected, 244 offensive and 188
defensive. Seven kickers and
five punters also were chosen.
The leading individual position
was running back, with 7~
taken.
The Big Eight Conference
was the leader with 44 players
chosen in the drafting, which
lasted two minutes short of 21
hours.
Most of the top talent was
snatched up on Tuesday's
opening seven rounds and
there were very lew major
items VVednesday. There was
one major trade involving Baltimore and Washington and the
Jets, who brought on an NFL

ruling agamst raiding the
World Football League last
season , dipped mw the ranks of
the rtval league again .
The Colts dealt two veterans
- 11)-year guard Glenn Ressler
and w1de recetver Cotton
Speyrer- to Washtngwn for the
Redskins' 12th-round pick this
year and 16th next season in
what seemed like a steal for
Washington. There is some
speculation, however, that the
deal may be attached to the
Redskms' releasing assistant
Ted March1broda recently w
become the new head coach of
th e Colts
The Jets grabbed off one of
the premier receivers in the
WFL m James Scott, who
played with the Cltlcago Fire
last season . Scott, described by
Fire Coach Jun Spavital as, "a
possible second Paul VVitrfield," has Indicated that he
will attend the Jets' rookie
testing sesston Saturday. He
IUiderwent knee surgery last
season after ranking as the No.
1 receiver in the league m mid·
season.
Last October, New York
signed veteran center Howard
Kindig when the Jacksonville
franchise folded and the NFL,
fearing possible antitrust
action from the WFL, tm·
mediately instituted a ban on
signing its players until the
NFL season was over. Dallas
squeezed In punter Duane
Carrill, also from Jacksonville,
just before the ruling went Into
effect.

Rio edges Dyke, 86-85
RIO GRANDE - A Bob
Caldwell free throw with 18
seconds remaining gave Rio
Grande an 86-83 lead and the
Redmen beld on to edge the
Dyke Demons, 86-85 at Lyne
Center Wednesday night.
The victory, which boosted
the Redmen to the .500 mark at
8-8, avenged an earlier overtime defeat to the Demons a!
Cleveland.
Caldwell's free throw, which
was followed by a Tom Eury
layup to account for the final 1
point margin, climaxed a seesaw race horse battle.
The Redmen trailed much of
the first half, taking the lead
for the first time with 7' 04
remaining on a 10 footer by
Caldwell. Jim Noe, who turned
in another ~ceplional game
with 34 points and 17 rebOunds,
added a 12 foot jumper before
Dan Bollinger laid in a bunny
and Noe hit again frQm the 12
foot mark as the Redmen
bolted into a :JS.30 lead.
Leading 48-42 at in·
termissioo, the Demons came
back midway through the
seasoo period, tying the score
at6+64at the 9:08mark on al2
footer by Alvin Brown.
Redman Andy· Davenport
responded with a foul shot to
put Rio on top by I at 65-M and
it was back and forth the rest of
the way.
Dyke took a ~77lead at 3:02
.., a Pair of free throws by
Leonard Askew before the
Redinen regained the lead on a
pair &lt;:l cbarlty to1a1s by Noe.
Brown bit the front end of a
one-aJHl.(IIIO to tie the score at
"-79 before Bolllnger lipped in
a m1 1~ shot to put Rio on top
agaiA.

Barry Smith, who led a host
of Demons in double ligures
with 19 pomts, hit a layup
before Noe got a bunny after a
Caldwell steal to put Rio on top
for good at 83-81 with I: 28 left.
Noe connected Of\ both ends
of a one-andoQne with 43
seconds remaining to give Rio
a 4 point margin at 83-81 before
Brett Manuel sank a pair of
charity tosses to set the stage
lor Caldwell's free throw that
provided the winning margin.

Rio Grande had just three
players in double figures, led
by Noe's 34 points. Bollinger
plllllped in 20 and Jim Stewart
added 12.
Smith was joined in double
figures by Leonard ABkew with
18, Brown with 17, highlywuted Hal Sullmger wtth 12
and Bernard Askew w1th 11.
The statistics were as close
as the final score with the
Redmen hitting 38 of 90 attempts from the noor for 42

Rio-Dyke box •
DYKE t85)

PLAYER

FG-A FT-A
6-14
0-1
5-11
1-2
7-19
4-7
B-18 1-2
9-19 1· 1
2-6
0-0
1-4
2-2

Hal Sullinger
Bernard Askew
Leonard Askew
Alvin Brown

Barry Smith
Tom Eury

Brett MantJel

TOTALS

38-91
RIO GRANDE (86)

PLAYER
Jim Noe

0

0

RB PF TP
14
2

5
5

5

2
2
2
1

12
4
4

3

9-15 44

FT-A RB
6-8
17
9-19 2-2 10
2-3
0-0
1
6-13 0-1
4
4o 1J 1•2
6
3-9
1-2
4
0-2
0-0
0
0-1
0-0
0
0-1
0-0
2
38-90 10-ll 44

FG-A

14-29

Dan Bollinger

Gil Price
Jim Stewart

Andy Davenport

Bob Caldwell

Mac Barbee
Brownie Wilson
Gary Swinehart

TOTALS

Halftime: Rio

ol8

Dyke

42

12
l1
18
17
19
4
4

0

pet. The Demons canned 38 of
91.
Rio sank 10 of 15 charity
chances while the visitors hit 9
of 15 anll both teams hauled m
44 reboiUids.
Noe led all reboW1ders with
17, while Bolhnger added 10 for
the Redmen . Sullinger grabbed
14 missed shots and Brown 12
w pace Dyke boardwork.
saturday the Redmen go
after their fourth MOC victory
when they travel to Cedarville,
before returmng home lor a
Wednesday mght encounter
with Ohio Dominican at Lyne
Center.
In Wednesday's preliminary,
the Redmen junior varsity
rolled past a Vinton independent squad, 92-73.

Paul Lucktenburg paced the
Redmen with 18 points,
followed by Chuck King with
16, Ted Chaffm and Richie
Thomas with 13 each, Artie
DeStephens with 12 and John
Lusher wtth 10.

For the Lowest

-

Tire Prir;es

in the ,ll,rea
IPs

'l'wo well-known Notre Dame
players- quarterback Tom
Clements and AU America
guard Jerry DINardo-ere
bypassed In Ute draft. Several
NFL club sources felt both
players were too small for their
positions. Both, however, are
expected to sign on as free
agents."

Choose

a
chain for
any
purpose
.....

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Mason, W. Va.

SIFFORD
CLEVELAND (UP!) Charlie Sifford, first black on
the Professional Golfers Association tour, has signed a
three-year contract as head
pro at Sleepy Hollow Golf
Course
In
suburban
Brecksville, Ohio, it was an·
nOIUICed Tuesday.
Sifford, 52, feels the pro tour
is just getting too tough. . .
"Those 12-hour days living m
motels and the traveling just
don't appeal to me," said
Sifford. "! want Jo settle

down."

HEATERS
t\oi4

BE,ND TIRE CENTER

20,000 TO
65,000 BTU

e

"I want to teach" said Slf·
ford, w)lo joined the pro tour 19
years ago. "! will bave group
lessons for both men and
women, and I'm going to have

til

a junior

lJ[;ft/
W.h~

Mason, W. Ita

772:5881

85

17 ,

PF TP
3

34
20
4
12
9

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2
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OFF

7
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86

same good nBighb.or.

T.IRE SALE

Here's my new State Farm off1ce, where I can serve
you with the best value in car,' home, life and health
insurance. I invite you to call or drop in any time .

All tires in stock

at catalog cost
prices.
•
Mea sizes jn stock.

STEVE . SNOWDEN
1258 Poweu ), ,,Middleport, Ph: 992-7155
11AII JAIM

NEWELl'S SERVICE-STATION
I

•

Year of Trojans
in pro ball also

A
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rot

SEE THESE GREAT NEW HEATERS SOON •.. .TERMS TO SUIT YOUR BUDGET
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'

'

2 - The Dally Sentinel, l\1lddleport-1\ Jnwruy P , Th u r ~rt a ). Ja n. 30, l ~ , .,

"Maybe If We All Drag Our Feet.

"

Editorial comment,
opinion,

fe;~tures

By BRUCE E. HICKS
UP! ScleliCe Writer
HOUS'I'ON (UP!)- A Teua
research center hopes to
determine how influenza
spreads and ways people can
build inununities to ward off
the next worldwide flu
epidemic expected in about
three years. ·
Drs. Robert Couch and Julius

