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                  <text>32 - The Sunday Tunes -Sentinel, Sw1day, Jan. 11. 1976

rfr~:;::~'"'1
:!::y
«. be sold

VA notices signal to tell
Social Security of amowtt
GALLIPOLIS
Sup- finandi:ll hctrdship. Huwc\'t'l'.
plemental Sccunty Income if a person lws prevmusly
recipients wh o I' C&lt;' ('in• .failed to report em inromt•
Veterans benefit s shuuld change, he t:anno( be fuund
contact lhe r.allipolis Social without rctult the seeond time
Security Office as soon as the overpa)'lllenl oceurs
they rec~h~ c t hl'ir lelters
SSI recipients should take
from VA tellmg how much thr aw::trd notice the} rct.:cive
their VA checks wtll be thtJ

~::

:~i

frnm VI\ this month tu the
· Svri:tl ~·&lt;.·urity Offiee when
l'cpurt111g tht• iru.Tease .
Tht! Ga llipoli s Sot'ia l

cord ing to Mrs .' Trische A.
Da n ~sJ,

Manager uf

the

Galltp olis Social Security
Office.
The S!&gt;I p;l}Tnen l mnoun l is

based on other income the
recipient

has ,

includin g

monthly VA benefits. Failure
to report an im:rcase in the
VA check s can result in an

SSI overpayment that will
have to be repaid or withh eld
from futw·e SSI checks if the
person is still eligi ble.

security benefits startmg thi s
r.-:on th , a socia l sec.:u rity
r e presentati ve said Wednesday.
The representa ti ve Is at the
Me igs Senior Citizens Center
lucated in
the forme;

normally sent out in January.

Pomeroy Jumor Ht ~h School,
fr om 9:30 to 12.:10 p. m each
Wednesday to help a nyone

SSr recipieJltS a re required to
report s uc h increases to the

havmg any s oc ial security
rela ted questions .

Social Security Office wtthtn
30 days.
This requirement applies to

The ofh ctal smd :
"In 1976 people can earn as
much as 12,760 and gel their

ve ter ans,
dependent

full
soc ial
ret ire me nt ur

Not1ces of VA i11creases are

widows,
pa re n ts

and
whu

receive both VA and SSI
payments . VA pensiOns and

compen[sa twn must be
coun led as tncome for SSI
purposes.
Mrs.

Da nesi emphasized

tha t the Social Securilv

Admtn1s tr atlon
will
b~
re luctant to wai H~ recovery
of the O\•erpaid amount if a

rectpient fatls tu no tify the
Social Securi ty Office.
The l&lt;Jw permits waiving
rec overy of the overpa yment
If the beneficiary was no t at

- fa ul t, and if paying back the
ove rpa yment wo uld ca use

increase keeps the amoun l m
line with Incr eases in generctl
average wages."
For earmngs uver $2, 760 In
1976 , soc ial securi ty benefils

for
1/1
your
fomJ7y

irttursncs
Rildt.·

BOSTON IUPJ ) year s

For
have

SCientis ts

common poli o-r elated virus .

Carrol K. Snowden

The breakthrough, inade

State St.. Ga IIi polis

by a

Phon e 446-4290 Home 446·4518

..., .....

The $2,520 ftg ure applies to
earnings for 1975. People who
earn over $2,520 and gel
benefits must send a r-eport
on 1975 earnings to soc..·ial
Jsecu nty by April 15, 1976.
The socia l security contributions ra te remams the

same in 1976 - 5.85 percent uf
covered wages contributed
by e mpl dyees a nd e m ~

ploye rs : 7 9 perce nt

of

cove r ed se lf-em pl oyed

in~

come.
The Ci:lrrnn gs and co n ~
tnb ut wns base -- the amount
on which s oc ia l sec urity

eontri butiuns ar made - will

wt ll be reduced by $1 for be the first $15,:100 of covered
eve ry $2 earned. "But no . earnings for the year , s tar~
lin g in Janu ary. The 1975
lllalter how muc h people earn
base
was $14, 100.
for the yea r," the spok esm~:~n
Since benefi t a mounts are
sa td , " lhey can get their full
based · on average earn ings
social secur·ity benefit ror any
covered by soc ial security,
month in which they neither
the 1ncrease in the wage base
ea rn over $230 nor do submeans
that' peoRie workmg
s tantia l \\ork 10 U1e1r uw n
now
will
be en tt tied to htg her
business." The 1975 monthly
pa
yments
later .
ea rhings limit was $21 0.

suspected a link between
diabetes and fa ctors of
-- heredity and viral infection .
Now researchers say they
have proof that diabetes ts
tri ggered in genetically
susceptible test a nimals by a

him

~4

beneftt. The yea rly earnings
limi t lot 1!175 was $2,520. The

so(•Jal sec urity benefi ts
regardless of earnings,·· the
spokesman noted.

Diabetes traced
to polio virus,

A GOOD
NEIGHBOR
OF
SBB

s'ecurity
s ur vivors

Different rules apply to
di sab led pe(&gt;ple wh o are
getting soc1al sec untY
disab il ity benefif s. " lind

team of sci entists

Stlfl Frrm

workmg in Ri c hmond~ Va .,
and Boston, shows promise of
a simple but foolproof im-

is rflerw.

m uni zation

likt'
gootf nrigflbor,

Sllte

F11rm fns \Jr11 nce Comp11n1es
Home Off ic es: 81oomlngton IllinOIS

- - - - - - - p 7305.

aga mst

the

dreaded killer fo r tnfants who
inherit diabettc genes from
tlleir parents, according to

the three researchers who
headed the study. Dr. Roger M. Loria, who
direc ted
the
diabetes
research a t Medical College
of Vtrgima, said up to now,
there was " no known ca use
diabetes· 1 occurs in

why

SHARON WILSON DOES HAVE her problems with her
boxer,
" D. J." Thursday night she entered the ltving room of
tim e there is a cause shown.
home
and found the dog had conswned a whole box of
her
The cause is the virus ."
penny
matches.
Not knowing what to do, Sharon decided to
Lori a s aid the virus
pour
a
pitcher
of
water down the throat of the dog who didn 't
"s pecifica ll y attacks the
tslets of Langerhans where "cotton" to the idea. Sharon called her "vet" who basically felt
the insulin is
bei ng that it was a bit amusing but did put the dog under observation
du e to the dangers of splinters from the matches.
produced."
" If one or . both of the
IT'S ENCOURAGING TO KNOW there are honest people!
parents had the disease then
around.
Recently, Mrs. Elizabeth !Libby) Lochary Chase, who
the childr en would be
is visiting in Pomeroy with her sister, Miss Helen Lochary, and '
brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Pat IAJChary, found a
bank deposit book with some $180 mside. She found the book
and money near The Farmers Bank and Savings Co., turned it
over to Ted Reed, president of the bank, who happened to be
nearby. The owner was located and recovered his money.
Good deal!
humans. This will be the first

HOUSE TRAILER
OWNER'S
TAX PAYMENT CHANGE

'

· Re vised Code Sections 4'~03 . 06 and 4503.061 as amended by
Sub . H .B. No . 330 and Ellective August 26, 1969
COMPUTED
. AND
ASSESSED
BY -

Coi.U"oly Aud ;tor b y muhopl )" .n 9 rh .. n!H IHibl~ vulul!!

o; the

ho~o~ ~t tr o. le r b'f' the 1 ~ ..,. •Pit Qf

l ht lo.o:ong di , tritl m w h ,t h th e hvu u 'r oil~t r hos tl! 'itus. fh e m•n im un&gt; lo ll: ,, SJ6 00 per
y ea r HoweY fH . 1f th ~ ml, imum t1u o f thut y - ~•.o: doll(ltl IS ap pli cable to

Q

hotne trailer n ot

lo( ot•d in th i~ \ !Ol e o n lh l! fin I rl o~ o f Jonul!;)ry , the lalO: i1 detetmined b y mu!r1p lytng three

d ol l,n ! b~ !he 1\Um br , oF full m or th~

l t moorung

IF YOU WERE AMO!'iP THE FEW who braved the cold
weather Friday night to he downtown in Pomeroy , you know
that Elberfelds was closed. Seemed strange tbat the establishment was closed on Friday but there ju'i\ weren't many people
around and tf the store had stayed open until the usual Friday
hour of 8 tt would have meant a struggle for employes to drive
'home at night. So - the store locked up at 5,

t o th e foll o""' "9 tho rty- fint of De u mb er

TAX DUE
AND
PAYABlE -

PENALTY -

Cnun tv

r:r.;.:;~r 1 1TP "C ' ("

r,.r. r.;

CP. .

r;--..Jrf.h'l\: . .

t' •

Pl rc:.r,p rP"":j ~ h':~ r ~irr:t .; t r·ieiry c. l.f'IJr, t•; '~11·iitnr ' r, ri f e .
If tr=--! Jl e r ir. . . p t the S.:Jif:" ?c; l:'! ~t v e·~ r ~ b rl ,.:..n ti~.le
When • hou•• tr•iler has 01 sllvs in th is stilte , u prov ided in this Jection , on the 1 sl
day of hnu•ry the full amount of the pro ra ta !u: n due .an d p•y•ble on or b efore
the 31st d1y of J•nu•ory .

When J j house !r••ler .cquires • situ s in this state u provided in thtt sedion, •fter
the first day of J1nuery 1nd on or prior to th11 31st day of December, the f~lj
•mount of the pro r.ua t.a x is due and pay•ble immedi•tely upon the ••piriltion of
·• 30 d•y period com'me ncing with i he dete the situs !1 ecquired.
If t he payment of the ten: i~ not ma d e as pro• ided above a pe nolry ol fi.,.e dollars
.
or ten p(:rccnt of th e t c::ucs du e, whochc•cr n greqtcr , shall be imposed and
coJicctcd '" add it ion to thC tax du ~ and ow•ng .

The County Truuuer . in addition to any other, remedy provtded by law for
Delinquent
t he co llection of ta xes and pcnaltit:s . sh.JII enfo rce col!ec tio.n of s uch t.txe 5
Taxes an d pcna ii 1U by c•vd o~ctton 1n the name o f ~uch hcaU.HCt .u::ounst the Owne,
I for ~ l-i e re &lt;:o'llery of the unpt td tne1i .

All own.1rs of ho~te fr.1 ileu h1ring • titus in th., Stale of Ohio .1nd subje't .tO the
ResponsiJloility In II proYided .1bove MUST regitter tuth tr•iler with the Covr'lty Auditor on •or
of Hou"se
prior to the date the tu: " due "nd p•y•ble
1

Tra ile.Owner -

No pe rto~ who is r_he ow.ner of 1 house tr~iler •nd -ho is required to regiuer ~

~a.uy ''"'''' sh•fl f.,J to drtpl•)! on the fron,t of tuch "••le r the cer fific•t• or " Dec•l"

lllued by the County Trenu r.er .

OPERATOR Every gper a tor of a house trr.i h!r court or puk or every o wner of property uud ·.
OFA
for such purpose when there is no operator shall kup .a recister of 1 11 .,ouu
HOUSE
tuilers whith malc.t use of tkt co u rt . park . or property .
TRAILER
COURT -

HOWARD E. FRANK
COUNTY AUDITOR
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

''

and fam ily at Ga llipoli s.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Curtis or
Lorain and Miss Patty Shain
of Antiquity vis ited Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Rtffle during the
holidays .
Mrs . Garne t Ervine spent

New Year 's Day with Mr and
Mrs. Ralph Shai n.
Mrs. Margaret Houdashelt
spen t New Year's Day in

Pomeroy with Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Smith.
Mr . and Mr s. Francis

+.+"

THE baby was born at 8 p.m. In Wesley Long Community
Hospital. She has been named Elizabeth Marie. Maternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. James Rodgers , Cheshire .
Paternal grandparenl&lt;i are Mr. and Mrs. Edward Pauley, Sr.,
Oak Ridge, N. C. The new father taught and coached at Gallia
Academy six years before going South last summer. Mrs.
Pauley is a former employee of the W. R. Brown Insurance
Agency. According to Mrs. Rodgers, her daughter and
granddaughter are getting along fine. Marsha IS in Room 525
at Wesley Long Community Hospital in Greensboro.

+ +.j
DURING the next few days, the Daily Tribune will publish
tax news which should be of interest to area rcsidenl&lt;i. The
informative items were submitted tO the newspaper by Mrs.
Garner F. Wall of H &amp; R Block Co., Gallipolis.

++.j

examined and if there is any
possibility they would get the
diseMe, lhey would be injected," he Said. " There ls a

Racine

By Mrs. ~· rancls Morris
very similar (polio ) vaccine
Mrs. Franckie Neigler
on the market and it is easy to returned to her home afier
develop."
surgery at Holzer Medical
Immunization should be a Center. Her daughter, Mrs.
simple process, he said, be· Clyde Cross of Colwnbus Is
cause 11 We know the family
with her lo help in her care.
histories " of diabetics, and
Mr. Wiley Ours is a patient
" families with
known in Unive rs ity Hospital ,
dia~tes ~rerecorded."
Columbus.
Loria, Dr. Stanley R. Webb
Mr. and Mrs. Elza Birch
at MCV and Dr. Sidney and son, Roger were called to
Kibrick at Boston University Barberton, Ohio for funeral
School of Medicine presented services of Mrs . Birch's
their findings Saturday at tbe brother.
American Feder a lion of
Mr. and· Mrs. Ralp~ Shain
Clinical Research meeting in and Miss Patty Shain of
Boston.
Antiquity spent Christmas
Building on research begun with Mr. and Mrs. Henry ·
by other scientists over two Ervine,
decades, the researchers
Mrs. Mabel Brace and
showed that an Inbred slraln daughter Kathryn Hart and
of laboratory mice with Legina spent Friday af.
twinned diabetic genes was ternuun at F.ast Letart with
fa tally stricken with diabetes Mr. ~nd Mrs. Virgil Roush
in 100 per cent of the cases and John Joe .
after being innoculated with
Mr. and Mrs . Roy Riffle
the virus.
and their guest, Melvin
Diahetes affects .10 million Riffle, of Columbus were
Americans a.nd last year Christmas dinner guests of
killed 38,000 persons.
Mr . .and Mrs. Bill McKenzie

VOL. XXVII NO. NO. 189

SIDEWALK SUPERINTENDENTS - Leo Shaver, left,
and Mort Dickey, both retired, cheek over structure at the
corner of Second Ave., and Pine St .. which ts be ing remodeled
by Carter &amp; Evans Contractors for a new fa st-service outlet by
SuperAmertca of Ashland Oil Co.
.
·H+
FIRST day issue of bicentehnial stamps may be rare m

I

this area. Last week, F orrest Borden, Sr., uf :1:1 Lincoln Ave.,

Gallipolis, received a bicentenmal rose ribbon tred, wh tte and
blue ) ' from · his son, Forrest (Brock ) Borden, .lr, of 111
Crescenta,. Ca lif. The nbbon wa s mailed from Pasadena and
the envelope contamed three 1:kent first day Issue "Spirit of
'76" stamps.

New Year's
dinner guests of Mrs. t\nna
Hilldore at Syracuse .
Mr. and Mrs. Solon But..her
uf Spencer, W. Va., spen t
New Year 's with Mrs. Grell&lt;!
Simpson.
Mrs . Da le Hart a nd
daughter , Leg ina , left
Saturday by plane fro m
Park~ rsburg for Rota , Spain,
after spendin g two weeks
with her parents, Mr and
Mrs. Edison Brace and Mr.
MorTIS

were

and Mrs Lin ley Hart.
Mr. and Mrs. Blythe Theiss
and daughter, Mrs. George
Wallace, spent a week in
Florid&lt;! wi th Mr. and Mrs Ira
Hill .
Mr . and Mrs Harvey Ours
of Dun bar , W.Va ., spent New
Yc~tr 's wi th Mr . and Mrs.

Dory Wolfe .
Mrs., Mahel Bruce, Mrs.
Kathry n Ha rt and l.egina and
Mrs. He len Simpson were ·
New Year 's dinn er guests of

Mr. and Mrs. Ronald

1

l

t

Save '100.00 on any RCA 25" lbgonal
Colortrak Console

.
Sale Prices on all Whidpool Refrigerators in Stock
Sale Pricos on

Wli._... Upri&amp;lrt and Chest Fremrs

Sale Prices on Perfection Gas and Oil Heaters

Save Up to '100.00 ON Electric or Gas Ranges
Sale Prices on Utton Miaowave tMns
Sale PriceS on RCA Stereo Consoles

H;~rt .

l

!
I
!I

·I
!
~
I

·I

L--~~~-~_j
Main Store. A~nex and Warehouse Open 'w eekdays 9:30 to s

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
,,

~ .

,,

FREMONT. ~EB. - RESCUE WORKERS · digging
through the rubble· left by an explosion and fire at lhe pathfinder Hotel have unearthed a 12th body and fear six to nine
more may be lailgled In the debris of the hotel's basement.
Reacue workers were resuming their search at dawn today for
Bill to nine per1011sllsted as inlsslng lind believed to have been
inllde the hotel al the time of the giant blast.
: Authorities aats a natural gas leak may have been to
blame for the expiO&amp;Ion . The dlsaater was described as the
'WGI'III In Nebraska history in terms of deaths and injuries.
Foarteen peraons were hospitalized at Dodge County
Memorl81 HCJIIIIIBI lor Injuries suffered in the blast and some
Ill peraons suffered minor Injuries.

Skidding caused two a~cidents
' Icy streets caused twoaccldenla - with light
damages In both - in"
Pomeroy Sunday.
.At 12:63 a.m. Sunday a
JCketl .car 011 Lasley St.
otrned by Lola Clelland,
~.slid backward Into
a·'leCont parked car owned

--

by Carul :itSh"''· l'omeroy. At
8:15 a.m. an eastbound car
driven by Roger Nelson, 20,
Middleport, on Condor St.
skidded on ice and struck a
parked car owned by Arlos
Casto, Pomeroy, No charges
were flied in cilher incident.
Ill

-

'

•

•

SLEDDINy IN RAIN - These three Pomeroy
youngsters were sledding in the rain on Mulberry Ave.
Sunday afternoon taking advantage of remaining snow
rna tters and a llempt to
complete a joint application
for de~ignation as a single
(Cont lmwd l·n pa~e RJ

which was disappearing quickly as the temperature rose
to 40 degrees. From the ldt are Chris McKinney. J . R.
Wamsley afl!l John McKinney.

Unvoted tax hit
by Gov. Rhodes
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

a.m. on the Bulaville-Addison
Rd. four tenths of a mile west
of SR 7 where John C. Gordon, 20, Rt. 1, Gallipolis, lost
control of his car which slid
on the icy snow-covered high! Connmwd nn page 81

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
W( dnesday through
Friday, chance of rain and
snow Wednesday. Chance
of snow Hurries Thursday.
Partly cloudy Friday.
Highs mostly In the 40s
Wednesday and In the 20s
and lo"· 30s Thursday and
Friday. Lows from the mid
20s to low 30a Wednesday
and In the teens and low 20s
Thursday and Friday.
:·:::·:;:;:·:::::::::·:::·:::·:::·:::::::::·:::::::::::::·:::·:::::::::·:::::

Do-it-yourself
course on tube
" You Can Do It," a weekly
series aimed at teaching how
to reduce the cost of home
maintenanc e

and

repair

the
before
watching
demonstration program.
Miss Guilkey advises that
should a person miss a
program or he unable to
watch, he can gain valuable
information from the letter
series and educational
materials.
Residents who received

"doing It yourself," is being
· offered through the Ohio
Cooperative Extension
Service.
Miss Marta Guilkey, Meigs
County Extension Agent ,
Home Economics, advised letters concernlng Ute "You
today that the program In- Can Do It" series are asked to
cludes a letter study course to return the postcard enclosed
coincide with weekly TV if they are interested in
broadcasts on WOUB TV receiving the materials b¥
Jan. 14. For those who did not
Ch"Jlnel 20.
She said instruction will receive an enrollment card,
cover nine areas including contact should be made with
simple electrical repairs, low Miss Guilkey at the Ex·
cost . cleaning products, tensioll' office.
repairing faucets, repair
toilets, weatherizing a home,
painting the exterior or a
house, repairing damaged
walls , and fastening things to
walls, painting the interior of
a house, and stretching
storage space.
RACINE
Damage
The
first
television
program will be at 3:30 p.m. caused by a fire Saturday to
on Jan . 27 and will continue at the home of Freddie Older,
that hour nine weeks. Letart Falls and its contents
Beginning Jan. 27 and prior to were estimated at $8,000,
The Racine Fire Dept. was
each television presenlation,
will receive a number of gilts those enrolling lor the called at 5:45 a.m. The fire
from area businesses . program will receive a letter was believed to have heen
caused by an overheated
Contributing prizes are Waid giving information about the
furnace
.
next
program.
Tl}is
gives
an
Cross and Sons, Heritage
opportunity
for
reading
and
Saturday the Racine E-R
House, Royal Crown BotUing
squad
was ~ailed for Richard
studying'
the
informat{on
Co., Krogers, Stifllers,
CIDDmlns, Racine, who was
Western Auto , Racine
laken to Pleasant Valley
Department Store , the Meigs
Hospital. Sunday at 3:45a.m.
Inn, H. and R. Firestone,
Isaac Jackson , Portland, was
Landmark, K. and C.
taken to Veterans Memorial
Jewelers , Racine Home
Hospital
.and this morning at
National Bank, Rutland
4:10. a.m. Lee Layne, RD,
Furniture, The · Fabric Shop,
Eastern and Southern Racine, was taken to Holzer
Racine
Food
Market, Local school districts did not
Pometoy Flower Shop, hold classes today for the Medical Center .
Powell's
Super
Vatu , third straight scbool day.
Gateway Supermarket, L.
In the Meigs Local District
and Z. Dress Shop, Swisher schools were open today but
CALLED TWICE
and Lohse Drugs Store, five buses did not run at all
The Midd.leport E·R squad
Kiddie Shoppe, Mark V, and sonle others were able to
Pomeroy National Bank, make only a part of their answered two callS Sunday,
at 5: 15 to Mill St. for Velma
Dudley Florist. Welker's route .
KeUer, who had fallen, and
Alhland Station, Citizens
Although much of the snow was taken to Veterans
Nallonal Bank, SeMrs In melted
Sunday,
tem- Memorial Hospital, and at
Pomeroy , Crow'a . Steak peratures dropped in to the
:26 a.m . to Story's Run
a-, Hartley Shoe Store, 201 overnight and created 11
Road
lor Carol Roush, who
Wille Pharmacy, Moore 's exlreme har.ardous drlvlng was faken
to Holzer Medical
Store and Goealer'a Jewelry conditio'l!l, • school officials
Center as a medical patient.
said.

Classes held. (

in Meigs local

. ...

•,

COLUMBUS (UP!) -Gov. Jn~aa.a.s
James A. Rhodes Sunday
'-'.1.~
said something has to be
done, and done now. about the .
practice of unvoted increases
, ·
in real estate taxes through
annual updating of property
values.
"'
Rhodes, in a statement,
0 till
said he is opposed to Ohio
taxpayers being treated creases, said Rhodes.
"This oppressive sltuallon
unfairly because of unvoted
in'c reases that he called· applies only to the 30 Ohio
''confiscatory and re- countieS that have undergone
gressive, particularly to Ohi· reappraisal," the govemor
oans trying to live on fix~d or said. "All lhls Is still ahead
low incomes."
for the remainlnC :;a counties
The governor said through undergoing reappraisal In
annual updating, Ohioans in 1975, 1976 and 1911."
30 counties hav~ been forced
Counties undqolng reaP'
to pay more than $124 ~on pralsal in 1975 included AU·
in additional taxes lllithout gJaize, c 1 1 n t o n, Darke,
ever having a chance to vote Defiance,
Delaware,
on them.
Franklin, GalUs, Geauga,
"If the annual updating Hamilton, Hardin, Harrllon,
procedure is allowed to con- Henry, Jackson, Ucklng,
tinue, the total cost of 'un- Mahonlng, Mercer, MorrGw,
voted.property lax increases · Perry, Pickaway, Pike,
could reaeh $1 billion .llY Preble, Putnam, RichlUd,
1980," Rhodes said.
' '"''" Seneca, - Shelby, Trulnbull,
" As a result of these annual Van Wert and Wood.
Counties to be reappraiaed
updates, many farmers have
l;leen forced to sell land to pay in 1978 are Belmont, Brown,
- these confiscatory taxes . CraWfo\'d, Cuyahop, Erie,
o,thers, on fixed or low In- Fayette, Highland, Huron,
comes, face losing their Jefferson, Lake, Lorain,
homes because they can no Lucas, Morgan, Musklngilln,
longer afford to pay the real Ottawa, Portage, Stark,
estate taxes.
Warren and Wlllluna.
"The annual updates must
Counties up f!ll' reappralaal
be eliminated, and an lm· in 1877 are Carroll, Olammed)ate freeze should be paign, Clark, Fairfield,
established on property L&lt;&gt;gan, Marion, Miami, Roll,
nlues," the governor said. Union and Wyandot.

confiscatory;

regressi've,
govemor h J..l _

uwe must act now."
Rhodes singled out Montgomery and Summit as the
two - hardest hit counties
presently subject to annual
updates. · ·
Rhodes said In the three
years since the 1972 Montgomery County reappralaal,
SAN ANTONIO, Tes.
more than ~ million In (UPI) - Arkansas has Ill
additional laDS have been Legend of Boggy Creek,
coUected from taxpayers aa a California ita Big Foot and
result of the annual updates, Scotland its Loch Nesa
and in the same period, Monster. Now comes South
Summit County property Tesas with the tale of the bigowners were forced to pay looted bird .
another M2 mWlon In In·
Rumors of Big Bird - a
creased lax collections.
creature the size of an
Neither county had a automobile gUdlng ·silently
chance to vote on the In· around South Texas In the
dark, terrifying dtizens began on a school playgroWld
in Robstown two months

Now it's
Big Foo~

Damage set
at $8,000 Ice blamed
in mishaps

Syracuse infant
winner of Derby
Stephen Matthew Wood ,
son or Mr. and Mrs . Stephen
Michael Wood, Syracuse, was
declared winner today of The ·
Daily Sentinel's 1976 Baby
Derby.
Stephen was the first baby
born to Melgs County_
parents. He arrived at 1:04
a:m. on Jan . 1 at the Holzer
Medical Center.
His maternal gra~dparent
is Mrs . Claude Fisher,
Clifton, W. Va ., and his
paternal grandparen Is are
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Wood,
New Haven . The maternal
great.-grandmother Is Mrs.
Harry Johnson of Clifton. Mr.
and Mrs . Wood have a
daughter, Kelley, age 3.
At present, Stephen II a
patient in Children's Hospital
in Columbus where he II
being treated lor a lung
di sorder . ltowever, he Is
reported to be making good
progress .
Stephen and his pannll

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MONDAY, JANUARY 12, 1976

Icy roads continued to be a Taylor, 42, Rt. I, Gallipolis.
major ca use of traffic ac· There was moderate damage
ridents over the weekend in to both vehicles.
Carl R. Johnson, 20,
the Galha-Meigs County
area.
Gallipolis, was cited for
The Ohio State . Highway excess speed for conditions
Patrol investigated 13 traffic following an accident at 2:20
mishap s Saturday and p.m . Sunday on the· BladenSunda y, all except two Mercerville Rd. two and five
relat ed to tee on highways. tenths miles west of SR 7.
Two persons were injured Officers said Johnson lost
in an accident at 12: 40 p.m. control of his car which
Smtday on SR 325, one and skidded on the icy roadway,
seven tenths miles north of ·striking a parked car owned
US Rt. 35. ·The Patrol said an by Betty Saunders. There
auto driven by Larry L. was moderate damage.
Cremeans, 27, Rt . 2 Bidwell
Another Sunday collision
skidded on ice , spun around, occurred at 3:10p.m . on TR 3
and the rear of the car hitting three tenlhl; of a mile east of
a fuel oil truck driven by CR 10 in Meigs County. The
Ervin Crabtree , 48, Vin!Qn. patrol reported cars driven
Roxie M. Cremeans, 27, Rt . by Dorothy M. Boggs, 44,
2, Btdwell, a passenger in the Athens, and Pete Butcher, 28,
Cremeans car was taken to McArthur, collided on the icy
the Holzer Medical Center for roadway .
treatment of injuries by the · Two early morning acGaliia County Volunteer ' cidents were investigated
Emergency Squad. Crabtree Sunday. The first occurred at
also complatned of minor 2 a .m. on SR 7 in Meigs
injurtes . Titere was heavy County, two tenths of a mile
damage to both vehicles. No northofCR36whereMark W.
charges were filed .
Jones, 25, Long Bottom, lost
Shirley A. Williams, 31 , Rt. control of his car which slid
I, Gallipolis, was cited to on the snowy roadway ,
Municipal Court for driving striking a guardrail.
A similar misbap occurred
left of center following an
accident al 11 :45a.m. Sunday on SR 7 at its junction with
on the Bulaville-Addison Rd., TR 20 where Tim L. Crites,
six tenths of a mile north of 17, West Columbia, W. Va .
SR 7.
lost control of his car which
The Patrol said Mrs. slid on icy pavement, striking
Withams' ca r slid on the ice, a guardrail.
striking headon a pi.ck-up
The first of seven Saturday
truck operated by Loren M. accidents occurred at 4:20

QUITO, ECUADOR - THE THRE~-MAN !"ilitary junta
that deposed President Guillermo Rodrtguez Lara m a mannerly coup says it will restore democratic rule to the
economically-battered nation within two .years.
But the junla, headed by Navy Rear Adm . Alfredo Poveda,
will have to overcome gigllljtiC economic difficulties In this
~oraci&lt;Hihed South American nation to last th.at long. The
junta took power Sunday morning alter courteously delaymg
the coup long enough to allow Rodriguez Lara to attend hts
daughter's wedding. There was no violence and despite a
tjeclaration of martial law, no curlew was enforced.

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zn 13 weekend mishaps

BEIRUT, LEBANON - WARRING GUNMEN hatlled
wllh rockets, morlars and machine guns across Beirut today,
Increasing speculation Lebanon's .18,QOO.man army would
enter the conflict. Christian forces damped a food blockade on
a third Palestinian refugee camp as Christian, Moslem and
Palestinian gunmen battled block-to-block in central and
eastern Beirut.
A showdown between the army and Palestinian guerrillas
was averted at the last moment Sunday but did nothing to ease
dvil war that has Claimed at least 65 dead lind 125 wounded in
the pasl 48 hours. Political ob.!ervers here said there were
Increasing indications that the Christian-dominated army, fed
up with nine months of chaos, was considering Intervention to
restore order by force . .

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· SALEM, MASS. - DEMOCRATIC presidential candidate
, Terry Sanford, stricken with "minor chest pains," spent a
comforlable night In Salem Hospilal and tests performed were
reported normal, a spokesman said today. The spokesma n
said he expected Sanford would see a doctor and be released
from the hospital later in the day. However, the candidate
canceled campaign appearances in several New Hampshire
communities .
His spokesman said, "Terry Sanford spent a very comfortable night with no complaints of any chest pains at all and
Ill tests were normal." Sanford, 58, president of Duke
University and a former governor of North Carolina, was
admitted to Salem Hospilalat8p.m. Sunday after becoming ill
at a campaign appearance at a private home in Marblehead.

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By Untied Press lntetnallonal
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. - THE U. N. Security Council
assembled today for an historic' Middle East . debate that
brought the Palestine Liberation Organization to the conf~ence table for the first time to join the Arab assault against
l!rael. The United States indicated it was prepared to block
any Coimcil move expanding the Palestinian role in future
.
.peace efforts.
.
The session marked the first time the 15-member Counc il
has aUowed the PLO full participatio~ in one of its debates.
l!rael has boycotted the meeting in protest . The Council
session, expected to last up to two weeks, was expected to
focus on two key pieces of U. N. legislation - Council
resolutions 242 and 338.
The two documents call for mutual recognition and talks
among Israel and the Arab nations to reach an overall Middle
East peace settlement. But they refer to the Palestinians only
as refugees .

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POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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.r------.-..-·---·-..--·--------.._..-..._..._.._...._.._._ __
Sale Prices on all RCA Color Televisions

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was

discussed at the meeting.
He said it was agreed that a
join I committee from the two
a ge ncies pursue these

e

Bargains In_ Every Department on All Three Floors,
Home. Furnrshrngs Annex and at the Mechanic Street
Warehouse.

I

agencies

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AT LEFT - Even though it rained Sunday it did not
stop youngsters from getting out in the snow. This foursome made a huge snowman with etrtended legs and all. In
front, 1..- are Becky Koehler , sitting between the legs, with
wri Chapman alongside, in back, Kenny Koehler and
Bobbi Chapman.·

·JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE
NOW IN PROGREss:

I

two

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Elberfelds In Pomeroy

!

the

. PATROLMAN Ezra .J. Sheets, Galtia-Metgs Post, State
Highway Patrol, received a trophy fo r hts ouL1ta nding effortsin the recent Ohio State Highway Patrol Superintendent's
annual trophy shoot. The Gallia-Meigs post also recetved a
trophy for achieving the highest score in this district.

I

tomnv•rH'"9 wi1h th ~ dn t ~ of nr q ~o~o~1!10n or e nt ro nr "' ont o thit t lol,.

PAYABLE
AT -

- Ri~ Bear Stores, a chain of

catchy . However, a coupl e days of weather like the past are and Kentucky , announced
plenty for me . How about you?
~'riday discussions are being
held with private investors
THE MONTHLY ~' REE CANCER clinic this Thursday at "looking toward the possible
Vetera ns Memorial Hospital has openings. ll is fur women and purchase" of the firm.
provides several free services. Of course, like everything else
Operator of 53 Big Bear
- if the chnic isn 'l used it will vanish so you women are really supermarkets, 12 Hart 's
preservmg a good service by taking advantage of the free Family Discount Department
offer.
Stores and Buckeye Trading
For ~ n appointment this Thursday, call the llmerican Stamps, Big Bear is on. the
Cancer Society office in Middl eport,·992-7531 from 9 a.m. until 4 American Stock Exchange.
p.m. and on weekends call Jan Judge , clinic coordinator , at
Although no formal agree992-5832. If the appointment list is full for Thursday you can get ment has been reached on the
one for the next time.
purchase, Big Bear President
Wayne Brown said terms of
WE 'RE HAPPY TO WELCOME as new Pomeroy the proposed transaction
residents Dr. and Mrs. Lewis Telle.
would mean stockholders or
Dr. and Mrs. Telle severa l months ago purchased the the company 's common
home of the late Mr. and Mrs. Dor Schaefer on Uncoln Hill shares would be offered at $31
Road; and are now occupyi ng the residence which has un -~ per share.
dergone extensive remodeling and modernizing. Dr. Telle, of
Brown refused ·to name the
course, is an extremely active staff member at Vetera ns private investors tnterested
Memorial Hospital. ·
in purchasing the company,
Incidentally, we understand Dr. Telle, a surgeon, was but said they are not
thoroughly initiated into the problems which fa ce Lincoln Hill presently engaged in the food
and other hill residen ts when the snow and resultant icy roods business and are looking at
took place the last couple of days. Thoroughly hung up, Dr. the purchase as an inTelle was picked up by Edison Hobstetter, a veteran snow vestment.
traveler on Lincoln Hill road , and taken to his duties at the
Brown, under terms of the
hospital.
discussion, would remain as
chief operating officer and all
MRS. DONALD DYE WAS LISTED as a contributor to the other offtcers and employes
very successful Christmas for the Meigs County Infirmary. would continue in present
However , we're advised that her name was listed because of a positions.
clerical error. '!'he contributor should have been the Eastern
Brown is the founder of Big
Homemaker Club of which Mrs. Dye is an active member .
Bear,
which
opened
Columbus' first supermarket
TED REED, PRESIDENT of the Farmers Bank and · in the middle 1930s.
Savings Co., was hung up in Co lum~lJS due to the heavy snow
The ftrm currently has
which fell Wednesday night.
. · ,
about 5,000 shareholders and
Ted had presided over sessions of the Ohio Development has issued 1,129,096 shares of
Loan Commission (he's viee chairman of the commission) ClassA common stock and
when the snow htt. He phoned hts wtfe, Nancy, to advise her of 166,766 shares of Class-B
the problem and stayed over until Thursday when the roads common stock. l'he firm also
were more fit for traveling.
has issued 1,274 shares of
Having weather problems on Wednesday a lso were Mr. preferred stock.
and Mrs. Bill Lehew and son, Billy, of Pomeroy who sta rted for , Big Bear had sales of $291
Ada where they were to see wrestling matches between million during the fiscal year
Capital University and Ohio Northern and Toledo. The ending M a r~ h I, 1975. Profits
I.chews' sons, Ted and John, are veteran members of Cap ital's for that pe riod we re
wrestling tea m.
J
$5,592,796.
About 10 minutes after the Lehews left for Ada, their son,
The compa-ny has reported
Ted, phoned, but all too late to say that the matches had been sales of $235 million for' the
postponed due to the bad weather .
first 39 weeks of the current
The weather got increasingly worse and the J.ehews fisca l year, a 9 per rent indecided to stop in Columbus and there learned of the post- crease . Profits for the same
ponemen t. Getting back home was not easy, a nd required over 39 weeks were up 16.3 per
four hours on the normal two hour trip. A bit hard on ' the eenl over the same period a
nerves, I'd say .
·
year ea rlier.
ANY BUSINESS INTERESTED in sponsonng a Bicentennial essay contest can receive free of charge a kit of information from the Molded Fiber Glass Compantes,' PO Box
675, Ashtabula, Ohio. The company's successful contest was
mentioned in Business Week magazine so it apparently has a
good system.