Cities on the federal dole
Concern is expressed from tune to tune that we are creatmg a soc1ety of welfa re addi cL-; _
people" ho spend their h\ es on the pubhc dole and whose chtldr en repeat the pattern
The fact Js Ul at there IS much more danger of our local gove rnments becommg so accustomed
to sucking on the bounteous federal teat that they wtll never be able to wea n themselves Only m th iS
case we don't ca l1 1t welfare but ·'reven ue sharing," "Impact Cities" en d or a host of other names
for a host of other fe deral programs
Cleveland, th e natiOn 's lOt h most populous c1ty, ISa pr1me examp le
It has reached th e potnt where Cleveland has become so dependent upon federal 1and to a lesser
degree, state ) fmancia l asSistance that tt would be completely bankrupt wtthou t tt.
The ctty 's 1975 budget IS proJected at $126 mtlh on But loca l in come and property taxes are'
expected to brmg m only 174 9 mtllion, whtch IS $1.5 mtlhnn short of the amoW1t needed JUSt to run
th e police department.
The difference of some 151 1 mtlhon will be made up w1U1 federal and state gran ts and subSidies, whtch m the past two years have tota led $143 5 mtlh on and $2.\ million respectively
"!! ! were not able to get contmued fed eral fW1d s, th1s would be a one-department government
-safety, " says Mayor Ralph J Perk "There would be no money for recreatiOn hea lth servtces
parks, rubbtsh collection or anythmg else."
'
'
lt'ssa td that Perk has earned the cup wWashm gton so many ttmes he's worn a pa th
Meanwlule, property tax es in Cleveland has been permitted to decline by 151 mtllton and last
November voters, perha~ ha vtng learned that the more they pay the less ervtce th ey get, turned
down an mcome tax mcrease that would have added $16 mtlhon to the cttv's coffers
Perk is not worn ed about the Ct!y's mcreasmg addictiOn to the fed~ral dollar The money, he
says, "belongs to the people "
Cl~veland "',~ Y differ from other Amertcan ctttes only m tbe scale of tts dependency on "tbe
peoples money. But if thts ctty, wtth tts strong tndustrta l and commerctal base ca n't afford to
govern Itself, what hope is there for any ctt y''
'

~~~~~~~~===r
A. Kasel said the center at
~
science today

Crisis in energy calls for research
By LEONARD CURRY
UP! Business Writer
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Scienttftc research of the prtority
enJoyed durmg the Apollo space project of the 1960s 15 needed w
solve the nation 's energy crisiS and other problems that will arise·
m th e next decade, according to the head of the Carnegie Institution
Dr . Philip H. Abelson, president of the scientific research
organjzation smce 1971, satd energy problems will agitate
Americans for more than a decade before any meanmgful
sources other than oil and coal can be dtscovered.
He said envtronmentahsts and government bureaucracy have

Whatever happened to English
At their annual convention in New Orleans, members of the Na tional Counctl of Teachers of
English (NCTE ) de ctded that the new English usage section of the Scholastic Aptitude Test is
"linguiStically mvalid" and should be dispensed wtth .
·
., . As report~ by Education USA newsletter, the teachers agreed that the new test attempts to
lumt students IIngutstte expression wan arbttranly established correct form. "
.Horror of horrors. But that 's not all. Thts "superftctal concept of 'correctness' " ts ractally and
soctally btased, the NCTE foW1d, because it excludes the dtalects of millions of students. This IS
especially distrer •ing smce the new test IS used around the country to dcternune college admtssions
and placement in English courses.
Bye:bye Shakespeare. Bye-bye Declaration of Independence and Gettysburg Address. Junk
everything, else that rep;~sents an "arbttrartly, esta blished" literary standard and "superftctal
con ~pt of Cor~ectness And we certamly can t deny anyone college adnusston just because he
don t talk Enghsh so good, or expect llifn to toke a remedial rather than an advanced English
course.
Whatever happened to the · ~quest for excellence'' the educa tors were urg1ng on us a few years
back' Obvtously, tl ain't no more

DR. LAMB

RAY CROMLEY

By Lawrcnct• E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - After
bemg " treated" for a duodenal
ulcer for mne years my doc;:tor
te lls me my X rays show no
scarnng from ulcers but r do
have a htatal herrua. Are they
so Similar tn symptoms and

Credit programs no

business today
acted to impede sctentiftc exploration that will develop energy
resources that are alternatives to natural gas and ml.
In the next decade, the energy crisis will be Jomed by crtses of
raw .matertals, population and food , Abelson satd, and the
solutions to these problems are not munediately at hand etther.
It wtll be found, Abelson said, that a cructal component in
meeting these problems IS to utilize knowledge more effectively.
He Satd President Ford's proposals to rely heavily on higher
pr1ces to curb energy cons=ption wUI proVIde only a short term
answer because prtce increases for ml and electric power m the
past year have dampened coMumer demand only slightly.
He satd, too, one of the chief problems facmg government IS the
difficulty of convincmg the public the energy crisis IS real.
Because the oil embargo was so brtef, he satd, Americans did not
realize fully how important energy is to our existence and way

of life and were not sufficiently motivated to take action needed
to meet the long-range problems.
"Today, what basically sets us apart from less fortiUiate
people is the abthty of· the average individual to acquire and to
use the equivalent of 10 kilowatts of power," hesatd.
However, Abelsonsatd, the United States is "coming to the end
of a joyride based on petroleum. " The economy will be severely
handicapped lor the next five years by a decline in the nation's
abihty to produce ml and natural gas, he satd.
The Carnegie president, a piOneer of atomic energy research,
has spent more than a decade studying the processes by which oil
ts created m nature and various ways of extracting oil from
shale.
Solar and nuclear energy bold some promise of easing the
problems in the future, Abelson satd, "but lor at least 15 years
our economy and way of life will be cruc13Uy dependent on
hydrocarbons, especially oil."
For the short I'W1, he said, the United States must increase coal
production and conversion of coal into oil. He also proposes Increased extraction of oil from shale, but that will require
guarantees that costly oil derived from shale will not be IUidercut
by foreign oil producers.
Abelson said scientific research is fragmented and has been
since Prestdent Ntxon removed it from tts priority position two
years ago.
" President Ford is nm.; m closer c,.ct with Dr. (H. Guyford)
Stever, the science adviser, but the scientific commiUiity has
reservations concerning the effectiveness of the present
arrangement. It is hoped President Ford will fmd ways of better
utilizing the enormous scientific and technological potentials of
thts country," Abelson said.

Levzonson 's happy
he left the race
1

I~-------------------------~
Letters ul opinion ore welcomed. They should be less
1
1 than 300 "ords long (or be subject to reduction by the
,
1 editor ! attd must be sigued with the signee 's address.
I
1 Names may be withheld upon publication. However" on
:
I r.quest, names will be dlsrtosed. Letters should be in good
j

place for politics

I

t.stt·, addressing Issues. not personalities .

discomfor t?

I
€)
I
By Ray Cromley
DE AR READER - You
HOLLYWOOD - Where 's
WASHINGTON (NEA ) - There ts a proposal in Congress,
don 't have to have a sea r that
Sam Levenson been lately'
you can see on an X ray after sponsored by some of its most mnuenlial members. wh1ch would
I
••• HV[..
II Lots of people ask that
fuMe! credit to specific industries if approved.
you have had an ulcer. So the
question The answer is that he
H one looks only at the surface, the concept has great inI
I made his choice and it 's worth
present-e of a h1atal herma now
tellectual appeal. Too little of the nation's cash ts going into those
I
t
doesn't mean you may not have
exanumng
industrtes which must be expanded if the unemployed are to be
had an ulcer.
It's been 10 years since
Bntey
et.
ill.
found
right
put to work and the shortages whtch he behind much of our inNot everyone with a htatal
Levenson
stopped being an
flatiOn are to be eradtcated . It sounds proper to channel funds
herma has sympto;ns Many
ordinary entertamer. He hasn't
away from "speculative" to "vttal" Industries such as housing,
Gallipolis, Ohto 45631
· people with htatal herntas don't forming and power generation.
done
a stand-up turn on TV or
January 'n, 1975
even know they have the
worked
a nighklub date tn that
Thts ts an economic boobytrap of inunense proportions.
Dear Sir:
problem. Most of the symplong.
And
all because of a
It IS clear we need more housing, but some of the more ·
I must praise Mr. Ben Batey and the other Metgs County
wms are caused by the acid arrogant
speculation of the past decade has been in homes, residents for their letters m the Daily Sentinel and the Times- rrurror.
di ges tive JUICe m the stomach apartments and land .
"! could have had 1t all,"
Sentinel on January 26. They are a lew of the thousands of
lea kmg or being sqmrted back
Levenson
says, and he ISn't
The farmer does need atd so that be may, wtth reasonable
mto the lower esophagus. ThiS profit, reach the production levels we require of him in this day of residents in Gallia and Meigs Counties who support the bemg Immodest, JUSt factual.
VOLUNTEER emergency squads.
ac1d JUice ca n bur n the lower shortages. But bere again, speculators have moved m to achieve
I, myself, am a member of the all-volunteer Gallia County "They were after me for
esog hapus and cau se the some soectacular abuses of government assistance programs.
Emergency Squad. I am qu1te aware of the harrassment by the everything - TV, Las Vegas,
burning pam m the ptt of the
The brownouts of some recent years are convincing proof the
Southeast Ohio Emergency Medical Service towards the everythtng.
stomach JUSt at the lower ltp of utilily industry must expand .more rapidly Tbe o1l shortage
"Then one mght I came off
volW1teer squads. SEOEMS has been trying to talk the Gallia
the breastbone that pattents obvtously requires investment of capttal to shift from oil-burnin~
the
s !age in Vegas and there
VoiW1teer Squad mto merging with them for over two years.
complain about
to coal-burmng power plants, with reasonable but costly Some SEOEMS officials even made the statements that the was a man standtng there and l
The same acid digestive proVIsions lor protection of the environment. But there ts also a volunteers were dissolving their operations. That was all news to asked him what time it was. He
JUi ce pr odu ce d in exce ss strtdent battle ragtng over what types of power shall be favored
just looked at me and didn 't
the ,VOIW1teers.
quantity and qmrted out mto - conventional or nuclear The danger is that aUocation wonld
answer.
I asked him again.
Mr . Batey is absolutely correct when he refers to a person
the duodenwn can cause an favor one over the other for emotional rather than technical and
SAM LEVENSON
do1ng a lot of talking trying to hold on to a JOb, especially if the Then, to my horror, I reali&gt;.ed I
uJ cer there. So, in fact, the ac1d economic reasons.
was talking to my renection in
job pays over $22,000 a year!
diges tive juice can cause an
Who then is to make the determination of where the chanthe Watergate scandal.
The Gallia County Volunteer Emergency Squad Inc. IS here a rh1rror.
ulcer tn the duodenum , wtth neled money goes? Congress? The adminiStration ? Some wstay. We have answered 90 emergency calls so far thts month!
"It was hke a scene out of
"They were aU brtlliant men.
bW"mng and pam , or it can
bureaucrat down the ltne'
Compare that with the Gallia SEOEMS station that now has Kafka. I realized how phony All had great marks in school.
cause IITI tat10n an even an
In the absence of war, how does one dectde on priortties ?
three ambulances ! The Gallipolis Ctty Commission requested my hfe was and made my And then look wbai;Jtappened
ulcer in the lower esoghagus, in
These are problems the nation's leadmg economiSts have
that SEOEMS leave the city of Gallipolis due winactivity. 1 can deciSion·. This life wasn 't for to them.! think our educational
relation to a htata l hernta .
wrestled with in vain .
me . "That was the end. "
system should teach people to
W1derstand, with just an average of about~ runs per month.
Our bodtes are not so good at
H Congress decides tbe priorities, as is lilt ely, tbe aMwer will
Now, he lives quietly tn ' love before it worries about
SEOEMS should worry about thetr own ambulance service
presenting black and whtte and be poltf,ical. Those industries favored will, if recent htstory is any while the federal funds last and not harrass the VOLUNTEER Queens , New York, m a nice whether they can read."
"either-or" s ituations Th e guide, tend to be those promoted by the stronger pressure grou~ squads by printing untrue statistics and remarks about the home with a vtew of the ' .Sam Levenson is happy with
pam and locat ton an Irritated - those with money or with the best publicity apparatus.
VOLUNTEER service.
Atlantic Ocean from every hts current way of life. The fact
lowe r es oph ag us or the Rulemaking by the executive would be no better. The enl would very much like to see the SEOEMS annual activity front window. He confines his that he ISO 't hugely famous or
duodenwn are not so spec1f1c forcement of regulations would require a host of inspectors,
report for 1974 published in this newspaper showmg the nW1flber performance to the lecture hugely rich doesn'l trouble
tha t you can al" ay s be sure regulawrs and attorneys, many of whom would have their own of actual emergency calls answered by SEOEMS (in-eounty runs circmt
him. He says he and his wife
whtch IS the problem or for thai interpretation of regulations and end up workmg at cross pur- only) in both Gallia and Meigs Counties. The tax.paying citizens
"! can be more myself lec- Esther, were Depression kid;
matter tf both condttions are poses in this most complicated field .
turmg," he says. " l can say so they never learned how to be
deserve to know what their tax-dollars are paying lor.
present at the same tnne.
The Russians have demonstrated the failure of central
Sincerely, A VOLUNTEER, Ohio certified Emergency what I want to say. I can talk spendthrifts.
There IS a lot you need to planning momtored by a combination of bureaucrats, economists
Medical Technician.
about serious subjects as well
He's con tent. What more can
knowabout the management of and pohticans. The USSR 's expertence has been that central
as
funny
ones.
And
my
a
person want?
- Name wtthheld on request.
a htatal herma . Small fre quent channehng of res ources becomes increasingly counaudience can talk back to me .
meals are Important, as we ll as terproductive as tbe economy advances and grows highly
Ask me questions . I IQve it."
what yq eat, rules abo ut sophisticated
He also writes. His latest
clothtng, sleepmg, an d exerThe secondary effects are so widespread and so unpossible
book "In One Era and Out the
cise
w calculate accurately that monstrosities result.
Other," IS 'now out in a
There
is
no
question
thai
individual
bankers,
other
money
paperback edition . It's very
Part of the treatment of both
hinders and investors make" many mistakes, some atrocious.
funny,
naturally, but there's
ul cers and htatal herma These men are subject to the same biases, pressures and Insome food for thought in it, too,
Jl!~ Daily Sentinel
symptoms are the same. Since
DEVOTED TO THE
fluences as congressmen and officials. They hBve some curious
just
as
naturally.
symptoms from both problems
INTEREST OF
It's really a pity that Sam
MEIGS·MASON AREA
are largely caused by the acid customs which make no econonuc sense. But our protection here
CHESTER L . TANNEHILL
lies in the diversity of our money markets. To a remarkable
made the decisiOn he made, for
Exec . Ed.
digestive juice formed by the
degree, the biases and other foibles balance out .
ROBERT HOEFLICH
we.
really
shouldn't
be
denied
swmach, it ts unportant to
C1tv Editor
,
In the end, fund allocation would mean a bef!Y financing of
hts wi t. In fact, a whole new
'Publ i shed dat ly. ex c ept
neutralize swmach acid. The mB.rgmal companies in the "vital" industries.tt .fould also mean
y by The Oh io Va lley
generation of kids has grown Saturda
P~Jbl t shmg
Company , 111
an !acids used for this purpose political decisions on how much capacity is needed in each field.
up wtthout knowing how !Winy Co u rt St , Pomeroy, OhiO;
work equally weU for both
45769 Business Offic e Phone
Inevitably, we 'd end up building many uneconomic plants,
he 1s, or how wise .
992 2156 Ect itor la l Phone 992 .
cooditions.
guaranteemg htgh costs for many r ears.
But he tsn 't sure how.' fW1ny 21 57
Medtcine ts sometimes used
Second cl ass po~ ag~ pa id at
he could be today. He says he Pomero y , Oh io. 1
to block the nerves to the
Nat i ona l advert t slng
doesn 't consider the current representative
Bottlnel lt
stoma~h to prevent tt from
Ga ll agher, Inc , 12 Eut .4 2ncf
time
as
particularly
amusing.
. forming so much acid. These
St , New York , New York
"! don 't make jOkes about
S!Jbscr i ption
rates :
Actually these medtc mes protected from the digestive
are very good for most case~ of
Deli vered b y carri er where
Watergate,"
he
says.
"Many
of
availab le 75 cents per week
ulcers . Their
use
is may not be all bad m hiatal action of its own juices by a
my
colleagues
do
but
1
don't.
By Motor Route where carrie~
thtck
mucus
material
over
its
hernia
,
If
'they
effectively
questionable in the treatment
serv 1ce . not ava il able, One
It's
not
fW1ny.
Actually,
I
feel
month , $3. 2S By ma,11 in Oh 1o
of hiatal hernia symptoms. decrease the amourrt of acid lining. The duodenum and
a~ d W Va , One Year , $22 .00,
the
problem
lies
with
our
They may delay the emp\ying produced by the swmach, even esophagus don't have this
Sue months , $11 SO . Three
educational system (Sam was mon t h&gt; , S7 00 E l sewhere
(l lfH511y"'EA III( ~
of the stomach allowing the tl they do delay swmach protection and that is why the
S26 . 00 year . Six months
a teacher before he became a Sl
3.SO . three mon t hs, S7 SO '
acid digestive juices ilTitate or
stomach con Ients to leak back emptying.
comedian ). That's what bred SubSc n ption pr ice includes.
"Good heaven~ ' How /ash•onabla can you gat? "
into the lower esophagus.
The stomach Itself is ulcerate them.
J Sundav T 1mes-Sentine1
';'" -:
~e amoral men who created

I

Al~fdilh
%L..

:

I

Berrys
World

.

I

I~

.,,

'

1

~

I
,. f

••

·l

'

I

'

Defense
sought
for flu

'

I

.

Bay lor College of Medicine was
funded by the Nationa! Institute of Allergy and Infectious diseases to use
Houston as a model city to
learn how influenza works.
"Houston is not unique in
what we know of past
epidemics," Couch said. "We
believe it will be applicable to
other ctties and otber parts of
the world.
"We're trying to find ways of
developing and implementing
new methods of control of
influenza in time to abort or
minimize the pandemic of
1978."
Pandemics
geographically wtdespread
epidemics -occur about every
10 to 14 years. The last one in
this country occurred In the
winter of 1968-69. In the last
three flu pandemics about
86,000 people died In the United
States.
The current influenza A
strain is called Port Chabners
F1u after a town in New
Zealand where it was first
isolated. Couch said an
epidemic of Port Chabners Flu
was expected this winter In
Houston but it didn't appear
there would be a widespread
out~reak.

"That's not ooly good for the
people but for us because we
just got started and need
another year to be better
organized," he said . .
The center was founded last
July to learn how flu enters a
community, monitor its
spread, determine duration
and disappearance.
"If we can le&amp;m that, the
Communicable Disease Center
in Atlanta will have the
responsibility of implementing
new controls," Kasel said.
The Houston center will
monitor flu spread throll8hout
the year and watch for
epidemic periods, usually In
the winter when people stay
inBide more and the disease
can more easUy spread. H they
can le&amp;m what occurrences
signal the beginning of an
epidemic it may be possible to
head off the epidemic, Couch
said.
"After all," he said, Hthe
prevention of death Is the main
thing, not just stopping nu."
The center is watching for
outbreaks of the flu through
city health clinics In mostly low
aoclo-economic areas, selected
family physicians and ctuwntown hospitals. They alao
monitor absenteeism in
schools, among city employes
and in several major depart. ·
ment chain stores.
"We presume flu spread&amp;
aroiUid a city like It does
aroiUid the country, following
trade routes," Couch said
"That's one of the things we're
looking for.
"There's no such thing as an
isolated city anymore. One
hundred years ago a port city
bad the worst problems. Now
ports mean nothing. F1u Is
spread over car, bus, truck and
airplane travel routes."

OTA layoffs
annotmced in
economy move
COLUMBUS (UPI)- About
550 erriployes of the Ohio
Department of Trllll8portatlon
will be furloughed in the next .
few weeks in an economy
move, Director Richard
Jackson announced VVednesday.
"It is a necessary move to
keep within OUr. budget," said
Jackson.
Jackson said the layoffs
would be made proportionately
in all 12 highway divisions
which amounts to a 5 per cent
staff reduction.
Jackson said the decisioo as
to whr. will be furloughed is up
to the dlreclllr ttf each divisioo
but he indicated those cuts will
be in 'design and construclloo
departments. The cutbacks
will bring the department's
payroll below 9,000 employes
for the first time In seVeral
years, said Jacbon.
I

3- The Daily Se~tinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Thursday, Jan. JO, 1975

NC rips Deacons

Tar O
He.els claim
~ACC top position
: " By United Press International

and Johnny Britt in the last 25
' When Atlantic Coast ~ooler- seconds enabled Western Ken1." ence coaches predicted at the tucky to upset LaSalle.
' " start of the season that there
Trailing most of the game
would be a close battle for the and by as many as 12 points,
'• league title, they were not Western Kentucky went ahead
merely being cautious about to stay, 87-85, on a field goal by
defending national champton Wilson James with 1:13 left.
North Carolina State.
Odemns' basket made it 89-85
Eleventh-ranked North with 25 seconds remaining. But
"' Carolina, With Mitch Kupehak then Charlie Wise scored for
.,, and Brad Hoffman hitting 21 LaSalle and it was IJ9.ll7 with 17
·1 points each, moved into the
seconds left .
0 ' lead of tbe ACC with a conOdemns was charged for
"' terence record or 5-1 after walking with nine seconds
whipping Wake Forest 101-91 remaining but Rr itf in'" Wednesday night.
;, Second-ranked North
:' Carolina State holds a 4-1 ACC
o· record while Maryland and
'' Clemson are 4-2.
The Tar Heels went into
1• second half against Wake
• Forest with a 49-48 lead on two
!' Hoffman free throws after the
... buzzer.
By United Press International
1'
North Carolina then outThere's still bope for the
scored Wake Forest, 31-12, in little man in the Natiooal
~ the first 9:14 of the second half
Basketball Association when
• to run up a ~int lead, ~ . Kansas Ctty.{)maha can beat
·: and was never seriously Milwaukee four times in six
" threatened afterwards. The meetings.
• closest the Deacons could come
The Milwaukee Bucks have
•· after the Tar Heel rampage 7-loot 2 Kareem Abdui.Jabbar,
:, 'was 96-87 with just under two of course, while the Kings'
!&gt;minutes remaining .
chief game-wumer is 6-1 Nate
Kupchak also led North Archibald.
• Carolina rebounding with nine
Abdul-Jabbar scored 43
• and Hoffman, who scored 1~ of points Wednesday night but
' his points In the second hall, Archibald and Jinuny Walker
l led in assists with eight.
took over down the stretch to
" Skip BroWn led Wake Forest give Kansas Clty.{)maha a 1061 with 32 points-22 in the fll'St
102 victory. It was the Kings'
" balf-and nine assists.
fourth victory in six meetings
' Elsewhere, Western Ken- with the Bucks.
t lucky defeated lOth-ranked
Archibald snapped a 99-W tie
LaSalle, 91-117, Niagara edged on a drive that resulted In a
• Cornell, 71-70, in overtime, layup over Abdui.Jabbar and a
' Pittsburgh scored a 70-61 foul with Nate making the free
i overtime win over Temple, throw for a three-i)Oint play.
· Penn State clipped Syracuse, Archibald scored 28 points and
88-84,
Nebraska
beat Walker 26 for the Kings.
' Oklahoma, 73-litl, Kansas State
The Philadelphia 76ers de1 ripped Iowa State, 108-93, St.
feated the New York Knicks
' Bona'l4nture routed St. 911-92, the Los Angeles Laker~
1 Francis (N.Y.), 108-89, and
beattheNewOrleansJazz, ll2KallSas dumped Colorado, 81· 108 the Detroit Pistons beat
. 59.
the' Golden State Warriors, 93Field goals by Mike Odemns 90, and the Seattle Supersonics

""

NEW YORK (UP!) - Let's get one thtng straJght right off.
!lever anybody deserves to be tn Baseball's Hall of Fame, it's
tercepted the LaSalie throw-in Robm Roberts. He did everything he was supposed to do and then
and dribbled in for the final some. HewOtked in the salt mines and toiled in the vmeyards for
basket of the game with four the Philadelphia Phillies mostly , plugging away do ggedly at his
seconds left.
trade lor 19 years.
Odemns scored 33 points for
He was a 20-game wmner sL' consecutive years and had the
the winners and made 14 of his same incredible control over a baseball Muhammad All has over
18 shots in the game with 21 a listening audience. He was the perfect gentleman wtth tt allm
points coming m tbe secood that never once dtd he ever make a pitch without first cleanmg
half.
his fingers and straightening the leg of his trousers.
Britt had 18 points for the
What I'm trying wsay is that Robin Roberts gels my vote for
wirmers who now bold a 10-5 the Hall of Fame .. . every year. He's going to keep getting tt as
record. LaSalle, which saw its
long as I keep voting because, tome, anyway, he belongs in there
ll1:ame wmning streak come wtth basebaU's elite the same way Bob Lemon does, but I also
to an end, got 22 points each think he should ease up and relax a little.
from Joe Bryant and Bill
He shouldn't allow himself to get carrted away by some of his '
Taylor.
more fervent Philadelphl8 well-wtshers, who are so upset over
his missing out by a mere nine votes in this last election that
they 're calling the balloting a poll-ish joke and throwmg around
hints that maybe the vote ISn't on the up-and-up because only one
man, Jack Lang, secretary of the Baseball Writers' Association
Of America, COW1ts the ballots in a closed room.
Next .thlng you know, someone's gomg w claim the voting is
9
cerigged, and I can just hear Babe Ruth laughing and saymg,
U
wherever he is, "Those guys down tbere are never gonna get to
heaven that way .''
ll anybody has a hcense to holler about the voting, it seems to
·. wpped the Phoenix club, 99-85,
me Bob Lemon has, but he never does.
in other games.
Take a look at some of hts figures. He pitched only 13 years, six
76ers 98 Knlcll.s 92:
Fred Carter scored 25 points, less than Robin Roberts, and was a 20-game wiMer seven times,
including two baskets in the one more time than Roberts, who pitched six years longer.
stretch, to give the 76ers their Moreover, Lemon was one of the fmest hitting pitchers ever, a
victory. Earl Monroe had 18 fellow who ranked with Charlie Ruffmg, Wes Ferrell and Doh
points for the losers while Phil Newcombe in that department, and was an exceptionalltelder as
Jackson and Mel Davis each well. He has been waiting much longer to get into the Hall of
Fame than Roberts, having retired as an active player in 1958,
had 13.
eight
years before Roberts did.
Lakers 112 Jazz 108:
Understandably, Robin Roberts is getting a little anxious.
Gail Goodrich scored 34
He sees a fellow like Ralph Kiner make it and he remembers
points and the Lakersrallied in
the second half for their win. that Kiner was among the top 10 hitters m the league averagePete Maravich was high scorer wise only twice. He doesn't knock Kiner's election, but he thinks,
and agam it's perfectly understandable, wbat about me?
for the Jazz with 32 points.
Roberts says he questions whether those writers voting now
Pistons 93 Warriors 90:
actually
know the records and backgrounds of the players
GeorgeTrapphitajurnpshot
with 10 seconds left and John they're votmg for. He says maybe they should condense the size
Mengel! sealed the Pistons' of the voting group, make it smaller, and select a neutral comwin with a pair of free throws mittee to get up a swnmary of ea_~ player and include it with the
to lift the Pistons to their win. ballot.
Robin Roberts wonders about the current writers.
Bob Lanier scored 30 points for
This isn't anything new . Ballplayers have wondered about
Detroit while Rick Barry had
writers for years and years, and writers in turn have wondered
25 for the Warriors.
about ballplayers. From my observation, both have a lot w
SuperSonics 99 SUDS 85: .
Fr.ed Brown scored. 24 pomls wonder about.
When he's elected, Robin Roberts will think the wrtters are
leading four players tn double
great.
Well, good, anyway.
;
figures as the SuperSonics
I know it's a little difficult, especially when he's this close, but
downed the Suns at Phoenix.
The Suns made only 35,of 101 Robin Roberts simply will have to be a little patient. He has
field goal attempts as they always enjoyed reading books and if I may, I'd suggest he read
dropped their second Pacific the Book E;cclesiastes from the Old Testament, particularly that
portion which goes like this :
Division game in two nights.
"There is ... a time to be born, and a time to die; a time to
plant, and a time wpluck up that which is planted; a time to kill
and a time to heal; a time to breakdown and a ttme to build up; a
time to weep, and a time wlaug)l; a time wmourn, and a tune to
Berea 66 Cumbrtnd 65
dance ... Atime wlove and a time to hate."
Va Un1on 102 N C Cent 84
Miss Valley 85 Ala St 78
Robin Roberts' time for being elected to the Hall of Fame
Elon 103 Campbell 91
simply
hasn't come yet.
J C Smith 92 Benedict 83
So La 90 Jacksnvl St Bl
It will, beyond question. Probably like Ralph Kiner satd, next
Tougaloo 79 Wm Carey 63
year.
M•dwest

Kings continue
• n
theBUC k d 0 m ln

College Basketball Results
east
W Ky . 91 LaSa l l e 87
Army 66 Ion a 60
Penn St . 88 Syracuse 84
Marshall 107 DePaul 96
FOU -Rthrfrd 77 Rider 75
St Jos (Pa.) 61 Hofstra 60
N1agara 71 Cornell 70
St Bonnie 108 St Fran 89
Boston Colt 85 Prov 77
St Fran Pe . 64 Oetro 1t 55
Pittsburgh 70 Temple 61
St. Ptr's 70 Geotwn DC 68
Nwrk Rutgers 76 NY Po ry 68
Alfred 77 Clarkson 74
lnd Pa 83 Jhnstwn - Pitt 68
Wagner 65 Kings Pomt 63
Mansfield 88 Cheyney 77
Del 80 Gettysburg 68
c.w . Post 92 Brklvn Coli. 62
Alliance 86 Wstmnstr Pa 78
Pt . Park 85 Ednbro 51 84
Allegheny 71 Bethany 64
Pratt sa Cncrdia NY 51

a.

Wash
Jeff 78 Crng 1e·MIIn 60
Queens Coli 72 Lehman 58
St Lawrence 94 P lat t sbgh St

"

Shippensbg 82 E Strdsbg 77
Haverford 57 W1dener 55
Kmg's Pa 66 Scranton 65
Binghmtn Sf 83 Houghtn 55
A l bany St. NY 99 U!1C8 84
Union NY 83 Rochstr U 72
Waynesburg 89 Geneva 1!6
York NY 59 Barucn 57
Brid~eport 86 Am Inti 78
Swrthmre 74 wash Md 70
Hartford ~0 Cent Conn 76
Tufts 78 wesleyan 60
CCNY 86 MIT 66
South
V Irginia 87 W Va . 79
Duke 113 Dav1dson 76
Clemson 106 C1tadel 75
Geo Wash 80 Navy 58
No Car 101 Wake Forest 91
Jac ksnvl 66 Richmond 58

Marquette 73 Xav1er 0 55
Kan Sf 108 Iowa Sf 93
M1am 1 0 . 74 Dayton 62
Ohio U 75 Bwlng Grn 69
Kent St 52 Toledo 48
Kansas 81 Co lorado 59
Mo 51 L 82 Lyla Ill. 75
Capital 49 Musklngum 47
Hanover 98 Bluffton 59
a Northrn 71 Oberlin 56
Mt Un1on 71! Wooster 76
R 10 Grande 86 Dyke es
lnd Sf T H 69 Evnsvt 67
Wayne St 88 Windsor 80
Ol1 vet 78 Hope 61
Alma 90 Alb1on 89

Plattvl 66 Stv s Pt 59
Wal sh 73 St V1n c cnt 70
Mill1 kn 106 North Pr k 71
Oum cy 75 N E Mo St 63
Ca l vm 105 Adnan 81
Valparai SO 88 DePauw 74
Southwest
MI SSOUri 77 Okl ahoma 66

F err 1s 74 Grand Val 54
Northwood 86 Oakland 66
Nebraska 73 Ok l a Sf 58
North Cent 54 Aurora 48
No Ill 93 Ball St 73
Gustavus 78 Ausburg 71
St Cld St 90 Moorhed 70
Mmn Oulth 73 Hamline 68
Mmn Dulth 73 Hamlin e 68
M11ton 85 St Norbert 73
So Il l Carb 91 Il l St 61
Whtwtr Sf 54 W 1S Gr B 52
Nrthlad 69 M1Ch Tec h 54

west

Ft LeWIS 73 A ir F= orce 62
Cap11a 1 49 Muskmgum 47 (otl
W1ttenb erg 90 Ohio We sleyan
58

NEW YORK (UPI) - The
Year of the Trojan even extended mto pro football this
year.
The University of Southern
California won the national
charnpwnship this year and
now will send a record nlllllber
of Its players inw the pros.
The annual National Football
League college player draft
ended Wednesday and when tt
was all sorted out, 14 Trojans
had been selected by the 26
cluba m 17 rounds .
The wt.l was one more than
the previous high of 13, set by
Ohto State tn 1971.
Southern Cal had four
players taken on the second
round alone- Anthony DaVIs
(New York J ets ), Charles
Plulltps (Oakland) , Btll Batn
(Green~Bay ) and Art Riley
(Mirmesota ) Richard Wood
(Jets) was taken on the third
round ,
Allan
Cart~r
(Cleveland) on the fourth and
Jim Obradovich (New York
Giants ) and Pat Haden (Los
Angeles) on the seventh on
Tuesday.
On Wednesday, six more
Trojans were selected, including J . K: McKay, son of USC
Coach John McKay, by Cleveland on the 16th roW1d. Others
Included Otha Bradley (San
Diego) on the lOth, Marvin
Cobb (Cincirmati) on the 11th,
Dale Mitchell (San Francisco)
on the 13th and Steve Knutson
(Atlanta) and Bob McCaffrey
(Green Bay) on the 16th.
There were 442 players
selected, 244 offensive and 188
defensive. Seven kickers and
five punters also were chosen.
The leading individual position
was running back, with 7~
taken.
The Big Eight Conference
was the leader with 44 players
chosen in the drafting, which
lasted two minutes short of 21
hours.
Most of the top talent was
snatched up on Tuesday's
opening seven rounds and
there were very lew major
items VVednesday. There was
one major trade involving Baltimore and Washington and the
Jets, who brought on an NFL

ruling agamst raiding the
World Football League last
season , dipped mw the ranks of
the rtval league again .
The Colts dealt two veterans
- 11)-year guard Glenn Ressler
and w1de recetver Cotton
Speyrer- to Washtngwn for the
Redskins' 12th-round pick this
year and 16th next season in
what seemed like a steal for
Washington. There is some
speculation, however, that the
deal may be attached to the
Redskms' releasing assistant
Ted March1broda recently w
become the new head coach of
th e Colts
The Jets grabbed off one of
the premier receivers in the
WFL m James Scott, who
played with the Cltlcago Fire
last season . Scott, described by
Fire Coach Jun Spavital as, "a
possible second Paul VVitrfield," has Indicated that he
will attend the Jets' rookie
testing sesston Saturday. He
IUiderwent knee surgery last
season after ranking as the No.
1 receiver in the league m mid·
season.
Last October, New York
signed veteran center Howard
Kindig when the Jacksonville
franchise folded and the NFL,
fearing possible antitrust
action from the WFL, tm·
mediately instituted a ban on
signing its players until the
NFL season was over. Dallas
squeezed In punter Duane
Carrill, also from Jacksonville,
just before the ruling went Into
effect.

Rio edges Dyke, 86-85
RIO GRANDE - A Bob
Caldwell free throw with 18
seconds remaining gave Rio
Grande an 86-83 lead and the
Redmen beld on to edge the
Dyke Demons, 86-85 at Lyne
Center Wednesday night.
The victory, which boosted
the Redmen to the .500 mark at
8-8, avenged an earlier overtime defeat to the Demons a!
Cleveland.
Caldwell's free throw, which
was followed by a Tom Eury
layup to account for the final 1
point margin, climaxed a seesaw race horse battle.
The Redmen trailed much of
the first half, taking the lead
for the first time with 7' 04
remaining on a 10 footer by
Caldwell. Jim Noe, who turned
in another ~ceplional game
with 34 points and 17 rebOunds,
added a 12 foot jumper before
Dan Bollinger laid in a bunny
and Noe hit again frQm the 12
foot mark as the Redmen
bolted into a :JS.30 lead.
Leading 48-42 at in·
termissioo, the Demons came
back midway through the
seasoo period, tying the score
at6+64at the 9:08mark on al2
footer by Alvin Brown.
Redman Andy· Davenport
responded with a foul shot to
put Rio on top by I at 65-M and
it was back and forth the rest of
the way.
Dyke took a ~77lead at 3:02
.., a Pair of free throws by
Leonard Askew before the
Redinen regained the lead on a
pair &lt;:l cbarlty to1a1s by Noe.
Brown bit the front end of a
one-aJHl.(IIIO to tie the score at
"-79 before Bolllnger lipped in
a m1 1~ shot to put Rio on top
agaiA.

Barry Smith, who led a host
of Demons in double ligures
with 19 pomts, hit a layup
before Noe got a bunny after a
Caldwell steal to put Rio on top
for good at 83-81 with I: 28 left.
Noe connected Of\ both ends
of a one-andoQne with 43
seconds remaining to give Rio
a 4 point margin at 83-81 before
Brett Manuel sank a pair of
charity tosses to set the stage
lor Caldwell's free throw that
provided the winning margin.

Rio Grande had just three
players in double figures, led
by Noe's 34 points. Bollinger
plllllped in 20 and Jim Stewart
added 12.
Smith was joined in double
figures by Leonard ABkew with
18, Brown with 17, highlywuted Hal Sullmger wtth 12
and Bernard Askew w1th 11.
The statistics were as close
as the final score with the
Redmen hitting 38 of 90 attempts from the noor for 42

Rio-Dyke box •
DYKE t85)

PLAYER

FG-A FT-A
6-14
0-1
5-11
1-2
7-19
4-7
B-18 1-2
9-19 1· 1
2-6
0-0
1-4
2-2

Hal Sullinger
Bernard Askew
Leonard Askew
Alvin Brown

Barry Smith
Tom Eury

Brett MantJel

TOTALS

38-91
RIO GRANDE (86)

PLAYER
Jim Noe

0

0

RB PF TP
14
2

5
5

5

2
2
2
1

12
4
4

3

9-15 44

FT-A RB
6-8
17
9-19 2-2 10
2-3
0-0
1
6-13 0-1
4
4o 1J 1•2
6
3-9
1-2
4
0-2
0-0
0
0-1
0-0
0
0-1
0-0
2
38-90 10-ll 44

FG-A

14-29

Dan Bollinger

Gil Price
Jim Stewart

Andy Davenport

Bob Caldwell

Mac Barbee
Brownie Wilson
Gary Swinehart

TOTALS

Halftime: Rio

ol8

Dyke

42

12
l1
18
17
19
4
4

0

pet. The Demons canned 38 of
91.
Rio sank 10 of 15 charity
chances while the visitors hit 9
of 15 anll both teams hauled m
44 reboiUids.
Noe led all reboW1ders with
17, while Bolhnger added 10 for
the Redmen . Sullinger grabbed
14 missed shots and Brown 12
w pace Dyke boardwork.
saturday the Redmen go
after their fourth MOC victory
when they travel to Cedarville,
before returmng home lor a
Wednesday mght encounter
with Ohio Dominican at Lyne
Center.
In Wednesday's preliminary,
the Redmen junior varsity
rolled past a Vinton independent squad, 92-73.

Paul Lucktenburg paced the
Redmen with 18 points,
followed by Chuck King with
16, Ted Chaffm and Richie
Thomas with 13 each, Artie
DeStephens with 12 and John
Lusher wtth 10.

For the Lowest

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in the ,ll,rea
IPs

'l'wo well-known Notre Dame
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guard Jerry DINardo-ere
bypassed In Ute draft. Several
NFL club sources felt both
players were too small for their
positions. Both, however, are
expected to sign on as free
agents."

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Mason, W. Va.

SIFFORD
CLEVELAND (UP!) Charlie Sifford, first black on
the Professional Golfers Association tour, has signed a
three-year contract as head
pro at Sleepy Hollow Golf
Course
In
suburban
Brecksville, Ohio, it was an·
nOIUICed Tuesday.
Sifford, 52, feels the pro tour
is just getting too tough. . .
"Those 12-hour days living m
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don't appeal to me," said
Sifford. "! want Jo settle

down."

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you with the best value in car,' home, life and health
insurance. I invite you to call or drop in any time .

All tires in stock

at catalog cost
prices.
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STEVE . SNOWDEN
1258 Poweu ), ,,Middleport, Ph: 992-7155
11AII JAIM

NEWELl'S SERVICE-STATION
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in pro ball also

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5-The Daily Sentinel M'ddl

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•,

· 4- The Dllily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursaay, Jan. ao.1J73

Wellsville, Can81 Winchester
hold poll lead despite losses
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS (UP I) - Wellsville and Canal Winchester
despite suffering their firsi
losses of the season, mana ged
to remain lirmly entrenched in
their top spots in this week's
Unlled Press In ter nationa l
Ohio High School Board of
Coaches' Class AA and A
basketball ra tings.
Wellsville, which was victimized &amp;!-&amp; by a Steubenville
Big Red comeback Friday
night, nevertheless, held a 305270 point spread over once.beaten Delphos St. John 's,
which moved into the runnerup
position despite a one-point loss
to Defiance.
Columbus Mohawk, second
last week, fell to third alter
absorbing its second defeat, 7267 to Columbus Eastmoor. The
looses by the lop three teams
were all to AAA opponents.
Cana\ Winchester ( 13-1)
stepped outside its class Tuesday night to try Class AAA
Groveport (12-2) for the second
time this season . and got
dumped 84-&amp;1, as the Cruisers
won for the loth straight time.
Winchester, which holds a
262-226lead over Mansfield St.
Peter's in the A ratings, had
beat.en Groveport by lour
points early in the year.
Meanwhile, unbeaten Middletown, rolling along with a '

12-0 record , once again held the
No. I spot in Class AAA.

The Middies of veteran coach
Paul Walker are in a lour-way
ba ttle for the AAA laurels, with
runne,up Barberton trailing
282-263. Ca nton McKinley once
again is third with 231 points,
with Ke ttering Alter fourth
with 206.
Cincinnati Hughes, unbeaten
in II games, jumped from
e.ghth to fifth this week in
AAA, mo ving pa st Toledo
Scott, Newark and Dayton
Rooseve lt.
.Scott fell one not ch to sixth
place, Roosevelt remained in
seventh and Newa rk dropped
I" eighth . Cincinnati Elder and
Cleveland East Tech round out
the lop len .
Circ' ·i lle, unbeaten in 13
ga mes, moved into the fourth
spot and into contention in AA
with 216 points, 28 behind third
place Mohawk. River View was
again in fifth, followed by
Rossford in slxth, Waverly in
seventh, Springfield Shawnee
in eighth, Buckeye South in
ninth and Lorain in tenth.
The last four teams were in
the same spots they occupied
last week.
Following Canal Winchester
and St. Peter's In Class A is
unbeaten Minster ( 1W), whlch
edged into third place ahead of
Norwalk St. Paul.
st. Paul, 13-1, fell from the

-INSULATIONBlown Into Walls
and Attics
-Fire RetardantFree Estimates-Nv OiJugation

unbea.ten ranks Friday r.ight,
dropplllg a 69-&lt;i4 decision to
lith-ranked Monroeville.
Rounding out the Class A top
!Rn are Lorain Clearview in
fifth , followed by Sebring
Upper Scioto Valley Anna'
Lordstown and Pettis~e. '

Board of . Coa c hes baske Tbal l
r a t mg s wilh f i r st p lace vo tes
an d
won l os t
re c ords
in

Middleport, Ohio

WASHINGTON (UPI) Rep. John F. Seiberling DOhio, introduced a bill in' the
House of Representatives
Wedneaday to eliminate the
reserve
clause
which
professional sports teams use
to prevent athletes from
changing teams.
Seiberling said the reserve
clause and other rules and
practices by owners of professional teams to confine players
to one team "constitute group
boycotts and illegal restraints
of trade which are violations of
the federal antitrust laws. "
He said his measure "would
prohibit a web of invidious
practices which owners and
officials of various sports have
instituted to prevent athletes

pttren the scs ·

C L A SS AA A
Nam e
Po i nts
1 Midd l e town ( 13 12 -0 1
282
263
2 Barb e r to n ( 13 13 0 1
J Ca n . M cK (3 13 1J
'2 31
4 Ke t _ A lt e r &lt;2 IJ OJ
206
5 _ C in H ugh e s ( 1 1 1 OJ

144

6. Toi . Sc ott ( 13 11
7 Day Roo s' l t ( 1 11 11
B N ewar k ( l &lt;f\.l l
9. Cin . E ider (?2l

143
106
96
73

10 _ Cte . E T ec h ( 14 1 J

66

Sec ond Te n : 11. la n esville
4•1. 12. Ely r ia 36 : 13. Cin c inna1i
Roger Bacon 34 ; 14 . All iance
33; 15. Cleve l an d H eights 18 ;
16. New Ph i ladelph ia 15 : 17.
Clayto n N o rtt).[l'lon t 14 ;
l B.
Akro n Kenmor e 11; 19. K c t
ter 1ng Fa 1rm on t Wes t 8 : 20.
You n g stown South 6 .

CLASS AA
TEAM
Points
1 W ellsvi ll e ( 11 11 1)
30 5
1. El . S t . J o hn 'S l 8 13 1)
27 0
3. Co l . Moh a wk (2 11 -2)
24-1
4 . Cir c lev il le() lJ .Q)
2 16
S. R ive r View f B 14 OJ
20 2
6. Ros sfor d (3 14 - l l
197
7. Wave r l y ( I 13 -1)
191
8 . Spr i ng . Sh a w nee (2 11 I J
I)4

9. Buc key e So . ( 1 10· 11
74
10. Lor ai n Ca l h . f 13-11
47
. Second ten : 11. Br o o ~ l y n 40 ,
12. Li sbon Bea ve r 37 j 13. Gr an .
vil l e J l ; 14. As ht ab ul a H arbo r
( I) 28 ; 15. W arr en K enn ed y 27 ·
16 Li ma Ba th 20 ; 17. Newt o~
Fa ll s 16 ; 18 . (li e) Dayton
Sliver s and Wh eel ersb urg ( 1 ),
19 ea c h ; 20 . F ir e lands ( I J 14 .
Oth er s wi th \ en or mor e
poin ts . Cin c innati M c Ni cholas .
A_kr o n Sout h , Bexl ey , Ci n Cinn llll Gr ee nhills (1 ), F ort
F r ye , M a n c h es t e r ( 1 1 and
Fa i r view .
CLASS A
T eam
Points
1 Can . Wi n che st er· f7 13-l l

262

2 . M an s . St . Per . ( 13 13 ·21 22 6
J. M ins ter (3 14 0 1
160
4 . N or wal ~ St . P au l (J 1).1)

155

5. Lor . Cle a rvie w c 10-2)
130
6 . Seb r in g {12 -1)
12 1
7. Up . Sc . V "l le y ( 2 14"- 0 l
8. A n·n a { 14 -11
92
9 . Lor ds tow n ( 2 14 -0l
75
10. Pe tti sv il le ( 1 13 -0 1
61
Se cond len: 11. Monro evill e
51; 12. W ynfo rd 40 ; 13. Ma ri on
L ocal 35 ; 14 . Cont in en tal 34 · 15
W indham 32 ; 16 . Hann.an .
Tra ce
( 1)
30 ;
' 17
F r ed er ic Kto Wn 28 ; 18 . { t iel

Fla ge t ,
N o rth
M iss issin awa Va l le Y'
R ic h m on d H eig ht s

G i:ll lia.
( 1J

and

*WHEEL CHAIRS
*WALKERS
*CRUTCHES &amp;CANIS
* BACK BRACES
I
* BEDSIDE COMMODES
* 'SUPPORT STOC~INGS
*TRUSSES
* TRACTION EQUIPMENT
* ELASTIC SUPPORTS
* SURGICAL DRESSINGS
* INCONTINENT
SUPPLIES

Reserve clause
wider fire again

CO L U MB US (UP I ) T h1 S
w ee k 's
U n i t ed
Pre ss
In
t e rnat i on&lt;~ l O h io High Sch oo l

"

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT

Za n es vi l l e Ro sec ran s and
Sen eca Ea st . 24 ea ch ; 20
Gran d Va ll ey ( 1) 19.
O t hers with ten o r mor e
po int s ; Covi n o t on C" i1 1:,..., , ",

from contracting fr eely for
their skills and services."

The Supreme Court ruled in
1972 that it was up to Congress
to alter antitrust laws to
prohibit the reserve clause
which St. Louis Cardinals
baseball star Curt Flood
challenged in a court suit.
Seiberling's proposal would
outlaw reserve clauses, whlch
are ~onta incd in professioo::.!
contracts stating that the team
reserves the right to a player's
services until he is traded or
given an unconditional release.·
"The indefensible intention
of these rules and practices is
to forbid free and reasbnable
negotiations between players
and reams," Seiberling said,
"and at tbe same time to
punish owners who dare acquire the property of other

.•

owners."
WHA Standing s
By Unil ed Pres s Int ernational
East
w. I. t . ph gf ga
N ew En g 26 19 2 54 161 166
Cleve .
20 25 2 42 135 153
Ch ic ago
18 27 1 37 156 181
Indi a n a . 10 34 3 23 105 194
West
w . I . t . pl !i gf ga
Hou S: ton
29 IS 0 58 206 137
Phoen ix
24 19 6 54 168 159
San D ie go 23 20 I 47 156 151
M in ne so t a 23 20 0 46 177 146
X· Bal t.
13 30 3 29 11"2 18 7
Can a dian
w . 1. t . pts gf ga
Qu eb ec
29 16 0 58 196 15 2
25 19 2 52 19 9 175
Tor onto
Ed m onton 23 16 2 48 158 140
v an c ouve r2 1 21 2 44 136 141
Winn i peg 19 21 2 40 165 148
x -Fran chi se tran sfe rre d from
MI Ch igan
Wednudav ' s Re sults
Cl eve land 6 Phoen h&lt; 2
New Eng land 4 Bal ti mor e J
Tllursday's Games
Toronto at I ndianapo l is
Qu eb ec at Ch icag o
Van couv er at Minn es ota
Winn ip eg at Phoeni x

Seiberling is a member of the
House judiciary antitrust subcommittee, which would take
first action on the measure.

SHOES

Wahama 7th

'\

grade tops

eSTER EO

MASON .FURNITURE

Easy Terms!
Free Delivery!

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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MASON, W. VA.

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Clearance!
BE SURE TO SHOP EARL V ·SOME, ITEMS ARE LIMITED

Score by quarters:
Gallia 7th
2 4 2 6- 14
Wahama 7th
8 6 9 10- 33

Valuable Coupon

HALEY'S
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$1.49 Value

300 Tablets
52.99
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$1.21 Value

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WE MUST REDUCE OUR
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All HAVE .FUll WARRANTY.·
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-=..
"'

"'!

- Harris, 4-0-B; Smith , 9· 0·18 ;
Lanham , 5-0·10; Sick le~ , o.o.o:
McGhee, 1-1·3; Sterrett, (1 ••1.1;
N . Thomas, 0-2-2; S. Thomas , 2·
0·4; Barr, 1-0·2 ; Si mon , 0-1-1;
c . Brown , 2·0-4; Isaa c, 3· 0· 6.
TOTALS 27· 5-59.

DESERT
.fLoWER ·

WAIIAMA ECGHTH (30) -

Savre, 1-3-5 ; Camp, 1.Q. 2 ;
IUckard , 4-0-8, ; Russell-. Q.Q.Q; .
Thorn, 0 · 1· 1:" Smith , 3-0 -6 ; "'
Roush , 0-4-4; Hartlev. 1.0. 2;
Barton, 1-0 -2. TOTALS 11·8-lO .
score by quilrfers:
Gallia 8th
1• 11 16 18- 59
Wlhama 8th .
3 13 10 4-30

Joshua

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Dodgers.
.
Tile ·~,-r-old JOihua, the
1112 Pacific CoaJt League
balti!W chrPJIIIon, hll·only .234
·for· the Dodgen lalt year .

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Septic Tanks
and
Cesspools

$1 .20 Value

Gallipolis' visiting eighth
grade basketball team downed
Wahama 59-30 Wednesday
evening for its fourth victory in
aeven starts .
Today, the Gallians play
powerful Logan ( 11-1) at
Logan.
At Wahama Wednesday,
Mark Smith tallied 18 points
and Jeff Lanham 10 as the
Galllana won their fourth game
In five starts.
Gallipolis led 14-3; 25-16 and
41-26 at the quartermarks.
Gallla hit 27 of 63 field goal
attempts for 43 percent. .The
winners had 37 rebounds and 17 .
turnovers . .
Box score:

()alf!•kler Von

'

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..-

JOSHUA ro·GJANTS
.
SAN FRANCISCO (Ul'J) -

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tbrow."

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GALLIPOLIS
SEVENTH
(14) - Gol gi , 0·0-0 ; Re imund,
0-0-0; Brown. 0·0-0; Derifield,
0- 1-1; Jones , 0·0-0; Col l ins, 0-0·
0; Cornett , 1·0 -2; casto , 0-0-0 ; ,
Bradshaw. 1·1·3; Eutsler , 0-0· ·
.D; H enson , 0-0-0 ; Briggs , 0-0-0 ;
Johnson, l -0· 2; Robinson, J .o. 6;
Sheets, 0-0·0; Cameron. 0·0-0;
Harrington , 0·0·0; Bosti c, 0-0-0;

33.

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BROILER OVEN REG. '44.95 ....... ............ •26.00
HAND HAIR DRYERS REG. 117.95............. •11.00
2-SLICE TOASTER REG. 119.95 .................. '13.00
BLENDERS REG. 129.95........................ '18.00
CAN OPEN.ERS REG. '24.95 ..... ............... '16.00
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HAIR DRYERS REG. 139.95.............. •26.00

. I.

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JOY

Wa.hama's seventh grade
basketball team remained
unbeaten in seven starts with a
33-14 victory over visiting
Gallipolis Wednesday evening.
Gallipolis, now 0-2 on the
year, was led by Nick
Robinson's six points. Dingey
and Boyer led the winners with
six points apiece.
Gallia's next game is
Monday, at Oak Hill .
Box score:

Olngey, 3·0-6 ; Weave r , 2· 0-4;
Bover , 3-0-6; Smith, 1-0-2; Tim
Roush, 0-5-5; Terry Roush , 0-4·
4; Richards, 1-0 -2; Arnold, 1-0·
2; FieldS. 1· 0· 2, TOTALS 12·9·

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POTATO
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The newly , approved ruling break, or any area where the the stands or into any area
ball is dead, the awarding of where the ball is dead.
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" When a wild pitch, or bases shall be one baso. One
" U, howev~r . the pitched or
passed ba ll . goes through or by base shall alsQ be awarded, if tlirown ball goes through or by
the catcher, or deflects off the the pitcher while in contact the catcher or through the
catcher, and goes directly into .with r~bber , throws to a base, . fielder , and remains on the
the dugout, stand s, above U1e and the throw goes directly in.to playing field, and is subse-

pitched to the batter , or thrown
by the pitcher from his position
on the pitcher's plate to a base
to catch a runner, goes into a
stand or a bench, or over or
throu gh a fi eld fence or
backstop. The ball is dead."

The Rules Committee also
clarified the rule with regard to
advancement on overtllrows
when the ball goes into the
stands or the dugout. The old
rule states that a batter is
entitled to "one base, if a ball,

Tackett, Q.Q. Q. TOTALS 6·2·14.
WA'HAMA SEVENTH C33l -

NOW-SAVE 10 - 20 - YES UP TO 30%
ON Al L HOOVER HOUSEWARES!

'

•••

Orleans makes it possible for
umpires to eject any pitcher
who is found to have a foreign
substance on him or in his
posSession. The previous rule
bad allowed for a warning
prior to ejection.

Gallipolis

Fantast-i c

QUANTITIES
ARE:'·LIMITEDI

••

NEW YORK (UPI) _ A
relief pitcher must !IQW finish a
game to gain credit lor a save.
The rule regarding relief
pitchers has been altered and
two other regulations dealing
with Specifications for bats and
lor errant throws by a pitcher
whlch end up out of play have
been strenghened by the Of.
!ictal Playing Rules Committee, It was announced today
by Baseball Commissioner
Bowie Kuhn.
Under the new relief pitching
rule, a pitcher. must be in the
game at the end to get credit
for a save in addition to
qualifying under at least one of
the following.
a) he enters the game with a
lead of no more than three l'1li1S
and .pitches for at least' one
lniling; or
b) he enters the game with
the potential tying run either
on base, or at bat, or on deck
(that is, the potential tying run
Is either already on base or is
one o~ the. first two batsmen he
faces) ; or
c) he pitches efffecively for
at least three innings.
A new provision has been
added to bat ·specifications
since some players have begun
using "cupped bats", or bats
with Indentations in the end.
Under the new provision, "an
Indentation In the end of the bat
up to one Inch in depth is
permitted and may be no wider
than two inches and no less
than one inch in diameter. The
indentation must be curved
with no foreign substance
added "
' rule strengthened at
Another
the winter meetings in New

STOP IN FOR YOUR
. ENTRY BLANK TODAY .

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1·

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WITH THE LARGER SIZ.ES

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5-The Daily Sentinel M'ddl

.

·

.

•,

· 4- The Dllily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursaay, Jan. ao.1J73

Wellsville, Can81 Winchester
hold poll lead despite losses
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS (UP I) - Wellsville and Canal Winchester
despite suffering their firsi
losses of the season, mana ged
to remain lirmly entrenched in
their top spots in this week's
Unlled Press In ter nationa l
Ohio High School Board of
Coaches' Class AA and A
basketball ra tings.
Wellsville, which was victimized &amp;!-&amp; by a Steubenville
Big Red comeback Friday
night, nevertheless, held a 305270 point spread over once.beaten Delphos St. John 's,
which moved into the runnerup
position despite a one-point loss
to Defiance.
Columbus Mohawk, second
last week, fell to third alter
absorbing its second defeat, 7267 to Columbus Eastmoor. The
looses by the lop three teams
were all to AAA opponents.
Cana\ Winchester ( 13-1)
stepped outside its class Tuesday night to try Class AAA
Groveport (12-2) for the second
time this season . and got
dumped 84-&amp;1, as the Cruisers
won for the loth straight time.
Winchester, which holds a
262-226lead over Mansfield St.
Peter's in the A ratings, had
beat.en Groveport by lour
points early in the year.
Meanwhile, unbeaten Middletown, rolling along with a '

12-0 record , once again held the
No. I spot in Class AAA.

The Middies of veteran coach
Paul Walker are in a lour-way
ba ttle for the AAA laurels, with
runne,up Barberton trailing
282-263. Ca nton McKinley once
again is third with 231 points,
with Ke ttering Alter fourth
with 206.
Cincinnati Hughes, unbeaten
in II games, jumped from
e.ghth to fifth this week in
AAA, mo ving pa st Toledo
Scott, Newark and Dayton
Rooseve lt.
.Scott fell one not ch to sixth
place, Roosevelt remained in
seventh and Newa rk dropped
I" eighth . Cincinnati Elder and
Cleveland East Tech round out
the lop len .
Circ' ·i lle, unbeaten in 13
ga mes, moved into the fourth
spot and into contention in AA
with 216 points, 28 behind third
place Mohawk. River View was
again in fifth, followed by
Rossford in slxth, Waverly in
seventh, Springfield Shawnee
in eighth, Buckeye South in
ninth and Lorain in tenth.
The last four teams were in
the same spots they occupied
last week.
Following Canal Winchester
and St. Peter's In Class A is
unbeaten Minster ( 1W), whlch
edged into third place ahead of
Norwalk St. Paul.
st. Paul, 13-1, fell from the

-INSULATIONBlown Into Walls
and Attics
-Fire RetardantFree Estimates-Nv OiJugation

unbea.ten ranks Friday r.ight,
dropplllg a 69-&lt;i4 decision to
lith-ranked Monroeville.
Rounding out the Class A top
!Rn are Lorain Clearview in
fifth , followed by Sebring
Upper Scioto Valley Anna'
Lordstown and Pettis~e. '

Board of . Coa c hes baske Tbal l
r a t mg s wilh f i r st p lace vo tes
an d
won l os t
re c ords
in

Middleport, Ohio

WASHINGTON (UPI) Rep. John F. Seiberling DOhio, introduced a bill in' the
House of Representatives
Wedneaday to eliminate the
reserve
clause
which
professional sports teams use
to prevent athletes from
changing teams.
Seiberling said the reserve
clause and other rules and
practices by owners of professional teams to confine players
to one team "constitute group
boycotts and illegal restraints
of trade which are violations of
the federal antitrust laws. "
He said his measure "would
prohibit a web of invidious
practices which owners and
officials of various sports have
instituted to prevent athletes

pttren the scs ·

C L A SS AA A
Nam e
Po i nts
1 Midd l e town ( 13 12 -0 1
282
263
2 Barb e r to n ( 13 13 0 1
J Ca n . M cK (3 13 1J
'2 31
4 Ke t _ A lt e r &lt;2 IJ OJ
206
5 _ C in H ugh e s ( 1 1 1 OJ

144

6. Toi . Sc ott ( 13 11
7 Day Roo s' l t ( 1 11 11
B N ewar k ( l &lt;f\.l l
9. Cin . E ider (?2l

143
106
96
73

10 _ Cte . E T ec h ( 14 1 J

66

Sec ond Te n : 11. la n esville
4•1. 12. Ely r ia 36 : 13. Cin c inna1i
Roger Bacon 34 ; 14 . All iance
33; 15. Cleve l an d H eights 18 ;
16. New Ph i ladelph ia 15 : 17.
Clayto n N o rtt).[l'lon t 14 ;
l B.
Akro n Kenmor e 11; 19. K c t
ter 1ng Fa 1rm on t Wes t 8 : 20.
You n g stown South 6 .

CLASS AA
TEAM
Points
1 W ellsvi ll e ( 11 11 1)
30 5
1. El . S t . J o hn 'S l 8 13 1)
27 0
3. Co l . Moh a wk (2 11 -2)
24-1
4 . Cir c lev il le() lJ .Q)
2 16
S. R ive r View f B 14 OJ
20 2
6. Ros sfor d (3 14 - l l
197
7. Wave r l y ( I 13 -1)
191
8 . Spr i ng . Sh a w nee (2 11 I J
I)4

9. Buc key e So . ( 1 10· 11
74
10. Lor ai n Ca l h . f 13-11
47
. Second ten : 11. Br o o ~ l y n 40 ,
12. Li sbon Bea ve r 37 j 13. Gr an .
vil l e J l ; 14. As ht ab ul a H arbo r
( I) 28 ; 15. W arr en K enn ed y 27 ·
16 Li ma Ba th 20 ; 17. Newt o~
Fa ll s 16 ; 18 . (li e) Dayton
Sliver s and Wh eel ersb urg ( 1 ),
19 ea c h ; 20 . F ir e lands ( I J 14 .
Oth er s wi th \ en or mor e
poin ts . Cin c innati M c Ni cholas .
A_kr o n Sout h , Bexl ey , Ci n Cinn llll Gr ee nhills (1 ), F ort
F r ye , M a n c h es t e r ( 1 1 and
Fa i r view .
CLASS A
T eam
Points
1 Can . Wi n che st er· f7 13-l l

262

2 . M an s . St . Per . ( 13 13 ·21 22 6
J. M ins ter (3 14 0 1
160
4 . N or wal ~ St . P au l (J 1).1)

155

5. Lor . Cle a rvie w c 10-2)
130
6 . Seb r in g {12 -1)
12 1
7. Up . Sc . V "l le y ( 2 14"- 0 l
8. A n·n a { 14 -11
92
9 . Lor ds tow n ( 2 14 -0l
75
10. Pe tti sv il le ( 1 13 -0 1
61
Se cond len: 11. Monro evill e
51; 12. W ynfo rd 40 ; 13. Ma ri on
L ocal 35 ; 14 . Cont in en tal 34 · 15
W indham 32 ; 16 . Hann.an .
Tra ce
( 1)
30 ;
' 17
F r ed er ic Kto Wn 28 ; 18 . { t iel

Fla ge t ,
N o rth
M iss issin awa Va l le Y'
R ic h m on d H eig ht s

G i:ll lia.
( 1J

and

*WHEEL CHAIRS
*WALKERS
*CRUTCHES &amp;CANIS
* BACK BRACES
I
* BEDSIDE COMMODES
* 'SUPPORT STOC~INGS
*TRUSSES
* TRACTION EQUIPMENT
* ELASTIC SUPPORTS
* SURGICAL DRESSINGS
* INCONTINENT
SUPPLIES

Reserve clause
wider fire again

CO L U MB US (UP I ) T h1 S
w ee k 's
U n i t ed
Pre ss
In
t e rnat i on&lt;~ l O h io High Sch oo l

"

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT

Za n es vi l l e Ro sec ran s and
Sen eca Ea st . 24 ea ch ; 20
Gran d Va ll ey ( 1) 19.
O t hers with ten o r mor e
po int s ; Covi n o t on C" i1 1:,..., , ",

from contracting fr eely for
their skills and services."

The Supreme Court ruled in
1972 that it was up to Congress
to alter antitrust laws to
prohibit the reserve clause
which St. Louis Cardinals
baseball star Curt Flood
challenged in a court suit.
Seiberling's proposal would
outlaw reserve clauses, whlch
are ~onta incd in professioo::.!
contracts stating that the team
reserves the right to a player's
services until he is traded or
given an unconditional release.·
"The indefensible intention
of these rules and practices is
to forbid free and reasbnable
negotiations between players
and reams," Seiberling said,
"and at tbe same time to
punish owners who dare acquire the property of other

.•

owners."
WHA Standing s
By Unil ed Pres s Int ernational
East
w. I. t . ph gf ga
N ew En g 26 19 2 54 161 166
Cleve .
20 25 2 42 135 153
Ch ic ago
18 27 1 37 156 181
Indi a n a . 10 34 3 23 105 194
West
w . I . t . pl !i gf ga
Hou S: ton
29 IS 0 58 206 137
Phoen ix
24 19 6 54 168 159
San D ie go 23 20 I 47 156 151
M in ne so t a 23 20 0 46 177 146
X· Bal t.
13 30 3 29 11"2 18 7
Can a dian
w . 1. t . pts gf ga
Qu eb ec
29 16 0 58 196 15 2
25 19 2 52 19 9 175
Tor onto
Ed m onton 23 16 2 48 158 140
v an c ouve r2 1 21 2 44 136 141
Winn i peg 19 21 2 40 165 148
x -Fran chi se tran sfe rre d from
MI Ch igan
Wednudav ' s Re sults
Cl eve land 6 Phoen h&lt; 2
New Eng land 4 Bal ti mor e J
Tllursday's Games
Toronto at I ndianapo l is
Qu eb ec at Ch icag o
Van couv er at Minn es ota
Winn ip eg at Phoeni x

Seiberling is a member of the
House judiciary antitrust subcommittee, which would take
first action on the measure.

SHOES

Wahama 7th

'\

grade tops

eSTER EO

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Easy Terms!
Free Delivery!

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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Clearance!
BE SURE TO SHOP EARL V ·SOME, ITEMS ARE LIMITED

Score by quarters:
Gallia 7th
2 4 2 6- 14
Wahama 7th
8 6 9 10- 33

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- Harris, 4-0-B; Smith , 9· 0·18 ;
Lanham , 5-0·10; Sick le~ , o.o.o:
McGhee, 1-1·3; Sterrett, (1 ••1.1;
N . Thomas, 0-2-2; S. Thomas , 2·
0·4; Barr, 1-0·2 ; Si mon , 0-1-1;
c . Brown , 2·0-4; Isaa c, 3· 0· 6.
TOTALS 27· 5-59.

DESERT
.fLoWER ·

WAIIAMA ECGHTH (30) -

Savre, 1-3-5 ; Camp, 1.Q. 2 ;
IUckard , 4-0-8, ; Russell-. Q.Q.Q; .
Thorn, 0 · 1· 1:" Smith , 3-0 -6 ; "'
Roush , 0-4-4; Hartlev. 1.0. 2;
Barton, 1-0 -2. TOTALS 11·8-lO .
score by quilrfers:
Gallia 8th
1• 11 16 18- 59
Wlhama 8th .
3 13 10 4-30

Joshua

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Tile ·~,-r-old JOihua, the
1112 Pacific CoaJt League
balti!W chrPJIIIon, hll·only .234
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Septic Tanks
and
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$1 .20 Value

Gallipolis' visiting eighth
grade basketball team downed
Wahama 59-30 Wednesday
evening for its fourth victory in
aeven starts .
Today, the Gallians play
powerful Logan ( 11-1) at
Logan.
At Wahama Wednesday,
Mark Smith tallied 18 points
and Jeff Lanham 10 as the
Galllana won their fourth game
In five starts.
Gallipolis led 14-3; 25-16 and
41-26 at the quartermarks.
Gallla hit 27 of 63 field goal
attempts for 43 percent. .The
winners had 37 rebounds and 17 .
turnovers . .
Box score:

()alf!•kler Von

'

.

..-

JOSHUA ro·GJANTS
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SAN FRANCISCO (Ul'J) -

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bases from position of runners
at the time of the pitch or
tbrow."

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GALLIPOLIS
SEVENTH
(14) - Gol gi , 0·0-0 ; Re imund,
0-0-0; Brown. 0·0-0; Derifield,
0- 1-1; Jones , 0·0-0; Col l ins, 0-0·
0; Cornett , 1·0 -2; casto , 0-0-0 ; ,
Bradshaw. 1·1·3; Eutsler , 0-0· ·
.D; H enson , 0-0-0 ; Briggs , 0-0-0 ;
Johnson, l -0· 2; Robinson, J .o. 6;
Sheets, 0-0·0; Cameron. 0·0-0;
Harrington , 0·0·0; Bosti c, 0-0-0;

33.

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HAND HAIR DRYERS REG. 117.95............. •11.00
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JOY

Wa.hama's seventh grade
basketball team remained
unbeaten in seven starts with a
33-14 victory over visiting
Gallipolis Wednesday evening.
Gallipolis, now 0-2 on the
year, was led by Nick
Robinson's six points. Dingey
and Boyer led the winners with
six points apiece.
Gallia's next game is
Monday, at Oak Hill .
Box score:

Olngey, 3·0-6 ; Weave r , 2· 0-4;
Bover , 3-0-6; Smith, 1-0-2; Tim
Roush, 0-5-5; Terry Roush , 0-4·
4; Richards, 1-0 -2; Arnold, 1-0·
2; FieldS. 1· 0· 2, TOTALS 12·9·

VALUES YOU WON'T BELIEVE
CHECK AND COMPARE

'

PRINGLES
POTATO
CHIPS

The newly , approved ruling break, or any area where the the stands or into any area
ball is dead, the awarding of where the ball is dead.
adds:
" When a wild pitch, or bases shall be one baso. One
" U, howev~r . the pitched or
passed ba ll . goes through or by base shall alsQ be awarded, if tlirown ball goes through or by
the catcher, or deflects off the the pitcher while in contact the catcher or through the
catcher, and goes directly into .with r~bber , throws to a base, . fielder , and remains on the
the dugout, stand s, above U1e and the throw goes directly in.to playing field, and is subse-

pitched to the batter , or thrown
by the pitcher from his position
on the pitcher's plate to a base
to catch a runner, goes into a
stand or a bench, or over or
throu gh a fi eld fence or
backstop. The ball is dead."

The Rules Committee also
clarified the rule with regard to
advancement on overtllrows
when the ball goes into the
stands or the dugout. The old
rule states that a batter is
entitled to "one base, if a ball,

Tackett, Q.Q. Q. TOTALS 6·2·14.
WA'HAMA SEVENTH C33l -

NOW-SAVE 10 - 20 - YES UP TO 30%
ON Al L HOOVER HOUSEWARES!

'

•••

Orleans makes it possible for
umpires to eject any pitcher
who is found to have a foreign
substance on him or in his
posSession. The previous rule
bad allowed for a warning
prior to ejection.

Gallipolis

Fantast-i c

QUANTITIES
ARE:'·LIMITEDI

••

NEW YORK (UPI) _ A
relief pitcher must !IQW finish a
game to gain credit lor a save.
The rule regarding relief
pitchers has been altered and
two other regulations dealing
with Specifications for bats and
lor errant throws by a pitcher
whlch end up out of play have
been strenghened by the Of.
!ictal Playing Rules Committee, It was announced today
by Baseball Commissioner
Bowie Kuhn.
Under the new relief pitching
rule, a pitcher. must be in the
game at the end to get credit
for a save in addition to
qualifying under at least one of
the following.
a) he enters the game with a
lead of no more than three l'1li1S
and .pitches for at least' one
lniling; or
b) he enters the game with
the potential tying run either
on base, or at bat, or on deck
(that is, the potential tying run
Is either already on base or is
one o~ the. first two batsmen he
faces) ; or
c) he pitches efffecively for
at least three innings.
A new provision has been
added to bat ·specifications
since some players have begun
using "cupped bats", or bats
with Indentations in the end.
Under the new provision, "an
Indentation In the end of the bat
up to one Inch in depth is
permitted and may be no wider
than two inches and no less
than one inch in diameter. The
indentation must be curved
with no foreign substance
added "
' rule strengthened at
Another
the winter meetings in New

STOP IN FOR YOUR
. ENTRY BLANK TODAY .

'

1·

/
'

-can

an

.

•.

SAVE MONEY
WITH THE LARGER SIZ.ES

.

•

.

...

�•
I

,•

6 - The Datly Sentmel Mtddleporl Pomeroy
FINANCIAL REPORT

OF TOWNSHIPS
For FISCal Y ear End 19

Deccmberl l 197A
Le l ar l Towns h p
M CI9S County
Rt 2 Rae nc Oh n

Januarvll 197S
I cerl ty the follow ng rr.por"

to lJc correct

6

Thursday JHn 30 Hil15

1
F I NANC 1Al REPORT
OF TOWNSHIPS
For F sea l Year Ending
D ece mber J J 197 4

Suttcn TowJt s tup
M e gs County
R D 1 R nc n c Otuo
Jan 7J 197S
r cer l ty

he follow ng rcpor

to b e cor r ec l

w

1!'1
If',

Memory
LOV IN G

1 u sb and

1

e mory ot my

Cer I

E va n s

who

pa ssed away • years ago
Jaw ary 30
1'il71
Sad ly
m sse d bY w te Doro hY and
F it n I y
I 30 lie

-

For Fast Results Use Sentinel Classi
Auto Sales

""

DICK TRACY

Notice

@)

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

.

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCTION

IS IT THE METAL TAB
FROM C\DINNY'S
POISONED "OLD
FASHIONED• "?

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

HElL
RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

••
........

10 To Te ll lhe Truth 13 Get Smart 15
8 ~Mac Davis 3 4 15

CAPTAI N EASY
WOW. I\E GOTTA ADMI T
THEY liRE KIOJD OF A TOUGH

WHICH ONE OF
Y0U5 THE MA5TER
OF TH AT DHL \\ Z

LOOKIN BUNCH EA5'-'

THAT D BEo

FROM HERE ON YOUG&amp; Kl"-'

ALL

ME MATEY B UT

;&gt;TAI&lt; T C AL L IIJ ME . MA.;TER ·

MA STER 0' THl? B.LIIVKII\J

loJEVER MIN D
WOT 5 LEFT 0

'5UPER.TANI&lt;ER'

1HE DJolOW

B 3()-Karen 6 13
9 oo-Archer 3 4 15 Stree ts of San Fr an c tsco 6 13 TElke M e
Home Again 8 Movie Double Suicide 20 Mov ie ~ oesk
Set 10 Fort un es of N tgel 33
10 oo-Mov ln On 3j4 15 Har ry 0 6 13 Movie T he L ons Are
Free 8.,., Woman 33

10 3o-Caught n the Act 33
11 oo--News 3 4 8 10 13 15 20 ABC News 33
11 3G-Joh nny Car son 3 4 15 Wide World Spec ia l 13 FB I 6
Movie Sol Madr d B M ove The l aw .:tnd the Lady 10
Janak• 33
12 JQ-W ide Wor ld Spec 1al 6
1
Tom or row 3 4 News 13

FRIDA Y JANUARY J1 197S
6 00-Sunnse Seminar 4 Sunrise Semes ter 10

6 15-Enghsh 505 3
6 25-Farm Report 13
6 3o--Ftve M mu t es to L1 ve By 4 N ews 6 Bible Answers 8
Publi c A ffa rs 10 B lue R1 dge Quar tet 13
6 35-Co lum b u s Today 4
6 45-M orn mg Report 3 Farmtlme 10

BORN LOSER

usn;~

~

IJ.J&gt;I, 1))10 wr

~

\-l()SmlO MD~

CAA'PJ lllNT Ac.uun

lP 10 !::IWJD

OF !».'IS lb %

CR IJ£'U.. l£T lt1£ NR

I«).DDt-Jb HIM ra&lt;

our a: HIS

~

r:;

I

IF

~&lt;e~H rs ~-z

-

-

s

'i

. .?.

ALLEY OO P
IS lT SAFE 10 USE
Ft~ KUNA? "THE

EVEN IF 'THEY ~_:.YE LL BE
LONG GONE BEK.ll&lt;l: 'THEY CAN

MOOVIANS MAY SEE
TilE SMOKE '

GET HERE

1

NOW 'THEN WJ.IICH
ONE OF YOU GIRLS
WANTS T DOTH ~
CDOKIN FOR US

I LL DO

ALL RIGHT BIG MAN

7 ()()--Today 3 4 15 A M America 6 13 CBS News 8 10
8 ()()--Lass1e6 Capt Ka ngaroo 8 Popeye 10 Sesame St 33
8 25-Ca pl Ka ngaroo 10
8 3()-Big Va ll ey 6
9 oo-A M J Ph il D ona hue 4 Bul lwl nkle 8 Morning with 0 J
13 P h1l Dona hue 15
9 25-t huck Wh1te Reports 10
9 3()- Not For Women Onty 3 Dinah 6 Ga ll oping Gou rmel 8
T attletales 10 New Zoo Revue 13
10 oo--Celebnty Sweepstakes 3 4 15 J okers Wi ld 8 10 Movie
All the Way Home 13 13
10 )()-Wheel of Forlune 3 A 1S Gamb1t 8 10
11 ()()-Hig h Roll ers 3 4 15 One l1 fe to l ive 6 Now Yo u See II
8 10

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one l etl t"r to each squa re to
f or m f o ur ord m ary \&gt;\ or ds

CUT HER LOOSE

IT?

BUT KEEP
~

1

1

----

USED AJEL OIL
HEATER, s50

Mobile Homes For Sale

I

\ Annvrr /lou lhty dt 1 u tl ( l1
uaH ro und- FLATLY

~a1•

GASOLINE ALLEY

The
babe comes down

here at two m
ihe tnormnq

t o qeta
tha~she
potato out t here because
of a p1pe
she was loneltJ
and wanted
to meet l)ou?

4

I Dream of Jeannie 4 Somerset 15

Gl tllga n s Is 6 Tattletales 8 Sesame St 20 33 Movie Tha t
Wonderfu l Urge 10 Mike Douglas 13
3()- Bewllched 3 Merv Gr iffin 4 Mod Squad 6 Lucy Show 8

S oo--FB I 3 Andy Gri ff ith 8 Mister Rogers Ne ighbOrhood
20 33 Ironside 13
5 3()-News 6 Beverly Hil lbil lies 8 Hodgepodge Lodge 20
Tra ils West 15 Elec Co 33
6 oo--News 3 A 8 10 13 15 ABC News 6 Elec Co 20 Per
sonall ty &amp; Behavioral De velopment 33
6 30-NBC News 3 A 15 ABC News 13 Bewitched 6 CBS News
8 10 Zoom 20
7 oo--Tr uth or Cons 3 RockIn ln~he U SA A Bowling for
Oollars 6 WCH S TV Report 8 A'vlaflon Weather33 20"-!ews
10 Jim my Dean 13 I Spy 15
7 3()-P orter Wagoner 3 New Candid Ca mera 6 Pop I Goes the
Counlry 8 Treasure Hunt 10 To Te ll the Truth 13 Black
P er s pec t i v e on the N ew s 20 33

8 oo--Sanford &amp; Son 3 • 15 Nlghl Sta lker 6 13 Or Seuss
Specia l 8 10 Washington Week In Review 20 J3
8 30-C hl co &amp; the Man 3 A 15 Lillie Mermaid Specia l 8 10
Wa ll Streel Week 20 J3
9 00--R ocklord F lles 3 A 15 Hoi Bal!lmore6 13 Smlfhsonalan
Inst ltutlon Specia l 8 10 Masterpiece Theefre 20 Consumer
Survi val Kit 33
9 3(f-{)dd Couple 6 13 Assignment Amer1ca J3
10 oo--Poltce Woman 3 A IS Bare!ta 6 13 c;ss Reports 8 10
News 20 Paul Nuchlms 33
10 3~Woman 10 World Press 20
11 oo--News 3 A 6 8 10 13 1 lS ABC News J3
11 ]()-Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Wide World In Concert 13, Mov1e
Daylon s Devil s 6 Movie Dr Phlbes Rises Again' 8
Mov1e The Deathmaster 10 Janakl 33
1 OQ-Midnlght Special] 15 Wide World In Concerl6 News 13
1 15-Movle Dangerous Crossing 10
2 3()-Movle 'X 15 A
4 oo--Movle Murder My Sweet A
5 30-Movle The Snow Queen A

BE'IN6 IN THE' TRAVEL. GAME I VE
PULL ED UNSPEAKABLE TRICKS FOR
NONEY- BUT I CAN'T" TAKE INNOCENT

E'VE'RY 1-&lt;EAL.TH NUT IN
T HE U SA WANTS TICKETS

To

1..owesr SI.OBeOVIA"

PS:)PI..E

THSRC " -

NOT

PER50NAL.LY "

s

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

FRIDAY AT 10:15 A.M. ON

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

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

WMPO AM-FM

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

LEO {July 23 Aug 221 Th ere s

VIRGO {Aug

to

23 Sopt

LIBRA (Sept 23-0cl

23)

30

29 Fuse
abbreviation
30 Italian ctty

• A3

• J 10 9 3
+ A94 2
• 7 s2

SOUTH
•KQ108

EAST
• J 72
¥ K Q 864
+ 76S
3

••o

• 7s
• Q J 10

Anneruan

. K J64

Republic 's
ca pt tal

Nett her

vulnerable

39 Coagulated
milk
40 Rulicule

®AFTER TALK IN6 W11J.I /)ILLY
I DECIDED ")}jE ONLY
DECENT ")}j)NG 1D D:J

5 7VRN MYOCI.F

IN/

L JUST WANT YOU ALLID
KNOW THAT THE O'JLY 'tR ME'
rMGU ILTYOF IS MY
UNCONmOLABLE

DESIRE 10
MPEI?SONATE
PEOPLE:; I

ANO NOTHING G4VEME
MORE PLEASI.IRE THAN
W~NGc!OHN

8ARTOL!fs FASHION
6HOW.'

ciOEY/ (GAfJP) YOU
WERE I?E5FON9113LE::
FOR ALL'THE:: 'THINGS
'THAT WENT Wra:JNG
AT 'THAT bHON ??

Pa!!s
Pas~

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

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Dne leiter 11mply otanda for another In Lhls sample A II
used for the three L s, X for Lhe Lwo 0 s elc Single letters
apostrophes the length and formah on of the words are all
h1nls Each day the code letters are different
CRYPTOQUOTE

TLB

BARNEY
ONE OF THESE DAV5
I'M GOIN TO PACK UP
MV DUDS AN GO SOMEWHAR
- - AN GIT AWAV FROM
IT ALL

1'0 SAV I.(E
GOT IT ALL

RIGHT HERE,
SNUFFY

Br.PD
FA

Q~
Jon 31 1175
Pl an s for Improving your sta
t on n lif e thi s year may get ott
1o a slow start Don 1use thi s as
a cue to give them up Par
slstence ev ent ua ll ~ rewards

you

North

E ast

I.-,
2•
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

you would have played the king
wtthout havmg the queen in

Soulb

West was qutte right South s
allempl to get West to plar, the
ace was doomed to fa tlure
agamst any good player once
he played tfie kmg Had he
played the queen 11 rntght have
been a dttretent story Expert
West mtght have decided that
South held ftve tr umps to the
queen Jack and that a duck wtth
the ace would lead to the ace
and kmg falhng together on the
next trump lead
NEWSPAPEH ENTERPR ISE ASSN !

LZ:R;! :1t!&amp;WU1
The btddtng has been
West

North

Eall

30

SoUth

Openmg lead- J ¥

pudu

ISD A

You It be sp ending more time
tod ay shoulderi ng burdens
and problems or others than
you will solving your own

reserve

• AQ 9 8

WEST

43 Impala or

AQUARIUS (Jon 20· Pob 1t)

Play of king tells too much

Z8 'El - '

42 Spoilage

11) If you try to bowl ove r your
opponents ~ It will only
st lfen their reSTstance to you r
atm s Be tact1ut con siderat e

WIN AT BRIDGE

+K 8 3

41 S Air fox

CAPRICORN (Doc 22-Jon

22)

Don t spread yourself too thin
where your rescurces are con
earned Your purse ca nt han
die a sp ending spree

21 Epochal

~

refuse to a d one who s gotten
lo you before materially then
fo rg ot yo u ti ll his p re sent
dilemm a

PIII"CES (Fob 20-Morch 20)

just a th n veneer over your
patience an d tem per A slight
provocation cov ld cause you to
overreac t unflatte ringly

33 Judge's
cOiiunand
38 London's
Old 39 Kis&amp;-and
tell man

21) It s to yo ur best Interest to

CANCER (Juno 21-July 22) Be
cha rge and or yo ur material
possession s Don t deal with
persons yo u m istrust

Anlswer ''"
31 Awaken
32 Minister

yo u II shortly be bo•ed ln
SAGITTARIUS {Nov 23·Dec

Yo u re n ol esp eciall y lucky to
day when p utting out cash for
r sky or chancy ventu res Bu y
nothmg s ght unseen

extra watchful of lhasa n yo ur

Yesterday 's
22 Extensive
23 Bellwether
24 One kind
of car
25 PriSOner
26 Flower
28 Gleason s
old sidekick
30 Milan's La -

You could be taking on more
res po nsi bilities r ight now than
you can handle Ease up or

Don t blame your mistake s on
others ra ther reexamin e your
own Ideas See If th at s where
the fault ltes

NORTH lD)
• 9 6 s4
¥A 2

;;;;bj;

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

GEMINI {Moy 21 Juno 20)

35 Wail
3&amp; Edi tortal
pronoun

s

Middleport child
ConseMJtion League

1dt a lhnl tlu l rrrtll

34 Code Signal

/

---------

Treasurer of

extr a careful t you re using
too ls today Al so f you re
work ng w1t h ano ther remind
htm to work In a safe ord erl y

rnatertal

IJL ABNER

Wanted T 8

SUSANthe BLAKER

costs
TAURUS {April 20 Moy 20) Be

table

---------

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

sen t al to yo ur Immediate alms
w 1 throw some roa db locks In
your pa th Keep coot at ell

26Bedor

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

Real Estate For S.

For Frldoy, Jon 31 1875
ARIES {Morel&gt; 21 April 18)
One whose co operation Is es

23 Bootstrmg

--------

-----------

mbltH "'

...,tlt'

ACROSS
DOWN
1 Wttly
1 Junto
one
2 Fragrance
5 Conftguration[ 3 Ktnd
10 Reg10n
of race
11 Iron Curtain 4 Pater
country
5 Cast
13 What knights 1 out
were
6 Poet
14 Come out
7 Porter's
15 Candleput
relative
tree
8 Perfect
16 Lambkm's
spectmen
mom
9 Etch
17 Macaw
12 Muffle
18 Stop-&lt;Jff
I&amp; Small
20 Mild oath
salamander
21 Roulette
19 Russtan
color
ctty
22 Braided

-----------

'

~

way

by THOMAS JOSEPH

For Rent

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

V" :

I I

y ... te rday •

TEAFORD

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

TROUEI'L N6 H M

(AA1we n t omorrowI

--- --------

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

r)

Juml I" FU ZZY LILAC MISFIT INLAND

---------

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

A H 6H ONE
MI6HT FIND IH IS

1,_---'-'Pri"11'-·= SUR'--'PRISI'-'.CA.::C:NSW_IR_Ilm-'--__,1 ''( I I I I ]"

------

Employment Wanted

Holloway, •

4 oo-Mr Cartoon 3

SCORPIO (Ocl 24 Nov 22)

Now arranre the circled letlers
to form the aurpr11e answer as
'"==::':·::=~·:::~=~l~L!~:=_:•::u~
nesled by the above cartoon

-----

r-

As the Wrold Turn s 8 10

2 oo--Oa ys of Our Lives 3 4 15 S10 000 Pyramid 6 13 Guiding
L1ghl 8 10
2 3()-0octors 3 4 1S Bi g Shwowdown 6 13 Edge of Night 810
3 oo--Another World 3 A 15 Genera l Hospita l 6 13 Price Is
Ri ght 8 10 Aseenl of Man 20
3 3()-()ne Li fe lo Live 13 Lucy Show 6 Match Game B 10

Kn ow when to back off toda y If
you r un nto too much opposl
l ion Disc ret on Is the better
part of valor

,o

/Jf-LJUM ~

IJ'ITLE ORP HAN ANNIE

Search for

12 45-E iec Co 33
12 55- NBC News 3 IS
()()-News 3 All My Children 6 13 Phil Donahue 8 Young &amp;
lhe Rest less 10 Not For Women On ly 15
3()-How lo Surv ive a Marr1age 3 A 15 Lei s Make A Deal6,13

[J

I KENV/0 ~

no

to

Spill Second 6 13

Tom er r ow 8 10 To Be Announ ce d 33

r)

I ()

CLELAND
REALTY

------ --

runner

Club 4 News 8 10
12 3()- Biank Check 3 15

___ _

Help Wanted

to

l1fe 8 10 Sesa me S 33

Bonanza 15

oo-

Wanted To Rent

a

Barney M ill er 6 13 The Wa ltons B 10

B II Moyers Journa l 20 33

Real Estate For Sale

------

11 55- Take Kerr with Graham Kerr 8 Dan Imel s Wor ld 10
N ew s 13
12 ()()-Jac kpot 3 15 P assword All Stars 6 13 Bob Braun s $0 $0

7 3D-Ho ll ywood Squares 3 4 Fred Tay lor Baske t ball 6 New
P r ice ts R i ght 8 Consumer Surviva l K t '10 Wil d Kingdom

Wanted To Buy

For Sale

6 oo--News 3 A 8 10 1315 ABC N ews~ Elec Co 20 Teachi ng

7 oo- Truth or Cons 3 4 Bowling for Do ll ars 6 W hat s M y Li ne
B News 10 L ets M ake a Dea l 13 Jimmy Dean IS Two
Way Street 20 N ova 33

Not1ce

Modem Chemicals

11 3()-Holl ywood Squares3 15 BrodyBunch6 News 4 love of

Children with Spec a l Needs 33

The Furniture Fixer

Lost

THUR SDA Y JANUAR Y3o "ll

6 3()-NBC News 3 4 l5 ABC News IJ Bewi tched 6 CBS News
8 10 Zodm 20 Gera ld Ford s :A.menca 33

v

Por.t~~oxE~8~!9~ co. @)

Television log for easy viewing

Fire Retardant
Insulation

Larry Lavender

a

'

l

Busmess se rv1ces
•

•

II am F Harr s
Tow ' sn p CI E'r k
lown sh p Cl erk
S umma ry of Cas h
SUMMARY OF CASH
r.. o ,.. denom nat ona l Go spel
Bnlarlces Rece pis
BALAN CES RECEIPTS
I.
5erv ces w It be t eld at Jr
And Expe nd tun~ s
AN D EX PENDITURES
0 U A M Ha l l 20 1 H h S f
Bala nc e J a n 1 19H
Balo1nc c Jan 1 197.'1
I.
N e w H aven Eac.h Tuc s
Genera F u1d
$1 5?7 6 1 Ge 1era F U HI
$ 3 308 J8
Wed
F r day a d Sunday
Motor Veh c le L ce 1se
Moor Ve h c le L cC'nSC'
7 30 p r
All ar e cord ally
la).. Fund
99 ?5
Tax F urrd
3J1 93
nv ed
Gascl neT dlC F und
1 95 7 0 Gasol r tlaxfud
9 169
1912 NOVA
$2250
Cenu• cry Fu nd
J 1.1-l 96 Roa a ~nd Br dqe F und
I &lt;1 61p
S5 1 67
'1
Dr V 8 auto P S black v nyl topw th r ed f n1sh Good
PHON E
Federill Rev e ue 51 a r ng
Crr et ry Fund
J 460 7 I
fABRIC SALE F rs t qua l y
Fu 11d
1 971 17 I edcral Rev enu e 51 ilr ng
949 3832 or 843 2667
w w t~res rad o loca l I owner car and serv ced regularly
Blo wn Into Wa ll s
doubl e and s nglt' kn t s s 1 98
T ot a s
s 806 J9
F ud
10 17?7
From the largest Truck or
by us
per yard A ll la br c n sho p
Total Rece pts
Tot a s
10 6'16 97
All Types of
and Allies
Bulldozer Rad ta tor to t he
r C'duce d n c lud ng new spr n g
General FU1HI
Total R HC ph
7 3 0 II
BUilDING
sm
al l est Heate r Core
Free
Est•
m
ates
patter
n
s
0
e
we
ek
on
l
y
Motor V eH cle L censc
G nc r~ I r unci
1912
CHEVROLET
2TON
H
DU
TY
6 ? ~9 1 7
sse's
Tax Fund
Monday Ja n 17 t hru Sa t
Nathan B1gg s
Motor V el cl e L cense
~ 103 03
a nd RE MOD E LING
10 Ft Mar on Dump 2 speed 900 t res
Feb
Open 9 a m to 7 p m
Gi!SO I n e Tax F una
l tn :F-uld
S83 810
I .tOO 00
Rad1 a 1o.- Sp ee~a l s 11
Ca rol na F abr c Route 7 on e
Cen1etery Fund
6 'JOB 8 GasO I1 e fa~~: F up
15 60000
Fro m a sh elf fo a house.
Ft-d erat R eve nu e
half l le north ol Ch ester
Rottd ct H f Br dqe Fund ? 43/ 48
S34'S
" " CHEV 2 TON CA B
P a mt1 ng s 1d1ng ro o fin g_ ~
Ot o
H enr y and Mary
Shat 19 Fund
1 18? 00 CC'n el ery Fund
7 797 :n
350 engtne 2 rpeed B25 t r es
paper h a n g 1ng
kit c h en
llu n rer own e s
Phone 992 l'/ 93
lora s
1 o; rn 17 Fede r al Rev~'nue sn a ng
ca
bmets
e
x
p
er
t
ca
r pe tin g
Total Rec e1pts &amp; Balances
1 16 6tp
r ur1d
1 899 oo
Da1ly Afte r 5 00
1912 CHE\o ~, TON
elc
Pom eroy
S22SO
Genera l F und
8 BJJ 71 Total s
Ph 992 2174
O Jn07
Fleetstde 4 speed
ANY O NE n terc"&gt; ed n 5t ar1 ng
Motor Ven cte L cense
8
Total R ecc pts&amp; B al ~nc es
Tax Fund
a lundan en al
nd ep endent
Ge ern F und
9 s.:.a 10
~ J02 28
Bapt s Ct ur c h wr t e R e v
Gasol neT ax F Jnd
16 ] 51 10 Molar Veh c le L ce sc
.~
James Ga nl 60)( 14 3 Albany
Ceme tery F u 1d
9 35 3 14
TaxFund
7 18 0n
Federa l Revenue
Oh u or C'l I I ) 69 8 3034
Ga so ne Tax ru d
16 51 6 91
Shar ng Fu r d
26 lip
4 959 17 Roi1d a dB dgc t=" u 1d 1 989 15
Totals
758 OJ
IJ 90 9 7 1 Ce 11 c t ery ru d
843 2824 or 843 2293
EJCpend lur es
Fe deral RC'v en e Shar ng
Genera l F u d
Fu nd
89 46?!
s 07J 79
P ortland OhiO
POMEROY, OH 10
Moler Veh c l e L cen se
To ~IS
50 948 91
Tax Fund
1 375 15
E)lpend l u res
.
On State Rl 124 l1 m t fr om
R EPAIR- Brok e n
Gasol 1e Tal( F und
5 16 BS Genera l f-un(
5 189M
969
MPALA Cusl om
gooo
Comple te plumbmg &amp;
Rou te 1 by p ass towards
Cemetery F u d
5 950 37 Moor Vel c e L~cense
Part s Me nded
cond to n F a ctory a r p s
Rutland
Federal Revenue Sh nr r g
h e attng s e rvtc e a nd
Ta)( f U1d
4 618 55
p b p r ced ro se l l Phon e 99 2
STRIPPIN
G- By
Fund
J 35 J 05 Gr. so l n c Ten. r u 1d
15 53 79
76 17
g e neral s hee t m etal
To al s
33 9SO 46 R o~ d and Br dge Fu d ? 399 n
SHO
OT
N
G
M
ATC
H
Co
rn
F I NA N CI AL REPORT
Ph 992 5682 o r 992 7121
Ha nd
I 29 6 c
Balanc e Dec 31 1974
Cem etery F und
J 789 33
work s
F r ee
OF TOW N SHI PS
Hollow Gun cub turn t r st
NO DIP TANKS
Ge nera Fund
3813 93 Federal Rever ue Si M r g
All
M
ec
ha
m
c
a
l
Work
r gh t all er M les Cem e ery 1960 MGA 2 d r con ver t bl e
For F 1sca 1 Year E nd rng
E s t1mate s
Motor Vehu:: e L cens e
tud
500000
D ece mb er 31 l'il14
Ru and
Fac ory c hokea
very good co nd t on Phor;e
Suppli es Stnppers
Tax F und
~6 83
To r as
15 880 60
Phone 949 5961
Orange Towns fu p
gu s o ly Sunday Fe br ua r y
992 7737 after 5 p m
Open
M
on
Sa
l
Gasot ne Tax F und
1 110 55
BaLwc e Dec 31 1974
Slams Ftns thes
Me gs County
?
P m
I 19 61 C
Em e rge ncy 992 3995
Ce n elery F und
3 .tO~ 82 Gener al F ur d
4 38 106
BA M 6P M
R l 2 CoO l II li e Oh o
I 30 3t c
Federa l Rev er ue Shar ng
Free Pt ckup and L ~ llv er y
Motor V e t c c L ce nse
Ja nu ary20 197S
or 997 5700
197] F OR 0 Cou n ry Squ r e
F u1d
I 605 12
T H F un d
2 33 68
I ce rt l y the loll ow ng report
MR A ND MR S Ron a iO Douga n
wagon
20 000 m les
all
Gil SO l I e T aK Fund
I J J S 7?
to be cor r ec r
wou l d I k e to mv te you to
equ pmeni 53 500 Phon e 992
Cash Balanc e Re cc pt s
Road r:tnd Br dge Fund
589 38
a tend Sunday Schoo l a t th e 3J93 or 992 2120
N nil Rob n son
:;,EP T I C
TA N KS
c l ~aned
And Expend lu re s
Ce rl ei E&gt;r y Fund
2 459 70
M ddl epor t
Un red
P en
Townsh p C erk
Moder n San ta t on 992 3954 or
By F un d
Fe der.;~! Revenue Shar ng
t ecos tal Churc h South Th r d 1970 MAVERICK 6 c yl nder
SU MMARY OF CA SH
992 7J J9
G e11era1 Fund
Fund
3 940 17
BALA N CES RECE I PTS
Avenue s lart ng at 10 a m
good co nd ton
9 8 lf o
Phone 98 5 MA LE Beag l e W l ke s v e
Ba l Jan 1 19 74
I S 013 8
1 5'17 61 To t a s
m ne
J
a ea
wear n g
A ND EXPE NDITUR ES
30 2 c
3 8~6
Rece 1pts
CAS H B A LA N CE
Col umbus dog ags Phon e W L L tr m or cui tr ees or
Ba l ance Ja n 1 1974
100 Kerr Slreel
I 26 Sic
Genera Properl y Tal{
RECE I PTS AND
992 7082
Gener al Fund
s
5 968 11 FOR RENT
s hr u bb ery
c l ea n
out
Tt)bacc
o
base
Pom eroy OhiO
Rea l Es rat e (G r ossi
3 599 14
EXPEND I TURES
Mo ror Veh cle L cense
1 29 Jt c
b ase men ts at cs e t c Phon e
2 300 l bs
on shart'! s o r
Phone {61 4) 992 2798
Tangible P erso n a l Prop ert y
BY F UND
Ta)(FUnd
395800
949322 1 or 7424&lt;14 1
o
th
erw
se
Phone
742
5761
Tax (G r ossl
183S 29
Genera l Fu n d
Ga so l rn e T a• F und
1 730 71
I 26 2Mc
1 16 SI C CON SI GNME NT S wel co me at
In her tan ce Tax
t50 OJ Sal Jan 1 197 4
3 308 48 F r e D s rr c t F und
2 749 6f!
STRI PPING FINISHES
L oca l Govt 0 st
1 61 5 29
P&amp;J Au c lr on
2 5 North
Rec e1pt s
Fed er&lt;"'l Re ... enuc Sha rr ng
FURNI
TURE METALS-ETC.
SH OOTIG Ma t c h Ra e n e Gun
Ciga r ette L censc Fee s
Second M dd le port
Ge neral Prop ert\1 T ax
F und
1 817 66
MODERN &amp; ANTIQUE
Club
Sunday
February
2
1
.1nd F mes (Gross )
18 7S
Rea l Es ta te {G ro ss
3 856 45 Totals
10 22-1 16
I 9 JO tc USED par ts Frye s T u ck and
p m
Tra ler Tax
90 71 TanQible Per sona l Prope rty
Refm1 sh1ng
Repatrrng
To t a l Rece rpts
Aulo Par s R uti and Oh o
Tota l Re c erp ts
7 310 1
NEW
HOM
ES
N
o
Money
Down
I
29
4lc
Tax ( Gr oss )
36 82 G enera l F und
Burn1shtng
Cantng
Phone
(
614
742
609
4
8 000 09
Tota l Beg nn ng Bala 1ce
Pay 11ents a ce o d ng to
I 1her ran ee T al(
M ol or Veh cl e L cense
Upholst enng
I
22
781p
PLu s R:e ce tpt s
8 837 72
nco me on Farmers H&lt;lm e
(G r oss )
Sl0049 t
Ta x Fund
69 18 10 G I GA NTI C Book Sa l e Thr ft
We Al so Buy Anttqu es
Stlop ac r oss from Pomeroy F U RNI SHE D house or larg e
Ex pe n d1tures
Adm n t stra' t on loan Con
L o al Go11 Dr st
2 256 16 Gasol m e Tax Fun d
14 410 00
1957
CHEVY
par
ts
NEW
Po st Offi ce Open Fr da y and
PICk up Ser v 1ce Avatlable
To ta l Expend tures
vent ana l f nanc ng
al so
tr a l er must be n mme are&lt;!
To t al Rece pt s
6 249 92 F re 0 str rct Fund
963 48
Lake&lt;Nood
tract
on
bars
h
Sa turd a y C l oth ng hand
a va rlabl e w th m n mum
A dm n stral ve
4 260 59 To tal Beg rnn ng Bal ance
Coup l e
and
1
c hr d
Feder al R evenue Sharrng
tacker a r shocks
hooker
mad e turn l ure glassware
Town Halls Me rnor al
down L ovel y homes n thre e
R efere nces Phone 388 8474
Plus Re ce pts
9 SS8 40
F und
2 153 00
eaders
w th 3 co l lectors for
h
Bldgs Md Gro ur ds
163 20
I 29 31c
lo ca l ons n M e gs County
E •pc nd1tu r es
Tora rs
32 34 4 67
r 28 3tc
EX CA V .... T I NG dozer loader
sma I b l ock
Ca r
992 3496
F re P r otect on
600 00 Totill Ex pend lures Som e homes w th wooded
----T ota l R ece1 p ts &amp; Bal an ces
and bi!ckhoe wo r k
sept c
af er 6 p m BEST OF F ER
OO
T
NG
mat
c
f1
Saturday
SH
Gr and Tota l Exp
loi
s
Ca
I
for
more
n
WANT EO old up r gh l p ano s
Adm n •str al vc
4 539 66
General F und
13 968 20
tanks rns l al l ed du mp t r u cks.
10 17 t fc
F
eb
I
7
p
m
M
l
e
H
II
Roa
d
Ge era I F und
format on 992 5976
5 023 79
any condton
Payng $10
F r e P rot ec t on
650 00 Motor Veh c l e l rcen se
and l o boys for h r e wrl l h au l
F a c tory c hoke g un s only
Ba l Dec 31 974
3 8 I 3 9] Grand To tal Expend t1.,1r es I 15 26tc
Tax Fund
10 776 10
ea ch f= r st f loor on l y Wr t e
f II d rt top so I 1 mes tone &amp;
Spon sored by the Ri!c ne F re
CL OSE OUT on new Ztg Zag
Tota E)(p Plu s Ba l
and g ve d rec t ons lo W tten
Ge n er al F und
5 1119 66 Gasol m e Tax F und
16140 71
grave
Ca l l Bob or Roger
Depar
l
ment
sew
rn
g
mac
h
nes
For
sew
mg
D ec 31 1974
883 772 Gal D ec 31 1974
P &lt;!no Co
Box 188 Sard s
4 381 06 FireD st r c t Fund
3 713 16
Jeffers day .,phone 992 7089
stretch
fabr
cs
buttonholes
Mo tor Ve h1 c l c L1 cense
I
19
31c
Oh o 43946
To te Exp PIU S a
Federal Revenue Shar n g
n g ht phone '9 2 3525 or 992
l aney des gns etc
Pa nf
Tax Fund
Dec 3 1 1974
9 570 12
F und
3 910 66
1 29 otp
5232
_..__
sl
gh
tl
y
blem
shed
Cho
ce
of
Bar Jan 1 19 74
199 25
M o tor V eh icle L 1cense
Totals
48 568 83 SHOOT l N G match Rae ne Gun
2 11 tf c
car r y rng c ase or sew n&lt;
Rcc e1pts
Club Sun day I p m Assor t ed
T ax Fun d
Ell p end1tu r es
sta n d $49 80 cash or term
Mo tor Veh cl e L ce n se
meat
s
and
faclor
y
choke
g
uns
Ba l Jan 1 197&lt;1
I 3&lt;1 1 93 Gener a Fund
6 48 I 32
EXrE L S OR Salt Works East
av atlable Phone 992 7755
T.x
I 855 OJ
on ly
Rece1pt s
Motor Veh 1c l e L ce nse
Ma n St Pomeroy A I k nds
Ot her
12
18tfc
2 348 00 Moror Veh1c e L cen se
Tax F und
9 0 13 69
12 22 lfc WA N r ED
M anager
f or Of salt wa t er pel l ets wa t er
Tela Rece pts
4 203 03
T ax
5 838 30 Getso ne Tax F und
13 726 05
nugget s b lock sal t and own
f n ~ n c &lt;II nst tutron
Salary G R OC ERY bus ne ss for sa l e
Tot&amp; Beg 11 n 19 Ba
To tar
Rece pi s
5 83 8 30 F i r e D1 slr c t Fund
2 750 79 NOW sell ng Fu ller Br ush
Oh o R ve r Sa l t Phone 992
open n n e w lh ex i? er en ce
Plus Rece pts
4 40 2 28 To t a Beg inn n g Bali! 1ce
Federa l Re&gt;Jenu e Shar ng
Bu ldtng tor sa l e or tei!se
389 1
Produc ts PhOne 992 34 10
Fr
n
ge
ben
ef
t
s
Wr
te
Box
M sce l/ an eous
J 055 41
P l us Rece pt s
7 80 23
Fund
4 609 oo
Phone 77 3 56 18 from 8 30 p m
1
24
tf
c
6 5 tfc
72
9A
Th
e
Da
l
y
Sent
ne
l
Mr~ n te nan ce
1
o~
to 10 p m for appo n t ment
Expend itu res
To tals
36 sao 85
Pomeroy Oh o 4576 9
Gr and Total E x p
Total Expend t u r ~s Ba l an ce Dec J r 1974
JlOtfc
I JO Jt c
EXCAVA
NG
dozer
N CO ME Tax Pr epar ed both
CHES TER - 80 ACRES Motor Veh c l e Lrcense
M sce ll an eous
3 42 1 87 General F und
1 486 88
backhoe
and
d tcher
Fede ra l an d Stat e Taxes w 11
Tax Fund
4 375.:15
Renova t ed home
2 lar ge
Ma nte 1an ce
l ~26 68 Motor V eh 1c1e L cense
Wi!lerl ne f oo t e r s dra ns
be done by appo ntm ent s Sal esmi!n o Agent Wanted
Bal Dec 3 1 19 74
26 8J Grand Total Exp Tax Fund
1 762 41
BR bath lovely k tchen has
roads and b r ush c l ean ng n o
only Pl ease phone 991 2272 or TEXAS O I L COMPANY n eeds
Total Exp P l us Ba
Motor Veh c le L rcense
Gasol nc Ta x F und
2 41&lt;1 66
over
20
cab
n
ets
range
&amp;
ob roo sma I no weat h er too
se e Mrs Wanda Eb l n Laur e
Dec 31 1974
4 402 28
dependa bl e m 3n who ca n wor k
Tax F und
4 848 55 F r e 0 str c t Fun d
962 37
O&gt;Jen basement natur al gas
bad Charle s R Hall el d Rt 1
C H Rd Pom eroy Ohro
Gas oli ne Tax F u lld
w l hovt supe rv 1s on n Me gs
Bal Dec 31 197 4
2 331 68 Federa l Rev enue Shar ng
R utland 0
Phon e 742 6092
FA heat over 5 000 sq ft
At~ I
Jan I 19 74
1 957 40 Total Exp Pl us Ba
1 3 30t c
Fund
- 63 8 34
Counry
area
Contact
I 7 261c
Rece tpts
un
der
r
oof
exce
ll
en
t
hun
D ec 3 19 74
7 180 2J
CA SH BALAN CE
cuslomer s Age un mpo r tant
Gasol neT ax
14 400 00
Gaso lin e Tu F un d
RECE IPT S AND
bu t matur ty s
We I ra n
FOR your
tmg flshmg about 25 a cr e s
0
o f Mrnk
All
New
Heaters
Total Rece a;Jts
1&lt;1 400 DO Bal Ja1 1 1974
9 169
EX PENDITUR ES
A rma rl G N
Orck
Pres
-tOME
l mp r o11ement
and
Cosme! cs Phone BROWNS
under fence $29 900
Now
To tal Begmn ng Bal
Soutnwestern Petroleum Box
Rece 1pt s
B Y F UND
992 5 13
Repa r Ser v ce Anyth ng
POM E ROY - 75 II Iron
Plus Rece pts
6 357 40 Gasoline Tax
IS 600 00
Ge n era l F und
789 Ft Wo r th T x 76 10 1
fr xed around lh e home from
l 7 li e
Dtscounted 1
Ex p endi tur es
Tot al R:e ce tpl s
15 600 00 Ba l Jan 1 1974
tage I or 2 bedrooms ba t h
roof lo basem ent You w 1
1 29 4tc
5 968 11
N ew Wood Burn1ng
Total Expendttures Total Beg nnm g Balan ce
R ece 1p t s
I ke our work an d r ates
t hree fourths
baseme n t
AVL T ON
Thursday
i!nd
Mtsce 11aneo4S
a 112 sJ Plu s Re ce tpt s
P hon e 742 5081
16 5 16 9
Ge nera l Property Tax HEATER- - - - - $239 9S
R
N
f
or
pa
r
t
t
me
pos
fro
n
w
t
ti
na
tvra
l
ga
s
hea
t
porches
Saturday
n
gh
t
7
p
m
a
t
Ma ntenan ce
6 53 4 02
Ex p en d itu r es
Real Es tate (G ro ss)
2 713 58
12 29 tfc
planned
pa
r
en
thoo
d
cl
n
cs
Delu
J(e
model
wtth
cabtn
et
good
r
enta
l
Ask
ng
1ust
Mason Auct on Horton St n
Gfand To ta l Exp - -To!&lt;! I Expend t ures Tang bl e Persona l Pro perty
educat
on
and
soc
a
l
ser
v
ces
Wall
lined
Mason W Va Con s gnmenTs
$3 800
Gasolrne Tax Fund
15 746 85
M sce l la neou s
7 948 27
Tax (Gro ss)
171 63
respons rb I f1 es 16 hou r s per
READY MIX CONC REl ~ d e
wel ... ome Phone (304) 773
Bal Dec 31 1974
1 10 $5
POMEROYL A ND M AR~
RUTLAND - 45 ACRES
M a mtenance
7 205 02 lnhen t an ce T ax
week
Ca
l
l
off
rce
991
59
12
I vered nght to you r pro ect
5.
:
1
71
Total Exp P l us Bal
Ja c k w Ca r se y M gr
Grand To l al E)l.pend lure s IG r oss l
457 99
weekdays except T hursday
all fenced n ce lak e or pond
Fas t
and
easy
F ree
10 3 ft c
Dec 31 1914
16 357 JO
Pho ne 992 2181
Gasolroe Tax Fund
5 153 29 Local GoYI D st
2 613 59
1 29 61c
esl m ates Ph o n e 992 3284
good spnng lots of b u l d ng
Ce m et ery Fund
I 335 72 In lang b l es
1 SOl 93
Ba l Dec 31 1974
- - - -- - - Goeg l em Ready M x Co
s tes mmera ls J U ST $9 000
Bal Jan 1 1974
3 14&lt;1 96 Tota l Exp Plus sa
M iddl eport Oh o
Insu rance Refund
w 32
WA I TRES SE S needed app y 11
Rece 1p t s
NEAR
POMEROY
About
De c 31 1974
16 499 OJ Tota l Rece p t s
8 000 09
STE REO RAD IO 8 track lape
6 30 tfc
per son Crows St eak House
Tang b l e Personal
co m b na t on am fm rad o 4
R oa d a nd B ri dge Fu nd
Tot al Beginning Ba lan ce
2 years old A BR 2 ba t hs
Pom
eroy
·.,---cc--P r operty Tax ( Grossl 1 155 35 Ba l Jan I 1974
551 67
P' us Rece p t s
13 968 20 55x 10 VI N DALE mob rle home 4
way speaker sound system
lt v1ng
R
has eled n c
SEW IN G MAC HIN E Rep arr s
1 7 tfc
r m s new l y carpe l ed good
Sal e ol Lot s
1 S90 00
Balan ce $107 89 or use ou r
Re cetp h
Ex pend itures
serv ce a I makes 992 2284
fireplace love ly k t chen an d
cond
rtron
Very
c
lean
S3
500
Fees
3 150 l l Genera l P rop erty Ta x
To t al Expend i tures bvdget ter ms Ca ll 992 3965
Th e Fabr c Shop Pom er oy
d
m
ng
area
ni
ce
workshop
Ca
ll
98S
3373
e11
enrn
gs
or
Trust Fun ds
312 70
Real E s late (Grossl
2 299 40
~dmm str at ve
s 97 48
1 2'il tt c
Au th on zed S n ger Sales and
weekends
Total Rece1pts
6 208 18 Tang ble Persona l Prop E!'rtv
m t he rear about I acre
Town H alls Memoria l
Serv
rce We Shar pen Sc ssor s
Tot al Beg nn ng Balan ce
1 26 6tp REMODELING
150 B U SH E L o f co r n $2 90 per
Tax (Gross )
42 08
Burldlngs&amp; Grounds
BRI CK &amp; FRAME Go ng at
60 00
p lu mb ng
3 29 tfc
Plus R ecei pts
9 3'S3 14 Other
96 00
Ce me l errcs
b
ushe
l
Hoo
ve
r
0
a
l
A
Mat1
c
IUSI $26 000
5 44 80
f1eat ng
and c: l l l ypes ot
e xpe n dl f u res
Tota l Re ce 1pts
2 437 48
L i ghting
w t h pqwer d r ve and at
679 04 1963 BLUEMOON H ou set r a l er
ge n er a l
r epa r
Work
ALL CAS H FOR YO U R
Sa laries
3 736 65 Tola l Beg nn ng Ba l an ce
Gra n d To l al Exp
tachm en ts $75 Phone 985
n exce lent cond I on loca t ed
DOZER: wo r k l an d c l ea r n g by
guaranteed 20 yea r s ex
PROPER TY LET US
Employers Ret.rement
Plus R ecei pts
2 989 15
General Fund
4
32
'-'II Route 3
A l bany
For
6 48 1 32
th e ac r e hour l y or co nt r act
penence
Phone
992
2409
Conlrlbutlon
344 98
SEL L IT WE NEED
Expe ndi t ures
Ba r De c 31 1974
1 29 10tp
further m for mat on call 698
7 486 88
Fa r m ponds
r o a ds
etc
1 19 tfc
New au ldmgs and
To tal Expend t ures
Total Exp P l us Ba l
8947 or 992 272Q
HOMES VE RY BAD lY
L ar ge dozer and operator
- - ,---- Add!t ons
556 47
M i scellaneous
2 399 77
Dec 31 197A
13 968 20
GRAVELY trac t or Pre season
1 29 3tc W I LL do wa l l papermg or n
w rl h o ve r 20 yea r s ex
2 22 S' or 992 2568
Tool s and Equrpmenl
31 9 51 Grand Total Expend ture s Motor V eh ic l e L1 ce nse
spec ar Purc h ase any new
per ence P ul l n s E)"cavat ng
te
r
or
wor
k
al
r
educe
d
ra
t
es
Other Expenses
626 22
Road and Br dg e Fund
Tax F und
Gravel y convert bl e tr ac t or
Pomeroy Oh o Pnon e 992
Pho n e 949 3832
A ud tor s and Tre a su r ers
2 399 71 Bal
Jan 1 1974
a t regular I st pr ce a nd we
10x55 Pa r t ally c arpeted a c
1 24 61 p
247 8
3 958 00
Fees
29 57 Sal Dec J l 1974
589 38
R ece 1pts
w 111 g 1ve you a n ew 30 ro l ar y
52 gat on hOI wa ter heater - - - - - - - - - - - - _
1219 tf c
U tr ll t es
?3 92 T'Jtar Exp Plus Ba l
Mo tor Vehtc l e Lrcens e
m ower altac h m ent F RE E
underp nn ng Ca ll 992 5153
---1
Tr us I Fund
313 00
'/ 1 q • I 1\ f • 1 1• r I
D ec :i1 1974
'l '189 15
Tax
6 81 8 10
N o tra d ~ na nd no del very on
P&amp;J
Home
Ma nt enance
____
_'_l~~tc
,
Tolal Exp
5 950 32
Ce m et ery Fund
Total Rece pts
6 818 10
l h 1S offer good through Feb 8
heat n g
cool ng
r efr g
t '&gt;~ ''k, ·r
Bal Dec 31 1974
J 402 92 Bat Jan 1 1974
J 4~0 71
Total BeQ nn ng Balanc e
1975 Grave ly Tr a ctor Sales
f./or •r 11, lllll \ l r , .
pl u m b n g
electr ca l ap
T ota l Exp P lus Ba l
R!ece rp ts
Plus Rece p ts
o 776 IO MOBIL E H OM E S FOR SALE t HOU~- u furns h ed 7rooms
Pomeroy Oh o Phon e (6 14 )
p l rances We serv rce a n d
f',rllo·r •.1'' Oh111; r t ;
Dec 31 1974
9 353 14 General P r oper ty T ax El{ pend 1tu res
NOT I CE
Due
to
t he
and ba th n ce Phone 992 2780
992 2975
repa r anyt ng n t he home or
F ederal R evenu e
Real Eslttt e (Gross )
1 72 1 01 To l al Expend t ures _
fo r ec losure on one of Ohro s
or 992 3431
1 29 6tc
bus ness
215 N
Seco nd
\
Sha nn g Fu nd
Tang ib l e Persona Pr oper t y
M sce l lan eous
l argest Mob e H ome D ealers
1 9 ttc
NEW LISTING - 3 bed rooms
9 013 69
M dd lepor t Phone 992 3509
Bal Jan 1 1974
1 977 17
Tax (G ross )
26 31
Grand Total E x p _
we w 111 o ff er for sa l e the
w 1t h bat h gas f u rn ace por ch
1 9 30t c
ACRES and locust posts
Receipts
Sate of Lot s
550 00
Mo tor V eht cle L cense
fol low ng Mob le Homes a t a APT 3 r ooms a l l elec tnc has 1 72
Phone 742 3656
bake and cook untts Needs
Total Rece pts
7 98 2 00 Tolal Recetpts
2 297 J2
Tu Fund
OlJ
very
ve
r
y
large
d
scount
9
69
tab l e t op range wall oven
1 19 12tp f in shed
M ake no m1stak e FuR N TURE Upho l s t er n g
Total Begmn ng Bal
To l al Beg mn ng B alance
Bal De c Jl 197 4
1 762 41 I - 64X 12 L b er t y 3 bedroom
r ea l nice and clean moder n
Rea son able
rates
f r ee
Pl us Re ce 1p f S
4 9591 1
P l us Rece pts
5 7SB OJ 'Total Exp Plus Ba t
l - 60x l 1 L bertv 2 bedroom
have
a
&lt;ook
Only 175()0 00
Located
n
Pomeroy F I R EWOOO fo r sa l e $15 per
estrmales
p ck up
an d
Ex p en d 1lu res
Ex pendi tu res
De c 31 197 4
150x
12
R
chardson
2
bedroom
10 776 20
RUTLAND - 3 bed room bloc k
IOi!d Phone 742 4831
de l ve r y p r om pt serv ce
OYerlook ng the Oh o R:1ver
Mamt and Operation
Sa lartes
15 1511
Gas olin e T ax F und
l - 60xl1 PMC 3 be droom
Phone Ga 111polrs
day 446
1 19 12tc home ba t h gas heat and 2
Mowrey s Uphol stery Pont
Sal ar;l•es- Emp loyees
904 00 Tools and Equ pm en t
1425 00 Bal Ji!n 1 197 4
1- 60xl 2 Trtan 2 bedroom
1370 71
7699 even ngs 446 9SJ9
P le i! Si! nt W Va Phone 675
acres
of
land
$16
000
00
Sup.p l tes
2 365 07 Supples
307 11
Rece tpts
l - 60X I2 Parkwood 2 bedroom
4154
1 26 tfn STEREO RADIO 8 track tape
Pubrlc Employees
Other Exp en ses
42 11
Gasol ne Tax
1- 60x 12 Elcona 2 bedrooms
14 400 OU
NEW
LI
STING
2
bed
rooms
combrna tt on am f m rad ro 4
12 J l 26t p
Ret r em ent Syst en
84 98 Tota l Expend tures
3 169 33
Other
cen t ra l a r
10 00
2 baths gas f ur nace s and v 1ew
way speaker sound syslem
2 BEDROOM mobrle h&lt;lme
Tot a l Exp
3 35 4 OS Bat Dec J 1 1974
2459 70 Tofa i Recep t s
165x12
Rt
c
ha
r
dson
3
144 1000
HOCK I NG Va ll ey Elect r 1c
Bal ance Sl OB 74 or use our
utI tres pad near Pomeroy
of r ver MIDDLEPORT
B al Dec 31 19 74
I 605 12 Total E~Cpend tur es Plu s
Total Begmnmg Ba la nc e
bedroom 1 full baths 8x 12
r es den t a t an d comme r c a /
b
udge
t
t
erm
s
Call
992
3965
Off
Rt
7
Cal
l
992
7017
or
992
Total Exp Plus Bat
Bal Dec 3 1 1974
5 74 9 03
!:' Jus Rec e pts
expando
RACINE - B rooms w 1th 2
6 14 o 71
7666
wrr ng B g and I tt le 10b s
1
21
li
e
Dec 31 1974
4 959 17
fe d eral Re11e n ue
E x pen d 1tu res
We also have a good se l ec t10n of
bat hs carpet ng and some m ce
Ca l l 593 6078 .Athens
F r ee
I 28 3tc
TOW N SH IP DEBT - Notes
Sh;u rn g Fund
Tota l E xpend tures _
other 8 IO and 17 w de Mob 11e
esltmates
pa n el m g And a A room rental
Purpo se For WhiCh
ELECTROLUX
Sweeper
~
e
Bal Jitn 1 19 74
1 OJ 7 27
M scellaneous
Homes
These
are
mostl
y
all
13 726 05
bedroom
I 19 lOtc
N ote D ebt W as Created
model
Comple t e w til al l 33 ACR ES - 3 bedroom s all
R ece1pts
Mam tenan ce
l ate model Homes !some have FUR N IS H ED
4 99S 86
tra l er
a ll ut rl rt1es
493
Grader
cleanmg attachments and electr c bat h m ce k tf chen
Gran Is - Federal
7 899 00
Grand To ta l E x p
never been lived rn ) If you
\..KEMEANS CO N CRETE ut:
Broadway Street Mrdd leport
Out st an d ng Ja n 1
uses paper bags Sl tght ly used
To t al Re ce pis
7 899 00
Gaso l ne Ta x Fund
are mterested
n a good
13 726 05
basement n ear town weth Ctty
r ve r e d Mon d ay
t h r oug h
1 28 tfc
1974
1 666 66 Total Beg nn ng Sal
but cleans and looks I k e new
Bal De c 3 1 , 974
Mobtle Home at a ve r y l arge
2 414 66
Satur d ay
i!nd
even ng s
Red eemed Our ng Yea r
w 11 sell for $37 2S cash or water
Plus Rece pts
8 946 27
Total E)(p P l us Ba r
d scount don t wa t Stop 1n
P hone J46 1142
J ,.
mrle
?0 ACRES - On Rt 33 near
19 74
1 666 66
te r ms ava labl e Phon e 992
E x penditures
Oec 31 197 4
16 UO 70
tOday a1 BERRY MILLER TRAILER SPACE
north
of
Me
gs
H
gh
Schoo
on
6 13 tfc
Rate of In I
6 Pet
775$
wa
t
er
I
n
e
N
ICe
for
sub
M a1nt and Operat on
F.re Distr.cf Fund
Mob l e Home Sales
70S
ol d Rt 33 Phone 99 2 294 1
----12 18 tfc
Equ pment
5 000 00 'Sa l Jan 1 197 4
2 749 68
F ar son Street Be l pre Otno
d
VIS LOn
1 23 tf c
Truck
To tal Exp end lures
5 000 00
R ece 1pts
phone 42l 9531
DBL HOM E - Good for large 'CAR PET nslal l at 1on $1 25 per
Outstand i ng Jan
Ba l Dec 31 1974
3 946 27
Genera l F'ropertv Tal{ _
1 30 10tc
FOLEY
saw
shariJ~ n ng
vatd P hone R cha r d West
tam
l y for a sta r t n b usiness
1974
3 179 so To ta l E x p Plus Sal
R.eel Es t ate (Gr oss )
920 34 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 843 2667
TRA I LER space 2m l es from
equ pment (3 pc hand saw
Redeemed Our nQ
On
Rt
143
near
Al
b
any
Dec J1 1974
8 9&lt;6 2? Other
43 14
Pomerov Rt 14J Phone 992
sharpener )
c rcu l ar saw
12 2426t p
Y ear 1974
] 179 so
$1 2 500 ()()
Tow n ship D ebt - ~ofes
Total Rece ipts
963 48
0 UJ
S858
sha r pener
and
car b._ de
Rate of lnt
6 Pe t
Pur pou For Whr ch
Total Beg l nnrng Balanc e
COUNTRY HOME
4
10 27 tfc
g r Mder A ll l rke new 992 2386
No t e D ebt was Crea ted
Plus Rece p ts
3 713 16 WANTED Ol d upr gh t P I ANOS
EXPER T t r ee serv 1ce
f r ee
1 27 4tp
bedrooms bath vast hv ng
Tractor Loader Backhoe
Ne w tO 570 A Motor Grader
Expe ndit u res
any cond ton
Paytng S10 COUNTRY Mob le Home Park
est mates
20 years ex
carport
and
large
g
arden
New I ssues Our ng
New issues Our ng Year
Contracts
each F rst floor only Wnte
per ence Cal l ( 1) 667 3041 or
2 000 00
TABLE saw a~ 10 n ter for
Rt 33 ten .rmles nor th of
Year 19 4
5 99S 00
$16 500 ()()
1974
16 77S 00
Aud tors &amp; Treas
99 2 30S?
and g 11e d r ecti ons to w tten
L
arge
lots
w
th
sale
Phon
e
843
2292
Pomeroy
Balance Ou t ~tand ng
Ba la n c e Outstand ing
Fees
Prano Co
Box 188 Sardts
1 21 26tp
24 79
1 211 6tc
concrere pat os
s rdewa lks
Dec 31 1974
S 99S 00
De c 31 1974
16 775 00
F re hydrants
Oh o 439 46
72600
runners and
off
street
7 Pet Rate of ln t
Rate of tnt
6 Pet
Total E)Cpend tures
2 750 79
I 30 6tp
N I CE stee r s werghs between
p-ark1ng Phon e 992 7479
i 91? D-4 t eo"Fmal Mat
Date- ol F i nal Mat
3 8 17
Sa l De c 31 1974
962 37
C BRADFO R D Auc t ion eer
4SO and 500 lhs dressed will
12 31 tfc
Total Exp Plus Bal
Complet t Serv ce
he
rea
d
y
l
ast
week
o
f
CASHSS.SS
FOR
JUNK
CARS
Tota l - Outstand ing
Mo Tr im Mower
Dec 31 1974
3 71 3 115
Phone 949 3821 or 949 316 1
Febr uary Whole SSe lb
12
Comple te FRYE S TRUCK 1- URNIS H EO apt 3 rooms and
Jan 1 1974
4 846 16 New Issues Otlrmg
Ftd tt al R even ue
Rac.ne Oh10
steer
87c
lh
~ elud e&amp;
AND AUTO PARTS Rutland
bath newly decorated Phone
Ye11r 1974
To tal - New Issues Durmg
3 800 00
Sh ar.n g F und
99 2 2937
Cr t1 Brad ford
dressrng
cutting
an d
Phone 742 6094
Year 1974
5 995 00 Balance Outstandrng
Bat Jan 1 1974
1 817 6.1
wrappmg just 2 steers left
1 tfc
I 22 26tp
I 26 6tp
Dec 31 1974
Total - Redeemed Curing Year
3 800 00
R ece 1ph
Call
742
3123
wrapped
for
a
1974
4 846 16 Rate of lnt
6 Pet
Grants - Federal
2 153 00
Fu- RNisHED
hom-;~r
f am ty S1ze
Tot al Balance Outstand ing Date of Final Mat
3 8 77
Total Rece pts
2 153 oo WANTED to buy a used
1 28 3tc
ren t Phone 949 2261 Alber t
Dec 31 1974
5 995 00
Gravely Tra ctor w th Mower
Total 8egmn ng Balance
H II Racrne Oh o .t5771
(II
He
30
111 30 lie
and r d~O Su l ky and plow
Plus ~ecerpts
3 970 66
This Fnday's Guest on Kaleidoscope 15
1 26 6tc
attachments Phone ()04) 88 2
E x pendttu r e s
2S25 or even ngs 882 2344
M ain I an d Oper•ho"
PATS PICK HOlLOWAY
NO TIC E OF
Equtpment
~ 609 00
1 26 12tc 3 and 4 ROOM furn "ned and
APPOI NTMEN T
unfurn shed
a pa r tments
tiOU SE r S!J 000 P hone 992 5871
FOXBORO, Mass (UPI ) Total Expend tures
.. 609 00 -- ~- ...... - - - - - - - - -Phone 992 5434
Cue No 21403 Bal D~c 31 1974
1 12 18tc
(tl834
:,
.._:.;
turn
ture
1
ce
boxes
brass
The New England Patriots E st ilte of Sl! ldon J W htte Tota l Expend lures Plus Sal
,. 12 tfc
beds or complete households
Otcused
Wedneadlly traded their right
Dec l h 1974
3 970 66
Wnte M 0 Mrller Rt 4 PRIVATE meet ing room tor BUILDING lol 80ft frootage
Notice 1S hereb y given that
T OW NS H I P DEBT - Bond
Pomeroy Oh1o Call 992 17 60
by 165 It T he second lot on lef t
otlahoma olfenlllve
Rob ertS Whtte of Route 2 Bo»t
any organ zatton phone 992
P ur pose For Wh 1ch
10 1 74
on R vervtew Dnve L ncoln
J97S
161
Cootv111e
Oh
o
has
been
tlitle Eddie Folter for Wa- dul y a ppointed Admm strator
Note D ebt W as Create d
Hill F'om eroy Ohlo If n
llltfc
Gallon Road Grader
JUNK autos complete and
teres ted call 99 2 3230 after p
iiJIDgtoo'sl211J.round llelection W W A of the Estate of Seldon Outstanding
J an 1
delivered t o our yard We prck FURNISHED apt Adults onl y
m
J Yfh•te deceased late of
1974
In the current N a tional O
10 500 00
up auto bo d ies and buy all
10 11 ttc
range
Townsh1p
Me os New l !sues Ourmg
M ddlepor t Pr- one 992 3874
'
krnds of scr ap metals and
Coun t y Oh o
FootbaU ~ draft
11
14
ttc
Yea r 1974
1 000 00
•ron R iders Salvag e St R &amp;..
Creditors
are
requ~red
to
f1le