COJ.UMilUS t UPIJ
Representatives of two
southeastern Ohio health
servke ;~gend es met with
state Health Director John
Ackerman over lhe weekend
to discuss a proposed merger,
the Health Department said
today.
Attending the meeting were
representatives of the Ohio
Valley Health Services
Foundation
with
headquarters in Athens and
the Southeast Ohio Health
Planning Association of
Cambridge.
Ackerman said funding,
staff, the method of operation
and continuation of current
obligations 3J1d programs of

FORMER GAHS Coach Ed Pauley and his wife , the former Marsha Rodgers, became the proud parents of Uteir first
child; an eight pound girl, in Greensboro , N, C. Thursday.

Ame rica's pnpular music and let's fa ce it, the son~s arc pret ty stores in Ohio, West Virgmi~

'49 Olive Stree t. The phune
ntun ber is 446 ~71'Hi0 .

peo ple 72 a nd ove r will

~! ·

The weather has proVIded qulle a bit uf material fur food and discount department

S..•t·m·ity Offi ce is located al

continue to ge t the ir full

Oy Uol• ll ot'llic-h

:~:

you 'd rather ~o walking in. a "Win.Ler W(lndfrland ."

Social Security all~ws
earnings now of $2,760
People und er 72 years of
age c.:an work and earn more
and still ge t thet r · social

~

POMEROY - "Baby, It's Cold Oul&lt;iide," so "Throw
Another l.og on the Fire ," and "Let It Snow" unless, of course .. COLUMBUS, Ohio ( UPI ) -

year.
This mform~t ltun is needed
to determme wha t t'ha nge
ma y be re quir ed in th e
person 's SS I check, He- ·

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Merger
reviewed,

No Injuries were reported
in two traffic accidents
Sunday.
Sheriff Robert C. Harlenbach's Dept. reported that
Sunday at 2:55p.m. on CR 28
in Suttori Twp., Chester Ray
Rose, 22, Racine, traveling
north, downhiU, slid off the
road to the right Into a ditch.
There was damage to the
right ·side of the car. No
citatio~ was issued.
AI 6:50 p.m. Sunday In
Orange Twp. Thomas A.
Gaspers, 24, Rt. I ReedsviUe,
driving west on TR 293 up a
hiD went off the road to the
right into an enlbankment.
There
~as
moderate
damage. No cilatlon was
issued.

Weather
Clear tonight, lows In the
upper 20s. Fair Tuesday.
Highs in the 401. Probability
of precipitation 10 per cent
today, near zero percent
tonight and 20 per cent
Tuesday.

,

ago.
Tongue-in;fheek spools
about the biid by a CorPus
Christi; Tes ., televlalon
station and newspaper were ·'
thought to have put the
growing legend to rest.
They dida't.
Nwnerous sighting&amp; of Big
Bird continue to coine In from
miles apart, especially in the
LAlwer Rio Grande Valley
along the Meslcan border,
Last week a Harlingen,·
Tes., television station
showed giant bird prlnll It
photographed In a freshly
plowed Deld In the 111'1!8 of Big
Bird slghtlnga. The prlnia
showed a three-toed lm·
preSIIon nine Inches wide and
12 inch.. long,
The same day San Benito,
Tex., policemen , Arturo
Padilla and llomero GaiVNI,
'traveling In IIIJl&amp;rlte tiQUIId
cars, reported aeetnc a hale
bird with a !!Hoot wine lliJIII
gliding through the valley
city.
" It more or lesa looked lllte
a stork or pelican lJIII of
bird,'' P.uDa ald. •IIJbl
wing span I~UMa abolt
Uke a pretty goockiad car,
{Contmued on page I)

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T~

I~. l ~lil ·

Dally Sentmt&gt;l. Mlddleport -l•oJJU'Il1\', 0 . Mu11ttt ) .1 .111

.r-----------,
:I
i1 Pro
~Stanrli n2~ :
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Casualties certain among hopefuls
.in New England primary elections
WASHINGTON tUPI) Before New England's triple-.
header prunary season IS
over
March
2,
the
presidential asp1rat10ns of
several Democrats could be
dead - or at least senously
wounded
It used to be the New
Hampshire prunary season
opener would altract a lot of
attention, but the results soon
would be forgotten when the
candidates went after latter
delegattoo counts tn Flortda
and WtsConsm
11us year New Hampshire
kicks things off Feb 24,
followed one week later by
netghbormg Massachusetts
and Vermont Vermont
)Otned the fray last week and
IS untested political terntory
So the Democrats are
scrambling around New
England wtth new mterest m
the Yankee voter Liberals
Birch Bayh, Morns Udall and
Fred Harris hop!! to do best m
Massachusetts Former Gov.
JlllUily Carter of Georgta
thinks he appeals most to the
more conservative voters m
Vermont and New Hampshtre.
Any Democrats who falter
in New England run the riSk
of havmg pohhcal contributions dry up JUst when
the money ts needed to carry
on mto such key prunanes as
Flonda, Illlnots , Oregon,
New York and Callforrua
-Some indtcattons of how

tht:' p~st

""~ du..- 111 no
small part to the Feder11l
F.lectwn Co numssaon, whach
;1arted handing out checks of
at least $100,000 each to II
prestdenttal candidates.
A number of Democratic
contenders were runmng
thetr carnprugns oo goodwtll
unttl receiVIng the ftrst
checks the government ever
has wrttten to help subsi!Iize
a pohttcal campatgn. So far
Uncle Sem's share has rome
to about $2 mthoo - but tt
could go over $100 mtlllon
before electton day
The money doesn't come
out of the general treasury,
but that little box taxpayers
check on their tax forms to
donate $1 to the pohllcal
party of thetr chotce

are goang m the
prestdenual sweepstakes
came out of a Carnbrtdge poll
released m Massachusetts
la!it week " Undectded" was
the wmner among the 10
entrants m the Democratic
rontest among Bay State
voters
In addttton to the 41 per
cent who satd they were
undectded. local !avonte
Sargent Shrtver got 18 per
cent
Geo rge
Wallace
recetved 11 per cent, Henry
Jackson 10 per cent and lhe
rest were also-rans among
Massachusetts voters
thw~s

-le; a

kmd of a prevtew to the
primanes, the carnpa tgn
year opens Jan 19 m Iowa
Rather .than have voters pick
delegates, Iowa Democrats
begin selectmg thetr party's
nol}lm ee wtlh precmct
caucuses tn 2,600 neighborhoods
Tins conlusmg process has
attracted a lot of attention
from the Democratic contenders A UPI poll shows
Sen. Hubert Hwnphrey, who
has patd no atlenllon to Iowa
or to any primary race, IS the
!avonte of local Dernocrattc
leaders, followed at some
distance by Carter and Udall
Recent reports out of the
state "show Bayh also IS
m~king a late showmg.

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ual s

R ep

Mllh&lt;:~cl

Harrmgton and Ma yor Ke\m
Wh1te of Ruston
Wlute also ts looking elsewhere He'd like to make the
problems of the natwn's btg
Cltles enough of a natwnwtde
campa1gn 1ssue to carve out a
VICe prestdenttal spdt for
himself thts year

die '."

Shrtver reportedly satd hts
wife, Eunice, also suffers
from tbe same disease which
tS treated wtth cortisone and
doca, a syntheltc drug whtch
makes up for a deftctent
-.secretion of the adrenal
gland.
The arttde also quoted Dr
Elmer Bartels, now retired,
WASHINGTON I UP!) - A
of the Lahey Cluuc m Boston, psychtatrtst who served m
as saymg Kennedy was born the Ntxon White House from
wtth an "unstable back" 1971 to 1973 says those close to
whtch was the cause of Prestdent Rtchard Ntxon dtssertous back problems. The trusted others and had no
back pams were publicly tolerance for dissent
altrtbuted to old football
"They deeply distrusted
became the mottves of other people
lnjurtes
ihat
aggravated after ReMedy's and were unable to believe
World War II combat experi- that people could nse above
ences aboard the PT109.
selftsh rnottves," satd Dr
The authors satd the J erome Jafle, who was
disease almost ktlled Ken- director of the White House
nedy three tunes
spectal action offtce lor drug
- Arter learnmg he had the abuse prevention and a
disease whtle m England tn ) spectal ronsultant on drugs.
1947, "the seriously ill" KenJaffe's Vtews Of hiS White
nedy, then a COngressman, House years came m an mwas sent home by ocean lmer
tervtew in Psychtatrtc News,
- Referrmg to a passage a publtcalton of the Arnertcan
from Robert Kennedy's book, Psychtatrtc Assoctalton .
"As We Remember Hun," Jaffe told UPI he was not
describing JFK's near fatal speakmg as a psychtatnst but
tllness on Oktnawa tn 1951, Just as someone who had been
the arttcle said that ep1sode there
was also caused by the
disease.
-On Oct 21, 1954, KeMedy weakened rondttion almost
underwent a sertous back killed htm. "He nearly dted,"
operatton but a severe in- Rose Kennedy was quoted as
fectton attrtbuted to hts saymg

-The btg pollttcal souvemr
being brought back from New
Hampshtre by pollltctans and
reporters thts year IS a new
book entttled , " Who the Hell
IS Wtlllarn Loeb ?"
The book 1s an uncornplunentary btography of
the controversial conser vative edttor of the
Manches ter, N H , Umo n
Leader.
Loeb's front-page edilonals
have had a maJor impact on
past Grarute State prunar1es
Thts 11eek one or them said
"You know, really, there
may have been btgger mcornpetents a nd btgger fools
m the White House than our
pleasant, bumbling Prestdent
Ford, but, tf there have been
such , ht story has not
recorded them!"

Jaffe IS Chtef Of psychiatriC
research at New York State
Psychtatrtc Instttute and
professor of psyottiatry at
Columbta Umverstty.
Jaffe satd that, as the mner
group around Nixon saw
thmgs, " to dtssent was to be
disloyal. That ts the theme
that re curred agam and
agam."
Jaffe satd tha t · al no poml
did the mner Whtte House
group ever feel sufftctently
comfortable wtth outstders to
take them really mto thetr
conftdence
' That was really the trony
' or the whole sttuatton 'Otey
deeply dtstrusted the motives
of other people and were
unable to beheve that people
could rtse above selfish
mollves "
Jaffe satd the NIXon people
"were not entirely selfish."
He satd they were molt vated
by ''the idea that the people of
the Ntxon admmtstt'attOn
could
accornpltsh
somfthmg"
He added !bat "to a certam

•

Sunshine and vitamin D

. DEAR READER - The
! ullra violet rays of Lile sun act
on chemicals In the sktn to
•p,-m vl""'lll D Studies have

•

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man, but to each hts own
You don't need Jo take cod
hver otl. You can and should
get enough vttamm D from a
well-balanced dtet that tneludes mtlk All cornmerctal
mtlk sold In supermarkets ts
enrtched wtth vitarnm D You
also gel vttarnin D In
margarmes and butter
The mexpenstve ali purpose datly vttamm contaws
all the vitamtn D you need
even tf there were none m
your food
'
t'or more mforrnatton on'
vltarntn D and other vttamm
requirements send 50 cents
lor The Health Letter number
4-6,
BalBnced
Diet,
Recommended Dally Dtetary
Allowances !RDA) Send a
long,
stamped,
selfaddressed envelope for
muillng. Address your letter
lo me in care of this newspaper, P 0 Box 1551 , RBdto
Oty Station, New York , I"Y
10019

lu hj• ( tlr11rttr v lu t la tW'al

I

Oetro 1t
kansas C11y
Ch1CitQO

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S a turct ~v·s Resu l1s
Cleveland lOt. f\ 11an ,,, 100
ttouston 10) P o ri l and 9J
' hiCi'IQO Il l ~i"lll~c15 C1ly Bl
Wc w Orleans 10 I ncl n ) t1 QQ
Wa s l1of'l(liO•• 107 Milwa u kee A7
~Olden &lt;,t;}IC J 17 New Yo rk. H7
•
Su ndilV 'S Re sult s
~un~a s C•t v IO'i Dclrott 99
11oston 10' Ph •ladc lphl d 11H
Clcvcl an (l lUt&gt; \' as11n q lon 101
MdwaukL""C 9'• 1 os 1\ nqc l c~ 89
New York 91,1 Plioen •"' 1,18
Por !l rt no lit. r.11ant&lt;1 10~
Buftalo 1? '1 ~C'alr l r Hp
1 No g am e~ to da v J
Tu esd a y's Gn m es
~or! l a n &lt;i vs !'aston .11 H a r l tor d
L.os fl m.H.'I cs ,,! Ch•c aq o

DRIVING TO THE BASKET - Modern basketball's
favorite maneuver, other tha n puttmg the hall through the
hoop from any angle at a ny range, ts drt\'lng for the
basket where It 's easiest to get the ball m Sat urday mght
John Sayre 133) of the Tornado Club of Southern Htgh
Schoo l got around a Wahama defender by gomg to the
hasehne and ts heachng for the basket Sou thern won 7~
Picture by .11m Hamm

~illt l e al Milwav k£&gt; e
~lJif01to .1 1 Golden ~ tate

Am cnc an Bas k etb;tll Ass oCia
lion St.lndtng s
.,B'f Un1ted P r ess lntcrnaltortal
W
l
Pe t
G B
De n ver
71
Y 7'10
N ew York
21 I" 667
J
'•an r nton. o
Jl 11 600
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New Yorio. 117 Indiana 10?
'C,t I OlliS. I }J IU' nlut ll y Il l
,
M onda y .s Cit me

BURN. BURN, NO TOUCH ' seems to be how Perry
Htll , 21, of Southern High School felt Saturday night about
tanglmg wtth the Waharna Falrons' Kenny Riggs (32) who
got to the bail !trstest wtth the rnostest The Tornado club
from Ohto went on to wm 7~. Ptcture by JlJD Harnm.

Tu cs d a v s GMn e
New York ill Dcnvf'r

---------

.;

."";,' .....-~ ·::·:::;:::

"'

EV !INS AND TilE Sl!ILLION It
took four d.tys tu ru n du\\n, to bl•
brough t to hi SOhiO farm ~~ n 10 Grande
He

110~

hus 'a hl·rd n£ 26 Spa n1 sh-Barb

~ 1u stan gs

destroym g pcopl£' m the
process of Its att amment, was
not someth mg that ehc1ted

an y adm1rat10n Suc h a
C"Oncer n wHs VIC\\ ed as a fata l
naw . .Jaffe ' "'"
Had they been able to do
wha t Gerald Ford seems to
he aGie to do, whtch ts to
hrmg m all ktncl&lt; of people
r:tnd JU St lis te n without
makmg am comnutments,
Wlthout bem g too an gry ,
maybe thm~ s would have
hcen different · Jaffe satd

Miller repeats
•

'

zn Tucson
TUCSON , Am CUP! ) Johnny Mtller almost felt had
about wmnmg the $200,000
Tucson Open Sunday lor a
near record lhtrd stratght
lime
The youn g Ca ltloi'ntan
charged m front on th e thtrd
hole of the fmal round, then
fou ght orr cha llenges by
Bnttsh Open champ Tom
Watson, young Howa rd
Twttly, former PGA champ
Dave Stockton and Tom
Wetskopf twtce to wm by
Utree strokes wtth a fmal
round 68
"When I ca me up to the
16th green, the crowd gave
me a btg cheer ," Mtller, 2ll,
who now ha s won $987,152 and
needs only' $12,841 to become
golf's youngest and mnth
rntlhonatr e, sa td 'That
made me feel good, but, tl I
was them, l would have been
rootmg for someone else I'm
surprtsed they aren't ltred of
seeing the same guy win
agam."
The 68, a score Mtllcr
predicted he would shoot to
wm, gave hun a 72-hole total
of 14-under-par 274 and a
three-s hol tnumph ove r
Twttty. a 1972 graduate or
Artzona State, who also had a
nnal round 68 to wm $22,800,
his btggest paycheck smce
jommg the tour last year
Miller , who won the Tucson
last year wtth a ~-under-par
score of 263, satd he woiJ)d
have :tkl•l a btg lea d going
mlu the fmal round because

Social ~~:::. Diabetes
Calendar 1may fall
~

· •::.ti~ ·-· ~
t/1.._
~ -..-;.~ -~. . ~'.}) ..

MONDAY
UN ITED MET HOOIST
Women , Heath
Untied
Methodtsl Church, 7 30 p m
at the church Mrs Nan
Moore , program leader,
triemonal
se r v1ce
for
deceasL-rl member::i
SOUTHERN
Athleltc
Boosters Monday 7 30 p m at
Interested
htgh sc hool
persons UJ ged to attend
MEIGS JUNIOR Athlehc
Boosters Monday al Me1gs
Juntor H1gh ca lelerta 7 30
pm
TUESDAY
AMERICAN LEGION'
Auxtha ry, Lewts Manley Post
26:1, 2 p m Tuesday at the
home of Mrs Ernest Bowles,
Mtddleport
DISABLED AMERICAN
Veterans, Cha pt er
53,
meeltng, 7 30 p m Tuesday
at DAV Home, Butternut
Ave , PomerO)
WINDING Tratl Garden
Club, 7 30 Tuesday mght at
the home of Mrs . Cora
Beegle Mrs Mtldred Deeth
to have the educatiOnal
dtsplay or books on btrds
Mtss Shtrley Beegle wtll
present shdes or her
Hawauan vacation The
arrangement of the month
wtll be dned on the theme
· Happy New Year 1976"
HARRISONVILLE Order
of Eastern Stars Tuesday at 8
p rn Refreshments
EASTERN Band Boosters
Tuesday 7 30 p.rn m band
room Insurance money lo be
turned tn
•
RACINE Masontc Lodge
461 Tuesday 7.30 p rn . All
mas ter masons mv1ted

he feels that once he ge ts on
top he can wm As tt was he
and Watson started the last 18
!ted for second, a shot behtnd
Wct skopf , who eventually
f1mshed thtrd at 278 and won
$14,200
''It was close," Mtller sa1d
" I played my game , and the
oth er guys fell back. I never
once felt I had tl locked up,
hut once I made that btrdie
putt on the 16th, I knew I was
m pretty good shape I feel
anyttrne I get m front by two
strokes, I have an excellent
WEDNESDAY
chance to wm "
WHITE
ROSE LODGE ,
By wmmng, Mtller became ' I 30 p m Wednesday at the
the seventh player in history Arnertcan Legton Hall m
to w1n the same tournwnent Mtddleport '
three stratght years -The
POMEROY
MIDrecord IS four consecutive DLEPORT Ltons Club,
triumphs , and that was set by Wednesday noon ~ Mefgs Inn.
Walter Hagen m 192~
Lions urged to attend
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
NOW YOU KNOW
Royal Arch Masons, staled
The stupidest creature ever convocahon, Wednesday,
to mhabtt the earth was the 7:30 p rn Pomeroy Masonic
stegosa uru s, a 6' z-ton Temple followed l!y 8.30 p.m.
dmosalU' w1th a 21 a. ..ounce
meeting of Bosworth Council
brain
46, Royal and Select Mulers.
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners, 6 30 dtnner at the
Too Lale IO C!asst l y
Meigs Inn , Wednesday
LOS!
Reservation to be telephoned
WH I TE Samoy ed Hu sky Dog
to Rose Reynolds Bicenl osl rn v1cmtly ot F 1v e Points
area Call Mall me Gr llilh
tennial program by Mrs.
992 21JJ day or 992 5782 e fl er
Mrs
Chlorus Grt!Dm.
I p m
1 12 61c Reynolds and Mrs. Errol!
Conroy, hostesses
A youth rally scheduled lor
lhts evenmg at the Freedom
Gospel Mtsston at Bald Knob
hrt" l&gt;een puslp•u

I

RACINE
GRANGE,
Wednesday 8 p m. at the
grange hall. Degree work wiU
b be dtsplayed

RICHMOND, Va (UPI) Sctenhsts m Vlrglnta and
Massachusetts say they have
taken a giant step toward
wtpmg out dtabetes, the natton's thtrd-ranking killer
aft er heart dtsease and

cancer.
Worktng at Meqtcal College
of Vtrgmla In RichmOnd and
Boston Untversity College of
Medictne, three climcal researchers and an acadermc
pathologtst satd ihey have
proven m tests on laboratory
anunals that the omtet or
diabetes IS triggered by a
rornrnon vtral cousm to polio.
The breakthrough pointa
the way toward a simple
trnmumzatlon against the
diabetescausmg VIrUS, they
satd Infants who Inherit
diabettc genes from their
parents then might be
protected
against
the
metabolic disorder.
"If one or both of the
parents had the disease, then
the children would tie
examined and if there Is any
posstbihty they would gel the
disease, tbey would be liiJected," said Dr. Roger
Lorta, who headed the
research.
"There IS a very slmll8r
vaccme (for polio) on tile
market and tt ts easy lo
develop," Lorta said
,
The link between hiiiii8,D
diabetes and factors of
heredity and viral inlectltm
has long been suspeeted, tile
sctentl.sts said. But work with
human subjects may atW be
two years away.
Lorta satd the vlr.lia
" specifically . attacks Ill•
tslets of Langerhana (In tl!e
pancreas) where the Insulin
IS being produced."
He said Immunization
should be a simple proceA
because "we know the family
histories" of dlabeUCI, and
"families with knowp
diabetes are recorded." .
Loria, Dr. Stanley Webb of
Vll'glnla Medical Colletle IIIII!
Drs Sidney Klbrlck and
Gordon Madge at Botlttil
University pre1111ted thq
finding&amp; Saturday to lhe
American Federation of
&lt;llnlcal ~ In JloiiQii.
Their re.earch wu financed
by a National lhlllllite of
Health grant.
A recent National Omlmllslon on Diabetes ~ Mljl
10 rnllllon Amerlcau . ,
vlcliml of dlabelel, ~
has grown man t11an 10
percent In prevalenc:e In the
put decade. '!be CXIIIIIIIIIIIal
said cbbelea kllletl . . .
per10ns last year all4
pojllibly contributed to tbe
de'tha of 300,000 otbln.

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St~

Joseph runs into foul
trouble in double OT loss

Umtt.•d Press Jnll'rnatiuual
The Natwnal Collegtate
Athlettr Assoctatton's controvenual 10-man hmlt on
lrave hn~ squads ts deftmtely
not sutted to the rugged
derenstve style of play taught
by St Joseph's 1Pa ) coach
Harry Booth
Booth 's Hawks strnply
fouled themselves out of
players Saturday rught m
dropp10g a 109-96 double
overtime dec1s1on to Xavter,
!tmshmg the game wtth only
a patr of second-team guards
un the court
T11e
Musketeers, who
upped thetr record to 7.,) wtth
the strange vtctory, appeared
to have the game won m
regulation ttme until th e
Hawks' Wtlhe Taylor htt a 35foot Jump shot at the buzzer
to deadlock the score at 8IHI6
Sl Joseph's led 90-88 wtth
25 seronds left tn the ltrst
overttme, but that's when
foul problems a nd the ltl·rnan
hrntt ca ught up "tth the
Hawks
Wtth f1ve players already
on the bench wtth !tve persona l fouls each, Taylor
ptcked up hts ftlth when he

UP! S p&lt;~rt s Wrller
Maryland's tnp down 'Tobacco !load " and UC LA's
trek up the ' Oregon Tratl"
[)rov~ d to be a lust JOUrney for
both schools
The har dest JOb 0 ! any
college basketbaJI team IS to
\\tn on the rnad, and not even
'1
nallonal t powers
hke
Ma ryland and UCLA are
1mmune from ·The CW'se"
Second-ranked Maryland
found that Greensboro, N C ,
tsn t a ver) mce place lo VISit
on a Sat urday naghl ,
espec1a\ly If you ha ve to play
a thttwnqlly-nwked tea m
1 he Tcrrapms were handed
the1r £Jrs l loss after 11
slr aJght tnumphs Saturday
rughl \~h e n seventh-ranked
W.1ke Furesl defea ted them
93·90

1

Vn lf1q)Cq 6 OllniN'l ~
lt(JU '&gt;IO n 1 F CI I1l 0 11 1011 )
I NO CIUI11 b5 toddy I

: 'rn

Tu c~ d~ y

Gerald says

s G;,m e

&lt;, l eu G ,lmf' ,;11 Clr"vf'land

·.-- - - - - ,
The Daily Sentinel

Razorhacks

DEVOTED TO THE

"

INTER._EST OF

..
ME I GS MASO N AREA
,. , CH ESTER' L TANNEHILL
E•cc Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH

City E dito r

P ub l shed d&lt;11 l y e xc e p l
.: Sat u r day by Th e Oh•o
,. , Va l le y Pubi 1SI11ng Com
•

P lH1Y

11 1

Sl

Courl

Pom~er o y
O h to
-1 5 769
GUS 1n ess O ff ce Ph one 99"2

.,, 1 1 ~ 6 F- d t lor al Phon e 992
,, 1 157
Seco nd cl a ~ s poslage
, , pa id "I P o m e r b v Oh 1o
N a l ton a l
adv e ri1 S1ng
'• repr ~ s e ntal l ve

' G rdfll h Co mpany
....
...

Ward
Inc

Boltt ne ll l &amp; G a l la g her D 1v
757 Th rd .1\ v e N e w Yor k
N Y 10017
Su b sc r i pl• o n
rates

"• Dcl tve r ed b y e arner where
ava tabl e 75 c e nts per
w eek
By Moto r Route
, , wh ere c arr.er serv1ce not
a vailab l e
One month
' S3 15 Cy mall 1n OhtO and
W Va , On e Y e a r S22 00
5 •)( monlhS \1 1 50 lt1ree
monlhs S7 00 El sew ll ere
$16 00 year
S1)( monihs
- t l J 50 three month s $7 50
.S ubs c ription pnce ~ ncludes
Sunday Times Senl1 net

Person to person
health insurance
It can help pay
soanng hospital
and surgical bills.

Call me

Bill Fletcher
1251 '-'wtll St.
Middleport, 0.

PH. 992-7155
•

.. t:,':::,:-:,.:::
.. ,:'\ S U I E FA AM MUTUAL
.A•
••••••
f•ul n11hd It '•UI I'IC. • Cn
Oc;t
ff &gt;m• ()!lu
•
Ill H mu Qhll'l Ill nOt!l

fouled Dale Haarman, whose
two free throws tted the score
90-all
Baker Not Embarrassed
Torn Haggerty then went to
the bench wtth only 25
seconds gone in the serond
overtune and Xavter ahead
93-90 That left St. Joseph's
wtth three players on the
court , and tl was all over
Steve Vassalattt became
the etghth St Joseph's player
to foul out when he got hiS
fifth wtth 1·27 to go tn the
second overtime, Jeavmg
ooly 6-11 Denms Cakert and 6-1
Mtke Boarskt on the rourt
Gary Whttfteld led Xavter
wtth 32 potnts, and Haarman
and Ntck Damels backed him
With 24 and 23 pomts, respecllvely
"I'm not embarrassed to
wm th1s basketball game,"
satd Xavter coach Tay Baker
"We had tt won in regulation
ume."
Saturday's action tn the
M1d-Amen can
Con ference
!atled to shake any of the
league's four leaders loose.
Ohto Umverstty, behmd
Scott Love's 23 potnls and 14
rebounds, won tts second

consccuttve league ~ame, 62- Aye" With 18
56 over Bowhng Green, and
C1n&lt;:mnatl ra n ats record to
Kent State also ran tis mark 11-2 with a lackluster 73-liti
to 2-lJ wtth a 72~ vtctory at VJctory over Eastern Ken·
Ball State behind Jtrnmy lucky Bnan Wtlharns and
rolli ns' 24 pomts
Pal Cumm mgs led the
Western Michtgan, the Bearcals wtth 13 pomls
preseason ptck lor the tttle, ap1ece
had plenty of trouble wtth
Dayton, traihng by two
Toledo before subdumg the , pomts at halftune, had httle
Rockets 78-73 in a come-frorn- trouble in the fmal 20 mmutes
behmd effort for the Rroncos' m sto~pmg Old Dornmtoo 91lOth stratght victory and 79 behtnd Johnny Davts and
thtrd m the MAC
Letghton Moulton, who had ~
Freshman Sparks Comeback and 20 potnts, respectively
•·reshrnan guard Marty
Grote Gets Career-Htgh
Murray scored 14 potnts tn
Stx Ohto Conference games
the second half to spark the were played Saturday mght,
Broncos back from a 37-32 three in each dtVIslon
halfttrne deltctt
In ~orthern Divtston acLarry Kohl led Toledo wtth tton, Heidelberg downed
21 pomts, and Mtke Larsen Mount Umon 70-57, Wooster
added II for the Rockets, who defeated Baldwm-Wallace 71fell to :Hi overall and 1-2 m th~ 60 and Ohio Northern won
ronference.
over Oberlm 70-50
Mtarnt, constdered the top
In Southern Dtvtston
challenger to the Broncos, games, Muskingurn tnpped
ran all over Northern lllmots Martella 73-71 m overtune on
113-73 Alll3 players on coach a last-second shut by semor
Darrell Hednc's squ.!'cd Dan Howell, Deruson rolled
scored
over Ohto Wesleyan 92-76 and
Archte Aldndge led the Otterbetn stopped Capital 71way with 21 pomts and had 66
solid support from Chuck
Wnghl State's Bob Grote,
Goodyear with 19 and Randy scormg a career -h tgh 33

G

broke rules
DALLAS t UP!) - A htghly
sought htgh school football
prospect told mve sllgators he
was offered tllegal mducernents to attend the
UnJverslty of Arkansas, the
Mormng
News
Dallas
reported today
The News satd Arkansas
was under mvest1gat10n by
the Southwest Conference
and posstbly the NCAA for
the school 's attempts to
recrutt Rodenc Gerald
Gerald, who played high
school football at Dallas
South Oak Cltlf, llrst Signed
wtth the Razorbacks m tbe
sprin g of 1975 but then
swttched to Ohtp State
Southern Methodtst has been
under mvesllgatlon for tts
attempt to recruit Gerald,
and the News reported the
SWC had also mvesttgated
Baylor.
The newspaper satd 11 had a
copy of the trdormatton oiltamed by NCAA mvesttgator
Jtm Owens, and the
allegations agamst Baylor
and SMU were not as strong
as those agatnst Arkansas.
"I took some thmgs some
schools offered me and I did
not sign wtth them ," Gerald
reportedly told Owens, adding that Arkansas dtd offer
htrn tllegal inducements
" I kno11 the Southwest
Co nfer ence
has
tn1 vesttguted,"
sa1d Arkansa:;
prestdent Dr Charles Btshop.
'But I know nothing of an
NCAA mvestlgatlon . The last
I heard one of the coaches
took a polygraph "
Arkansas assistant coach
Jtm Johnson said be voluntarily took a polygraph test
" I pa~ tt Wtth nying
4 ulc1rS," .Johnson said
:'I
have a feellnK what they are
dotn~
Is
Investigating
everybody ~ ho rec rutlcd
RoderU' r,, 1•'141 •

was a n espectally
sattsfymg trturnph for the
Deacons, who had been upset
by Vtrgtma last Wednesday
after havmg vaulted toto the
top 10 wtth successtve vtctones over naltonally-ranked
teams North Carolma and
North Carohna State the
week before
The Deacons, 12-1. took the
lead and never rellnqmshed
H. although the Terps cut tl to
one-point twtce- the last ttme
at 68-87 wtth I 30 to play. But
m the last two mmutes, the
Deacons htt 10 of 10 free
throws to msure the v1ctory ·
Wake Forest got superb
scormg balance wtth four
players scortng more than 20
pomts
Guards
Jerry
Schellenberger and Sktp
Brown had 22 pomts aptece
whtle Daryl Peterson and
Rud Grtflm had 21 each lor
lhe Deacons All-Amertca
guard John Lucas of
Maryland led all scorers wttll
34 pomts
It

' We wanted th1s one
badly," satd Deacons' Coach
Ca rl Tacy " It was a great
come ba~k alter losmg to
Vtrgtnta Wedn es day Our
approach to the game was
low key "
"They JUS! outhustled us,"
satd Maryland Coach I.e!ly ,
Drtesell "They htt some
clutch shots that cost
11~ really cost us They JUS!
outplayed us "
The
Brums,
after
squeaktng by Oregon, 62-61,
at Eugene on Fnday mght
met their match at Corvallis
Saturday rught when Oregon
State whtp~d them soundly 1
75-58
Center I..onme ~elton , who
went to court to get hts
college ellgtbiltty restored
after stgnmg a hardshtp
cootract wtth the Arnertcan
Basketball Association ,
sparked the upset wtth 20
pomts.
It was only the etghth
Pacthc Etght Conference loss

~ ea•t te

C o ll e g e B oH k c tb a fl
74 P1tl 1] ll

Georget own

Wheeling

ao

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61

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u •ah St 75 BnfOlharn vouno 1l
W1Sh l n910n tl Orevon
Co li 10
W a s h.ngton 87 St enforCI II
W ash.noton Sl H C111tornta

1 a.rheld ~0
va wesley a n

w

Clemson Rl C.tade l 611
•
Oa-,.ton 'JI Old Oomin1can 7'il
E Caroltna 1'J Furman 68
1 lor.cta 'i l n Ja c k.sonv •lle ~7
Georg .a 51 64 So M~ss 75
to: y Westevan 87 D r ury 69
Lock Haven 73 ~a llsbu r y Sl

••We ber

:)1 80 l dltlO 6S

to9

pomts, led the Ratders to an
84-80 come-from -behmd '"n
over Central State, handing
the Marauders only their
second loss m 12 games
Wnghl Slate IS now 9-2
Rto Grande's 6-.5 Jtm Noe
scnred 42 pmnts to lead the
Redmen to an ~ vtctory
over Malone
In other games. Def1ance
downed Hanover 84-69,
Ashland edged Trt.State 57..)3
for the Eagles' etghth wm 1n a
row,
Ftn diay
downed
Wtlmm gton 78-62, Tay lor
squeaked by Bluffton 91-90,
Walsh rolled over Ohto
Dommtcan 108-76, Htram
drubbed Case-Western
Reserve 107-82, P!uladelplua
Texttle beat Youngstown
State 76-64, Steubenvtlle
downed Wtlberforce 90-85,
John Carroll defeated Carnegte-Mellon 73-71 and Cedarville ntpped Tiffin 79-77
Tontght, Ohto State ts at
Mtchtgan, Wrtght State at
Morehead State, Centra l
State at TeMessee State,
Fatrletgh Dtckmson at
Cleveland State and Ohio
Dom1mcan at R10 Grande

International Hockey
100 MISSISSIPP I 75
Len ut St•ndtntt
Ma r ~haiii!B Mo r eh ea d 87 (ot)
United Prtn tnttrnatlanal
Mo r ef1o tne 81 Cl ark 80
Harth
Mu rray 87 N e w Orl ean s 78
w I t ptl If t•
N T exas St 77 SW La 75
S a~;pnaw
72 U 6 SO 1173 14$
No Caro l ma B~ V1 rg 1n t a 82 Port Huron
No Ca r o l 1n a 51 JQ Ro ll 1n s 7S
21 15 4 •6 IS' 1)6
So Ca r o!t n a IOJ Sam ford 74 • M J skegon 18 14 7 •J 119 101
Tenn ·Tec h 74 E Ten n Sl 69
r l tn l
11 IS 9 43 1d 125
Ten nessee 90 Ke nl uc ky 88
Kalamazoo
!ol)
II 23 7 29 130 ltl
V and er bll l t 'il5 Geor g 1a a ~ Co l 1
South
V 1r g 1n 1a 51 79 H am pton tn s1
wIt Pft 11 II
l ~U

.