~""~l"'f)rn.t marely one acre Tn
lbe PlltrliJta 1111111 tbe aelec. their c1a1ms wrth s111d f duc,arv Redeemed Ourmg
12-4 Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh o FUR:N,SHE O
apartment
Rutland set up for mob te
Year 1974
J
.500
00
ca11
992
s
..
68
wr
th
ln
four
months
tk1a pick
quarterUt!l!ttes furnished
SUita b le
h ome Phone (I ) 446 9662
Ba lance Outstandmo
lO
I?
tfc
Oated th I s 25th day of
for .two w orking men or
1 30 7tc
Dec 31 1974
1 000 00
beet ,Olnred8e
6- Janui!lry
1975
.ret1red
couple
LNing
room
Rate of tnt
6
F'ct
CASH pa i d for all makes and
10, 1• ponJ!der New Eqllnd
k1tchen shower and bath On H OUSE tor sa te m Portland 6
Dat e of F1nal Mat
12 27 76
models of mob1le homes
Manntng
J
Webster
ma1n highwa y Mason w v-e
rooms and batn good well '1
Jnjected hbn • a tWellllive
Phone area code 614 423 9531
Phone 773 5147
Judge
( II JO ltc
acres S6 700 Call 843 2292
4
13
tfc
.
beet
111 JO (2 l • 13 3tc
10 21 tfc
1 28 6lc
Dav dE Gloeckner

7- The Daily Sentinel Mtddleport-Pomeroy 0 Thursda) Jon 10 1975

FV
MSD

JDNB
KN JR

FM

F V

FM

WGIDJ
K l\t RDV

G A
LV - DLXDAD
RDAADHC
Yesterday's Cryptoqaole THE SECRET OF LIFE IS NOT
TO DO WHAT YOU LIKE, BUT TO LIKE WHAT YOU DO -

SOURCE UNKNOWN
(C) 191&amp; KID&amp; FMturet SyDditate IDC )

Pass

I¥

Pass

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

Pass

1NT

Pass

South played qutckly bul un
successfully At Irick two he led
a spade to hts ktnJ! West duck
ed wtlhout batlmg an eye so
South retur ned to dummy wtth
a club led a second spade and
played hts queen West produc
ed the ace and South had Lo lose
another trumf trtck a heart
and the ace o diamonds
Ntce play ' satd Soulb 'But
wouldn L you have fell stlly tf
my spade holdmg had been live
to the ktng JOCk ten'
Yes I would ' replied West
' However you would have
played the Len or the JOCk not
the kmg from that holdmg. In
fact there was no holdmg where

Pass 3 •
Pass
You South hold
•AQ769 2 tKJS 4 .AQ82
What do you do now'
A- Pan Is our tint cbelee INt
wltll lOme partaert y011 coald aDII
1hould bkt four clubs
TODAY S QUESTION
Instead of b1ddmg one notrump
over your one spade your parl9er

has raised you lo Lwo spades What
do you do now'

Send $11or JACOBY MODERN
book to Wm sf Bfldge, (c/ o
thiS newspaper) P 0 Box 489
Rad•o City Statton New York
NY 10019

�•
I

,•

6 - The Datly Sentmel Mtddleporl Pomeroy
FINANCIAL REPORT

OF TOWNSHIPS
For FISCal Y ear End 19

Deccmberl l 197A
Le l ar l Towns h p
M CI9S County
Rt 2 Rae nc Oh n

Januarvll 197S
I cerl ty the follow ng rr.por"

to lJc correct

6

Thursday JHn 30 Hil15

1
F I NANC 1Al REPORT
OF TOWNSHIPS
For F sea l Year Ending
D ece mber J J 197 4

Suttcn TowJt s tup
M e gs County
R D 1 R nc n c Otuo
Jan 7J 197S
r cer l ty

he follow ng rcpor

to b e cor r ec l

w

1!'1
If',

Memory
LOV IN G

1 u sb and

1

e mory ot my

Cer I

E va n s

who

pa ssed away • years ago
Jaw ary 30
1'il71
Sad ly
m sse d bY w te Doro hY and
F it n I y
I 30 lie

-

For Fast Results Use Sentinel Classi
Auto Sales

""

DICK TRACY

Notice

@)

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

.

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCTION

IS IT THE METAL TAB
FROM C\DINNY'S
POISONED "OLD
FASHIONED• "?

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

HElL
RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

••
........

10 To Te ll lhe Truth 13 Get Smart 15
8 ~Mac Davis 3 4 15

CAPTAI N EASY
WOW. I\E GOTTA ADMI T
THEY liRE KIOJD OF A TOUGH

WHICH ONE OF
Y0U5 THE MA5TER
OF TH AT DHL \\ Z

LOOKIN BUNCH EA5'-'

THAT D BEo

FROM HERE ON YOUG&amp; Kl"-'

ALL

ME MATEY B UT

;&gt;TAI&lt; T C AL L IIJ ME . MA.;TER ·

MA STER 0' THl? B.LIIVKII\J

loJEVER MIN D
WOT 5 LEFT 0

'5UPER.TANI&lt;ER'

1HE DJolOW

B 3()-Karen 6 13
9 oo-Archer 3 4 15 Stree ts of San Fr an c tsco 6 13 TElke M e
Home Again 8 Movie Double Suicide 20 Mov ie ~ oesk
Set 10 Fort un es of N tgel 33
10 oo-Mov ln On 3j4 15 Har ry 0 6 13 Movie T he L ons Are
Free 8.,., Woman 33

10 3o-Caught n the Act 33
11 oo--News 3 4 8 10 13 15 20 ABC News 33
11 3G-Joh nny Car son 3 4 15 Wide World Spec ia l 13 FB I 6
Movie Sol Madr d B M ove The l aw .:tnd the Lady 10
Janak• 33
12 JQ-W ide Wor ld Spec 1al 6
1
Tom or row 3 4 News 13

FRIDA Y JANUARY J1 197S
6 00-Sunnse Seminar 4 Sunrise Semes ter 10

6 15-Enghsh 505 3
6 25-Farm Report 13
6 3o--Ftve M mu t es to L1 ve By 4 N ews 6 Bible Answers 8
Publi c A ffa rs 10 B lue R1 dge Quar tet 13
6 35-Co lum b u s Today 4
6 45-M orn mg Report 3 Farmtlme 10

BORN LOSER

usn;~

~

IJ.J&gt;I, 1))10 wr

~

\-l()SmlO MD~

CAA'PJ lllNT Ac.uun

lP 10 !::IWJD

OF !».'IS lb %

CR IJ£'U.. l£T lt1£ NR

I«).DDt-Jb HIM ra&lt;

our a: HIS

~

r:;

I

IF

~&lt;e~H rs ~-z

-

-

s

'i

. .?.

ALLEY OO P
IS lT SAFE 10 USE
Ft~ KUNA? "THE

EVEN IF 'THEY ~_:.YE LL BE
LONG GONE BEK.ll&lt;l: 'THEY CAN

MOOVIANS MAY SEE
TilE SMOKE '

GET HERE

1

NOW 'THEN WJ.IICH
ONE OF YOU GIRLS
WANTS T DOTH ~
CDOKIN FOR US

I LL DO

ALL RIGHT BIG MAN

7 ()()--Today 3 4 15 A M America 6 13 CBS News 8 10
8 ()()--Lass1e6 Capt Ka ngaroo 8 Popeye 10 Sesame St 33
8 25-Ca pl Ka ngaroo 10
8 3()-Big Va ll ey 6
9 oo-A M J Ph il D ona hue 4 Bul lwl nkle 8 Morning with 0 J
13 P h1l Dona hue 15
9 25-t huck Wh1te Reports 10
9 3()- Not For Women Onty 3 Dinah 6 Ga ll oping Gou rmel 8
T attletales 10 New Zoo Revue 13
10 oo--Celebnty Sweepstakes 3 4 15 J okers Wi ld 8 10 Movie
All the Way Home 13 13
10 )()-Wheel of Forlune 3 A 1S Gamb1t 8 10
11 ()()-Hig h Roll ers 3 4 15 One l1 fe to l ive 6 Now Yo u See II
8 10

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one l etl t"r to each squa re to
f or m f o ur ord m ary \&gt;\ or ds

CUT HER LOOSE

IT?

BUT KEEP
~

1

1

----

USED AJEL OIL
HEATER, s50

Mobile Homes For Sale

I

\ Annvrr /lou lhty dt 1 u tl ( l1
uaH ro und- FLATLY

~a1•

GASOLINE ALLEY

The
babe comes down

here at two m
ihe tnormnq

t o qeta
tha~she
potato out t here because
of a p1pe
she was loneltJ
and wanted
to meet l)ou?

4

I Dream of Jeannie 4 Somerset 15

Gl tllga n s Is 6 Tattletales 8 Sesame St 20 33 Movie Tha t
Wonderfu l Urge 10 Mike Douglas 13
3()- Bewllched 3 Merv Gr iffin 4 Mod Squad 6 Lucy Show 8

S oo--FB I 3 Andy Gri ff ith 8 Mister Rogers Ne ighbOrhood
20 33 Ironside 13
5 3()-News 6 Beverly Hil lbil lies 8 Hodgepodge Lodge 20
Tra ils West 15 Elec Co 33
6 oo--News 3 A 8 10 13 15 ABC News 6 Elec Co 20 Per
sonall ty &amp; Behavioral De velopment 33
6 30-NBC News 3 A 15 ABC News 13 Bewitched 6 CBS News
8 10 Zoom 20
7 oo--Tr uth or Cons 3 RockIn ln~he U SA A Bowling for
Oollars 6 WCH S TV Report 8 A'vlaflon Weather33 20"-!ews
10 Jim my Dean 13 I Spy 15
7 3()-P orter Wagoner 3 New Candid Ca mera 6 Pop I Goes the
Counlry 8 Treasure Hunt 10 To Te ll the Truth 13 Black
P er s pec t i v e on the N ew s 20 33

8 oo--Sanford &amp; Son 3 • 15 Nlghl Sta lker 6 13 Or Seuss
Specia l 8 10 Washington Week In Review 20 J3
8 30-C hl co &amp; the Man 3 A 15 Lillie Mermaid Specia l 8 10
Wa ll Streel Week 20 J3
9 00--R ocklord F lles 3 A 15 Hoi Bal!lmore6 13 Smlfhsonalan
Inst ltutlon Specia l 8 10 Masterpiece Theefre 20 Consumer
Survi val Kit 33
9 3(f-{)dd Couple 6 13 Assignment Amer1ca J3
10 oo--Poltce Woman 3 A IS Bare!ta 6 13 c;ss Reports 8 10
News 20 Paul Nuchlms 33
10 3~Woman 10 World Press 20
11 oo--News 3 A 6 8 10 13 1 lS ABC News J3
11 ]()-Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Wide World In Concert 13, Mov1e
Daylon s Devil s 6 Movie Dr Phlbes Rises Again' 8
Mov1e The Deathmaster 10 Janakl 33
1 OQ-Midnlght Special] 15 Wide World In Concerl6 News 13
1 15-Movle Dangerous Crossing 10
2 3()-Movle 'X 15 A
4 oo--Movle Murder My Sweet A
5 30-Movle The Snow Queen A

BE'IN6 IN THE' TRAVEL. GAME I VE
PULL ED UNSPEAKABLE TRICKS FOR
NONEY- BUT I CAN'T" TAKE INNOCENT

E'VE'RY 1-&lt;EAL.TH NUT IN
T HE U SA WANTS TICKETS

To

1..owesr SI.OBeOVIA"

PS:)PI..E

THSRC " -

NOT

PER50NAL.LY "

s

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

FRIDAY AT 10:15 A.M. ON

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

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

WMPO AM-FM

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

LEO {July 23 Aug 221 Th ere s

VIRGO {Aug

to

23 Sopt

LIBRA (Sept 23-0cl

23)

30

29 Fuse
abbreviation
30 Italian ctty

• A3

• J 10 9 3
+ A94 2
• 7 s2

SOUTH
•KQ108

EAST
• J 72
¥ K Q 864
+ 76S
3

••o

• 7s
• Q J 10

Anneruan

. K J64

Republic 's
ca pt tal

Nett her

vulnerable

39 Coagulated
milk
40 Rulicule

®AFTER TALK IN6 W11J.I /)ILLY
I DECIDED ")}jE ONLY
DECENT ")}j)NG 1D D:J

5 7VRN MYOCI.F

IN/

L JUST WANT YOU ALLID
KNOW THAT THE O'JLY 'tR ME'
rMGU ILTYOF IS MY
UNCONmOLABLE

DESIRE 10
MPEI?SONATE
PEOPLE:; I

ANO NOTHING G4VEME
MORE PLEASI.IRE THAN
W~NGc!OHN

8ARTOL!fs FASHION
6HOW.'

ciOEY/ (GAfJP) YOU
WERE I?E5FON9113LE::
FOR ALL'THE:: 'THINGS
'THAT WENT Wra:JNG
AT 'THAT bHON ??

Pa!!s
Pas~

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

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Dne leiter 11mply otanda for another In Lhls sample A II
used for the three L s, X for Lhe Lwo 0 s elc Single letters
apostrophes the length and formah on of the words are all
h1nls Each day the code letters are different
CRYPTOQUOTE

TLB

BARNEY
ONE OF THESE DAV5
I'M GOIN TO PACK UP
MV DUDS AN GO SOMEWHAR
- - AN GIT AWAV FROM
IT ALL

1'0 SAV I.(E
GOT IT ALL

RIGHT HERE,
SNUFFY

Br.PD
FA

Q~
Jon 31 1175
Pl an s for Improving your sta
t on n lif e thi s year may get ott
1o a slow start Don 1use thi s as
a cue to give them up Par
slstence ev ent ua ll ~ rewards

you

North

E ast

I.-,
2•
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

you would have played the king
wtthout havmg the queen in

Soulb

West was qutte right South s
allempl to get West to plar, the
ace was doomed to fa tlure
agamst any good player once
he played tfie kmg Had he
played the queen 11 rntght have
been a dttretent story Expert
West mtght have decided that
South held ftve tr umps to the
queen Jack and that a duck wtth
the ace would lead to the ace
and kmg falhng together on the
next trump lead
NEWSPAPEH ENTERPR ISE ASSN !

LZ:R;! :1t!&amp;WU1
The btddtng has been
West

North

Eall

30

SoUth

Openmg lead- J ¥

pudu

ISD A

You It be sp ending more time
tod ay shoulderi ng burdens
and problems or others than
you will solving your own

reserve

• AQ 9 8

WEST

43 Impala or

AQUARIUS (Jon 20· Pob 1t)

Play of king tells too much

Z8 'El - '

42 Spoilage

11) If you try to bowl ove r your
opponents ~ It will only
st lfen their reSTstance to you r
atm s Be tact1ut con siderat e

WIN AT BRIDGE

+K 8 3

41 S Air fox

CAPRICORN (Doc 22-Jon

22)

Don t spread yourself too thin
where your rescurces are con
earned Your purse ca nt han
die a sp ending spree

21 Epochal

~

refuse to a d one who s gotten
lo you before materially then
fo rg ot yo u ti ll his p re sent
dilemm a

PIII"CES (Fob 20-Morch 20)

just a th n veneer over your
patience an d tem per A slight
provocation cov ld cause you to
overreac t unflatte ringly

33 Judge's
cOiiunand
38 London's
Old 39 Kis&amp;-and
tell man

21) It s to yo ur best Interest to

CANCER (Juno 21-July 22) Be
cha rge and or yo ur material
possession s Don t deal with
persons yo u m istrust

Anlswer ''"
31 Awaken
32 Minister

yo u II shortly be bo•ed ln
SAGITTARIUS {Nov 23·Dec

Yo u re n ol esp eciall y lucky to
day when p utting out cash for
r sky or chancy ventu res Bu y
nothmg s ght unseen

extra watchful of lhasa n yo ur

Yesterday 's
22 Extensive
23 Bellwether
24 One kind
of car
25 PriSOner
26 Flower
28 Gleason s
old sidekick
30 Milan's La -

You could be taking on more
res po nsi bilities r ight now than
you can handle Ease up or

Don t blame your mistake s on
others ra ther reexamin e your
own Ideas See If th at s where
the fault ltes

NORTH lD)
• 9 6 s4
¥A 2

;;;;bj;

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

GEMINI {Moy 21 Juno 20)

35 Wail
3&amp; Edi tortal
pronoun

s

Middleport child
ConseMJtion League

1dt a lhnl tlu l rrrtll

34 Code Signal

/

---------

Treasurer of

extr a careful t you re using
too ls today Al so f you re
work ng w1t h ano ther remind
htm to work In a safe ord erl y

rnatertal

IJL ABNER

Wanted T 8

SUSANthe BLAKER

costs
TAURUS {April 20 Moy 20) Be

table

---------

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

sen t al to yo ur Immediate alms
w 1 throw some roa db locks In
your pa th Keep coot at ell

26Bedor

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

Real Estate For S.

For Frldoy, Jon 31 1875
ARIES {Morel&gt; 21 April 18)
One whose co operation Is es

23 Bootstrmg

--------

-----------

mbltH "'

...,tlt'

ACROSS
DOWN
1 Wttly
1 Junto
one
2 Fragrance
5 Conftguration[ 3 Ktnd
10 Reg10n
of race
11 Iron Curtain 4 Pater
country
5 Cast
13 What knights 1 out
were
6 Poet
14 Come out
7 Porter's
15 Candleput
relative
tree
8 Perfect
16 Lambkm's
spectmen
mom
9 Etch
17 Macaw
12 Muffle
18 Stop-&lt;Jff
I&amp; Small
20 Mild oath
salamander
21 Roulette
19 Russtan
color
ctty
22 Braided

-----------

'

~

way

by THOMAS JOSEPH

For Rent

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

V" :

I I

y ... te rday •

TEAFORD

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

TROUEI'L N6 H M

(AA1we n t omorrowI

--- --------

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

r)

Juml I" FU ZZY LILAC MISFIT INLAND

---------

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

A H 6H ONE
MI6HT FIND IH IS

1,_---'-'Pri"11'-·= SUR'--'PRISI'-'.CA.::C:NSW_IR_Ilm-'--__,1 ''( I I I I ]"

------

Employment Wanted

Holloway, •

4 oo-Mr Cartoon 3

SCORPIO (Ocl 24 Nov 22)

Now arranre the circled letlers
to form the aurpr11e answer as
'"==::':·::=~·:::~=~l~L!~:=_:•::u~
nesled by the above cartoon

-----

r-

As the Wrold Turn s 8 10

2 oo--Oa ys of Our Lives 3 4 15 S10 000 Pyramid 6 13 Guiding
L1ghl 8 10
2 3()-0octors 3 4 1S Bi g Shwowdown 6 13 Edge of Night 810
3 oo--Another World 3 A 15 Genera l Hospita l 6 13 Price Is
Ri ght 8 10 Aseenl of Man 20
3 3()-()ne Li fe lo Live 13 Lucy Show 6 Match Game B 10

Kn ow when to back off toda y If
you r un nto too much opposl
l ion Disc ret on Is the better
part of valor

,o

/Jf-LJUM ~

IJ'ITLE ORP HAN ANNIE

Search for

12 45-E iec Co 33
12 55- NBC News 3 IS
()()-News 3 All My Children 6 13 Phil Donahue 8 Young &amp;
lhe Rest less 10 Not For Women On ly 15
3()-How lo Surv ive a Marr1age 3 A 15 Lei s Make A Deal6,13

[J

I KENV/0 ~

no

to

Spill Second 6 13

Tom er r ow 8 10 To Be Announ ce d 33

r)

I ()

CLELAND
REALTY

------ --

runner

Club 4 News 8 10
12 3()- Biank Check 3 15

___ _

Help Wanted

to

l1fe 8 10 Sesa me S 33

Bonanza 15

oo-

Wanted To Rent

a

Barney M ill er 6 13 The Wa ltons B 10

B II Moyers Journa l 20 33

Real Estate For Sale

------

11 55- Take Kerr with Graham Kerr 8 Dan Imel s Wor ld 10
N ew s 13
12 ()()-Jac kpot 3 15 P assword All Stars 6 13 Bob Braun s $0 $0

7 3D-Ho ll ywood Squares 3 4 Fred Tay lor Baske t ball 6 New
P r ice ts R i ght 8 Consumer Surviva l K t '10 Wil d Kingdom

Wanted To Buy

For Sale

6 oo--News 3 A 8 10 1315 ABC N ews~ Elec Co 20 Teachi ng

7 oo- Truth or Cons 3 4 Bowling for Do ll ars 6 W hat s M y Li ne
B News 10 L ets M ake a Dea l 13 Jimmy Dean IS Two
Way Street 20 N ova 33

Not1ce

Modem Chemicals

11 3()-Holl ywood Squares3 15 BrodyBunch6 News 4 love of

Children with Spec a l Needs 33

The Furniture Fixer

Lost

THUR SDA Y JANUAR Y3o "ll

6 3()-NBC News 3 4 l5 ABC News IJ Bewi tched 6 CBS News
8 10 Zodm 20 Gera ld Ford s :A.menca 33

v

Por.t~~oxE~8~!9~ co. @)

Television log for easy viewing

Fire Retardant
Insulation

Larry Lavender

a

'

l

Busmess se rv1ces
•

•

II am F Harr s
Tow ' sn p CI E'r k
lown sh p Cl erk
S umma ry of Cas h
SUMMARY OF CASH
r.. o ,.. denom nat ona l Go spel
Bnlarlces Rece pis
BALAN CES RECEIPTS
I.
5erv ces w It be t eld at Jr
And Expe nd tun~ s
AN D EX PENDITURES
0 U A M Ha l l 20 1 H h S f
Bala nc e J a n 1 19H
Balo1nc c Jan 1 197.'1
I.
N e w H aven Eac.h Tuc s
Genera F u1d
$1 5?7 6 1 Ge 1era F U HI
$ 3 308 J8
Wed
F r day a d Sunday
Motor Veh c le L ce 1se
Moor Ve h c le L cC'nSC'
7 30 p r
All ar e cord ally
la).. Fund
99 ?5
Tax F urrd
3J1 93
nv ed
Gascl neT dlC F und
1 95 7 0 Gasol r tlaxfud
9 169
1912 NOVA
$2250
Cenu• cry Fu nd
J 1.1-l 96 Roa a ~nd Br dqe F und
I &lt;1 61p
S5 1 67
'1
Dr V 8 auto P S black v nyl topw th r ed f n1sh Good
PHON E
Federill Rev e ue 51 a r ng
Crr et ry Fund
J 460 7 I
fABRIC SALE F rs t qua l y
Fu 11d
1 971 17 I edcral Rev enu e 51 ilr ng
949 3832 or 843 2667
w w t~res rad o loca l I owner car and serv ced regularly
Blo wn Into Wa ll s
doubl e and s nglt' kn t s s 1 98
T ot a s
s 806 J9
F ud
10 17?7
From the largest Truck or
by us
per yard A ll la br c n sho p
Total Rece pts
Tot a s
10 6'16 97
All Types of
and Allies
Bulldozer Rad ta tor to t he
r C'duce d n c lud ng new spr n g
General FU1HI
Total R HC ph
7 3 0 II
BUilDING
sm
al l est Heate r Core
Free
Est•
m
ates
patter
n
s
0
e
we
ek
on
l
y
Motor V eH cle L censc
G nc r~ I r unci
1912
CHEVROLET
2TON
H
DU
TY
6 ? ~9 1 7
sse's
Tax Fund
Monday Ja n 17 t hru Sa t
Nathan B1gg s
Motor V el cl e L cense
~ 103 03
a nd RE MOD E LING
10 Ft Mar on Dump 2 speed 900 t res
Feb
Open 9 a m to 7 p m
Gi!SO I n e Tax F una
l tn :F-uld
S83 810
I .tOO 00
Rad1 a 1o.- Sp ee~a l s 11
Ca rol na F abr c Route 7 on e
Cen1etery Fund
6 'JOB 8 GasO I1 e fa~~: F up
15 60000
Fro m a sh elf fo a house.
Ft-d erat R eve nu e
half l le north ol Ch ester
Rottd ct H f Br dqe Fund ? 43/ 48
S34'S
" " CHEV 2 TON CA B
P a mt1 ng s 1d1ng ro o fin g_ ~
Ot o
H enr y and Mary
Shat 19 Fund
1 18? 00 CC'n el ery Fund
7 797 :n
350 engtne 2 rpeed B25 t r es
paper h a n g 1ng
kit c h en
llu n rer own e s
Phone 992 l'/ 93
lora s
1 o; rn 17 Fede r al Rev~'nue sn a ng
ca
bmets
e
x
p
er
t
ca
r pe tin g
Total Rec e1pts &amp; Balances
1 16 6tp
r ur1d
1 899 oo
Da1ly Afte r 5 00
1912 CHE\o ~, TON
elc
Pom eroy
S22SO
Genera l F und
8 BJJ 71 Total s
Ph 992 2174
O Jn07
Fleetstde 4 speed
ANY O NE n terc"&gt; ed n 5t ar1 ng
Motor Ven cte L cense
8
Total R ecc pts&amp; B al ~nc es
Tax Fund
a lundan en al
nd ep endent
Ge ern F und
9 s.:.a 10
~ J02 28
Bapt s Ct ur c h wr t e R e v
Gasol neT ax F Jnd
16 ] 51 10 Molar Veh c le L ce sc
.~
James Ga nl 60)( 14 3 Albany
Ceme tery F u 1d
9 35 3 14
TaxFund
7 18 0n
Federa l Revenue
Oh u or C'l I I ) 69 8 3034
Ga so ne Tax ru d
16 51 6 91
Shar ng Fu r d
26 lip
4 959 17 Roi1d a dB dgc t=" u 1d 1 989 15
Totals
758 OJ
IJ 90 9 7 1 Ce 11 c t ery ru d
843 2824 or 843 2293
EJCpend lur es
Fe deral RC'v en e Shar ng
Genera l F u d
Fu nd
89 46?!
s 07J 79
P ortland OhiO
POMEROY, OH 10
Moler Veh c l e L cen se
To ~IS
50 948 91
Tax Fund
1 375 15
E)lpend l u res
.
On State Rl 124 l1 m t fr om
R EPAIR- Brok e n
Gasol 1e Tal( F und
5 16 BS Genera l f-un(
5 189M
969
MPALA Cusl om
gooo
Comple te plumbmg &amp;
Rou te 1 by p ass towards
Cemetery F u d
5 950 37 Moor Vel c e L~cense
Part s Me nded
cond to n F a ctory a r p s
Rutland
Federal Revenue Sh nr r g
h e attng s e rvtc e a nd
Ta)( f U1d
4 618 55
p b p r ced ro se l l Phon e 99 2
STRIPPIN
G- By
Fund
J 35 J 05 Gr. so l n c Ten. r u 1d
15 53 79
76 17
g e neral s hee t m etal
To al s
33 9SO 46 R o~ d and Br dge Fu d ? 399 n
SHO
OT
N
G
M
ATC
H
Co
rn
F I NA N CI AL REPORT
Ph 992 5682 o r 992 7121
Ha nd
I 29 6 c
Balanc e Dec 31 1974
Cem etery F und
J 789 33
work s
F r ee
OF TOW N SHI PS
Hollow Gun cub turn t r st
NO DIP TANKS
Ge nera Fund
3813 93 Federal Rever ue Si M r g
All
M
ec
ha
m
c
a
l
Work
r gh t all er M les Cem e ery 1960 MGA 2 d r con ver t bl e
For F 1sca 1 Year E nd rng
E s t1mate s
Motor Vehu:: e L cens e
tud
500000
D ece mb er 31 l'il14
Ru and
Fac ory c hokea
very good co nd t on Phor;e
Suppli es Stnppers
Tax F und
~6 83
To r as
15 880 60
Phone 949 5961
Orange Towns fu p
gu s o ly Sunday Fe br ua r y
992 7737 after 5 p m
Open
M
on
Sa
l
Gasot ne Tax F und
1 110 55
BaLwc e Dec 31 1974
Slams Ftns thes
Me gs County
?
P m
I 19 61 C
Em e rge ncy 992 3995
Ce n elery F und
3 .tO~ 82 Gener al F ur d
4 38 106
BA M 6P M
R l 2 CoO l II li e Oh o
I 30 3t c
Federa l Rev er ue Shar ng
Free Pt ckup and L ~ llv er y
Motor V e t c c L ce nse
Ja nu ary20 197S
or 997 5700
197] F OR 0 Cou n ry Squ r e
F u1d
I 605 12
T H F un d
2 33 68
I ce rt l y the loll ow ng report
MR A ND MR S Ron a iO Douga n
wagon
20 000 m les
all
Gil SO l I e T aK Fund
I J J S 7?
to be cor r ec r
wou l d I k e to mv te you to
equ pmeni 53 500 Phon e 992
Cash Balanc e Re cc pt s
Road r:tnd Br dge Fund
589 38
a tend Sunday Schoo l a t th e 3J93 or 992 2120
N nil Rob n son
:;,EP T I C
TA N KS
c l ~aned
And Expend lu re s
Ce rl ei E&gt;r y Fund
2 459 70
M ddl epor t
Un red
P en
Townsh p C erk
Moder n San ta t on 992 3954 or
By F un d
Fe der.;~! Revenue Shar ng
t ecos tal Churc h South Th r d 1970 MAVERICK 6 c yl nder
SU MMARY OF CA SH
992 7J J9
G e11era1 Fund
Fund
3 940 17
BALA N CES RECE I PTS
Avenue s lart ng at 10 a m
good co nd ton
9 8 lf o
Phone 98 5 MA LE Beag l e W l ke s v e
Ba l Jan 1 19 74
I S 013 8
1 5'17 61 To t a s
m ne
J
a ea
wear n g
A ND EXPE NDITUR ES
30 2 c
3 8~6
Rece 1pts
CAS H B A LA N CE
Col umbus dog ags Phon e W L L tr m or cui tr ees or
Ba l ance Ja n 1 1974
100 Kerr Slreel
I 26 Sic
Genera Properl y Tal{
RECE I PTS AND
992 7082
Gener al Fund
s
5 968 11 FOR RENT
s hr u bb ery
c l ea n
out
Tt)bacc
o
base
Pom eroy OhiO
Rea l Es rat e (G r ossi
3 599 14
EXPEND I TURES
Mo ror Veh cle L cense
1 29 Jt c
b ase men ts at cs e t c Phon e
2 300 l bs
on shart'! s o r
Phone {61 4) 992 2798
Tangible P erso n a l Prop ert y
BY F UND
Ta)(FUnd
395800
949322 1 or 7424&lt;14 1
o
th
erw
se
Phone
742
5761
Tax (G r ossl
183S 29
Genera l Fu n d
Ga so l rn e T a• F und
1 730 71
I 26 2Mc
1 16 SI C CON SI GNME NT S wel co me at
In her tan ce Tax
t50 OJ Sal Jan 1 197 4
3 308 48 F r e D s rr c t F und
2 749 6f!
STRI PPING FINISHES
L oca l Govt 0 st
1 61 5 29
P&amp;J Au c lr on
2 5 North
Rec e1pt s
Fed er&lt;"'l Re ... enuc Sha rr ng
FURNI
TURE METALS-ETC.
SH OOTIG Ma t c h Ra e n e Gun
Ciga r ette L censc Fee s
Second M dd le port
Ge neral Prop ert\1 T ax
F und
1 817 66
MODERN &amp; ANTIQUE
Club
Sunday
February
2
1
.1nd F mes (Gross )
18 7S
Rea l Es ta te {G ro ss
3 856 45 Totals
10 22-1 16
I 9 JO tc USED par ts Frye s T u ck and
p m
Tra ler Tax
90 71 TanQible Per sona l Prope rty
Refm1 sh1ng
Repatrrng
To t a l Rece rpts
Aulo Par s R uti and Oh o
Tota l Re c erp ts
7 310 1
NEW
HOM
ES
N
o
Money
Down
I
29
4lc
Tax ( Gr oss )
36 82 G enera l F und
Burn1shtng
Cantng
Phone
(
614
742
609
4
8 000 09
Tota l Beg nn ng Bala 1ce
Pay 11ents a ce o d ng to
I 1her ran ee T al(
M ol or Veh cl e L cense
Upholst enng
I
22
781p
PLu s R:e ce tpt s
8 837 72
nco me on Farmers H&lt;lm e
(G r oss )
Sl0049 t
Ta x Fund
69 18 10 G I GA NTI C Book Sa l e Thr ft
We Al so Buy Anttqu es
Stlop ac r oss from Pomeroy F U RNI SHE D house or larg e
Ex pe n d1tures
Adm n t stra' t on loan Con
L o al Go11 Dr st
2 256 16 Gasol m e Tax Fun d
14 410 00
1957
CHEVY
par
ts
NEW
Po st Offi ce Open Fr da y and
PICk up Ser v 1ce Avatlable
To ta l Expend tures
vent ana l f nanc ng
al so
tr a l er must be n mme are&lt;!
To t al Rece pt s
6 249 92 F re 0 str rct Fund
963 48
Lake&lt;Nood
tract
on
bars
h
Sa turd a y C l oth ng hand
a va rlabl e w th m n mum
A dm n stral ve
4 260 59 To tal Beg rnn ng Bal ance
Coup l e
and
1
c hr d
Feder al R evenue Sharrng
tacker a r shocks
hooker
mad e turn l ure glassware
Town Halls Me rnor al
down L ovel y homes n thre e
R efere nces Phone 388 8474
Plus Re ce pts
9 SS8 40
F und
2 153 00
eaders
w th 3 co l lectors for
h
Bldgs Md Gro ur ds
163 20
I 29 31c
lo ca l ons n M e gs County
E •pc nd1tu r es
Tora rs
32 34 4 67
r 28 3tc
EX CA V .... T I NG dozer loader
sma I b l ock
Ca r
992 3496
F re P r otect on
600 00 Totill Ex pend lures Som e homes w th wooded
----T ota l R ece1 p ts &amp; Bal an ces
and bi!ckhoe wo r k
sept c
af er 6 p m BEST OF F ER
OO
T
NG
mat
c
f1
Saturday
SH
Gr and Tota l Exp
loi
s
Ca
I
for
more
n
WANT EO old up r gh l p ano s
Adm n •str al vc
4 539 66
General F und
13 968 20
tanks rns l al l ed du mp t r u cks.
10 17 t fc
F
eb
I
7
p
m
M
l
e
H
II
Roa
d
Ge era I F und
format on 992 5976
5 023 79
any condton
Payng $10
F r e P rot ec t on
650 00 Motor Veh c l e l rcen se
and l o boys for h r e wrl l h au l
F a c tory c hoke g un s only
Ba l Dec 31 974
3 8 I 3 9] Grand To tal Expend t1.,1r es I 15 26tc
Tax Fund
10 776 10
ea ch f= r st f loor on l y Wr t e
f II d rt top so I 1 mes tone &amp;
Spon sored by the Ri!c ne F re
CL OSE OUT on new Ztg Zag
Tota E)(p Plu s Ba l
and g ve d rec t ons lo W tten
Ge n er al F und
5 1119 66 Gasol m e Tax F und
16140 71
grave
Ca l l Bob or Roger
Depar
l
ment
sew
rn
g
mac
h
nes
For
sew
mg
D ec 31 1974
883 772 Gal D ec 31 1974
P &lt;!no Co
Box 188 Sard s
4 381 06 FireD st r c t Fund
3 713 16
Jeffers day .,phone 992 7089
stretch
fabr
cs
buttonholes
Mo tor Ve h1 c l c L1 cense
I
19
31c
Oh o 43946
To te Exp PIU S a
Federal Revenue Shar n g
n g ht phone '9 2 3525 or 992
l aney des gns etc
Pa nf
Tax Fund
Dec 3 1 1974
9 570 12
F und
3 910 66
1 29 otp
5232
_..__
sl
gh
tl
y
blem
shed
Cho
ce
of
Bar Jan 1 19 74
199 25
M o tor V eh icle L 1cense
Totals
48 568 83 SHOOT l N G match Rae ne Gun
2 11 tf c
car r y rng c ase or sew n&lt;
Rcc e1pts
Club Sun day I p m Assor t ed
T ax Fun d
Ell p end1tu r es
sta n d $49 80 cash or term
Mo tor Veh cl e L ce n se
meat
s
and
faclor
y
choke
g
uns
Ba l Jan 1 197&lt;1
I 3&lt;1 1 93 Gener a Fund
6 48 I 32
EXrE L S OR Salt Works East
av atlable Phone 992 7755
T.x
I 855 OJ
on ly
Rece1pt s
Motor Veh 1c l e L ce nse
Ma n St Pomeroy A I k nds
Ot her
12
18tfc
2 348 00 Moror Veh1c e L cen se
Tax F und
9 0 13 69
12 22 lfc WA N r ED
M anager
f or Of salt wa t er pel l ets wa t er
Tela Rece pts
4 203 03
T ax
5 838 30 Getso ne Tax F und
13 726 05
nugget s b lock sal t and own
f n ~ n c &lt;II nst tutron
Salary G R OC ERY bus ne ss for sa l e
Tot&amp; Beg 11 n 19 Ba
To tar
Rece pi s
5 83 8 30 F i r e D1 slr c t Fund
2 750 79 NOW sell ng Fu ller Br ush
Oh o R ve r Sa l t Phone 992
open n n e w lh ex i? er en ce
Plus Rece pts
4 40 2 28 To t a Beg inn n g Bali! 1ce
Federa l Re&gt;Jenu e Shar ng
Bu ldtng tor sa l e or tei!se
389 1
Produc ts PhOne 992 34 10
Fr
n
ge
ben
ef
t
s
Wr
te
Box
M sce l/ an eous
J 055 41
P l us Rece pt s
7 80 23
Fund
4 609 oo
Phone 77 3 56 18 from 8 30 p m
1
24
tf
c
6 5 tfc
72
9A
Th
e
Da
l
y
Sent
ne
l
Mr~ n te nan ce
1
o~
to 10 p m for appo n t ment
Expend itu res
To tals
36 sao 85
Pomeroy Oh o 4576 9
Gr and Total E x p
Total Expend t u r ~s Ba l an ce Dec J r 1974
JlOtfc
I JO Jt c
EXCAVA
NG
dozer
N CO ME Tax Pr epar ed both
CHES TER - 80 ACRES Motor Veh c l e Lrcense
M sce ll an eous
3 42 1 87 General F und
1 486 88
backhoe
and
d tcher
Fede ra l an d Stat e Taxes w 11
Tax Fund
4 375.:15
Renova t ed home
2 lar ge
Ma nte 1an ce
l ~26 68 Motor V eh 1c1e L cense
Wi!lerl ne f oo t e r s dra ns
be done by appo ntm ent s Sal esmi!n o Agent Wanted
Bal Dec 3 1 19 74
26 8J Grand Total Exp Tax Fund
1 762 41
BR bath lovely k tchen has
roads and b r ush c l ean ng n o
only Pl ease phone 991 2272 or TEXAS O I L COMPANY n eeds
Total Exp P l us Ba
Motor Veh c le L rcense
Gasol nc Ta x F und
2 41&lt;1 66
over
20
cab
n
ets
range
&amp;
ob roo sma I no weat h er too
se e Mrs Wanda Eb l n Laur e
Dec 31 1974
4 402 28
dependa bl e m 3n who ca n wor k
Tax F und
4 848 55 F r e 0 str c t Fun d
962 37
O&gt;Jen basement natur al gas
bad Charle s R Hall el d Rt 1
C H Rd Pom eroy Ohro
Gas oli ne Tax F u lld
w l hovt supe rv 1s on n Me gs
Bal Dec 31 197 4
2 331 68 Federa l Rev enue Shar ng
R utland 0
Phon e 742 6092
FA heat over 5 000 sq ft
At~ I
Jan I 19 74
1 957 40 Total Exp Pl us Ba
1 3 30t c
Fund
- 63 8 34
Counry
area
Contact
I 7 261c
Rece tpts
un
der
r
oof
exce
ll
en
t
hun
D ec 3 19 74
7 180 2J
CA SH BALAN CE
cuslomer s Age un mpo r tant
Gasol neT ax
14 400 00
Gaso lin e Tu F un d
RECE IPT S AND
bu t matur ty s
We I ra n
FOR your
tmg flshmg about 25 a cr e s
0
o f Mrnk
All
New
Heaters
Total Rece a;Jts
1&lt;1 400 DO Bal Ja1 1 1974
9 169
EX PENDITUR ES
A rma rl G N
Orck
Pres
-tOME
l mp r o11ement
and
Cosme! cs Phone BROWNS
under fence $29 900
Now
To tal Begmn ng Bal
Soutnwestern Petroleum Box
Rece 1pt s
B Y F UND
992 5 13
Repa r Ser v ce Anyth ng
POM E ROY - 75 II Iron
Plus Rece pts
6 357 40 Gasoline Tax
IS 600 00
Ge n era l F und
789 Ft Wo r th T x 76 10 1
fr xed around lh e home from
l 7 li e
Dtscounted 1
Ex p endi tur es
Tot al R:e ce tpl s
15 600 00 Ba l Jan 1 1974
tage I or 2 bedrooms ba t h
roof lo basem ent You w 1
1 29 4tc
5 968 11
N ew Wood Burn1ng
Total Expendttures Total Beg nnm g Balan ce
R ece 1p t s
I ke our work an d r ates
t hree fourths
baseme n t
AVL T ON
Thursday
i!nd
Mtsce 11aneo4S
a 112 sJ Plu s Re ce tpt s
P hon e 742 5081
16 5 16 9
Ge nera l Property Tax HEATER- - - - - $239 9S
R
N
f
or
pa
r
t
t
me
pos
fro
n
w
t
ti
na
tvra
l
ga
s
hea
t
porches
Saturday
n
gh
t
7
p
m
a
t
Ma ntenan ce
6 53 4 02
Ex p en d itu r es
Real Es tate (G ro ss)
2 713 58
12 29 tfc
planned
pa
r
en
thoo
d
cl
n
cs
Delu
J(e
model
wtth
cabtn
et
good
r
enta
l
Ask
ng
1ust
Mason Auct on Horton St n
Gfand To ta l Exp - -To!&lt;! I Expend t ures Tang bl e Persona l Pro perty
educat
on
and
soc
a
l
ser
v
ces
Wall
lined
Mason W Va Con s gnmenTs
$3 800
Gasolrne Tax Fund
15 746 85
M sce l la neou s
7 948 27
Tax (Gro ss)
171 63
respons rb I f1 es 16 hou r s per
READY MIX CONC REl ~ d e
wel ... ome Phone (304) 773
Bal Dec 31 1974
1 10 $5
POMEROYL A ND M AR~
RUTLAND - 45 ACRES
M a mtenance
7 205 02 lnhen t an ce T ax
week
Ca
l
l
off
rce
991
59
12
I vered nght to you r pro ect
5.
:
1
71
Total Exp P l us Bal
Ja c k w Ca r se y M gr
Grand To l al E)l.pend lure s IG r oss l
457 99
weekdays except T hursday
all fenced n ce lak e or pond
Fas t
and
easy
F ree
10 3 ft c
Dec 31 1914
16 357 JO
Pho ne 992 2181
Gasolroe Tax Fund
5 153 29 Local GoYI D st
2 613 59
1 29 61c
esl m ates Ph o n e 992 3284
good spnng lots of b u l d ng
Ce m et ery Fund
I 335 72 In lang b l es
1 SOl 93
Ba l Dec 31 1974
- - - -- - - Goeg l em Ready M x Co
s tes mmera ls J U ST $9 000
Bal Jan 1 1974
3 14&lt;1 96 Tota l Exp Plus sa
M iddl eport Oh o
Insu rance Refund
w 32
WA I TRES SE S needed app y 11
Rece 1p t s
NEAR
POMEROY
About
De c 31 1974
16 499 OJ Tota l Rece p t s
8 000 09
STE REO RAD IO 8 track lape
6 30 tfc
per son Crows St eak House
Tang b l e Personal
co m b na t on am fm rad o 4
R oa d a nd B ri dge Fu nd
Tot al Beginning Ba lan ce
2 years old A BR 2 ba t hs
Pom
eroy
·.,---cc--P r operty Tax ( Grossl 1 155 35 Ba l Jan I 1974
551 67
P' us Rece p t s
13 968 20 55x 10 VI N DALE mob rle home 4
way speaker sound system
lt v1ng
R
has eled n c
SEW IN G MAC HIN E Rep arr s
1 7 tfc
r m s new l y carpe l ed good
Sal e ol Lot s
1 S90 00
Balan ce $107 89 or use ou r
Re cetp h
Ex pend itures
serv ce a I makes 992 2284
fireplace love ly k t chen an d
cond
rtron
Very
c
lean
S3
500
Fees
3 150 l l Genera l P rop erty Ta x
To t al Expend i tures bvdget ter ms Ca ll 992 3965
Th e Fabr c Shop Pom er oy
d
m
ng
area
ni
ce
workshop
Ca
ll
98S
3373
e11
enrn
gs
or
Trust Fun ds
312 70
Real E s late (Grossl
2 299 40
~dmm str at ve
s 97 48
1 2'il tt c
Au th on zed S n ger Sales and
weekends
Total Rece1pts
6 208 18 Tang ble Persona l Prop E!'rtv
m t he rear about I acre
Town H alls Memoria l
Serv
rce We Shar pen Sc ssor s
Tot al Beg nn ng Balan ce
1 26 6tp REMODELING
150 B U SH E L o f co r n $2 90 per
Tax (Gross )
42 08
Burldlngs&amp; Grounds
BRI CK &amp; FRAME Go ng at
60 00
p lu mb ng
3 29 tfc
Plus R ecei pts
9 3'S3 14 Other
96 00
Ce me l errcs
b
ushe
l
Hoo
ve
r
0
a
l
A
Mat1
c
IUSI $26 000
5 44 80
f1eat ng
and c: l l l ypes ot
e xpe n dl f u res
Tota l Re ce 1pts
2 437 48
L i ghting
w t h pqwer d r ve and at
679 04 1963 BLUEMOON H ou set r a l er
ge n er a l
r epa r
Work
ALL CAS H FOR YO U R
Sa laries
3 736 65 Tola l Beg nn ng Ba l an ce
Gra n d To l al Exp
tachm en ts $75 Phone 985
n exce lent cond I on loca t ed
DOZER: wo r k l an d c l ea r n g by
guaranteed 20 yea r s ex
PROPER TY LET US
Employers Ret.rement
Plus R ecei pts
2 989 15
General Fund
4
32
'-'II Route 3
A l bany
For
6 48 1 32
th e ac r e hour l y or co nt r act
penence
Phone
992
2409
Conlrlbutlon
344 98
SEL L IT WE NEED
Expe ndi t ures
Ba r De c 31 1974
1 29 10tp
further m for mat on call 698
7 486 88
Fa r m ponds
r o a ds
etc
1 19 tfc
New au ldmgs and
To tal Expend t ures
Total Exp P l us Ba l
8947 or 992 272Q
HOMES VE RY BAD lY
L ar ge dozer and operator
- - ,---- Add!t ons
556 47
M i scellaneous
2 399 77
Dec 31 197A
13 968 20
GRAVELY trac t or Pre season
1 29 3tc W I LL do wa l l papermg or n
w rl h o ve r 20 yea r s ex
2 22 S' or 992 2568
Tool s and Equrpmenl
31 9 51 Grand Total Expend ture s Motor V eh ic l e L1 ce nse
spec ar Purc h ase any new
per ence P ul l n s E)"cavat ng
te
r
or
wor
k
al
r
educe
d
ra
t
es
Other Expenses
626 22
Road and Br dg e Fund
Tax F und
Gravel y convert bl e tr ac t or
Pomeroy Oh o Pnon e 992
Pho n e 949 3832
A ud tor s and Tre a su r ers
2 399 71 Bal
Jan 1 1974
a t regular I st pr ce a nd we
10x55 Pa r t ally c arpeted a c
1 24 61 p
247 8
3 958 00
Fees
29 57 Sal Dec J l 1974
589 38
R ece 1pts
w 111 g 1ve you a n ew 30 ro l ar y
52 gat on hOI wa ter heater - - - - - - - - - - - - _
1219 tf c
U tr ll t es
?3 92 T'Jtar Exp Plus Ba l
Mo tor Vehtc l e Lrcens e
m ower altac h m ent F RE E
underp nn ng Ca ll 992 5153
---1
Tr us I Fund
313 00
'/ 1 q • I 1\ f • 1 1• r I
D ec :i1 1974
'l '189 15
Tax
6 81 8 10
N o tra d ~ na nd no del very on
P&amp;J
Home
Ma nt enance
____
_'_l~~tc
,
Tolal Exp
5 950 32
Ce m et ery Fund
Total Rece pts
6 818 10
l h 1S offer good through Feb 8
heat n g
cool ng
r efr g
t '&gt;~ ''k, ·r
Bal Dec 31 1974
J 402 92 Bat Jan 1 1974
J 4~0 71
Total BeQ nn ng Balanc e
1975 Grave ly Tr a ctor Sales
f./or •r 11, lllll \ l r , .
pl u m b n g
electr ca l ap
T ota l Exp P lus Ba l
R!ece rp ts
Plus Rece p ts
o 776 IO MOBIL E H OM E S FOR SALE t HOU~- u furns h ed 7rooms
Pomeroy Oh o Phon e (6 14 )
p l rances We serv rce a n d
f',rllo·r •.1'' Oh111; r t ;
Dec 31 1974
9 353 14 General P r oper ty T ax El{ pend 1tu res
NOT I CE
Due
to
t he
and ba th n ce Phone 992 2780
992 2975
repa r anyt ng n t he home or
F ederal R evenu e
Real Eslttt e (Gross )
1 72 1 01 To l al Expend t ures _
fo r ec losure on one of Ohro s
or 992 3431
1 29 6tc
bus ness
215 N
Seco nd
\
Sha nn g Fu nd
Tang ib l e Persona Pr oper t y
M sce l lan eous
l argest Mob e H ome D ealers
1 9 ttc
NEW LISTING - 3 bed rooms
9 013 69
M dd lepor t Phone 992 3509
Bal Jan 1 1974
1 977 17
Tax (G ross )
26 31
Grand Total E x p _
we w 111 o ff er for sa l e the
w 1t h bat h gas f u rn ace por ch
1 9 30t c
ACRES and locust posts
Receipts
Sate of Lot s
550 00
Mo tor V eht cle L cense
fol low ng Mob le Homes a t a APT 3 r ooms a l l elec tnc has 1 72
Phone 742 3656
bake and cook untts Needs
Total Rece pts
7 98 2 00 Tolal Recetpts
2 297 J2
Tu Fund
OlJ
very
ve
r
y
large
d
scount
9
69
tab l e t op range wall oven
1 19 12tp f in shed
M ake no m1stak e FuR N TURE Upho l s t er n g
Total Begmn ng Bal
To l al Beg mn ng B alance
Bal De c Jl 197 4
1 762 41 I - 64X 12 L b er t y 3 bedroom
r ea l nice and clean moder n
Rea son able
rates
f r ee
Pl us Re ce 1p f S
4 9591 1
P l us Rece pts
5 7SB OJ 'Total Exp Plus Ba t
l - 60x l 1 L bertv 2 bedroom
have
a
&lt;ook
Only 175()0 00
Located
n
Pomeroy F I R EWOOO fo r sa l e $15 per
estrmales
p ck up
an d
Ex p en d 1lu res
Ex pendi tu res
De c 31 197 4
150x
12
R
chardson
2
bedroom
10 776 20
RUTLAND - 3 bed room bloc k
IOi!d Phone 742 4831
de l ve r y p r om pt serv ce
OYerlook ng the Oh o R:1ver
Mamt and Operation
Sa lartes
15 1511
Gas olin e T ax F und
l - 60xl1 PMC 3 be droom
Phone Ga 111polrs
day 446
1 19 12tc home ba t h gas heat and 2
Mowrey s Uphol stery Pont
Sal ar;l•es- Emp loyees
904 00 Tools and Equ pm en t
1425 00 Bal Ji!n 1 197 4
1- 60xl 2 Trtan 2 bedroom
1370 71
7699 even ngs 446 9SJ9
P le i! Si! nt W Va Phone 675
acres
of
land
$16
000
00
Sup.p l tes
2 365 07 Supples
307 11
Rece tpts
l - 60X I2 Parkwood 2 bedroom
4154
1 26 tfn STEREO RADIO 8 track tape
Pubrlc Employees
Other Exp en ses
42 11
Gasol ne Tax
1- 60x 12 Elcona 2 bedrooms
14 400 OU
NEW
LI
STING
2
bed
rooms
combrna tt on am f m rad ro 4
12 J l 26t p
Ret r em ent Syst en
84 98 Tota l Expend tures
3 169 33
Other
cen t ra l a r
10 00
2 baths gas f ur nace s and v 1ew
way speaker sound syslem
2 BEDROOM mobrle h&lt;lme
Tot a l Exp
3 35 4 OS Bat Dec J 1 1974
2459 70 Tofa i Recep t s
165x12
Rt
c
ha
r
dson
3
144 1000
HOCK I NG Va ll ey Elect r 1c
Bal ance Sl OB 74 or use our
utI tres pad near Pomeroy
of r ver MIDDLEPORT
B al Dec 31 19 74
I 605 12 Total E~Cpend tur es Plu s
Total Begmnmg Ba la nc e
bedroom 1 full baths 8x 12
r es den t a t an d comme r c a /
b
udge
t
t
erm
s
Call
992
3965
Off
Rt
7
Cal
l
992
7017
or
992
Total Exp Plus Bat
Bal Dec 3 1 1974
5 74 9 03
!:' Jus Rec e pts
expando
RACINE - B rooms w 1th 2
6 14 o 71
7666
wrr ng B g and I tt le 10b s
1
21
li
e
Dec 31 1974
4 959 17
fe d eral Re11e n ue
E x pen d 1tu res
We also have a good se l ec t10n of
bat hs carpet ng and some m ce
Ca l l 593 6078 .Athens
F r ee
I 28 3tc
TOW N SH IP DEBT - Notes
Sh;u rn g Fund
Tota l E xpend tures _
other 8 IO and 17 w de Mob 11e
esltmates
pa n el m g And a A room rental
Purpo se For WhiCh
ELECTROLUX
Sweeper
~
e
Bal Jitn 1 19 74
1 OJ 7 27
M scellaneous
Homes
These
are
mostl
y
all
13 726 05
bedroom
I 19 lOtc
N ote D ebt W as Created
model
Comple t e w til al l 33 ACR ES - 3 bedroom s all
R ece1pts
Mam tenan ce
l ate model Homes !some have FUR N IS H ED
4 99S 86
tra l er
a ll ut rl rt1es
493
Grader
cleanmg attachments and electr c bat h m ce k tf chen
Gran Is - Federal
7 899 00
Grand To ta l E x p
never been lived rn ) If you
\..KEMEANS CO N CRETE ut:
Broadway Street Mrdd leport
Out st an d ng Ja n 1
uses paper bags Sl tght ly used
To t al Re ce pis
7 899 00
Gaso l ne Ta x Fund
are mterested
n a good
13 726 05
basement n ear town weth Ctty
r ve r e d Mon d ay
t h r oug h
1 28 tfc
1974
1 666 66 Total Beg nn ng Sal
but cleans and looks I k e new
Bal De c 3 1 , 974
Mobtle Home at a ve r y l arge
2 414 66
Satur d ay
i!nd
even ng s
Red eemed Our ng Yea r
w 11 sell for $37 2S cash or water
Plus Rece pts
8 946 27
Total E)(p P l us Ba r
d scount don t wa t Stop 1n
P hone J46 1142
J ,.
mrle
?0 ACRES - On Rt 33 near
19 74
1 666 66
te r ms ava labl e Phon e 992
E x penditures
Oec 31 197 4
16 UO 70
tOday a1 BERRY MILLER TRAILER SPACE
north
of
Me
gs
H
gh
Schoo
on
6 13 tfc
Rate of In I
6 Pet
775$
wa
t
er
I
n
e
N
ICe
for
sub
M a1nt and Operat on
F.re Distr.cf Fund
Mob l e Home Sales
70S
ol d Rt 33 Phone 99 2 294 1
----12 18 tfc
Equ pment
5 000 00 'Sa l Jan 1 197 4
2 749 68
F ar son Street Be l pre Otno
d
VIS LOn
1 23 tf c
Truck
To tal Exp end lures
5 000 00
R ece 1pts
phone 42l 9531
DBL HOM E - Good for large 'CAR PET nslal l at 1on $1 25 per
Outstand i ng Jan
Ba l Dec 31 1974
3 946 27
Genera l F'ropertv Tal{ _
1 30 10tc
FOLEY
saw
shariJ~ n ng
vatd P hone R cha r d West
tam
l y for a sta r t n b usiness
1974
3 179 so To ta l E x p Plus Sal
R.eel Es t ate (Gr oss )
920 34 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 843 2667
TRA I LER space 2m l es from
equ pment (3 pc hand saw
Redeemed Our nQ
On
Rt
143
near
Al
b
any
Dec J1 1974
8 9&lt;6 2? Other
43 14
Pomerov Rt 14J Phone 992
sharpener )
c rcu l ar saw
12 2426t p
Y ear 1974
] 179 so
$1 2 500 ()()
Tow n ship D ebt - ~ofes
Total Rece ipts
963 48
0 UJ
S858
sha r pener
and
car b._ de
Rate of lnt
6 Pe t
Pur pou For Whr ch
Total Beg l nnrng Balanc e
COUNTRY HOME
4
10 27 tfc
g r Mder A ll l rke new 992 2386
No t e D ebt was Crea ted
Plus Rece p ts
3 713 16 WANTED Ol d upr gh t P I ANOS
EXPER T t r ee serv 1ce
f r ee
1 27 4tp
bedrooms bath vast hv ng
Tractor Loader Backhoe
Ne w tO 570 A Motor Grader
Expe ndit u res
any cond ton
Paytng S10 COUNTRY Mob le Home Park
est mates
20 years ex
carport
and
large
g
arden
New I ssues Our ng
New issues Our ng Year
Contracts
each F rst floor only Wnte
per ence Cal l ( 1) 667 3041 or
2 000 00
TABLE saw a~ 10 n ter for
Rt 33 ten .rmles nor th of
Year 19 4
5 99S 00
$16 500 ()()
1974
16 77S 00
Aud tors &amp; Treas
99 2 30S?
and g 11e d r ecti ons to w tten
L
arge
lots
w
th
sale
Phon
e
843
2292
Pomeroy
Balance Ou t ~tand ng
Ba la n c e Outstand ing
Fees
Prano Co
Box 188 Sardts
1 21 26tp
24 79
1 211 6tc
concrere pat os
s rdewa lks
Dec 31 1974
S 99S 00
De c 31 1974
16 775 00
F re hydrants
Oh o 439 46
72600
runners and
off
street
7 Pet Rate of ln t
Rate of tnt
6 Pet
Total E)Cpend tures
2 750 79
I 30 6tp
N I CE stee r s werghs between
p-ark1ng Phon e 992 7479
i 91? D-4 t eo"Fmal Mat
Date- ol F i nal Mat
3 8 17
Sa l De c 31 1974
962 37
C BRADFO R D Auc t ion eer
4SO and 500 lhs dressed will
12 31 tfc
Total Exp Plus Bal
Complet t Serv ce
he
rea
d
y
l
ast
week
o
f
CASHSS.SS
FOR
JUNK
CARS
Tota l - Outstand ing
Mo Tr im Mower
Dec 31 1974
3 71 3 115
Phone 949 3821 or 949 316 1
Febr uary Whole SSe lb
12
Comple te FRYE S TRUCK 1- URNIS H EO apt 3 rooms and
Jan 1 1974
4 846 16 New Issues Otlrmg
Ftd tt al R even ue
Rac.ne Oh10
steer
87c
lh
~ elud e&amp;
AND AUTO PARTS Rutland
bath newly decorated Phone
Ye11r 1974
To tal - New Issues Durmg
3 800 00
Sh ar.n g F und
99 2 2937
Cr t1 Brad ford
dressrng
cutting
an d
Phone 742 6094
Year 1974
5 995 00 Balance Outstandrng
Bat Jan 1 1974
1 817 6.1
wrappmg just 2 steers left
1 tfc
I 22 26tp
I 26 6tp
Dec 31 1974
Total - Redeemed Curing Year
3 800 00
R ece 1ph
Call
742
3123
wrapped
for
a
1974
4 846 16 Rate of lnt
6 Pet
Grants - Federal
2 153 00
Fu- RNisHED
hom-;~r
f am ty S1ze
Tot al Balance Outstand ing Date of Final Mat
3 8 77
Total Rece pts
2 153 oo WANTED to buy a used
1 28 3tc
ren t Phone 949 2261 Alber t
Dec 31 1974
5 995 00
Gravely Tra ctor w th Mower
Total 8egmn ng Balance
H II Racrne Oh o .t5771
(II
He
30
111 30 lie
and r d~O Su l ky and plow
Plus ~ecerpts
3 970 66
This Fnday's Guest on Kaleidoscope 15
1 26 6tc
attachments Phone ()04) 88 2
E x pendttu r e s
2S25 or even ngs 882 2344
M ain I an d Oper•ho"
PATS PICK HOlLOWAY
NO TIC E OF
Equtpment
~ 609 00
1 26 12tc 3 and 4 ROOM furn "ned and
APPOI NTMEN T
unfurn shed
a pa r tments
tiOU SE r S!J 000 P hone 992 5871
FOXBORO, Mass (UPI ) Total Expend tures
.. 609 00 -- ~- ...... - - - - - - - - -Phone 992 5434
Cue No 21403 Bal D~c 31 1974
1 12 18tc
(tl834
:,
.._:.;
turn
ture
1
ce
boxes
brass
The New England Patriots E st ilte of Sl! ldon J W htte Tota l Expend lures Plus Sal
,. 12 tfc
beds or complete households
Otcused
Wedneadlly traded their right
Dec l h 1974
3 970 66
Wnte M 0 Mrller Rt 4 PRIVATE meet ing room tor BUILDING lol 80ft frootage
Notice 1S hereb y given that
T OW NS H I P DEBT - Bond
Pomeroy Oh1o Call 992 17 60
by 165 It T he second lot on lef t
otlahoma olfenlllve
Rob ertS Whtte of Route 2 Bo»t
any organ zatton phone 992
P ur pose For Wh 1ch
10 1 74
on R vervtew Dnve L ncoln
J97S
161
Cootv111e
Oh
o
has
been
tlitle Eddie Folter for Wa- dul y a ppointed Admm strator
Note D ebt W as Create d
Hill F'om eroy Ohlo If n
llltfc
Gallon Road Grader
JUNK autos complete and
teres ted call 99 2 3230 after p
iiJIDgtoo'sl211J.round llelection W W A of the Estate of Seldon Outstanding
J an 1
delivered t o our yard We prck FURNISHED apt Adults onl y
m
J Yfh•te deceased late of
1974
In the current N a tional O
10 500 00
up auto bo d ies and buy all
10 11 ttc
range
Townsh1p
Me os New l !sues Ourmg
M ddlepor t Pr- one 992 3874
'
krnds of scr ap metals and
Coun t y Oh o
FootbaU ~ draft
11
14
ttc
Yea r 1974
1 000 00
•ron R iders Salvag e St R &amp;..
Creditors
are
requ~red
to
f1le
~""~l"'f)rn.t marely one acre Tn
lbe PlltrliJta 1111111 tbe aelec. their c1a1ms wrth s111d f duc,arv Redeemed Ourmg
12-4 Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh o FUR:N,SHE O
apartment
Rutland set up for mob te
Year 1974
J
.500
00
ca11
992
s
..
68
wr
th
ln
four
months
tk1a pick
quarterUt!l!ttes furnished
SUita b le
h ome Phone (I ) 446 9662
Ba lance Outstandmo
lO
I?
tfc
Oated th I s 25th day of
for .two w orking men or
1 30 7tc
Dec 31 1974
1 000 00
beet ,Olnred8e
6- Janui!lry
1975
.ret1red
couple
LNing
room
Rate of tnt
6
F'ct
CASH pa i d for all makes and
10, 1• ponJ!der New Eqllnd
k1tchen shower and bath On H OUSE tor sa te m Portland 6
Dat e of F1nal Mat
12 27 76
models of mob1le homes
Manntng
J
Webster
ma1n highwa y Mason w v-e
rooms and batn good well '1
Jnjected hbn • a tWellllive
Phone area code 614 423 9531
Phone 773 5147
Judge
( II JO ltc
acres S6 700 Call 843 2292
4
13
tfc
.
beet
111 JO (2 l • 13 3tc
10 21 tfc
1 28 6lc
Dav dE Gloeckner

7- The Daily Sentinel Mtddleport-Pomeroy 0 Thursda) Jon 10 1975

FV
MSD

JDNB
KN JR

FM

F V

FM

WGIDJ
K l\t RDV

G A
LV - DLXDAD
RDAADHC
Yesterday's Cryptoqaole THE SECRET OF LIFE IS NOT
TO DO WHAT YOU LIKE, BUT TO LIKE WHAT YOU DO -

SOURCE UNKNOWN
(C) 191&amp; KID&amp; FMturet SyDditate IDC )

Pass

I¥

Pass

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

Pass

1NT

Pass

South played qutckly bul un
successfully At Irick two he led
a spade to hts ktnJ! West duck
ed wtlhout batlmg an eye so
South retur ned to dummy wtth
a club led a second spade and
played hts queen West produc
ed the ace and South had Lo lose
another trumf trtck a heart
and the ace o diamonds
Ntce play ' satd Soulb 'But
wouldn L you have fell stlly tf
my spade holdmg had been live
to the ktng JOCk ten'
Yes I would ' replied West
' However you would have
played the Len or the JOCk not
the kmg from that holdmg. In
fact there was no holdmg where

Pass 3 •
Pass
You South hold
•AQ769 2 tKJS 4 .AQ82
What do you do now'
A- Pan Is our tint cbelee INt
wltll lOme partaert y011 coald aDII
1hould bkt four clubs
TODAY S QUESTION
Instead of b1ddmg one notrump
over your one spade your parl9er

has raised you lo Lwo spades What
do you do now'

Send $11or JACOBY MODERN
book to Wm sf Bfldge, (c/ o
thiS newspaper) P 0 Box 489
Rad•o City Statton New York
NY 10019

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8- The Daily Sentinel Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thw-sday, Jw1 . :10. 1!175

New.8.
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Continw.'d from

"

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1

LAS VEGAS, NEV. - BEEF PRICE~ WILL remain at
present levels for at least a year, but there could be shortages and higher prices - In succeeding years, an industry leader said
, Wednesday. Current retail bed prices are 36 cents a pound lower
than they were a year ago, said Gordon Van Vleck, president of
the American National CatUemen's Association.
"There wiD be just as many cattle on the market in January
of 1976 as there are now, " he said, predicting the amount of beef
eaten by an average American would increase this year to 122
pounds, up from 117 pounds last year. However, he told an
association meeting, the supply will be "lower quality beef, with
less grain feeding, and more grass fed animals.

COLUMBUS - REP . NORMAN MURDOCK, R-Cincinnati,
W88 scheduled today to introduce legislation which would give
scholars the same chance for scholarships as athletes. Mw-dock
said his bill would force state universities to spend a• much on
academic scholarships as they do .for athletic grants and state
aid would be cut ID percent for any school failing to comply.
"I'm not at all anti-athletics," said Murdock. " My concern is
that we give equal emphasis to scholastic achievement. "If a guy
is 240 pounds and can run like the wind, he can get a free
education anywhere, even if his father is a millionaire," said
Mw-dock. "But if he ls a· genius academically with ability to
contribute to society, his chances of getting
, a scholarship are
very limited.
Mw-dock said the priorities of society are at issue.
CHALMETTE, LA. - THREE Oll.. BARGES and an empty
freighter Wednesday collided on the Mississippi River creating a
wall of fire that paralyzed 15 miles of the nation's longest inland
waterway. The barges bw-st into flames and broke loose from
their tugboat to drift aimlessly down the river.
No crewmen on the freighter or the tug was hurt, but crude
oU leaked from the damaged barges and caught fire, forming
patches of flame that floated downstream dangerously close to 10
ships waiting at anchor. Paint on one of the ships was blistered
by the heat.
·:·:·:·:·:·:::::·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::::::::;.::::::::;.::::

An Important meeting to
organize girls' softball
teams for the coming season,
Meigs-Mason area, wlll be
held Sunday, Feb. 2, at 4
• p.m. al the Royal Crown
garage on North Second
An orientation meeting was
Ave.. Middleport.
held in Wellston Tuesday
All member's of the Hlt'n
evening for appointees to the
Mjsses team, all managers
·newly formed Board of
or representatives of lasl
Trustees for Southeast Ohio
year's Meigs Junior Girls'
Emergency Medical Services,
League teams arc asked to
Inc. The historical developattend. Also, any other
ment
and
present
teams, girls In any age
organizational operations and
group, and Interested adults
· contractual relationships were
are Invited to attend.
explained by staff representatives of both Ohio Valley ;.;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::;::::.:·:=:::::::.;.;:;:;:;:::
Health Services Foundation,
Inc., and SEOEMS.
SURGERY DELAYED
New appointees attending
Rebecca Broderi c k,
the meeting were: Mrs. Sadie Pomeroy, Rt. 2, has returned
Parks, Athens County ; Ray home from Holzer M~ical
Waller and William Kai!;er, Center. She was to have unLawrence County; Scott dergone surg~ry but it was
.Lucas, Mrs. JoAnn Stewart cancelled until additional tests .
and B. L. Williamson, Meigs are made.
County; Dr. Donald W. Barton,
James Blower and Raymond
Cottrill, Vinton County, and
DAUGHTER BORN
James McLain, Hocking
A daughter was born to Mr .
County.
and Mrs. Wilford Lee Roush,
The next meeting will be held Pomeroy, Holzer Medical
on the last Tuesday in Center, Jan. 29.
February at SEOEMS central
headquarters in Gallipolis.
Election of officers and
designation of committees will
HAU.. DAMAGED
take place during an
ELYRIA, Ohio (UP!) - A
organizational meeting in general alarm fire caused
April.
$100,000 damage Wednesay at
the American Legion Hall
here. Officials said the _city's
entire
69-member
fire
JOBLESS AT 218,000
department responded to the
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio B\U'eau of Employment alarm. The fire was believed
Services reported today that caused by an eleclrical short
circuit. There were no injw-ies.
218,000 Ohioans were unemployed for one week or more
lor the week ending Jan. 2:i,
compsred to 85,700 out of work
REBATES OFFERED
for the same period of time for
CLEVELAND ( UPI)
'the average week of January, Republic Steel Corp.'s 40,000
19R
employes will be offered a $100
The. bw-eau said there were rebate on the purchase of a new
36,232 new claimaints for the car durin g February, the
week ending Jan. 2:i compared company announced Wed·
to the weekly average of 19,839 nesday.'The offer will be valid
in January, 1974.
only for"cars made in theU . S.
and Canada and will be in
addition to any rebates offered
by the aut o companies .
200 LAID OFF
CLEVELAND . (UP! )
MORE AMNESTY
Some 200 employes of ·the
WASHINGTON (UP! )
Addressograph • Multigraph
Officials have indicated that
C&lt;rp. plant in Euclid will be
President Ford will decide to
laid off Feb. I. The layoffs,
extend the conditional amnesty
blamed on the troubled
and &lt;'lemency program for one
ecoriomy and the need to k~p
month beyond its scheduled
Inventory down while orders
are declining, will reduce the expiration rriday.
· plant's work force to 1,140.
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J&lt;lC II.~ o n

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G,l1I •P OI ,~

7 11 11P
~I) 1 'oi l',

Mt•iC! S

70 7

11~

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Wf' I IS I Oil

I M .190

JJ'I

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Fr ee Thro w Per CCI1.1 QC

Te am

.

FTM -A

Pe t.

W i!vC rl y

l l'l'/1'/

6111

Lo ga n
G ~·l f 1 pO I 1 S
M eig s
I ro nto n
Jac lo. s on

10-1

1~ ?

6 84

I ?.! 1\lO

6 3)

10 5 11]

60 7

W e l lston
A tll e n s

Te am
I ron ton
Log a n
Atll e n s
G all i po l is
Wave rl y

109 I B?
~n
16 t JO
51l 5
101 t n
S/ 1
Ill IM
':; } I
R cl:mu nd s
Nc . G Av g .
) 67 9 .IQ '}

3 18
30 7
30-t
JOO

Meig s
W e ll s ton

?7 4
?67

J oc l&lt;. son

'/,19

J:.

J
34 l
9 JJ .S
9 ... J J )
9 30 J
9
y

9
9

JO 4
77 .7

Per o;o nal Foul ~
T ea m ·•
No . G Avg .
IJ I 9 I S 7
Jile k son
LO (J an
J.JS 9 16 I
1&lt;1 8 9 16 .J
A th en s
Wv v er l y
165 9 18 3
Ir on i on
169 Y 18 8
M eigs
176 9 19 6
Well ston
178 Y 19 8
Ga 111poi 1S
188 9 ?Cl 9
IND LEADERS
F te ld Goal Per ce nta9c
N.1m c . T
FGM · A Pet
Ch on l&lt;.o . A
53 9?
57 6
Ho r n , !\
~I 73
50?
l r&lt;I CY Wav
J I 76
S3 9
M c D ona l d , J
! ? 134
SJ )
Yo ung . L
53 99
S35
Free Th r ow Per centag e
Name , T
FTM ·A Pet.
N i day , G
35 .1]
81 &lt;1
Hol lan d . Wav
26 37
813
Wrigh i . L
?S31
806
Va l c n li n e. G
?9 37 . 78 -1
Younq . L
33 .l]
767
R ebound s
T eam
No . G Avg .
F 1tzpatr tck . l
117 9 17..1
9&lt;1 9 10 4
Ct1o nko . A
Dudu ll . Wav
94 9 10 .t
Y oung . L
91 9 10 l
1-a ulkner , A
87 9
9 1
( Remind er : Abov e tot a l s do
not includ e l eagu e gam e of
Tue sdav . Jan . 18 )
SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES

Team
w L
P
H anna n Tra ce 12 2 961
N orl h Gall ia
8 J 764
South ern
/
8 6 736
Sou ttl wes tern
' 6 77 7
E ast er n
I 12 771
Kyg er Cr eek
I 10 496
S Va l l ey
1 12 794
SVAC ONLY
Team
W L
P
Hanna n Tr ace 10 0 726
Nort h G al li a
7 2 6/.6
South ern
5 3 J IS
Sou t h w estern
5 4 50 3
Eas t ern
2 6 4JS
S. Va ll e y
1 7 50 8
Ky g er Cr eek
o B Jo a
SVAC RESERVES
T eam
yY L
P
Hannan T r ace
7 J J39
North Cal l ia
6 J 313
So uttl we ster n
5 4 25 1
So uth e r n
;1
4 302
Kyg er Creek.
4 4 266
S V n l l ey
3 5 786
East er n
1 7 220

OP
7S6
660
757
758
883

696
9 ]7

OP
513
524
425

"'
481

599

543

OP

m

17J

"'
'1.75
255

? 97

?67

ALL GAMES
W L
P
Team
13 I 878
Wav erly
Whee lersburg 12 2 854
Hannan Tra ce 12 2 973
11 4 1020
South Point
8 5 723
Jackson
8 5 862
Ironton
8 5 815
Logan
7 6 753
Gallipolis
7 6 795
Portsmouth
5 9 812
Athens
2 11 635
Wellston
I 12 709
M~ i gs

OP
731
700
756
886
71 9

797
750
678
76 4
796
862

842

SEOAL VARSITY
Team
W L P OP
Wav e rly
10 0 646 540
Iron ton

7 3 664

Gal lipolis
Jackson
Logan
Athens
Wellston
Meigs
TOTALS

6
6
5
4
1
1
40

4
4
5
6

599
524

604
545
628
578
9 487
9 560
4D 4712

560
581
540
705
663
4712

SEOAL RESERVES
Team
W L P
Waverly
8 2 4D7
Athens
8 2 466
Gallipoli s
6 4 385
Logan
6 4 435
Meigs
6 4 37 8

OP
307
356
378
374
319

Jackson

421

4

lrnton
Wellston
TOTALS

6

405

2 8 368 441
0 10 305 553
40 40 3149 3149

Northwest at Wheelersburg
Chllllcothe at Por tsmouth
South Point at Coal Grove
SEOAL F.RESHMEN
Team
W. L . P
Ga l lipol i s
8 2 463
Logan
8 2 400
Athens
7 3 395
Wa ver ly
7 3 40 2
Me igs
4 6 397
1ron ton
3 7 325
3 7 32 4
Ja ck son
We l lston
0 \ 0 253
TOTALS
40 40 3019
Thursdiy ' s games :
Logan a t Gall ipoli s
wav erl y at Afhen s
M ei gs at lronfon
Jackson at Wel lston

OP
37 0
305
358
321
401

36 2
445
451
3019

Economy improved
the worst recesssion since the

By RICHARD HUGHES

UP! Business Writer
The nation 's eConomic health
is showing signs of improving
- but workers are still losing
their jobs and a government
report says the recession
definitely is stili here.
The stock market sw-ged
Wednesday for the third day in
a row , and economists expected even lower interest
rates by the end of the week to
stimulate the economy.
In another encouraging sign,
the number of persons applying for unemployment
compensation dropped last
. week for the firsf time in a
month .
But al the same time, the
government released a report
of leading economic indic;~tors
that confirms the nation is in

economic collapse ol the 1930s.
There also were several
announcements of workers losing their jooo. General Motors
said it is closing seven plants
for one week, low- more than
previously announced.
In Washington, sow-ces said
the number of persons- using
government foo;&gt;d stamps rose
to 17 million in December -8
per cent of the population from 15.8 million in November.
The nation's unemployment
rate in December was 7.:; per
cent and was expected to near 8
per cent this month.
The surge in the stock
market and the lower interest
rates , do not mean heavy
layoffs and production cuts will
end immediately. Rather, they
provide strong signals of better
days by mid-year .

The
stock
market
historically has gone into an
upward swing six ·months
before a general econoriuc
recovery.
In three days of trading this
week on the New York Stock
Exchange, 92.1 million shares
were traded, sw-passing last
week's five-day total by 10
million shares and nearing the
all-time weekly volum~ of 110.6
million Feb. 8-12, 1971, when
the economy was booming.
Prices also rose sharply. The
Dow Jones industrial average,
a widely watched barometer of
price trends, rose 11.19 to 705.96
Wednesday. It was the first
time it has been over 700 in five
months.
The hectic trading activity
and the widespread gain in
prices have led some analysts

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
voice of the "Weather Underground," practically unheard
in recent years, has spoken
again with explosive force .
A bomb went off early
Wednesday in a State Depart·
ment bathroom . Another was
found in the ceiling of the
military induction center in
Oakland, Calif., and exploded
by police. The "Weather Un·
derground" took credit for
both. No injuries were
reported.
The explosions produced a
series of bomb scares that
disrupted official Washington
all day Wednesday .
"Tonight we attack AID in
TRI · VALLEY
Wa rr en Loca l a t A l e&gt;~ and e r
Belp r e at Nelson \' i ll e York
Fede r al Ho c k i ng a1 V 111ton
Co untv
'
SVAC
Kyg er Cr eek at Ea st er n
North Gal l ill at Sou fhern
Oth er s
Wahama at Sou t hwe st ern
Symm es V all ey at Che &lt;o ap ea ke
Trim bl e a t Mi ll er
SATURDAY
SVAC
Sym m es Va ll ey il l Kyg er
Cr eek
Othe rs
M il l er al Al ex and er
Tr imb l e a t Fede r al Hoc k1n g
P ar k e r s bur g
Ca t hol1 c
at
Warr en L oc al
TUESDAY ( F eb. ·ll
SVAC
Southe rn at Eastern
So ut hw es t ern at H annan Tra ce
Others
Nelson v ill e York a t Logan
Bel pre a t W ill iam stown
Nor t h Gal l ia a t Wah&lt;~ma
R i pl ey at P t. P leasant
THURSDAY1F eb. 6l
P t . Pl ea sant a t Wah a rna

·

,

INFLATION BUSTERS DOLLAR -DAY SALE

MEIGS THEATRE •

THURSDAY, JAN. JO
TONIGHT
NOT OPEN
FRI. , SAT. , SUN.
Jan. Jlthru Feb. 2
THE TRIAL OF
BILLY JACK

Price of
coal off
sharply

( Technicolor)
Starr ing Tom Laughlin
Show Starts 7:00p .m.

By

Over 6,000
.P rice Cuts!

Lusk said there is a sw-plus
of coal on the market, resulting
In the sharp price drop.
"It would take about six
months for the stockpiles to be
exhausted," he predicted.

I

Metailw-gical coal used by
the steel industry is very much
in demand and its price did not
go down, Lusk said.
Coal committted to industrial customers on a long
term basis did not decline
significantly from the previous
selling price either, he said.
"The coal industry is very
competitive," Lusk noted. "Its
a supply and demand situation.
Right now supplies exceed
ctemand for ordinary coal."
Electricity bllls charged by
utilities using coal are bound to
go down within six months, he

1

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Shop now .and' save! Sears 1975
Winter Sale Catalog is on your
nearest catalog order desk now.
No-nonsense values, at worthwhile savings
that represent virtually every department.
at Sears. You'll be pleased to know that
the Winter Sale Catalog offers ·our bi&amp;gest
selection of sale items for the year. All this
and catalog-shopping convenience too. Ask
about Sears convenient credit plans.

as Nitro outscored Point 20-16
in that fourth frame.
In lhe preliminary, the little
Wildcats pulled away in the
last quarter to hand the little
Blacks their seventh defeat in
11 starts, 52-41.
Next week the Big Blacks go
at it three times, hosting
Ripley Tuesday, traveling to
Wahama Thursday and hosting
the Parkersburg Big Reds
Friday .
Pt. Pleas.
16 ·19 13 1~4
Nitro
19 13 17 2:&gt;--74

CHEST HURTING
WASHINGTON (UP! )
Sen. Robert Taft Jr., R.()hio,
was admitted .to Bethesda
Naval Hospital Wednesday as
a precautionary measure after
complaining of fatigue and
chest discomfO't, said a
spokesman for his office.

SHOP AT SEARS
AND SAVE

is==l

~

SEAitl-1,

K(~~Bl

( ' 1.

----

''

I
.

'.

MARKED DOWN
AGAIN!
Men's Long Sleeve

DRESS SHI

lh

NOW

Down

NITRO ( 74 ) - Shrewsbw-y
10-2-22,
Arthur
12-3-27,
Kniceley 7·1·1:;, Starcher 1-2-4,
Snyder 1·&lt;1-2, Brightwell 1-2-4,
Sample ().0.(), Surfaee ().0.().
POINT (64) - Cottrill 2-1·9,
Tatterson 7-2-16, Taylor 1.()..2,
Rardin IH}.J2, Gerlach 2..()..4,
Wilson 4-&gt;13, Hoss 3-2-11.

ValeQtiQe

PRICE

GROUP

LUGGAGE

Gard·s

lh

NOW

PRICE

Both Men's &amp; Women's. A
very good name in luggage.
This you can't miss.

MEN'S SUITS 1f2 PRICE

Small charge far alterations.

MEN 1S SPORT COATS 1f2 PRICE
Both wools and knllsln Reg .. Shorts &amp; Longs . All the latest styles &amp; colors . We over
so here Is

$49 .50 · t~

Sportc:oat you

have

A very good name In slacks . Most of these are knits . . Sizes
$25.00. Now Just SU9·1o $12.50. Small charge for altera loons.

been. wan t ing . Reg .
·

29

to 48 . Reg. $19 .98 lo

Both Long &amp; Short styles in Dacron &amp; Colloo . Nylons. Woo ls &amp; Leathers. Reg . $19.98tc
$150.00. Sale Price $9.99 to $15.00.
.

MEN'S SWEATERS 1f2 PRICE

I

Cardigan &amp; Sllpover styles. s thorugh X- large. Some ot t~se are washable. Reg .
Price $8.98to $18.00 . Sale Price S4.491o $9.00.
.
,
·

Our Store Will Be Closed 12:30 .til 2:QO _on Fnday for the
Funeral of Mrs. Lester Hart

a lo v~l y v ar iety of col or s in fi ne ie w elry se tt ing s for
men and wom e n.

'

•

Pomeroy.

l

'

K-McCsR ..... ;., Or IM_,It,l. Pll.

O..Dal"''..........., ...

$oo11111Jy lt:. . . lt........ !....•

•. . PH. m.2ftl.
.
Fri.... S.VIa
.
112 £;MAIN
.
I'OMIROY. 0.

l .PRESCRIPTIONS

l
I

l . . _..._..........:....._ ~-

l'"f I

·-

..;.

last winter -have peaked at mid-January, the Inventory
this week's 177,()()().level and stlll was too high to continue
that some workers could retw-n building more.
to their jobs in March . Tern·
HEADSAMTRAx
porary shutdoWD:l wlll continue
WASHINGTON
(UP!)
until a record inventory of l. 7
million cars is whittled, they Paul H. Relstrup, a senior vice
president of 'the nunois Central
said.
Gulf
Railroad, Wednesday was
Two of the seven GM planu
named president and chief ,
to be closed next week build tht
executive
officer of Amtrak.
compact models on which GM
Reistrup,
42, will succeed
is offering $200 cash rebates.
Roger
Lewis on March
retiring
While their sales increased in
l.

FRI. &amp; SAT. FABRIC SALES
STOREWIDE
REDUCTION
ALL FABRICS

SOME
GROUPS

1h

..

'.

"It Pays To Sew Sale!"
SINGER SALE ENDS SATURDAY·-·
Save Up To •65.00

The Fabric ·shop
llSW. Second
PH.tn-2214
McC..IIs&amp; Slmpllcit.y Polloms

There's A Dollar Days Sale In TownBut, We Celebrate 3 Year~ In Business.

RD

At 9 a.m.

*~**

WOMEN'S

WOMEN'S
Ladies'

SHOES

Values to '19.00

Better

1974

l.lDO .OQ

Plus Int .
Rate of Int .
6 Pet .
Tr-ac tor, Mower, end ·loader
Outstanding Jan . 1,
l ,lOQ .OD
1974
Balance Outstaning

1,100.00

Rateorrnt.
'6Pct.
Date of Final Mat.
12· 28 -75
tialion grader - 104 H
New Issues During
Year 1974
5.000 .00
Balance Outstanding

Dec . 31, 197&lt;

5,000 .00

Rate of Int.
6 Pet .
Date of Final Mat .
12· 11 -75
Galion grader - 104 H
New Issues During
5,000 .00
Year 1974
Balance Outstanding
Dec. 31 , 1974
5,000 .00
~ate or Int .
6 Pet .
OateofFinaiMat .
12 · 1l"· 76 ~
Galion grader - 104 H
··
New Issues During
· Year 1974
5,000 .00
Red·e emed During Year
197"
5,000 .00
Rate of Int .
6 Pet .
Date of Final Mal.
12. 11 -77
Total - Outstanding Jan .
.
11 1974
' '
3,300 .00
Total - New Issues During
Year 1974
15,000.00
Total Balance Outstan"ding

16,100.00

lie

$JPR

Dre~s

TO 123.00
One Group
One Group

'6''
Men's Dress Shoes

Men's.Dress Shoes

I Group Broken· Sizes

2 Pairs

WEYENBERG

•3

$10.99.

For 5.00

Pair

'

OFF REG. PRICE .

Women's Dress Shoes
Naturalizers, Auditions, Fanfares, Jolene _
and Fashion Craft. All from regular stock.

'3 OFF REGULI\R PRICE
Miscellaneous Group
Ladies' and Chiidren's Slippers, Ladies.'
Dress Shoes. f

1.00

pair

Marguerite's Shoes
,SEnY QHLIN~ER

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&amp; . Sport

V~LUES

2 Pairs
For ss.oo

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DRESS
BOOTS

Dress &amp; Sport

Dec . 31 , 1974

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Price

*lf Anniversary
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By EDWARD S. LECHTZIN
UPI Auto Writer
DETROIT (UP! ) - Cash
rebates are he\plng· to sell
more cars, but auto workers
are stiU losing their jobs.
Despite optimism generated
by their rebates, Detroit 's
automakers continue to close
assembly plants to keep their
huge inventory of unsold cars
from growing larger.
General Motors Corp. said
Wednesday seven of its 23 U.S.
assembly plants will be closed
next week , idling 15,505
workers in addition to more ·
than 93,000 on open-ended
layoffs. Auto experts expected
Chrysler Corp. to detail its
early February production
plans today with the Ford
Motor Co . following Friday.
American Motors previously
announced it will idle 3,000 of
the 11,000 workers at its
Kenosha, Wis ., plant for one
week starting Monday to slow
production of small cars. Its
Brompton,Ont.,plant will be in
the second week of a two-week
shutdown.
This week's industry layoffs
totaled nearly 250,000 worketS,
a figw-e that may be matched
next week. GM's temporary
layoffs this week Included 6,000
workers.
GM said its early February
shutdowns include four plants
not in original . layoff plans
announced for ID others in late
December. A spokesman said
this was due to changing
market conditions, and the
automaker · would now begin
outlining its production plans
weekly.
"We are going to report on a
week-by-week basis, primarily
because we don't know far in
advance which plants will be
affected," the spokesman said.
Industry executives this
week predicted indefinite
layoffs - some dating back to

• .... · - '""':

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More autoworkers lose jobs

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Dec . 31, 197&lt;

MEN'S OUTERWEAR, 1f2 PRICE

Its Magical Glow Reflects Lo·leJight.
As long as the st ar shin es t hrough , love will never leav e
the wea r er. That wa s an ancient l egend about star
sapph ir es . Express y ou r love with a Li nde Sta r, a

Court St.

that

MEN'.S DRESS SLACKS Y~ PRICE

Give Your Valentine
aUndeStar

· GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY STORE

your chance to get

$80 .00 . Now Only $24.75 to $40.00.

The Stale of Ohio , M e ig s
County , Court of Common
Pleas, Probate Division
To th e Ad m in ist r a to r of th e
es tate , t o such of th e t o 1tow1ng
as ar e r esid en ts o f th e St at e Of
Ohio , v iz : the s ur viv ing
Alma E . Smith spouse, th e nex t of Kin , the
Tow nship Cler k ·ben efi c i ar i es und er th e w i ll :
and to th e atto r ney or attor neys
re pr esenting
any
of
th e
SUMMARY OF CASH
afor ement i on ed person s :
BALANCES. RECEIPTS
Jerr y CvtwetL Rt . J, A lbany ,
AND EXPENDITURES
Ohio . Columbia Town ship , No .
Balance Jan. 1. 1974
21387 .
Gener al Fund
Y ou are h er eb y no l 1fi ed 1ha t
and Cern .
5, 280 .08
th e
Inv entory
and
Ap
Motor V ehi c le L ice nse
Ta)( Fund
4, 326 . 32 pra isement of the estl!lt e of th e
Gasolin e Ta x F und
4, 624.92 aforement i on ed , d eceased , lat e
of sai d Count y , was f iled in th is
Federa l R ev enue Sharin g
F un d
40 2.00 Court . Said I nv en tor y a nd
Totals
14 ,633.32 Apprais em ent wi l l b e for
hear ing befor e th is Court on th e
Total Receipts.
141h da·v of February , 197 5, at
Gen eral Fund and Cem
11 ,60 3.98 10 :00 o 'cloc k A.M .
Any pers oh desir in g to til e
Motor Vehi c le L i ce nse
Tax Fund
10 .797. 60 exception s th er e to must f i le
Ga solin e Tax F und
14 ,430.02 th em at least five days prior to
the date set for hearing .
Federa l Re v enue Sharing
Gi ve n unde r my hand an d
Fund
2,127 . 18
Total s
38 ,958 .78 seal of sa i d Cour t, th i s 27f h day
~ f January 1975 .
Total Rece1pts &amp; Balances
Gen eral Fund and Cem .
Mann111g D . W eb ster
\0 ,884.06
Judg e
Motor V ehicl e Licen se
Ta x Fun d
15 , 123.92
By An n B Wa tson
Gao l in e Tax Fund
19,054.94
Deputy Cl erk
Fed era l Revenu e Sha r ing
Fund
2. 529. 18 (1) 30 (2) 6 . 21&lt;
Total s
53.59 2 10
Expenditures
Ge n er al F und and Cem
11,078 42
ORDINANCE NO . 1020-75
Motor Vehi cle L 1c ense
Tax F und
6,866 .79
An Ordin an ce to am en d
Gasol in e Tax Fund
14,987 .64 S~ ct i ons 1135. 01 and 1161. 02 of
F ederal Revenue Sharing
Zoning Ordinan ce No . 87 1A of
Fund
2, 332 .00 Codified Ordinan c e s of lhe
Total s
35.264 .85 Village of Middleport .
Balance Dec 31 , 1974
General F und and Ce: m . 5. 805 .64
Be it orda .ned by th e Coun c il
Motor V ehi cl e Li cense
of th e Village of M iddl eport as
8,257 .13 follows :
Ta x Fund
Ga sol ine T ax Fund
4, 067.30
Sec . I . That Se ction 1135. 01
Federal Revenue Sharing
(P ermitted us es)
B 3 C EN .
F und
197. 18 TRAL BUSINES :i : ADD : Mu lt i
CASH BALANCE,
F amil y Dw ellings .
RECEIPTS AND
Sec . II Thaf sec tion 1161.02
EXPENDITURES
( Number of Off Street Parking
BY FUND
Spaces required ) : Under USE :
General Fund
add Apartment Hou ses ; Under
Bal. , Jan . 1, 197J
5,280 .08 PAR K ING
S PAC ES
ReceiptS
REQUIRED : add, one { 1) for
General Properly Tax each Apartm en t.
3,292 .58
Real E stat e (Gro·ss)
Sec . Ill . B e 11 further or .
Tangible Persona l Prop erty
da ined ttlat th is Ord i nan ce is
T a x (Gross )
1,.179 87 decl ared to be an Emergency
Inh eri t an ce Ta x
and it i s, therefore , Order ed that
( Gro ss )
238 . 16 the rul es be d ispen sed with
Local Govt . Dist .
3, 14 5. 15 provid ing if recei,ve s an a f .
Cigar ette L icense Fees
f irmative vote of lwo . fh i rds of
56 .25 the members of Coun c il and
and F ines (G r oss)
Intang ible tax
\,696 .69 sha l l take effect a t t he ear l iest
Oth er
260 .26 date sl low ed by law .
Tran sf er s
1.3 00 .00
Sec IV . This Ordinanc e sh 8 11
Sale of Cem lots &amp;
take effec t illld be in force from
donations
135 .00 and after January 13, 1975.
Total Rec eipts
11.603.98
Passed th e 13th day of
Tot al Beginning Balanc e
Januar y 197 S.
P IUS ReceiptS
16.884.06
Expenditures
M . L . Kelly
Tota l Expenditures Pr es ident of Coun c il
Administrat ive
9,669 . 18 (1) 23, 30 (:2 ) 6 , 3tc
11 390 .2 4
Cem eteries
L1ght ing
19.0D
Gran t Tot al Exp .
11.078 .42
Gen eral Fund
Bal 1 Dec . 311 1974
5 ~ 805 . 64
Tota l E x p . Plus Bal .• ·
Dec . Jl. 1974
16,884.06
Motor Vehicle license
Tax Fund
Bal. , Jan I , 1974
4, 326 32
Betty
Receipts
Motor Vetlicle L i cense
Ohlinger's
Ta x
7,796. 00
Transfer from Gen .
3~001.60
Total Rece ipts
10, 797.60
Tota l Beginning Bal ance
P lus Receipts
15. 123.92
Expenditures
Total Expenditures ·
M iscellaneou s
2 ~ 800 . 00
Ma i ntenance
4 ~ 066 . 79
Grant Tota l Exp . Motor Vehicle License
, Tax Fund
6.866 .79
Bai ., Dec . 31, 1974
8,257 . 13
Total Exp . P lus Bal .,
Dec. 31, 1974
15, 123 .92
Gasoline Tu Fund
Bal., Jan . L 1974
4,624.92
Receipts
Gasoline Tax
14,400 .00
Oth er
30 .02
Total Re ce ipts
14,430 .02
Total Beginning Balan ce
Plus Receipts
19,054 .94
Expenditures
Total Expenditures M i scellaneous
7,029 .20
Maintenance
7;958 .44
Grand Total Expenditures Gasoline Tax Fund
14,987.64
Bat. , Dec. 31,1974
4,067.30
Total Ex p. Plus Bal .,
Dec. 31, 1974
'
19,0.54 .94
Federal Revenue
Sharing Fund
Bal. , J an . 1, 1974
.402 .00
Receipts
Grant s- Federal
2,118 .00
Refund on Int .
9.18
Total Receipts
2,127 . 18
Total Beginning Balance
Plus Receipts
2,529.18
Expenditures
Maint. and Operation
Equipment
2,332 .00
Total Expenditures
2,332.00
BaL . Dec . 31, 1974
197.18
Total E x p . Plus Bal. ,
Dec . 31, 1974
2,529 . 18
TOWNSHIP DE;BT- NOTES
Purpose For Which
Note Debt Was Created ·
Tractor I mower , end loader
Outstanding Jan. 1.
1974
1,100.00
Redeemed During Year
1974
1,100 .00
Plu s
Int .
Rate of Int .
6 Pet .
Tra ctor, Mower, end ·loader
Outstanding Jan. 1
1974
1,100 .00 .
Redeemed During Year

Children's Shoes ·

Plaids , stripes and plain colors. 1nis ts one of the best selections we have. e ver shown
ou This you must see . Reg., Shorts &amp; Longs. Sizes 35 to 48. Reg . PrK:e .$90 .00. to
~lsO.OO. Sale Price $45 .00 to $75.00. Some oithese have 2 pants. All top qualoly suols .

bought,

AND APPRAISEMENT

..

Stalls Friday, Jan. 31

REDUCED AGAIN!

Values!

The' very special way to remember .. .

J•omeroy

FRIDAY
AND sATURDAY

Marked

message t hat will last . Li nde Stars ar e offered by us in

Ph. 992-3629

REDSKINS GET RIGHTS
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Washington Redskins received
the rights to World Football
League star, defensive end
Karl Lorch, Wednesday by
giving the Miami Dolphins
their loth choice in the draft
next year.

THESE.

A!"'ID('O. ' pOmeroy

Q.UBKanauga

The MEIGS INN

said .
But they could rise again if
the price of coal goes up as
stockpiles are exhausted and
demand picks up, Lusk said.
"The fut\U'e of the coal in·
dustry is super," the industry
spokesman said. "We haven't
even touched our potential.
We'll see a resurgence of coal
industry--one like we never
had,"

RIGIITS TO REDSKINS
WASHINGTON (UP! )- The
Washington Redskins received
the rights to World Football
League defensive end Karl
.Lorch Wednesday by giving the
Miami Dolphins their lOth
draft choice next year.
Lorch, a former Southern
California star, was Miami's
ninth draft choice last year but
chose to play with Hawaii in
the WFL.

GIB

THE FLAMINGO

TONIGHT 8:00 TO 12:30

sociation Wednesday named
Harry Rossi, president of the
Continental Racing
Association of Pennsylvania,
and F. George Tucker,
president of Bowie in
Maryland, to the Board of
Directors.

Lou Osborne
220 E. Main

FRI. thru SUN.
"BAD MOUNTAIN
BOOGIE"

AND THE HALLMARKS

TWO NAMED TO BOARD
·. SAN FRANCISCO (UP! ) The Thoroughbred Racing As·

Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Monty Bodt

'QUINf

GEO.HALL

BIG SCORERS - Marietta College scoring greats Carl
Woife, center, arid Jack Marks, right, congratulate senior
Chuck Robinson on his membership in the Pioneers' !,()()().
Point Club. Robinson's 19 markers Wednesday brought his
career total to 1,021. Wolfe is the second all-time MC scorer
with 1,:;24 points, while Marks is No. 4 with 1,283. Wolfe, now
the head coach at Southern Iligh School, Meigs County, holds
the Ban Johnson Fieldhouse single-game record with 46
points. PictlU'e courtesy Marietta Times.

992-2178

WED. · THURS.

Listeni.J1g

'

CALL

THE FLAMINGO
CLUB PRESENTS

Rt. 1

For Fiscal Y ear Ending
D ecembrr 31 , 1974
Salem Township
Meigs County
Langsville , Ohio
January 20. 1975
I cer t if y th e fo l lowin g r epo r t
to be correc t

Dollar Days

FOR PHONE ORDERING -

OF INVENTORY

. OF TOWNSHIPS

''

month."

NOTICE ON FILING

FINANCIAL REPORT

·~

FRANK T. CSONGOS

CHARLESTON, W. Va .
(UP!) - Coal prices declined
sharply since the nationwide
United Mine Workers strike
was settled last December and
this could bring lower electricity bills, an industry
spokesman says.
The average price of coal is
currently $12 to $20 a ton on the
spot market, said Ben Lusk,
president of the West Virginia
&amp;trface Mining and Reclamation Association.
,
Prior to the miners strike
coal cost between $30 to 40,
Lusk 'said In an interview
Wednesday.
"Most major industries
stOckpiled a lot of coal last year
in anticipation of a long UMW
strike," Lusk said. "The strike
was settled in less than a

II

Big bank drops
interest rate

r

FRIDAY-SATURDAY-JAN. 31-FEB. 1st

Sears

Nitro dumps Point
Robin Arthur and Tony
Shrewsbury combined for j9
points to lead the Nitro Wild·
cats to a 74-'4 victory over the
Point Pleasant Big Blacks
Wednesday night.
Arthw- poured in 27 points
and the 6-1 Shrewsbury
pumped in 22, while their 6-4
teammate Joe Kniceley controlled both boards with 17
rebounds and . managed to
connect for 15 points.
Jim Tatterson again pac~d
the Big Black atlack with 16
points, 13 in the first half when
Point Pleasant led 35.:J2 at
intermission .
Tatterson also swept the
boards for 10 rebounds.
Andy Wilson came off the
bench to add 13 points, and Bill
Rardin tossed in 12.
The final quarter spelled
"curtains" for the Big Blacks,

9 ~ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., Thursday , Jan. 30, 1975

.---~·----------------------_.----..,

" It appears it was the same
the State Department in Wash·
ington and the Department of group," said agent Charles I
Defense in Oakland," said a Bates. "This is the Weather
letter signed by the Weather Underground.''
Underground. It contained a
FBI Director Clarence
Kelley
said the group included
rambling denunciation of continued U.S. involvement in a number on the wanted list :
Bernadine Dohrn, Jeffrey
Southeast Asia.
The bombers, it said, acted Jones, Mark Rudd, Kathie
"in solidarity with the peoples Boudin, Robert Roth, Cathlyn
of VIetnam and Cambodia and WilkerS(\n, Leonard Handelswith millions in the United man and Howard Machtinger.
States.
The group broke off with the
The FBI said the bomb was Students for a ·Democratic
planted in a women's rest room Society, saying the time for
on the third floor of the State revolution in the United States
Department, near the offices of was now.
the Agency for International
Development. The blast col·
lapsed walls, shattered win·
dows, dislodged ceillng tiles
and ruphired water pipes, but
did not make enough noise to
be heard by the building's night
NEW YORK (UPI ) ~- Chase
crew.
Manhattan
Bank today ·
A Washington policeman, dropped its interest rate for
Charles Lightner, called it "a prime business loans to 9 per 1
damn big bomb .. . not one of cent from 9'h per cent, making 1
those blow-the-lid-off things." it the lowest prime rate ln the
A
State
Department country .
spokesman, Paul Hare, said
The new Chase rate is the
Secretary Henry Kissinger was lowest since last spring when
relieved there were no injuries the interest charged by banks
in "this totally senseless act." to their most credit worthy
In • Oakland, bomb experts customers started a slow but
found 14 sticks of dynamite in a steady decline after they·
briefcase, hidden in the ceiling peaked out at 12 per cent in
of a seventh floor room. It was July. U. S. Trust Co. of New
dragged outside and exploded, York dropped its prime rate to
shattering a few windows. The gy, per cent Wednesday but
FBI said the bombers had the most big commercial banks
same method of operation 'IS
were still at 9~~ and some at 9%
those in Washington.
per cent.

'

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create· iobs.

to believe the two-year market
decline has ended.
A spokesman for Walter B.
Wriston, chairman of First
National 'Cityr Bank of New
York , said the hanker believes
the prime interest rate proba·
bly would decline to 9¥• per
cent from 9'% per cent on
Friday.
The steady decline in the
prime rate for business loans
reflects the Federal Reserve's

Underground is heard again

FRIDAY
SEOAL
Athe ns a t Wa\ler ly
Gal lipo l is at Loga n
Ironton at M eigs
Wel lston at Jackson

For Your Dining and
Pleasure•••
NEW CLAIMS DROP
WASHINGTON (UP! )
· Initial claims for unemployment insurance benefits
dropped by more than 12 per ·
cen\in the week ending Jan. 18,
the fll'St decline in a month, the
Labor ~partment said
Wednesday. The department
said that 851,700 pe&lt;sons filed
cll!lms during lhl!t week, a
drop or 118,500 from the week
before. Forty-one slates
· reported lower volumes of
firsWime clailn$, the department said..
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attempt to. fight the re~on :
through more and easier Cl'edlt :
to expand businesses and ,

S ! ,l l• ~ ~ • t-.

E 0AM
ATI
STICS
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Go ST
,l t P
4'r cc
nt .u w
T t•am
FG M A P e t ,

lo q a n

HUNTINGTON, W. VA. - WATERGATE CON.SPIRATOR
John Dean wiD be paid about $13,500 for a three-day speaking
tour of college campuses in West Virginia and Virginia beginning
&amp;tnday .
·
Dean was released from prison Jan. 8 after serving a low-month prison term for his role in the Watergate matter. He will
speak at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville for ~ .ooo ,
Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Va., for $3,000, Marshall
University in Huntington for $3,000, and William and Mary
College at Williamsburg, Va., for a reported $3,500.

Appointees to
trustees' board
are oriented

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8- The Daily Sentinel Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thw-sday, Jw1 . :10. 1!175

New.8.
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LAS VEGAS, NEV. - BEEF PRICE~ WILL remain at
present levels for at least a year, but there could be shortages and higher prices - In succeeding years, an industry leader said
, Wednesday. Current retail bed prices are 36 cents a pound lower
than they were a year ago, said Gordon Van Vleck, president of
the American National CatUemen's Association.
"There wiD be just as many cattle on the market in January
of 1976 as there are now, " he said, predicting the amount of beef
eaten by an average American would increase this year to 122
pounds, up from 117 pounds last year. However, he told an
association meeting, the supply will be "lower quality beef, with
less grain feeding, and more grass fed animals.

COLUMBUS - REP . NORMAN MURDOCK, R-Cincinnati,
W88 scheduled today to introduce legislation which would give
scholars the same chance for scholarships as athletes. Mw-dock
said his bill would force state universities to spend a• much on
academic scholarships as they do .for athletic grants and state
aid would be cut ID percent for any school failing to comply.
"I'm not at all anti-athletics," said Murdock. " My concern is
that we give equal emphasis to scholastic achievement. "If a guy
is 240 pounds and can run like the wind, he can get a free
education anywhere, even if his father is a millionaire," said
Mw-dock. "But if he ls a· genius academically with ability to
contribute to society, his chances of getting
, a scholarship are
very limited.
Mw-dock said the priorities of society are at issue.
CHALMETTE, LA. - THREE Oll.. BARGES and an empty
freighter Wednesday collided on the Mississippi River creating a
wall of fire that paralyzed 15 miles of the nation's longest inland
waterway. The barges bw-st into flames and broke loose from
their tugboat to drift aimlessly down the river.
No crewmen on the freighter or the tug was hurt, but crude
oU leaked from the damaged barges and caught fire, forming
patches of flame that floated downstream dangerously close to 10
ships waiting at anchor. Paint on one of the ships was blistered
by the heat.
·:·:·:·:·:·:::::·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::::::::;.::::::::;.::::

An Important meeting to
organize girls' softball
teams for the coming season,
Meigs-Mason area, wlll be
held Sunday, Feb. 2, at 4
• p.m. al the Royal Crown
garage on North Second
An orientation meeting was
Ave.. Middleport.
held in Wellston Tuesday
All member's of the Hlt'n
evening for appointees to the
Mjsses team, all managers
·newly formed Board of
or representatives of lasl
Trustees for Southeast Ohio
year's Meigs Junior Girls'
Emergency Medical Services,
League teams arc asked to
Inc. The historical developattend. Also, any other
ment
and
present
teams, girls In any age
organizational operations and
group, and Interested adults
· contractual relationships were
are Invited to attend.
explained by staff representatives of both Ohio Valley ;.;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::;::::.:·:=:::::::.;.;:;:;:;:::
Health Services Foundation,
Inc., and SEOEMS.
SURGERY DELAYED
New appointees attending
Rebecca Broderi c k,
the meeting were: Mrs. Sadie Pomeroy, Rt. 2, has returned
Parks, Athens County ; Ray home from Holzer M~ical
Waller and William Kai!;er, Center. She was to have unLawrence County; Scott dergone surg~ry but it was
.Lucas, Mrs. JoAnn Stewart cancelled until additional tests .
and B. L. Williamson, Meigs are made.
County; Dr. Donald W. Barton,
James Blower and Raymond
Cottrill, Vinton County, and
DAUGHTER BORN
James McLain, Hocking
A daughter was born to Mr .
County.
and Mrs. Wilford Lee Roush,
The next meeting will be held Pomeroy, Holzer Medical
on the last Tuesday in Center, Jan. 29.
February at SEOEMS central
headquarters in Gallipolis.
Election of officers and
designation of committees will
HAU.. DAMAGED
take place during an
ELYRIA, Ohio (UP!) - A
organizational meeting in general alarm fire caused
April.
$100,000 damage Wednesay at
the American Legion Hall
here. Officials said the _city's
entire
69-member
fire
JOBLESS AT 218,000
department responded to the
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio B\U'eau of Employment alarm. The fire was believed
Services reported today that caused by an eleclrical short
circuit. There were no injw-ies.
218,000 Ohioans were unemployed for one week or more
lor the week ending Jan. 2:i,
compsred to 85,700 out of work
REBATES OFFERED
for the same period of time for
CLEVELAND ( UPI)
'the average week of January, Republic Steel Corp.'s 40,000
19R
employes will be offered a $100
The. bw-eau said there were rebate on the purchase of a new
36,232 new claimaints for the car durin g February, the
week ending Jan. 2:i compared company announced Wed·
to the weekly average of 19,839 nesday.'The offer will be valid
in January, 1974.
only for"cars made in theU . S.
and Canada and will be in
addition to any rebates offered
by the aut o companies .
200 LAID OFF
CLEVELAND . (UP! )
MORE AMNESTY
Some 200 employes of ·the
WASHINGTON (UP! )
Addressograph • Multigraph
Officials have indicated that
C&lt;rp. plant in Euclid will be
President Ford will decide to
laid off Feb. I. The layoffs,
extend the conditional amnesty
blamed on the troubled
and &lt;'lemency program for one
ecoriomy and the need to k~p
month beyond its scheduled
Inventory down while orders
are declining, will reduce the expiration rriday.
· plant's work force to 1,140.
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6111

Lo ga n
G ~·l f 1 pO I 1 S
M eig s
I ro nto n
Jac lo. s on

10-1

1~ ?

6 84

I ?.! 1\lO

6 3)

10 5 11]

60 7

W e l lston
A tll e n s

Te am
I ron ton
Log a n
Atll e n s
G all i po l is
Wave rl y

109 I B?
~n
16 t JO
51l 5
101 t n
S/ 1
Ill IM
':; } I
R cl:mu nd s
Nc . G Av g .
) 67 9 .IQ '}

3 18
30 7
30-t
JOO

Meig s
W e ll s ton

?7 4
?67

J oc l&lt;. son

'/,19

J:.

J
34 l
9 JJ .S
9 ... J J )
9 30 J
9
y

9
9

JO 4
77 .7

Per o;o nal Foul ~
T ea m ·•
No . G Avg .
IJ I 9 I S 7
Jile k son
LO (J an
J.JS 9 16 I
1&lt;1 8 9 16 .J
A th en s
Wv v er l y
165 9 18 3
Ir on i on
169 Y 18 8
M eigs
176 9 19 6
Well ston
178 Y 19 8
Ga 111poi 1S
188 9 ?Cl 9
IND LEADERS
F te ld Goal Per ce nta9c
N.1m c . T
FGM · A Pet
Ch on l&lt;.o . A
53 9?
57 6
Ho r n , !\
~I 73
50?
l r&lt;I CY Wav
J I 76
S3 9
M c D ona l d , J
! ? 134
SJ )
Yo ung . L
53 99
S35
Free Th r ow Per centag e
Name , T
FTM ·A Pet.
N i day , G
35 .1]
81 &lt;1
Hol lan d . Wav
26 37
813
Wrigh i . L
?S31
806
Va l c n li n e. G
?9 37 . 78 -1
Younq . L
33 .l]
767
R ebound s
T eam
No . G Avg .
F 1tzpatr tck . l
117 9 17..1
9&lt;1 9 10 4
Ct1o nko . A
Dudu ll . Wav
94 9 10 .t
Y oung . L
91 9 10 l
1-a ulkner , A
87 9
9 1
( Remind er : Abov e tot a l s do
not includ e l eagu e gam e of
Tue sdav . Jan . 18 )
SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES

Team
w L
P
H anna n Tra ce 12 2 961
N orl h Gall ia
8 J 764
South ern
/
8 6 736
Sou ttl wes tern
' 6 77 7
E ast er n
I 12 771
Kyg er Cr eek
I 10 496
S Va l l ey
1 12 794
SVAC ONLY
Team
W L
P
Hanna n Tr ace 10 0 726
Nort h G al li a
7 2 6/.6
South ern
5 3 J IS
Sou t h w estern
5 4 50 3
Eas t ern
2 6 4JS
S. Va ll e y
1 7 50 8
Ky g er Cr eek
o B Jo a
SVAC RESERVES
T eam
yY L
P
Hannan T r ace
7 J J39
North Cal l ia
6 J 313
So uttl we ster n
5 4 25 1
So uth e r n
;1
4 302
Kyg er Creek.
4 4 266
S V n l l ey
3 5 786
East er n
1 7 220

OP
7S6
660
757
758
883

696
9 ]7

OP
513
524
425

"'
481

599

543

OP

m

17J

"'
'1.75
255

? 97

?67

ALL GAMES
W L
P
Team
13 I 878
Wav erly
Whee lersburg 12 2 854
Hannan Tra ce 12 2 973
11 4 1020
South Point
8 5 723
Jackson
8 5 862
Ironton
8 5 815
Logan
7 6 753
Gallipolis
7 6 795
Portsmouth
5 9 812
Athens
2 11 635
Wellston
I 12 709
M~ i gs

OP
731
700
756
886
71 9

797
750
678
76 4
796
862

842

SEOAL VARSITY
Team
W L P OP
Wav e rly
10 0 646 540
Iron ton

7 3 664

Gal lipolis
Jackson
Logan
Athens
Wellston
Meigs
TOTALS

6
6
5
4
1
1
40

4
4
5
6

599
524

604
545
628
578
9 487
9 560
4D 4712

560
581
540
705
663
4712

SEOAL RESERVES
Team
W L P
Waverly
8 2 4D7
Athens
8 2 466
Gallipoli s
6 4 385
Logan
6 4 435
Meigs
6 4 37 8

OP
307
356
378
374
319

Jackson

421

4

lrnton
Wellston
TOTALS

6

405

2 8 368 441
0 10 305 553
40 40 3149 3149

Northwest at Wheelersburg
Chllllcothe at Por tsmouth
South Point at Coal Grove
SEOAL F.RESHMEN
Team
W. L . P
Ga l lipol i s
8 2 463
Logan
8 2 400
Athens
7 3 395
Wa ver ly
7 3 40 2
Me igs
4 6 397
1ron ton
3 7 325
3 7 32 4
Ja ck son
We l lston
0 \ 0 253
TOTALS
40 40 3019
Thursdiy ' s games :
Logan a t Gall ipoli s
wav erl y at Afhen s
M ei gs at lronfon
Jackson at Wel lston

OP
37 0
305
358
321
401

36 2
445
451
3019

Economy improved
the worst recesssion since the

By RICHARD HUGHES

UP! Business Writer
The nation 's eConomic health
is showing signs of improving
- but workers are still losing
their jobs and a government
report says the recession
definitely is stili here.
The stock market sw-ged
Wednesday for the third day in
a row , and economists expected even lower interest
rates by the end of the week to
stimulate the economy.
In another encouraging sign,
the number of persons applying for unemployment
compensation dropped last
. week for the firsf time in a
month .
But al the same time, the
government released a report
of leading economic indic;~tors
that confirms the nation is in

economic collapse ol the 1930s.
There also were several
announcements of workers losing their jooo. General Motors
said it is closing seven plants
for one week, low- more than
previously announced.
In Washington, sow-ces said
the number of persons- using
government foo;&gt;d stamps rose
to 17 million in December -8
per cent of the population from 15.8 million in November.
The nation's unemployment
rate in December was 7.:; per
cent and was expected to near 8
per cent this month.
The surge in the stock
market and the lower interest
rates , do not mean heavy
layoffs and production cuts will
end immediately. Rather, they
provide strong signals of better
days by mid-year .

The
stock
market
historically has gone into an
upward swing six ·months
before a general econoriuc
recovery.
In three days of trading this
week on the New York Stock
Exchange, 92.1 million shares
were traded, sw-passing last
week's five-day total by 10
million shares and nearing the
all-time weekly volum~ of 110.6
million Feb. 8-12, 1971, when
the economy was booming.
Prices also rose sharply. The
Dow Jones industrial average,
a widely watched barometer of
price trends, rose 11.19 to 705.96
Wednesday. It was the first
time it has been over 700 in five
months.
The hectic trading activity
and the widespread gain in
prices have led some analysts

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
voice of the "Weather Underground," practically unheard
in recent years, has spoken
again with explosive force .
A bomb went off early
Wednesday in a State Depart·
ment bathroom . Another was
found in the ceiling of the
military induction center in
Oakland, Calif., and exploded
by police. The "Weather Un·
derground" took credit for
both. No injuries were
reported.
The explosions produced a
series of bomb scares that
disrupted official Washington
all day Wednesday .
"Tonight we attack AID in
TRI · VALLEY
Wa rr en Loca l a t A l e&gt;~ and e r
Belp r e at Nelson \' i ll e York
Fede r al Ho c k i ng a1 V 111ton
Co untv
'
SVAC
Kyg er Cr eek at Ea st er n
North Gal l ill at Sou fhern
Oth er s
Wahama at Sou t hwe st ern
Symm es V all ey at Che &lt;o ap ea ke
Trim bl e a t Mi ll er
SATURDAY
SVAC
Sym m es Va ll ey il l Kyg er
Cr eek
Othe rs
M il l er al Al ex and er
Tr imb l e a t Fede r al Hoc k1n g
P ar k e r s bur g
Ca t hol1 c
at
Warr en L oc al
TUESDAY ( F eb. ·ll
SVAC
Southe rn at Eastern
So ut hw es t ern at H annan Tra ce
Others
Nelson v ill e York a t Logan
Bel pre a t W ill iam stown
Nor t h Gal l ia a t Wah&lt;~ma
R i pl ey at P t. P leasant
THURSDAY1F eb. 6l
P t . Pl ea sant a t Wah a rna

·

,

INFLATION BUSTERS DOLLAR -DAY SALE

MEIGS THEATRE •

THURSDAY, JAN. JO
TONIGHT
NOT OPEN
FRI. , SAT. , SUN.
Jan. Jlthru Feb. 2
THE TRIAL OF
BILLY JACK

Price of
coal off
sharply

( Technicolor)
Starr ing Tom Laughlin
Show Starts 7:00p .m.

By

Over 6,000
.P rice Cuts!

Lusk said there is a sw-plus
of coal on the market, resulting
In the sharp price drop.
"It would take about six
months for the stockpiles to be
exhausted," he predicted.

I

Metailw-gical coal used by
the steel industry is very much
in demand and its price did not
go down, Lusk said.
Coal committted to industrial customers on a long
term basis did not decline
significantly from the previous
selling price either, he said.
"The coal industry is very
competitive," Lusk noted. "Its
a supply and demand situation.
Right now supplies exceed
ctemand for ordinary coal."
Electricity bllls charged by
utilities using coal are bound to
go down within six months, he

1

I

1

Shop now .and' save! Sears 1975
Winter Sale Catalog is on your
nearest catalog order desk now.
No-nonsense values, at worthwhile savings
that represent virtually every department.
at Sears. You'll be pleased to know that
the Winter Sale Catalog offers ·our bi&amp;gest
selection of sale items for the year. All this
and catalog-shopping convenience too. Ask
about Sears convenient credit plans.

as Nitro outscored Point 20-16
in that fourth frame.
In lhe preliminary, the little
Wildcats pulled away in the
last quarter to hand the little
Blacks their seventh defeat in
11 starts, 52-41.
Next week the Big Blacks go
at it three times, hosting
Ripley Tuesday, traveling to
Wahama Thursday and hosting
the Parkersburg Big Reds
Friday .
Pt. Pleas.
16 ·19 13 1~4
Nitro
19 13 17 2:&gt;--74

CHEST HURTING
WASHINGTON (UP! )
Sen. Robert Taft Jr., R.()hio,
was admitted .to Bethesda
Naval Hospital Wednesday as
a precautionary measure after
complaining of fatigue and
chest discomfO't, said a
spokesman for his office.

SHOP AT SEARS
AND SAVE

is==l

~

SEAitl-1,

K(~~Bl

( ' 1.

----

''

I
.

'.

MARKED DOWN
AGAIN!
Men's Long Sleeve

DRESS SHI

lh

NOW

Down

NITRO ( 74 ) - Shrewsbw-y
10-2-22,
Arthur
12-3-27,
Kniceley 7·1·1:;, Starcher 1-2-4,
Snyder 1·&lt;1-2, Brightwell 1-2-4,
Sample ().0.(), Surfaee ().0.().
POINT (64) - Cottrill 2-1·9,
Tatterson 7-2-16, Taylor 1.()..2,
Rardin IH}.J2, Gerlach 2..()..4,
Wilson 4-&gt;13, Hoss 3-2-11.

ValeQtiQe

PRICE

GROUP

LUGGAGE

Gard·s

lh

NOW

PRICE

Both Men's &amp; Women's. A
very good name in luggage.
This you can't miss.

MEN'S SUITS 1f2 PRICE

Small charge far alterations.

MEN 1S SPORT COATS 1f2 PRICE
Both wools and knllsln Reg .. Shorts &amp; Longs . All the latest styles &amp; colors . We over
so here Is

$49 .50 · t~

Sportc:oat you

have

A very good name In slacks . Most of these are knits . . Sizes
$25.00. Now Just SU9·1o $12.50. Small charge for altera loons.

been. wan t ing . Reg .
·

29

to 48 . Reg. $19 .98 lo

Both Long &amp; Short styles in Dacron &amp; Colloo . Nylons. Woo ls &amp; Leathers. Reg . $19.98tc
$150.00. Sale Price $9.99 to $15.00.
.

MEN'S SWEATERS 1f2 PRICE

I

Cardigan &amp; Sllpover styles. s thorugh X- large. Some ot t~se are washable. Reg .
Price $8.98to $18.00 . Sale Price S4.491o $9.00.
.
,
·

Our Store Will Be Closed 12:30 .til 2:QO _on Fnday for the
Funeral of Mrs. Lester Hart

a lo v~l y v ar iety of col or s in fi ne ie w elry se tt ing s for
men and wom e n.

'

•

Pomeroy.

l

'

K-McCsR ..... ;., Or IM_,It,l. Pll.

O..Dal"''..........., ...

$oo11111Jy lt:. . . lt........ !....•

•. . PH. m.2ftl.
.
Fri.... S.VIa
.
112 £;MAIN
.
I'OMIROY. 0.

l .PRESCRIPTIONS

l
I

l . . _..._..........:....._ ~-

l'"f I

·-

..;.

last winter -have peaked at mid-January, the Inventory
this week's 177,()()().level and stlll was too high to continue
that some workers could retw-n building more.
to their jobs in March . Tern·
HEADSAMTRAx
porary shutdoWD:l wlll continue
WASHINGTON
(UP!)
until a record inventory of l. 7
million cars is whittled, they Paul H. Relstrup, a senior vice
president of 'the nunois Central
said.
Gulf
Railroad, Wednesday was
Two of the seven GM planu
named president and chief ,
to be closed next week build tht
executive
officer of Amtrak.
compact models on which GM
Reistrup,
42, will succeed
is offering $200 cash rebates.
Roger
Lewis on March
retiring
While their sales increased in
l.

FRI. &amp; SAT. FABRIC SALES
STOREWIDE
REDUCTION
ALL FABRICS

SOME
GROUPS

1h

..

'.

"It Pays To Sew Sale!"
SINGER SALE ENDS SATURDAY·-·
Save Up To •65.00

The Fabric ·shop
llSW. Second
PH.tn-2214
McC..IIs&amp; Slmpllcit.y Polloms

There's A Dollar Days Sale In TownBut, We Celebrate 3 Year~ In Business.

RD

At 9 a.m.

*~**

WOMEN'S

WOMEN'S
Ladies'

SHOES

Values to '19.00

Better

1974

l.lDO .OQ

Plus Int .
Rate of Int .
6 Pet .
Tr-ac tor, Mower, end ·loader
Outstanding Jan . 1,
l ,lOQ .OD
1974
Balance Outstaning

1,100.00

Rateorrnt.
'6Pct.
Date of Final Mat.
12· 28 -75
tialion grader - 104 H
New Issues During
Year 1974
5.000 .00
Balance Outstanding

Dec . 31, 197&lt;

5,000 .00

Rate of Int.
6 Pet .
Date of Final Mat .
12· 11 -75
Galion grader - 104 H
New Issues During
5,000 .00
Year 1974
Balance Outstanding
Dec. 31 , 1974
5,000 .00
~ate or Int .
6 Pet .
OateofFinaiMat .
12 · 1l"· 76 ~
Galion grader - 104 H
··
New Issues During
· Year 1974
5,000 .00
Red·e emed During Year
197"
5,000 .00
Rate of Int .
6 Pet .
Date of Final Mal.
12. 11 -77
Total - Outstanding Jan .
.
11 1974
' '
3,300 .00
Total - New Issues During
Year 1974
15,000.00
Total Balance Outstan"ding

16,100.00

lie

$JPR

Dre~s

TO 123.00
One Group
One Group

'6''
Men's Dress Shoes

Men's.Dress Shoes

I Group Broken· Sizes

2 Pairs

WEYENBERG

•3

$10.99.

For 5.00

Pair

'

OFF REG. PRICE .

Women's Dress Shoes
Naturalizers, Auditions, Fanfares, Jolene _
and Fashion Craft. All from regular stock.

'3 OFF REGULI\R PRICE
Miscellaneous Group
Ladies' and Chiidren's Slippers, Ladies.'
Dress Shoes. f

1.00

pair

Marguerite's Shoes
,SEnY QHLIN~ER

I

I. ~ , ·.

.

i

-·

I
.,
'

'

&amp; . Sport

V~LUES

2 Pairs
For ss.oo

( (J J D.

•

SHOES

DRESS
BOOTS

Dress &amp; Sport

Dec . 31 , 1974

.

Price

*lf Anniversary
"" *
*.

..

'

J

..

By EDWARD S. LECHTZIN
UPI Auto Writer
DETROIT (UP! ) - Cash
rebates are he\plng· to sell
more cars, but auto workers
are stiU losing their jobs.
Despite optimism generated
by their rebates, Detroit 's
automakers continue to close
assembly plants to keep their
huge inventory of unsold cars
from growing larger.
General Motors Corp. said
Wednesday seven of its 23 U.S.
assembly plants will be closed
next week , idling 15,505
workers in addition to more ·
than 93,000 on open-ended
layoffs. Auto experts expected
Chrysler Corp. to detail its
early February production
plans today with the Ford
Motor Co . following Friday.
American Motors previously
announced it will idle 3,000 of
the 11,000 workers at its
Kenosha, Wis ., plant for one
week starting Monday to slow
production of small cars. Its
Brompton,Ont.,plant will be in
the second week of a two-week
shutdown.
This week's industry layoffs
totaled nearly 250,000 worketS,
a figw-e that may be matched
next week. GM's temporary
layoffs this week Included 6,000
workers.
GM said its early February
shutdowns include four plants
not in original . layoff plans
announced for ID others in late
December. A spokesman said
this was due to changing
market conditions, and the
automaker · would now begin
outlining its production plans
weekly.
"We are going to report on a
week-by-week basis, primarily
because we don't know far in
advance which plants will be
affected," the spokesman said.
Industry executives this
week predicted indefinite
layoffs - some dating back to

• .... · - '""':

- ..../

More autoworkers lose jobs

*""
*

Dec . 31, 197&lt;

MEN'S OUTERWEAR, 1f2 PRICE

Its Magical Glow Reflects Lo·leJight.
As long as the st ar shin es t hrough , love will never leav e
the wea r er. That wa s an ancient l egend about star
sapph ir es . Express y ou r love with a Li nde Sta r, a

Court St.

that

MEN'.S DRESS SLACKS Y~ PRICE

Give Your Valentine
aUndeStar

· GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY STORE

your chance to get

$80 .00 . Now Only $24.75 to $40.00.

The Stale of Ohio , M e ig s
County , Court of Common
Pleas, Probate Division
To th e Ad m in ist r a to r of th e
es tate , t o such of th e t o 1tow1ng
as ar e r esid en ts o f th e St at e Of
Ohio , v iz : the s ur viv ing
Alma E . Smith spouse, th e nex t of Kin , the
Tow nship Cler k ·ben efi c i ar i es und er th e w i ll :
and to th e atto r ney or attor neys
re pr esenting
any
of
th e
SUMMARY OF CASH
afor ement i on ed person s :
BALANCES. RECEIPTS
Jerr y CvtwetL Rt . J, A lbany ,
AND EXPENDITURES
Ohio . Columbia Town ship , No .
Balance Jan. 1. 1974
21387 .
Gener al Fund
Y ou are h er eb y no l 1fi ed 1ha t
and Cern .
5, 280 .08
th e
Inv entory
and
Ap
Motor V ehi c le L ice nse
Ta)( Fund
4, 326 . 32 pra isement of the estl!lt e of th e
Gasolin e Ta x F und
4, 624.92 aforement i on ed , d eceased , lat e
of sai d Count y , was f iled in th is
Federa l R ev enue Sharin g
F un d
40 2.00 Court . Said I nv en tor y a nd
Totals
14 ,633.32 Apprais em ent wi l l b e for
hear ing befor e th is Court on th e
Total Receipts.
141h da·v of February , 197 5, at
Gen eral Fund and Cem
11 ,60 3.98 10 :00 o 'cloc k A.M .
Any pers oh desir in g to til e
Motor Vehi c le L i ce nse
Tax Fund
10 .797. 60 exception s th er e to must f i le
Ga solin e Tax F und
14 ,430.02 th em at least five days prior to
the date set for hearing .
Federa l Re v enue Sharing
Gi ve n unde r my hand an d
Fund
2,127 . 18
Total s
38 ,958 .78 seal of sa i d Cour t, th i s 27f h day
~ f January 1975 .
Total Rece1pts &amp; Balances
Gen eral Fund and Cem .
Mann111g D . W eb ster
\0 ,884.06
Judg e
Motor V ehicl e Licen se
Ta x Fun d
15 , 123.92
By An n B Wa tson
Gao l in e Tax Fund
19,054.94
Deputy Cl erk
Fed era l Revenu e Sha r ing
Fund
2. 529. 18 (1) 30 (2) 6 . 21&lt;
Total s
53.59 2 10
Expenditures
Ge n er al F und and Cem
11,078 42
ORDINANCE NO . 1020-75
Motor Vehi cle L 1c ense
Tax F und
6,866 .79
An Ordin an ce to am en d
Gasol in e Tax Fund
14,987 .64 S~ ct i ons 1135. 01 and 1161. 02 of
F ederal Revenue Sharing
Zoning Ordinan ce No . 87 1A of
Fund
2, 332 .00 Codified Ordinan c e s of lhe
Total s
35.264 .85 Village of Middleport .
Balance Dec 31 , 1974
General F und and Ce: m . 5. 805 .64
Be it orda .ned by th e Coun c il
Motor V ehi cl e Li cense
of th e Village of M iddl eport as
8,257 .13 follows :
Ta x Fund
Ga sol ine T ax Fund
4, 067.30
Sec . I . That Se ction 1135. 01
Federal Revenue Sharing
(P ermitted us es)
B 3 C EN .
F und
197. 18 TRAL BUSINES :i : ADD : Mu lt i
CASH BALANCE,
F amil y Dw ellings .
RECEIPTS AND
Sec . II Thaf sec tion 1161.02
EXPENDITURES
( Number of Off Street Parking
BY FUND
Spaces required ) : Under USE :
General Fund
add Apartment Hou ses ; Under
Bal. , Jan . 1, 197J
5,280 .08 PAR K ING
S PAC ES
ReceiptS
REQUIRED : add, one { 1) for
General Properly Tax each Apartm en t.
3,292 .58
Real E stat e (Gro·ss)
Sec . Ill . B e 11 further or .
Tangible Persona l Prop erty
da ined ttlat th is Ord i nan ce is
T a x (Gross )
1,.179 87 decl ared to be an Emergency
Inh eri t an ce Ta x
and it i s, therefore , Order ed that
( Gro ss )
238 . 16 the rul es be d ispen sed with
Local Govt . Dist .
3, 14 5. 15 provid ing if recei,ve s an a f .
Cigar ette L icense Fees
f irmative vote of lwo . fh i rds of
56 .25 the members of Coun c il and
and F ines (G r oss)
Intang ible tax
\,696 .69 sha l l take effect a t t he ear l iest
Oth er
260 .26 date sl low ed by law .
Tran sf er s
1.3 00 .00
Sec IV . This Ordinanc e sh 8 11
Sale of Cem lots &amp;
take effec t illld be in force from
donations
135 .00 and after January 13, 1975.
Total Rec eipts
11.603.98
Passed th e 13th day of
Tot al Beginning Balanc e
Januar y 197 S.
P IUS ReceiptS
16.884.06
Expenditures
M . L . Kelly
Tota l Expenditures Pr es ident of Coun c il
Administrat ive
9,669 . 18 (1) 23, 30 (:2 ) 6 , 3tc
11 390 .2 4
Cem eteries
L1ght ing
19.0D
Gran t Tot al Exp .
11.078 .42
Gen eral Fund
Bal 1 Dec . 311 1974
5 ~ 805 . 64
Tota l E x p . Plus Bal .• ·
Dec . Jl. 1974
16,884.06
Motor Vehicle license
Tax Fund
Bal. , Jan I , 1974
4, 326 32
Betty
Receipts
Motor Vetlicle L i cense
Ohlinger's
Ta x
7,796. 00
Transfer from Gen .
3~001.60
Total Rece ipts
10, 797.60
Tota l Beginning Bal ance
P lus Receipts
15. 123.92
Expenditures
Total Expenditures ·
M iscellaneou s
2 ~ 800 . 00
Ma i ntenance
4 ~ 066 . 79
Grant Tota l Exp . Motor Vehicle License
, Tax Fund
6.866 .79
Bai ., Dec . 31, 1974
8,257 . 13
Total Exp . P lus Bal .,
Dec. 31, 1974
15, 123 .92
Gasoline Tu Fund
Bal., Jan . L 1974
4,624.92
Receipts
Gasoline Tax
14,400 .00
Oth er
30 .02
Total Re ce ipts
14,430 .02
Total Beginning Balan ce
Plus Receipts
19,054 .94
Expenditures
Total Expenditures M i scellaneous
7,029 .20
Maintenance
7;958 .44
Grand Total Expenditures Gasoline Tax Fund
14,987.64
Bat. , Dec. 31,1974
4,067.30
Total Ex p. Plus Bal .,
Dec. 31, 1974
'
19,0.54 .94
Federal Revenue
Sharing Fund
Bal. , J an . 1, 1974
.402 .00
Receipts
Grant s- Federal
2,118 .00
Refund on Int .
9.18
Total Receipts
2,127 . 18
Total Beginning Balance
Plus Receipts
2,529.18
Expenditures
Maint. and Operation
Equipment
2,332 .00
Total Expenditures
2,332.00
BaL . Dec . 31, 1974
197.18
Total E x p . Plus Bal. ,
Dec . 31, 1974
2,529 . 18
TOWNSHIP DE;BT- NOTES
Purpose For Which
Note Debt Was Created ·
Tractor I mower , end loader
Outstanding Jan. 1.
1974
1,100.00
Redeemed During Year
1974
1,100 .00
Plu s
Int .
Rate of Int .
6 Pet .
Tra ctor, Mower, end ·loader
Outstanding Jan. 1
1974
1,100 .00 .
Redeemed During Year

Children's Shoes ·

Plaids , stripes and plain colors. 1nis ts one of the best selections we have. e ver shown
ou This you must see . Reg., Shorts &amp; Longs. Sizes 35 to 48. Reg . PrK:e .$90 .00. to
~lsO.OO. Sale Price $45 .00 to $75.00. Some oithese have 2 pants. All top qualoly suols .

bought,

AND APPRAISEMENT

..

Stalls Friday, Jan. 31

REDUCED AGAIN!

Values!

The' very special way to remember .. .

J•omeroy

FRIDAY
AND sATURDAY

Marked

message t hat will last . Li nde Stars ar e offered by us in

Ph. 992-3629

REDSKINS GET RIGHTS
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Washington Redskins received
the rights to World Football
League star, defensive end
Karl Lorch, Wednesday by
giving the Miami Dolphins
their loth choice in the draft
next year.

THESE.

A!"'ID('O. ' pOmeroy

Q.UBKanauga

The MEIGS INN

said .
But they could rise again if
the price of coal goes up as
stockpiles are exhausted and
demand picks up, Lusk said.
"The fut\U'e of the coal in·
dustry is super," the industry
spokesman said. "We haven't
even touched our potential.
We'll see a resurgence of coal
industry--one like we never
had,"

RIGIITS TO REDSKINS
WASHINGTON (UP! )- The
Washington Redskins received
the rights to World Football
League defensive end Karl
.Lorch Wednesday by giving the
Miami Dolphins their lOth
draft choice next year.
Lorch, a former Southern
California star, was Miami's
ninth draft choice last year but
chose to play with Hawaii in
the WFL.

GIB

THE FLAMINGO

TONIGHT 8:00 TO 12:30

sociation Wednesday named
Harry Rossi, president of the
Continental Racing
Association of Pennsylvania,
and F. George Tucker,
president of Bowie in
Maryland, to the Board of
Directors.

Lou Osborne
220 E. Main

FRI. thru SUN.
"BAD MOUNTAIN
BOOGIE"

AND THE HALLMARKS

TWO NAMED TO BOARD
·. SAN FRANCISCO (UP! ) The Thoroughbred Racing As·

Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Monty Bodt

'QUINf

GEO.HALL

BIG SCORERS - Marietta College scoring greats Carl
Woife, center, arid Jack Marks, right, congratulate senior
Chuck Robinson on his membership in the Pioneers' !,()()().
Point Club. Robinson's 19 markers Wednesday brought his
career total to 1,021. Wolfe is the second all-time MC scorer
with 1,:;24 points, while Marks is No. 4 with 1,283. Wolfe, now
the head coach at Southern Iligh School, Meigs County, holds
the Ban Johnson Fieldhouse single-game record with 46
points. PictlU'e courtesy Marietta Times.

992-2178

WED. · THURS.

Listeni.J1g

'

CALL

THE FLAMINGO
CLUB PRESENTS

Rt. 1

For Fiscal Y ear Ending
D ecembrr 31 , 1974
Salem Township
Meigs County
Langsville , Ohio
January 20. 1975
I cer t if y th e fo l lowin g r epo r t
to be correc t

Dollar Days

FOR PHONE ORDERING -

OF INVENTORY

. OF TOWNSHIPS

''

month."

NOTICE ON FILING

FINANCIAL REPORT

·~

FRANK T. CSONGOS

CHARLESTON, W. Va .
(UP!) - Coal prices declined
sharply since the nationwide
United Mine Workers strike
was settled last December and
this could bring lower electricity bills, an industry
spokesman says.
The average price of coal is
currently $12 to $20 a ton on the
spot market, said Ben Lusk,
president of the West Virginia
&amp;trface Mining and Reclamation Association.
,
Prior to the miners strike
coal cost between $30 to 40,
Lusk 'said In an interview
Wednesday.
"Most major industries
stOckpiled a lot of coal last year
in anticipation of a long UMW
strike," Lusk said. "The strike
was settled in less than a

II

Big bank drops
interest rate

r

FRIDAY-SATURDAY-JAN. 31-FEB. 1st

Sears

Nitro dumps Point
Robin Arthur and Tony
Shrewsbury combined for j9