''

W Ken t uc k y 104 M ac Murra y

"w

Vt r g m •a 84 D CHr'l d Son 80
!ot l
Wake f o r est 96 M aryl and 93
Was h &amp; Lee 7l Ly com mg 7 ~
W 1ll1a m &amp; M ar y 105 W a s h
M d 60
Be than y
10 4
Conc..p rd t a
T e a c h e r s SB
Bu l l er 91 Ev an s v!!le 78
Cent M1 c h 82 E M1c h 80
Cent M o 53 S W Mo S l 52
Ch1 cago 78 N w s lrn (Wis l 3a
ll l •no s 74 Nor t hwe s le r n 69
lndtana 80 M1 c h•gan 74
Iowa 7 1 Mmnesota 68
Jo hn Canol! 13 C Mellon 11
Ke nr S t 72 Ball Sl 66
M~ a mt (Qh •o l 113 No
Il l 1 3
N e v La s V e g a s 88 I owa S l 82
No Dakola 75 N o Dakota S l

13 26

Muskegon 3 Fort Wayne 0
Por t Huron 5 Kal1mnoo 3
Dayton 2 rlml 0
Col u mbus 5 Sag.now A

Sunday 's Result•

Fltn l 2 Port Huron 2
Sag tnaw 1 Daylon l
Kala mazoo 3 Muskevon
Toledo 10 c o tumbul J

Today•s Gemn

No

games scheduled

Tuesd1v'1 Games
No games scheduled

College Sl1ndin1s

Notre Dame 88 Manhattan 71
Oh•o Norlh ern 70 t Ober l m 50
Ohto U 62 Bo whrtg Green 56
O!le rbe ln 71 Cap!lal 66
Purdu e 87 W ts c ons tn 72

Mator lndrp•nlltnts

n

Pepp erdtne 42 Santa ' Ciara 38
San Otego Sl 110 Portland S t
80
San Fr an 7~ Loyo la fCal!f l
65

7 5

W L Pet

lnd1an a
Purdue
M1Ch
Iowa

stratght potnts to take a 93-92
lead wtth 9·11 rematmng
Phtladelphta then scored
etght stratghl pomts and a
100.93 margin wtth 6 18 left
and Boston could never catch
up

!'•1ge4

846

Mlch St

2 '2

500
33)

8 •

6 7

&lt;62
667

250
250
000

' 3
6 7
• 7

750

111!0015
l 2
Mtnneso ta

I 3
N ' ws lrn
Oh10SI

I 2
0 3

w Mtch

W L PCf

" Mtamt

MALONE ('7) 4513
Ma s on
Manghum 2 1

Pearson

Sill

S Vtckery 0 2

2 Kle1n 8 ~ 70 Gepha.rl 2 0 4
Sommers I 0 2 Mar11n 2 0 41
Jordan 2 0 4
Cox 0 2 '2
TOTALS 26-15-67

O htO u
Ke nt St
Toledo
Bwln9 G

c

Mtch
Ball St
E Mtch
No Ill

RIO GRAtjDE till

-

636

2010007•
1 2
333 S 6
12
3n•7

636

1o1 ooo5 •

333 S 6

4S•

333 6 •
000 • 7
000 2 9

600
363
181

0 3
0 3

t .........,

POMEROY, OHIO
OFFICE
to 12, 2 to 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.l-EAST COURT

4S•

363

t 2

Farmers Bank

Sc:ore at half1tme - R: 10 J2
Malone 19

m

I 2

John Marshall IS a tough Ch1ef Justice. He
can even give a Pres 1dent h1s comeuppance
Seems Tom Jefferson d1dn't g1ve an Adams
appomtee the job h e was promised. It's challenged ui the case of Marbury vs Mad1son .
Marshall rules agamst the admmistration.
And for the first t1me the Supreme Court
cla1ms the power to declare federal law unconstitUtiOnal Marshall js determined to
make the JUdiciary a powerful force m the
government A far cry from the old coloma!
days, when our JUdicial decisiOns were based
on Enghsh court precedents It's the first time
he shows us what a clever statesman he is.
We thmk John Mar shall w11l make quite a
difference m American law 51

TOTALS 17 14 U

W L Pet.

3010007.t

1803 A new precedent zs set.

.l\lbanese 3 1 7 Barbee I 0 '2
VIse o 1 1 . Br1sker 0 7 2
Caldwell 3 o 6, ca rr.ng t on 1
o 2 Noe 19 4 •2 Pr1 c e 6 Q 12 .
Rob•nson 0 2 2 . Royse I 0 2.
S1ewart 1 4 6. Swfun 2 0 -t

m

36•

301000101000

in Rio win

to stx points tn the fu sl half .
The Malone ace scored most
or hts potnts alter the Redmen teed the vtclory
Klein became the ftrst
Malo~e player m htstory to
' surpass the 2,000 point mark
In lour years of varstty play
at Malooe, Klem has tallted
2,1)07 pomts, good for an
average or 2ti pomts per
game

667

Mid Amerlun conttrenct
conference All Gemts

Noe nets 42

The victory left Rio Grande
wath a &amp;.7 season record
• lnstde the MOC, Rlo Grande
ts 1.0 whtle the delendtng
charnpton Pioneers dropped
to 7-9 overall and 3-2 inside
the conference
Tonlf!hl, Rio Grande wtll
host Ohto Domm1can 12-7) m
another cpnference game .
Tipoff ltrne ts 8 p m
In Saturday's contest, Rio
Jumped out In front early and
never looked behind Coach
Art Lanham's quintet enJOYed a 32-!9 hal!ttme lead
Bestdes Noe 's 42 potnf.s, Gtl
Prtce tossed tn 12 for the
Redrnen All 12 Rto Grande
p~yers entered the scoring
colwnn Mark Klein paced
the Pioneers \1 tth 20 points
Eastern's Bob (;aldwell
hmited the h~h«urml( Klem

W L Pet.

667 11 2
soo 8 ..

I

Jumor Forward J1mmy Noe tossed in 42
pomts Saturday night to lead Rio Grande College
to a surpnsmgly easy 88-67 Mtd-Ohto Conference
victory over the v1s1tmg Malone Pioneers.
Noe's output, h1s career high at Rio Grande,
also established a new single-game mdiv1dual
scoring mark for a Redman player in six-year-old
Lyne Center

Sll

2 1
2 2

"We had our best second
hall of basketball we had all
season," Shue satd
Charlte Scott led tbe Celttcs
wtth 19 pomts whtle JoJo
Whtte had 18 and John
f 'flJIII!l llf'l'l Ill\

... ,

w.s

From a Great American Bank

!

~ct

3010001101000
2 0 1 000 7 ..
636
3 1 750 ' 3 750

76ers getting respect
There 's life yet m the
Phtladelphta 76ers and now,
more than ever, the Boston
Celttcs reahze they face a
rea I challenge to their NBA
Atlanttc Divtston crown
Many observers have been
expectmg the 76ers to lay
down hke lost sheep after
team leader Btlly Cunnmgham underwent knee
surgery a month ago They
dtd struggle somewhat
through an adjustment pertod
hut, to the credtt of coach
Gene Shue, the young 76ers,
boastmg the third best record
m the NBA, are proving they
are a team whose future may
be now.
"Some of our young players
are showing defimte stgns of
rontrtbutmg rught in and
night out," Shue satd after hts
team wtped out a 15-pomt
deftctt to defeat ~ston 118!07 and close to wtthm a hallgame of th~ Atlanttc DlVlslon·
leading Celttcs.
Shue was happy about
Doug Collms, who scored 31
pomts, and especially Steve
Mtx. who has replaced
Cunmngham at forward
George McGtnrus had 18 and
rookie Joe Bryant added 16
What made the wm more
unpresstve was the fact that
the 76ers started the th1rd
quarter tratling ~I after
the Celttcs had played a
brtlllant ftrst half, hlttmg on
2ll of 51 shots from the field.
Ru 1 1he r.elt ics cooled off m
the thtrd pertod when they
tuatle only stx of 21 shots
'J11e Stxers reeled off 14
~lral~ht pomls to make at 70.
69 with 6 22 left m the
quarter BoSton upened up
two ftve-potnt leads agam at
81-76 and 83-78 and then the
Sixet s came back to !earl lt6fl5 entermg the final peno&lt;l
Pluladelphia made tl 92~
wtth 10 38 remamtng . Boston
came back, scoring six

1

Btq Ttn
Conference All G•mes

60

Fres no St 7J Pori l and 66
N ew Melt iCO 54 Wyom mg 53
So Cal! fornta 72
Or e gon
Oregon St 75 U Cl f• 58

11

Dayton

Houslon 8? RIce S9
71 Ok l a Cd~ 60
Pan /l me r
10 4 Hardin
S1mmons 97
so Me lhodtSI 96 T e,;as 84
TeJ~aS A&amp;M 76 Bay lo r' 6~ (OI J
TeJ~as Te c h 82 TCU S8
Tulsa 99 Bradley 87
f\.r 1ZOna 51 72 Long Beach 5~

62

w L

em

St e ub env•lle 90 Wt l b erforce
81
S t L OU I S .t6 Ok l ahoma 4)
Val p ara.so 75 tnd Cent Sd
Ar t zona 106 D e lro 1 76
Belhany 104 Concordia Tchrs

Cal Luth eran 68 Occtdent a l 66
Cal Poly SLO 90 Havwa rd St

4 30 123 IU

saturday's Ruutts

57

"

lor UCLA m the past 10 years scramble to defeat No 13
and lour of those losses have Mtchtgan fl0.74 at Ann Arbor,
come on the Oregon road trtp No 5 Washmgton trailed at
"Oregon State played a the half and had to rally to
near perfect game," saad defeat Stanford 87-81 at
UCLA Coach Gene Bartow Stanford, No 6 Nevada-Las
"We have to rontrol the Vegas squeezed past Iowa
boards to win and we dtdn 'I State 88-82 at Ames, No 8
North Ca rolina mpped
We took poor shots "
"Thts has to be one of our Vtrgmia 85-82
greatest vtctor1es," saad
Beaver Coach Ralph Mtller.
"I satd before the game that
the greatest defensive team
would wm It dtd We cut off
the passtng lanes, took away
the mtddle and forced the
outs1de shot "
Maryland and UCLA
weren 't the only teams to lmd
thmgs tough on the road rhe
remamder or the top 10 also
played on the road last
Saturday, and whtle each of
them won, only No 4
Marquette, which defeated
Oklahoma Ctty 71-60 at
Oklahoma City, had thmgs
relauvely easy
No . I Indtana had to

D ayton
22 15 5 A9 158 127
Toledo
17 lA 10 .u 137 129
r o rt Wayne
15 20 a 38 lSB 1S6
Co lumbus

Vtrg m ,a Tech 72 Mem ph• s 51
71

MarQ~.Jetle

.Maryland, UCLA drop cage contests
Ry FRED McMANE

~an r nton~(l a• Df'nvcr

~--:·:·:·:·:.~:·••:-·.·:::·.·:::·,.::.:.:-:·:·:·:·x;:. ·:·:·: .·:-:

extent there may ha ve been
the feeltng that they wet e
second rate wher1 compared
to the Kennedys, "ho also
had a reputation for bemg
politically ruthless
"Some of them wer e attemplmg to ou tdo the Ken
nedys It ts hearsay, but my
1mpress10n was
1f t he
Kennedys were tough, " e
have to be tougher '
· To ma ke concesswns to.
peop)e 's
feelm gs
10
recogmzc lhat a paruculat
obj ective \.\a s not '-"OI t h

I

•

W

M!lwau~ ec

P &lt;~c 1tt c

Amencans who are 50 tu 65 ;e~u .s uld
and are sltll emp loyed
E\.ans was proll,lpted to take tictum
when he read an arhclc rccuLIDlmg hO\\
the w1ld horses were bemg run rhmn
and shot £rom helu.:upters HI wester·n
states Dynamic Matunty qootes hun
as saymg
" What a cr1me They' re the }JidJ e~ n
pontes that Rennngtun and Russe ll
pamted "
Evans captured some wtld pontes
m the South\\ es t and brought them !o
hi s Oh1 o farm , \\here lheJ have cx·
cellent pasturage and have become
domesticated Four years etgo Evi.lns
founded and became the ftrst prestde~l
of th e Spantsh-Barb Bt eede r s
Assoc1atwn, wtth headque~r ter s m
Colorado Spnngs, Colo

,'

enough abundant sunshme m
the !trst place, then the more
skin area avatlable to the
hrnited supply of llltra violet
rays the more hkeiy you wtll
be to form enough vitam to D
Inctde ntaliy excessive
exposure of the skm to the sun
and wmd ages tl, causmg
premature wrmkllng and a
htgher rate of skin cancer A
more generous exposure of
large areas to less intense~
rays wtll prov 1de vitammi 0
1
:
Wllhoul s ue 11 1
likelihood of de•elvptng ·.kill
abnormalthes
As a sctenttst I lmd tl hard
lo sympathtze wtth htdmg
parts of the body A normal
healthy body or any part of It
isn'l exacU} somethmg tube
ashamed of It ts a wondrous
mac htne that has no equal. I
thmk clothtng should be
funcliunal to keep the body ·
warm. cotufortable ur, yes,
even enhance tis appearance
Hldmg the body m shame has

M~d wes t DI V I ~ I O il

"'

•

Co-worker f~und intolerance in Nixonites ,

shown that as httle as three
square mches of skm contam
enough of the baste cherntcal
to provtde all the vttamtn D a
normal person needs, tl, and
that ts a btg tf, the chemtcals
are fully achvated by the sun
rays
A maJor part of the dll·
ference depends on how much
of the sun rays get through
the atmosphere and act on
the skin In the northern
chmates chtldren are more
prone to nckets from lack vi
sunshtne, and vitarntn D
replacemen ts are more
Important
The big ctttes lltth a1r
pollutiOn are the worst At the
beglnnlng of the 20th centw-y
90 per cent of the children In
northern European ctlies had
rickets from vllamtn D
deflctency
Normally tf the face and
hands were fully exposed to
the ld\ 0:
, • r1
ShOUJd be J)ll'lll) t.J! , (1 JJ.IIl l I)
ft •rmed bu, tf there IS nut

n

flew

w.

DR. LAMB

I fooda.

,.
Sto1 n d 10 Q!!
., o., Un •te~ P ress ln lc tnallo n.ll
.,
East r rn Con tercncl'
11 "
Afl a nf !C DI VISIO O
a
W
L
Pet
G 8
:bos !on
7 t 11 6H6
~ hdad~lph•a
?'i 13 6'&gt;8
~ U it aiO
17 "o61
I
York
!9 • :l3 J'&gt;1
H'
..,
' Cc nfra l D IV IS IOO
•
W
L
P el
G 8
W.1sh1ng•on
Ll 17 'i'IJ
~leveland
71 IB "o)ij
.(itlanta
IH lfi sou l
U OU!.f011
1H 18 500 l
H ew Orll;'an s
17 19 J/2
J
:
W e~ In n Con l et c ne c

Kenneth sargenl , and Oemo-

RIO GRANDE Farmer busmessrnan Bob Evans of Rto Grande
has a spectal JmsstOn m hfe He ts
heJptng save the Wild mustangs Of
Arnenca from extmcl!on
On hts farm are 26 wtld horses
descended from a breed known as the
Spantsh-Barb They are small, mtelhgent horses f1r st bred m Spam more
than 700 years ago
The storY of Evans' mterest m
preservmg the wtld mustang ts told m
the January 11976) tssue of Dynamtc
Matunty, a monthly mt:tgazme
published lor the quarter mtlhon
members of AIM I Actton for Independent Maturtly l, a divtston of the .
etg ht-mJJIJ on-member Amertcan
Assoctahon of Reltred Persons AIM ts
a pre-re tirement orgamzatwn for

Kennedy had Addtson 's
dtsease everybody would
have satd, 'He's gomg to

J

By Lawren&lt;:e E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DOCTOR LAMB •. Do you have any information
regardmg vttarnm D from the
., sun through skin absorplton
~ and
the posstbtltty of
recetvtng thts vttarnln from
other sources
·. , The reason for this mqwry
, ts that there are certain
. reUgious orgamzattons that
:· require full length dresses
and sleeves and I wonder t!
, • this could not be detrimental
•. to children.
~ Could this lack of vttamm D
' from the sun be supplemented through other
l SOIJIICII such ~s cod liver otl ,
1 e1111 yollt and mtlk'
L Ellpectally 1 would hke to
'· know If sunohiM on the face
• only would provtde enough
, vttamtn D for a child's well' being along with the proper

~ ilft ORol l Bil~ k e f b~ ll ASSOC iclh on

Evans' Mustangs story.in AIM mag

Blairs say JFK
had rare disease
LANTANA, Fla . IUPI) John Kennedy was the vtclun
of a rare blood dtsease that
nearly proved fatal three
times before he became
preSident, but hts frtends and
farnUy kept tbe illness secret
for pohtlcal reasons, acrording to a new book about
Kennedy
Joan and Clay Blatr Jr ,
authors of "The Search for
JFK," said Kennedy suffered
from Addtson's dtSease, a
hormone defictenc:y.- conSidered fatal unttl the late
1930s.
"On at least two occastons
as a member of Congress,"
the Bla1rs wrote, " KeMedy
was so close to death from the
disease that he was gtven the
laBt rttes of the Catholic
church."
An excerpt from the
Kennedy book was released
Sunday by the Nahonal
Enquirer, which ts publishing
a coodensed versiOn of the
work m a series of
ropyrtghted articles
The Blairs reported detatls
of Kennedy's Illness based on
information from ReMedy's
mother, Mrs Rose KeMedy,
his brother-m~aw, R. Sargent
Shriver, and family friends .
Hts pohttcal associates ,
friends, family and doctors
kept the tllness secret
because, the newspaper
arttcle quoted Shrtver as
saying, "In that period, in the
l!lii(ti and 196(k;, tf you put out
(a statement), that Jack

week 11

-When Rose Kennedy told a
reporter last week her son,
Sen Edward Kennedy , mtght
break hts promtse to her and
rttn for prestdent alter all, tt
set orr a scramble m
Massachusetts.
There's a long line of men
who want to be senator tn
Massach usetts The fteld tncludes Repubhcans Elhot
Richardson and former Gov

-If the pace of the prestdenttal
race ptcked up a bit durmg

The nuih &amp;out mel, MlthUepurt-PUIIII'I tl\' 0 • MorHim '.I. til

3

$40,000.00 Maximum Insurance For Each Depositor
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

�I

2-

T~

I~. l ~lil ·

Dally Sentmt&gt;l. Mlddleport -l•oJJU'Il1\', 0 . Mu11ttt ) .1 .111

.r-----------,
:I
i1 Pro
~Stanrli n2~ :
.

Casualties certain among hopefuls
.in New England primary elections
WASHINGTON tUPI) Before New England's triple-.
header prunary season IS
over
March
2,
the
presidential asp1rat10ns of
several Democrats could be
dead - or at least senously
wounded
It used to be the New
Hampshire prunary season
opener would altract a lot of
attention, but the results soon
would be forgotten when the
candidates went after latter
delegattoo counts tn Flortda
and WtsConsm
11us year New Hampshire
kicks things off Feb 24,
followed one week later by
netghbormg Massachusetts
and Vermont Vermont
)Otned the fray last week and
IS untested political terntory
So the Democrats are
scrambling around New
England wtth new mterest m
the Yankee voter Liberals
Birch Bayh, Morns Udall and
Fred Harris hop!! to do best m
Massachusetts Former Gov.
JlllUily Carter of Georgta
thinks he appeals most to the
more conservative voters m
Vermont and New Hampshtre.
Any Democrats who falter
in New England run the riSk
of havmg pohhcal contributions dry up JUst when
the money ts needed to carry
on mto such key prunanes as
Flonda, Illlnots , Oregon,
New York and Callforrua
-Some indtcattons of how

tht:' p~st

""~ du..- 111 no
small part to the Feder11l
F.lectwn Co numssaon, whach
;1arted handing out checks of
at least $100,000 each to II
prestdenttal candidates.
A number of Democratic
contenders were runmng
thetr carnprugns oo goodwtll
unttl receiVIng the ftrst
checks the government ever
has wrttten to help subsi!Iize
a pohttcal campatgn. So far
Uncle Sem's share has rome
to about $2 mthoo - but tt
could go over $100 mtlllon
before electton day
The money doesn't come
out of the general treasury,
but that little box taxpayers
check on their tax forms to
donate $1 to the pohllcal
party of thetr chotce

are goang m the
prestdenual sweepstakes
came out of a Carnbrtdge poll
released m Massachusetts
la!it week " Undectded" was
the wmner among the 10
entrants m the Democratic
rontest among Bay State
voters
In addttton to the 41 per
cent who satd they were
undectded. local !avonte
Sargent Shrtver got 18 per
cent
Geo rge
Wallace
recetved 11 per cent, Henry
Jackson 10 per cent and lhe
rest were also-rans among
Massachusetts voters
thw~s

-le; a

kmd of a prevtew to the
primanes, the carnpa tgn
year opens Jan 19 m Iowa
Rather .than have voters pick
delegates, Iowa Democrats
begin selectmg thetr party's
nol}lm ee wtlh precmct
caucuses tn 2,600 neighborhoods
Tins conlusmg process has
attracted a lot of attention
from the Democratic contenders A UPI poll shows
Sen. Hubert Hwnphrey, who
has patd no atlenllon to Iowa
or to any primary race, IS the
!avonte of local Dernocrattc
leaders, followed at some
distance by Carter and Udall
Recent reports out of the
state "show Bayh also IS
m~king a late showmg.

.
'

"'

'

•'

•

.~

ual s

R ep

Mllh&lt;:~cl

Harrmgton and Ma yor Ke\m
Wh1te of Ruston
Wlute also ts looking elsewhere He'd like to make the
problems of the natwn's btg
Cltles enough of a natwnwtde
campa1gn 1ssue to carve out a
VICe prestdenttal spdt for
himself thts year

die '."

Shrtver reportedly satd hts
wife, Eunice, also suffers
from tbe same disease which
tS treated wtth cortisone and
doca, a syntheltc drug whtch
makes up for a deftctent
-.secretion of the adrenal
gland.
The arttde also quoted Dr
Elmer Bartels, now retired,
WASHINGTON I UP!) - A
of the Lahey Cluuc m Boston, psychtatrtst who served m
as saymg Kennedy was born the Ntxon White House from
wtth an "unstable back" 1971 to 1973 says those close to
whtch was the cause of Prestdent Rtchard Ntxon dtssertous back problems. The trusted others and had no
back pams were publicly tolerance for dissent
altrtbuted to old football
"They deeply distrusted
became the mottves of other people
lnjurtes
ihat
aggravated after ReMedy's and were unable to believe
World War II combat experi- that people could nse above
ences aboard the PT109.
selftsh rnottves," satd Dr
The authors satd the J erome Jafle, who was
disease almost ktlled Ken- director of the White House
nedy three tunes
spectal action offtce lor drug
- Arter learnmg he had the abuse prevention and a
disease whtle m England tn ) spectal ronsultant on drugs.
1947, "the seriously ill" KenJaffe's Vtews Of hiS White
nedy, then a COngressman, House years came m an mwas sent home by ocean lmer
tervtew in Psychtatrtc News,
- Referrmg to a passage a publtcalton of the Arnertcan
from Robert Kennedy's book, Psychtatrtc Assoctalton .
"As We Remember Hun," Jaffe told UPI he was not
describing JFK's near fatal speakmg as a psychtatnst but
tllness on Oktnawa tn 1951, Just as someone who had been
the arttcle said that ep1sode there
was also caused by the
disease.
-On Oct 21, 1954, KeMedy weakened rondttion almost
underwent a sertous back killed htm. "He nearly dted,"
operatton but a severe in- Rose Kennedy was quoted as
fectton attrtbuted to hts saymg

-The btg pollttcal souvemr
being brought back from New
Hampshtre by pollltctans and
reporters thts year IS a new
book entttled , " Who the Hell
IS Wtlllarn Loeb ?"
The book 1s an uncornplunentary btography of
the controversial conser vative edttor of the
Manches ter, N H , Umo n
Leader.
Loeb's front-page edilonals
have had a maJor impact on
past Grarute State prunar1es
Thts 11eek one or them said
"You know, really, there
may have been btgger mcornpetents a nd btgger fools
m the White House than our
pleasant, bumbling Prestdent
Ford, but, tf there have been
such , ht story has not
recorded them!"

Jaffe IS Chtef Of psychiatriC
research at New York State
Psychtatrtc Instttute and
professor of psyottiatry at
Columbta Umverstty.
Jaffe satd that, as the mner
group around Nixon saw
thmgs, " to dtssent was to be
disloyal. That ts the theme
that re curred agam and
agam."
Jaffe satd tha t · al no poml
did the mner Whtte House
group ever feel sufftctently
comfortable wtth outstders to
take them really mto thetr
conftdence
' That was really the trony
' or the whole sttuatton 'Otey
deeply dtstrusted the motives
of other people and were
unable to beheve that people
could rtse above selfish
mollves "
Jaffe satd the NIXon people
"were not entirely selfish."
He satd they were molt vated
by ''the idea that the people of
the Ntxon admmtstt'attOn
could
accornpltsh
somfthmg"
He added !bat "to a certam

•

Sunshine and vitamin D

. DEAR READER - The
! ullra violet rays of Lile sun act
on chemicals In the sktn to
•p,-m vl""'lll D Studies have

•

l

I

man, but to each hts own
You don't need Jo take cod
hver otl. You can and should
get enough vttamm D from a
well-balanced dtet that tneludes mtlk All cornmerctal
mtlk sold In supermarkets ts
enrtched wtth vitarnm D You
also gel vttarnin D In
margarmes and butter
The mexpenstve ali purpose datly vttamm contaws
all the vitamtn D you need
even tf there were none m
your food
'
t'or more mforrnatton on'
vltarntn D and other vttamm
requirements send 50 cents
lor The Health Letter number
4-6,
BalBnced
Diet,
Recommended Dally Dtetary
Allowances !RDA) Send a
long,
stamped,
selfaddressed envelope for
muillng. Address your letter
lo me in care of this newspaper, P 0 Box 1551 , RBdto
Oty Station, New York , I"Y
10019

lu hj• ( tlr11rttr v lu t la tW'al

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359 I ~
S a turct ~v·s Resu l1s
Cleveland lOt. f\ 11an ,,, 100
ttouston 10) P o ri l and 9J
' hiCi'IQO Il l ~i"lll~c15 C1ly Bl
Wc w Orleans 10 I ncl n ) t1 QQ
Wa s l1of'l(liO•• 107 Milwa u kee A7
~Olden &lt;,t;}IC J 17 New Yo rk. H7
•
Su ndilV 'S Re sult s
~un~a s C•t v IO'i Dclrott 99
11oston 10' Ph •ladc lphl d 11H
Clcvcl an (l lUt&gt; \' as11n q lon 101
MdwaukL""C 9'• 1 os 1\ nqc l c~ 89
New York 91,1 Plioen •"' 1,18
Por !l rt no lit. r.11ant&lt;1 10~
Buftalo 1? '1 ~C'alr l r Hp
1 No g am e~ to da v J
Tu esd a y's Gn m es
~or! l a n &lt;i vs !'aston .11 H a r l tor d
L.os fl m.H.'I cs ,,! Ch•c aq o

DRIVING TO THE BASKET - Modern basketball's
favorite maneuver, other tha n puttmg the hall through the
hoop from any angle at a ny range, ts drt\'lng for the
basket where It 's easiest to get the ball m Sat urday mght
John Sayre 133) of the Tornado Club of Southern Htgh
Schoo l got around a Wahama defender by gomg to the
hasehne and ts heachng for the basket Sou thern won 7~
Picture by .11m Hamm

~illt l e al Milwav k£&gt; e
~lJif01to .1 1 Golden ~ tate

Am cnc an Bas k etb;tll Ass oCia
lion St.lndtng s
.,B'f Un1ted P r ess lntcrnaltortal
W
l
Pe t
G B
De n ver
71
Y 7'10
N ew York
21 I" 667
J
'•an r nton. o
Jl 11 600
J&lt;...eni ii CkJo
1'1 HI .,11
8
lnd1&lt;m a
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Sundav ~ Resu lh
New Yorio. 117 Indiana 10?
'C,t I OlliS. I }J IU' nlut ll y Il l
,
M onda y .s Cit me

BURN. BURN, NO TOUCH ' seems to be how Perry
Htll , 21, of Southern High School felt Saturday night about
tanglmg wtth the Waharna Falrons' Kenny Riggs (32) who
got to the bail !trstest wtth the rnostest The Tornado club
from Ohto went on to wm 7~. Ptcture by JlJD Harnm.

Tu cs d a v s GMn e
New York ill Dcnvf'r

---------

.;

."";,' .....-~ ·::·:::;:::

"'

EV !INS AND TilE Sl!ILLION It
took four d.tys tu ru n du\\n, to bl•
brough t to hi SOhiO farm ~~ n 10 Grande
He

110~

hus 'a hl·rd n£ 26 Spa n1 sh-Barb

~ 1u stan gs

destroym g pcopl£' m the
process of Its att amment, was
not someth mg that ehc1ted

an y adm1rat10n Suc h a
C"Oncer n wHs VIC\\ ed as a fata l
naw . .Jaffe ' "'"
Had they been able to do
wha t Gerald Ford seems to
he aGie to do, whtch ts to
hrmg m all ktncl&lt; of people
r:tnd JU St lis te n without
makmg am comnutments,
Wlthout bem g too an gry ,
maybe thm~ s would have
hcen different · Jaffe satd

Miller repeats
•

'

zn Tucson
TUCSON , Am CUP! ) Johnny Mtller almost felt had
about wmnmg the $200,000
Tucson Open Sunday lor a
near record lhtrd stratght
lime
The youn g Ca ltloi'ntan
charged m front on th e thtrd
hole of the fmal round, then
fou ght orr cha llenges by
Bnttsh Open champ Tom
Watson, young Howa rd
Twttly, former PGA champ
Dave Stockton and Tom
Wetskopf twtce to wm by
Utree strokes wtth a fmal
round 68
"When I ca me up to the
16th green, the crowd gave
me a btg cheer ," Mtller, 2ll,
who now ha s won $987,152 and
needs only' $12,841 to become
golf's youngest and mnth
rntlhonatr e, sa td 'That
made me feel good, but, tl I
was them, l would have been
rootmg for someone else I'm
surprtsed they aren't ltred of
seeing the same guy win
agam."
The 68, a score Mtllcr
predicted he would shoot to
wm, gave hun a 72-hole total
of 14-under-par 274 and a
three-s hol tnumph ove r
Twttty. a 1972 graduate or
Artzona State, who also had a
nnal round 68 to wm $22,800,
his btggest paycheck smce
jommg the tour last year
Miller , who won the Tucson
last year wtth a ~-under-par
score of 263, satd he woiJ)d
have :tkl•l a btg lea d going
mlu the fmal round because

Social ~~:::. Diabetes
Calendar 1may fall
~

· •::.ti~ ·-· ~
t/1.._
~ -..-;.~ -~. . ~'.}) ..

MONDAY
UN ITED MET HOOIST
Women , Heath
Untied
Methodtsl Church, 7 30 p m
at the church Mrs Nan
Moore , program leader,
triemonal
se r v1ce
for
deceasL-rl member::i
SOUTHERN
Athleltc
Boosters Monday 7 30 p m at
Interested
htgh sc hool
persons UJ ged to attend
MEIGS JUNIOR Athlehc
Boosters Monday al Me1gs
Juntor H1gh ca lelerta 7 30
pm
TUESDAY
AMERICAN LEGION'
Auxtha ry, Lewts Manley Post
26:1, 2 p m Tuesday at the
home of Mrs Ernest Bowles,
Mtddleport
DISABLED AMERICAN
Veterans, Cha pt er
53,
meeltng, 7 30 p m Tuesday
at DAV Home, Butternut
Ave , PomerO)
WINDING Tratl Garden
Club, 7 30 Tuesday mght at
the home of Mrs . Cora
Beegle Mrs Mtldred Deeth
to have the educatiOnal
dtsplay or books on btrds
Mtss Shtrley Beegle wtll
present shdes or her
Hawauan vacation The
arrangement of the month
wtll be dned on the theme
· Happy New Year 1976"
HARRISONVILLE Order
of Eastern Stars Tuesday at 8
p rn Refreshments
EASTERN Band Boosters
Tuesday 7 30 p.rn m band
room Insurance money lo be
turned tn
•
RACINE Masontc Lodge
461 Tuesday 7.30 p rn . All
mas ter masons mv1ted

he feels that once he ge ts on
top he can wm As tt was he
and Watson started the last 18
!ted for second, a shot behtnd
Wct skopf , who eventually
f1mshed thtrd at 278 and won
$14,200
''It was close," Mtller sa1d
" I played my game , and the
oth er guys fell back. I never
once felt I had tl locked up,
hut once I made that btrdie
putt on the 16th, I knew I was
m pretty good shape I feel
anyttrne I get m front by two
strokes, I have an excellent
WEDNESDAY
chance to wm "
WHITE
ROSE LODGE ,
By wmmng, Mtller became ' I 30 p m Wednesday at the
the seventh player in history Arnertcan Legton Hall m
to w1n the same tournwnent Mtddleport '
three stratght years -The
POMEROY
MIDrecord IS four consecutive DLEPORT Ltons Club,
triumphs , and that was set by Wednesday noon ~ Mefgs Inn.
Walter Hagen m 192~
Lions urged to attend
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
NOW YOU KNOW
Royal Arch Masons, staled
The stupidest creature ever convocahon, Wednesday,
to mhabtt the earth was the 7:30 p rn Pomeroy Masonic
stegosa uru s, a 6' z-ton Temple followed l!y 8.30 p.m.
dmosalU' w1th a 21 a. ..ounce
meeting of Bosworth Council
brain
46, Royal and Select Mulers.
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners, 6 30 dtnner at the
Too Lale IO C!asst l y
Meigs Inn , Wednesday
LOS!
Reservation to be telephoned
WH I TE Samoy ed Hu sky Dog
to Rose Reynolds Bicenl osl rn v1cmtly ot F 1v e Points
area Call Mall me Gr llilh
tennial program by Mrs.
992 21JJ day or 992 5782 e fl er
Mrs
Chlorus Grt!Dm.
I p m
1 12 61c Reynolds and Mrs. Errol!
Conroy, hostesses
A youth rally scheduled lor
lhts evenmg at the Freedom
Gospel Mtsston at Bald Knob
hrt" l&gt;een puslp•u

I

RACINE
GRANGE,
Wednesday 8 p m. at the
grange hall. Degree work wiU
b be dtsplayed

RICHMOND, Va (UPI) Sctenhsts m Vlrglnta and
Massachusetts say they have
taken a giant step toward
wtpmg out dtabetes, the natton's thtrd-ranking killer
aft er heart dtsease and

cancer.
Worktng at Meqtcal College
of Vtrgmla In RichmOnd and
Boston Untversity College of
Medictne, three climcal researchers and an acadermc
pathologtst satd ihey have
proven m tests on laboratory
anunals that the omtet or
diabetes IS triggered by a
rornrnon vtral cousm to polio.
The breakthrough pointa
the way toward a simple
trnmumzatlon against the
diabetescausmg VIrUS, they
satd Infants who Inherit
diabettc genes from their
parents then might be
protected
against
the
metabolic disorder.
"If one or both of the
parents had the disease, then
the children would tie
examined and if there Is any
posstbihty they would gel the
disease, tbey would be liiJected," said Dr. Roger
Lorta, who headed the
research.
"There IS a very slmll8r
vaccme (for polio) on tile
market and tt ts easy lo
develop," Lorta said
,
The link between hiiiii8,D
diabetes and factors of
heredity and viral inlectltm
has long been suspeeted, tile
sctentl.sts said. But work with
human subjects may atW be
two years away.
Lorta satd the vlr.lia
" specifically . attacks Ill•
tslets of Langerhana (In tl!e
pancreas) where the Insulin
IS being produced."
He said Immunization
should be a simple proceA
because "we know the family
histories" of dlabeUCI, and
"families with knowp
diabetes are recorded." .
Loria, Dr. Stanley Webb of
Vll'glnla Medical Colletle IIIII!
Drs Sidney Klbrlck and
Gordon Madge at Botlttil
University pre1111ted thq
finding&amp; Saturday to lhe
American Federation of
&lt;llnlcal ~ In JloiiQii.
Their re.earch wu financed
by a National lhlllllite of
Health grant.
A recent National Omlmllslon on Diabetes ~ Mljl
10 rnllllon Amerlcau . ,
vlcliml of dlabelel, ~
has grown man t11an 10
percent In prevalenc:e In the
put decade. '!be CXIIIIIIIIIIIal
said cbbelea kllletl . . .
per10ns last year all4
pojllibly contributed to tbe
de'tha of 300,000 otbln.