points to lead the Nitro Wild·
cats to a 74-'4 victory over the
Point Pleasant Big Blacks
Wednesday night.
Arthw- poured in 27 points
and the 6-1 Shrewsbury
pumped in 22, while their 6-4
teammate Joe Kniceley controlled both boards with 17
rebounds and . managed to
connect for 15 points.
Jim Tatterson again pac~d
the Big Black atlack with 16
points, 13 in the first half when
Point Pleasant led 35.:J2 at
intermission .
Tatterson also swept the
boards for 10 rebounds.
Andy Wilson came off the
bench to add 13 points, and Bill
Rardin tossed in 12.
The final quarter spelled
"curtains" for the Big Blacks,

9 ~ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., Thursday , Jan. 30, 1975

.---~·----------------------_.----..,

" It appears it was the same
the State Department in Wash·
ington and the Department of group," said agent Charles I
Defense in Oakland," said a Bates. "This is the Weather
letter signed by the Weather Underground.''
Underground. It contained a
FBI Director Clarence
Kelley
said the group included
rambling denunciation of continued U.S. involvement in a number on the wanted list :
Bernadine Dohrn, Jeffrey
Southeast Asia.
The bombers, it said, acted Jones, Mark Rudd, Kathie
"in solidarity with the peoples Boudin, Robert Roth, Cathlyn
of VIetnam and Cambodia and WilkerS(\n, Leonard Handelswith millions in the United man and Howard Machtinger.
States.
The group broke off with the
The FBI said the bomb was Students for a ·Democratic
planted in a women's rest room Society, saying the time for
on the third floor of the State revolution in the United States
Department, near the offices of was now.
the Agency for International
Development. The blast col·
lapsed walls, shattered win·
dows, dislodged ceillng tiles
and ruphired water pipes, but
did not make enough noise to
be heard by the building's night
NEW YORK (UPI ) ~- Chase
crew.
Manhattan
Bank today ·
A Washington policeman, dropped its interest rate for
Charles Lightner, called it "a prime business loans to 9 per 1
damn big bomb .. . not one of cent from 9'h per cent, making 1
those blow-the-lid-off things." it the lowest prime rate ln the
A
State
Department country .
spokesman, Paul Hare, said
The new Chase rate is the
Secretary Henry Kissinger was lowest since last spring when
relieved there were no injuries the interest charged by banks
in "this totally senseless act." to their most credit worthy
In • Oakland, bomb experts customers started a slow but
found 14 sticks of dynamite in a steady decline after they·
briefcase, hidden in the ceiling peaked out at 12 per cent in
of a seventh floor room. It was July. U. S. Trust Co. of New
dragged outside and exploded, York dropped its prime rate to
shattering a few windows. The gy, per cent Wednesday but
FBI said the bombers had the most big commercial banks
same method of operation 'IS
were still at 9~~ and some at 9%
those in Washington.
per cent.

'

-------,·
create· iobs.

to believe the two-year market
decline has ended.
A spokesman for Walter B.
Wriston, chairman of First
National 'Cityr Bank of New
York , said the hanker believes
the prime interest rate proba·
bly would decline to 9¥• per
cent from 9'% per cent on
Friday.
The steady decline in the
prime rate for business loans
reflects the Federal Reserve's

Underground is heard again

FRIDAY
SEOAL
Athe ns a t Wa\ler ly
Gal lipo l is at Loga n
Ironton at M eigs
Wel lston at Jackson

For Your Dining and
Pleasure•••
NEW CLAIMS DROP
WASHINGTON (UP! )
· Initial claims for unemployment insurance benefits
dropped by more than 12 per ·
cen\in the week ending Jan. 18,
the fll'St decline in a month, the
Labor ~partment said
Wednesday. The department
said that 851,700 pe&lt;sons filed
cll!lms during lhl!t week, a
drop or 118,500 from the week
before. Forty-one slates
· reported lower volumes of
firsWime clailn$, the department said..
I .•

1/tl
1~ 11

'
.

attempt to. fight the re~on :
through more and easier Cl'edlt :
to expand businesses and ,

S ! ,l l• ~ ~ • t-.

E 0AM
ATI
STICS
FT11'1
Go ST
,l t P
4'r cc
nt .u w
T t•am
FG M A P e t ,

lo q a n

HUNTINGTON, W. VA. - WATERGATE CON.SPIRATOR
John Dean wiD be paid about $13,500 for a three-day speaking
tour of college campuses in West Virginia and Virginia beginning
&amp;tnday .
·
Dean was released from prison Jan. 8 after serving a low-month prison term for his role in the Watergate matter. He will
speak at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville for ~ .ooo ,
Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Va., for $3,000, Marshall
University in Huntington for $3,000, and William and Mary
College at Williamsburg, Va., for a reported $3,500.

Appointees to
trustees' board
are oriented

S EO/\ l B iH k t•lb ,lll

•'
•

••

,.

.

'{

.'

,.
I

I

�'-

-

' '

.

'

'

'· '

•

10 ~ The Daily Sent mel, Middlepor t-Pome ro~·. 0 . 'l'hu"uay, Jan. 30, 1975

state Rep. C. J. McLin, oDayton, who introduced the
measUre in the Ohio House.
"There has been al2per cent
increase in inflation, and [
think state employes need to be
upgraded," said McLin. "They
are still below federal employes and most of the city
employes.
McUn said he saw no need
for a tax increase.
"When we're dealing with an
$11 billion budget," said
McLin, " it 's a matter of
placing priorities where they
should' be. I think that we can
take care of it with the amount
of money that is coming into

•

55,000 state wo·r kers ask pay, benefits rncreases
COLUMBUS ( UPI) - Til; Association said Wednesday a
Ohio 'Civil Se rvice Employes bill drafted by it to provide for

•

Cutbacks mgas
warned agamst
CO LUMBUS 1UPI I - l."rge much as 55 per ce nl ," O'Neill
cutbacks in naturul gas alloca - so ld . "We are opposing this
tions wil l he ''devast.:1li ng'' to move mOs t vigprously, r&gt;rimariOhio's food industry . r ~prese n - ly on the basis that fuod
t.:ltives of that industry sa id production is essen tia l. "
Wednesday

for

The representatives asked the

"across the board" alloc:1tion
inc rel't ses to all users.
Proposed natural gas curtailments \\'ere protested at a joint
cory.rerence here by the Ohio
Bake rs Associat ion, Ohio Canners an d FooU Process ors,

Ohi o. Energy Emergen(y Commission to make ava ila ble low interest !oans to oil ancl gas
pnxluccrs to increase drilling
activity in Ohio a nd Congress to
1
pcrmit regulation of natur al
gas prices a t the well heiJd .

grain,
NEW ENERGY CZAR,
Dr. Robert Seamans is a
veteran
of
top· lrve l

,government posts. Hcforc
appointment
as
ad ministrator of thr newly
create-d Energy Rcsearc:h
and Developm ent Administration. he served as
Air Force secretary and as a

deputy administrator of
NASA.

fe~d

in

ca lling

and

reprcsentatlves and the Ohio al, Power Commission
F~rrn Burea u Federa tion.
1ncrease the a\l{)('ation

to
of

cur tailments requested by the izer Association Execu tive Vice
East Oh io Gas Co., the West President George Greenlea f
Ohio Gas Co., and Col umbia wHrned that his members need

Gas of Ohio.
Ohio Bakers Association and
Ohio Ca nners and ~~ood Processors spokesma n William H.
O'Nei ll said the industries he
represents have been granted
priority s tatus fo r a lmost 50
years und er a Publi c Utili ties
Commission of Ohi o I PUCO 1

gas to adequa tely dry 1974 's
corn crop and nex t year's
cor n and soy beans.
which are to be dried within the
nex t nine months.
" If the PUCO cur tai led all.
customers or the utiliti es up to
10 per ce11l," sa id Green leaf,
wheat,

"this cut would be sufficien t to
cover

the

entire

es tim ated

deficiency of both East Ohio
and West Ohio gas compan ies."

a

. COVER UP is resorted to by woman arriving at the
Gwldford, England, courthouse to face chorges in coMection
with pub bombings that have claimed more than 50 lives in
Britain in the last two years. She is one of six, including
another woman, charged witt&gt; October bombings attributed
to the Irish Republican Army Provisionals.

Russian daughter wanted in Hollywood
disapproved of the affair, including "Seven Brides for entered the Navy as a seaman
ordered Tate out of the country Seven Brothers" and "Tea- second class and retired as an
and sent Miss Fyodorova to a house of the August Moon " admiral, which is a hell of a
labor camp for eigh t years. said he has knoWn Tate sin~e story in itself. I knew about the
Tate only recently discovered the 1930s and his We and affair with the Russian actress
he had a daughter.
romance would make a good but not about the child."
Cummings, nephew of the movie.
"I'm working with a couple
late Louis B. Mayer and
"Ja ck Tale is a smashi~g of studios right now" on a
producer of a nwnber of films hero, you know," he said. "He projected film , Cummings
said. "The episode with Zoya
certainly is romantic ,'' he said,
They'll Do It Every Time
and in addition there may be
"some cloak and dagger
elements" for a movie script.
"The story has everything
going for it - war, espionage,
great states and all the r.est."

'

.

I

McLin said the raise will go
into effect in July if approved.
Some legislators he contacted were willing to sign the
bill, said McUn.

·II

69~

I
I

SPECIAL

tft.OZ. WOOUTE·

••n-to. St10

liMIT , ,

69~

Ht11Hrtlt• BATfERIES

Savo '"' ho•!l.lt otw•
nOio un o Fol.·
ulouoooloc\"'n

2Cite• 4ft1
4 et 380
.,..
2 7"'
7"

Reg. 45&lt;

etlfHN

IWESIY.
Sow!.......

o.,.o.... t.c~u~;.., '"'"d
COR 0 S IZ ES

I
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I
I
I
I
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C.WW.ftrWII~

14-0.. SAiti-FWSH,
fillet Bowl Cltootr

•nv

A.,..

Reg . SS&lt;

PENLIT( II. /I, SIZE

IHI

Reg. $1.00

1-\IOLT

OfiC.

···•I• IIIII,

"' 99"

Sh111~tot,

l'

•&gt;Ormal
~,, ,.

..., . . . ..., • .•, ~. 4

mk&gt;• ''""Y" 44 ,
6-4 '" '""'~'u J&lt;te
w.,hoblo ocr,loc
11m
Ll&gt;llll i t: &lt;&gt;to•
CMo:n

n31 WITiiO UT COUf&gt;Orrll

Choo'" lr Otn wltdl orod ,., .... l lod "'~""
MIChtnl Willi IIIII dry

M&lt;llhQ!OO II OO'

FRI. &amp; SAT.

. AWIIINUM FOil

s,. 99~

OVER 50 PAIRS
Values sf2 .99 to $24.99

'10

'17

to

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

Sale! LADIES' SHOES

Over 100 pairs of dress and sport styles. Bone.
white, black, tan, navy a11d green .
Regular $10 .99 to 521.99 Values ....

'7" to • 12so
Chapman's Shoes

89•
.. '""

POMEROY

••
••
•"
••
••
••
••
••
•
••
.
••
••
••
••
•

II
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and lin~ patum
Otlo.. ""'" .... ,ct&gt;
nvlon. Sruo1o In 8 10

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BIICIMIS

I I . Colotc~o &gt;eo

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IRIDOESIZE
""""' C.til
co• •ed

PI •" '"
I•Ciuo ~

lo.ock

L ~« IS

!..99~

11-0t. ..,,

CHOCOlATE
CANDIES

Reg. 2tc E• .

••

99~.
Reg , $1.35

FASHION EARRINGS

!99~

BOKED

WIZARD

GrMHnt Corit
l O•·t iY 1~ 0&lt; 1!1 11 10 lOr
d!l Ut:&lt; JIIQI!$ 10 I~

PANlV HOSE

We Blast Prices!

-

, . , , . , e«fttl

'

ll&lt;1P::1.o~t'~;:;;'"-;:

AIR FRESHENER

Ca!d•Mi bO• .

tiARRffiES
Mo 'I Stylotl

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ti

Sill Aoo1t•

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""", . , etMD/1·

llarnr , t lrps of "~rov

Reg . SU9 Pai.-

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me1DI to accen1
h""~"·

I~V

2 on a ca•d,

IOK OF 24
C.oyoto · CRAYONS

P~•tc c t "'''~ p•nll

&lt;

Supe•

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Chnd l r.ll

Welc~ ~vlon

t~

One 1&gt;10 ltl$ ~II

SlfEP AMD
SlOWER eMS
CC&gt;mplele prr&gt;I~C I I&lt;ttl
to• v&lt;&gt;~• ho"d"
Solin 1 ;,~~

nl '&lt;•lo"

"""u'-1" • • ,,.&lt;1 •

~.89~

II'ECIMI

COMBS
OALOREI

. 49t

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A I..,IIO!to Yalue 2
combo P« c ard
• n.Ue••~• _.,,leo lm
th e wholo l•m.l,
All CO li Oil let" CIO I ~
fe at~•es

...a,;C •il&gt;

e1as uc

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1106

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Cto o,&lt;o o r 'I •555 "'

METAL
· ..,.,.,,..
FILE BOX Reg. 13.79

"'"' " " " ·~·· 279

men11
Jirf! .

To 11.29

1 2 '~ &gt;10o 5 Y,

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in.

Reg . SJ.79

loek .nd lct~ .

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Reg. Slc and 4'c Each

SPORTSMAN GLASS PACK

MUFFLERS

I
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MAIN ST.

R::.~

"•1

ICIO'o OriO~ l ~fVI" ·

SPECIAL

MEN'$ PEDWIN SHOES
Assorted
Styles
Sizes 6'12-12

~lh. -

Reg . $1 .99

·II

20-0z. Utftrl....
ANTISEPI'IC

WINTUII, II•IIHnt W1111"4

2 Days To Save

Whitman. FAMILY CAMES

·a~·

1"

Cash and Carry
E ~~y •mou~lr for ktll5
~1.11 corrw"'s two

( ach

lh 10 oam!ls. 01 1colors,

ALL SNOW TIRES ON SALE

IIIUSh

FIRST OOME.
FIRST SERVED!

Elllfft,
OLIE

1 GROUP
,. AUTO FLOOR MATS
SAVE •2.00 I

8· ~1 .

OIASSWME SPECIALS!

boltiU .
SohCDI

Uti~Ufll

colo•0&lt;1 bowls

01

•

Plltflt

Glui-Aa

awu

99~,

R...

J4.9f

,SHOCKS

leatherette Seat
COVERS
PASS.
AND

REG.
'6.99

Un4nrs•
MODEliC1TS

SPECIAL BUY

HOUSfWARES

SAVE MORE NOWI

ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT

TRUCK

79!

Glille'!IIQ CU I QIIK llf..,;,;Q pif&lt;:n. ,1.1!1(1 8· &lt;11.

Chog"'
Glut

"

11 .(11

Add a 1&lt;&gt;uch ol elegonce to 111u1 d.oner "bit

piU!&gt;C IQUHl f

1/11

ALL REDUCED TO 1fz PRICE

·-

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IARO£R ·SIZE
MODEL KITS

MO
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!99+

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Reg. Uc ,

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Spirttl
Meny

Pun11t1,

Cespe1. Mo•e l 8 ·318•
10% -in sin .

MAKE
POMEROY
YOUR
SHOPPING
CENTER

Colcr1 '

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BIG

Kutuek11 fried Ckieku~
CROW'S STEAK HOUSE
T".I -,..,

IMOf SIZE
CAIID'IIAIS

9
.VALUES ·

Ult~ l e

11!

''

,.

'

SPECIAL

'

..
;

I.

. ~,-~
·Reg . 15c Ea.

BEN FRAN-KLIIN
200-202 E. MAIN STREET

• PHONE

' 992-3498
'

.

P.OMEROY

Open Fri ..8r Sat . N.ights-::-Use OUr t:onvenient Lay Away Plan

~

,.

•

1:

(

iOPI&gt;iS·

!&gt;Cited puu.l e tant
Lovely out~ l¢1!nes

ARE
STOREWIDE

POMEROY, OHIO

lo r

,

I

.

29c

.
'.

II

the state."

Once-A-Year

in business

News, maintains a residence

~R69t

SPECIAL

10&gt;1

.,

37c WITHOUT COUPON

FIRDA Y &amp; SATURDAY

consultants

. . ., I

p i~~-.. ~

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-

I
I
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41-Dt. JU./

For Most Cars

,,

R.:,::'99~

lJ1IIT t ,

I'OIVESTER
FltER Fill
f !J'

The doctor recommended
He also said monitoring of
the city's general population elderly persons and persons
hos shown there is little with heart or respiratory
evidence of the type of rroblems check with their
antibodies needed for natural doctors to see if they still have
any Port Chalmers vaccine.
protection against the virus.

CLEVELAND (UPI ) - Samples of an apparently new and
potentially dangerous flu isolated here were sent to the World
Health Organization influenza
center at Atlanta Wednesday
for examination.
The "A Cleveland 1-75" flu
was Isolated at Cleveland
Me lropoli Wn Genera I Hospi Ia! 's
influenza laboratory.
"We think it will be about 10
days before this thing either
fizzles Or really lakes off, " said
Dr. Steven Mostow, director of
the influenza lab.
"In my opinion it's starting
just about now because we've
looked very hard for it for
weeks," he added.
Being the " A" type flu, the
Cleveland strain hos the potential to start a serious epidemic,
Mostow soid.
The center at Atlanta will
test the samples to confinn
Mostow's findings and determine how much the new
Cleveland flu differs from the
Port Chalmers, New Zealand
variety, the flu current vaccines are designed to ward off.
"This virus, from what we've
been able to identify, is related
very closely to the Port
Cholmers virus," he soid.
Moslow said he believes the
current vaccine would probably
handle the Cleveland flu if it
were available. But he said the
supply was exhausted six weeks
ago.

BILL FILLED
PARIS (UP[) - Egyptian
President Anmwar Sadat said
Wednesday France will sell
him its latest type 1,800 m.p.h.
Mirage warplanes. Fren~h
government officials said
Sadat had submilted a shopping list for $2.2 billion worth of
war equipment. Soda! told the
news confere nce he could
pledge Egypt and Syria never
to attack Israel first and that
"it is possible that we can have
peace" in the Middle East for
the first time in 26 years.

Gilligan

COLUMBUS (UPI) - JMn
J. Gilllgan Consultants, a
partnership operated by former Gov. John J , Gilligan and
his former gubernatorial
lissistant, Roher! E. Daley, will
begin .operations here Feb. l.
The new firm will deal
primarily in insurance sales
and counsel, Gilligan said.
Gilligan this week began a
ooe-year appointmenl as a
fellow at the Woodrow Wilsow
International Center for Scholars althe Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. The
former governor said he plans
ty write a book on govenunent
and serve as a member of t,he
center's study of local and
state tgOVeflllllMl.
Gilligan has also been named
a member of a !.ask force
studying fmancial problems of
higher education sponsored by
the Twentieth Century Fwld of
New York City, a nonprofit and
nonpartisan research foundation which studies . major
economic, social and political
institutions and issues.
Gilligan ·was to maintain a
residence and voting address
in his hometown of Cincinnati.
Dl!ley, a former Washington
corre5pondent and financial
editor .for the Dayton Journal
Herald and · public affairs
reporter for the Dayton Daily

-----------------------·II

NO I IiiO&lt;C &lt;h l trnt! &amp;l thoost' our 1•"""1~ h&lt;h n •~»~d
., ~~ fl&lt;l&gt;ll 1&gt;~1 '" • pron

• 'J ttjli ii•C
. .,,,,,_

Oueen Size

much loving

here.

We 're BIG on convenience,
pleassnt friendly people
and speedy service tool

111111 ' IIITII eflfi'OM

survive too

freq ue ntly . i\ little plont in '
small clay pot may need wa ter
ing every day while one in a 10·
inch plastic pot might need :;
drink only once a week or less

Starts F_riday Morning
PUZZLES

New, tough flu virus found

Plants don 't

runs out of the bott om of th€
pot. Make su re till' t&gt;xress &lt;·ar
drain out. He ex tra c&lt;m .·ful not
t o oYer w ater plants 1r
d ecora t 1v'r pots w1thot1t
drainage holes. Gem~rally . P,l\' l
them lt'ss water.
Plants ir.1 plastic w •ts hole
moisture longer than ones ir
clay and rrqutrr fe wer
waterings but check illl plont;

S~le

We Reserve The Right to
Limit Quantities.
Ask For A Sale .Bjll At Store

7$0-PIMH

Use of gas will be redu ced by na tura l gas fo r Ohio.
as muc h as 5:&gt; per ce nt with
Ohio Grain, F'eed and Fertil-

AdIDJr
• a}' S

A good role is to let you t
plants become completei)' dr~
before wateri ng tlwm . When
you do. soak until the Willl' l

.J

fer tilizer They also requested the Feder-

SOX SIGN FORSTER
CHICAGO ( UPI) - The
Chicago White Sox announced
Wednesday the signing of rule.
Terry Fors ter, the 1974
"Now some gas companies
American League Fireman of &lt;Ire seeking to set aside (the )
the Year.
rule and curta il u s;H~P lw &lt;1.'i
The left-handed, hard throwing relief pitcher led the
American Leagqe with 24
saves and won seven. His 31
points led the Ameri ca n
League for the fireman honor.
By VERNON SCOT!'
Forster, 23, has four years
HOLLYWOOD
(UPI) - A
major league experience and
movie
producer
wants
to gel
laSt year had a 3., 2earned run
average. He was the lOth White the Illegitimate daughter of an
American admil'!l l and a
Sox player signed.
Russian movie star to play her
own mother in a film version of
TARVER INKS CONTRACT
their World WarD romance PHILADELPHIA (UPI ) if the Soviet government will
Jolm . Tarver, a fullback ac- cooperate.
quired Monday in a trade from
Producer Ja ck Cummings
the New England Patriots, said Wednesday he Is camMonday signed a three-year paigning to get entertainment
contract with the Philadelphia industry figures to wire or
Eagles.
write the Soviet government,
The 26-year-&lt;&gt;ld Tarver pleading .for an exi t visa for
played behind Sam CunVictoria Fyodorova, 29, now a
ningham last season but
started the last four games leading Russi'lfl.movie actresst
Cummings iiaid he was an old
alter. Cunningham broke his
friend of retired Adm . Jackson
leg .
Tate, Miss Fyodorova's father,
and is representing the naval
officer in any movie deals
involving the story. Tale, who
li ves in Orange Park, Fla.,
mnfirmed the arrangement
with Cwrunin gs.
Tate, now 77, and Miss
Fyorlorova are trying to arrange for her to come to the
United States to meet hlm, but
the Soviet Government has
refused to allow her to leave
By Janet Tara
the country.
Drowning is one ol the major
Miss Fyodorova, a greencauses of dea th among plants.
eyed brunette, was the result of
While some die from lac k of
a
romance in the closing
wat er. mo s t succ umb to
months
of World War II be-overzealous -waterins by un tween
Tate,
then a captain
knowing new own e rs. who
assigned as naval attache to
literally drown thei r plants with
love.
the U.S. EmbiiS!Iy in Moscow,
It is al ways ne cessary t o
and Zoya Fyodorova, then a
check the so il befo re wate ring
leading Russian actress. She
by gcntl~· pu shing ~·our fin ~er
wa s named Victoria, her
about a n inch int o thr ea r\"11 hJ
mother
said, because she was
see if it 1s wet or dn· ln the
~.:onceived on VE day.
winter. don't be foule(J b,v cold
The Stalin government
earth from (l pot that is ncar a
window : the soil &lt;"a n often fl't'i
wet.

.,

The total cost of fully paid
hospitalization, including eye
and dental care, would be
about $23.5 million.
"Many employers in private
industry are already providing
fully · paid hospitalization insw-ance, "· said OCSEA Execuw
live Director Karl E. Stewart.
"Providing fully paid hospi·
lalization is one way for the
state to heltJ.., its employt!w
survive inflationary times because the employes will have
more money to purchsae
needed goods that are rapidly
being priced out of their
reach."
·
Th.e pay raise will cost the
state about $314 minion, said

fully paid hospitalization, including eye and dental care,
for about 55,000 state employes, has been introduced in
the General Assembly.
The OCSEA also said it has
drafted a bill to provide for a $1
per hour across-the-board
raise, plus a cost-of-living
increase, for more than 90,000
state and county welfare
workers and nonacademic
state university employes.
The state pays about 69.5 per
cent of hospitalization · premiWI\S for employes at an aMual
cost of about $15 million but
does not pay for eye and dental
coverage, said the association.

11.-- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pot;11eroy, o., Thursday. Jan. 30.1975 '

,.

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10 ~ The Daily Sent mel, Middlepor t-Pome ro~·. 0 . 'l'hu"uay, Jan. 30, 1975

state Rep. C. J. McLin, oDayton, who introduced the
measUre in the Ohio House.
"There has been al2per cent
increase in inflation, and [
think state employes need to be
upgraded," said McLin. "They
are still below federal employes and most of the city
employes.
McUn said he saw no need
for a tax increase.
"When we're dealing with an
$11 billion budget," said
McLin, " it 's a matter of
placing priorities where they
should' be. I think that we can
take care of it with the amount
of money that is coming into

•

55,000 state wo·r kers ask pay, benefits rncreases
COLUMBUS ( UPI) - Til; Association said Wednesday a
Ohio 'Civil Se rvice Employes bill drafted by it to provide for

•

Cutbacks mgas
warned agamst
CO LUMBUS 1UPI I - l."rge much as 55 per ce nl ," O'Neill
cutbacks in naturul gas alloca - so ld . "We are opposing this
tions wil l he ''devast.:1li ng'' to move mOs t vigprously, r&gt;rimariOhio's food industry . r ~prese n - ly on the basis that fuod
t.:ltives of that industry sa id production is essen tia l. "
Wednesday

for

The representatives asked the

"across the board" alloc:1tion
inc rel't ses to all users.
Proposed natural gas curtailments \\'ere protested at a joint
cory.rerence here by the Ohio
Bake rs Associat ion, Ohio Canners an d FooU Process ors,

Ohi o. Energy Emergen(y Commission to make ava ila ble low interest !oans to oil ancl gas
pnxluccrs to increase drilling
activity in Ohio a nd Congress to
1
pcrmit regulation of natur al
gas prices a t the well heiJd .

grain,
NEW ENERGY CZAR,
Dr. Robert Seamans is a
veteran
of
top· lrve l

,government posts. Hcforc
appointment
as
ad ministrator of thr newly
create-d Energy Rcsearc:h
and Developm ent Administration. he served as
Air Force secretary and as a

deputy administrator of
NASA.

fe~d

in

ca lling

and

reprcsentatlves and the Ohio al, Power Commission
F~rrn Burea u Federa tion.
1ncrease the a\l{)('ation

to
of

cur tailments requested by the izer Association Execu tive Vice
East Oh io Gas Co., the West President George Greenlea f
Ohio Gas Co., and Col umbia wHrned that his members need

Gas of Ohio.
Ohio Bakers Association and
Ohio Ca nners and ~~ood Processors spokesma n William H.
O'Nei ll said the industries he
represents have been granted
priority s tatus fo r a lmost 50
years und er a Publi c Utili ties
Commission of Ohi o I PUCO 1

gas to adequa tely dry 1974 's
corn crop and nex t year's
cor n and soy beans.
which are to be dried within the
nex t nine months.
" If the PUCO cur tai led all.
customers or the utiliti es up to
10 per ce11l," sa id Green leaf,
wheat,

"this cut would be sufficien t to
cover

the

entire

es tim ated

deficiency of both East Ohio
and West Ohio gas compan ies."

a

. COVER UP is resorted to by woman arriving at the
Gwldford, England, courthouse to face chorges in coMection
with pub bombings that have claimed more than 50 lives in
Britain in the last two years. She is one of six, including
another woman, charged witt&gt; October bombings attributed
to the Irish Republican Army Provisionals.

Russian daughter wanted in Hollywood
disapproved of the affair, including "Seven Brides for entered the Navy as a seaman
ordered Tate out of the country Seven Brothers" and "Tea- second class and retired as an
and sent Miss Fyodorova to a house of the August Moon " admiral, which is a hell of a
labor camp for eigh t years. said he has knoWn Tate sin~e story in itself. I knew about the
Tate only recently discovered the 1930s and his We and affair with the Russian actress
he had a daughter.
romance would make a good but not about the child."
Cummings, nephew of the movie.
"I'm working with a couple
late Louis B. Mayer and
"Ja ck Tale is a smashi~g of studios right now" on a
producer of a nwnber of films hero, you know," he said. "He projected film , Cummings
said. "The episode with Zoya
certainly is romantic ,'' he said,
They'll Do It Every Time
and in addition there may be
"some cloak and dagger
elements" for a movie script.
"The story has everything
going for it - war, espionage,
great states and all the r.est."

'

.

I

McLin said the raise will go
into effect in July if approved.
Some legislators he contacted were willing to sign the
bill, said McUn.

·II

69~

I
I

SPECIAL

tft.OZ. WOOUTE·

••n-to. St10

liMIT , ,

69~

Ht11Hrtlt• BATfERIES

Savo '"' ho•!l.lt otw•
nOio un o Fol.·
ulouoooloc\"'n

2Cite• 4ft1
4 et 380
.,..
2 7"'
7"

Reg. 45&lt;

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IWESIY.
Sow!.......

o.,.o.... t.c~u~;.., '"'"d
COR 0 S IZ ES

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14-0.. SAiti-FWSH,
fillet Bowl Cltootr

•nv

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Reg . SS&lt;

PENLIT( II. /I, SIZE

IHI

Reg. $1.00

1-\IOLT

OfiC.

···•I• IIIII,

"' 99"

Sh111~tot,

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..., . . . ..., • .•, ~. 4

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Choo'" lr Otn wltdl orod ,., .... l lod "'~""
MIChtnl Willi IIIII dry

M&lt;llhQ!OO II OO'

FRI. &amp; SAT.

. AWIIINUM FOil

s,. 99~

OVER 50 PAIRS
Values sf2 .99 to $24.99

'10

'17

to

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

Sale! LADIES' SHOES

Over 100 pairs of dress and sport styles. Bone.
white, black, tan, navy a11d green .
Regular $10 .99 to 521.99 Values ....

'7" to • 12so
Chapman's Shoes

89•
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POMEROY

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and lin~ patum
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nvlon. Sruo1o In 8 10

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BIICIMIS

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""""' C.til
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L ~« IS

!..99~

11-0t. ..,,

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CANDIES

Reg. 2tc E• .

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99~.
Reg , $1.35

FASHION EARRINGS

!99~

BOKED

WIZARD

GrMHnt Corit
l O•·t iY 1~ 0&lt; 1!1 11 10 lOr
d!l Ut:&lt; JIIQI!$ 10 I~

PANlV HOSE

We Blast Prices!

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Ca!d•Mi bO• .

tiARRffiES
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llarnr , t lrps of "~rov

Reg . SU9 Pai.-

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h""~"·

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IOK OF 24
C.oyoto · CRAYONS

P~•tc c t "'''~ p•nll

&lt;

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Chnd l r.ll

Welc~ ~vlon

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One 1&gt;10 ltl$ ~II

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SlOWER eMS
CC&gt;mplele prr&gt;I~C I I&lt;ttl
to• v&lt;&gt;~• ho"d"
Solin 1 ;,~~

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COMBS
OALOREI

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combo P« c ard
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th e wholo l•m.l,
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fe at~•es

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SPORTSMAN GLASS PACK

MUFFLERS

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R::.~

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SPECIAL

MEN'$ PEDWIN SHOES
Assorted
Styles
Sizes 6'12-12

~lh. -

Reg . $1 .99

·II

20-0z. Utftrl....
ANTISEPI'IC

WINTUII, II•IIHnt W1111"4

2 Days To Save

Whitman. FAMILY CAMES

·a~·

1"

Cash and Carry
E ~~y •mou~lr for ktll5
~1.11 corrw"'s two

( ach

lh 10 oam!ls. 01 1colors,

ALL SNOW TIRES ON SALE

IIIUSh

FIRST OOME.
FIRST SERVED!

Elllfft,
OLIE

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,. AUTO FLOOR MATS
SAVE •2.00 I

8· ~1 .

OIASSWME SPECIALS!

boltiU .
SohCDI

Uti~Ufll

colo•0&lt;1 bowls

01

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Glui-Aa

awu

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R...

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leatherette Seat
COVERS
PASS.
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REG.
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HOUSfWARES

SAVE MORE NOWI

ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT

TRUCK

79!

Glille'!IIQ CU I QIIK llf..,;,;Q pif&lt;:n. ,1.1!1(1 8· &lt;11.

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Glut

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MODEL KITS

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Kutuek11 fried Ckieku~
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BEN FRAN-KLIIN
200-202 E. MAIN STREET

• PHONE

' 992-3498
'

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Open Fri ..8r Sat . N.ights-::-Use OUr t:onvenient Lay Away Plan

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the state."

Once-A-Year

in business

News, maintains a residence

~R69t

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37c WITHOUT COUPON

FIRDA Y &amp; SATURDAY

consultants

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I'OIVESTER
FltER Fill
f !J'

The doctor recommended
He also said monitoring of
the city's general population elderly persons and persons
hos shown there is little with heart or respiratory
evidence of the type of rroblems check with their
antibodies needed for natural doctors to see if they still have
any Port Chalmers vaccine.
protection against the virus.

CLEVELAND (UPI ) - Samples of an apparently new and
potentially dangerous flu isolated here were sent to the World
Health Organization influenza
center at Atlanta Wednesday
for examination.
The "A Cleveland 1-75" flu
was Isolated at Cleveland
Me lropoli Wn Genera I Hospi Ia! 's
influenza laboratory.
"We think it will be about 10
days before this thing either
fizzles Or really lakes off, " said
Dr. Steven Mostow, director of
the influenza lab.
"In my opinion it's starting
just about now because we've
looked very hard for it for
weeks," he added.
Being the " A" type flu, the
Cleveland strain hos the potential to start a serious epidemic,
Mostow soid.
The center at Atlanta will
test the samples to confinn
Mostow's findings and determine how much the new
Cleveland flu differs from the
Port Chalmers, New Zealand
variety, the flu current vaccines are designed to ward off.
"This virus, from what we've
been able to identify, is related
very closely to the Port
Cholmers virus," he soid.
Moslow said he believes the
current vaccine would probably
handle the Cleveland flu if it
were available. But he said the
supply was exhausted six weeks
ago.

BILL FILLED
PARIS (UP[) - Egyptian
President Anmwar Sadat said
Wednesday France will sell
him its latest type 1,800 m.p.h.
Mirage warplanes. Fren~h
government officials said
Sadat had submilted a shopping list for $2.2 billion worth of
war equipment. Soda! told the
news confere nce he could
pledge Egypt and Syria never
to attack Israel first and that
"it is possible that we can have
peace" in the Middle East for
the first time in 26 years.

Gilligan

COLUMBUS (UPI) - JMn
J. Gilllgan Consultants, a
partnership operated by former Gov. John J , Gilligan and
his former gubernatorial
lissistant, Roher! E. Daley, will
begin .operations here Feb. l.
The new firm will deal
primarily in insurance sales
and counsel, Gilligan said.
Gilligan this week began a
ooe-year appointmenl as a
fellow at the Woodrow Wilsow
International Center for Scholars althe Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. The
former governor said he plans
ty write a book on govenunent
and serve as a member of t,he
center's study of local and
state tgOVeflllllMl.
Gilligan has also been named
a member of a !.ask force
studying fmancial problems of
higher education sponsored by
the Twentieth Century Fwld of
New York City, a nonprofit and
nonpartisan research foundation which studies . major
economic, social and political
institutions and issues.
Gilligan ·was to maintain a
residence and voting address
in his hometown of Cincinnati.
Dl!ley, a former Washington
corre5pondent and financial
editor .for the Dayton Journal
Herald and · public affairs
reporter for the Dayton Daily

-----------------------·II

NO I IiiO&lt;C &lt;h l trnt! &amp;l thoost' our 1•"""1~ h&lt;h n •~»~d
., ~~ fl&lt;l&gt;ll 1&gt;~1 '" • pron

• 'J ttjli ii•C
. .,,,,,_

Oueen Size

much loving

here.

We 're BIG on convenience,
pleassnt friendly people
and speedy service tool

111111 ' IIITII eflfi'OM

survive too

freq ue ntly . i\ little plont in '
small clay pot may need wa ter
ing every day while one in a 10·
inch plastic pot might need :;
drink only once a week or less

Starts F_riday Morning
PUZZLES

New, tough flu virus found

Plants don 't

runs out of the bott om of th€
pot. Make su re till' t&gt;xress &lt;·ar
drain out. He ex tra c&lt;m .·ful not
t o oYer w ater plants 1r
d ecora t 1v'r pots w1thot1t
drainage holes. Gem~rally . P,l\' l
them lt'ss water.
Plants ir.1 plastic w •ts hole
moisture longer than ones ir
clay and rrqutrr fe wer
waterings but check illl plont;

S~le

We Reserve The Right to
Limit Quantities.
Ask For A Sale .Bjll At Store

7$0-PIMH

Use of gas will be redu ced by na tura l gas fo r Ohio.
as muc h as 5:&gt; per ce nt with
Ohio Grain, F'eed and Fertil-

AdIDJr
• a}' S

A good role is to let you t
plants become completei)' dr~
before wateri ng tlwm . When
you do. soak until the Willl' l

.J

fer tilizer They also requested the Feder-

SOX SIGN FORSTER
CHICAGO ( UPI) - The
Chicago White Sox announced
Wednesday the signing of rule.
Terry Fors ter, the 1974
"Now some gas companies
American League Fireman of &lt;Ire seeking to set aside (the )
the Year.
rule and curta il u s;H~P lw &lt;1.'i
The left-handed, hard throwing relief pitcher led the
American Leagqe with 24
saves and won seven. His 31
points led the Ameri ca n
League for the fireman honor.
By VERNON SCOT!'
Forster, 23, has four years
HOLLYWOOD
(UPI) - A
major league experience and
movie
producer
wants
to gel
laSt year had a 3., 2earned run
average. He was the lOth White the Illegitimate daughter of an
American admil'!l l and a
Sox player signed.
Russian movie star to play her
own mother in a film version of
TARVER INKS CONTRACT
their World WarD romance PHILADELPHIA (UPI ) if the Soviet government will
Jolm . Tarver, a fullback ac- cooperate.
quired Monday in a trade from
Producer Ja ck Cummings
the New England Patriots, said Wednesday he Is camMonday signed a three-year paigning to get entertainment
contract with the Philadelphia industry figures to wire or
Eagles.
write the Soviet government,
The 26-year-&lt;&gt;ld Tarver pleading .for an exi t visa for
played behind Sam CunVictoria Fyodorova, 29, now a
ningham last season but
started the last four games leading Russi'lfl.movie actresst
Cummings iiaid he was an old
alter. Cunningham broke his
friend of retired Adm . Jackson
leg .
Tate, Miss Fyodorova's father,
and is representing the naval
officer in any movie deals
involving the story. Tale, who
li ves in Orange Park, Fla.,
mnfirmed the arrangement
with Cwrunin gs.
Tate, now 77, and Miss
Fyorlorova are trying to arrange for her to come to the
United States to meet hlm, but
the Soviet Government has
refused to allow her to leave
By Janet Tara
the country.
Drowning is one ol the major
Miss Fyodorova, a greencauses of dea th among plants.
eyed brunette, was the result of
While some die from lac k of
a
romance in the closing
wat er. mo s t succ umb to
months
of World War II be-overzealous -waterins by un tween
Tate,
then a captain
knowing new own e rs. who
assigned as naval attache to
literally drown thei r plants with
love.
the U.S. EmbiiS!Iy in Moscow,
It is al ways ne cessary t o
and Zoya Fyodorova, then a
check the so il befo re wate ring
leading Russian actress. She
by gcntl~· pu shing ~·our fin ~er
wa s named Victoria, her
about a n inch int o thr ea r\"11 hJ
mother
said, because she was
see if it 1s wet or dn· ln the
~.:onceived on VE day.
winter. don't be foule(J b,v cold
The Stalin government
earth from (l pot that is ncar a
window : the soil &lt;"a n often fl't'i
wet.

.,

The total cost of fully paid
hospitalization, including eye
and dental care, would be
about $23.5 million.
"Many employers in private
industry are already providing
fully · paid hospitalization insw-ance, "· said OCSEA Execuw
live Director Karl E. Stewart.
"Providing fully paid hospi·
lalization is one way for the
state to heltJ.., its employt!w
survive inflationary times because the employes will have
more money to purchsae
needed goods that are rapidly
being priced out of their
reach."
·
Th.e pay raise will cost the
state about $314 minion, said

fully paid hospitalization, including eye and dental care,
for about 55,000 state employes, has been introduced in
the General Assembly.
The OCSEA also said it has
drafted a bill to provide for a $1
per hour across-the-board
raise, plus a cost-of-living
increase, for more than 90,000
state and county welfare
workers and nonacademic
state university employes.
The state pays about 69.5 per
cent of hospitalization · premiWI\S for employes at an aMual
cost of about $15 million but
does not pay for eye and dental
coverage, said the association.

11.-- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pot;11eroy, o., Thursday. Jan. 30.1975 '

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Intensiv~

&lt;;LEVELAND (UPI)- U.S.
fices shortly after 1 a.m. EST identities, continues its operawhen the building was virtually tions in a most clandestine
empty .
manner and receives the help
There were also a spate of . of an above-ground support
bomb U1reats in Washington appara tus allowing it to continWednesday, ca using the . ue its terroristic attacks
temporary ev.acuationS of the against the" government," said
Interior
and
Treasury Kelley .
Departments and search.es of
He did not elaborate on the
several other federal 'buildings. "a bove-g round support ::mNo explosives were found.
State Department operations
were back to normal today
although security had be.n
tightened with more policemen
in the halls. Electricity was
SANTO DOMI NGO. D.R.
restored to most of the offices (UP! l - A twin..,ngine charter
affected by the blast but two plane w1th 29 persons aboard
restrooms and three offices crashed today on takeoff from
were closed because of exten- the Las Americas Insive damage.
ternational Airport here and
Kelley said the "Weather ca ught fi re.
Underground" lias claimed
The pilot was killed but
responsibility for t9 politically a uthorities said the 27
motivated bombings in th e Canadian passengers and a
United States since 1970, in- stewardess survived .
cluding the Capitol buil~ing in
Airport authorities said the
1971 and the Pentagon in 1972, body of pilot Manuel LaMarche
"This underground, by utili- Rey was found when rescuers
zation of false and stolen pulled the passengers from the
shattered DC3. LaMarche was
llle owner of the one-plane
airline and his wife Lourde,
who survived, was serving
aboard as stewardess. Both
were Dominicans.
The plane, chartered by the
excursion group , crashed at
6:55a.m. (7 :55a.m. EST ) as it
was taking off for Port-AuNEW YORK (UP!) - The The prime rose to a record 12 Prince , Haiti.
aurging stock market, heart- per cent high in July and
Authorities said many of the
ened by a further reduction in remained there until October. trave l group were seriously
interest rates, opened higher The high rate has kept many injJ!!.ed. They were laken to
today In . continued heavy investors away fr om the two nea rby hospitals, one
trading on the New York Stock market.
operated by the Dominican Air
Exchange.
Early prices included :
Force .
The Dow Jones industrial
Steels- U.S. Steel 46 up "•;
Most of the members of the
average, which has gained Republic Steel 27% off ;&amp;; group were Canadians, but
more than 39 poin~o~ thls -week, , National Steel 37¥o off Yo .
some were believed to be U.S.
waa ahead 0.39 at 706.35 shortly
Aircrafts- Boeing 17 up \2; citizens, authorities said. They
after the opening. Advances McDonnell Douglas 10o/s up Is. did not identify the passengers
led declines, 203 to 75, among
Chemicals- DuPont 96% up irrunediately.
the 425 isaues crossing the tape. %; Monsanto 47% up v.; Union
The excursion group, which
Turnover amounted to Carbide 4&gt;1% ·up ¥s.
included a number of businesslii'Ound 720,00o shares. TurnOils-Kerr-McGee 65\2 up I ; men investigaling investment
over thus far this week has J. Ray McDermott 63 \2 up '1.; possibilities in this Caribbean
totaled more than 91,1100,1100 Natomas 37¥, up 12; Mobil42 \2 nation, had been here about
llhares, more than all of last up Yo; Atlantic Ri chfield 87¥. four days, authorities said.
week.
off %; California Stancjjlrd 25%
Witnesses said most of the
Before the market opened, off ¥•.
1
.
passengers were badly injured
Cbase Manhattan, the nation's
Drugs- Bristol-Myers 55% but that a few had only small
Utlrd largest bank, gave inves- up 1¥,; Merck 66% up 1; Pfizer scratches. The injured were
tors an added boost by 29% up l'l.
taken in rililitary and Red
lowering · the prime lending
Electronics and computersCross ambulances to the
rate It charges key corporate Fairchild Camera 3511! up Iv, ; nearby airbase of San Isidro
C\ISIOillers to 9 per cent from Honeywell '!I up %; Texas and the hospital Durio Con·
9"' per cent-the lowest level Instruments 25% up %.
treras.
for the prime since last sprinR.
Fire and civil defense bri-

).Ji&lt;rotus," but said the FBI had
been lookmg for eight
' Wea ther Underground"
members - including Bernadine Dohrn-for some time.
There was speculation that
the Stare Department bomb
might have been planred by a
·woman beeause it went off in a

_surge in trading

General William J. Brown to
stop all other legal action on a
congressional redistricting bill
which the state legislature
passed until the federal panel
can rule on the measure.
The motion by Brown was
filed in connection with a
federal court class action suit
challenging
the
conof
the
stitutionality
redistricting bill and a
separate suit in 'Franklin
County Common Pleas Court
challenging
the
con- ·
stitutionality
of
the
redistricting bill and five
others passed by the Ohio
General Assembly_
The redistricting bill creares
congressional dlatrlcts "much
closer to the ideal situation of
having all districts consist of
an absolutely equal number of

women's restroom.

Charter crashes

Market continues

District Court here Wednesday
was asked by Ohio Attorney

·

gades aided by air force
-helicopters carried out the
rescue operation.

HOSPITAL
NEWS
Holzer.Medical Ceoter
(Discharged, Jao. 29)
Leslie Alban , Debbi e
Baisden, Janie Bateman, Mrs.
David Belasco nd son, Edna A.
Brown, Charles Casto, Juanita
Clark, Carl Davis, Mary Dean,
Karen Filson, Julie Garrett,
Betty Gilmore, Christoph er
Hanning, Blodwyn Hill, Jay
J ohnson, William Joyce, Lois
Karakis , Ronald Kemper,
Kathy Martin, Mrs. Patrick
Maxwell and son, Linda McComas, Barbara McDade,
Carol Mercer, Neva Metz,
Mollie Parrish, Aaron Phillips,
Abn er
Pleasants, Lena
Pleasants, Opal Samples,
Clarence Siders, Morris
Souders, Albert Stephens,
Violet Stumbo, Melvin Supple,
John Weeks. Nancy White,
Paul Williams.
(Births)
Mr. and Mrs. Dale McManus, a daugher, Wellston.

persons," said Brown.
SWALLOWING THE HAND THAT FEEDS HER would
appear to be what Miss Sunbeam, an elephant-type resident
of the Grearer New Orleans Zoo, has 'in mind, Nothing so
unrefined, however . An atrendant with a snack of popcorn is
merely meeting the lady far more than halfway, to the envious inrerest of the hungry kibitzer at right.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Robert
Henprick, Letart; Osborne
Stewart, Point Plea5ant; Mrs.
Robert Garden , Leon; Mrs.
Dencil Roush, son, Point
Pleasant ; Mrs . Terry Workman, daughter, Glenwood;

Mrs . Wenda! Rossirer, Northup; Edward Grimes, Point
Pleasant; Lioille Ramsey ,
Cheshire; Sandra Smith,
Henderson; Harry Riffle ,
Leon; Judy Casrell, Northup;
and R. C. Hinkle, Point
Pleasant.

Political and racial gerry-

-

Reason 14. We're human, and once
in a great while we make a mistake.
But if our error means you must pay
additional tax, you pay only the tax.
We pay any interest or penalty .
We stand behind our work.

•

POMEROY ELEMENTARY SCHOOL CHEERI..IADERS - These Pomeroy girls will lead . the
cJiers for the Pomeroy Elementary basketball ream which
•
play on Saturday, Feb. B. They are front, Julie

·•

COLUMBUS (UPI)- Democratic state legislators intent ·
on providing a $40i&gt;er1JUpil increase in subsidies to Ohio's
113 public school districts have
received an unexpecred boost
toward their goal of enacting
· the propoaal early next month.
The $91 million supplemental
appropriations bill, tickered foc
Senate floor action early next
week; cleared the House
Wednesday on a strong 63-35
vote.
Moreover, the measure was
supporred by five Republicans,
enough to override a potential
veto by Republican Gov.
James A. Rhodes If he
disapproves .the bill next
month.
SeiiBW President Pro Tempore Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron,
said he expects the Senare
Finance Conunittee to give
quick approval to the measure
next Monday night, and the
· Democratic-controlled Senare
to send it to Rhodes next
, Tuesday or Wednesday.
Democrats wrote the appropriations bill to use up an
anticipated stat. surplus, at
the same time furnishing aid to
schools In monthly in·
stallinents in March, April,
May and Jtlne.
Joint vocational school dJa.
'J'Icts would receive an additional $30 per pupil,_and county

.....

..

REMODELING
NEEDS

cni:INNATI (UPI)- Clgaretre )makers would be requiret to sit apart from nonsmok.-s in restaurants, meetini"aiting rooms and
colle
classi'Ooms under a
pro
law llebig seriously
consited by health officials
here.
ThO: Cincinnati Board of
Healtl:~ln.ady has direcred its
staff : to begin preparing
reg~ns and procedures for
shlel g nonslJlokers from
exhal
cigarette and cigar
smoke.
The arrangement would be
similar to the airlines' practice
of requesting,!IIJIOkers to sit in
certain seats, only here the
health board is gearing up for
possible laws and penalties.

"

'

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

Valley lumber &amp; Supply Co.

.,
118 E. MAIN ST.
Open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mou.-&amp;lt."
Pb.II9U'IH
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

992-2709

MIDDLEPORT

Being debated are dlacomforts and possible health
hazards that smokers impose
on non-&lt;1111okers.
City health department staff·
er Ms. Addy Kochanowski
reconunended tougher regula1101111 because of the "known
dlacomfort" smoke causes others and "the potential harm to
health that met result."
Her report said enforcement
should include penalties
againSt both tlle smoker and
the facility responsible for the
controlled area.
Tbe report recommended
segregation of smokers in all
public meetings and waiting
rooms seating 40 or more
persons, in restaurants seating
mo~ than 100 and in all college

classrooms.
Tbe report also suggesred
that separation be "encouraged"
at
smaller
locations, including meeling
and wailing rooms and cafes
and taverns.
Existing smoking bans for
buses, elevators, theatres and
retail stores should be continued, the report added.
Ms. Kochanowski said "it
does appear" that exhaled
smoke may threaren the health
of non-&lt;1111okers.
But, board member Roger
Berger pointed out that "there
is no proof smoking is hazardous to healtll rather than just
· causlog dlacomfort."
Berger said the staff "should
give reasoris why goverrunent

DAYS

ought to be involved in
establishing these
regulations."
However, a motion to "begin
the process of promulgating"
the regulations was adopted
with only one dlasenting vote.
Actlng city health commissioner Dr. Arnold M. Leff said
there would be public hearings
before o.uyllllpiCfut:hl&amp;lu)D &amp;.ld
figured the process ''would
take a number of months."
There already have been
·some complaints from restaurant and tavern owners.
A restaurant association
spokeswoman said her group
was l'concerned" about . the .,

possible laws and a spokesman
for a tavern association said
such laws ''could be considered ·
dlacrlmination against people
being able to sit where they

COLUMBUS (UP)) -Anoth-

QUALITY FLEXSTEEL SOFAS,
CHAIRS, AND LOVE SEATS
If we don;t have what you want we will give you 4
week delivery on any special order - Hundreds of
beautiful fabrics to choose from.

in your hometbwn paper can reach more people, quicker
than your salesmen . Newspaper advertising motivates people ...

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

when people are motivated . ; . they buy! So, Mr.

;

Merchant, when you want to reach the most people, the
fastest way possible ... think newspaper. We
cover more of the people you want to reach, everyday.

.,
I

DAILY SENTINEL

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PH. 992-2156
. ..ADVERTISING DEPf.

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20%.

Vinyl cushioned back floor coverlnas. 12' wide,
Regular u.oo

·

SALE $2•50_Sq. Yd.

9xl2 VINYL RUGS
OZITE CARPET 12' WIDE
9x12 CANDY STRIPE .RUGS
HOLLYWOOD
TWIN SIZE .BEDS
·
Complele
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58.88

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PlATFORM ROCKERS
SoFA
BEDS
RECLINi::'RS

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s3.95Sq.
s48.00
s88.00
$58.00

full size manress.
BEDROOM SUITES.
Bed, Dresser, ,Chosi.·

sus.oo

fabrics.
,Sofa that converts into. a oomtorlable oed with a

,

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KINGS&amp; QUEENS
Jan . 7, 197S
Standing s

Team
No . 6

Felrsome Four

•
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14

·2

HJ
8
2

6
8

12

Jack's Club
Go Go
No .2

4

14

No . 1 .
~
2 u
High Ind . Game - Men :'Ray
Roach 198, Moses Norman 19&lt;1 ;
Women : Nancy Dobbins 168 , Jo
Ann Ward 163.
H lgh Series M en : Ray
Roach 515, Bill Hatfield 503;
Women : Jo Ann ward &lt;152, Opal
H upp &lt;144 .
ieam High Game - Jack's

Club 627.
Team High Series - Jack's
Club 1796 .
Kj NG·$&amp; QUEENS
, Jan. 21 , 1975
Standings

Team

THE TIME IS N9Wl

a

Fearsome. Four
No . 6

20
)4

10

Go Go

1,0

u

No . 2
iD's

10 1~
8 16

Jack's Club

10 ·14

H igh Ind . Game - Men : B iU
Hatfie"ld 2&lt;14, Bill Hatfield 223 ;
Women : .D onna McFarland
198, Oonna , Mc Farland 190~
H i gh Series ~- Men : B ill
Hatfield UJ, Ray Roach 556;

FU~NITUR. E

Women : Donna McFarland

. ~IDDLEPORT, OHIO .

..

L.--------..;.,-----~~------------'.

AN.TI-DANDRUFF
SHAMPOo

~:~~ $595

~:~~·

FRIDAY AND

$}79

~====~~S=M~U~RD~M--~~~==~
VICK'S
.NYQUIL

VICKS REG.
79'
34~
INHALERS
SYLVANIA
LIGHT BULBS

REG.

1.69

1

LISTERINE

oz.$ 49

25. 40•.

2.65

1

PLASTIC BABY
PANTS

CONTAC
COLD
CAPSULES

REG. 1139

REG. s1.79 .

DAYTIME 30's
REG. 12.49
EXTRA ABSORBENT

· 49~

•1••

DAYTIME 24's REG. 12.39

CHARM IN

BOUNff TOWELS

TYLENOL

4 ROU PKG.
REG. 7'1

REG. 59'

PUFFS 200's

LIQUID P~IN
RELIEVER
1.95 .

39e

2111

OVERNIGHT 12's

PU.LL.ON
REG; 4/'1.25

REG;

REG. '1.79

PAMPERS

WASHABLE

FOR CHILDREN

12 Ol

2·. .

REG.

60, 75.
100 WATT

REG.

MAALOX

REG. 59'
1

$_12.5

~ •

McKESSON lOO's
5 GRAIN ASPIRIN

LANES

You'll find a great se,iedion of fine ' furrliture. ap~liances and floor
coverings at very special low prices- Terms to sutt you and ,
FREE DE.L IVEIO'I

BAKER

here is possible if the latest
wage offer by the Columbus
Board uf Education is rejeckd,
the chief negotiator for the
5,000-member Columbus
Education Association said
Wednesdey.
Meetings between the board
and the CEA were adjourned
indefinitely by a federal
mediator after two hours of .
bargaining Wednesday.
· Tbe CEA's top negotiator,
Jack Burgess, said members
will meet here Sunday. The
CEA hopes to present the
board's latest pay package for
a membership vote, he said.
A 6 per cent immediate increase, to he ra.tsed to 8 per
cent in Seprember if funds are
available, is called for in the
larest salary offer.
Teachers here have been
under a Franklin County
Conunon Pleas Court back-towork order for over three
weeks.
POMEROY BOWLI .NG

~78.00

SfiS.OO
$188.00

Blg-Comtorl~ble-Nice

Ph GAU.ON

1

.Name brand appliances a!_ great discounts.
Frigidaire-Admiral-Speed Queen-HooVer-Roper Ranges

•
••
••
••

THE

LAMPS
TABLES .
MIRRORS
PICJURES
WAll.
PlAQUES