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St~

Joseph runs into foul
trouble in double OT loss

Umtt.•d Press Jnll'rnatiuual
The Natwnal Collegtate
Athlettr Assoctatton's controvenual 10-man hmlt on
lrave hn~ squads ts deftmtely
not sutted to the rugged
derenstve style of play taught
by St Joseph's 1Pa ) coach
Harry Booth
Booth 's Hawks strnply
fouled themselves out of
players Saturday rught m
dropp10g a 109-96 double
overtime dec1s1on to Xavter,
!tmshmg the game wtth only
a patr of second-team guards
un the court
T11e
Musketeers, who
upped thetr record to 7.,) wtth
the strange vtctory, appeared
to have the game won m
regulation ttme until th e
Hawks' Wtlhe Taylor htt a 35foot Jump shot at the buzzer
to deadlock the score at 8IHI6
Sl Joseph's led 90-88 wtth
25 seronds left tn the ltrst
overttme, but that's when
foul problems a nd the ltl·rnan
hrntt ca ught up "tth the
Hawks
Wtth f1ve players already
on the bench wtth !tve persona l fouls each, Taylor
ptcked up hts ftlth when he

UP! S p&lt;~rt s Wrller
Maryland's tnp down 'Tobacco !load " and UC LA's
trek up the ' Oregon Tratl"
[)rov~ d to be a lust JOUrney for
both schools
The har dest JOb 0 ! any
college basketbaJI team IS to
\\tn on the rnad, and not even
'1
nallonal t powers
hke
Ma ryland and UCLA are
1mmune from ·The CW'se"
Second-ranked Maryland
found that Greensboro, N C ,
tsn t a ver) mce place lo VISit
on a Sat urday naghl ,
espec1a\ly If you ha ve to play
a thttwnqlly-nwked tea m
1 he Tcrrapms were handed
the1r £Jrs l loss after 11
slr aJght tnumphs Saturday
rughl \~h e n seventh-ranked
W.1ke Furesl defea ted them
93·90

1

Vn lf1q)Cq 6 OllniN'l ~
lt(JU '&gt;IO n 1 F CI I1l 0 11 1011 )
I NO CIUI11 b5 toddy I

: 'rn

Tu c~ d~ y

Gerald says

s G;,m e

&lt;, l eu G ,lmf' ,;11 Clr"vf'land

·.-- - - - - ,
The Daily Sentinel

Razorhacks

DEVOTED TO THE

"

INTER._EST OF

..
ME I GS MASO N AREA
,. , CH ESTER' L TANNEHILL
E•cc Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH

City E dito r

P ub l shed d&lt;11 l y e xc e p l
.: Sat u r day by Th e Oh•o
,. , Va l le y Pubi 1SI11ng Com
•

P lH1Y

11 1

Sl

Courl

Pom~er o y
O h to
-1 5 769
GUS 1n ess O ff ce Ph one 99"2

.,, 1 1 ~ 6 F- d t lor al Phon e 992
,, 1 157
Seco nd cl a ~ s poslage
, , pa id "I P o m e r b v Oh 1o
N a l ton a l
adv e ri1 S1ng
'• repr ~ s e ntal l ve

' G rdfll h Co mpany
....
...

Ward
Inc

Boltt ne ll l &amp; G a l la g her D 1v
757 Th rd .1\ v e N e w Yor k
N Y 10017
Su b sc r i pl• o n
rates

"• Dcl tve r ed b y e arner where
ava tabl e 75 c e nts per
w eek
By Moto r Route
, , wh ere c arr.er serv1ce not
a vailab l e
One month
' S3 15 Cy mall 1n OhtO and
W Va , On e Y e a r S22 00
5 •)( monlhS \1 1 50 lt1ree
monlhs S7 00 El sew ll ere
$16 00 year
S1)( monihs
- t l J 50 three month s $7 50
.S ubs c ription pnce ~ ncludes
Sunday Times Senl1 net

Person to person
health insurance
It can help pay
soanng hospital
and surgical bills.

Call me

Bill Fletcher
1251 '-'wtll St.
Middleport, 0.

PH. 992-7155
•

.. t:,':::,:-:,.:::
.. ,:'\ S U I E FA AM MUTUAL
.A•
••••••
f•ul n11hd It '•UI I'IC. • Cn
Oc;t
ff &gt;m• ()!lu
•
Ill H mu Qhll'l Ill nOt!l

fouled Dale Haarman, whose
two free throws tted the score
90-all
Baker Not Embarrassed
Torn Haggerty then went to
the bench wtth only 25
seconds gone in the serond
overtune and Xavter ahead
93-90 That left St. Joseph's
wtth three players on the
court , and tl was all over
Steve Vassalattt became
the etghth St Joseph's player
to foul out when he got hiS
fifth wtth 1·27 to go tn the
second overtime, Jeavmg
ooly 6-11 Denms Cakert and 6-1
Mtke Boarskt on the rourt
Gary Whttfteld led Xavter
wtth 32 potnts, and Haarman
and Ntck Damels backed him
With 24 and 23 pomts, respecllvely
"I'm not embarrassed to
wm th1s basketball game,"
satd Xavter coach Tay Baker
"We had tt won in regulation
ume."
Saturday's action tn the
M1d-Amen can
Con ference
!atled to shake any of the
league's four leaders loose.
Ohto Umverstty, behmd
Scott Love's 23 potnls and 14
rebounds, won tts second

consccuttve league ~ame, 62- Aye" With 18
56 over Bowhng Green, and
C1n&lt;:mnatl ra n ats record to
Kent State also ran tis mark 11-2 with a lackluster 73-liti
to 2-lJ wtth a 72~ vtctory at VJctory over Eastern Ken·
Ball State behind Jtrnmy lucky Bnan Wtlharns and
rolli ns' 24 pomts
Pal Cumm mgs led the
Western Michtgan, the Bearcals wtth 13 pomls
preseason ptck lor the tttle, ap1ece
had plenty of trouble wtth
Dayton, traihng by two
Toledo before subdumg the , pomts at halftune, had httle
Rockets 78-73 in a come-frorn- trouble in the fmal 20 mmutes
behmd effort for the Rroncos' m sto~pmg Old Dornmtoo 91lOth stratght victory and 79 behtnd Johnny Davts and
thtrd m the MAC
Letghton Moulton, who had ~
Freshman Sparks Comeback and 20 potnts, respectively
•·reshrnan guard Marty
Grote Gets Career-Htgh
Murray scored 14 potnts tn
Stx Ohto Conference games
the second half to spark the were played Saturday mght,
Broncos back from a 37-32 three in each dtVIslon
halfttrne deltctt
In ~orthern Divtston acLarry Kohl led Toledo wtth tton, Heidelberg downed
21 pomts, and Mtke Larsen Mount Umon 70-57, Wooster
added II for the Rockets, who defeated Baldwm-Wallace 71fell to :Hi overall and 1-2 m th~ 60 and Ohio Northern won
ronference.
over Oberlm 70-50
Mtarnt, constdered the top
In Southern Dtvtston
challenger to the Broncos, games, Muskingurn tnpped
ran all over Northern lllmots Martella 73-71 m overtune on
113-73 Alll3 players on coach a last-second shut by semor
Darrell Hednc's squ.!'cd Dan Howell, Deruson rolled
scored
over Ohto Wesleyan 92-76 and
Archte Aldndge led the Otterbetn stopped Capital 71way with 21 pomts and had 66
solid support from Chuck
Wnghl State's Bob Grote,
Goodyear with 19 and Randy scormg a career -h tgh 33

G

broke rules
DALLAS t UP!) - A htghly
sought htgh school football
prospect told mve sllgators he
was offered tllegal mducernents to attend the
UnJverslty of Arkansas, the
Mormng
News
Dallas
reported today
The News satd Arkansas
was under mvest1gat10n by
the Southwest Conference
and posstbly the NCAA for
the school 's attempts to
recrutt Rodenc Gerald
Gerald, who played high
school football at Dallas
South Oak Cltlf, llrst Signed
wtth the Razorbacks m tbe
sprin g of 1975 but then
swttched to Ohtp State
Southern Methodtst has been
under mvesllgatlon for tts
attempt to recruit Gerald,
and the News reported the
SWC had also mvesttgated
Baylor.
The newspaper satd 11 had a
copy of the trdormatton oiltamed by NCAA mvesttgator
Jtm Owens, and the
allegations agamst Baylor
and SMU were not as strong
as those agatnst Arkansas.
"I took some thmgs some
schools offered me and I did
not sign wtth them ," Gerald
reportedly told Owens, adding that Arkansas dtd offer
htrn tllegal inducements
" I kno11 the Southwest
Co nfer ence
has
tn1 vesttguted,"
sa1d Arkansa:;
prestdent Dr Charles Btshop.
'But I know nothing of an
NCAA mvestlgatlon . The last
I heard one of the coaches
took a polygraph "
Arkansas assistant coach
Jtm Johnson said be voluntarily took a polygraph test
" I pa~ tt Wtth nying
4 ulc1rS," .Johnson said
:'I
have a feellnK what they are
dotn~
Is
Investigating
everybody ~ ho rec rutlcd
RoderU' r,, 1•'141 •

was a n espectally
sattsfymg trturnph for the
Deacons, who had been upset
by Vtrgtma last Wednesday
after havmg vaulted toto the
top 10 wtth successtve vtctones over naltonally-ranked
teams North Carolma and
North Carohna State the
week before
The Deacons, 12-1. took the
lead and never rellnqmshed
H. although the Terps cut tl to
one-point twtce- the last ttme
at 68-87 wtth I 30 to play. But
m the last two mmutes, the
Deacons htt 10 of 10 free
throws to msure the v1ctory ·
Wake Forest got superb
scormg balance wtth four
players scortng more than 20
pomts
Guards
Jerry
Schellenberger and Sktp
Brown had 22 pomts aptece
whtle Daryl Peterson and
Rud Grtflm had 21 each lor
lhe Deacons All-Amertca
guard John Lucas of
Maryland led all scorers wttll
34 pomts
It

' We wanted th1s one
badly," satd Deacons' Coach
Ca rl Tacy " It was a great
come ba~k alter losmg to
Vtrgtnta Wedn es day Our
approach to the game was
low key "
"They JUS! outhustled us,"
satd Maryland Coach I.e!ly ,
Drtesell "They htt some
clutch shots that cost
11~ really cost us They JUS!
outplayed us "
The
Brums,
after
squeaktng by Oregon, 62-61,
at Eugene on Fnday mght
met their match at Corvallis
Saturday rught when Oregon
State whtp~d them soundly 1
75-58
Center I..onme ~elton , who
went to court to get hts
college ellgtbiltty restored
after stgnmg a hardshtp
cootract wtth the Arnertcan
Basketball Association ,
sparked the upset wtth 20
pomts.
It was only the etghth
Pacthc Etght Conference loss

~ ea•t te

C o ll e g e B oH k c tb a fl
74 P1tl 1] ll

Georget own

Wheeling

ao

v~

HI

w

u

6l Seaulr P•c lllc

61

Wa.-. hlnQIOn

OISI

u •ah St 75 BnfOlharn vouno 1l
W1Sh l n910n tl Orevon
Co li 10
W a s h.ngton 87 St enforCI II
W ash.noton Sl H C111tornta

1 a.rheld ~0
va wesley a n

w

Clemson Rl C.tade l 611
•
Oa-,.ton 'JI Old Oomin1can 7'il
E Caroltna 1'J Furman 68
1 lor.cta 'i l n Ja c k.sonv •lle ~7
Georg .a 51 64 So M~ss 75
to: y Westevan 87 D r ury 69
Lock Haven 73 ~a llsbu r y Sl

••We ber

:)1 80 l dltlO 6S

to9

pomts, led the Ratders to an
84-80 come-from -behmd '"n
over Central State, handing
the Marauders only their
second loss m 12 games
Wnghl Slate IS now 9-2
Rto Grande's 6-.5 Jtm Noe
scnred 42 pmnts to lead the
Redmen to an ~ vtctory
over Malone
In other games. Def1ance
downed Hanover 84-69,
Ashland edged Trt.State 57..)3
for the Eagles' etghth wm 1n a
row,
Ftn diay
downed
Wtlmm gton 78-62, Tay lor
squeaked by Bluffton 91-90,
Walsh rolled over Ohto
Dommtcan 108-76, Htram
drubbed Case-Western
Reserve 107-82, P!uladelplua
Texttle beat Youngstown
State 76-64, Steubenvtlle
downed Wtlberforce 90-85,
John Carroll defeated Carnegte-Mellon 73-71 and Cedarville ntpped Tiffin 79-77
Tontght, Ohto State ts at
Mtchtgan, Wrtght State at
Morehead State, Centra l
State at TeMessee State,
Fatrletgh Dtckmson at
Cleveland State and Ohio
Dom1mcan at R10 Grande

International Hockey
100 MISSISSIPP I 75
Len ut St•ndtntt
Ma r ~haiii!B Mo r eh ea d 87 (ot)
United Prtn tnttrnatlanal
Mo r ef1o tne 81 Cl ark 80
Harth
Mu rray 87 N e w Orl ean s 78
w I t ptl If t•
N T exas St 77 SW La 75
S a~;pnaw
72 U 6 SO 1173 14$
No Caro l ma B~ V1 rg 1n t a 82 Port Huron
No Ca r o l 1n a 51 JQ Ro ll 1n s 7S
21 15 4 •6 IS' 1)6
So Ca r o!t n a IOJ Sam ford 74 • M J skegon 18 14 7 •J 119 101
Tenn ·Tec h 74 E Ten n Sl 69
r l tn l
11 IS 9 43 1d 125
Ten nessee 90 Ke nl uc ky 88
Kalamazoo
!ol)
II 23 7 29 130 ltl
V and er bll l t 'il5 Geor g 1a a ~ Co l 1
South
V 1r g 1n 1a 51 79 H am pton tn s1
wIt Pft 11 II
l ~U

.

''

W Ken t uc k y 104 M ac Murra y

"w

Vt r g m •a 84 D CHr'l d Son 80
!ot l
Wake f o r est 96 M aryl and 93
Was h &amp; Lee 7l Ly com mg 7 ~
W 1ll1a m &amp; M ar y 105 W a s h
M d 60
Be than y
10 4
Conc..p rd t a
T e a c h e r s SB
Bu l l er 91 Ev an s v!!le 78
Cent M1 c h 82 E M1c h 80
Cent M o 53 S W Mo S l 52
Ch1 cago 78 N w s lrn (Wis l 3a
ll l •no s 74 Nor t hwe s le r n 69
lndtana 80 M1 c h•gan 74
Iowa 7 1 Mmnesota 68
Jo hn Canol! 13 C Mellon 11
Ke nr S t 72 Ball Sl 66
M~ a mt (Qh •o l 113 No
Il l 1 3
N e v La s V e g a s 88 I owa S l 82
No Dakola 75 N o Dakota S l

13 26

Muskegon 3 Fort Wayne 0
Por t Huron 5 Kal1mnoo 3
Dayton 2 rlml 0
Col u mbus 5 Sag.now A

Sunday 's Result•

Fltn l 2 Port Huron 2
Sag tnaw 1 Daylon l
Kala mazoo 3 Muskevon
Toledo 10 c o tumbul J

Today•s Gemn

No

games scheduled

Tuesd1v'1 Games
No games scheduled

College Sl1ndin1s

Notre Dame 88 Manhattan 71
Oh•o Norlh ern 70 t Ober l m 50
Ohto U 62 Bo whrtg Green 56
O!le rbe ln 71 Cap!lal 66
Purdu e 87 W ts c ons tn 72

Mator lndrp•nlltnts

n

Pepp erdtne 42 Santa ' Ciara 38
San Otego Sl 110 Portland S t
80
San Fr an 7~ Loyo la fCal!f l
65

7 5

W L Pet

lnd1an a
Purdue
M1Ch
Iowa

stratght potnts to take a 93-92
lead wtth 9·11 rematmng
Phtladelphta then scored
etght stratghl pomts and a
100.93 margin wtth 6 18 left
and Boston could never catch
up

!'•1ge4

846

Mlch St

2 '2

500
33)

8 •

6 7

&lt;62
667

250
250
000

' 3
6 7
• 7

750

111!0015
l 2
Mtnneso ta

I 3
N ' ws lrn
Oh10SI

I 2
0 3

w Mtch

W L PCf

" Mtamt

MALONE ('7) 4513
Ma s on
Manghum 2 1

Pearson

Sill

S Vtckery 0 2

2 Kle1n 8 ~ 70 Gepha.rl 2 0 4
Sommers I 0 2 Mar11n 2 0 41
Jordan 2 0 4
Cox 0 2 '2
TOTALS 26-15-67

O htO u
Ke nt St
Toledo
Bwln9 G

c

Mtch
Ball St
E Mtch
No Ill

RIO GRAtjDE till

-

636

2010007•
1 2
333 S 6
12
3n•7

636

1o1 ooo5 •

333 S 6

4S•

333 6 •
000 • 7
000 2 9

600
363
181

0 3
0 3

t .........,

POMEROY, OHIO
OFFICE
to 12, 2 to 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.l-EAST COURT

4S•

363

t 2

Farmers Bank

Sc:ore at half1tme - R: 10 J2
Malone 19

m

I 2

John Marshall IS a tough Ch1ef Justice. He
can even give a Pres 1dent h1s comeuppance
Seems Tom Jefferson d1dn't g1ve an Adams
appomtee the job h e was promised. It's challenged ui the case of Marbury vs Mad1son .
Marshall rules agamst the admmistration.
And for the first t1me the Supreme Court
cla1ms the power to declare federal law unconstitUtiOnal Marshall js determined to
make the JUdiciary a powerful force m the
government A far cry from the old coloma!
days, when our JUdicial decisiOns were based
on Enghsh court precedents It's the first time
he shows us what a clever statesman he is.
We thmk John Mar shall w11l make quite a
difference m American law 51

TOTALS 17 14 U

W L Pet.

3010007.t

1803 A new precedent zs set.

.l\lbanese 3 1 7 Barbee I 0 '2
VIse o 1 1 . Br1sker 0 7 2
Caldwell 3 o 6, ca rr.ng t on 1
o 2 Noe 19 4 •2 Pr1 c e 6 Q 12 .
Rob•nson 0 2 2 . Royse I 0 2.
S1ewart 1 4 6. Swfun 2 0 -t

m

36•

301000101000

in Rio win

to stx points tn the fu sl half .
The Malone ace scored most
or hts potnts alter the Redmen teed the vtclory
Klein became the ftrst
Malo~e player m htstory to
' surpass the 2,000 point mark
In lour years of varstty play
at Malooe, Klem has tallted
2,1)07 pomts, good for an
average or 2ti pomts per
game

667

Mid Amerlun conttrenct
conference All Gemts

Noe nets 42

The victory left Rio Grande
wath a &amp;.7 season record
• lnstde the MOC, Rlo Grande
ts 1.0 whtle the delendtng
charnpton Pioneers dropped
to 7-9 overall and 3-2 inside
the conference
Tonlf!hl, Rio Grande wtll
host Ohto Domm1can 12-7) m
another cpnference game .
Tipoff ltrne ts 8 p m
In Saturday's contest, Rio
Jumped out In front early and
never looked behind Coach
Art Lanham's quintet enJOYed a 32-!9 hal!ttme lead
Bestdes Noe 's 42 potnf.s, Gtl
Prtce tossed tn 12 for the
Redrnen All 12 Rto Grande
p~yers entered the scoring
colwnn Mark Klein paced
the Pioneers \1 tth 20 points
Eastern's Bob (;aldwell
hmited the h~h«urml( Klem

W L Pet.

667 11 2
soo 8 ..

I

Jumor Forward J1mmy Noe tossed in 42
pomts Saturday night to lead Rio Grande College
to a surpnsmgly easy 88-67 Mtd-Ohto Conference
victory over the v1s1tmg Malone Pioneers.
Noe's output, h1s career high at Rio Grande,
also established a new single-game mdiv1dual
scoring mark for a Redman player in six-year-old
Lyne Center

Sll

2 1
2 2

"We had our best second
hall of basketball we had all
season," Shue satd
Charlte Scott led tbe Celttcs
wtth 19 pomts whtle JoJo
Whtte had 18 and John
f 'flJIII!l llf'l'l Ill\

... ,

w.s

From a Great American Bank

!

~ct

3010001101000
2 0 1 000 7 ..
636
3 1 750 ' 3 750

76ers getting respect
There 's life yet m the
Phtladelphta 76ers and now,
more than ever, the Boston
Celttcs reahze they face a
rea I challenge to their NBA
Atlanttc Divtston crown
Many observers have been
expectmg the 76ers to lay
down hke lost sheep after
team leader Btlly Cunnmgham underwent knee
surgery a month ago They
dtd struggle somewhat
through an adjustment pertod
hut, to the credtt of coach
Gene Shue, the young 76ers,
boastmg the third best record
m the NBA, are proving they
are a team whose future may
be now.
"Some of our young players
are showing defimte stgns of
rontrtbutmg rught in and
night out," Shue satd after hts
team wtped out a 15-pomt
deftctt to defeat ~ston 118!07 and close to wtthm a hallgame of th~ Atlanttc DlVlslon·
leading Celttcs.
Shue was happy about
Doug Collms, who scored 31
pomts, and especially Steve
Mtx. who has replaced
Cunmngham at forward
George McGtnrus had 18 and
rookie Joe Bryant added 16
What made the wm more
unpresstve was the fact that
the 76ers started the th1rd
quarter tratling ~I after
the Celttcs had played a
brtlllant ftrst half, hlttmg on
2ll of 51 shots from the field.
Ru 1 1he r.elt ics cooled off m
the thtrd pertod when they
tuatle only stx of 21 shots
'J11e Stxers reeled off 14
~lral~ht pomls to make at 70.
69 with 6 22 left m the
quarter BoSton upened up
two ftve-potnt leads agam at
81-76 and 83-78 and then the
Sixet s came back to !earl lt6fl5 entermg the final peno&lt;l
Pluladelphia made tl 92~
wtth 10 38 remamtng . Boston
came back, scoring six

1

Btq Ttn
Conference All G•mes

60

Fres no St 7J Pori l and 66
N ew Melt iCO 54 Wyom mg 53
So Cal! fornta 72
Or e gon
Oregon St 75 U Cl f• 58

11

Dayton

Houslon 8? RIce S9
71 Ok l a Cd~ 60
Pan /l me r
10 4 Hardin
S1mmons 97
so Me lhodtSI 96 T e,;as 84
TeJ~aS A&amp;M 76 Bay lo r' 6~ (OI J
TeJ~as Te c h 82 TCU S8
Tulsa 99 Bradley 87
f\.r 1ZOna 51 72 Long Beach 5~

62

w L

em

St e ub env•lle 90 Wt l b erforce
81
S t L OU I S .t6 Ok l ahoma 4)
Val p ara.so 75 tnd Cent Sd
Ar t zona 106 D e lro 1 76
Belhany 104 Concordia Tchrs

Cal Luth eran 68 Occtdent a l 66
Cal Poly SLO 90 Havwa rd St

4 30 123 IU

saturday's Ruutts

57

"

lor UCLA m the past 10 years scramble to defeat No 13
and lour of those losses have Mtchtgan fl0.74 at Ann Arbor,
come on the Oregon road trtp No 5 Washmgton trailed at
"Oregon State played a the half and had to rally to
near perfect game," saad defeat Stanford 87-81 at
UCLA Coach Gene Bartow Stanford, No 6 Nevada-Las
"We have to rontrol the Vegas squeezed past Iowa
boards to win and we dtdn 'I State 88-82 at Ames, No 8
North Ca rolina mpped
We took poor shots "
"Thts has to be one of our Vtrgmia 85-82
greatest vtctor1es," saad
Beaver Coach Ralph Mtller.
"I satd before the game that
the greatest defensive team
would wm It dtd We cut off
the passtng lanes, took away
the mtddle and forced the
outs1de shot "
Maryland and UCLA
weren 't the only teams to lmd
thmgs tough on the road rhe
remamder or the top 10 also
played on the road last
Saturday, and whtle each of
them won, only No 4
Marquette, which defeated
Oklahoma Ctty 71-60 at
Oklahoma City, had thmgs
relauvely easy
No . I Indtana had to

D ayton
22 15 5 A9 158 127
Toledo
17 lA 10 .u 137 129
r o rt Wayne
15 20 a 38 lSB 1S6
Co lumbus

Vtrg m ,a Tech 72 Mem ph• s 51
71

MarQ~.Jetle

.Maryland, UCLA drop cage contests
Ry FRED McMANE

~an r nton~(l a• Df'nvcr

~--:·:·:·:·:.~:·••:-·.·:::·.·:::·,.::.:.:-:·:·:·:·x;:. ·:·:·: .·:-:

extent there may ha ve been
the feeltng that they wet e
second rate wher1 compared
to the Kennedys, "ho also
had a reputation for bemg
politically ruthless
"Some of them wer e attemplmg to ou tdo the Ken
nedys It ts hearsay, but my
1mpress10n was
1f t he
Kennedys were tough, " e
have to be tougher '
· To ma ke concesswns to.
peop)e 's
feelm gs
10
recogmzc lhat a paruculat
obj ective \.\a s not '-"OI t h

I

•

W

M!lwau~ ec

P &lt;~c 1tt c

Amencans who are 50 tu 65 ;e~u .s uld
and are sltll emp loyed
E\.ans was proll,lpted to take tictum
when he read an arhclc rccuLIDlmg hO\\
the w1ld horses were bemg run rhmn
and shot £rom helu.:upters HI wester·n
states Dynamic Matunty qootes hun
as saymg
" What a cr1me They' re the }JidJ e~ n
pontes that Rennngtun and Russe ll
pamted "
Evans captured some wtld pontes
m the South\\ es t and brought them !o
hi s Oh1 o farm , \\here lheJ have cx·
cellent pasturage and have become
domesticated Four years etgo Evi.lns
founded and became the ftrst prestde~l
of th e Spantsh-Barb Bt eede r s
Assoc1atwn, wtth headque~r ter s m
Colorado Spnngs, Colo

,'

enough abundant sunshme m
the !trst place, then the more
skin area avatlable to the
hrnited supply of llltra violet
rays the more hkeiy you wtll
be to form enough vitam to D
Inctde ntaliy excessive
exposure of the skm to the sun
and wmd ages tl, causmg
premature wrmkllng and a
htgher rate of skin cancer A
more generous exposure of
large areas to less intense~
rays wtll prov 1de vitammi 0
1
:
Wllhoul s ue 11 1
likelihood of de•elvptng ·.kill
abnormalthes
As a sctenttst I lmd tl hard
lo sympathtze wtth htdmg
parts of the body A normal
healthy body or any part of It
isn'l exacU} somethmg tube
ashamed of It ts a wondrous
mac htne that has no equal. I
thmk clothtng should be
funcliunal to keep the body ·
warm. cotufortable ur, yes,
even enhance tis appearance
Hldmg the body m shame has

M~d wes t DI V I ~ I O il

"'

•

Co-worker f~und intolerance in Nixonites ,

shown that as httle as three
square mches of skm contam
enough of the baste cherntcal
to provtde all the vttamtn D a
normal person needs, tl, and
that ts a btg tf, the chemtcals
are fully achvated by the sun
rays
A maJor part of the dll·
ference depends on how much
of the sun rays get through
the atmosphere and act on
the skin In the northern
chmates chtldren are more
prone to nckets from lack vi
sunshtne, and vitarntn D
replacemen ts are more
Important
The big ctttes lltth a1r
pollutiOn are the worst At the
beglnnlng of the 20th centw-y
90 per cent of the children In
northern European ctlies had
rickets from vllamtn D
deflctency
Normally tf the face and
hands were fully exposed to
the ld\ 0:
, • r1
ShOUJd be J)ll'lll) t.J! , (1 JJ.IIl l I)
ft •rmed bu, tf there IS nut

n

flew

w.

DR. LAMB

I fooda.

,.
Sto1 n d 10 Q!!
., o., Un •te~ P ress ln lc tnallo n.ll
.,
East r rn Con tercncl'
11 "
Afl a nf !C DI VISIO O
a
W
L
Pet
G 8
:bos !on
7 t 11 6H6
~ hdad~lph•a
?'i 13 6'&gt;8
~ U it aiO
17 "o61
I
York
!9 • :l3 J'&gt;1
H'
..,
' Cc nfra l D IV IS IOO
•
W
L
P el
G 8
W.1sh1ng•on
Ll 17 'i'IJ
~leveland
71 IB "o)ij
.(itlanta
IH lfi sou l
U OU!.f011
1H 18 500 l
H ew Orll;'an s
17 19 J/2
J
:
W e~ In n Con l et c ne c

Kenneth sargenl , and Oemo-

RIO GRANDE Farmer busmessrnan Bob Evans of Rto Grande
has a spectal JmsstOn m hfe He ts
heJptng save the Wild mustangs Of
Arnenca from extmcl!on
On hts farm are 26 wtld horses
descended from a breed known as the
Spantsh-Barb They are small, mtelhgent horses f1r st bred m Spam more
than 700 years ago
The storY of Evans' mterest m
preservmg the wtld mustang ts told m
the January 11976) tssue of Dynamtc
Matunty, a monthly mt:tgazme
published lor the quarter mtlhon
members of AIM I Actton for Independent Maturtly l, a divtston of the .
etg ht-mJJIJ on-member Amertcan
Assoctahon of Reltred Persons AIM ts
a pre-re tirement orgamzatwn for

Kennedy had Addtson 's
dtsease everybody would
have satd, 'He's gomg to

J

By Lawren&lt;:e E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DOCTOR LAMB •. Do you have any information
regardmg vttarnm D from the
., sun through skin absorplton
~ and
the posstbtltty of
recetvtng thts vttarnln from
other sources
·. , The reason for this mqwry
, ts that there are certain
. reUgious orgamzattons that
:· require full length dresses
and sleeves and I wonder t!
, • this could not be detrimental
•. to children.
~ Could this lack of vttamm D
' from the sun be supplemented through other
l SOIJIICII such ~s cod liver otl ,
1 e1111 yollt and mtlk'
L Ellpectally 1 would hke to
'· know If sunohiM on the face
• only would provtde enough
, vttamtn D for a child's well' being along with the proper

~ ilft ORol l Bil~ k e f b~ ll ASSOC iclh on

Evans' Mustangs story.in AIM mag

Blairs say JFK
had rare disease
LANTANA, Fla . IUPI) John Kennedy was the vtclun
of a rare blood dtsease that
nearly proved fatal three
times before he became
preSident, but hts frtends and
farnUy kept tbe illness secret
for pohtlcal reasons, acrording to a new book about
Kennedy
Joan and Clay Blatr Jr ,
authors of "The Search for
JFK," said Kennedy suffered
from Addtson's dtSease, a
hormone defictenc:y.- conSidered fatal unttl the late
1930s.
"On at least two occastons
as a member of Congress,"
the Bla1rs wrote, " KeMedy
was so close to death from the
disease that he was gtven the
laBt rttes of the Catholic
church."
An excerpt from the
Kennedy book was released
Sunday by the Nahonal
Enquirer, which ts publishing
a coodensed versiOn of the
work m a series of
ropyrtghted articles
The Blairs reported detatls
of Kennedy's Illness based on
information from ReMedy's
mother, Mrs Rose KeMedy,
his brother-m~aw, R. Sargent
Shriver, and family friends .
Hts pohttcal associates ,
friends, family and doctors
kept the tllness secret
because, the newspaper
arttcle quoted Shrtver as
saying, "In that period, in the
l!lii(ti and 196(k;, tf you put out
(a statement), that Jack

week 11

-When Rose Kennedy told a
reporter last week her son,
Sen Edward Kennedy , mtght
break hts promtse to her and
rttn for prestdent alter all, tt
set orr a scramble m
Massachusetts.
There's a long line of men
who want to be senator tn
Massach usetts The fteld tncludes Repubhcans Elhot
Richardson and former Gov

-If the pace of the prestdenttal
race ptcked up a bit durmg

The nuih &amp;out mel, MlthUepurt-PUIIII'I tl\' 0 • MorHim '.I. til

3

$40,000.00 Maximum Insurance For Each Depositor
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

�..
•
4 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport·PIImcroy, 0 .. M;&gt;nday , Jilll. 12, 1!17U

~~~:::::~::::~~:;:' ::\Mttr:::~t::r=:=::::::=ttttt't:::::::::==:=::::::'!:l··!·

Ohto Htqn Sc hoo l
Untfcd Pt I'),. ln h' t thtfiO tt ol l
I l..t 1111 t•lll i1t o• l / I I 11irh•.,,
I I.. run ', '• I MdS.,i! hHI '• I
t- vu'1 f' I t tl' hl•r,ln \\ •, I

11,

l',lrb, •rtnn 1·1 (. "YrlhOqil I illlo;

&gt;I '
Rt'lll• f OIH''•lllll'

IIU

L1111,1

"' hnwntl' '&gt; 'I

Sport Parade

.!ll

ii~

Rt&gt; II Ovue 67 I ttltn &lt;.,7
~ e niftn"'' Louan .,, M i ~n11 E:

\j'jijl Arunsw•
" ck

Ry MILTON RICHMAN
::::::
UPI Sporls Editor
MIAMit UP I) - The baby blue Cadillac wa s parked lllltsidc
the ballpark and looked as if it was pleading for a rest.
The chrome molding on one side was gone. So was most uf
the original paint job, furnishing unmistake·a ble evidence the
vehicle had been left out in the SWlloo long.
The car had Illinois plates on it, two years old, and nearly
80,000 miles on lhe odometer , some of that mileage h a vin~

B'

Etyrt.:t ~'\ t'l t
Beallsville 6.t
Ca'h H! Jaelo.son

t.'l

Ciildwl'tt
Colnton C~nt
16
Co1nton Lehman ') 7 N Canton
Hoover ·., 1
C'a nt o n L incotn 7Q Kent
Roosevelt 73
Can ton ') •,J Massillon P e rry
.J .1
Cte Benedictine 6.J Cle Ce n t
Calh 53
Cte H o l y N ame 57 Univ
Sc h ool .J9
Columbus G r ove 69 I • Jen
nings 5!:i
Co r y Rawson q ~ ~ p e n cervi l l e

been recOrded over Mexico's tirei)unishing back countrY 37
roads . Where the leather interior had once been showroom Cos hoc ton o.t Cambridg e ~o
D unba r 65 Li ma
marshmallow white, it was now bat.tleship gray going on first Dayton
Sen ior 61

stage black .
Theballgamewasn'l due to start for two hours but the owner
of the car already was inside the park, sitting in fr ont of a drab
concrete cube serving as the home club dugout. In full
Wliform, he was inscribing his team 's name- PUERTO VAl ,.
LARTA-&lt;m every single baseball while a fascinated five-vcarold little boy sat at his feet in the dirt and watched him black
ink the balls.
MiiUlie Minoso wasn't hurrying at alL He was being very
deliberaie with the" lettering .
·
''How come you're doing that ?" I asked him only the other
day when I was in Puerto Vallarta.
'
Minoso, one of the American League 's most consistent hit ters with the Chicago Wllile Sox and Cleveland Indians two
decades ago and now managing the Puerto Villarta Dolphins in
Mexico's Northeast Winter League, laughed.
"You know ballplayers," he said . "They get a ball, and right
away they stick it in their pocket. Same here like in the States .
This, what I am doing now, helps us keep the balls a little
longer."
As a manager in Mexico, Minoso has won pennants three
years in a row. The players like him and respect him. So do the
fans_ One of them brings him fresh red snapper twice a week
during every homesland.
Born in Cuba 53 years ago, Minoso is in better physical shape
now than half the players in the majors. He still wears the
same old,nW)lber nine· he wore on his uniform the last time he
was last with the While Sox 15 years ago, and he'll get it ba ci&lt;
again now that he's been named to return to them as a em-1 ch
next season. This,is the first year since coming to Mexico more
than 10 years ago that he isn 't playing.
Years back when he was still with the White Sox, Minoso
once told me he hoped to die with his baseball uniform on. He
still says the same thing .
"Bas_eball is my life," says Minnie. "It always will be . Why
do you think I do all this traveling ? I like Mexico, and I like the
people. When I finished playing in the majors, I went back to
Mexico and hil.360 the first y.ear and was picked MVP. Second
year, I hit .350. When one of the dubowners asked me to
manage later, because he said the kids listen to me and respect
me, 1 said okay.l've been managing the last few years and I
like it.'!
Whal'Minosa wanted even more was to get back with his old
ball club, lhe_While Sox, and Bill Veeck look care of over the
weekend when he brought Minnie up from Mexico and introduced ' him as one of the team's new coaches under Paul
Richards at 'the Chicago Baseball Dinner.
.
·· Shortly after Veeck took over the White Sox, MifUiie -sent him
a wire. "Congratulations on coming back home to Chicago
where you belong," Minoso said in his wire to Veeck. "If you
say you need me, I'll be .right there."

Veeck decided he could use Minoso .
The While Sox traded Minoso back to the Indians the year
before they won their 13$t pennant in 1959. Nonetheless, ·veeck
saw to it Minoso received a pennant winning White.Sox ring.
"You deserved it because you helped us get where we did, "
Veeck told Minoso. MifUiie still wears the ring.
.
In Lhe Mexican Winter League, each team is permilled two
U.S. players on its roster, and one of the two with Puerto
Vallarta is Orestes Minoso Jr., Minnie's 23-year-old son who
was with Jacksonville of the Soulliern League last swnmer.
Young Minoso is an outfielder like his father was and he.
played for him once before two years ago.
;'He's an excellent manager, the kind who worries about his
ballplayers," says Minnie's boy. "I saw him play the year
before last and here he was at lhe age of 51, diving into the
bases head first and playing harder than most young guys. He
never complained about get.tinglired.l figure he musl've been
a helluva ballplayer when he was younger. One thing 1 know:
he wanted to get back with the W11ite Sox more than anything.
He went to Chicago for an oldlimers' gamelasl summer and he
still talks about it."
That's right, Minnie still does.
"The people there have always been very good to me," he
says. "I love Olicago."
'

De fi an ce c;IJ Bryan .sa
Edison 80 Margaretl-a 56
Edon 71 T inora 69
f ire t ands 59 S Amhe r st 57
F r ontie r 75 R i ver Local 70
f I r r ye 58 Mea dowbrook 55
Galion 67 Norwalk 55
Gara wa v 70 Guernsey Ca th 69
Glenoak 59 Mar l inglon .J6
H am i li on
T ownship
76
Lib erly U nion J6
H emlock Mill e r 69 Bern e
Un ion 65
Hi ck svi ll e 90 I· ayel1e &lt;16
H ig hland 72 Buc k eye 56
Hi land 81 E . K nox 55
Hob an 75 Ravenna 13
Ki dron
Ce nt
Ca lh
60
Cuya hog a Va'll ey Chris I ian 58
t1 0 I)
Li ma Balh ..J9 Pa t r ick H enry
insley 66 Mingo 60
"'LL ogan
Elm 70 Bloom

51

Carroll

L oudonvil le 68 Creslline 36
Ma n s f ie l d
C hri s Ti an
86
Brunn erdal e 6?
Mansf ie ld Malabar 70 Mans
fi e ld St P e ter's 57
Maple He ights 53 Brecksvi lle

36
Marion L ocal (&gt;6 F I . Loramie

.l6

Marl illS Ferry 6·.1 Be lla.ire St
John ' s 62
;!v'l aum ee Va l l ey 75 Lake ·
~ idg e !\eade m y 62
Meigs County Southern 70
Wa hama (W Va) 66
Parma 54 Cle Rhode s 47
Parma Padua 68 Parma
Normandy 5&lt;1
Port s mou t h 72 Co l Northland

60
S Central 59 L ucas &lt;10
S Rang e 58 Minera l Ridge 50
Sh eri dan 88 Morgan 52
!io lon 58 Bedford 55 (ol I
Southington 8.1 Fa rmingTon 5J
Spr i ngfi e ld Local -1 6 Leetonia

·15
STre e Tsboro 69 M "o gadore ·16
Tiflin Calv ert 63 roslo~:ia .51
Toled o Strilch 57 Wauseon 52
Upper Sandusky ·1&lt;1 Sh e lby 41
Wa rr e n Local 77 Parkersburg
Ca th {W Va ) 62
Warre.n R eserve 89 1\ kro n
G arfield .13
Warrensvi l l e 1fJ Be dford
Chan e! 68
w aterford 72 woodsfield 6J
(ol l
W e llsvi l le 73 Dayt o n While J3
Whee lersb u rg 80 Col Moh awk
65
W indham . 76 Crestwo od 46
w oos ter 60 Louisville 5.1
Wy n f ord 5J B uc yrus J2
Zan es v i ll e Ro se crans 61 Co t
We hr le 5·1
Skyvu e 63 Sh e nando&lt;th ;2

·76ers get _
1Curn m u·~-tl

from page 3)

Tornados edge Falcons 70-66
regained the lead and went
on to take a six point advantage near the quarters
Down by fifteen points
end
at 16-10 but Wahama
late in the third quarter, the
stonned back with a bucket
Wahama White Falcons put
by Ken Riggs and two more
on a fourth period surge only
by Marty Holbrook to knot
to have il fare four points shy
the score after one period of
with the visiting Southern
play at 16-16.
Tornadoes claiming a
Terry Tucker then gave
narrow 70·66
victory,
Wabama
the lead at 18-16 to
Saturday night.
begin
the
second quarter
One of the major factors
scoring
but
Southern 's
that contributed to the
Wahama d,ywnfall was Brown retailiated to even the
th eir inconsistency at the . score at 18-18. Seconds later,
after an exchange of
chariiy stripe especially
baskets, the score was
while on the bonus situation.
knotted
again at 20-20 for
The White Falcons failed lo
the
sixth
time
of the game. At
convert the front end of a one·
this
point
in
lhe
action the
plus one free throw no less
superior
height
of
lhe Torthan ·; seven times throughout
nadoes began tq take its toll
the course of the game with
fOur of those seven occuring as the cross river foe commenced to pull away. The
in the final period of play
White
Falcons
found
when the Falcons were
themselves
down
by
as
much
trying to rally from behind.
as
ten
points
at
24-34
With
Southern jwnped out to an
1:
25
left
in
the
half
but
Terry
early lead by scoring the
Tucker scored seven straight
first two buckets of the
points to cut the lead to three
game. The While Falcons
came right back by scoring- with seconds remaining. A
six straight points on suc· final basket by Southern
gave the Tornadoes a 36-31
cessive buckets by
Ray
lead
at intennisslon.
Tucker, Tim Davis and
Southern
scored the first
Terry Tucker. Southern

seven of the second half
enroute to their biggest
points lead ol the night,
fifteen points, at 53-58 with
just 2:40 left in the third
quarter of play before the
White Falcons began to
make their move . Duke
Smith bucket with :04 to play
in the quarter cut the lead Lo
56-44 going into the final
eight minutes of action.
Smith opened up the fourth
period with two - quick
jumpers, to cut the Tornadoe lead to eight at 56-411.
Southern then managed to
keep the White Falcons at
bay momentarily but three
quick baskets by the While
Falcons cut their lead down
to three at 6:1-oo.
Seconds later Van Riggs
narrowed the gap to two al
6~ but that was as close as
the local charges could get.
Southern capped the scoring
with two free throws with :03
left to play to ice the 7~
wln .
Team statistics show both
Wahama and Southern
shooting 41 percent from the
field will&gt; the While Falcons
hitting on just 52 percent at
the charity line while
Southern shot a poor 41
::: percent . The Tornadoes also
·· 'pulled down forty-three

BYGARYCLARK

Helen
Us ••.

1-l~lp
lh llt•lt•IJ Uulll'l

One in Every Office
Dear Helen :
What do you do with the office vamp ' Or should I say
"roundheels?" Liz can't keep her hands off the men. When she
talks to them, she stands so close the largest part of her
tou ches, and·she'salways leaning over to get something on the
other side of their desks , so t~at everything hangs - and
there's a lo t of everything , well displayed ..
Most of the guys just .laugh her off, or try to avoid her, but
the new ones go a little bug-eyed. Should I tell thi s one particular man tha t what everybody can gel, nobody should want ?
- IRKED

'

Committing twenty and
Wahama 19.
Terry Tucker came away
with the most impressive
statistics individually lor
Wahama. The senior cocaptain hit for 19 points on
six field goals and seven free
throws and also collected
thirteen rebounds to lead his
team in that department.
Duke Smith came off the
·bench in he second half to hit
for twelve markers and Ken
Riggs contributed eleven .
tallies Ofllhe night to·give the
White Falcons three double
figures _scorers in the game.
The While Falcons will
now be idle until Friday,
January 20 when they
journey to Huntington to
take on the second ranked
Vinson
Tigers.
Then
following HWltington Vinson
comes third rated Poca and
then a talented Buffalo group
who incidently almost upset .
the Poe a Dots last • week
losing by a single point. It
looks like a tough road ahead
for Coach Scherr and his
White Falcons meeting three
of the
toughest
"AA''
schools in the state.
WAHAMA (66)

Miss Evert in
easy victory
AUSTIN, Tex . 1UPIJ Chris Evert admits she wa s

once al a psychological
disadvantage against her
. chief competitOr Evonne
GuuJ'agong.
But ·she says she;s over~

come · that problem and she
~ave a convinc:ing example of
that Sunday .
Sl1e
whipped
Mis s
Goola gong 6-3, 7-6 Sunday lo
success fully defend the
Dear Irked :
richest prize in women 's
Why not let him find out for himself ~ as the other men sports - the $50,000 Women's
have ? Warning him away from "Luscious Liz" won't earn you Worfd Series of Tennis.
points with him - and I think they 're what you're after, right ?
But the tennis darling from
- H.
Florida wa s not alway s so
-j-j -1
success ful again s t Mi ss
Dear Helen :
Guolagong .
I'm a beauty operator and I date a bartender . We believe
we 've heard more hard luck stories-than anYone .this side of an
. advi ce cdlwnnist - more than the average psychiatrist ·hears
Ohio College Results.
in one day ! that 's for sure r
A lbion 73 Ke nyon 72
I understand some colleges are giving crash courses in · A shland 57 Tri Sl a ! e 53
Ce darville 79 Ti H in 77
"listening" for people like us so we can be helpful without (i n 73 Ea s tern Ky 66
going overboard. Any information here~ - BEAUTY AND Dayt on 9 1 Old Oom inion 7q
De fianc e 84 Hanov er 69
THE BAR
De ni son 92 Ohio wes l e yan 76

Dear B and the B:
I read recently tha t the Racine, Wis., Mental Health
Association has offered "listening courses" to bartenders .
This doesn't teach them to be therapists, but it acquaints
Elsewhere in - the NBA ,
them with the various help agencies to which they may refer
Kansas Cily beal Detroit 105- troubled peoplO. It also t~ains them in the art of withholding
99, Cleveland dumped
advice where it might be dangerous.
Wa s hington 106-104 ;
Perhaps your local mental health association might plan a
Milwaukee beat Los Angeles similar course. Why not contact the area director ? - H.
95·89, New York edged
-H -1 ·
Phoenix 99-98, Portland
Dear He len :'
defeated Atlanta 116-109 and
My Wife and I decided we'd switch roles unlil I finish
Buffalo ripped Seattle 125- correspondence school, with her earning 'the money, me
104 .
staying home with the kids.
In the ABA, New York
I now appreciate women, specifically home-based
whipped Indiana 112·102 and mothers!
St. Louis nipped Kentucky
Last night, I foWld myself in a tirade yelling at my wife ll3-Itl.
"You-just don't know what I go through every day . Just when I
get the baby down for a nap a telephone salesman woke him up
... the washer died, and I had to do it all by hand. How do you
expect me to have dinner on time with three kids yapping
aroWld my feet ?" Suddenly, we looked at each other and began
to laugh. It was just what SHE had been telling me all last
year, as a housewife.
The only difference is: A man can't call up a friend and
commiserate, something my wife said aimost saved her sanity
at times. Nor can he run next door to grab a cup of coffee with
another housebound mother :.. or he'll be suspected of starting
something up. •
It's the isolation that gets you. The only adults I talk to are
clerks at the supennarkel and they mainly keep it to , "Have a
good day" !which I could answer !); and people dispensing
religious tracts, wlfom I'm tempted Lo invite in for a visit - il 's
got that lonely'
'
What does a househusband do for company'! - TENDING
THE HOME FIRES
Havlicek, Dave Cowens and
Paul Silas had 16 poinlse~ch.

SOUTHERN (70)
Roberts
8 4-10 4 20
Brown,D.
8 2-5 2 18
Johnston
5 2-2 5 12
Braver
5 1-4 4 11
Roush
2 !HI 0 4
Cross
1 !HI 0 2
Brown,J .
o 2-1 4 2 _
Findley
0 1-4 2 1
Total
29 12·29 21 70
Score
by
Quar·
ters:
1"2 3 4 Total
Waharria
16 15 13 22 66
Southern
16 20 20 14 70
Reserve Score : Wahama 46
Southern 40

rebounds to thirty-five for
Wahama . Turnovers were
fairly even with Southern

FG
· Tucker,T.
6-15 1-9 I 19
Smith
6·10 ~ I 12
Riggs
5·11 Hi I II
Holbrook
4~ ().J 3 8
Tucker,R.
2·7 4-.'i 5 8
Davis
3~ ~ 2 6
Sayre
1·2 Q.l 5 2
Lambert
(k)~3 0
Tucker,J.
Q.4 ().2 4 0
Totals
21-65 12·23 25 66

Frigidaire 18 lb. Laundry Pair

• Rugged heavy duty

compone11ts In washer

73

• Flextble 1· 18 lb c"apaci ly

Mic h St . 92 Ohio St 8 2
Muskingum 73 Mariella 7)
(O! )
Ollio Northern 70 Ober lin 50
Ot1io Universily 62 Bowlin g
Gree"n 56 .
Oltei"beit:~ 11 C;;~pl, l&lt;tl 66
Philadelphia
Tex ! il e
76
Yol,lngs town .s t 6·1
R io ·G rande BB Malorve 66
Steubeovi ll e 90 Wilberfor ce
85
Taylor 91• Bluffton 90
Walsh 108 Ohio Oom inican 76
Weste rn Mich 78 Toledo 73
w ooster 71 Baldwin Wal lac e

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WCIDEC

• Kmts/Permanen t

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•
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,

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'BAKER FURNITURE

60

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

W righ t S! B~ Cen1ra l St 80
X avier 109 St Joseph ' s { Pa l

on

·THIS·WEEK'S SPECIAL

BIG BURGER
SINGLE

BIG _BURGER
DOUBLE ·

'1.09
REG. PRICE 79c

pound fresh
ground beef paHy
garf'!ished the way
you ask for it.
(Cheese lOc ex• tra.)
.
lf4'

RE G. PRICE $1.29

Two-1;4
pound
fresh ground beef
paHies garnished
the way you ask
for it. (Cheese 10c
extra .)

DRIVE-IN OR CARRY OOT ONLY
(OUR BEEP IS GROUND FRESH DAILY)
ASK FOR THEM BY NAMEi
'

-CHOW'S STEAK HOUSE

That 's a tough question - even for a houseWIFE, in these
days of working women. You won't find much adult eompany
available, but you can: CommWle with your text books; drown
your sorrows in .'lOOP operas (which show you thi~gs could be
worse) - or get acquainted with th~ retired couple down the
street. - H.

DEN

Playing

NITELY
AT THE

"ZERPHA
BLUE"

INN-

5 Piece Group From

TUES.·THURS,

Parketsbu~

8:30 to 1:00

New Exciting Sounds

TRY

DR. RONALD F. RIVIERE
DR . ;.,, J. STAEHll
Dl. FlEEMAN MALTZ
Dl . CHRIS;.,_ IlDDLE
CALL COLLECT AIEA CODE (6141

WHAT'S IT ALL ABOUT- THOSE GARDEN CLUBS!
By Mrs. Chlorus Grimm, 1973-75 Meigs County Contact
Chairwoman for the Garden Club Association

Last week we began telling you abOut the various clubs of
the county which belong to lbe Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs, their many contributions to commun ity improvement
and beautification as well as personal development and
therapy . This week we conclude the series which has been
designed to give the general public a better understanding and
insight into the role of garden clubs in the community.
WINDING TRAIL GARDEN CLUB
The Winding Trail Club of Pomeroy has 14 members and
through the years has been active in a variety of programs and
projects.
l
The members have donated gardening bonks to the public
library . They bave won district and state awards for their
projects at the Meigs County lnfinnary and the new firehouse.
They have been active in many civic improvements such as
organizing a "litter walk" and recycling old Christmas trees
as part of an ecology project.
The club's latest plan is to assist in the development of the
mini-park project of the Jaycees , with plantings and shrubbery. The members have donated seeds and plant materials to
youth and other organizations, and_have staged flower shows,
\he latest being a home show hosted by Mrs. John TerrelL
Mrs. Ali ron Kelton is the club's immediate past president
as well as Lbe immediate part regional director, and Mrs.
Charles. Hayes is the 1975-76 president. .
WD..DWOOD GARDEN CLUB
With 19 active members, the Wildwood Club has for many
years bad as one of its special projects that of remembering
shut-ins at Christmas with cheer baskets.
·
They are always active participants in county flower
shows and are faithful at providing arrangements for the local
churches and other organizations. They planted shrubbery al
the Forest Run Methodist Churoh and for many years have
participated in the therapy program at the Gallipolis State
Institute. .
Mrs. Karl Grueser is the past year's presidi'"t and Mrs.
John A. Smith is !he current president. Mrs. Grueser for two
years served as secretary of ReRion 11. ·
RIJTLAND GARDEN CLUB
The Rutland Club has Tl active members and have long
been participants in many projects. For l.he past three years
they have had their own club's Christmas flower show in ad·
clition to participating in the county show.
They are active in the therapy programs at the Gallipolis
State Institute and the Athens Mental Health Center .
In addition to entering county flower shows, the .club
members provide arrangements for four churches in their
area. In addition they provide . table pieces for other
organizations. For educational purposes they have had flower
arranging demonstrations at open meetings.
As lor civic projects;-the club has bad plantings at several
public places in recent years.
Miss Ruby Djehl is nQW serving hl\r second year as club
president.'
·
·
.RIJTLAND FRIENDLY GARDENERS
An especially active club,.the Rlilland Friendly Gardeners
established lhe slogan, "Make Rulland a Bloomin' Clean
Town" and for nwnber of years now have worked diligenlly
to make it just that. Every spring finds the club doing a
"cleanup, paintup and plantup" program in cooperation with
the village officials.
The club's latest project was the memorial plantings at
Forest Acres Park, a tribute to Mrs. Homer Parker, long-time
active member. .
For this memorial planting, the club received a first place
award in the Region 11 . The junior garden dub also was
awarded first place in the Reed Award State Contest on " Birds
·and Conservation".
·
The club members have taken many educational tours,
have made floral arrangements lor business places an.d
churches, and have had dub flower shows both at the school
and in their homes.
'
One of their members has the honor of being lhe stale news
medi~ chairw_oman for the Ohio Association of Garden ClubS.
The members are always active participants in the county
flower shows .
Mrs. Joe Bolin, inun~iate past president, is on accredited
flower show judge, a past regional director and current county
contact chairwoman. Mrs. Howard Birchfield is the 1975-76
president.
STAR GARDEN CLUB
The Star Club with Mrs. Robert Jewell as the new
president, is active in a variety of programs. During the past
two .years their emphasis has been on vegetable as well as
flower gardening, and they have had several de~~Jonltrations
on arranging.
·

a

F indlay 78 Wi l ming ton 62
H e id elbE-rg 70 M I . Un ion 57
Hiram
107 Case Western
Rese rv e 81
John Carro l l 73 Carn egie
Mellon 71
Ke nt 51 7'1 Ba ll St 66
Miami (O hio ) 11 3 N or!h ern Ill

Q6 (2

Polly's Pointers

I ('~ mi H II.Wd Or! (UI ..\f'

8)

proved for payment.
A comm unication was read
announcing lh e di s trict lly Potty Cramer
Re por ts on fund s f or next meeting will -be on the
mee ting lo be held at
missions were glven at the second Tuesday in February
Ev angeHn e Chapt er, MidTuesday night meeting of the at the home of Mrs. Tina
INFI.ATJI)N FIGIITF.R
and yielt.llwic~ HS much juice
dleport, on Jan . 21. Those to
DF:AH POLLY - I have a if it is healed thoroughly Missionary Society of the Jacobs with Mrs. ~rtha
attend the dinner were asked few Pointers that ~n: a ~elp befure squeezing . I Poll Y's Laurel Cliff Free Methodist , Parker and Mrs . Kathy
to make their reservation s in t"ufnbaling inflation . I shup
note - Rolling a lemnn that is Church held al the home of Pullins serving refreshand pay their fee to Mrs. Cora ·wr gruceries only unce a , at ruum l(!mperature will · Mrs. Iva Powell .
ments.
Webb. It was announced that month . This saves tremen· help, too. 1
Mrs . Donna Gilmore,
Others attending were Mrs.
chairwoman,
reported
lbal
Wanda
Eblin, Mrs. Amber
Mary Shull has been rea ~ ­ dously . I also collect all
A loaf Ctf sta le bread can
pointed as representative to coupons thai appear in the often be saved by running it over $20 was in lhe "postage" Lohn , Mrs. Mildred Jacobs,
Oklahoma . A thank-you note paper. At the end of the BRIEFLY Wlder cold water box at lhe concl usion of the Mrs. Jean Wright, Mrs. Ann
was read fr om the Ethel month, I have s~ved at least and then placing in a hotuven holiday season , Instead of Nash . Refr~shmenls were
wheeler family _
three dollars worth . That for ten minutes. I also revive mailing cards lo their church · servedoby Mrs. Della Curtl•
Refreshments were served pays fur our paper !11r one sweet rolls and Danish pastry friends, the members use a and Miss Susan Fleshman,
during a concluding social month.
sumewhat the same way but church maiJ container for the with Mrs. Wright presiding ol
hour.
I save, wash and re-use all by brushing wilh milk instead cards and put the mone.f they lhe meeting.
plaslic bags that fresh fruits uf pulling under running would have spent for postage
into the "postage" box _
and vegetables come in and water. - - ANNE.
II was also reported lha l
•uMf 'ACTt PO""
use them for slurlng bread,
DEAR POLLY - During
INV!!IfO•I Htf '
lhe
thank ca lendar co ncracke_rs, dust rags and so on. lhese days of high food prices
tainers
brought
in
$100.
Mutual
I use the bn;..wn paper many of us are doubling the
Mrs .
Gilmore
had
grocery bags for was.tebasket volume of butter by sim ply
, Investing
liners .
whippine one pound with a devotions reading- the 33rd
Delegates and alternates to Charter Day luncheon of the
Foul\dation's
I make syrup go further by cup of cold water. Butter Psalm and an ar ticle "God
PIIIOI'ICTUI
the Ohio Daughters of lhe chapter to ·be in March .
buying a heavy maple syrup must be at room tem- Knows Your Name and Your
American Revolution conMrs . Thereon J ohnson and diluting it with a syr up perature . I use my electric Needs. " The World D,ay of
ference in Dayton, March 15- presided at t)le meeting with made with two parts water mixer for this but it can be Prayer book was ordered and
17 were named at a meeting Mrs. Dale Dutton , acting and one part sugar. I stretch done with a hand beater. Oleo it was a nnounced that the
Fo r ~ ou r lite c opy wrth ,.. 0
of Return Jonathan Meigs · chaplain. Mrs. Jones gave the a gallon of milk 1whole 1 by . can be done the same way.
Otlhgatoon contact Ule
Chapter held Friday at the national defense report us ing mixing it with a gali(Jn of Restaurants have used
local rep•esenliltrvt ot
home of Mrs . James information
from powdered milk. This not only whipped butter to serve on
American patriot' and
Brewington.
Congressman Miller on billS cos ts less ,per gallon but pancakes for years. This. also
HERITAGE
sta4'Sman
John Hancock was
••cu,.o:rt•a. INC.
The delegates are Mrs. whjch would provi~e jobs to tastes delicious and -is very. cuts on the calories si nce one
" • 9~ s• Cot ..... .,~ , o~ ."
Paul Eich, vice regent, and take the load off welfare, and nutritious. The column has uses much less. It does not born Jan. 12, !737.
••'•'! • .,,.
"'~ ' '""' " · 1~ lro&lt; ~r~•• • ~ • ··' •"' ~ C•
Also on this day in history:
Mrs. James Brewington, · dect~a·se duplication in helped tne . many limes. •. ,,...., l)ft ,r ~ 'Co•~"'~ ·· • (,
separate even in warm
In 1943, the warlime1)ffice
corresponding secretary. The paperwork . Mrs . Pearl Mora ERNESTINE.
,
g.,.
weaiher. · 1 Polly's note of Price Administration said_
alternates are Mrs. Charles reported on a_n article to
P. J. PAULEY
DEAR POLLY - To ease During World War II many
McDaniel, Mrs. Arthur encourage students to par· my clothing budget I shop al did the same thing but used standard frankfurters would
104W, MAIN
be replaced by "victory
Skinner and Mrs. Emerson ticipate in bicentennial church and temple rummage milk instead of water.) Pomeroy, 0 ..
sausages" consisting of meat
Jones.
• projects.
sales, other clothing sales .MRS. A. T.
PM. 992-2311
and soybean meal.
- Good Citizenship winners
The death of Abigaal ~nd resale shops . I manage to
DEAR POLLY - I have
annoWlced by Mrs. Harold Graves,
Columbus,
a find good
serviceable what I call a "Poor Man's
Sargent were Molly Fisher, member of the local chapter, clothing for my entire family Sewing Basket " To make
Southern High School; Cathy was announced. Mrs. Dwight a t a minimum cost. this use a metal can such as
And~ews,
Eastern,
and Milhoan announced that NANCY.
cookies come in . Cut a thick ·
Becky Glaze, Meigs. The genealogical records on
DEAR POLLY - One piece of hard while styrofoam
three will be guests at the families, ce meteri es and lemon can do the work of two, to. fit and put in the can. Cut
churches had been sent to the
plastic straws into thirds or
Ohio D.A.R. headquarters. ;:;:::::·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::.::: ::: ::; ::: ::::;:;:;::: ::;:;:;:;: ;:;:;::~ any desired length and
Mrs , Brew.ington, Mrs.
. "screw'' into the foam.
Mora and Mrs . Skinner
Puncture the paper ends on
served a salad course from a
spools of thread and put a ·
Play it oafe .and IIW'e
table centered with an
spool on each straw holder. I
I~ may be time to
arran'gemenl of red and white
keep my spare machine
have
your preoent
car:nations in a blue conPlans for the bicentennial bobbins and thimble on the
policy
updated.
tainer. Mrs. Pauline Horton year were made at the center ones. - MRS. J . R. B.
Tuesday meeting of the
was a guest.
You will receive a dohar If
Let's .Faile Soon
Senior Citizens Chorus.
Polly uses your favorite
The group decided to have homemaking , idea,- Pet
both an Easter program· and Peeve. Poily's Problem or
a bicentennial ·pageant or solutio~ to a problem. Write
992-214J
102 W . Main
. play during the year. Officers Polly in care of this newsPomeroy
elected were Ira Wolfe, paper.
president, and Clara Thomas,
..._
assistant
pianist and
BRIAN DENN\&gt;
Mrs. Garnet Ervin hosted a secre tary-treasurer. Mrs .
New Year's party for Ben Neutzling is director of
members of_ the Senior the chorus, and Mrs. Hazel
Citizens Chorus and guests Thomson is pianist. ·
recently at her home .
Garnes were played and
The Almanac
several door prizes were
United Press lntematioaal
Today is Monday, Jan. 12,
. Brian Denny celebrated his awarded , There was--,uso
eighth birthday on Jan . 7 with group singing . For lhe parly the lllh day of 1976 with 354 to
-a party given by his mother, the Ervin home was follow.
decorated
in
the
Christmas
The
moon
is
moving
toward
Mrs. Judy Harrison, at the
full moon .
home of 'his grandparents, motif.
Attending
the
party
were
The IJ10rning stars are
Mr. and Mrs. Ardith Barton.
Sarah
Voss,
Waller
Voss,
Venus
and S;llurn.
Cake, potato fhips, ice
The evening stars are Mercream and soft drink$ were Virginia Gulley, Mr. and Mrs.
William
Watson
,
Caryl
Cook,_
cury
and and Jupiter.
.
served . Gifts were presented
Ethel
Hughes.
Rose
McDade,
Those
born
on
this
date
are
to Brian_ Attending were his
sister, Deanna, Mrs. Bettie Elizabeth Slavin, Teresa under the sign of Capricorn.
Reed, Crystal and Judy Hall, Byer, Jessie Houchings,
Joey and Scottie Barton , Mrs. Hazel Thomson , Ma'rjorie
Grimm, Neva Seyfried, Clara
Neila Seyler and Mickey,
Thotnas, Belly Kern, Ralph
Kern, Rose Ginther, Ruth
In 197r, · a federal grand Circle, Josephine Smith and
SAVE AS
jury indicted the Rev. Philip Carrie Neutzling.
Others altending who assist
Berrigan and five other
MUCH AS
persons, including a nun and Jn chorus programs were
two priests, on charges of Frances Roush, Eugene
plotting
to
kidnap McElroy, Kermit McElroy
Dayton
McElroy,
presidential adviser (now and
___ Secretary of Sta.te) Henry Dorothy Will and Rulh
Your Thorn MeAn Store
Middleport, Ohio
Evans.
Kissinger.

at the grocers

DAR names delegates
to Dayton conference

JYL.r.'F

] a(&gt; "

~n o•

0.,,,'

r&amp;pr&amp;tetll~

~ ::= 1

Mrs. -Eroin
hosts party

DALE C. WARNEJC

Celebrates
birthday

FULL SIZE

BOX SPRING
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JANUARY
1 SlOREWIDE
50%

heritage house
'

One or Two Day Full Denture
Service, Partials, Extractions,
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.

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Loo.king for anything? Anything at all?
•
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eas&gt;t way out. Your feet will thank you!
Whatever you need, it's there atyourfingertips
when your fingers do thewalking
through the Yellow Pages. ,

Smilr Tomorrow I[ You Tr~Ar Carr OJ Yo&amp;~r J't'rth ""'''··',- ,

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$29.88

TWIN SIZE

CLEARANCE SALE

Best In
Live Enteriain.ment

PHONE: 252·3181 252·8445.

on missions funds ·

Fighting prices

RACINE - The 7~th anniverS&lt;:try yea r of RHcine
Chapter 134, Order of the
~astern
Star . lu . be
celebrated this year was
noted by· Mrs. Barbara
Roush, worthy matron, and
James Roush, worthy patron,
at the Monday night meeting .
The presiding officers
asked for suggestions on an
appropriate . observ~nce.
Roush led lhe members in
giving the obligation and the
Chapter voted to pay the Fire
and Safety Code of th e
Eastern Star Home Fund .
Other bills were also ap-

Society hears report

Maple Wooer Chair

pages

. ·;

EA Maple/Cushion, lfz price---· 60

INGELS FURNITURE

�..
•
4 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport·PIImcroy, 0 .. M;&gt;nday , Jilll. 12, 1!17U

~~~:::::~::::~~:;:' ::\Mttr:::~t::r=:=::::::=ttttt't:::::::::==:=::::::'!:l··!·

Ohto Htqn Sc hoo l
Untfcd Pt I'),. ln h' t thtfiO tt ol l
I l..t 1111 t•lll i1t o• l / I I 11irh•.,,
I I.. run ', '• I MdS.,i! hHI '• I
t- vu'1 f' I t tl' hl•r,ln \\ •, I

11,

l',lrb, •rtnn 1·1 (. "YrlhOqil I illlo;

&gt;I '
Rt'lll• f OIH''•lllll'

IIU

L1111,1

"' hnwntl' '&gt; 'I

Sport Parade

.!ll

ii~

Rt&gt; II Ovue 67 I ttltn &lt;.,7
~ e niftn"'' Louan .,, M i ~n11 E:

\j'jijl Arunsw•
" ck

Ry MILTON RICHMAN
::::::
UPI Sporls Editor
MIAMit UP I) - The baby blue Cadillac wa s parked lllltsidc
the ballpark and looked as if it was pleading for a rest.
The chrome molding on one side was gone. So was most uf
the original paint job, furnishing unmistake·a ble evidence the
vehicle had been left out in the SWlloo long.
The car had Illinois plates on it, two years old, and nearly
80,000 miles on lhe odometer , some of that mileage h a vin~

B'

Etyrt.:t ~'\ t'l t
Beallsville 6.t
Ca'h H! Jaelo.son

t.'l

Ciildwl'tt
Colnton C~nt
16
Co1nton Lehman ') 7 N Canton
Hoover ·., 1
C'a nt o n L incotn 7Q Kent
Roosevelt 73
Can ton ') •,J Massillon P e rry
.J .1
Cte Benedictine 6.J Cle Ce n t
Calh 53
Cte H o l y N ame 57 Univ
Sc h ool .J9
Columbus G r ove 69 I • Jen
nings 5!:i
Co r y Rawson q ~ ~ p e n cervi l l e

been recOrded over Mexico's tirei)unishing back countrY 37
roads . Where the leather interior had once been showroom Cos hoc ton o.t Cambridg e ~o
D unba r 65 Li ma
marshmallow white, it was now bat.tleship gray going on first Dayton
Sen ior 61

stage black .
Theballgamewasn'l due to start for two hours but the owner
of the car already was inside the park, sitting in fr ont of a drab
concrete cube serving as the home club dugout. In full
Wliform, he was inscribing his team 's name- PUERTO VAl ,.
LARTA-&lt;m every single baseball while a fascinated five-vcarold little boy sat at his feet in the dirt and watched him black
ink the balls.
MiiUlie Minoso wasn't hurrying at alL He was being very
deliberaie with the" lettering .
·
''How come you're doing that ?" I asked him only the other
day when I was in Puerto Vallarta.
'
Minoso, one of the American League 's most consistent hit ters with the Chicago Wllile Sox and Cleveland Indians two
decades ago and now managing the Puerto Villarta Dolphins in
Mexico's Northeast Winter League, laughed.
"You know ballplayers," he said . "They get a ball, and right
away they stick it in their pocket. Same here like in the States .
This, what I am doing now, helps us keep the balls a little
longer."
As a manager in Mexico, Minoso has won pennants three
years in a row. The players like him and respect him. So do the
fans_ One of them brings him fresh red snapper twice a week
during every homesland.
Born in Cuba 53 years ago, Minoso is in better physical shape
now than half the players in the majors. He still wears the
same old,nW)lber nine· he wore on his uniform the last time he
was last with the While Sox 15 years ago, and he'll get it ba ci&lt;
again now that he's been named to return to them as a em-1 ch
next season. This,is the first year since coming to Mexico more
than 10 years ago that he isn 't playing.
Years back when he was still with the White Sox, Minoso
once told me he hoped to die with his baseball uniform on. He
still says the same thing .
"Bas_eball is my life," says Minnie. "It always will be . Why
do you think I do all this traveling ? I like Mexico, and I like the
people. When I finished playing in the majors, I went back to
Mexico and hil.360 the first y.ear and was picked MVP. Second
year, I hit .350. When one of the dubowners asked me to
manage later, because he said the kids listen to me and respect
me, 1 said okay.l've been managing the last few years and I
like it.'!
Whal'Minosa wanted even more was to get back with his old
ball club, lhe_While Sox, and Bill Veeck look care of over the
weekend when he brought Minnie up from Mexico and introduced ' him as one of the team's new coaches under Paul
Richards at 'the Chicago Baseball Dinner.
.
·· Shortly after Veeck took over the White Sox, MifUiie -sent him
a wire. "Congratulations on coming back home to Chicago
where you belong," Minoso said in his wire to Veeck. "If you
say you need me, I'll be .right there."