OFF

-·..•

'

These compassion funds help
people !Ike missionary nurse
Myra Adamson who writes
from Nundu, Zaire : "A strip of
innertube serves as tourniquet
when giving I.V.s, and new
babies are wrapped in their
mothers' cloths (because she
has no baby blankets) ... I
sterilize a few supplies in a
large pressure cooker ... Have
started weekly classes for
Mrican nurses."
In anticipation of a new
hospital now under construction at Nundu, t~ a
medical clinics have been
established in the area. Each
clinic has only one missionary
nurse and no doctor, There is
no other medical facility for
the 100,000 people in the area.
Friends a.re lnvired to share ln
the compassion observance.

SELSUN
BLUE

32

er work stoppage by reachers

20% oH list

...

Free Methodists of North
America will join hands to help
hungry, sick and 'destitute
people during Compassion
Month In February. Through
the traditional outpouring of
compassion, ·families of the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church will give to relieve
physical suffering and dlatress
around the world , demonstrating Christ's concern for
the whole man .
Compassion ban.ks will be
placed in homes to receive
contributions during the
month. On CompassiOn Sunday, March 2, Pastor Floyd F.
Shook, will preach a compassion sermon and families
will present their banks. The
gifts will , support Free
Methodist doctocs and nurses
In twenty-five hospitals and
clinics overseas.

STEAM
VAPORIZER

Bargaining .
broken off

A consistent, well co-ordinated advertising campaign placed

1

Church to aid ne~dy

Qncinnati may ostracize smokers

PUT YOUR ·SALESMAN
AT EVERY DOORSTEP. ••

•

money bgally and wlllely,'"
9loemaker aald.
The Democrata received a
boost for their plan Wedni!Jiday
when the Ohio Education
A.ssoclatlon (OEA), rep~t.
ing some 90,000 public school
teachers, said It would be
quicker and fairer than
Rhodes' proposal.

~

want to."

••

operare, 107 more will have to
borrow by March I, and 37
others may need to borrow to
make It through the school
year, Still others, he aald, may
keep operating by using bond
retirement money ,
"We are saying to the school
districts, 'we have confidence
In you, it's up to you to Use this

bolll'ds of education would
receive f2 for each pupil under
their superviBion.
Rhodes came out with his
own plan Tuesday to sjlend
what he foresees as a $109
million cash excess as of next
June 30. The go\oernor called
for a one-shot bonus of t6'/5 for
each public school reacher,
$300 for ·professional school
employes and $375 for noncertified school employes,
payable next June,
llhodee To Veto
Sources have said Rhodes
will veto the Democratic WI.
House Minority Leader
Chlll'les F. Kurfess, R-Bowllng
Green, said he has aSked
Rhodes ty veto it, and tllat he
will renew his request.
Kurless ssld after Wednesday'ssessionhe will attempt to
line up his troops to sustain a
veto . Democrats, with 59
members, need at least one
Republican for the 60 vow
required to override a veto ln
the House. They have one more
than the required 20 in the
Senate.
Rep. Myrl H. Shoemaker,)).
Bourneville, chief sponsor of
the bill, said it would furnish
prompt stare aid to a num~ of
needy school districts.
Shoemaker said 83 school
dlatricts have already been
forced to borrow money to

Richards, with left to right, Barbara Whitlatch holding Eloca
Faulkner, Kathy Whitlatch with Rhonda Haning, and Angela
Triplett with Becky Mitchem. Advisor and instructor for the
group Is Mrs. Viola Haning.

· ~

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.House approves-$40 school bill

Henry Block has .
17 reasol,l.S why )Uti
should come to us
for income tax help.

YOUR
HEADQUARTERS

Jrd AVE.

.'

.
mandering are chlll'ged in the •
class action suit filed by a
Youngstown woman, who ~lao - ·
challenges population figure~ ..,. ·
used in the redlatrlcting.
::
All six bills pBBSed during the
week of Jan. 5 were enacted ln .
violation of the state ConStitution, according to the common ,.
pleas court suit filed by state
Sen. Michael J . Maloney, RClnclnnatl.
THEY'LL LEAVE TODAY
LOST ANGELES (UPil Elizabeth Taylor and her .•
current boyfriend, Henry
Wynberg , planned to leave
today for Switzerland . They
have been here for several
months, while Miss Taylor •
received ·treatment for a back
ailment and Wynberg stood
trial on grand theft charges for
rolling back the odometers on
autos when he was a used car
salesman. He pleaded no
contest and was fined $1,1100
and placed on three years
probation.

FOR ALL YOUR
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Don A.
Stephenson, Pomeroy; Eura
Largent, Syracuse; Bertha
Zamorano, Coolville; Robert
Lawrence, Middleport; Roy
Neece, Middleport; Charles
Schoolcraft, Ric hwood , W.
Va.; Kathryn Evans, Portland.
DISCHARGED - Jerry
Ferguson , Wesley Clark,
Barbara McMahon, Carla
Crisp, Earl Folmer, Jessie
Holtz .

. '

•

Brown in court

probe is launched

WASIUNGTON (UP!)- FBI
Director Clarence Kelley says
the agency has begun an in. rensive investigation into the
bombing of the State Department and a bungled explosion
attempt in Oakland, Calif.apparentiy by a radical underground group.
The
" Weather
Underground" claimed. responsibility for the Stare Department blast Wednesday morningandsaid it planted a bomb
found later in the ceiling of the
military induction center in
Oakland. There were no injuries.
In a statement Wednesday
night, Kelley did not dispute
the claim by the Left Wing
group, which denounced U.S.
military aid to South Vietnam
and Cambodia in anonymous
relephone calls and letters.
The Oakland bomb was
removed and exploded safely
by pollee. The Stare Department blast shatrered a rest• room and three adjoining of-

.

.,

,,,

12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday .. Jm1. :10. !!!",:,

5~9 ,

Opal Hupp 471 ..

Teem High Game -

-

Go Go

650 .

.Team · High

Series

Fearsome Four 181 2.

COOL•MIST

VICKS

VAPORIZER

VAPORUB.

llh GAL

OPERATES
12 HRS.

REG. '12.95

•a•s

13 OZ.· SMAll.
65'
·-

-~

·-

TRIAMINIC
-EXPECTORANT

lOOTHPASTE

8 o.z:

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Reg.65C

.,!

&lt; '· . .

c·REST
Large 3

43~

REG.

REG.'U8

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Intensiv~

&lt;;LEVELAND (UPI)- U.S.
fices shortly after 1 a.m. EST identities, continues its operawhen the building was virtually tions in a most clandestine
empty .
manner and receives the help
There were also a spate of . of an above-ground support
bomb U1reats in Washington appara tus allowing it to continWednesday, ca using the . ue its terroristic attacks
temporary ev.acuationS of the against the" government," said
Interior
and
Treasury Kelley .
Departments and search.es of
He did not elaborate on the
several other federal 'buildings. "a bove-g round support ::mNo explosives were found.
State Department operations
were back to normal today
although security had be.n
tightened with more policemen
in the halls. Electricity was
SANTO DOMI NGO. D.R.
restored to most of the offices (UP! l - A twin..,ngine charter
affected by the blast but two plane w1th 29 persons aboard
restrooms and three offices crashed today on takeoff from
were closed because of exten- the Las Americas Insive damage.
ternational Airport here and
Kelley said the "Weather ca ught fi re.
Underground" lias claimed
The pilot was killed but
responsibility for t9 politically a uthorities said the 27
motivated bombings in th e Canadian passengers and a
United States since 1970, in- stewardess survived .
cluding the Capitol buil~ing in
Airport authorities said the
1971 and the Pentagon in 1972, body of pilot Manuel LaMarche
"This underground, by utili- Rey was found when rescuers
zation of false and stolen pulled the passengers from the
shattered DC3. LaMarche was
llle owner of the one-plane
airline and his wife Lourde,
who survived, was serving
aboard as stewardess. Both
were Dominicans.
The plane, chartered by the
excursion group , crashed at
6:55a.m. (7 :55a.m. EST ) as it
was taking off for Port-AuNEW YORK (UP!) - The The prime rose to a record 12 Prince , Haiti.
aurging stock market, heart- per cent high in July and
Authorities said many of the
ened by a further reduction in remained there until October. trave l group were seriously
interest rates, opened higher The high rate has kept many injJ!!.ed. They were laken to
today In . continued heavy investors away fr om the two nea rby hospitals, one
trading on the New York Stock market.
operated by the Dominican Air
Exchange.
Early prices included :
Force .
The Dow Jones industrial
Steels- U.S. Steel 46 up "•;
Most of the members of the
average, which has gained Republic Steel 27% off ;&amp;; group were Canadians, but
more than 39 poin~o~ thls -week, , National Steel 37¥o off Yo .
some were believed to be U.S.
waa ahead 0.39 at 706.35 shortly
Aircrafts- Boeing 17 up \2; citizens, authorities said. They
after the opening. Advances McDonnell Douglas 10o/s up Is. did not identify the passengers
led declines, 203 to 75, among
Chemicals- DuPont 96% up irrunediately.
the 425 isaues crossing the tape. %; Monsanto 47% up v.; Union
The excursion group, which
Turnover amounted to Carbide 4&gt;1% ·up ¥s.
included a number of businesslii'Ound 720,00o shares. TurnOils-Kerr-McGee 65\2 up I ; men investigaling investment
over thus far this week has J. Ray McDermott 63 \2 up '1.; possibilities in this Caribbean
totaled more than 91,1100,1100 Natomas 37¥, up 12; Mobil42 \2 nation, had been here about
llhares, more than all of last up Yo; Atlantic Ri chfield 87¥. four days, authorities said.
week.
off %; California Stancjjlrd 25%
Witnesses said most of the
Before the market opened, off ¥•.
1
.
passengers were badly injured
Cbase Manhattan, the nation's
Drugs- Bristol-Myers 55% but that a few had only small
Utlrd largest bank, gave inves- up 1¥,; Merck 66% up 1; Pfizer scratches. The injured were
tors an added boost by 29% up l'l.
taken in rililitary and Red
lowering · the prime lending
Electronics and computersCross ambulances to the
rate It charges key corporate Fairchild Camera 3511! up Iv, ; nearby airbase of San Isidro
C\ISIOillers to 9 per cent from Honeywell '!I up %; Texas and the hospital Durio Con·
9"' per cent-the lowest level Instruments 25% up %.
treras.
for the prime since last sprinR.
Fire and civil defense bri-

).Ji&lt;rotus," but said the FBI had
been lookmg for eight
' Wea ther Underground"
members - including Bernadine Dohrn-for some time.
There was speculation that
the Stare Department bomb
might have been planred by a
·woman beeause it went off in a

_surge in trading

General William J. Brown to
stop all other legal action on a
congressional redistricting bill
which the state legislature
passed until the federal panel
can rule on the measure.
The motion by Brown was
filed in connection with a
federal court class action suit
challenging
the
conof
the
stitutionality
redistricting bill and a
separate suit in 'Franklin
County Common Pleas Court
challenging
the
con- ·
stitutionality
of
the
redistricting bill and five
others passed by the Ohio
General Assembly_
The redistricting bill creares
congressional dlatrlcts "much
closer to the ideal situation of
having all districts consist of
an absolutely equal number of

women's restroom.

Charter crashes

Market continues

District Court here Wednesday
was asked by Ohio Attorney

·

gades aided by air force
-helicopters carried out the
rescue operation.

HOSPITAL
NEWS
Holzer.Medical Ceoter
(Discharged, Jao. 29)
Leslie Alban , Debbi e
Baisden, Janie Bateman, Mrs.
David Belasco nd son, Edna A.
Brown, Charles Casto, Juanita
Clark, Carl Davis, Mary Dean,
Karen Filson, Julie Garrett,
Betty Gilmore, Christoph er
Hanning, Blodwyn Hill, Jay
J ohnson, William Joyce, Lois
Karakis , Ronald Kemper,
Kathy Martin, Mrs. Patrick
Maxwell and son, Linda McComas, Barbara McDade,
Carol Mercer, Neva Metz,
Mollie Parrish, Aaron Phillips,
Abn er
Pleasants, Lena
Pleasants, Opal Samples,
Clarence Siders, Morris
Souders, Albert Stephens,
Violet Stumbo, Melvin Supple,
John Weeks. Nancy White,
Paul Williams.
(Births)
Mr. and Mrs. Dale McManus, a daugher, Wellston.

persons," said Brown.
SWALLOWING THE HAND THAT FEEDS HER would
appear to be what Miss Sunbeam, an elephant-type resident
of the Grearer New Orleans Zoo, has 'in mind, Nothing so
unrefined, however . An atrendant with a snack of popcorn is
merely meeting the lady far more than halfway, to the envious inrerest of the hungry kibitzer at right.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Robert
Henprick, Letart; Osborne
Stewart, Point Plea5ant; Mrs.
Robert Garden , Leon; Mrs.
Dencil Roush, son, Point
Pleasant ; Mrs . Terry Workman, daughter, Glenwood;

Mrs . Wenda! Rossirer, Northup; Edward Grimes, Point
Pleasant; Lioille Ramsey ,
Cheshire; Sandra Smith,
Henderson; Harry Riffle ,
Leon; Judy Casrell, Northup;
and R. C. Hinkle, Point
Pleasant.

Political and racial gerry-

-

Reason 14. We're human, and once
in a great while we make a mistake.
But if our error means you must pay
additional tax, you pay only the tax.
We pay any interest or penalty .
We stand behind our work.

•

POMEROY ELEMENTARY SCHOOL CHEERI..IADERS - These Pomeroy girls will lead . the
cJiers for the Pomeroy Elementary basketball ream which
•
play on Saturday, Feb. B. They are front, Julie

·•

COLUMBUS (UPI)- Democratic state legislators intent ·
on providing a $40i&gt;er1JUpil increase in subsidies to Ohio's
113 public school districts have
received an unexpecred boost
toward their goal of enacting
· the propoaal early next month.
The $91 million supplemental
appropriations bill, tickered foc
Senate floor action early next
week; cleared the House
Wednesday on a strong 63-35
vote.
Moreover, the measure was
supporred by five Republicans,
enough to override a potential
veto by Republican Gov.
James A. Rhodes If he
disapproves .the bill next
month.
SeiiBW President Pro Tempore Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron,
said he expects the Senare
Finance Conunittee to give
quick approval to the measure
next Monday night, and the
· Democratic-controlled Senare
to send it to Rhodes next
, Tuesday or Wednesday.
Democrats wrote the appropriations bill to use up an
anticipated stat. surplus, at
the same time furnishing aid to
schools In monthly in·
stallinents in March, April,
May and Jtlne.
Joint vocational school dJa.
'J'Icts would receive an additional $30 per pupil,_and county

.....

..

REMODELING
NEEDS

cni:INNATI (UPI)- Clgaretre )makers would be requiret to sit apart from nonsmok.-s in restaurants, meetini"aiting rooms and
colle
classi'Ooms under a
pro
law llebig seriously
consited by health officials
here.
ThO: Cincinnati Board of
Healtl:~ln.ady has direcred its
staff : to begin preparing
reg~ns and procedures for
shlel g nonslJlokers from
exhal
cigarette and cigar
smoke.
The arrangement would be
similar to the airlines' practice
of requesting,!IIJIOkers to sit in
certain seats, only here the
health board is gearing up for
possible laws and penalties.

"

'

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

Valley lumber &amp; Supply Co.

.,
118 E. MAIN ST.
Open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mou.-&amp;lt."
Pb.II9U'IH
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

992-2709

MIDDLEPORT

Being debated are dlacomforts and possible health
hazards that smokers impose
on non-&lt;1111okers.
City health department staff·
er Ms. Addy Kochanowski
reconunended tougher regula1101111 because of the "known
dlacomfort" smoke causes others and "the potential harm to
health that met result."
Her report said enforcement
should include penalties
againSt both tlle smoker and
the facility responsible for the
controlled area.
Tbe report recommended
segregation of smokers in all
public meetings and waiting
rooms seating 40 or more
persons, in restaurants seating
mo~ than 100 and in all college

classrooms.
Tbe report also suggesred
that separation be "encouraged"
at
smaller
locations, including meeling
and wailing rooms and cafes
and taverns.
Existing smoking bans for
buses, elevators, theatres and
retail stores should be continued, the report added.
Ms. Kochanowski said "it
does appear" that exhaled
smoke may threaren the health
of non-&lt;1111okers.
But, board member Roger
Berger pointed out that "there
is no proof smoking is hazardous to healtll rather than just
· causlog dlacomfort."
Berger said the staff "should
give reasoris why goverrunent

DAYS

ought to be involved in
establishing these
regulations."
However, a motion to "begin
the process of promulgating"
the regulations was adopted
with only one dlasenting vote.
Actlng city health commissioner Dr. Arnold M. Leff said
there would be public hearings
before o.uyllllpiCfut:hl&amp;lu)D &amp;.ld
figured the process ''would
take a number of months."
There already have been
·some complaints from restaurant and tavern owners.
A restaurant association
spokeswoman said her group
was l'concerned" about . the .,

possible laws and a spokesman
for a tavern association said
such laws ''could be considered ·
dlacrlmination against people
being able to sit where they

COLUMBUS (UP)) -Anoth-

QUALITY FLEXSTEEL SOFAS,
CHAIRS, AND LOVE SEATS
If we don;t have what you want we will give you 4
week delivery on any special order - Hundreds of
beautiful fabrics to choose from.

in your hometbwn paper can reach more people, quicker
than your salesmen . Newspaper advertising motivates people ...

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

when people are motivated . ; . they buy! So, Mr.

;

Merchant, when you want to reach the most people, the
fastest way possible ... think newspaper. We
cover more of the people you want to reach, everyday.

.,
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DAILY SENTINEL

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PH. 992-2156
. ..ADVERTISING DEPf.

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...
••
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20%.

Vinyl cushioned back floor coverlnas. 12' wide,
Regular u.oo

·

SALE $2•50_Sq. Yd.

9xl2 VINYL RUGS
OZITE CARPET 12' WIDE
9x12 CANDY STRIPE .RUGS
HOLLYWOOD
TWIN SIZE .BEDS
·
Complele
.

-

58.88

.

PlATFORM ROCKERS
SoFA
BEDS
RECLINi::'RS

,.

s3.95Sq.
s48.00
s88.00
$58.00

full size manress.
BEDROOM SUITES.
Bed, Dresser, ,Chosi.·

sus.oo

fabrics.
,Sofa that converts into. a oomtorlable oed with a

,

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•

•

KINGS&amp; QUEENS
Jan . 7, 197S
Standing s

Team
No . 6

Felrsome Four

•
•
-~

14

·2

HJ
8
2

6
8

12

Jack's Club
Go Go
No .2

4

14

No . 1 .
~
2 u
High Ind . Game - Men :'Ray
Roach 198, Moses Norman 19&lt;1 ;
Women : Nancy Dobbins 168 , Jo
Ann Ward 163.
H lgh Series M en : Ray
Roach 515, Bill Hatfield 503;
Women : Jo Ann ward &lt;152, Opal
H upp &lt;144 .
ieam High Game - Jack's

Club 627.
Team High Series - Jack's
Club 1796 .
Kj NG·$&amp; QUEENS
, Jan. 21 , 1975
Standings

Team

THE TIME IS N9Wl

a

Fearsome. Four
No . 6

20
)4

10

Go Go

1,0

u

No . 2
iD's

10 1~
8 16

Jack's Club

10 ·14

H igh Ind . Game - Men : B iU
Hatfie"ld 2&lt;14, Bill Hatfield 223 ;
Women : .D onna McFarland
198, Oonna , Mc Farland 190~
H i gh Series ~- Men : B ill
Hatfield UJ, Ray Roach 556;

FU~NITUR. E

Women : Donna McFarland

. ~IDDLEPORT, OHIO .

..

L.--------..;.,-----~~------------'.

AN.TI-DANDRUFF
SHAMPOo

~:~~ $595

~:~~·

FRIDAY AND

$}79

~====~~S=M~U~RD~M--~~~==~
VICK'S
.NYQUIL

VICKS REG.
79'
34~
INHALERS
SYLVANIA
LIGHT BULBS

REG.

1.69

1

LISTERINE

oz.$ 49

25. 40•.

2.65

1

PLASTIC BABY
PANTS

CONTAC
COLD
CAPSULES

REG. 1139

REG. s1.79 .

DAYTIME 30's
REG. 12.49
EXTRA ABSORBENT

· 49~

•1••

DAYTIME 24's REG. 12.39

CHARM IN

BOUNff TOWELS

TYLENOL

4 ROU PKG.
REG. 7'1

REG. 59'

PUFFS 200's

LIQUID P~IN
RELIEVER
1.95 .

39e

2111

OVERNIGHT 12's

PU.LL.ON
REG; 4/'1.25

REG;

REG. '1.79

PAMPERS

WASHABLE

FOR CHILDREN

12 Ol

2·. .

REG.

60, 75.
100 WATT

REG.

MAALOX

REG. 59'
1

$_12.5

~ •

McKESSON lOO's
5 GRAIN ASPIRIN

LANES

You'll find a great se,iedion of fine ' furrliture. ap~liances and floor
coverings at very special low prices- Terms to sutt you and ,
FREE DE.L IVEIO'I

BAKER

here is possible if the latest
wage offer by the Columbus
Board uf Education is rejeckd,
the chief negotiator for the
5,000-member Columbus
Education Association said
Wednesdey.
Meetings between the board
and the CEA were adjourned
indefinitely by a federal
mediator after two hours of .
bargaining Wednesday.
· Tbe CEA's top negotiator,
Jack Burgess, said members
will meet here Sunday. The
CEA hopes to present the
board's latest pay package for
a membership vote, he said.
A 6 per cent immediate increase, to he ra.tsed to 8 per
cent in Seprember if funds are
available, is called for in the
larest salary offer.
Teachers here have been
under a Franklin County
Conunon Pleas Court back-towork order for over three
weeks.
POMEROY BOWLI .NG

~78.00

SfiS.OO
$188.00

Blg-Comtorl~ble-Nice

Ph GAU.ON

1

.Name brand appliances a!_ great discounts.
Frigidaire-Admiral-Speed Queen-HooVer-Roper Ranges

•
••
••
••

THE

LAMPS
TABLES .
MIRRORS
PICJURES
WAll.
PlAQUES

OFF

-·..•

'

These compassion funds help
people !Ike missionary nurse
Myra Adamson who writes
from Nundu, Zaire : "A strip of
innertube serves as tourniquet
when giving I.V.s, and new
babies are wrapped in their
mothers' cloths (because she
has no baby blankets) ... I
sterilize a few supplies in a
large pressure cooker ... Have
started weekly classes for
Mrican nurses."
In anticipation of a new
hospital now under construction at Nundu, t~ a
medical clinics have been
established in the area. Each
clinic has only one missionary
nurse and no doctor, There is
no other medical facility for
the 100,000 people in the area.
Friends a.re lnvired to share ln
the compassion observance.

SELSUN
BLUE

32

er work stoppage by reachers

20% oH list

...

Free Methodists of North
America will join hands to help
hungry, sick and 'destitute
people during Compassion
Month In February. Through
the traditional outpouring of
compassion, ·families of the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church will give to relieve
physical suffering and dlatress
around the world , demonstrating Christ's concern for
the whole man .
Compassion ban.ks will be
placed in homes to receive
contributions during the
month. On CompassiOn Sunday, March 2, Pastor Floyd F.
Shook, will preach a compassion sermon and families
will present their banks. The
gifts will , support Free
Methodist doctocs and nurses
In twenty-five hospitals and
clinics overseas.

STEAM
VAPORIZER

Bargaining .
broken off

A consistent, well co-ordinated advertising campaign placed

1

Church to aid ne~dy

Qncinnati may ostracize smokers

PUT YOUR ·SALESMAN
AT EVERY DOORSTEP. ••

•

money bgally and wlllely,'"
9loemaker aald.
The Democrata received a
boost for their plan Wedni!Jiday
when the Ohio Education
A.ssoclatlon (OEA), rep~t.
ing some 90,000 public school
teachers, said It would be
quicker and fairer than
Rhodes' proposal.

~

want to."

••

operare, 107 more will have to
borrow by March I, and 37
others may need to borrow to
make It through the school
year, Still others, he aald, may
keep operating by using bond
retirement money ,
"We are saying to the school
districts, 'we have confidence
In you, it's up to you to Use this

bolll'ds of education would
receive f2 for each pupil under
their superviBion.
Rhodes came out with his
own plan Tuesday to sjlend
what he foresees as a $109
million cash excess as of next
June 30. The go\oernor called
for a one-shot bonus of t6'/5 for
each public school reacher,
$300 for ·professional school
employes and $375 for noncertified school employes,
payable next June,
llhodee To Veto
Sources have said Rhodes
will veto the Democratic WI.
House Minority Leader
Chlll'les F. Kurfess, R-Bowllng
Green, said he has aSked
Rhodes ty veto it, and tllat he
will renew his request.
Kurless ssld after Wednesday'ssessionhe will attempt to
line up his troops to sustain a
veto . Democrats, with 59
members, need at least one
Republican for the 60 vow
required to override a veto ln
the House. They have one more
than the required 20 in the
Senate.
Rep. Myrl H. Shoemaker,)).
Bourneville, chief sponsor of
the bill, said it would furnish
prompt stare aid to a num~ of
needy school districts.
Shoemaker said 83 school
dlatricts have already been
forced to borrow money to

Richards, with left to right, Barbara Whitlatch holding Eloca
Faulkner, Kathy Whitlatch with Rhonda Haning, and Angela
Triplett with Becky Mitchem. Advisor and instructor for the
group Is Mrs. Viola Haning.

· ~

•

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.House approves-$40 school bill

Henry Block has .
17 reasol,l.S why )Uti
should come to us
for income tax help.

YOUR
HEADQUARTERS

Jrd AVE.

.'

.
mandering are chlll'ged in the •
class action suit filed by a
Youngstown woman, who ~lao - ·
challenges population figure~ ..,. ·
used in the redlatrlcting.
::
All six bills pBBSed during the
week of Jan. 5 were enacted ln .
violation of the state ConStitution, according to the common ,.
pleas court suit filed by state
Sen. Michael J . Maloney, RClnclnnatl.
THEY'LL LEAVE TODAY
LOST ANGELES (UPil Elizabeth Taylor and her .•
current boyfriend, Henry
Wynberg , planned to leave
today for Switzerland . They
have been here for several
months, while Miss Taylor •
received ·treatment for a back
ailment and Wynberg stood
trial on grand theft charges for
rolling back the odometers on
autos when he was a used car
salesman. He pleaded no
contest and was fined $1,1100
and placed on three years
probation.

FOR ALL YOUR
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Don A.
Stephenson, Pomeroy; Eura
Largent, Syracuse; Bertha
Zamorano, Coolville; Robert
Lawrence, Middleport; Roy
Neece, Middleport; Charles
Schoolcraft, Ric hwood , W.
Va.; Kathryn Evans, Portland.
DISCHARGED - Jerry
Ferguson , Wesley Clark,
Barbara McMahon, Carla
Crisp, Earl Folmer, Jessie
Holtz .

. '

•

Brown in court

probe is launched

WASIUNGTON (UP!)- FBI
Director Clarence Kelley says
the agency has begun an in. rensive investigation into the
bombing of the State Department and a bungled explosion
attempt in Oakland, Calif.apparentiy by a radical underground group.
The
" Weather
Underground" claimed. responsibility for the Stare Department blast Wednesday morningandsaid it planted a bomb
found later in the ceiling of the
military induction center in
Oakland. There were no injuries.
In a statement Wednesday
night, Kelley did not dispute
the claim by the Left Wing
group, which denounced U.S.
military aid to South Vietnam
and Cambodia in anonymous
relephone calls and letters.
The Oakland bomb was
removed and exploded safely
by pollee. The Stare Department blast shatrered a rest• room and three adjoining of-

.

.,

,,,

12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday .. Jm1. :10. !!!",:,

5~9 ,

Opal Hupp 471 ..

Teem High Game -

-

Go Go

650 .

.Team · High

Series

Fearsome Four 181 2.

COOL•MIST

VICKS

VAPORIZER

VAPORUB.

llh GAL

OPERATES
12 HRS.

REG. '12.95

•a•s

13 OZ.· SMAll.
65'
·-

-~

·-

TRIAMINIC
-EXPECTORANT

lOOTHPASTE

8 o.z:

OL

Reg.65C

.,!

&lt; '· . .

c·REST
Large 3

43~

REG.

REG.'U8

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3.9e

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15 - The Daily Sentinel •M'ddl
· 0., Thw-sday, Jan. 30,
t eport-Pomeroy,

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Arran ge ments to order
tre es
and
crabapp le
evergreens to be used at the
LeUJ rt Falls cemetery civic
plan ting were made during a
meeting Monday night at the
Bend 0 ' the Riv er Garden Club
at the home of Mrs. Bert

Rap :
I've heard of writing in a changed date on a wedding invitation, but hi~ wins the brass ring: A couple split 'up after invitations were printed. The girl fell in love with another guy.
Ratber than waste all that money, she simply crossed out the
first man 's name and penned in the second, si nce she kept the
same date, same church , etc.
What do you think of THA P - BEATS ALL

Grimm .

The cemetery proj,·cl is a
continuance of the Sears Civic

Improvement Prog ram sUJrled
two years ago. Mrs. W. 0.

B.A. :
If the new fiance doesn't mind , why should we ' Do you
suppose he got the first engagement ring at a discount '! -

Barnitl is chairwoman and
contributions for the trees are
being accepted by her.
Read at the meeting conducted by Mrs. Wilson Carpenter was a letter announcing
the Meigs Musewn is available
lor club meetings. Also read
was a letter from the Meigs
MenU,! Retardation Citizens
Committee asking that a
representative be·sen t Feb. 6 to
a meeting at the Meigs Coun ty
court house .
Mrs . Edward Simpson,
Green Thumb Notes chairwoman, announced that Mrs .
Glenn West will pj;epare the
column for March . Mrs.
Grimm, the county contact

HELEN

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ru

bet these invitations won't be tossed out, as most are .
Might be nice to know that people are saving them as curiosity
pieces ... SUE

+++
Dear Helen and Sue :
"Clean" who said she didn 't want to smoke grass because it
"might pollute her brain" implied dopers push straights to start
smoking. Uh-uh ! !
Dopers don 't push, if they're doing it to have a good tim,e and
really enjoy grass. The people who smoke because everybody
else does , or to impress people by being "in," are the ones who
won't take "No" for an answer. - ONE OF THE FORMER

THREE YEARS OLD Stacey Rebecca Butcher.
daughter of Ri ck and Yv onne

But che r , Reedsville,
celebrated her third birthday , Jan. 4. A party wa s
given in her honor at the
home of her parents . The
Gaddis family , Bill, Jacque,
Denise, Mark , Kristi and
Nancy. helped celebrate the
event. A week earlier while
visiting Stace y's grandmother in Cleveland, her

Dear OOF:
How can an outsider tell tbe difference' To her, a doper Is a
doper, is a doper, and if even two or three push her to try grass, it
could seem like "everyone. " - HELEN

birthday
wa s
also
ce lebrated. Attending th e

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home Was Louis, Carl and
Amy Butcher.

ONE OF THE FORMER :
It isn't VERBAL pushing that gets to a nousmoker, it's the
feeling of aloneness that "polite respect" of her wishes brings.
I still say, the easiest way to avoid dope is to bow out of the
dope scene. - SUE

party at her grandmother's

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DearS.:
Perhaps we don 't know the who!~ story. Having a baby
doesn't indicate a 14-year-&lt;&gt;ld is ready lor marriage. During
tl)ese next few months, prove you can handle an' adult
relationship, and THEN maybe yow- mother will listen to ~r­
suasion. - HELEN
THURSDAY
TRUSTEE MEETING,
Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society, 7:30p.m. at
Meigs Museum.
SATURDAY
FISH FRY by Middleport
Fire Department, starting
11 :30 a.m. at Middleport Fire
House; sandwiches or dinners.

THURSDAY
PRECEPTOR Beta Beta
Sorority, meets at 7:45p.m. at
the hom~ of Mrs. Mary
Pickens.
FRIDAY
SOUP Supper 3:30 to 6:30
p.m. at Southern High School
sponsored by the Racine ER
Squad.

SUNDAY
MEETING at 4 p. m. at
Royal Crown garage on North
Second Ave., Middleport, to
organize girls • softball teams.
All interested persons urged to
attend.

clubs have been scheduled for
programs on WMPO Radio and
that the February one will be

presented by Mrs. Reid Young the therapeutic va lue of
of the Chester Garden Club.
examining buds and branches
For roll call members gave in a garden walk and working
ga rden- resolutions . The in the soil and with plants when
ecology news by Mrs. Clifford weather permits.
Morris was on the use of salt on
Natw-e can bring peace of
snow and ice. She said care mind, said Mrs. Kuhn, who
should be used to get the salt commented on the variety of
only where it is needed because forms and shapes which c~n be
it injures plant life. Mrs. found in a walk through the
Morris said that sn!)w is an woods. To conclude her
exce llent mulch ·because program , Mrs. Kuhn read a
nitrogen in the snow, when history of the daffodil and also
dissolved, goes into the plan t. gave a humorous reading on
it was her suggestion that the daisy .
Christmas tree branches be
Mrs. Andrew Cross won the
placed beneath shrubbery over traveling prize. Next meeting
the snow to slow the melting will be hosted by Mrs. James
process.
Diehl with Mrs. Simpson to give
For devotions Mrs. Edward the program .
Simpson gave scripture and
Mrs. Grimm served refreshthen concluded with the ments from a table covered
thought that "somtthing is with a gold cloth and centered
wror.;; with a man 's theology if with an arrangement of dried
it doesn't include ecology ". flowers.
Mrs. Ralph Webb read a poem.
On display at the meeting
SPEAKER COMING
was an all·white arrangement,
Dick Smith from "His Place
"Winter Wonderland", by Mrs. Farms" will spea k at the
Carpenter.
Pomeroy Church of Christ at
Mrs . Robert Kuhn presented 7:30p . m. Sunday. "His Place
the program using "Gardening Farms " is a place where boys
is Therapeudic" as her theme . who have been drug addicts go
She said that arranging flowers in an attempt to straighten up
for show or just for one's own their Jives. Smith will be
home and pleasure can be showing a !lim strip of the
therapeudic. She also spoke of location.

.POLLY'S POINTERS .

Rap:
I'm 14, engaged and pregnant: My Mom approves of my
boyfriend and Jets him live with us , but she doesn't want me to
get married. He's paying the doctor and hospita,l bills as he's out
of school and has a job . She says I can keep the baby .
His parents will sign for him, but Mom won't sign for me.
We're really in Jove. What's with her, and how can we persuade
ber? - S. J ..
DearS.:
Evidently yow- mother doesn't mind being an Ulegitlmate
grandma. Or maybe she prefers that to the prospect of having a
divorced , 10-year-&lt;&gt;ld daughter. However, she may change her
mind. Wait a few months and try persuasion again. SUE

chairwoman, advised that

Does it take two to
hem a skirt?

It can easily be made shorter or

longer by turning -a hem up or
down with the orig\nal hemline
crease ns a guide. Anybody
have something better to pass
on'! - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Pe.eve concerns finding
something that wiii clean
water spots off the aluminum
stripping on shower doors. -

HELEN .

DEAR HELEN - I lind a
soap-filled steel wool pad does

NEW YORK (uP! ) _ When
'" Bettina Parker negotiates a
deal between the United States
and the Soviet Union, it sticks.
.......
Thl.s makes her record better
• than that of the diplomats.
: '
Ms. Parker is an emissary
! ' all right, but for trade betwee~
~
.the two great powers not a
diplomatic representative. She
works closely. however, with
the U.S. State and Conunerce
• Departments.
Since 1966, this handsome
blonde businesswoman has divided her time between her
adopted United States (she was
born in Holland ) and the Soviet
Union to bring together the
various ministries that seek
Western
products . and
technology and U.S. compimies
that have them to sell.
She is one of the few women
in the world in this highly
specialized field.
Said Ms. Parker, "Once they
sign a contract, they fulfill it to
: the letter." Sbe was talking
• about purchase agreements
• between various ministries in
• the Soviet and private U.S.
• companies.
.,
The recent Soviet decision
not to implement a 1972 trade
, agreement, made at the diplom~tic level during the
" Nixon administration, is
., another matter ~ worry for
:~ •. President Ford and Secretary
of State Kissinger among
others. It never was ratified
formally.
Of the action, Ms. Parker
said, "I think what they want to
buy, they will. I'd rather see
those sales come here (to the
United . States) than go elsewhere." Almost every Western
country is doing business with
Russia, ahe said, so the U.S.
has strong competition.
She thought perhaps the
thing to do now was "start
from scratch", working toward
a new diplomatic accord.
I talked with Ms. Parker
ahortly after she had tow-ed the
. country with 10 Soviet experts
in food technology and nutri-

fifoilA.~IiDAYSJ
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

BARGAINS
ALL OVER THE
STORE I

Concluding Our
January Clearance
Sale With Bargains
On Items Too Numerous
To Mention

Middleport' Dept.
Store
Middle ort, Ohio

~ ~our dollar doesn't go

BY POLLY CRMIER

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEi\R POLLY - ·! would
like to know if anyone has
found a way to mark a hem in a
dress or skirt without the help .
of anyone else . Thank you. MRS. H.L.C.
DEAl! MRS. H.L.C. - I
appreciate your problem. It is
one most of us who sew face at
one time or another. When
making a garment cut the
bottom right on the cutting line
of the pattern, turn up and pin.
Then ask a neighbor to check
its evenness and make any
needed pinned corrections. II a
readymade dress hangs evenly .

Tuesday guest of Mr. and Mrs.
Barnhart was Mrs. Lulu
Johnson, Parkersbw-g, W. Va.
Mrs. Johnson also visited Mrs.
Nettie Meeks at the Syracuse
Nw-sing Home.

VISIT FRIENDS
M~. and Mrs . 1Waid Gorby,
London, visited over the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
William
Barnhart
and
daughter, Elain, Pomeroy .

Trees to adqrn cemetery

B. :

Trade~r binds deals .

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il r;m;~?:.i~~;

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as far nowadays,
George!

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-and we're doing
something about itthat's why nobody
can afford to miss

a great job In removing even

builtup soap scum or hard
water deposits from aluminum
strips around sbower doors.
Wipe off with a rag wet with
clear water and then polish
with a dry one. - pOLLY.
DEAR POLLY - Since
mayonnaise and salad dressing
have just about doubled in
price I make them go fw-ther,
when making fruit salad, by
thinning with bottled lemon
juice. Also l find any other fruit
juices I may have in the
refrigerator work just as well
for the thinning when it is to be
used for a fruit salad. This adds
to the flavor of the salad and
decreases the caloric content.
fl also saves on money for
mayonnaise or salad dressing.
- FRANCES.
DEAR POLLY - Those
who make macrame will find
empty holders that bolts of
material are wrapped on are
perfect lor pinning one's work
to. Most stores are happy to
give them to you. They just
throw them away. - MARIE

tion.
The delegation, headed by
the vice minister for meat and
dairy, wanted to study tech'
niques in producing infant
foods and formulas and how
:. 'they. could be used in

INGELS

, Carpeting contributions were
. made during a meeting of the
' Loyal Bereans Class of the
. Middleport Church of Christ
Tuesday night.
The class cont.iJi.uted toward
carpeting cost for the nw-sery
and for the slairs and hall
leading to the Homebuilders '
classroom.
Mrs. Kathryn Ervin presided
at the meeting with Mrs. Mary

lor any 3/3 size
headboard (wood

on~)

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maple, walnut, wMe.
W~h purchase of
any sleep set.

Former pastor

H.

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

SAVE 1.32!
All Season
Windshield
Washer
Regulsr

2.65
W.A.
Value!

33

Gal.

2T9772

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Just pour 11 into washer
reSftrvoir ... no mixing. necessary. All season - won'l
freeze. Priced low now!

:;:

1.26 Savings!

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DEAR POLLY- To keep
warmer at night when the
thermostat is kept lower use
sheet biankts as bottom sheets
and the bed is warm when one
crawls in. I never believed they
could add so · much warmth
until I tried them. - YVONNE.
DEAR POLLY - My
Pointer is a way to hold hose up
for those folks who are not able
to wear clothes tight around
th e stomach, a girdle or even
pantyhose. Cut off an old slip,
preferably cotton but nothing
that stretches, so it corns just
below the hips. Have a good
wide hem at th bottom and buy
garte.rs to sew on to the hem. 1
sewed mine on the outside of
the slip because my skin is
tender. l use just tWo garters in
front and wear stretch hose.
They stay up well and do not
have to be pulled tight. It a
mini-slip is used one does not
have to cut off so much. Older
women might prefer the builtup slip~. - A.M.M .
.

for any Zenith
AM clock
radio with
any Zenith TV.

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SA205-.U16

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SAVEl Furnace Fl.lters
Regu/sr
Value~

up

to 1.0~!

.12 VOLT

69~

3 Yr. Wananty

·~~ ..$=2. . 5_. ~=.!~~hha~.ng

.e..

·L~X~k

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for any accent
chair up to '50
with purchase of

WEST·
E
RN
AUTO
. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO · '

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for
more sale
items in .
our mail
circular.

J.

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Meinhart, Mrs. Ciyda Aliensworth, Mrs. Louise McElhinny,
. Mrs. Walter Crooks, and Mrs.
Donna Russell being reported
iii.

Named to take care of
communion elements in
February were Mrs. Ervin,
Mrs. Martha Haggerty. Mrs .
Grace Hawley, Mrs . Bernaiine
Kelly, Mrs . Bessie Ashley were
appointed to the hostess
committee for February, with
Mrs. Martha Childs, Mrs.
Gertrude Greenlee , and Mrs.
Ervin being named for March.
To open the meeting Mrs.
Ervin gave scriplw-e from
Romans, Mrs. Childs had
prayer , and Mrs. Lena
McKinley gave a poem by
Helen Steiner Rice.
The meeting Closed with a
poem, "Why Should He Die for
Such As I" by Mrs. Ervin and
prayer. Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Ervin, Mrs.
McKinley, Mrs. Regina Swi~t.
Mrs . Childs and Mrs. Clyda
Allensworth.

RELATIYE ARRIVES
Mrs. Alma Thompson ,
Columbus, is in Pomeroy
visiting her. brother, Edward
Hoeflich, and other relatives.

By Janel Maggicd
The French Art Co lon y
cordiaiiy mvites the public to
come and meet Annamary
Bierly, painter , printmaker

and sculptor and view her work
at a reception this evening

from 8 to 10 at Riverby,
Gallipolis.
Presently ·artist-in-residence
in the Oak Hill Community,
Annamary Bierly . is truly a
versatile artist who is not
limited to any one medium in
her artistic ventures. It is

precisely this lack of retice nce
to explore new rheans of expression which give her the
and originality so

vi~ality

evident in her work. She meets
each new technical chalienger
he ad-on and masters the
technique, thereby freeing

for additional
chair .with
purchase of
any 5•pc., 7-pc.
or 9-pc. dinette

which can only come forth
when technique is no longer the
primary concern.
She holds a Master of Fine
Arts Degree from the Ohio
State University, Bachelor of
Fine Arts Degree from Wright
SU,te University , has completed the Hobart Welding
School for Sculptors, studied
with David Dreisbach, Moishe
Smith, Andrew Rush, Sidney
Chafetz and Richard Hunt. She
has shown extensively and has
works in the collections of the
Ohio State University, the
University of Arizona, IBM
Corporation, W. C. Downey Co.
and other corporate, as well as
numerous private, collections.
Among her larger commissioned works is a l2x9 foot
welded aluminum sculpture
I Intern a tiona! Harvester
Employee Credit Union. )
She studied printmaking in
Japan while living in Kyoto in
1970. Upon receipt of a large
dona lion of books from the
International House of Japan,
Wittenberg University commissioned her to design a bookplate for the collection which

BIRTHDAY MARKED
TUPPERS PLAINS - Mrs .
Betty Cheyalier, Tuppers
Plains, en tertained Sunday
with a dinner party in observance of the birthday anniversary of her son, Rodney .
Attending were Mr. and Mrs .
Wayne Beal, Kingsbw-y ; Miss
Frances Hawk, Wilbur Dean
and Mr. and Mrs. Kirk
Chevalier, Chesler.

MONDAY
SALEM CENTER PTA 7:30
p. m. Foimder's Day program
by Miss Triplett's third grade ·
students. Past presidents will
be recognized 8!Ki nominating
committee announced.
POMEROY CHAPTER !116,
Order Qf the Eastern Star, 7:45
p. m. at the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple, instead of TUesday
nig~t due 1o meeting conflicts.

CASH AND CARRY

Make your, dollar
go all the way in the
most fantastic sale of the year, Friday and Saturday only, at-

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INGELS
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FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT'·
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was named the Matswnato
Co lle cti on in honor of
Shigeharu Mats umato.
Annamary is cu rren tly
represented by galieries in
Ohio, Georgia and Florida.
co ntinue
Exhibit will
throu ghou t the month or
February at usual gallery
hours, !0 a. m . to 3 p. m.
Tuesdays and Thursdays and I
to 5, Salw-days and Sundays.
Special viewings can be
arranged at other times by
calling 446-0547. Monitors for
this weekend are, Salw-day:
Mrs . Gilbert Bush, Sr .• Mrs.
Janice SUJpleton, Mrs. Roy
Briggs, and Mrs. Emil Janko.
Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. David
Wickline and Mr. and Mrs. Joe

Sewing club
plans year
Fund raising projects for the
year were outlined by Mrs.
Pandora Coliins, ways and
means comm ittee chairwoman , at the recent meeting
of the Sew-Rile Sewing Clu~ at
the hom e of Mrs. Carolyn
McDaniel.
Members were asked to UJke
homemade valentines to the
Feb. 5 meeting . A silent auction will also be held at one of
the February meetings. Mrs.
Lucy White will be hostess for
the next meeting , at the home
of Mrs . Flo Strickland.
Mrs. Ann Browning presided
at the meeting with Mrs. Betty
Wehrun g givi ng the treasw-er's
report, and Mrs. Evelyn
Gilmore, the sec retary's
report. Games were played
and others attending were Mrs.
Lenora McKnight and Mrs.
Shirley Baity .

1 GROUP

HOUSE SLIPPERS
VALUES

MEN'S SHOES

'

VALUES

rof

117.99

PR.

MEN'S SHOES

WOMEN'S

Tennis Shoes

REG. STOCK

AU DRESS

From Reg. Stock

VALUES
TO
1
17.99

OFF

RUBBER BOOTS
lined &amp; Unlined

OFF

...~ i~.\R:r$
QUILTi~,R~:~~NTS

c

each

1 WINDOW TOP
QUALITY FABRICL98'
1 WINDOW
OOUBLEKNIT 'h PRICE
POLY-COTTON KNITS
(NEW) IDEAL FOR
SUMMER ----12.49
STRETCH TERRY
so:·__1.1.98

OFF

OFF

heritage house
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

FRIDAY &amp;SATURDAY
I LOT LADIES'
MOJUD HOSE, PANTY .HOSE
AND OPAQUE HOSE
Reg. $3.00 Value .
D. DAYS-Sl.OO
Reg . $1.00 Hose and Panty Hose
are 2 pair for $1.00

LADIES COTTON DRESSE S
Values to $12 .00
D. DAYS- $5 .00 Each

I Table of Ladies'
SKIRTS, SLACKS, FUR HATS,
SCARFS
Values to $13.00
D. DAYS-$3.00 Each

LADIES' CAR COATS
REDUCEDJO PCT.

LADIES' WINTER COATS
(6.0nly)

LADIES' DR ESSES
112 PRICE

1 size 20, 1 size 12~ 3 size 16's .

Reg. 580.00 to SIOO.OO
D. DA YS-$40.00 To $50.00

LADIES'
PANT SUITS

~:":.:7t::::"::"::::;"::jReduced From 30 Pet. to so

Pet.

ri~IA.Jn,v items reduced

the store
~~::::::=~~~~!Jto~ds~o~:P:ctj~:::::::::::::::::::::
men women.

f

DOLLAR DAYS
t 'LOT MEN'S
CORDUROY PANTS
Reg. S9.00toS15.00
D. DAY5-S6.30toS10.50
I LOT MEN'S
Long Sleeve Colored
DRESS SHtR:rS
Reg. S6.oo to $13.00
D. DA Y5-S3.00 fO $6.50
Men's Permanent Press
WORK PANTS
Sizes 29 to 44
Reg. 58.95
D. DAY5-SS.OO a pair.
Men's Flannel

WORK SHIRTS

Sizes Large &amp; X-Large
Reg. S7 .00 to $7.50
D. DA Y5-S4.00 Each

111

&amp;

1 LOT KNIT SHIRTS
&amp; SLEEVELESS
SWEATERS
If&gt; PRICE
1 Lot Men's

WHITE SHIRTS
~ong Sleeve
Reg. S4.00toS7.00
D. DA Y5-S2 .00 to $3.50
Packages of 3
Boys jVhite
T-SHlRTS&amp; BRIEFS
Reg .,S2.6l
D. DAYS S2.00
Sizes Bto 18

Men's Leather

JACKETS
~Btueonry

Sizes 40-42,44
Was SlJO to 5165.00
Now 565.00 to 582.50

1 Lot Men's Corduroy
SPORT COATS
Reg. S25.00
D. DAY5-SI2.SO
1 Table of Assorted Items
for Both Men and Women.
Values to $5.95
D. DAYS 51.00 Each

':'(It

~·•Houseof
Fabrics"

MASON,

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•'

The onion was so va lued in
the ancient world that Egyptians supposedly took an oath
with their right hand resting on
an onion.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
•

'/

reading course is off,ered free

of charge by the Me igs Local
School District Teachers Corps
Program.

Women 's
SHOES (14 pr . only)

DINGO
BOOTS

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School, the Meigs Seni or High
School and the Meigs Junior
High School. All class sess i on ~
are informa l and recreation is
provided for children of participan ts from four to 14. The

1 Group

TO
sg_g9

HOST CHILDREN
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mitch, ·
Whee ling, W. Va., spent the
weekend in Middleport visiting
their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Perry Milch and John Seines.

COTTON THREAD

co.

WOMEN'S
(Name Brandl

charge.

.10' INCH

MATERIALS

The second of a six session

course on rellding for adults so
that they can assist their
children in raising their
reading level will be held from
6:30 to 8 this eveniog at four
centers.
·
All adults are invited to
attend tonight's session at the
Rutland Elementary School,
the Harrisonville Elementary

Snyder . There is no admission

~

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
773-5554

Adults invited to readers meet

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

............................. .:... ..... - r:;:;;;;;t~ni-1

AND6111/EI

for matching
night stand
·, with· purchase
of any bedroom
ensembie

Mrs. Betty Hayes.
.A meeting for all advocates
and proteges is being planned
by Mrs. Eason in. February.

that expression

STUDS-

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herself for

Cathy Ctunmings, Mrs. Mary
Seaman, Nora Eason, Tom
Hoffner and Mary Skinner,
coordinator. Unable to attend
were Mrs. Gene Lyons .and

/
nnamary B.zeny

A
4-'tt"st
.
t
.
ht
ingw:~ :~~~:;:~~;~;
sesston ontg

()(J·IT-YfJII/IIlU

or sleeper-sofa

any living room
~uite or sectional

BAnERY

BUY TWO-GET 3rd

fijQJ,j

79
for any COCiktail
table up to .'79
with purchase of
Sdfa, loveseat
1

MEMB,ERS OF
Drew
Webster Post 39 American
Legion, Pomeroy, to meet, in a
body, to attend services at
Pomeroy United Methodist
Chw-ch. Members are to meet
at 10:25 a. m.

~!!$
.. ... ifll"· ··
. ·

replacemenl

A

IIEillll.llllli~---·~ .....v

Sunday

Fuel UM Anii-Fr 1' M

and stability, re-

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ICalendar

. SAVE 40c,HOW

5.25

for any fashion
lamp up to •40 t
with purchase of
any three
accent tables

Ric Morrison, former pastor
of the Zion Chw-ch of Christ in
Meigs County, and his wife,
Roberta, Ronceverte, W. Va. ,
have been the guests this week
of Mr. and Mrs. Earie Wood
and son, Steven, Middleport.
Monday night Mr. and Mrs.
Wood entertained with a pizza
· party. Other guests were Jeff
Ranson, pastor of the Bradford
Church of Christ, and Mrs.
Ranson and their son, Jeremy.
Monday afternoon the
Morrisons visited Mrs. Ronnie
Riffle, Neva and Paul
McElroy, Mrs. John Mw-phy,
Gene Thompson and their
families .' They retw-ned to
Ronceverte Wednesda~.

for any lamp
table up to '79
with purchase
of any pair
of accent chairs

1sOci'~

~-

visits in area

,,

,,

Wizard Shock
Absorbers

Moscow May 22-June 5.
The Parker business was a
natw-al outgrowth of her early
training. Her father was a fish
broker in Holland, wbere she
said "the gross national pr&lt;&gt;duct is trade. The Dutch before
the war had lots of dealings
with the Russians. "
She worked, postwar, for a
chemical company in her
homeland but eventually fulfilled a "dream to come to the
United States to study."

Bereans help buy carpet
.

The Personal Advocacy
A _rilm was shown on,
Committee ·and participnnts "Something Shared." This is a
me t at the Meigs Community film showing ways advocates
Mental Health Cen ter for ll1e1r work with re tarded and
second
training
sessio n cerebral palsy people.
Tuesday nig ht.
Nora Eason, chairwoman for
Mrs . Mary Skinner, coor- the Advocacy Committee ,
. dina tor, Ia lked to U1e ad- spoke on cerebral palsy . She
vocates on wnys they might be told of the manv causes of
able to help their protege and cerebral palsy and of the need
mee l their needs for getting of special equipment these
along in the community.
children and adults need. She
Each advocate explained noted the number of children
and told of ways they had who could attend school if this
helped their protege, and goals equipment
were
made
U1ey hoped to attain for their available, and of the need for
protege. Several told or the such a school.
gratification or working with
Attending were Rev . William
their protege and of the great Middlesworth, Rev . Robert
friendship they had developed Bumgarner. Rev . W. H.
for each other.
Perrin, Arthur Skinner, Mrs.

international exposition in

'"

"

Health advocateS convene

developing comparable industries there.
They also tow-ed modem
meat and dairy processing
plants.
She said the Soviet in the
next five years plans to push its
meat, dairy. baby food and
transportation industries and
the businesses supportive of
them.
There aiso is stepped up
interest in co mmunications
systems and electronics as
consumer goods, she said.
Accordingly, the company she
heads, Parker Associates, New
York and Moscow, is coordinatin ~ exhibits at the
American Pavilion during an

could at Stanford University,
she also worked as a marketing
specialist with a Palo Alto firm
- "I had aU the freedom l
wanted," she said, "but I could
see myself doing the same
thing at 60. Not for me."
The idea of her own business
became a reality after she
helped with a 1966 exhibition of
U.S. products in Moscow and
returned for a sales lollowup.
Home is New York (she
became a U.S. ci~en in 1956),
but she maintains an apartment and private offices in
Moscow, and estimates she
travels about 150,000 miles a
year between the two countries.
In the summer, she takes her
daughter, Diana, along. Ms.
Parker is the widow of a U.S.
Army man. ·
With trade channels now
opening between the U.S. and
China, will she start market
counseling there too ? "No,"
ahe said, "I've aU I can dn. I'll
leave that for my daughter. "

.

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15 - The Daily Sentinel •M'ddl
· 0., Thw-sday, Jan. 30,
t eport-Pomeroy,

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Arran ge ments to order
tre es
and
crabapp le
evergreens to be used at the
LeUJ rt Falls cemetery civic
plan ting were made during a
meeting Monday night at the
Bend 0 ' the Riv er Garden Club
at the home of Mrs. Bert

Rap :
I've heard of writing in a changed date on a wedding invitation, but hi~ wins the brass ring: A couple split 'up after invitations were printed. The girl fell in love with another guy.
Ratber than waste all that money, she simply crossed out the
first man 's name and penned in the second, si nce she kept the
same date, same church , etc.
What do you think of THA P - BEATS ALL

Grimm .

The cemetery proj,·cl is a
continuance of the Sears Civic