Veeck decided he could use Minoso .
The While Sox traded Minoso back to the Indians the year
before they won their 13$t pennant in 1959. Nonetheless, ·veeck
saw to it Minoso received a pennant winning White.Sox ring.
"You deserved it because you helped us get where we did, "
Veeck told Minoso. MifUiie still wears the ring.
.
In Lhe Mexican Winter League, each team is permilled two
U.S. players on its roster, and one of the two with Puerto
Vallarta is Orestes Minoso Jr., Minnie's 23-year-old son who
was with Jacksonville of the Soulliern League last swnmer.
Young Minoso is an outfielder like his father was and he.
played for him once before two years ago.
;'He's an excellent manager, the kind who worries about his
ballplayers," says Minnie's boy. "I saw him play the year
before last and here he was at lhe age of 51, diving into the
bases head first and playing harder than most young guys. He
never complained about get.tinglired.l figure he musl've been
a helluva ballplayer when he was younger. One thing 1 know:
he wanted to get back with the W11ite Sox more than anything.
He went to Chicago for an oldlimers' gamelasl summer and he
still talks about it."
That's right, Minnie still does.
"The people there have always been very good to me," he
says. "I love Olicago."
'

De fi an ce c;IJ Bryan .sa
Edison 80 Margaretl-a 56
Edon 71 T inora 69
f ire t ands 59 S Amhe r st 57
F r ontie r 75 R i ver Local 70
f I r r ye 58 Mea dowbrook 55
Galion 67 Norwalk 55
Gara wa v 70 Guernsey Ca th 69
Glenoak 59 Mar l inglon .J6
H am i li on
T ownship
76
Lib erly U nion J6
H emlock Mill e r 69 Bern e
Un ion 65
Hi ck svi ll e 90 I· ayel1e &lt;16
H ig hland 72 Buc k eye 56
Hi land 81 E . K nox 55
Hob an 75 Ravenna 13
Ki dron
Ce nt
Ca lh
60
Cuya hog a Va'll ey Chris I ian 58
t1 0 I)
Li ma Balh ..J9 Pa t r ick H enry
insley 66 Mingo 60
"'LL ogan
Elm 70 Bloom

51

Carroll

L oudonvil le 68 Creslline 36
Ma n s f ie l d
C hri s Ti an
86
Brunn erdal e 6?
Mansf ie ld Malabar 70 Mans
fi e ld St P e ter's 57
Maple He ights 53 Brecksvi lle

36
Marion L ocal (&gt;6 F I . Loramie

.l6

Marl illS Ferry 6·.1 Be lla.ire St
John ' s 62
;!v'l aum ee Va l l ey 75 Lake ·
~ idg e !\eade m y 62
Meigs County Southern 70
Wa hama (W Va) 66
Parma 54 Cle Rhode s 47
Parma Padua 68 Parma
Normandy 5&lt;1
Port s mou t h 72 Co l Northland

60
S Central 59 L ucas &lt;10
S Rang e 58 Minera l Ridge 50
Sh eri dan 88 Morgan 52
!io lon 58 Bedford 55 (ol I
Southington 8.1 Fa rmingTon 5J
Spr i ngfi e ld Local -1 6 Leetonia

·15
STre e Tsboro 69 M "o gadore ·16
Tiflin Calv ert 63 roslo~:ia .51
Toled o Strilch 57 Wauseon 52
Upper Sandusky ·1&lt;1 Sh e lby 41
Wa rr e n Local 77 Parkersburg
Ca th {W Va ) 62
Warre.n R eserve 89 1\ kro n
G arfield .13
Warrensvi l l e 1fJ Be dford
Chan e! 68
w aterford 72 woodsfield 6J
(ol l
W e llsvi l le 73 Dayt o n While J3
Whee lersb u rg 80 Col Moh awk
65
W indham . 76 Crestwo od 46
w oos ter 60 Louisville 5.1
Wy n f ord 5J B uc yrus J2
Zan es v i ll e Ro se crans 61 Co t
We hr le 5·1
Skyvu e 63 Sh e nando&lt;th ;2

·76ers get _
1Curn m u·~-tl

from page 3)

Tornados edge Falcons 70-66
regained the lead and went
on to take a six point advantage near the quarters
Down by fifteen points
end
at 16-10 but Wahama
late in the third quarter, the
stonned back with a bucket
Wahama White Falcons put
by Ken Riggs and two more
on a fourth period surge only
by Marty Holbrook to knot
to have il fare four points shy
the score after one period of
with the visiting Southern
play at 16-16.
Tornadoes claiming a
Terry Tucker then gave
narrow 70·66
victory,
Wabama
the lead at 18-16 to
Saturday night.
begin
the
second quarter
One of the major factors
scoring
but
Southern 's
that contributed to the
Wahama d,ywnfall was Brown retailiated to even the
th eir inconsistency at the . score at 18-18. Seconds later,
after an exchange of
chariiy stripe especially
baskets, the score was
while on the bonus situation.
knotted
again at 20-20 for
The White Falcons failed lo
the
sixth
time
of the game. At
convert the front end of a one·
this
point
in
lhe
action the
plus one free throw no less
superior
height
of
lhe Torthan ·; seven times throughout
nadoes began tq take its toll
the course of the game with
fOur of those seven occuring as the cross river foe commenced to pull away. The
in the final period of play
White
Falcons
found
when the Falcons were
themselves
down
by
as
much
trying to rally from behind.
as
ten
points
at
24-34
With
Southern jwnped out to an
1:
25
left
in
the
half
but
Terry
early lead by scoring the
Tucker scored seven straight
first two buckets of the
points to cut the lead to three
game. The While Falcons
came right back by scoring- with seconds remaining. A
six straight points on suc· final basket by Southern
gave the Tornadoes a 36-31
cessive buckets by
Ray
lead
at intennisslon.
Tucker, Tim Davis and
Southern
scored the first
Terry Tucker. Southern

seven of the second half
enroute to their biggest
points lead ol the night,
fifteen points, at 53-58 with
just 2:40 left in the third
quarter of play before the
White Falcons began to
make their move . Duke
Smith bucket with :04 to play
in the quarter cut the lead Lo
56-44 going into the final
eight minutes of action.
Smith opened up the fourth
period with two - quick
jumpers, to cut the Tornadoe lead to eight at 56-411.
Southern then managed to
keep the White Falcons at
bay momentarily but three
quick baskets by the While
Falcons cut their lead down
to three at 6:1-oo.
Seconds later Van Riggs
narrowed the gap to two al
6~ but that was as close as
the local charges could get.
Southern capped the scoring
with two free throws with :03
left to play to ice the 7~
wln .
Team statistics show both
Wahama and Southern
shooting 41 percent from the
field will&gt; the While Falcons
hitting on just 52 percent at
the charity line while
Southern shot a poor 41
::: percent . The Tornadoes also
·· 'pulled down forty-three

BYGARYCLARK

Helen
Us ••.

1-l~lp
lh llt•lt•IJ Uulll'l

One in Every Office
Dear Helen :
What do you do with the office vamp ' Or should I say
"roundheels?" Liz can't keep her hands off the men. When she
talks to them, she stands so close the largest part of her
tou ches, and·she'salways leaning over to get something on the
other side of their desks , so t~at everything hangs - and
there's a lo t of everything , well displayed ..
Most of the guys just .laugh her off, or try to avoid her, but
the new ones go a little bug-eyed. Should I tell thi s one particular man tha t what everybody can gel, nobody should want ?
- IRKED

'

Committing twenty and
Wahama 19.
Terry Tucker came away
with the most impressive
statistics individually lor
Wahama. The senior cocaptain hit for 19 points on
six field goals and seven free
throws and also collected
thirteen rebounds to lead his
team in that department.
Duke Smith came off the
·bench in he second half to hit
for twelve markers and Ken
Riggs contributed eleven .
tallies Ofllhe night to·give the
White Falcons three double
figures _scorers in the game.
The While Falcons will
now be idle until Friday,
January 20 when they
journey to Huntington to
take on the second ranked
Vinson
Tigers.
Then
following HWltington Vinson
comes third rated Poca and
then a talented Buffalo group
who incidently almost upset .
the Poe a Dots last • week
losing by a single point. It
looks like a tough road ahead
for Coach Scherr and his
White Falcons meeting three
of the
toughest
"AA''
schools in the state.
WAHAMA (66)

Miss Evert in
easy victory
AUSTIN, Tex . 1UPIJ Chris Evert admits she wa s

once al a psychological
disadvantage against her
. chief competitOr Evonne
GuuJ'agong.
But ·she says she;s over~

come · that problem and she
~ave a convinc:ing example of
that Sunday .
Sl1e
whipped
Mis s
Goola gong 6-3, 7-6 Sunday lo
success fully defend the
Dear Irked :
richest prize in women 's
Why not let him find out for himself ~ as the other men sports - the $50,000 Women's
have ? Warning him away from "Luscious Liz" won't earn you Worfd Series of Tennis.
points with him - and I think they 're what you're after, right ?
But the tennis darling from
- H.
Florida wa s not alway s so
-j-j -1
success ful again s t Mi ss
Dear Helen :
Guolagong .
I'm a beauty operator and I date a bartender . We believe
we 've heard more hard luck stories-than anYone .this side of an
. advi ce cdlwnnist - more than the average psychiatrist ·hears
Ohio College Results.
in one day ! that 's for sure r
A lbion 73 Ke nyon 72
I understand some colleges are giving crash courses in · A shland 57 Tri Sl a ! e 53
Ce darville 79 Ti H in 77
"listening" for people like us so we can be helpful without (i n 73 Ea s tern Ky 66
going overboard. Any information here~ - BEAUTY AND Dayt on 9 1 Old Oom inion 7q
De fianc e 84 Hanov er 69
THE BAR
De ni son 92 Ohio wes l e yan 76

Dear B and the B:
I read recently tha t the Racine, Wis., Mental Health
Association has offered "listening courses" to bartenders .
This doesn't teach them to be therapists, but it acquaints
Elsewhere in - the NBA ,
them with the various help agencies to which they may refer
Kansas Cily beal Detroit 105- troubled peoplO. It also t~ains them in the art of withholding
99, Cleveland dumped
advice where it might be dangerous.
Wa s hington 106-104 ;
Perhaps your local mental health association might plan a
Milwaukee beat Los Angeles similar course. Why not contact the area director ? - H.
95·89, New York edged
-H -1 ·
Phoenix 99-98, Portland
Dear He len :'
defeated Atlanta 116-109 and
My Wife and I decided we'd switch roles unlil I finish
Buffalo ripped Seattle 125- correspondence school, with her earning 'the money, me
104 .
staying home with the kids.
In the ABA, New York
I now appreciate women, specifically home-based
whipped Indiana 112·102 and mothers!
St. Louis nipped Kentucky
Last night, I foWld myself in a tirade yelling at my wife ll3-Itl.
"You-just don't know what I go through every day . Just when I
get the baby down for a nap a telephone salesman woke him up
... the washer died, and I had to do it all by hand. How do you
expect me to have dinner on time with three kids yapping
aroWld my feet ?" Suddenly, we looked at each other and began
to laugh. It was just what SHE had been telling me all last
year, as a housewife.
The only difference is: A man can't call up a friend and
commiserate, something my wife said aimost saved her sanity
at times. Nor can he run next door to grab a cup of coffee with
another housebound mother :.. or he'll be suspected of starting
something up. •
It's the isolation that gets you. The only adults I talk to are
clerks at the supennarkel and they mainly keep it to , "Have a
good day" !which I could answer !); and people dispensing
religious tracts, wlfom I'm tempted Lo invite in for a visit - il 's
got that lonely'
'
What does a househusband do for company'! - TENDING
THE HOME FIRES
Havlicek, Dave Cowens and
Paul Silas had 16 poinlse~ch.

SOUTHERN (70)
Roberts
8 4-10 4 20
Brown,D.
8 2-5 2 18
Johnston
5 2-2 5 12
Braver
5 1-4 4 11
Roush
2 !HI 0 4
Cross
1 !HI 0 2
Brown,J .
o 2-1 4 2 _
Findley
0 1-4 2 1
Total
29 12·29 21 70
Score
by
Quar·
ters:
1"2 3 4 Total
Waharria
16 15 13 22 66
Southern
16 20 20 14 70
Reserve Score : Wahama 46
Southern 40

rebounds to thirty-five for
Wahama . Turnovers were
fairly even with Southern

FG
· Tucker,T.
6-15 1-9 I 19
Smith
6·10 ~ I 12
Riggs
5·11 Hi I II
Holbrook
4~ ().J 3 8
Tucker,R.
2·7 4-.'i 5 8
Davis
3~ ~ 2 6
Sayre
1·2 Q.l 5 2
Lambert
(k)~3 0
Tucker,J.
Q.4 ().2 4 0
Totals
21-65 12·23 25 66

Frigidaire 18 lb. Laundry Pair

• Rugged heavy duty

compone11ts In washer

73

• Flextble 1· 18 lb c"apaci ly

Mic h St . 92 Ohio St 8 2
Muskingum 73 Mariella 7)
(O! )
Ollio Northern 70 Ober lin 50
Ot1io Universily 62 Bowlin g
Gree"n 56 .
Oltei"beit:~ 11 C;;~pl, l&lt;tl 66
Philadelphia
Tex ! il e
76
Yol,lngs town .s t 6·1
R io ·G rande BB Malorve 66
Steubeovi ll e 90 Wilberfor ce
85
Taylor 91• Bluffton 90
Walsh 108 Ohio Oom inican 76
Weste rn Mich 78 Toledo 73
w ooster 71 Baldwin Wal lac e

Now Only
WCIDEC

• Kmts/Permanen t

Press/RegularWashcycles

•
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,

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Gen ll_e. flo~lng Heat plus

Kn1 ts and Permanenl
Press sett ing

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60

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W righ t S! B~ Cen1ra l St 80
X avier 109 St Joseph ' s { Pa l

on

·THIS·WEEK'S SPECIAL

BIG BURGER
SINGLE

BIG _BURGER
DOUBLE ·

'1.09
REG. PRICE 79c

pound fresh
ground beef paHy
garf'!ished the way
you ask for it.
(Cheese lOc ex• tra.)
.
lf4'

RE G. PRICE $1.29

Two-1;4
pound
fresh ground beef
paHies garnished
the way you ask
for it. (Cheese 10c
extra .)

DRIVE-IN OR CARRY OOT ONLY
(OUR BEEP IS GROUND FRESH DAILY)
ASK FOR THEM BY NAMEi
'

-CHOW'S STEAK HOUSE

That 's a tough question - even for a houseWIFE, in these
days of working women. You won't find much adult eompany
available, but you can: CommWle with your text books; drown
your sorrows in .'lOOP operas (which show you thi~gs could be
worse) - or get acquainted with th~ retired couple down the
street. - H.

DEN

Playing

NITELY
AT THE

"ZERPHA
BLUE"

INN-

5 Piece Group From

TUES.·THURS,

Parketsbu~

8:30 to 1:00

New Exciting Sounds

TRY

DR. RONALD F. RIVIERE
DR . ;.,, J. STAEHll
Dl. FlEEMAN MALTZ
Dl . CHRIS;.,_ IlDDLE
CALL COLLECT AIEA CODE (6141

WHAT'S IT ALL ABOUT- THOSE GARDEN CLUBS!
By Mrs. Chlorus Grimm, 1973-75 Meigs County Contact
Chairwoman for the Garden Club Association

Last week we began telling you abOut the various clubs of
the county which belong to lbe Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs, their many contributions to commun ity improvement
and beautification as well as personal development and
therapy . This week we conclude the series which has been
designed to give the general public a better understanding and
insight into the role of garden clubs in the community.
WINDING TRAIL GARDEN CLUB
The Winding Trail Club of Pomeroy has 14 members and
through the years has been active in a variety of programs and
projects.
l
The members have donated gardening bonks to the public
library . They bave won district and state awards for their
projects at the Meigs County lnfinnary and the new firehouse.
They have been active in many civic improvements such as
organizing a "litter walk" and recycling old Christmas trees
as part of an ecology project.
The club's latest plan is to assist in the development of the
mini-park project of the Jaycees , with plantings and shrubbery. The members have donated seeds and plant materials to
youth and other organizations, and_have staged flower shows,
\he latest being a home show hosted by Mrs. John TerrelL
Mrs. Ali ron Kelton is the club's immediate past president
as well as Lbe immediate part regional director, and Mrs.
Charles. Hayes is the 1975-76 president. .
WD..DWOOD GARDEN CLUB
With 19 active members, the Wildwood Club has for many
years bad as one of its special projects that of remembering
shut-ins at Christmas with cheer baskets.
·
They are always active participants in county flower
shows and are faithful at providing arrangements for the local
churches and other organizations. They planted shrubbery al
the Forest Run Methodist Churoh and for many years have
participated in the therapy program at the Gallipolis State
Institute. .
Mrs. Karl Grueser is the past year's presidi'"t and Mrs.
John A. Smith is !he current president. Mrs. Grueser for two
years served as secretary of ReRion 11. ·
RIJTLAND GARDEN CLUB
The Rutland Club has Tl active members and have long
been participants in many projects. For l.he past three years
they have had their own club's Christmas flower show in ad·
clition to participating in the county show.
They are active in the therapy programs at the Gallipolis
State Institute and the Athens Mental Health Center .
In addition to entering county flower shows, the .club
members provide arrangements for four churches in their
area. In addition they provide . table pieces for other
organizations. For educational purposes they have had flower
arranging demonstrations at open meetings.
As lor civic projects;-the club has bad plantings at several
public places in recent years.
Miss Ruby Djehl is nQW serving hl\r second year as club
president.'
·
·
.RIJTLAND FRIENDLY GARDENERS
An especially active club,.the Rlilland Friendly Gardeners
established lhe slogan, "Make Rulland a Bloomin' Clean
Town" and for nwnber of years now have worked diligenlly
to make it just that. Every spring finds the club doing a
"cleanup, paintup and plantup" program in cooperation with
the village officials.
The club's latest project was the memorial plantings at
Forest Acres Park, a tribute to Mrs. Homer Parker, long-time
active member. .
For this memorial planting, the club received a first place
award in the Region 11 . The junior garden dub also was
awarded first place in the Reed Award State Contest on " Birds
·and Conservation".
·
The club members have taken many educational tours,
have made floral arrangements lor business places an.d
churches, and have had dub flower shows both at the school
and in their homes.
'
One of their members has the honor of being lhe stale news
medi~ chairw_oman for the Ohio Association of Garden ClubS.
The members are always active participants in the county
flower shows .
Mrs. Joe Bolin, inun~iate past president, is on accredited
flower show judge, a past regional director and current county
contact chairwoman. Mrs. Howard Birchfield is the 1975-76
president.
STAR GARDEN CLUB
The Star Club with Mrs. Robert Jewell as the new
president, is active in a variety of programs. During the past
two .years their emphasis has been on vegetable as well as
flower gardening, and they have had several de~~Jonltrations
on arranging.
·

a

F indlay 78 Wi l ming ton 62
H e id elbE-rg 70 M I . Un ion 57
Hiram
107 Case Western
Rese rv e 81
John Carro l l 73 Carn egie
Mellon 71
Ke nt 51 7'1 Ba ll St 66
Miami (O hio ) 11 3 N or!h ern Ill

Q6 (2

Polly's Pointers

I ('~ mi H II.Wd Or! (UI ..\f'

8)

proved for payment.
A comm unication was read
announcing lh e di s trict lly Potty Cramer
Re por ts on fund s f or next meeting will -be on the
mee ting lo be held at
missions were glven at the second Tuesday in February
Ev angeHn e Chapt er, MidTuesday night meeting of the at the home of Mrs. Tina
INFI.ATJI)N FIGIITF.R
and yielt.llwic~ HS much juice
dleport, on Jan . 21. Those to
DF:AH POLLY - I have a if it is healed thoroughly Missionary Society of the Jacobs with Mrs. ~rtha
attend the dinner were asked few Pointers that ~n: a ~elp befure squeezing . I Poll Y's Laurel Cliff Free Methodist , Parker and Mrs . Kathy
to make their reservation s in t"ufnbaling inflation . I shup
note - Rolling a lemnn that is Church held al the home of Pullins serving refreshand pay their fee to Mrs. Cora ·wr gruceries only unce a , at ruum l(!mperature will · Mrs. Iva Powell .
ments.
Webb. It was announced that month . This saves tremen· help, too. 1
Mrs . Donna Gilmore,
Others attending were Mrs.
chairwoman,
reported
lbal
Wanda
Eblin, Mrs. Amber
Mary Shull has been rea ~ ­ dously . I also collect all
A loaf Ctf sta le bread can
pointed as representative to coupons thai appear in the often be saved by running it over $20 was in lhe "postage" Lohn , Mrs. Mildred Jacobs,
Oklahoma . A thank-you note paper. At the end of the BRIEFLY Wlder cold water box at lhe concl usion of the Mrs. Jean Wright, Mrs. Ann
was read fr om the Ethel month, I have s~ved at least and then placing in a hotuven holiday season , Instead of Nash . Refr~shmenls were
wheeler family _
three dollars worth . That for ten minutes. I also revive mailing cards lo their church · servedoby Mrs. Della Curtl•
Refreshments were served pays fur our paper !11r one sweet rolls and Danish pastry friends, the members use a and Miss Susan Fleshman,
during a concluding social month.
sumewhat the same way but church maiJ container for the with Mrs. Wright presiding ol
hour.
I save, wash and re-use all by brushing wilh milk instead cards and put the mone.f they lhe meeting.
plaslic bags that fresh fruits uf pulling under running would have spent for postage
into the "postage" box _
and vegetables come in and water. - - ANNE.
II was also reported lha l
•uMf 'ACTt PO""
use them for slurlng bread,
DEAR POLLY - During
INV!!IfO•I Htf '
lhe
thank ca lendar co ncracke_rs, dust rags and so on. lhese days of high food prices
tainers
brought
in
$100.
Mutual
I use the bn;..wn paper many of us are doubling the
Mrs .
Gilmore
had
grocery bags for was.tebasket volume of butter by sim ply
, Investing
liners .
whippine one pound with a devotions reading- the 33rd
Delegates and alternates to Charter Day luncheon of the
Foul\dation's
I make syrup go further by cup of cold water. Butter Psalm and an ar ticle "God
PIIIOI'ICTUI
the Ohio Daughters of lhe chapter to ·be in March .
buying a heavy maple syrup must be at room tem- Knows Your Name and Your
American Revolution conMrs . Thereon J ohnson and diluting it with a syr up perature . I use my electric Needs. " The World D,ay of
ference in Dayton, March 15- presided at t)le meeting with made with two parts water mixer for this but it can be Prayer book was ordered and
17 were named at a meeting Mrs. Dale Dutton , acting and one part sugar. I stretch done with a hand beater. Oleo it was a nnounced that the
Fo r ~ ou r lite c opy wrth ,.. 0
of Return Jonathan Meigs · chaplain. Mrs. Jones gave the a gallon of milk 1whole 1 by . can be done the same way.
Otlhgatoon contact Ule
Chapter held Friday at the national defense report us ing mixing it with a gali(Jn of Restaurants have used
local rep•esenliltrvt ot
home of Mrs . James information
from powdered milk. This not only whipped butter to serve on
American patriot' and
Brewington.
Congressman Miller on billS cos ts less ,per gallon but pancakes for years. This. also
HERITAGE
sta4'Sman
John Hancock was
••cu,.o:rt•a. INC.
The delegates are Mrs. whjch would provi~e jobs to tastes delicious and -is very. cuts on the calories si nce one
" • 9~ s• Cot ..... .,~ , o~ ."
Paul Eich, vice regent, and take the load off welfare, and nutritious. The column has uses much less. It does not born Jan. 12, !737.
••'•'! • .,,.
"'~ ' '""' " · 1~ lro&lt; ~r~•• • ~ • ··' •"' ~ C•
Also on this day in history:
Mrs. James Brewington, · dect~a·se duplication in helped tne . many limes. •. ,,...., l)ft ,r ~ 'Co•~"'~ ·· • (,
separate even in warm
In 1943, the warlime1)ffice
corresponding secretary. The paperwork . Mrs . Pearl Mora ERNESTINE.
,
g.,.
weaiher. · 1 Polly's note of Price Administration said_
alternates are Mrs. Charles reported on a_n article to
P. J. PAULEY
DEAR POLLY - To ease During World War II many
McDaniel, Mrs. Arthur encourage students to par· my clothing budget I shop al did the same thing but used standard frankfurters would
104W, MAIN
be replaced by "victory
Skinner and Mrs. Emerson ticipate in bicentennial church and temple rummage milk instead of water.) Pomeroy, 0 ..
sausages" consisting of meat
Jones.
• projects.
sales, other clothing sales .MRS. A. T.
PM. 992-2311
and soybean meal.
- Good Citizenship winners
The death of Abigaal ~nd resale shops . I manage to
DEAR POLLY - I have
annoWlced by Mrs. Harold Graves,
Columbus,
a find good
serviceable what I call a "Poor Man's
Sargent were Molly Fisher, member of the local chapter, clothing for my entire family Sewing Basket " To make
Southern High School; Cathy was announced. Mrs. Dwight a t a minimum cost. this use a metal can such as
And~ews,
Eastern,
and Milhoan announced that NANCY.
cookies come in . Cut a thick ·
Becky Glaze, Meigs. The genealogical records on
DEAR POLLY - One piece of hard while styrofoam
three will be guests at the families, ce meteri es and lemon can do the work of two, to. fit and put in the can. Cut
churches had been sent to the
plastic straws into thirds or
Ohio D.A.R. headquarters. ;:;:::::·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::.::: ::: ::; ::: ::::;:;:;::: ::;:;:;:;: ;:;:;::~ any desired length and
Mrs , Brew.ington, Mrs.
. "screw'' into the foam.
Mora and Mrs . Skinner
Puncture the paper ends on
served a salad course from a
spools of thread and put a ·
Play it oafe .and IIW'e
table centered with an
spool on each straw holder. I
I~ may be time to
arran'gemenl of red and white
keep my spare machine
have
your preoent
car:nations in a blue conPlans for the bicentennial bobbins and thimble on the
policy
updated.
tainer. Mrs. Pauline Horton year were made at the center ones. - MRS. J . R. B.
Tuesday meeting of the
was a guest.
You will receive a dohar If
Let's .Faile Soon
Senior Citizens Chorus.
Polly uses your favorite
The group decided to have homemaking , idea,- Pet
both an Easter program· and Peeve. Poily's Problem or
a bicentennial ·pageant or solutio~ to a problem. Write
992-214J
102 W . Main
. play during the year. Officers Polly in care of this newsPomeroy
elected were Ira Wolfe, paper.
president, and Clara Thomas,
..._
assistant
pianist and
BRIAN DENN\&gt;
Mrs. Garnet Ervin hosted a secre tary-treasurer. Mrs .
New Year's party for Ben Neutzling is director of
members of_ the Senior the chorus, and Mrs. Hazel
Citizens Chorus and guests Thomson is pianist. ·
recently at her home .
Garnes were played and
The Almanac
several door prizes were
United Press lntematioaal
Today is Monday, Jan. 12,
. Brian Denny celebrated his awarded , There was--,uso
eighth birthday on Jan . 7 with group singing . For lhe parly the lllh day of 1976 with 354 to
-a party given by his mother, the Ervin home was follow.
decorated
in
the
Christmas
The
moon
is
moving
toward
Mrs. Judy Harrison, at the
full moon .
home of 'his grandparents, motif.
Attending
the
party
were
The IJ10rning stars are
Mr. and Mrs. Ardith Barton.
Sarah
Voss,
Waller
Voss,
Venus
and S;llurn.
Cake, potato fhips, ice
The evening stars are Mercream and soft drink$ were Virginia Gulley, Mr. and Mrs.
William
Watson
,
Caryl
Cook,_
cury
and and Jupiter.
.
served . Gifts were presented
Ethel
Hughes.
Rose
McDade,
Those
born
on
this
date
are
to Brian_ Attending were his
sister, Deanna, Mrs. Bettie Elizabeth Slavin, Teresa under the sign of Capricorn.
Reed, Crystal and Judy Hall, Byer, Jessie Houchings,
Joey and Scottie Barton , Mrs. Hazel Thomson , Ma'rjorie
Grimm, Neva Seyfried, Clara
Neila Seyler and Mickey,
Thotnas, Belly Kern, Ralph
Kern, Rose Ginther, Ruth
In 197r, · a federal grand Circle, Josephine Smith and
SAVE AS
jury indicted the Rev. Philip Carrie Neutzling.
Others altending who assist
Berrigan and five other
MUCH AS
persons, including a nun and Jn chorus programs were
two priests, on charges of Frances Roush, Eugene
plotting
to
kidnap McElroy, Kermit McElroy
Dayton
McElroy,
presidential adviser (now and
___ Secretary of Sta.te) Henry Dorothy Will and Rulh
Your Thorn MeAn Store
Middleport, Ohio
Evans.
Kissinger.

at the grocers

DAR names delegates
to Dayton conference

JYL.r.'F

] a(&gt; "

~n o•

0.,,,'

r&amp;pr&amp;tetll~

~ ::= 1

Mrs. -Eroin
hosts party

DALE C. WARNEJC

Celebrates
birthday

FULL SIZE

BOX SPRING
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JANUARY
1 SlOREWIDE
50%

heritage house
'

One or Two Day Full Denture
Service, Partials, Extractions,
x. Rays, _Cleaning 1

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Loo.king for anything? Anything at all?
•
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eas&gt;t way out. Your feet will thank you!
Whatever you need, it's there atyourfingertips
when your fingers do thewalking
through the Yellow Pages. ,

Smilr Tomorrow I[ You Tr~Ar Carr OJ Yo&amp;~r J't'rth ""'''··',- ,

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POMEROY, OHIO

A.M. TO 8:JO P.M.

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.,

MEIGS INN
COLUMBUS, CJi 10 43205

Gibson 14 Cubic Foot

CONSOLE STEREO-~-~~~~---

FRI. &amp; SAT.
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AYE.

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do the

$29.88

TWIN SIZE

CLEARANCE SALE

Best In
Live Enteriain.ment

PHONE: 252·3181 252·8445.

on missions funds ·

Fighting prices

RACINE - The 7~th anniverS&lt;:try yea r of RHcine
Chapter 134, Order of the
~astern
Star . lu . be
celebrated this year was
noted by· Mrs. Barbara
Roush, worthy matron, and
James Roush, worthy patron,
at the Monday night meeting .
The presiding officers
asked for suggestions on an
appropriate . observ~nce.
Roush led lhe members in
giving the obligation and the
Chapter voted to pay the Fire
and Safety Code of th e
Eastern Star Home Fund .
Other bills were also ap-

Society hears report

Maple Wooer Chair

pages

. ·;

EA Maple/Cushion, lfz price---· 60

INGELS FURNITURE

�. '

li - Tl~ [)rtily 8t•f11inl'l, MitllUc puri -PnJiu'l't l)", 11 . i\h tntl.!~ .. 1:111 . 1:'. 1 ~1;1 ;

Jll!l1~th~;::.~:;.1tit~:.r:.:

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

Television log for easy viewing

NURSES'

l 'nsan mblt" lh,•li(' rour Jumbles,

ont" lt.• ttr-r

t1 · t'1U' h

to

squar~ .

Auto Sales

form fuur ordinarr "''ords .

! I' l 1~~~A.'

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[J I

[J

I [{)I

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mvch

I

V'"'\1

·''/ .1

1974 DAT SUN 71 0 CPE.
Clearance 52695
Loce~l l ow ner . rtu t omafic , blk . viny l int . tr i m , si l ver
finish . good t ires. radio , r ea l economy . Book Value
Price $2 875 .00
-

'}~l f'

HE PUT ON 100

V \J

Now arTang• th• cirded letlen

to form the sufl)rise answer, as

XI XIII X XXJ

!'Oo~~lurtlon ·.,

·

I

ABBEY

FERVID

NOTICE OF
E sl at\1 of ·Eth e l

E . Wh ee l er

Decea sed .
Notice is her e by given l h at
l'. da E Bays of Ra c ine . Ot1in .
has been duly •1PPO i nt e d
EKecutrix of th e Estate of
Etht&gt;l E VI/ heeler . deceased .
tat e of Me ig s County , Oh io
Credilo r s are requir ed to
fi le thei r c laims with said
fiduc ia ry within four tnonth s
Da t ed this 7 th day o f
.Ja n uary 1976
Manning D \1\.ebster
Judge
{ 11 11 . 1'~ . 26 . Jtc

A Low Cost

')

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
D EA DLIN ES
.
5
p .M .
Day
8e t ore
PUblicat ion .
Monday Dca diinc 9 a m
C.:~ncel l ation
Corrections
witt be accepted unti l 9 a m .
for Day' ol Publ ic ation
R EG ULATIONS
T11e Publ is her r e serves tile
riqtl t to edit o r r eiect any ads
de e med ob j ectional
Th e
puhlish e r
wi l i :, not
be
r esponsib l e For mo r e than one
incorrect i nse rt io n,
RATES
For W a nt A d Service
Sc ents per word one i n se rlion
Mi n imum Cha r ge Sl.OO
1.1 ce nt s per word thr ee
CO II SCc utiv e insert i ons .
26 cent s per word Sil&lt;. con
sec u tiv(' insert,io ns
75 Per. Cen t D iscount on paid
ad s and ads pa ·i d w i ttlin to
days .
CARD OF THAN~S
&amp; OBITUARY
't7 00 tor 50 word m in.im um
Each additionu l wo t d 3
c ents
~UN DADS
A dditiona l '25c Ch urge per
/l dvert ise ment .
•.
OFF I CE HOURS

8 JO a . m
to s · oo p . m .
Da i l y . 8 : 30 il m to 17 ; 00 Noon
Sal urday . - ·

WRITE YOUR
OWN 'AD!

News Notes

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MAUl
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12,, WORDS
4 DAYS
ll,25

ONLY

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ORDER

AVAilABLE TO
INDIVIDUALS ONLY!
NON COMMERCIAL
N() REFUNDS.
Each ini.tial and
group ·· of figures
counts as one word.
Be sure to count
name and address, if
,used, and your phone
rium&amp;er.
Including
prices for items offered in your want ad
w i I I · ·increase
response.

,l ,

2.

3.
4.

..

5.
'

6.
7.

8.

9.
10.

11.
.
12.NAME
ADDRESS

CITY
PHONE
MAIL WITH
11.25
TO ntE

'

DAILY SENDNEL
111 OOURT ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

45769

.

Holiday guests of Mrs .
Alberta Edwards were Mr.
and Mrs. Clark Edwards Sr .
and Mr . and Mrs, Clark
Edwards Jr. ' a nd family of
Canal Wlnchestet and Mr .
and Mrs. Robert Edwards
and family of Troy .
·M1·s. Grant Boring ha s been
a patient at C:miden-Clark
Hospital, Parkersburg, W.
Va .
Holiday guests a t the home
of Mr . and Mrs. D. C. Riebel
were the John Riebel family
of Pomeroy Rd., Robert
Thomas family of Cheshire,
and the Robert Morton family
of Belpre Rd .
Mrs. Virginia Walton has
been a patient at. Camden·
Clark Hospital, Parkersburg,
W. Va .
Mr. and Mrs . Richard
Ca shdollar of Ci ncinnati, Mr .
and Mrs . Charles Pyor and
sons of Pittsburgh, Pa ., Mr .
oind Mrs. Tom Watson and
Lis.a, 'Mrs . Eunice Halsey of
Belpre. Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Fortney of . Washington, W.
Va ., Carrel Cheva lier of
Mansfield, Mr . and Mrs.
Clark Edwards Sr. , and Mr.
an d Mrs. Clark Edwards Jr .
of Cana l Winchester and Mrs.
Alberta Edwards we re
holiday guests of Mr . and
Mrs. Alfred Cashdollar.
Tammy, Robin and Vicky
Morton of Belpre Spent New
Year's eve with their grand·
parents, Mr. and M:rs. D. C. ·
Riebel. Dinner guests of lhe
Riebels New Year 's day were
Mr. and Mrs, Robert Morton
and lamily;~pre Rd ., and
Mr . and Mrs . John Riebel and
family, Pomeroy Rd.
Zenith Chevalier and son
Allan of Belpre Rd., and
Carrel Chevalier of Mansfield
visited with Mr . and Mrs.
Edward Chevalier Friday .
Mrs . Dorothy Riebel visited
with Mrs. Bernice Prince at
I.&lt;&gt;ng Bottom, who has been a
p~tient
at
University
Hospital, Columbus.
Zenith Chevalier of Belpre
Rd. ; and Carrel Cheva lier of
Mansfield visited wtlh Mr.
and Mrs. R . E. Williams.
Mr . and
Mrs. John
Bu!=lianan were dinner guests
of Mr . and Mrs . Don
Buchanan and Sheila.
Mr . .and Mrs . Ernest
Whitehead and .Juli, Mr . and
Mrs. Denver Weber . David
and Mark, and Mr . and Mrs.
Warren Pickens spent New
Year's day wil11 Mr. And Mrs.
Bill. Meredith al Beverly.

Racine
Lt. auu JVIfS. Edward M.
Brown of Del Rio, Texas,
spent two weeks over the
holidays with Mr . and Mrs .
Martin Wilcoxen and Mr, and
Mrs . Donald Ohlinger al New
Haven , W. va . Other holiday
\

f&lt;..'.t'&gt;Uil

wo

b~drm
double w i d e
modular
home .
rural
loc al ion near Poi'T)croy No
pets or Chi ldren . Phon e 99 '1
70 17
1 6 6t c

Clearance SJ29S

tr ailer . n ir &lt;.. ~n
d i tion i ng . l£:1evi s ion . lur
n lshed . Phone 997 22 1·1.
'
1 II ) IC

vr cr liON over
\\oe of fe r ·
greil tc&gt;E.t savings even on
'r ailers and told downs
Guarantee and se rv ice what
we se ll '&gt;lth y~ar with l) lar
Craft
Ca mp Conley .S tar
Craft . R 1 62 . N o rth ot Pt
P l easant
C HEV~
'• ton ·I · whee l
clriv c p ic lo.up
P.11&lt;m ce ot
t .1ctory w.1 rrnnty Check
·t,is bc torc you buy i'+ n ew
(' Il l' Pt10 n c afl c r "'p '' ' or &lt;m
wcC "-Cnd S. YY'l J.l\16
I 9 I IC

1 -&lt;l~

Notice
:O. I-'t&lt;tN U tSMOUn d the co rn e r
Get your til ler s and mowers
re a dy tor use I'IOW Claren ce
H il L Rusti c Hill s. Syra cuse
Phon e 997 296 7 al te r 5 p m
1 8 6t c

19 73 DODGE Chafger. I\ 1
con dition , p .s .. p .b Phone
tUJ 718.1 any ti me
I 6 61p

tQ68 CH EVY Im pala Phone
9'i'? 6 137 or 7-17 2695
END O t SE/I SON c usto mer
1 6 6tc
(
appreciation sa l e now at
Bob ' s Marke t A ppl es S2 _98
bushel. oranges two dolen .
S1 . T-angerine s thre e doze n
for $ 1. Grapes . three p ounds
for S1 Wh il e the SUPDIY
l asts . Bob's Markel 1n CA RP E NT E R work , cei l i ngs,
Mason , w Va Ph one 773
floor i ng s a nd pa n e ling
571 1. hou r s 10 a . m . ti ll 5 : 30
Phone Q91 2759 .
nm
I 7 10 tc
l 6 10tc

Employment Wanted

IN COME TI\X
pre p ared ,
Fe deral an d sta t e tax es .
W i l l be done by appl . on l y
Please ph one 99? 2272 , or see
M r s Wanda Eblin , Laurel
Cliff Rd . Pomeroy
12 31 JOtc

P/I.R T T I ME babysitter
Phone 7.t2 2695 .
1 6 6tc

Mobile Homes For Sale

H/1. Y , large c l ean
Phone ' 142 24Jl.

bales .
~1

6 6t c

COAL . limestone and a ll types
of salt and rock sa i l for i ce
and snow remova l. E x
celsio r Salt Wo rk s . East
Main St . , Pomeroy , Ohio .
Pt10ne q92 3B9 1
I 2 7 1fc
10 ACRES near Rut l an d .with 3
bed rm ,
house .
i 12,000 .
House in H ar r iso nv i ll e.
$ 10,000 ; .. 1970 Bu i ck Riv~ria ,
lul l power. no ru s t . $1.200 .
Phone 7.J2 '1796 .
1 6 8tc
NOW se t!ing F u l l er Br ush
Pr oduc ts . Phon e Q92 34 10.
10 6 l i e
H I\ Y for sa te or trad e for co rn
PhOne 7 .J 2 1085
1 11 Jtp
MODE RN design s t ereo . tr
track tape . am fm rad io
comb ina! ion . Balance $98 .60
or te r ms . Call 992 396 5

1 7 Tf(
NE e !I ,1 qinn t room iHJcli lion .
or olli cc . showroon1 e tc 'l ,
V. c t1 nvc a 19 71, Mobi le unil . i'll (l:I'IC tr ChCSI l rC'CZN .
t ully
1 1 x 70 'OI,11 clec
like new 're ar .lf'd
old
CMp e l ed . I o tt ices in center .
PI&lt;one 99') ? lOY
' , billtl on Ctlch end Pr iced
low 'O sel l Gnn be seen a t
I WI LL b e givi ng p i a'no lessons · '' inq SflUr y H o me ·-itlcs . 1100
E r\~.1in ' 1 , Pome roy , Ohio . f97 .t HONor. 7!10. 1 ord 7000
1n my hOme starli ng f'- eb . 1.
Jr octor . P'•. di lf erc nt ial
or c ,l l l 119? }lLI-l
. I or in l orrnation call 99 2
l.ock. fr ont end -.ycighls und
377 8
I 9 .11 c
ot her e,;tras
Phone 99 7
I :? 18 50t c
l6'ioA
til x '•U PEERLE '·'• M obi l e
1 5 11tc
Hon1c . n ew gas l urn,l c e.
D 8. J HO USE o t I abric 'S
buil• 1n oven a nd ra nq c .
GO O D quality t1ay Phone 9'n
Ja n uary Clearance Sale A ll
pric e r edu ce d to r quicK salt.&gt;
) 6~11
materia l in s tock on sa l e.
C .1n be seen at ~ inq sbu ry
Open 10 am ·till 5 p m :
I 5 I 7tc
Hpme '·&lt;li es , Ill E M a rn ' ·' .
Monday .through Satur d ay
Pomeroy Ohio or call qq'?
LIME STONE a nd g r ave l.
I .r 11 t c.
101 I
Phone Jr . Darst at 742 2A50
I
I 9 .11 c
a f ter5p m .
"
I 7 12 tp

W I LL ca re tor elder l y persons
in my home . Trained an d
e xpe r ience l:l . Phone 99'2
7J
12 ·JO 18tc

'j

Wanted To Buy

OEI\LER S in scra p . iron ,
me.ta l s, j un k autos . Rid er 's
Sa vage Phon e 992 5-168

For Rent

FREE RENT
MANOR

A T _V I LLAG E
IN

MID

1· 17. 1 mo.

Real Estate For Sale
6 RM . HOUSE , b ath, 1 .' acre ,
flJ!I basement. u t i l ity roo{ll .
blJilt i n po r c h , 9~1rage .
Phone &lt;;192 7733
12 30 tf c

J BR . H O M E.

/US! finished
remodeling . Sa l em
St ,
Rutland . Phone 742 2306
after 4 p .r"n . or see Mi lo B .
Hutchinso n .
10 9 tf c

1\t~CO

welding ma ch ine, new
elec al l accessories in
cii,Jded . Phone 991 -3410 ,
1028' 1t c

.t

ROOM S and
bath
in
Pomeroy near Krog er 's
Store . ~-1 , 000 . Phone 992 772 9
or see J'rrry Hawk
I ,f l?tp

, .r.1 AC RE tor
f6 t.t ) 66"1 JJ])

sa l e

Phone
1 4 121c

,1

RM .
H OU SE ,
basemen t and 5
Phone 992 50 35

I ULL
a c r es
1 6 Ole

.1 ROOM ~ and bath , large yard
.1nd garden Phone 949 2812
1 6 61c
HO USE on Lincoln Hg t s I
bedrm , la rge k i tchen , f Ull
basement , Cl!;Ce ll ent bvv for
'&gt;8 .900 , wilh n ew f urn itu r e .
on ly \10 .3'00 Phon e 991 7MH
1 6 26t c

TEAFORD
Virgil B ., Sr ., Broker
110 Mechanic Pomeroy , 0 .

Phcin, 992-3325
NEW LISTING

~

Large

ranch hOme, 4 B . R .s, l' '
ceramic baths, oil furnace ,
large k i tchen wit h dining . 2
car garage . 1 acre . Only
$25,000 . TUppers Plain s.

RACINE -

Renovaled 3

BRs, nice large bath, 7
closets
with
storage
s he l ve s. Dry basement.
garage and I acre . Only

---

______

Dl'.' lu x Lr- rox Copy :-:.~r vi cc.
0 I f i r l'
~, u p p I
~· 5 ,
MlillCOQ r uph
~ up plies,
IArqi'.'S I '&gt;C' If'G110il. of WCd
dtnq ~, 1 ppl lt&gt;"&gt; 111 ~.o utt1
ea st ••rn OhioTh e Pnnt Sh op Co mph~ t ~
1 St11t 111 bu:. tnc :.s 111 Mi d·
rJi c pp rt )
I:' 8 7 mo

CAPI'AIN EA:ii\'
OLII&lt;: Ffi.IENPS Afi.E FL'ill\16
SEE T~E NEW Mci&lt;EE

I Q. IC.:.:m:.Oo'-!

C R /\ NE &lt;.,e r viu ,
e r ection . .IQ I!
Phurw ~9/ S 161-l

b ui t dinq
tJ erric.k

THE LOCAL CHIEF OF
POLICE:

EXPERIENCED

I ') ?61p

Radiata

YOU urr&gt; 1nlu~;,:st &lt;.' d in
bu i lfl l nll .1 n~w l1omc or f or
yo ur
present
110m c
rcn'tOcl e lc&lt;.L c. on·tac t l~o us h
Co n st r uction Pli0 11t• 99?
} 58)

Service

I 1

~ .- -.

.

•

~.

.
''
t

--.