Improvement Prog ram sUJrled
two years ago. Mrs. W. 0.

B.A. :
If the new fiance doesn't mind , why should we ' Do you
suppose he got the first engagement ring at a discount '! -

Barnitl is chairwoman and
contributions for the trees are
being accepted by her.
Read at the meeting conducted by Mrs. Wilson Carpenter was a letter announcing
the Meigs Musewn is available
lor club meetings. Also read
was a letter from the Meigs
MenU,! Retardation Citizens
Committee asking that a
representative be·sen t Feb. 6 to
a meeting at the Meigs Coun ty
court house .
Mrs . Edward Simpson,
Green Thumb Notes chairwoman, announced that Mrs .
Glenn West will pj;epare the
column for March . Mrs.
Grimm, the county contact

HELEN

+++

ru

bet these invitations won't be tossed out, as most are .
Might be nice to know that people are saving them as curiosity
pieces ... SUE

+++
Dear Helen and Sue :
"Clean" who said she didn 't want to smoke grass because it
"might pollute her brain" implied dopers push straights to start
smoking. Uh-uh ! !
Dopers don 't push, if they're doing it to have a good tim,e and
really enjoy grass. The people who smoke because everybody
else does , or to impress people by being "in," are the ones who
won't take "No" for an answer. - ONE OF THE FORMER

THREE YEARS OLD Stacey Rebecca Butcher.
daughter of Ri ck and Yv onne

But che r , Reedsville,
celebrated her third birthday , Jan. 4. A party wa s
given in her honor at the
home of her parents . The
Gaddis family , Bill, Jacque,
Denise, Mark , Kristi and
Nancy. helped celebrate the
event. A week earlier while
visiting Stace y's grandmother in Cleveland, her

Dear OOF:
How can an outsider tell tbe difference' To her, a doper Is a
doper, is a doper, and if even two or three push her to try grass, it
could seem like "everyone. " - HELEN

birthday
wa s
also
ce lebrated. Attending th e

+++

home Was Louis, Carl and
Amy Butcher.

ONE OF THE FORMER :
It isn't VERBAL pushing that gets to a nousmoker, it's the
feeling of aloneness that "polite respect" of her wishes brings.
I still say, the easiest way to avoid dope is to bow out of the
dope scene. - SUE

party at her grandmother's

+++

+++
DearS.:
Perhaps we don 't know the who!~ story. Having a baby
doesn't indicate a 14-year-&lt;&gt;ld is ready lor marriage. During
tl)ese next few months, prove you can handle an' adult
relationship, and THEN maybe yow- mother will listen to ~r­
suasion. - HELEN
THURSDAY
TRUSTEE MEETING,
Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society, 7:30p.m. at
Meigs Museum.
SATURDAY
FISH FRY by Middleport
Fire Department, starting
11 :30 a.m. at Middleport Fire
House; sandwiches or dinners.

THURSDAY
PRECEPTOR Beta Beta
Sorority, meets at 7:45p.m. at
the hom~ of Mrs. Mary
Pickens.
FRIDAY
SOUP Supper 3:30 to 6:30
p.m. at Southern High School
sponsored by the Racine ER
Squad.

SUNDAY
MEETING at 4 p. m. at
Royal Crown garage on North
Second Ave., Middleport, to
organize girls • softball teams.
All interested persons urged to
attend.

clubs have been scheduled for
programs on WMPO Radio and
that the February one will be

presented by Mrs. Reid Young the therapeutic va lue of
of the Chester Garden Club.
examining buds and branches
For roll call members gave in a garden walk and working
ga rden- resolutions . The in the soil and with plants when
ecology news by Mrs. Clifford weather permits.
Morris was on the use of salt on
Natw-e can bring peace of
snow and ice. She said care mind, said Mrs. Kuhn, who
should be used to get the salt commented on the variety of
only where it is needed because forms and shapes which c~n be
it injures plant life. Mrs. found in a walk through the
Morris said that sn!)w is an woods. To conclude her
exce llent mulch ·because program , Mrs. Kuhn read a
nitrogen in the snow, when history of the daffodil and also
dissolved, goes into the plan t. gave a humorous reading on
it was her suggestion that the daisy .
Christmas tree branches be
Mrs. Andrew Cross won the
placed beneath shrubbery over traveling prize. Next meeting
the snow to slow the melting will be hosted by Mrs. James
process.
Diehl with Mrs. Simpson to give
For devotions Mrs. Edward the program .
Simpson gave scripture and
Mrs. Grimm served refreshthen concluded with the ments from a table covered
thought that "somtthing is with a gold cloth and centered
wror.;; with a man 's theology if with an arrangement of dried
it doesn't include ecology ". flowers.
Mrs. Ralph Webb read a poem.
On display at the meeting
SPEAKER COMING
was an all·white arrangement,
Dick Smith from "His Place
"Winter Wonderland", by Mrs. Farms" will spea k at the
Carpenter.
Pomeroy Church of Christ at
Mrs . Robert Kuhn presented 7:30p . m. Sunday. "His Place
the program using "Gardening Farms " is a place where boys
is Therapeudic" as her theme . who have been drug addicts go
She said that arranging flowers in an attempt to straighten up
for show or just for one's own their Jives. Smith will be
home and pleasure can be showing a !lim strip of the
therapeudic. She also spoke of location.

.POLLY'S POINTERS .

Rap:
I'm 14, engaged and pregnant: My Mom approves of my
boyfriend and Jets him live with us , but she doesn't want me to
get married. He's paying the doctor and hospita,l bills as he's out
of school and has a job . She says I can keep the baby .
His parents will sign for him, but Mom won't sign for me.
We're really in Jove. What's with her, and how can we persuade
ber? - S. J ..
DearS.:
Evidently yow- mother doesn't mind being an Ulegitlmate
grandma. Or maybe she prefers that to the prospect of having a
divorced , 10-year-&lt;&gt;ld daughter. However, she may change her
mind. Wait a few months and try persuasion again. SUE

chairwoman, advised that

Does it take two to
hem a skirt?

It can easily be made shorter or

longer by turning -a hem up or
down with the orig\nal hemline
crease ns a guide. Anybody
have something better to pass
on'! - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Pe.eve concerns finding
something that wiii clean
water spots off the aluminum
stripping on shower doors. -

HELEN .

DEAR HELEN - I lind a
soap-filled steel wool pad does

NEW YORK (uP! ) _ When
'" Bettina Parker negotiates a
deal between the United States
and the Soviet Union, it sticks.
.......
Thl.s makes her record better
• than that of the diplomats.
: '
Ms. Parker is an emissary
! ' all right, but for trade betwee~
~
.the two great powers not a
diplomatic representative. She
works closely. however, with
the U.S. State and Conunerce
• Departments.
Since 1966, this handsome
blonde businesswoman has divided her time between her
adopted United States (she was
born in Holland ) and the Soviet
Union to bring together the
various ministries that seek
Western
products . and
technology and U.S. compimies
that have them to sell.
She is one of the few women
in the world in this highly
specialized field.
Said Ms. Parker, "Once they
sign a contract, they fulfill it to
: the letter." Sbe was talking
• about purchase agreements
• between various ministries in
• the Soviet and private U.S.
• companies.
.,
The recent Soviet decision
not to implement a 1972 trade
, agreement, made at the diplom~tic level during the
" Nixon administration, is
., another matter ~ worry for
:~ •. President Ford and Secretary
of State Kissinger among
others. It never was ratified
formally.
Of the action, Ms. Parker
said, "I think what they want to
buy, they will. I'd rather see
those sales come here (to the
United . States) than go elsewhere." Almost every Western
country is doing business with
Russia, ahe said, so the U.S.
has strong competition.
She thought perhaps the
thing to do now was "start
from scratch", working toward
a new diplomatic accord.
I talked with Ms. Parker
ahortly after she had tow-ed the
. country with 10 Soviet experts
in food technology and nutri-

fifoilA.~IiDAYSJ
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

BARGAINS
ALL OVER THE
STORE I

Concluding Our
January Clearance
Sale With Bargains
On Items Too Numerous
To Mention

Middleport' Dept.
Store
Middle ort, Ohio

~ ~our dollar doesn't go

BY POLLY CRMIER

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEi\R POLLY - ·! would
like to know if anyone has
found a way to mark a hem in a
dress or skirt without the help .
of anyone else . Thank you. MRS. H.L.C.
DEAl! MRS. H.L.C. - I
appreciate your problem. It is
one most of us who sew face at
one time or another. When
making a garment cut the
bottom right on the cutting line
of the pattern, turn up and pin.
Then ask a neighbor to check
its evenness and make any
needed pinned corrections. II a
readymade dress hangs evenly .

Tuesday guest of Mr. and Mrs.
Barnhart was Mrs. Lulu
Johnson, Parkersbw-g, W. Va.
Mrs. Johnson also visited Mrs.
Nettie Meeks at the Syracuse
Nw-sing Home.

VISIT FRIENDS
M~. and Mrs . 1Waid Gorby,
London, visited over the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
William
Barnhart
and
daughter, Elain, Pomeroy .

Trees to adqrn cemetery

B. :

Trade~r binds deals .

'

il r;m;~?:.i~~;

I' i l

as far nowadays,
George!

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-and we're doing
something about itthat's why nobody
can afford to miss

a great job In removing even

builtup soap scum or hard
water deposits from aluminum
strips around sbower doors.
Wipe off with a rag wet with
clear water and then polish
with a dry one. - pOLLY.
DEAR POLLY - Since
mayonnaise and salad dressing
have just about doubled in
price I make them go fw-ther,
when making fruit salad, by
thinning with bottled lemon
juice. Also l find any other fruit
juices I may have in the
refrigerator work just as well
for the thinning when it is to be
used for a fruit salad. This adds
to the flavor of the salad and
decreases the caloric content.
fl also saves on money for
mayonnaise or salad dressing.
- FRANCES.
DEAR POLLY - Those
who make macrame will find
empty holders that bolts of
material are wrapped on are
perfect lor pinning one's work
to. Most stores are happy to
give them to you. They just
throw them away. - MARIE

tion.
The delegation, headed by
the vice minister for meat and
dairy, wanted to study tech'
niques in producing infant
foods and formulas and how
:. 'they. could be used in

INGELS

, Carpeting contributions were
. made during a meeting of the
' Loyal Bereans Class of the
. Middleport Church of Christ
Tuesday night.
The class cont.iJi.uted toward
carpeting cost for the nw-sery
and for the slairs and hall
leading to the Homebuilders '
classroom.
Mrs. Kathryn Ervin presided
at the meeting with Mrs. Mary

lor any 3/3 size
headboard (wood

on~)

1

maple, walnut, wMe.
W~h purchase of
any sleep set.

Former pastor

H.

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

SAVE 1.32!
All Season
Windshield
Washer
Regulsr

2.65
W.A.
Value!

33

Gal.

2T9772

-·:

Just pour 11 into washer
reSftrvoir ... no mixing. necessary. All season - won'l
freeze. Priced low now!

:;:

1.26 Savings!

•

DEAR POLLY- To keep
warmer at night when the
thermostat is kept lower use
sheet biankts as bottom sheets
and the bed is warm when one
crawls in. I never believed they
could add so · much warmth
until I tried them. - YVONNE.
DEAR POLLY - My
Pointer is a way to hold hose up
for those folks who are not able
to wear clothes tight around
th e stomach, a girdle or even
pantyhose. Cut off an old slip,
preferably cotton but nothing
that stretches, so it corns just
below the hips. Have a good
wide hem at th bottom and buy
garte.rs to sew on to the hem. 1
sewed mine on the outside of
the slip because my skin is
tender. l use just tWo garters in
front and wear stretch hose.
They stay up well and do not
have to be pulled tight. It a
mini-slip is used one does not
have to cut off so much. Older
women might prefer the builtup slip~. - A.M.M .
.

for any Zenith
AM clock
radio with
any Zenith TV.

,..,.,,.,

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SA205-.U16

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c

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SAVEl Furnace Fl.lters
Regu/sr
Value~

up

to 1.0~!

.12 VOLT

69~

3 Yr. Wananty

·~~ ..$=2. . 5_. ~=.!~~hha~.ng

.e..

·L~X~k

·-

for any accent
chair up to '50
with purchase of

WEST·
E
RN
AUTO
. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO · '

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l

for
more sale
items in .
our mail
circular.

J.

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Meinhart, Mrs. Ciyda Aliensworth, Mrs. Louise McElhinny,
. Mrs. Walter Crooks, and Mrs.
Donna Russell being reported
iii.

Named to take care of
communion elements in
February were Mrs. Ervin,
Mrs. Martha Haggerty. Mrs .
Grace Hawley, Mrs . Bernaiine
Kelly, Mrs . Bessie Ashley were
appointed to the hostess
committee for February, with
Mrs. Martha Childs, Mrs.
Gertrude Greenlee , and Mrs.
Ervin being named for March.
To open the meeting Mrs.
Ervin gave scriplw-e from
Romans, Mrs. Childs had
prayer , and Mrs. Lena
McKinley gave a poem by
Helen Steiner Rice.
The meeting Closed with a
poem, "Why Should He Die for
Such As I" by Mrs. Ervin and
prayer. Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Ervin, Mrs.
McKinley, Mrs. Regina Swi~t.
Mrs . Childs and Mrs. Clyda
Allensworth.

RELATIYE ARRIVES
Mrs. Alma Thompson ,
Columbus, is in Pomeroy
visiting her. brother, Edward
Hoeflich, and other relatives.

By Janel Maggicd
The French Art Co lon y
cordiaiiy mvites the public to
come and meet Annamary
Bierly, painter , printmaker

and sculptor and view her work
at a reception this evening

from 8 to 10 at Riverby,
Gallipolis.
Presently ·artist-in-residence
in the Oak Hill Community,
Annamary Bierly . is truly a
versatile artist who is not
limited to any one medium in
her artistic ventures. It is

precisely this lack of retice nce
to explore new rheans of expression which give her the
and originality so

vi~ality

evident in her work. She meets
each new technical chalienger
he ad-on and masters the
technique, thereby freeing

for additional
chair .with
purchase of
any 5•pc., 7-pc.
or 9-pc. dinette

which can only come forth
when technique is no longer the
primary concern.
She holds a Master of Fine
Arts Degree from the Ohio
State University, Bachelor of
Fine Arts Degree from Wright
SU,te University , has completed the Hobart Welding
School for Sculptors, studied
with David Dreisbach, Moishe
Smith, Andrew Rush, Sidney
Chafetz and Richard Hunt. She
has shown extensively and has
works in the collections of the
Ohio State University, the
University of Arizona, IBM
Corporation, W. C. Downey Co.
and other corporate, as well as
numerous private, collections.
Among her larger commissioned works is a l2x9 foot
welded aluminum sculpture
I Intern a tiona! Harvester
Employee Credit Union. )
She studied printmaking in
Japan while living in Kyoto in
1970. Upon receipt of a large
dona lion of books from the
International House of Japan,
Wittenberg University commissioned her to design a bookplate for the collection which

BIRTHDAY MARKED
TUPPERS PLAINS - Mrs .
Betty Cheyalier, Tuppers
Plains, en tertained Sunday
with a dinner party in observance of the birthday anniversary of her son, Rodney .
Attending were Mr. and Mrs .
Wayne Beal, Kingsbw-y ; Miss
Frances Hawk, Wilbur Dean
and Mr. and Mrs. Kirk
Chevalier, Chesler.

MONDAY
SALEM CENTER PTA 7:30
p. m. Foimder's Day program
by Miss Triplett's third grade ·
students. Past presidents will
be recognized 8!Ki nominating
committee announced.
POMEROY CHAPTER !116,
Order Qf the Eastern Star, 7:45
p. m. at the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple, instead of TUesday
nig~t due 1o meeting conflicts.

CASH AND CARRY

Make your, dollar
go all the way in the
most fantastic sale of the year, Friday and Saturday only, at-

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INGELS
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FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT'·
·' .

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was named the Matswnato
Co lle cti on in honor of
Shigeharu Mats umato.
Annamary is cu rren tly
represented by galieries in
Ohio, Georgia and Florida.
co ntinue
Exhibit will
throu ghou t the month or
February at usual gallery
hours, !0 a. m . to 3 p. m.
Tuesdays and Thursdays and I
to 5, Salw-days and Sundays.
Special viewings can be
arranged at other times by
calling 446-0547. Monitors for
this weekend are, Salw-day:
Mrs . Gilbert Bush, Sr .• Mrs.
Janice SUJpleton, Mrs. Roy
Briggs, and Mrs. Emil Janko.
Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. David
Wickline and Mr. and Mrs. Joe

Sewing club
plans year
Fund raising projects for the
year were outlined by Mrs.
Pandora Coliins, ways and
means comm ittee chairwoman , at the recent meeting
of the Sew-Rile Sewing Clu~ at
the hom e of Mrs. Carolyn
McDaniel.
Members were asked to UJke
homemade valentines to the
Feb. 5 meeting . A silent auction will also be held at one of
the February meetings. Mrs.
Lucy White will be hostess for
the next meeting , at the home
of Mrs . Flo Strickland.
Mrs. Ann Browning presided
at the meeting with Mrs. Betty
Wehrun g givi ng the treasw-er's
report, and Mrs. Evelyn
Gilmore, the sec retary's
report. Games were played
and others attending were Mrs.
Lenora McKnight and Mrs.
Shirley Baity .

1 GROUP

HOUSE SLIPPERS
VALUES

MEN'S SHOES

'

VALUES

rof

117.99

PR.

MEN'S SHOES

WOMEN'S

Tennis Shoes

REG. STOCK

AU DRESS

From Reg. Stock

VALUES
TO
1
17.99

OFF

RUBBER BOOTS
lined &amp; Unlined

OFF

...~ i~.\R:r$
QUILTi~,R~:~~NTS

c

each

1 WINDOW TOP
QUALITY FABRICL98'
1 WINDOW
OOUBLEKNIT 'h PRICE
POLY-COTTON KNITS
(NEW) IDEAL FOR
SUMMER ----12.49
STRETCH TERRY
so:·__1.1.98

OFF

OFF

heritage house
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

FRIDAY &amp;SATURDAY
I LOT LADIES'
MOJUD HOSE, PANTY .HOSE
AND OPAQUE HOSE
Reg. $3.00 Value .
D. DAYS-Sl.OO
Reg . $1.00 Hose and Panty Hose
are 2 pair for $1.00

LADIES COTTON DRESSE S
Values to $12 .00
D. DAYS- $5 .00 Each

I Table of Ladies'
SKIRTS, SLACKS, FUR HATS,
SCARFS
Values to $13.00
D. DAYS-$3.00 Each

LADIES' CAR COATS
REDUCEDJO PCT.

LADIES' WINTER COATS
(6.0nly)

LADIES' DR ESSES
112 PRICE

1 size 20, 1 size 12~ 3 size 16's .

Reg. 580.00 to SIOO.OO
D. DA YS-$40.00 To $50.00

LADIES'
PANT SUITS

~:":.:7t::::"::"::::;"::jReduced From 30 Pet. to so

Pet.

ri~IA.Jn,v items reduced

the store
~~::::::=~~~~!Jto~ds~o~:P:ctj~:::::::::::::::::::::
men women.

f

DOLLAR DAYS
t 'LOT MEN'S
CORDUROY PANTS
Reg. S9.00toS15.00
D. DAY5-S6.30toS10.50
I LOT MEN'S
Long Sleeve Colored
DRESS SHtR:rS
Reg. S6.oo to $13.00
D. DA Y5-S3.00 fO $6.50
Men's Permanent Press
WORK PANTS
Sizes 29 to 44
Reg. 58.95
D. DAY5-SS.OO a pair.
Men's Flannel

WORK SHIRTS

Sizes Large &amp; X-Large
Reg. S7 .00 to $7.50
D. DA Y5-S4.00 Each

111

&amp;

1 LOT KNIT SHIRTS
&amp; SLEEVELESS
SWEATERS
If&gt; PRICE
1 Lot Men's

WHITE SHIRTS
~ong Sleeve
Reg. S4.00toS7.00
D. DA Y5-S2 .00 to $3.50
Packages of 3
Boys jVhite
T-SHlRTS&amp; BRIEFS
Reg .,S2.6l
D. DAYS S2.00
Sizes Bto 18

Men's Leather

JACKETS
~Btueonry

Sizes 40-42,44
Was SlJO to 5165.00
Now 565.00 to 582.50

1 Lot Men's Corduroy
SPORT COATS
Reg. S25.00
D. DAY5-SI2.SO
1 Table of Assorted Items
for Both Men and Women.
Values to $5.95
D. DAYS 51.00 Each

':'(It

~·•Houseof
Fabrics"

MASON,

'.
•'

The onion was so va lued in
the ancient world that Egyptians supposedly took an oath
with their right hand resting on
an onion.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
•

'/

reading course is off,ered free

of charge by the Me igs Local
School District Teachers Corps
Program.

Women 's
SHOES (14 pr . only)

DINGO
BOOTS

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School, the Meigs Seni or High
School and the Meigs Junior
High School. All class sess i on ~
are informa l and recreation is
provided for children of participan ts from four to 14. The

1 Group

TO
sg_g9

HOST CHILDREN
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mitch, ·
Whee ling, W. Va., spent the
weekend in Middleport visiting
their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Perry Milch and John Seines.

COTTON THREAD

co.

WOMEN'S
(Name Brandl

charge.

.10' INCH

MATERIALS

The second of a six session

course on rellding for adults so
that they can assist their
children in raising their
reading level will be held from
6:30 to 8 this eveniog at four
centers.
·
All adults are invited to
attend tonight's session at the
Rutland Elementary School,
the Harrisonville Elementary

Snyder . There is no admission

~

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
773-5554

Adults invited to readers meet

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

............................. .:... ..... - r:;:;;;;;t~ni-1

AND6111/EI

for matching
night stand
·, with· purchase
of any bedroom
ensembie

Mrs. Betty Hayes.
.A meeting for all advocates
and proteges is being planned
by Mrs. Eason in. February.

that expression

STUDS-

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herself for

Cathy Ctunmings, Mrs. Mary
Seaman, Nora Eason, Tom
Hoffner and Mary Skinner,
coordinator. Unable to attend
were Mrs. Gene Lyons .and

/
nnamary B.zeny

A
4-'tt"st
.
t
.
ht
ingw:~ :~~~:;:~~;~;
sesston ontg

()(J·IT-YfJII/IIlU

or sleeper-sofa

any living room
~uite or sectional

BAnERY

BUY TWO-GET 3rd

fijQJ,j

79
for any COCiktail
table up to .'79
with purchase of
Sdfa, loveseat
1

MEMB,ERS OF
Drew
Webster Post 39 American
Legion, Pomeroy, to meet, in a
body, to attend services at
Pomeroy United Methodist
Chw-ch. Members are to meet
at 10:25 a. m.

~!!$
.. ... ifll"· ··
. ·

replacemenl

A

IIEillll.llllli~---·~ .....v

Sunday

Fuel UM Anii-Fr 1' M

and stability, re-

..

ICalendar

. SAVE 40c,HOW

5.25

for any fashion
lamp up to •40 t
with purchase of
any three
accent tables

Ric Morrison, former pastor
of the Zion Chw-ch of Christ in
Meigs County, and his wife,
Roberta, Ronceverte, W. Va. ,
have been the guests this week
of Mr. and Mrs. Earie Wood
and son, Steven, Middleport.
Monday night Mr. and Mrs.
Wood entertained with a pizza
· party. Other guests were Jeff
Ranson, pastor of the Bradford
Church of Christ, and Mrs.
Ranson and their son, Jeremy.
Monday afternoon the
Morrisons visited Mrs. Ronnie
Riffle, Neva and Paul
McElroy, Mrs. John Mw-phy,
Gene Thompson and their
families .' They retw-ned to
Ronceverte Wednesda~.

for any lamp
table up to '79
with purchase
of any pair
of accent chairs

1sOci'~

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visits in area

,,

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Wizard Shock
Absorbers

Moscow May 22-June 5.
The Parker business was a
natw-al outgrowth of her early
training. Her father was a fish
broker in Holland, wbere she
said "the gross national pr&lt;&gt;duct is trade. The Dutch before
the war had lots of dealings
with the Russians. "
She worked, postwar, for a
chemical company in her
homeland but eventually fulfilled a "dream to come to the
United States to study."

Bereans help buy carpet
.

The Personal Advocacy
A _rilm was shown on,
Committee ·and participnnts "Something Shared." This is a
me t at the Meigs Community film showing ways advocates
Mental Health Cen ter for ll1e1r work with re tarded and
second
training
sessio n cerebral palsy people.
Tuesday nig ht.
Nora Eason, chairwoman for
Mrs . Mary Skinner, coor- the Advocacy Committee ,
. dina tor, Ia lked to U1e ad- spoke on cerebral palsy . She
vocates on wnys they might be told of the manv causes of
able to help their protege and cerebral palsy and of the need
mee l their needs for getting of special equipment these
along in the community.
children and adults need. She
Each advocate explained noted the number of children
and told of ways they had who could attend school if this
helped their protege, and goals equipment
were
made
U1ey hoped to attain for their available, and of the need for
protege. Several told or the such a school.
gratification or working with
Attending were Rev . William
their protege and of the great Middlesworth, Rev . Robert
friendship they had developed Bumgarner. Rev . W. H.
for each other.
Perrin, Arthur Skinner, Mrs.

international exposition in

'"

"

Health advocateS convene

developing comparable industries there.
They also tow-ed modem
meat and dairy processing
plants.
She said the Soviet in the
next five years plans to push its
meat, dairy. baby food and
transportation industries and
the businesses supportive of
them.
There aiso is stepped up
interest in co mmunications
systems and electronics as
consumer goods, she said.
Accordingly, the company she
heads, Parker Associates, New
York and Moscow, is coordinatin ~ exhibits at the
American Pavilion during an

could at Stanford University,
she also worked as a marketing
specialist with a Palo Alto firm
- "I had aU the freedom l
wanted," she said, "but I could
see myself doing the same
thing at 60. Not for me."
The idea of her own business
became a reality after she
helped with a 1966 exhibition of
U.S. products in Moscow and
returned for a sales lollowup.
Home is New York (she
became a U.S. ci~en in 1956),
but she maintains an apartment and private offices in
Moscow, and estimates she
travels about 150,000 miles a
year between the two countries.
In the summer, she takes her
daughter, Diana, along. Ms.
Parker is the widow of a U.S.
Army man. ·
With trade channels now
opening between the U.S. and
China, will she start market
counseling there too ? "No,"
ahe said, "I've aU I can dn. I'll
leave that for my daughter. "

.

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16 -The Oaily Sentinei,Middleport,Pomeroy, O.,.Thur,5(1ay, Jan. 30, p

'

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Elb~rfelds
.

In Pomeroy Dollar Days Sale

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Weather

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 8 PM
(Items Limited To Stock On Hand - Subject To Prior Sale)

r-;;;;-;:;-

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Values to $12 .00

l1

NYLON GOWNS

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Values To $15 .00

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VOL. XXVI

Famous Maker Bras
Values to $8.00

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;...--..-..__._.._.._._.. . -...,...._..~.._--1

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Small Group

.

1Women's
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Values To $20.00

!

SALE

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_

VINYL FLITE BAGS

~~1

soo
!I
_._.._..._._.._.._.._,_..~

t-,._.._.._... _

. SALE

M~~~.~~~~c~r~

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$100

SALE

L-,._.._.._.._._.._.._

•.._ •.._.._..._, ___ _.._.._.._.._.._.._.,_..j

!I

Values To $4, 50

.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

50¢ 1

_.._...__J

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Gov.
James A. Rhodes today
'' refused to say whether he will
sign or vetO a $91 million
supplementBI appropriation
for public schools when It
reaches h1s desk next week. ··
However, the governor told
)
newsmen he is finnly opposed
to the Democratic written bill
now traveling through the
General Assembly and prefers
his own plano! a $650 flat bonus
to public school teachers.

The governor held his first payment to each of Ohio's 613
formal news conference ~ince public school districts.
11 8ut
ru say one . thing, n
tBklng office Jan. 13.
It was held in a special news Rhodes continued. "! think the
conference room constructed school lobbyists are dead
during the administration of wrong. I don't think they
Gov. John J . Gilligan. Rhodes represent the school teachers'
said he had never been there salaries. School teachers
salaries have not kept pace."
before.
The Ohio Education Associa"I'll cross that bridge when I
come to it," Rhodes said when tion,.representing Ohio's 90,000
asked if he would sign or veto school teachers, has come out
the Democratic appropriations in favor of the Democratic bill
bill provldln8 a $40 periJUpil which has cleared the Ohio

House and is scheduled for a
vote in the Senate.
Rhodes
was
asked
repeatedly how he expects
anything other than the,
Democratic bill to be sent to hls
desk next week. "We're hoping

tus budget money for education

to school teachers .
'' As of now , we're prone to

earmark everything we get to
teachers, '' he said.

Rhodes said he has "the
finest brains in Ohio" working

for a compromise,'' the on his legislative pro~ram,
goveror said. uvou CWl be whlch he expects to begin
frozen on something and still revealing in about a week.

The governor said one of his
have ice skates and move
plans will be a bond issue to
around a little ."
The governor said he plans to finance rehabilitation of
earmarl&lt; a certain amount of central business districts in

will be to expand energy
resources by developing coal
gasification plants throughout
not say how much money is Ohio.
Rhodes also said his finanneeded.
"I think our whole program cial experts are seeking ways
is for the cities of Ohio," the to cut out woste and
governor said. "When they duplication they found upon
deteriorate the whole state of taking over from former
democraic Gov. John J .
, Ohio detlriorntes.
Rhodes said another impcr- Gilligan.
The governor said he plans to
t&lt;lnt priority will be energy and
the economic growth of Ohio, have hls two year budget for
He said one of hia programs the state prepared for
Ohio cities, He said he will
attempt to get it on the Jtme
primary ballot, but he would

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(Note: Today's column Is written by Joanne.)

Married women can have men as frien ds. Carole Saline says so ir
the J anuary issue of McCall's. In theory . I agree with h'er

SALE

I have always enjoyed the company of men. This wouldn 't be a

ssoo

SALE

L_,__ _.._,_..._..._,.._.._.._.._...___ . . , \_.

,_..._._._.._...._.._.._,_.._.._..._.,_.._,J:

problem, if I were work ing outside my home. I would converse
free ly with men at the office, go out to business lunches with

R
eg . $11.50 to $14 .00

I!11

$1 00

SALE

!1
II II
Il
I!

LEATHER GLOVES

I I1

Reg. $2.50 to $6.50

1
1
11

$1 00

l
l1.
i

DRESS GLOVES

1.
I 1
I

Cotton and
Dacron -Cotton Blend

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By Joanne and Lew Koch

ll1

WOMEN'S SLIPS

.._...__.._.._.._.._.._,_.._.._.,-.,_.._j

r~:;;;;;;~;-----·---·1 r;E~:-;;~;·---·---·--1 ~s:,:;~~;~-----=-~

mainly because he wouldn 't

~NO

FASHION

l

BASIC

1

BELTS ·

~-

Values To $6.00

II

$100

SALE

By MICHAEL J . CONLON

·-I ""

( ... _,_...,_.._.._.______

r;;.;;-;:;;- -----.-"''"1

be arourfd to ev.aluate their intentions.
Working women are allowed to interact with male t'oworkers .
House wives and wr~e n who work at home i:lre allowed· to in·

terac t with the Boy Scout troop, the Fuller brush man· twi ce a
year. the 63-yea r-old laundry man who just happens to have bad

'

to hi s breast pccket. I guess he had been attacked by a felon diS-

$100

SALE

!

I s;,~'~ ~~'~"
Sale 5.00
Sale 3.00
Reg. 5.00 to 9.50 · . . . Sale 2.00

I

I

L.~::.~:~~_:~.:_:~~~~~~~

t•se men. I had to &lt;JdmJt that they were more attractive th an th e

I;.. undry man or the meter readers.

~-_..---

II

1Reg. 15.00 to 24.00 . . . .
1Reg. 10.00 to 14.00 · . . .

men wh o had t a l ~ed to me during the co urse of the evening.
In _spite of my quick replies about the absurdity of .his charges.
h,'! Lhd succeed in maki.ng me feel guilty about conversing with

PAIR

. . ·WOMENS

r-;;.;-;:;------·--~

tunity. Each family brought their children.. ranging in age from
mne months to 10 years ~ 21 children in all This was hardly the
setting for a secret tryst
After the Frtday night get together. Lew let me know th at he
didn 't approve of the flirtatious lodge dJrector or the three other

·---,_.,_..._..~_.

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Selected from stock .

L

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·I Fashion and basic
1 I Selected from stock.
I

SALE

I !

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Save

l1

1/2 to 2/3

00

ll

.__,.,i,

SALE

lLz
74

I I
I I
1

PRICE

WASH CLOTHS .............
1

"'

Salw~;ks

I

daughter.

I

o;ng;;ees

DOLLAR DAYS

It....-.-.-._..._.._.,
.
•73'.

Limited quantities . long sleeve .

I~

Sizes 4 to 20
digan .

slipover and car -

!
t_1~,:S~..,:~~~~~:_:_;~,;.~J L~~::~~:~e~~-.
~

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HUNTINGTON, W. Va .~ AlL EIGHT CARS of an Amtrak
passenger train derailed shortly after leaving a stBtion here
before daybreak today,
·
There were no serious injuries, but one man was examined at
a hospital, according to an Amtrak spokesman, More than 100
passengers were aboard. The James Whitcomb Riley, enroute
from Chicago to Norfolk, Va,, had gone 10 blocks from the st&lt;ltion
when it derailed. All units remained upright, and on the railroad
right-of-way.

1

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$1 00
I-

WASHINGTON -PRESIDENT FORD is asking Congress to
let him cut or delay federal spending of $2.5 billion for programs
ranging from cancer research to construction of schools and
hospitals.
.
Ford's request was the latest in a series of attempts he has
made to hold down a multibillion dollar deficit thls year - with
virtual certainty of another one in the 1976 federal budget that he
will submit Monday to Congress. The bulk of his choices for the
chopping block - $1.6 billion worth -dealt with social welfare
and was expected to encounter resistance on Capitol Hill.

'

1

LOS ANGELES- THE "SKID ROW SLASHER," who has
cut the throats of eight men in two months, is a husky blond
homosexual in h1s 20s who may be driven by impotence or hatred
of his father, police said today. He is ''a jackal, an animal who
preys on weaklings and cripples," but not a vampire, a pclice
spokesman said, denying reports that the slasher apparently
drank the blood of some victims.
Detectives, mounting one of the greatest manhunts in the
history of the city, late Wednesday distributed copies of a
drawing showing t_he man police believe is the slasher. The
composite drawing was put together from information gathered
in hundreds of interviews, pollee said, and the "psychiatric ·
profile" was drawn by a panel of psychiatrists and psychologists.
The man is white, between 2D and 30 years old, appears to be
about 8 feet tBII, weighs about 190 pounds, has stringy collai'·
Iedglh hair of a dirty blond color, a long prominent nose and thick
eyebrows, according to a police description. .

·•

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TUBE

,SOCKS
Mens one s1ze f1ts 10 to 15. Boys one size

L
Sale.:~

fits sizes 6 to 10.

White with color tops - your choice.

'1 00

"'

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PAR
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. WASHINGTON- VICE PRESIDENT ROCKEFElLER told
associates that former FBI Director J, Edgar Hoover's refusal to
cooperate led to illegal domestic spying by the CIA. Rockefeller,
who heads ,President Ford's panel investigating the CIA, said the
CIA undertook the spying at the insistence of "tbe • administration." He did not indicate whether this was the administration of President Lyndon Johnson or Richard Nixon, or
both,
The vice president made the conunents at closed question
and answer session for about 50 persons who paid a 11,000 each to
attend a reception for Republicans in New Vernon, N.J., Wed·
Continued on page 10

f~ N;;--~ . ~P-;njp;;;;-~ f;;,:;;~=:.:o-:--l f~~r['~~~i'~s

organization is inade up of
Democrats from all13 counties
in the lOth Co ngressional
District. The purpose of the
club is to promote the candidacy of Democrats for
Congress and for the state
legislature and to enable
Democrats from the district to
become acquainted with one
another.
Those who wish. may come
earlier than the meeting time
to dine together. No reservation is necessary.

ties ~ • 9~ setecMn .
J.oo TIES
4.00 n es
4.50 Tl ES
I $.00 Tt ES
l sso Tl ES

.

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I' box

SALE 2.00
· · ·
SALE 2.so
SALE l.OO
. . • . . SALE l ~
. . . . . SALE 4:oo
o T1 ES • . . . • SALE uo I
.-~ .... ,_.._.._.. _ _ _ _.._:...;..._j

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ODDS and ENDS

N~~!~~!rlt~~t

Regular price 77c -

·

lim ited quantity .

1---~-~:-~~~---l

,

. assorted solid colors.

Dollar Days

~

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While lhey last.
DOLLAR DAYS

GARDENERS TO MEET
The Pomeroy Garden Club
will meet at7:30 p. m. Monday
at the home of Mrs. Irving

' '

for two pens

I
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! Decorator · small lotto clean up.
I
Dollar Days
!
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$..
I
1

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oo

1

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IJ . _ . - - w
---·-~-·----...J
,..., o
- - · _...,
.,.

- _.- -

1 Only 553.50_Movie Camera Outfit
Sale 535.00

l

Only 68.50 Movie Camera Outfit
Sale $45.00

~--....

I
'f

1 .......

'
Plenty of Free Customer Pa.rking On Second Street

Bloodmobile coming 8oon

'

1be Bloodmobile wOl be In Melp Colllllf Feb. 10 attbe

and At The Mechanic Street Warehouse

Pomeroy Elemelitary Scllool ffOI'Il 1 to I p.m.

·ELBERFELDS -IN POMEROY

Beea..e lbe Deed for blood Is ·Ver"J great penoDI art
qed to give a aolt aud tuure that blood wOl be available
to the family of eacb glvet. ·
.
'lbe prognm II Jlbort · vobmll!en to work at lbe

'·

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pnee
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!" 3.95 to 5.95 Sweaters ... Sale 2.00

r

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-

72

1IMiMiN:s HA~DBAGS

COORDINATE SPORJSWEAR

I

6.95 to 8.95 Shirts · · · Sale 3.00
• 9.50 to 10.95 Shirts . . . Sale 4.00

______ j

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Sanfor ized 10 ounce denim . 2 sturdy ba ck ·
pockets bar tacked " rule pocket with
reinforcemen ts · heavy duty front pockets .
Sizes 32 to 44, Choose your correct length . ~

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relived old-shows
Mary Pickens, Lincoln HilL
Highlights from their long
association with Hoeflich were
It was inevitable that given by Katie Crow, president
sometime Bob Hoeflich, city of the Big Bend Minstrel
editor of The Daily Sentinel, Ass'n.; June ·Van Vranken,
would be hooored at a "This is sorority president and a longYour Life" program. Thursday time performer in Hoellich
musicals and Rose Sisson .
night it happened.
Giving the clever surprise Jane walton, who had planned
presentation for Hoeflich, in the evening since last fall ,
presented the "This is Your
E~ppreciation for more than 20
Story and Pictures
By Katie Crow

~ars' of

conummity service

Life 11 script.

Providing musical
backgrounds for the presen·
tation was Armand Turley at
the organ. Taking part in the
musical
numbers were Velma
coWltless organizations, were
members of Preceptor Chapter Rue and Mildred Karr in a
comedy skit as minstrel end
of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority.
Costumed sorority members men; Lillian Moore, Betty
joined by others staged Ohlinger and Bill Young in "By
musical numbers which were the Sea" from a show
takeoffs from Hoeflich Shows . presented at the Meigs County
during the event at the home of Fair 15 years ago when the cast

.rough news reporting and
editing and the many musical
shows he has produced and
directed for the benefit of

stood in irnee deep water, and
Roberta O'Brien, Margaret
Follrod, Clarice Krautter, Lois
Rosenbaum and Reva Vaughn
doing · a takeoff on a
"Cigareets, Whuskey and Wild,
Wild, Women" from one of

Hoeflich's later shows.
Following lhe program,
Hoeflich, in an impressive

ritual conducted by Mrs, Van
Vranken, was . made an
associate member of the

sorority and his wife, Charlene,
was presented a bouquet of
yellow roses. Hoellich was
given a iramed certificate
signed by all members of the
group and a lapel pin.
Mrs , Pickens, assisted by

DRESSED AS END MEN, giving a good presentation
were (l.r), Mildred Karr and Velma Rue.

Shirley
Custer,
served
ments and
Turley
playedrefreshorgan
music lor group singing of
songs of yesterday to conclude
the evening.

. WASHINGTON (UP!) Sonny Covlll, by hts account,
bas been farming for 28 years
around Burgaw, N.C. He has
aome bad news for conswners.
"By mid-1976, if som~thing
bn't done, we will have one of
the most serious food crises
that this country has ever
'known," he predicts.
Covill delivered that warning
Thursday to a room crowded
with professionals, volunteers,
experts an~ amateurs ill the
consumer movement, pulled
together for the annual
meeting of the Consumer
Federation of America, which
claims to represent more than
. 30 million organized con-

sumers.

.~

By United Press lnternallouai
MARCUS HOOK, PA.- TWO SHIPS, one containing 315,000 ,
gallons of crude oil, collided at dockside at the British Petroleum
refinery here today, causing at least one death. Several persons
were believed missing lipdiit1Mst20'wereinjtired.
The U.S. Coast Guard said a l,,berlan ·tanker, the Corinthus,
was moored at dockside unloading and was struck by the U. S.
Edgar M. Queeney as it was leaving dockside, causing a series of
explosions and fires. The blasts shattered windows in a wide area
and rocked this area of industrial complexes, includtiig !MnY
refineries.
One person was confinned dead on arrival at Crozer-Chester
Medical Center, where 13 ofthe_injured were Ul~!"'-

tricot . challis. flannel.

. .

Yoor Life" program. Making the pl'!!Sf!ntation is June Van
Vranken, left, presenting a pin and framed certificate. At
right is Mrs. Jane Walton, progran• chairman.

ROBERT HOEFLICH,·center, city editor of The Daily
Sentinel and producer and director of the Big Bend Minstrel
Association, was honored Thursday night with a "This is

w;;;:J;t'. n;I;!~ Hoeflich's Night

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25'l1t____ _..!SALE
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rs:;:;L~~;,:---------1 r;::::;-~~-----·--- G~E:;-----·-----1

the closing prayer was given
by Sam Bartrug, Belinton, W.
Va .. husband of a grand·

~r .

1 1 Brushed

\,_,__..,_,__...._.._... .... ....

i

extras, good condition . Phone
992·2258 after 6 p. m .
1·30·6tc

1h

11 HAND TOWELS............. sa,! 1

DRAPERIES

IL________
SALE $100
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$1
,__.._.._.._...._. ___~ L_.._..___...__.._,_..,_ __

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Icenhower, Mr . and Mrs.

SA!-E

Now Reduced
For Final Clearance
SAVE OVER

TAKlNG PART in the "By the Sea" number were Betty Ohlinger, Bill Young and Lillian
J\loote (l.r}. ··

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I MAlTRESS PADS j IAluminum Roasters !1

~OR

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colors.! 1
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SALE /z PRICE
II
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Out-of-town relatives at· Marshall, all of Columbus, Mr.
tending the funeral services lor and Mrs . Clifford Beaver,
Mrs. Mattie Yost Sunday, Jan. Grove City, and Mr . and Mrs.
26 at Ewing Chapel were Mr. T. M. Cottrill, Carroll, Ohio.
and Mrs. Robert Yost, Mr. and
Pallbearers were grandsons
Mrs. James Yost, and Mr. and and husbands of the grandMrs . Jack McCready, all of daughters . Grandsons were
New Galilee, Pa., Mr . and Mrs. Charles Yost, James Yost,
M. G. Kucsma , Gahanna , Johnny Yost, George Kucsma
George Kucsma, Cambridge, and David Kucsma, and
David Kucsma and Mr . and . husbands of the grand·
Mrs . J . D. McTurner , of daughters were Danny MeAthens, Mr. and Mrs . Sam Turner, James White , Jack ·
Bartrug and daughters, McCready and Carl Circle.
Belington, W. Va ., Mr. and
The Rev . Walter Bickacsam,
Mrs . Johnny Youst and son, pastor of the First Baptist
Atlanta, Ga ., Mrs. Edna Church, was the minister and

' 19'71 , YAMAHA 2SO, new parts ,
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1 11: ::~ ~~~~~~ ~~~~e~08 :~. 20 and 11 I
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REG.
. .. .
. SALE
7.oo
REG. 9.79
7.79 . .
..
.•
sALE 6.oo

I

Action Ouh meeting set

I

SALE

sALE l.oo

1

!

Our ent1re stock mcluded .
REG, 12.98 · · · · · SALE 9.00
REG. 10.98 . . . . . SALE 8.00

1

Come for funeral here

Tne lOth Congressional
District Democratic Action
Club will meet in Gallipolis,
Feb. 12 at 8 p.m. at the
Crescent Room in Oscar's
Restaurant. The program is
being arranged by WU!iam
Hoffman, president, Athens
C01,111ty Chairman, Nels~nville.
Other , officers are vice
-president, Don Moyer, Zanesville, recenUy a delegate to the
· Mini-Convention in Kansas
CitY; ·MCs. lise Bachinann,
McConnelsville, secretary, and
Ernest Wingett, Meigs County ·
Chainnan, Racine, treasw-er.
All local Democrats are
invited to attend and join. The

I Scotland .

.,

.

S~irts

Blouses and

SALE

Geotge Wallace and daughter,
Mrs : Jackie Haycook, Mrs.
Ruby Swick and Mrs. Mabel

SALE 1.00 1.

~;;c-;;;;-l·~~i-;;;;;;;:;;;;s-11~~;S;L;;EE;P-W_E_A_R_l ~~~~r Slee:Wear

So on Saturda y morning. I let Lew sleep late and made it a
poult to sit next to the lodge director's wife at breakfast. The
lodge director ('.tune over and asked if I could m;1ke room for him .
A few minutes la ter. Lew walked in.
The glance of Roger Chillingworth could not have been more
withering: Who would have thought that this was taking place in
the swmgmg seventies and not in the 17th Centurv Puritan world
of Hawthorne's "Scarlet LeUer?"
·
Well. I'm safely back with the meter reader and just last
Thursday a 300-pound plumber dropped in to clean our drain .
Lew ca me home yesterday a£1er in terviewing an attractive
woman who is in th e business of making people's fantas ies come
true - "The F'anta sy Business" she calls it. When Lew retu rned
from the t~·o- h our interview of the Fantasy Lady , looking ra ther
puffr d up hk e a somewhat paunchy peacock . I joshingly Inquired .
"How is she at !ullilling fantasies?"
'' Joanne,'' an indignant Lew replied, "don 't you trust me '~"
McCa lls and "Open Marriage" notwithstanding, what's sauce for
the .gander is not yet sa uce for the goose, if the bird 's name is
Koch. Or to put it another way. a sa ucy goose makes for an angry
gander.

i

I !I GROUP
REG. 7.oo to 10.00
It
I I.~~~u~-:~tto 15.oo

J
$100
II
$500
L______________ _j t___,_.__.:. ___,____ __l ·!~:~~:.:~:.____~_:~j !___:____________ j

I

guised as i:l house wife.)
Arter about six months of such'brief encounters. I look forward
lo being in the prese nce of other men with grea ter than usual
enthusiasm . Thus. when we were invi ted to go with nine other
fam11ies to a winter lodge for a weekend of tobagganning ,
skating. singing and conversation. I jumped at this coed oppor-

I

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1

breath. and an occasional meter reader
(One aiW .ays has to peer at the meter reader to make sure he's
not a burgla r or rapist di sguised as a meter reader. The last
meter reader I encountered wore a visible ca n of mace attached

PANTYHOSE
Choose grey. navy or bla ck.

presentBUon to the legislature
March 10.
On other matters, the gover·
nor said:
- He does not know if be can
get a bill through the legislature abollsh!ng the Ohio Board
of Regents.
~He does not look on hts plan
to revise the Public Utilities
Commission to concentrate on
energy problems as "packing"
the commission,

by

Crisis in
food may
hit soon

r-~:~;~·::-u;-·-·--·-----1 r-;0~;~-----·---·-, r;,~;;;--'·-------l ~-;;~~---------~

Coping with a
closet Puritan

The dodo bird, now extinct,
was a giant nightless . pigeon.

PHONE 992 2156

FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 1975"

,,

1

Small Group

l

JEWELRY

Values From $2.00 to $5.00

$

SALE

!I

Small Group

1COSTUME

\

Black or Brown

II

$100

t..,.._....__..._..,._._,,..__..~-...--·--.1

Family Lib
'

CARRY -ON

1

Sportswear

l

r..--. ...-...---·---·--·---·-- · ---~

NO. 204

en tine

Now You Know

, RhodeS may not sigrt Democrats' school aid bill

L---~~-~~~--·--J L---~~-~~~----J r---.....--·---·---------·..,
L-·--~~~~~~·---.1 r-:---..-------...--·--------"1
l.----~~~~ _j

SIGNS ROIL ~ Jo Ellen Diehl, right, of 'Pomeroy,
president of Pi Delta Epsilon , Marlett&lt;! College chapter,
national journalism honor society, holds the chapter
membership roll for college junior Mrs. Mildred B. Haddox
to sign upon her recent induction . Miss Diehl·is the daughter
of Meigs High School Principal and Mrs . James Diehl,
Mulberry Heights .

~

!i

PULLOVER TOPS

I

Junior and Misses Sizes

l

them and Lew wouldn 't mind a bit

I!l

WOMEN•s JEANS

a1 y

Rain or snow likely tonight
and Saturday . Lows tonight in
the lower 3Qs, highs Saturday
to the lower 40s. Probability of
precipitation 80 pet . today, 70
pet. tonight and Saturday .

'

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Covill told them the high
prices consumers pay for food,
a central theme being studied
at the meeting, ~&lt;re only the
beginning. Corporate control
over food from farm to shelf ts
increasing, he said, at a Ume
when operating costs are
driving more ·fanners ·off the
land.
"Right now It will cost me
$200 for every acre of com I
plant," he said. "I'm not sure
today that I'm going to be able
to 'farm in ,1975: Farmers are
taking a $15 lou on every hog
they sell.
"! took up farming because
tny father was ·a farmer," he
went on, "but I didn't know
what I was getting into. I didn't
know for Instance that my
goverrunent was going to pay
John Wayne, that cowboy man
you see on TV, $250,000 a year
not to farm ...
"Our problem in agriculture
is everybody's problem," he
Continued on page 10

1 ,800-£oot mountai•n not
shown on airport charts
'

WASHINGTON 1UPI1 ·~ A approach chart used at Dulles asked by National Transflight controller said International Airport did not portation Safety Board i9·
today he was "frightened" last show the existance of 1,764-foot terrogator Uoyd LaGrangl.
· Dec. 1 by a dangerously low Mt. Weather, located 23 miles
"That frightened me," he
altitude radar signal from northwest of the airport's replied. "I'll say that . It
TWA flight 514, but was runway No. 12.
frightened me.
·
unaware of the existence of a
"! questioned it because I
That was the runway for
mount&lt;lih which the plane hit 95 which Dameron had given didn't expect to get that kfnd of
seconds later ,
fligh t 514 clearance for a altitude in that area.
Merle W. Dameron, a 20-year landing approach . The plane
"I couldn't believe the pilot
veteran controller, said the descended too low and hit the could be at that altitude there,
mountain , killing all92 persons so I assumed I .was getting a ·
wrong altitude ·readout ... It
aboard .
In his testimony Thursday, . occasionally happens.''
R~ferring to the approach
Dameron said his only
chart
for runway 12, which did
resppnsibility toward the
WASHINGTON (UP! I ~ doomed plane was to keep it not show the mount in,
President Ford has given from colliding with other LaGrange asked: "Were you
Vietnam war draft evaders and aircraft. He said it plainly was aware there was such an ob~
de8erters another month to the pilot's job to avoid terrain struction?"
"No, sir, I was not/ '
MAKlNG A.Hn' in "Cigareets and Whuakey and Wlld, Wild Women" were the performers
sign up for "earned re...entry". obstacles, such as mountains.
Dameron
replied.
Returning to the stand today,
' with Armand Turley at the organ were (l.r), Clarice Krautter, Margaret Foilrod (Turley),
But pro-amnesty groups still
He
also
said h1s radar 'was
Reva Vaughan, Lois Rosenbaum and RobertB O'Brien.
spurn his program and are howeVer, Dameron said h~ was
pushing Congress for lull so startled when he saw the not "continuously reliable
aircraft an an altitude of t•OOO enough" In presenting altitude
amnesty.
Weeks' condition
"The extension of the bad feet in an area where he lmew readouts for him to constantly
program does not make it a mountains existed that he provide terrain clearance
is reponed good
good program," said Louise called the pilot for an altitude information for pilots.
Balloon sales, one of the most DeMolay,' under the direction
Friends of the family said
Ransom, a Gold St&lt;lr mother ve rification . He never got a
today the condition of John who heads Americans for response.
popular and ' 'few ways" of Bob King, will work.
The president of the Air Une
stUdents, ~ community
Funds received !rain the sale. Weeks at University Hospital ' Amnesty,
Dameron said he ,.as not · Pilots Association said
organizations and other groups of the h'eart-shaped balloons in Columbus is "very good."
ciosely
monitoring !light 514's meanwhile tilat despite a
Ford Thursday extended to
raise funds for the Meigs help support Heart Associati()fl
Weeks, a native of Pomeroy, Mar. I his program of pardon altitude because that was not · disagreement that has Brisen
CoUnty J:Ieart Branch, will take programs . of . research, son of Mrs. Eldon · Weeks, and clemency - usually in his job.' He said when the during hearings into the crash,
place Saturday.
education and community Enterprise, and assistant return for a tour of public yellow-green target pn his the pilots and flight controllers
Through the sale, residents service. Through the programs manager of the Columbus and service work - which was to radar scope emerged fr~m a were r.ot at odds.
will ~on tribute to help comb~! the association has ,made Southern Ohio Electric Co .'s bave expired at midnight patch of precipitation "clut·
"We are not at each other's , ,..
the nation's number one killer.
River District, is suffering tonight.
Continued on page 10
throats,';
said pilot J . J.
"ter" and showed a brief inTaking ' pert ln tomorrow 's
from
non-contagio~s
The President said he or- dication of a 2,000-foot altitude, O'Donnell in a television in·
balloon sale will be Job's .
meningitis, it 'was learned dered the program extended his initial thought )Vas that the terview.
MAT MATCH
Daughters, Bethal 52, under
today.
ABC's uiJi America." ·"We
because "! 1\elieve that many radar had to be wrong,
The
Meigs
Wreslling Team
the direction '. of Mrs. John
Mr'. Weeks resides at 541 . of those who could benefit from
"What · was your r~action simply have · differences of
Sebo, in the Pomeroy business will go against Logan Saturday Hilda Dr., Gallipolis. His room it·are only now learning of its when you saw the altitude or · duties here that need to be
district. On Middleport, the at. 7:30 pJ!\, at Meigs ·High number al jJniversity is 1190. appijcation to their cases.''
2,000 feet,'"' Dameron vies cleared up for Safety's we."· ,
Meigs Chapter Order of School Gym.
He !s not in isolation.
iiJ
lJ . ·
'
- .
' ~
\'1
veter~n

Amnesty given
ariother month

Saturday~ is

balloon day

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