E,XCf1V/diNG , d(Uf'r , tdo ...
.1nd t,lackhoe work
sep tic
lilnks
1n st,1llr&gt;d
dlltri J.l
tr uck5 ilnd 10 boys tor 11 1rt' ,
will h,;ut fill Uirl. top so il
lltnf'SIOnf' And rJrr1v~&gt;l {, all
Bob or .t~o q ct· Jt• tt erS ct,)y
phonf' 992 70811 niqh' r•hone
??I 'l~ 1 'l or lt9~ .~:'17

~~~t~

OHOUR$, I'VI%:Or

,.,BUT, B'/ WPP'/,
IT'S BeTTER llWJ

~l~~TV

~&amp;XI'{ 8l.SI;'SI

• A\12
• AQ84 '

.AQ ;
"'9 3 2

(.OMPJ..j?:)(. ".

1-::.~ s t - Wcs l v ulrlerabl&lt;'

ill 1".~ ''· '.I'· ""

~----"""11

1PH- H'S A

'M'8 GOT

'IMU, lOO -·
Afl)

I 1 30 lB tc_

'"1!'5 BUN

A~P40A~1

20

111010n?

fl.&lt;prrienCC' l n &lt;.urr·d ,
t rr&lt; t• (! St lrn, • tt·~ Call 997 ?J A-1
or ( f1 t 11 6YB .j 1'.7' 1\ lbo'ny
10 l 'S tfc
Yl'dr~

O'DELL r, lm erneh t tOc_il i Cd
behind
Ru ll a'n d G r .Jd f,' &lt;., E:,\·V IN G"V.-\t-.( HINL Pcpalr~.
Sc hoo l l un-elJ p , bra.l&lt;.c ~. ' '&gt;NviC(' i'ltl 111 ~"-f ~ 99'} 'n8·1
whee l ba lan Ci nq , ill inemt&gt;nl
T'tl(' I .1br •c ~ 110 p PohH ·i-'oy
Phon e / .f t 200·1
f·U fhOrl7t'll '·t ll flfr ~«1fl'~ )llCI
11 16 i lc
\ o'rvtc&gt;'
l/'J• •
&lt;, ll&lt;irpPn
'-,c i s&lt;,o r •,
1 -;q ttc.
C BR A Dt OR P '•uctlon~t..
Compl e te Se r vice
Phon e WI Ll. rR tM or c.ut IP'f'!&gt; tm d
::.hrubbt'ry
Pn onc 9.!9 75 .15
9&lt;19 2.t87 or 9.19 ?000 Ra cine.
or! t~J.t6 7
•
Oh)o . Cr i tt B radf ord
17- 18 t ote
10 v Jf c

' .

ALLEY OOP

lieuc~~VJt4e

$21 ,500 .00 .
NEW LISTING - Like new

I Confabulate
5 Kind of
conference
or agent
II Take on·.

3 8Rs with nice paneling ,
c arpeting , granc;1 bath ,
garage, and over 1. 2 acr e .
$25,500. F ive Points .

cargo

11 One kind
ol sciup
U Tennis star
14 Write

.. ...... _._

•' &lt;tHo •.1·•·· ··"-

••
·~
•
••

much salt

~

•

~

••
•

Card of Thanks
WE W I SH to eliCpress our
si n cere t hank s and ap
pr ec iation to our relatives ,
fri ends and ne ighbor s fo r
the ir kin dness a nd con ce rn
shown us dur i ng our r ecent
hosp ila tlzalion due 1o th e
automobile
acc i dent .
spec ia l lh~tnks to lhe staff s
of th e Holzer Medica l Center
and St . Mary :s Hospilal and
lhe Volunteer Emerg ency
Sq uad , especial ly volun
r ee r s.
Mrs .
Mildred
Hamilton
and
Kenny'
Cremeens . Word s cannol
eliCpress our gral i fute . Gary ,
5ue . i)nd Eric Tllacker
I 1·1 l ' p

l WO bed rm . trail er , S2B per
wee k
1\1 1 uliliti es paid .
Phon e 991 3324 .
I 4 t fc
L ~ fDRUUM

apartment
at
Vi l lage
M anor . Phone 99 2 3273 .
12. 19·26tc

--

-·

.. ,.._- -,- ..

~·-

-·---

- ·· -·~·--

..

-- ,

-- . ··: ·-

1974 CL '200 H onda . Phone 241 .
2023. .
l -6-6tc

Rill Esflte Fer S.

FU RN IS HED apar t ment 4
rooms and bath , adults only . HOUSE
in
Chester ,
2
Phone 992 5908 .
bedr ooms , and bath , good
12 - 18· 1fC
condilion . Phon e Ray Rittle .
{61 .11 981 J2 .15.
1 12 .ttp

,

La Salle
HOTEL

Middleport, C.

gues ls of the Wilc oxens were
Mr. and Mrs. Rock Young
and Andy of Columbus, Helen
Wilcoxen, Larry Wilcoxen
and fl·iend, Amy Esmond of
Ohio State . Univ~rsily .
·l

fVIII· ... ·H~d

1975 HONDA -400, 4 cylii)Qer
Super Sport less than 500
miles . Phone 992 2977.
·
1 6 Ole

Ph, 992-2771

Rooms, '5.00 up
Speca.l Rates
by Wee~
or Month

it. S5oo.

LOT .tO x 100
Close to
Kroger''s in Pomeroy . Ca ll
(11 864 2490 after !1 : 30 p .m .;
Reynoldsburg, Ohio .
I 11 31c
HOU SE in Ches t er , 2 bedrms .
and bath . Good co ndlllon .
Phone 161.s\ 98 5 -'24( ,
1 5 6tc
··oLDER
" ' 'Ill 1 rm . ho"me ,
c arpet('{! . t n d camp l~tely
furnisl1ed , w i lh forc ed air
furnace .:~ ., acre 101 . Phone

992 : 180.

7 .

1 ~'2 acres, home has

bath ,

often need
them

9 Locate
lZ Athlete's
award

Z4 Regularly
(3 wds.)
Z5 Shadowy

11 Work
r7 Infertile
hard
Z9 Screen
19 Herbert
30 ScandlniiBeerbohm vlans
Z2 Kind of
Sl Step in
reader
· II Foot (Lal)
Z3 Mind you!
(2 wds.)

(3 wds.)

37 HawaUan

delll:acy

car

-4

ca,.petlng,

paneling, H.W. heal .
Storage bldg. $15.000.
POMEROY - 5 hilly acres,
3 BR, bath, large kitchen.
w-lols of cabinet., storage
bldg . 57.900.
CLOSE IN - Rl. 143 -- 2
acres, lovely lor building
site· or trailer . water

available. $4,1100.
HYSELL RUN -

Lovely

home wi ttl 2.77 acres ' of

goqd ground, I 910f'y, 3 BR,
bath, nice kitchen , utility

R. full basement, . very
large concrete B. garage &amp;
workshop, carport, :28,000.
SELLER
DON'T
WORRY ABOUT BUYEilS
WE HAVE MANY - LIST
WITH US TODAY .
992-2259 or 992-2561

6:25-Farm Reoort 13.
6: 30-Now Zoo Revue 4: News 6; Bible Ani.._rs 8;
Concerns &amp; Comments 10; Rev . Cloophuo Robinson
13.
6:45-Mornlng R-rt 3.
6:55-Chuck While Reporlo 10; Good Morning, Trl ·
State 13.
7:00:-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, America 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7:30-Schoolles 10.
8: DO-Laosle 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; S.umo St. 33.
8:30-Big Valley 6.
9:DO-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4; Lucy Show 8; Mike
Doilglas 10: Morning with D. J . 13; Phil Donahue
15,
9:31&gt;-Not for Women Only 3; One Life to Live 6 ;
Tattletales 8; New Zoo Revue 13.
IO:OD-Ctlebrlty Sweepstakes 3;4,15.; Edge of Night 6;
Price Is. Right a.10; Mike Dquglu 13
· ·
10 :30-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; I Dream . of JNnnle 4;
Dinah 6.
t1 :DO-Hollywood Squares4; Gomblt8,10; Eltc. Co. 20.
Happy O.ys 13;
. Midday 4; Love of Life 8,1 0; Seume St. 20,33.
11:55-Take Kerr 8; Dan I mol's World 10.
12 :00-High Rollers 3,1S; Let's Make 1 Deal13; .Bob
11: 30-Hollywood Squares 3, 15;

Braun's 50.50 Club _.; News 6,8, 10.

12:30-Take My Advice 3,15; All My Children 6,13;
Storch for tomorrow 8,10; Eloc. Co. 33.
12:55-NBC News 3,15:
1:DO-Ryan's Hope 6, 13;. New• 3; Phil OonahlHf 8;
Young &amp; the Resll••• 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1: 30-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15; Rhyme &amp; RNson 6.13;
As the World Turns 8, 10.
2:DO-S10,000 Pyramid 6, 13; Biography 33.
2: 30--Doctors 3.4,15: Neighbors 6, 13; Guiding Light ·
8, 10; Lowell Thomes Remembers 33.
3: DO-Another World 3,o, 15; General Hospital 6, 13; All
In The Family 8.10;' Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:30-0ne Lilt to Llvt13; Mlckoy Moun Club 6; Match
Game 8, 10; Romagnolls' Table 20 .
~ : OD-Speclal Treat 3,o, 15; Bewltched6; Mlcl&lt;ey Mouse
Club 8: Mister Rogers 20,33; Movie "To Find 1
Rainbow" 10; Dinah 13.
o: 30-Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8; 5eume St.
5:DO-Bonenza 3; Junior Theatre 4: Family Affair 1:
Star Trek 15.
.
5: 30-Adam-121; News 6; , Bever:ly Hillbillies 8; I!' lee.
Co. 20,33; Actam -12 13.
6:0D-Nows 3,4,8,10,13.15; Zoom 20.33; ABC Nows 6.
6:30-NBC News3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Your Future . Is Now 33;
Jiodgepodge Lodge 20. .
7:0D-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling lor
Dollaro 6; Wilburn Brothers 8; News 10; Name
That Tune 13; Family Affair 15; Antiques 20; Wild
Wild World of Animals 33.
•
7:30-Hollywood Sq~~ares 3:,4; Lei's Deal with It 6:
$25,000 Pyramid 8; National Geographic 20,33;
Price Is Right 10; To Tell the Truth 13; High School
TV Honor Society 15.
8:DO-Movln' On 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13; Good Times
8,10.
8: 30-Welcome Back, KoHer 6,13i Joe &amp; Sons I;
Consumer Survival 20,33; Channel 10 Reports 10.
9:DO-Deen Martin 3,4,15; Rookies 6,13; MASH 8,10;
WHA All-Star Game 20; ~rgot Fonteyn 33.
· 9:30-0ne O.y at A Time 8,10.
·
10:oo-Joe Forrester 3.4.15; ~reus Welby, M.D. 6,13;
Switch 8,10; Women 33.
10:30-Woman Alive! 33.
11 :OD-News 3,4,6,8,]0,13,15: ABC News 33.
11 :30-Mysfery of "'e Week 6,13; Johnny Carson
3,4, 15; Mavkt "KIIIdozer" 1: Movie "Becaute
You're Mine." 10; News 20; Jenakl 33.
1:oo-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

Douay Blbleffi:-t--t---t1'1 Explosive
IGUIId .
II Caesar's

11Jn8Ue
(abbr. )
II Food

~

&gt;--THE SHEiKS PRIME
MINISTER 151~1 NOv YA'NK TO 6 tr HI~\
SOME' AA\ERICAN
~-

toclay you may be overly in~
fluen ced
by unsound
suggesttons.

fllb

a Colorful

BCOIIPIO (Oct. 2'·Nov. II)

period

Be careful today not to be
drawn too dtteply Into a corri· ·
plicated situation thafs not of
your making . Stay on the
sidelines.

Jl Euiiperate "-=-+--1-H Coli
·,.

For T..-r, Jon. 13, 1171
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 181 SAGiTTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.

nllbl

II Meal

111-

... ..
•

G.o.G&gt;pp.
~-~--~

- ~---·

-· .. ··-··

1'1 Dessert
wiDe .
11 Jadlet
part
IIEJtcillh

You may be talkative today. 21) Be extra diplomatic In d8at.
and say more than you should ing with close·associates tOday.
to the wrong sel ot ears. Weigh even though their actions could
your words.
provoke you to do otherwise.

TAURUS (April 20·MIIJ 20) CAPIIICOIIN (Doc. 22·Jon.

"-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here•s how to work It:

WINNIE
lliE GIRLS AREN'T' INSPIRED DO )OJ HAVE
fWi~ .•.THEY DON'T
AllY IDEA WHO
SEEM 10 HAVE ANY
MIGHT BE
DIREC110N ,..
REPl.ACING.JANIE?

1
Pl!l"'''&lt; I MCNT
.JUST
leNT THE&amp;W.E

·~~~ J_HE DESIGN

~NCE.JANIE

lEFT.

lo

A X Y D L B A, A X a
IJ 0 N G F E L •L 0 W

One letter simply stands lor another. In thia sample A 11
used for · the three L's, X '"'the two O's, ~tc. Single letters.
.apostrophes, the length and formation or the words are aU
hints. Each day ·the rode letlers are different.

CRYPrOQUOTES

fencing,

and other
bldg• . DOWN PAYMENT
and bal. like rent. $38,000.
POMEROY - Close to Rl.

' BR,

2 Celerity
3 Athletes

II Hosea, In

frame, 2 BR , bath, dining
~ .. wash bldg .. garage. A
VERY GOOD BI.JY SB.SOO.
RUTLAND ~ 1 STORY
FRAME, b4th 2 BR,
carpeting,
panetlng,
garage .
CLOSE
TO '
SHOPPING. $9,500 . .
OEXTER - 157 acres,

large
home,
timber , barn

highway

DOWN
1 "- de Lune"

D Type of
Clrange
IS Railroad

J.·

CAS H p a id for all m&lt;l.KI..'!:. and
models of m ob il e horii es .
Phon e 'a re a"· co d e 61.t .123
953 1.
'' 13 tf c

works

41 Roman

( 2 words)
favor
. 4 Kicker's
II Encountered
gadget
17 Dilector's"
5 Tool kit
word
item
01 Bring back
&amp; French
II "Krazy - "
81Ululty
ll Eye pari
7 Purpose
lZ Tiny bit
1 Holding fast

A iet:chtoo

$299

Phone 992-2111

~PP

lli EndinB for

tfcxxx.

tliil

48 Site of the

ACROSS

6:0D-Columbus Today 4; Public Affallrs 10.

20,33.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

~·

·~-Jack W. C.rsey, Mgr.

J •

f:

=~=

--

" RM . and bath , unfUrnished
hou se at 1650 l ncoln Hgt~ .
Phone 992 3874 .
1,6 61 c

Several readers have
wanted to know what happens
when the wrong opponent
leads and the wrong dummy is
placed on Ihe table . The
answer is that the wrong
declarer proceeds to play the
hand and the result stands.
(Do you have a question
for the eKperts? Write "Ask
the Jacobys .. care ot this
newspaper. The Jacobys wifl
answer individual questions
if stamped. self-addressed
envelopes are encfosed. The
mos t interesting questions
wiff be used in this column
and will receive copies ·of

Jim : " The Jacoby transfer
can a lso be extended easily lo
FIIIST LET us the minor su its . The simplest
~IKf~
way is lo use lhe two~spade
"'FA _ ntEH response to one not rump as
"""'""""the transfer to clubs and the
OF ~Y · three-club response as the
transfer to diamonds ."
Oswald : " With a bad hand
you should only use a minor·
suit transfer when vou reallv
want. to play th·e
su it . JACOt;JY MODERN. !
'

Help Wanted

Wanted

I'&lt;IHs

;;,;;;.;;;..__•li""---

I.I'I''I'LS oa•HAJf AlflfiE-DOVBLII:·HSADII:a

1 If(

- ··--··

- ---·--

:l N.T. Pass

' ,. '"'

_

·-. - -----

Puss

By llswald &amp; James Jacoby

u tl&lt;~nd .- Oitio

r r ,rnmrt'\CJ

I 1/ t'-&lt; II

UTI1.E ORPHAN ANNIE

d u 1 er
c·,nn
d•lther
P
H,tlt ,r tt1 11ilrl..

&amp; D 11(E f·

South

1•a s~

E Y C II V r, l I N G

I)

North, t:ast

Opt•nin~ it•ud --

Plu•nbin q ,
nil lf P("; Of
Qf' I1 CI at
r cpa1 t
V/ork
quilri'lnl ('&lt;'tJ
JO V('ilr•, l'Y
prr~t"n ce
f&gt;t,nn • '192 7 tQ9

Chiirlf' ~

\hst

I N.T.

cHlCI

Hoc '•N ~ •cf.' R
PtW IW !.17 '2001;1

•K&amp;a

.JI7&amp; 2
tJK 5H

tKI0 6

fi E MUD[.t. I N ( .

bd ( kl10f'

• .IIOOH

•K 3

4(J. IOH 7
4 -SOllTII 1111

') I i JIC

~

12

4AK.T654
,F.AST

w~: sr

BORN LDSER

RE AQY M IX (OI'~ .::. RC, i:.
dt'livercd r•gt1r to your
proj ec t I· i'tSt uno t'ilSy r ree
estimate s Phone ??? 3/8\ ,
Got'gl ein R ead y M1 x Co ,
M id dl epo rt Oh io
6 ao ' t c

Remember . you h.ave gone
from one notrump all the way
to the three level. With a good
hand you should usually use
th e ll')inor·s uit · transfer as
so me
sort of Slam
suggestion .··
Jim : " Today 's North simply raised to three notrump . He
&amp;a w no reason td s how his sixcard club suit . Had he
transferred to clubs. South
with 18 high-card points might
well have made some slam
move

• 74 3
•lO S
• 94

N il t h.lt~ Biqq s
R,1dto:ttu r Sp e( i ,1.11 'io i

h~i:I11Ml

Nfi~TH

I

b~~~~~~~;,~~~

WO U LD YOU r\E LIEVE 'l
tluil d an all :n e&lt;' l budd u•CJ ~11
Pole B.1r n p rt ccs? Gol d en
Gia11 t /1!1 Sl &lt;::&lt; e l Buildmt.t··
Rt
.1,
13ox 1.:H . w,,vcr t y .
OhiO .Phone 9.t1 719.f&gt;
· 7 ?.I r tc

I :30-News 13.

TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 1976

EXCAVATING , £3/\CK H OES
/I. ND OOZER L/\RGE /,ND
SMAL L
~ EP11(
T/,Nj.( "J
lN S T /\ L LED
Bill
P ULLI N S. P H ONE 992 1-PB
D /\Y O R NI G H T
! 1 11 7Hip

e. EPli C T t• N K~ cle a nc·d
Mode rn Sdnilalion 991 39',.t
. or 997 /J .JQ
9 18 t lc

10 :30-To Keep And Beer Arms 20; Catch 33 33.
II :OD-N•w• 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
II :30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; David Frosf Prtstnls the
Best 6; Movie "Docl!)r.. You've Got To Be l(ld·
ding I" 8: Movie " Teacher's Pot." 10; Coll09t
Basketball 13; Jankl 33.
1:00-Tomorrow 3,-C ,

WIN AT BRIDGE

rron1 ltu.: I M q e~ l T'ruck or
13u tl rfl'nf'r RndiiliO t to lite
Snltl i i('S t Hec~tl' r Co re .

i '] I(

ELWOOD OO WE:: R 'J I([P/\ 110'
Sw eepe r s . I ousters , iron s.
a ll srnull (lpp tiance~ . Lawn
mow·cr . n e xt to &lt;:. tate Hiqh
w ,1y G,1r ,1qc . on Rout&lt;" l
Phon e 9115 382'1
-1 16 Ill

8:0D-Sandburg's Lincoln 3,4.15; On The Rocks 13;
College Basketball 6; Gunsmoke 8; Singly Nones
33; Rhoda 10; Dey Wllho&lt;tt Sunshine 20.
8:30-Happy Oays 13; Phyllis 10.
9:DO-Movle "The Guns of the ~gnlflcent S.von"
3,4, 15; ABC Theatre 13; All In The Family 8.10;
9 : 31&gt;-~ude 8, 10; World Press 20; RNIIdodn 33.
IO :DO-ABC Theatre 6: Medical Center 1,10; News 20;
BI-Ways 33.

Minor-Suit transfer asks slam

RT. 33 NORTH - 2 BR .
DlEPORT ! We are so sur e
bungalow.
bath ,
LP
1 2 29 1p
!h al you .wi l l lo ve our
~ating , r .p water , ·fa s t
apar tme nt s t hat w e giv e you LOCUST posts . Phon e 742
move . Aski.ng $6800.
two weeks RENT F REE .
2359.
WA N TED Old u pright p ianos
Just p ay your . sec urity
COZY BRICK - 3 BRs ,
12 9 76 tp
in an){ condi t ion . Wi l l pa y SlO
deposit and st ay six rnontll~
modern kit. , fine bath,
each . I ir s l fl oo r onl y W irt e
and I he firs t 2 weeks is free
dining an'd utility . Only
giving d 1rections to Wi tt en
You will e njoy month1y COAL FO R SALE . C/I.B 0oal
Pian o Co , Bo)( 188 , Sar d is .
Com
pa,
n
y
,
1
mile
nor
th
of
111,000.
.
leases. all e lectric l ivi ng ,
Ohio .t 39 -t6
Chesh ir e . on Rt 7 Pick your
MOOE RN - 3 BRs ., 1' '
car
p
eli
ng
,
rang
e
and
I 8 61p
own . S20 p er 1o n. Ope n t. days
baths ,
ful l
basement.
r e fr ige r ator , fr ee trash
'per week , or ca ll (61 .t ! 367
family room , 4 ca,. garage,
p ic:k up , cab le TV {opt i onal)
7330
lor
furth
er
i
nformation
HALL ·s Salvdge . /\ I I autos
i'ln d . launpry
facil i ties .
and good garden space .
I 8 7B tc
wilh fr ames and bodies wi t h
COnve n ient to shopping on
$31
.000.
cr wilhout motors , Sl ·hund
Thtrd and Mill in Mid 4 ACRES - 2 houses, one
r ed . Ti n .50 hundred . Will
d leport. V I LLAGE MANOR GRA IN led beet weighs be
tw een 500 and 600 l bs . Ph one
renovated , central hea t &amp;
bu y meta ls and sc rap iron . .clis you r s for on·e be d r oom
9·19 25-12.
air . Lots of pines with
On o ld R t. 33. i us t across
apartm en t s star t in g at SlO.t
1 8 6tc
spacious yard . 531.000 .
from Grueser's Chi pp €r .
monthly plus el ec. We pay
Monday through F rida -y 9
MIDDLEPORT - 3 large
for everythi ng else . See th e
rill 4. p .m ., Sa turd ay , 9 tit
Mana ger
at
Riv e r si d e 1971 H O NO f\ 350, e~cel lenl
BRs .. vast living room . ho t
noon..
A piJrtm en t s or ca ll 992 3273
con dition Low mileage . 5~75 .
water heat , 11'2 bath s, one
Thi s o~fcr w i ll enq soon : so
Phone 997 59 o 1.
enclosed. Lot 7Dx MO. Just
"'--·- .... -- · ~-~rnov e tn now and sav e nu.
I 8 61p
$16.500.
OLD furnili.Jr e, ice bp xes.
10.· 23 .Ttc.
COOLVILlE AREA - 4
brass beds. s ton e iar s, or
.....
·E; N D Ot S EA SON custome r
8Rs ., 21·2 baths , hot water
co mpl ete hou se h o ld s. Wrile
appreciation
sa
le
now
at
M
0 . M i l le r ,
Rt.
2. H Ol i ~.B in Rutland Ca ll 991
heaL enormous modern
Bob
's
Mark
et
.
1\pp
les
S2
.9B
~8',8
Pomeroy , Oh io
Ca l l 992
kitchen , full basement and
• buSh t"l , oranges two dozt"n,
1 J tic
7760 .
5 to 68 acres of land .
$ 1. tangerin es lhree do zen
for Sl. Grap es. thre e pound s . BUILDING LOT S AND
for-, s 1. W hil e the supply
-·- t-O R RENT OR SA LE , :'l
ACREAGE . IF
YOU
la sls . Bob 's Markel in
bcdrm . mobi le !lome , un
DON ' T
KNOW
Mason, W . Va . Ph one 773
furn ish ed, uti l i ties pa id on
PROPERTY
KNOW
5771 , hours 10 a .m . t ill S: JO
RET IRE D or semi r etire d
Rt. 33 in Burlingham . Phon e
YOUR REALTOR .
pm
.
99'1 775 1.
l ady to live in . rree room
1 1 10tc
crnd boa rd and sma ll wages
1231 t t c ·
to r light tli..1t ies . See at JOB
'
Page 51., Mid dl ep orl . Oh i o. HOU SE in Sy ra c use. 5 rms .
3
BEDRM . home ,
ju s l
I 11 lfc
f
i
nished
,
r
emodeling
,
Salem
and balh
Ph on e 992 2530
1 WEEKONLYI
r111 er 5 p .m
St.. Ru t land . Phone· 7412306
NEED c'apab le women to li ve
afler 4 p .m . or see Milo B .
1 8 61 c
Hu! chison .
in with e'lder l y l ady . r or
9 2J .Ifc
m or e i nformatip n , call· 992
CO-OP
~U R NI S H E O
apar tment
).\57 .
a d ul ts only . in Middleport..
Automatic W•ter
1 6 6tc
Phone 99 2 387 4.
Conditioner
J 25 .1fc
Model
h' EL IJ\E\ LE per so n to li ve in
-·'
--- .......
210,000
wilh e ld erl y l ady Cdll 9.t9
J A N 0 &lt;i RM . furnished ana
l'i.t7. f o r mOr e inlo r mat&lt;on
Wef!kly Grain
unfurnished apts . Phone 992 .
5434
1 9 Jt c
Capacity
11 .9 -tfc
-·-- --- ~ --WA ITR ES~ wante d fo r
12
COUNTRY
Mobile H ome
midnight Iii 8 a . m . sh ift
Park , Rt . 33, ten miles north
Ap p ly in person at Crow ·s
of Pom eroy , L arge lot s w i th
Steak H ouse . A l so, talo,ing
con crete patios . sidewa lk s, f'-·- - -4 Reg. $339.00 Val.
applications for grill c ooks .
runners and off s t reet
12·3 1 lfc
parking . Phon e 992 -7479 .
·
12 -31 -lfc
POMEROY LANDMARk
RUTLAND 1 otory

--

Fr-iends of Man IS; Marc o Sportllte 33 .

OtJR 05Vl0US r.JE)&lt;. r
MOVE IS TO CHECK VjiTM

-

..l

If

992 ·3.l~ S

W~ol es ate ,
F £&gt; ilhll' H1C'J :

'i ~ acu s. e, Ohio

Ph . YV2 -3993

O lh :::c

Fortn1•r to; We e d

lARRY
lAVENDER
'

Caii992-75J7
Pomeroy. Ohio

1 6 6tc

Pom~:rDy

l OS Butternu t

5TORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOO RS
REPLACEMENT .
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
~ IOIN G SOFFITT
GU TT.ER5 . AWN IN G5

Kuhl Cake Decor

Gfi S stove . See at llo,., 14·1, on

t Rt . 143, Rulland

ln s uiation Se 'r vic es
Blown tttf p W&lt;JJi s &amp; Allie s

Licensed
baker
and
decorator .
Kitchen State Inspected

BEO~M

I 12 )I C

197·1 CHEVROLET ' • to n
tr uc k
Se e Joe I mboden
Min er svi l le
I 6 6t c

6:0&lt;&gt;-News 3.~. 8,1 0.13, 15 ; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
1&gt;:30- NBC News 3,• , 15: ABC Newo 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8.10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Ourstory
33.
7:0&lt;&gt;-Tr•th or Consequences 3; To Tell The Trulh 4 ;
Bowling lor Dollars 6; Buck Owens 8; Buck Owens
8; News 10; Candid Camera 13; Family Affair 15;
On Agtng 20 ; Jeanne Wolf with .. . 33.
7:30-Thai Good Ole Na•hvllle Music 3; Don Adams
Screen Test 4; Match Game PM6; Price Is Right 8;
Evening Edition with . Maf)ln Agronsky 20; High
Road to Adventure 10; To Tell The Truth 13 ;

Quality Print Shop

Blown

CAKE BAKING

I{EO I•C E SO l e t! nd ta st W11h
Gol1ese Tabl et s ilnd E Vap
" wa 1 ~r p i ll s ," Ne ls on Drug
I 12 I i p

Whit e vinyl top , b lk . l inish , au t oma t ic. P . S., P. B., t ilt
wheel. radio, radial w .w t i r es , local lady owner, you
w ill thi nk this is a new car . So n i ce . Book Va l ue

FREE ESTIMATES

WANTED

For Sale

SEPTIC

Want Ad
Will Cut
Cost of
Living •••••• Reedsville

..

1

t\n•"'•·r: .\ 't•e d ll a rlri l't 'r lt• t·n l&lt;·r U't11Jd .11- A SCREW

APPOINTMENT
c .1 se No . 2 1699

'

1

$3550.00.

(AnHMrn• lotuurr""'

Jun•bl· ·~: SHOWY

1973 CHEV . MONTE CARLO

11.1' 1 !(1/ ,

MONDAY, JANUARY 12,lt76

I Y It c_

Locnlli'!dy owned, fully equi p .. au tomatic , P . S., P. B . ,
radio , air c ond it ioned . Like new fires , good finis h &amp;
vinyl inter ior, truly i s dean as a new one . Book Value
! 3?00 00

:=~t-..:::.JJ::_J=~::;~::-~f\.~.-J~~s;-,':';';.:t'Rled by the above cartoon.

,...... - -... !HE t

1101'

1971 PONTIAC 2 SEAT WAG. SAFARI Clearance S279S

MI,JCH • WE16HT.

b

' Oia t!y

Pomeroy
Motor Co~

'!'j

for~

EDUC.4D

DROOrE

m nhil(• hume N ew
'-1',1) p~ ·r l!lt!IIIIJ ,
turn1 'i llf'fl
l 'lif&lt; tll

1'1/', tii(IC1CI

· 1 0 [j
SEROU

.B;;;r~;~;· Services l

For .Rent

Auto Sales

EDN\'U

JET

ONE REAL SOLUTION.

CEZT

ACTION Volunteers.

LD

'

Illiteracy is a plague. It fa&gt;ds on apathy and
breeds fear and ignorance. Hit's a problem
in your community, you need professional
help. ACTION is skilled voluntQers- people
of all ages, with ull kinds of skills, working
to solve problems in your conimunity arid
around the world. Soil you've got a·tough
community problem,
write : ACTION, Dept. PP. Washington.
D.C. 20525,

TIME FER .

BSDD't- BYE I
FELLERS

Between us,
.
there's got to be a solution.
"'PuD IIC Service o! Thll NDWIPIQef &amp; The M~lll l l lrl ll Counci l

'

r--,.....-r-----.,.--------::::::-:::--

ENOZ

APLC

TDPY
QD

CEYDJ

CYDPFBZL?

HNYMZC

ONBPZ,

CEZH

NJNT.-

N_BQ
LXEYNUZ
, Yesterday's Cr)optoqaote: AS A PEOPlE WE POSSESS A
1 PHENOMENAL CAPACITY FOR RIGHTEqUS INDIGNATION, - EUZABETH JACKSON

You manage your resources 11) Pace yourself sensibly to.
rather well early in the day : A.s day or you may take on more
the afternoon wears on you burdens than you can manage.
mav grow a trifle extravagant. Try to find a helper.

GEMINI (Mor 21·Juno 20) For AOUAIItUS (Jon, 20-l"llb. II)
best re s ults today . don't
auempt more than you can
competently handle . Try to
devote your energies to your
priorities.

Give all types of risky ventures
a wide berth today. Play
everything on the safe side. ·"-~
Don ' t expect· something lor
nothing .

CANCER (Junt .21·July 22) Be PISCES (Fob. 20·Morcll 20)
careful today fiOI to create un ~
necessary problems for
yourself . Plan wisely ~ Avoid
lruslrallons.

LEO (Julr 23·Auo. 221 Don't
make too la te a night of it if
you 're out on the town with
fr ie nds
th i s
even i ng.
Tomorrow's a work day! _

VIRGO (Allfl. 2:1-lept. 22) In
your eagerness to accomplish
whal yOll set out to do today
you may unthinkingty tread on
a few toes. Watch your image!

You may find it very difficult to .
please certain members of
your family today. no matter
how hard you try . Do so
anyway .

~~
Jon. 13, 1171

You're likely to attempt several
very ambitious undef~akings
LIBRA (Sopt. 23-0ct. 23) It's this poming ·year. You have
wise lo take advice offered by' what n takes If vou stav in areas
othe~s Into consideration. but ·within your means and talents,

�. '

li - Tl~ [)rtily 8t•f11inl'l, MitllUc puri -PnJiu'l't l)", 11 . i\h tntl.!~ .. 1:111 . 1:'. 1 ~1;1 ;

Jll!l1~th~;::.~:;.1tit~:.r:.:

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

Television log for easy viewing

NURSES'

l 'nsan mblt" lh,•li(' rour Jumbles,

ont" lt.• ttr-r

t1 · t'1U' h

to

squar~ .

Auto Sales

form fuur ordinarr "''ords .

! I' l 1~~~A.'

l
[J I

[J

I [{)I

.•.

mvch

I

V'"'\1

·''/ .1

1974 DAT SUN 71 0 CPE.
Clearance 52695
Loce~l l ow ner . rtu t omafic , blk . viny l int . tr i m , si l ver
finish . good t ires. radio , r ea l economy . Book Value
Price $2 875 .00
-

'}~l f'

HE PUT ON 100

V \J

Now arTang• th• cirded letlen

to form the sufl)rise answer, as

XI XIII X XXJ

!'Oo~~lurtlon ·.,

·

I

ABBEY

FERVID

NOTICE OF
E sl at\1 of ·Eth e l

E . Wh ee l er

Decea sed .
Notice is her e by given l h at
l'. da E Bays of Ra c ine . Ot1in .
has been duly •1PPO i nt e d
EKecutrix of th e Estate of
Etht&gt;l E VI/ heeler . deceased .
tat e of Me ig s County , Oh io
Credilo r s are requir ed to
fi le thei r c laims with said
fiduc ia ry within four tnonth s
Da t ed this 7 th day o f
.Ja n uary 1976
Manning D \1\.ebster
Judge
{ 11 11 . 1'~ . 26 . Jtc

A Low Cost

')

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
D EA DLIN ES
.
5
p .M .
Day
8e t ore
PUblicat ion .
Monday Dca diinc 9 a m
C.:~ncel l ation
Corrections
witt be accepted unti l 9 a m .
for Day' ol Publ ic ation
R EG ULATIONS
T11e Publ is her r e serves tile
riqtl t to edit o r r eiect any ads
de e med ob j ectional
Th e
puhlish e r
wi l i :, not
be
r esponsib l e For mo r e than one
incorrect i nse rt io n,
RATES
For W a nt A d Service
Sc ents per word one i n se rlion
Mi n imum Cha r ge Sl.OO
1.1 ce nt s per word thr ee
CO II SCc utiv e insert i ons .
26 cent s per word Sil&lt;. con
sec u tiv(' insert,io ns
75 Per. Cen t D iscount on paid
ad s and ads pa ·i d w i ttlin to
days .
CARD OF THAN~S
&amp; OBITUARY
't7 00 tor 50 word m in.im um
Each additionu l wo t d 3
c ents
~UN DADS
A dditiona l '25c Ch urge per
/l dvert ise ment .
•.
OFF I CE HOURS

8 JO a . m
to s · oo p . m .
Da i l y . 8 : 30 il m to 17 ; 00 Noon
Sal urday . - ·

WRITE YOUR
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AVAilABLE TO
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NON COMMERCIAL
N() REFUNDS.
Each ini.tial and
group ·· of figures
counts as one word.
Be sure to count
name and address, if
,used, and your phone
rium&amp;er.
Including
prices for items offered in your want ad
w i I I · ·increase
response.

,l ,

2.

3.
4.

..

5.
'

6.
7.

8.

9.
10.

11.
.
12.NAME
ADDRESS

CITY
PHONE
MAIL WITH
11.25
TO ntE

'

DAILY SENDNEL
111 OOURT ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

45769

.

Holiday guests of Mrs .
Alberta Edwards were Mr.
and Mrs. Clark Edwards Sr .
and Mr . and Mrs, Clark
Edwards Jr. ' a nd family of
Canal Wlnchestet and Mr .
and Mrs. Robert Edwards
and family of Troy .
·M1·s. Grant Boring ha s been
a patient at C:miden-Clark
Hospital, Parkersburg, W.
Va .
Holiday guests a t the home
of Mr . and Mrs. D. C. Riebel
were the John Riebel family
of Pomeroy Rd., Robert
Thomas family of Cheshire,
and the Robert Morton family
of Belpre Rd .
Mrs. Virginia Walton has
been a patient at. Camden·
Clark Hospital, Parkersburg,
W. Va .
Mr. and Mrs . Richard
Ca shdollar of Ci ncinnati, Mr .
and Mrs . Charles Pyor and
sons of Pittsburgh, Pa ., Mr .
oind Mrs. Tom Watson and
Lis.a, 'Mrs . Eunice Halsey of
Belpre. Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Fortney of . Washington, W.
Va ., Carrel Cheva lier of
Mansfield, Mr . and Mrs.
Clark Edwards Sr. , and Mr.
an d Mrs. Clark Edwards Jr .
of Cana l Winchester and Mrs.
Alberta Edwards we re
holiday guests of Mr . and
Mrs. Alfred Cashdollar.
Tammy, Robin and Vicky
Morton of Belpre Spent New
Year's eve with their grand·
parents, Mr. and M:rs. D. C. ·
Riebel. Dinner guests of lhe
Riebels New Year 's day were
Mr. and Mrs, Robert Morton
and lamily;~pre Rd ., and
Mr . and Mrs . John Riebel and
family, Pomeroy Rd.
Zenith Chevalier and son
Allan of Belpre Rd., and
Carrel Chevalier of Mansfield
visited with Mr . and Mrs.
Edward Chevalier Friday .
Mrs . Dorothy Riebel visited
with Mrs. Bernice Prince at
I.&lt;&gt;ng Bottom, who has been a
p~tient
at
University
Hospital, Columbus.
Zenith Chevalier of Belpre
Rd. ; and Carrel Cheva lier of
Mansfield visited wtlh Mr.
and Mrs. R . E. Williams.
Mr . and
Mrs. John
Bu!=lianan were dinner guests
of Mr . and Mrs . Don
Buchanan and Sheila.
Mr . .and Mrs . Ernest
Whitehead and .Juli, Mr . and
Mrs. Denver Weber . David
and Mark, and Mr . and Mrs.
Warren Pickens spent New
Year's day wil11 Mr. And Mrs.
Bill. Meredith al Beverly.

Racine
Lt. auu JVIfS. Edward M.
Brown of Del Rio, Texas,
spent two weeks over the
holidays with Mr . and Mrs .
Martin Wilcoxen and Mr, and
Mrs . Donald Ohlinger al New
Haven , W. va . Other holiday
\

f&lt;..'.t'&gt;Uil

wo

b~drm
double w i d e
modular
home .
rural
loc al ion near Poi'T)croy No
pets or Chi ldren . Phon e 99 '1
70 17
1 6 6t c

Clearance SJ29S

tr ailer . n ir &lt;.. ~n
d i tion i ng . l£:1evi s ion . lur
n lshed . Phone 997 22 1·1.
'
1 II ) IC

vr cr liON over
\\oe of fe r ·
greil tc&gt;E.t savings even on
'r ailers and told downs
Guarantee and se rv ice what
we se ll '&gt;lth y~ar with l) lar
Craft
Ca mp Conley .S tar
Craft . R 1 62 . N o rth ot Pt
P l easant
C HEV~
'• ton ·I · whee l
clriv c p ic lo.up
P.11&lt;m ce ot
t .1ctory w.1 rrnnty Check
·t,is bc torc you buy i'+ n ew
(' Il l' Pt10 n c afl c r "'p '' ' or &lt;m
wcC "-Cnd S. YY'l J.l\16
I 9 I IC

1 -&lt;l~

Notice
:O. I-'t&lt;tN U tSMOUn d the co rn e r
Get your til ler s and mowers
re a dy tor use I'IOW Claren ce
H il L Rusti c Hill s. Syra cuse
Phon e 997 296 7 al te r 5 p m
1 8 6t c

19 73 DODGE Chafger. I\ 1
con dition , p .s .. p .b Phone
tUJ 718.1 any ti me
I 6 61p

tQ68 CH EVY Im pala Phone
9'i'? 6 137 or 7-17 2695
END O t SE/I SON c usto mer
1 6 6tc
(
appreciation sa l e now at
Bob ' s Marke t A ppl es S2 _98
bushel. oranges two dolen .
S1 . T-angerine s thre e doze n
for $ 1. Grapes . three p ounds
for S1 Wh il e the SUPDIY
l asts . Bob's Markel 1n CA RP E NT E R work , cei l i ngs,
Mason , w Va Ph one 773
floor i ng s a nd pa n e ling
571 1. hou r s 10 a . m . ti ll 5 : 30
Phone Q91 2759 .
nm
I 7 10 tc
l 6 10tc

Employment Wanted

IN COME TI\X
pre p ared ,
Fe deral an d sta t e tax es .
W i l l be done by appl . on l y
Please ph one 99? 2272 , or see
M r s Wanda Eblin , Laurel
Cliff Rd . Pomeroy
12 31 JOtc

P/I.R T T I ME babysitter
Phone 7.t2 2695 .
1 6 6tc

Mobile Homes For Sale

H/1. Y , large c l ean
Phone ' 142 24Jl.

bales .
~1

6 6t c

COAL . limestone and a ll types
of salt and rock sa i l for i ce
and snow remova l. E x
celsio r Salt Wo rk s . East
Main St . , Pomeroy , Ohio .
Pt10ne q92 3B9 1
I 2 7 1fc
10 ACRES near Rut l an d .with 3
bed rm ,
house .
i 12,000 .
House in H ar r iso nv i ll e.
$ 10,000 ; .. 1970 Bu i ck Riv~ria ,
lul l power. no ru s t . $1.200 .
Phone 7.J2 '1796 .
1 6 8tc
NOW se t!ing F u l l er Br ush
Pr oduc ts . Phon e Q92 34 10.
10 6 l i e
H I\ Y for sa te or trad e for co rn
PhOne 7 .J 2 1085
1 11 Jtp
MODE RN design s t ereo . tr
track tape . am fm rad io
comb ina! ion . Balance $98 .60
or te r ms . Call 992 396 5

1 7 Tf(
NE e !I ,1 qinn t room iHJcli lion .
or olli cc . showroon1 e tc 'l ,
V. c t1 nvc a 19 71, Mobi le unil . i'll (l:I'IC tr ChCSI l rC'CZN .
t ully
1 1 x 70 'OI,11 clec
like new 're ar .lf'd
old
CMp e l ed . I o tt ices in center .
PI&lt;one 99') ? lOY
' , billtl on Ctlch end Pr iced
low 'O sel l Gnn be seen a t
I WI LL b e givi ng p i a'no lessons · '' inq SflUr y H o me ·-itlcs . 1100
E r\~.1in ' 1 , Pome roy , Ohio . f97 .t HONor. 7!10. 1 ord 7000
1n my hOme starli ng f'- eb . 1.
Jr octor . P'•. di lf erc nt ial
or c ,l l l 119? }lLI-l
. I or in l orrnation call 99 2
l.ock. fr ont end -.ycighls und
377 8
I 9 .11 c
ot her e,;tras
Phone 99 7
I :? 18 50t c
l6'ioA
til x '•U PEERLE '·'• M obi l e
1 5 11tc
Hon1c . n ew gas l urn,l c e.
D 8. J HO USE o t I abric 'S
buil• 1n oven a nd ra nq c .
GO O D quality t1ay Phone 9'n
Ja n uary Clearance Sale A ll
pric e r edu ce d to r quicK salt.&gt;
) 6~11
materia l in s tock on sa l e.
C .1n be seen at ~ inq sbu ry
Open 10 am ·till 5 p m :
I 5 I 7tc
Hpme '·&lt;li es , Ill E M a rn ' ·' .
Monday .through Satur d ay
Pomeroy Ohio or call qq'?
LIME STONE a nd g r ave l.
I .r 11 t c.
101 I
Phone Jr . Darst at 742 2A50
I
I 9 .11 c
a f ter5p m .
"
I 7 12 tp

W I LL ca re tor elder l y persons
in my home . Trained an d
e xpe r ience l:l . Phone 99'2
7J
12 ·JO 18tc

'j

Wanted To Buy

OEI\LER S in scra p . iron ,
me.ta l s, j un k autos . Rid er 's
Sa vage Phon e 992 5-168

For Rent

FREE RENT
MANOR

A T _V I LLAG E
IN

MID

1· 17. 1 mo.

Real Estate For Sale
6 RM . HOUSE , b ath, 1 .' acre ,
flJ!I basement. u t i l ity roo{ll .
blJilt i n po r c h , 9~1rage .
Phone &lt;;192 7733
12 30 tf c

J BR . H O M E.

/US! finished
remodeling . Sa l em
St ,
Rutland . Phone 742 2306
after 4 p .r"n . or see Mi lo B .
Hutchinso n .
10 9 tf c

1\t~CO

welding ma ch ine, new
elec al l accessories in
cii,Jded . Phone 991 -3410 ,
1028' 1t c

.t

ROOM S and
bath
in
Pomeroy near Krog er 's
Store . ~-1 , 000 . Phone 992 772 9
or see J'rrry Hawk
I ,f l?tp

, .r.1 AC RE tor
f6 t.t ) 66"1 JJ])

sa l e

Phone
1 4 121c

,1

RM .
H OU SE ,
basemen t and 5
Phone 992 50 35

I ULL
a c r es
1 6 Ole

.1 ROOM ~ and bath , large yard
.1nd garden Phone 949 2812
1 6 61c
HO USE on Lincoln Hg t s I
bedrm , la rge k i tchen , f Ull
basement , Cl!;Ce ll ent bvv for
'&gt;8 .900 , wilh n ew f urn itu r e .
on ly \10 .3'00 Phon e 991 7MH
1 6 26t c

TEAFORD
Virgil B ., Sr ., Broker
110 Mechanic Pomeroy , 0 .

Phcin, 992-3325
NEW LISTING

~

Large

ranch hOme, 4 B . R .s, l' '
ceramic baths, oil furnace ,
large k i tchen wit h dining . 2
car garage . 1 acre . Only
$25,000 . TUppers Plain s.

RACINE -

Renovaled 3

BRs, nice large bath, 7
closets
with
storage
s he l ve s. Dry basement.
garage and I acre . Only

---

______

Dl'.' lu x Lr- rox Copy :-:.~r vi cc.
0 I f i r l'
~, u p p I
~· 5 ,
MlillCOQ r uph
~ up plies,
IArqi'.'S I '&gt;C' If'G110il. of WCd
dtnq ~, 1 ppl lt&gt;"&gt; 111 ~.o utt1
ea st ••rn OhioTh e Pnnt Sh op Co mph~ t ~
1 St11t 111 bu:. tnc :.s 111 Mi d·
rJi c pp rt )
I:' 8 7 mo

CAPI'AIN EA:ii\'
OLII&lt;: Ffi.IENPS Afi.E FL'ill\16
SEE T~E NEW Mci&lt;EE

I Q. IC.:.:m:.Oo'-!

C R /\ NE &lt;.,e r viu ,
e r ection . .IQ I!
Phurw ~9/ S 161-l

b ui t dinq
tJ erric.k

THE LOCAL CHIEF OF
POLICE:

EXPERIENCED

I ') ?61p

Radiata

YOU urr&gt; 1nlu~;,:st &lt;.' d in
bu i lfl l nll .1 n~w l1omc or f or
yo ur
present
110m c
rcn'tOcl e lc&lt;.L c. on·tac t l~o us h
Co n st r uction Pli0 11t• 99?
} 58)

Service

I 1

~ .- -.

.

•

~.

.
''
t

--.

E,XCf1V/diNG , d(Uf'r , tdo ...
.1nd t,lackhoe work
sep tic
lilnks
1n st,1llr&gt;d
dlltri J.l
tr uck5 ilnd 10 boys tor 11 1rt' ,
will h,;ut fill Uirl. top so il
lltnf'SIOnf' And rJrr1v~&gt;l {, all
Bob or .t~o q ct· Jt• tt erS ct,)y
phonf' 992 70811 niqh' r•hone
??I 'l~ 1 'l or lt9~ .~:'17

~~~t~

OHOUR$, I'VI%:Or

,.,BUT, B'/ WPP'/,
IT'S BeTTER llWJ

~l~~TV

~&amp;XI'{ 8l.SI;'SI

• A\12
• AQ84 '

.AQ ;
"'9 3 2

(.OMPJ..j?:)(. ".

1-::.~ s t - Wcs l v ulrlerabl&lt;'

ill 1".~ ''· '.I'· ""

~----"""11

1PH- H'S A

'M'8 GOT

'IMU, lOO -·
Afl)

I 1 30 lB tc_

'"1!'5 BUN

A~P40A~1

20

111010n?

fl.&lt;prrienCC' l n &lt;.urr·d ,
t rr&lt; t• (! St lrn, • tt·~ Call 997 ?J A-1
or ( f1 t 11 6YB .j 1'.7' 1\ lbo'ny
10 l 'S tfc
Yl'dr~

O'DELL r, lm erneh t tOc_il i Cd
behind
Ru ll a'n d G r .Jd f,' &lt;., E:,\·V IN G"V.-\t-.( HINL Pcpalr~.
Sc hoo l l un-elJ p , bra.l&lt;.c ~. ' '&gt;NviC(' i'ltl 111 ~"-f ~ 99'} 'n8·1
whee l ba lan Ci nq , ill inemt&gt;nl
T'tl(' I .1br •c ~ 110 p PohH ·i-'oy
Phon e / .f t 200·1
f·U fhOrl7t'll '·t ll flfr ~«1fl'~ )llCI
11 16 i lc
\ o'rvtc&gt;'
l/'J• •
&lt;, ll&lt;irpPn
'-,c i s&lt;,o r •,
1 -;q ttc.
C BR A Dt OR P '•uctlon~t..
Compl e te Se r vice
Phon e WI Ll. rR tM or c.ut IP'f'!&gt; tm d
::.hrubbt'ry
Pn onc 9.!9 75 .15
9&lt;19 2.t87 or 9.19 ?000 Ra cine.
or! t~J.t6 7
•
Oh)o . Cr i tt B radf ord
17- 18 t ote
10 v Jf c

' .

ALLEY OOP

lieuc~~VJt4e

$21 ,500 .00 .
NEW LISTING - Like new

I Confabulate
5 Kind of
conference
or agent
II Take on·.

3 8Rs with nice paneling ,
c arpeting , granc;1 bath ,
garage, and over 1. 2 acr e .
$25,500. F ive Points .

cargo

11 One kind
ol sciup
U Tennis star
14 Write

.. ...... _._

•' &lt;tHo •.1·•·· ··"-

••
·~
•
••

much salt

~

•

~

••
•

Card of Thanks
WE W I SH to eliCpress our
si n cere t hank s and ap
pr ec iation to our relatives ,
fri ends and ne ighbor s fo r
the ir kin dness a nd con ce rn
shown us dur i ng our r ecent
hosp ila tlzalion due 1o th e
automobile
acc i dent .
spec ia l lh~tnks to lhe staff s
of th e Holzer Medica l Center
and St . Mary :s Hospilal and
lhe Volunteer Emerg ency
Sq uad , especial ly volun
r ee r s.
Mrs .
Mildred
Hamilton
and
Kenny'
Cremeens . Word s cannol
eliCpress our gral i fute . Gary ,
5ue . i)nd Eric Tllacker
I 1·1 l ' p

l WO bed rm . trail er , S2B per
wee k
1\1 1 uliliti es paid .
Phon e 991 3324 .
I 4 t fc
L ~ fDRUUM

apartment
at
Vi l lage
M anor . Phone 99 2 3273 .
12. 19·26tc

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.. ,.._- -,- ..

~·-

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- ·· -·~·--

..

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-- . ··: ·-

1974 CL '200 H onda . Phone 241 .
2023. .
l -6-6tc

Rill Esflte Fer S.

FU RN IS HED apar t ment 4
rooms and bath , adults only . HOUSE
in
Chester ,
2
Phone 992 5908 .
bedr ooms , and bath , good
12 - 18· 1fC
condilion . Phon e Ray Rittle .
{61 .11 981 J2 .15.
1 12 .ttp

,

La Salle
HOTEL

Middleport, C.

gues ls of the Wilc oxens were
Mr. and Mrs. Rock Young
and Andy of Columbus, Helen
Wilcoxen, Larry Wilcoxen
and fl·iend, Amy Esmond of
Ohio State . Univ~rsily .
·l

fVIII· ... ·H~d

1975 HONDA -400, 4 cylii)Qer
Super Sport less than 500
miles . Phone 992 2977.
·
1 6 Ole

Ph, 992-2771

Rooms, '5.00 up
Speca.l Rates
by Wee~
or Month

it. S5oo.

LOT .tO x 100
Close to
Kroger''s in Pomeroy . Ca ll
(11 864 2490 after !1 : 30 p .m .;
Reynoldsburg, Ohio .
I 11 31c
HOU SE in Ches t er , 2 bedrms .
and bath . Good co ndlllon .
Phone 161.s\ 98 5 -'24( ,
1 5 6tc
··oLDER
" ' 'Ill 1 rm . ho"me ,
c arpet('{! . t n d camp l~tely
furnisl1ed , w i lh forc ed air
furnace .:~ ., acre 101 . Phone

992 : 180.

7 .

1 ~'2 acres, home has

bath ,

often need
them

9 Locate
lZ Athlete's
award

Z4 Regularly
(3 wds.)
Z5 Shadowy

11 Work
r7 Infertile
hard
Z9 Screen
19 Herbert
30 ScandlniiBeerbohm vlans
Z2 Kind of
Sl Step in
reader
· II Foot (Lal)
Z3 Mind you!
(2 wds.)

(3 wds.)

37 HawaUan

delll:acy

car

-4

ca,.petlng,

paneling, H.W. heal .
Storage bldg. $15.000.
POMEROY - 5 hilly acres,
3 BR, bath, large kitchen.
w-lols of cabinet., storage
bldg . 57.900.
CLOSE IN - Rl. 143 -- 2
acres, lovely lor building
site· or trailer . water

available. $4,1100.
HYSELL RUN -

Lovely

home wi ttl 2.77 acres ' of

goqd ground, I 910f'y, 3 BR,
bath, nice kitchen , utility

R. full basement, . very
large concrete B. garage &amp;
workshop, carport, :28,000.
SELLER
DON'T
WORRY ABOUT BUYEilS
WE HAVE MANY - LIST
WITH US TODAY .
992-2259 or 992-2561

6:25-Farm Reoort 13.
6: 30-Now Zoo Revue 4: News 6; Bible Ani.._rs 8;
Concerns &amp; Comments 10; Rev . Cloophuo Robinson
13.
6:45-Mornlng R-rt 3.
6:55-Chuck While Reporlo 10; Good Morning, Trl ·
State 13.
7:00:-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, America 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7:30-Schoolles 10.
8: DO-Laosle 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; S.umo St. 33.
8:30-Big Valley 6.
9:DO-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4; Lucy Show 8; Mike
Doilglas 10: Morning with D. J . 13; Phil Donahue
15,
9:31&gt;-Not for Women Only 3; One Life to Live 6 ;
Tattletales 8; New Zoo Revue 13.
IO:OD-Ctlebrlty Sweepstakes 3;4,15.; Edge of Night 6;
Price Is. Right a.10; Mike Dquglu 13
· ·
10 :30-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; I Dream . of JNnnle 4;
Dinah 6.
t1 :DO-Hollywood Squares4; Gomblt8,10; Eltc. Co. 20.
Happy O.ys 13;
. Midday 4; Love of Life 8,1 0; Seume St. 20,33.
11:55-Take Kerr 8; Dan I mol's World 10.
12 :00-High Rollers 3,1S; Let's Make 1 Deal13; .Bob
11: 30-Hollywood Squares 3, 15;

Braun's 50.50 Club _.; News 6,8, 10.

12:30-Take My Advice 3,15; All My Children 6,13;
Storch for tomorrow 8,10; Eloc. Co. 33.
12:55-NBC News 3,15:
1:DO-Ryan's Hope 6, 13;. New• 3; Phil OonahlHf 8;
Young &amp; the Resll••• 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1: 30-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15; Rhyme &amp; RNson 6.13;
As the World Turns 8, 10.
2:DO-S10,000 Pyramid 6, 13; Biography 33.
2: 30--Doctors 3.4,15: Neighbors 6, 13; Guiding Light ·
8, 10; Lowell Thomes Remembers 33.
3: DO-Another World 3,o, 15; General Hospital 6, 13; All
In The Family 8.10;' Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:30-0ne Lilt to Llvt13; Mlckoy Moun Club 6; Match
Game 8, 10; Romagnolls' Table 20 .
~ : OD-Speclal Treat 3,o, 15; Bewltched6; Mlcl&lt;ey Mouse
Club 8: Mister Rogers 20,33; Movie "To Find 1
Rainbow" 10; Dinah 13.
o: 30-Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8; 5eume St.
5:DO-Bonenza 3; Junior Theatre 4: Family Affair 1:
Star Trek 15.
.
5: 30-Adam-121; News 6; , Bever:ly Hillbillies 8; I!' lee.
Co. 20,33; Actam -12 13.
6:0D-Nows 3,4,8,10,13.15; Zoom 20.33; ABC Nows 6.
6:30-NBC News3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Your Future . Is Now 33;
Jiodgepodge Lodge 20. .
7:0D-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling lor
Dollaro 6; Wilburn Brothers 8; News 10; Name
That Tune 13; Family Affair 15; Antiques 20; Wild
Wild World of Animals 33.
•
7:30-Hollywood Sq~~ares 3:,4; Lei's Deal with It 6:
$25,000 Pyramid 8; National Geographic 20,33;
Price Is Right 10; To Tell the Truth 13; High School
TV Honor Society 15.
8:DO-Movln' On 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13; Good Times
8,10.
8: 30-Welcome Back, KoHer 6,13i Joe &amp; Sons I;
Consumer Survival 20,33; Channel 10 Reports 10.
9:DO-Deen Martin 3,4,15; Rookies 6,13; MASH 8,10;
WHA All-Star Game 20; ~rgot Fonteyn 33.
· 9:30-0ne O.y at A Time 8,10.
·
10:oo-Joe Forrester 3.4.15; ~reus Welby, M.D. 6,13;
Switch 8,10; Women 33.
10:30-Woman Alive! 33.
11 :OD-News 3,4,6,8,]0,13,15: ABC News 33.
11 :30-Mysfery of "'e Week 6,13; Johnny Carson
3,4, 15; Mavkt "KIIIdozer" 1: Movie "Becaute
You're Mine." 10; News 20; Jenakl 33.
1:oo-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

Douay Blbleffi:-t--t---t1'1 Explosive
IGUIId .
II Caesar's

11Jn8Ue
(abbr. )
II Food

~

&gt;--THE SHEiKS PRIME
MINISTER 151~1 NOv YA'NK TO 6 tr HI~\
SOME' AA\ERICAN
~-

toclay you may be overly in~
fluen ced
by unsound
suggesttons.

fllb

a Colorful

BCOIIPIO (Oct. 2'·Nov. II)

period

Be careful today not to be
drawn too dtteply Into a corri· ·
plicated situation thafs not of
your making . Stay on the
sidelines.

Jl Euiiperate "-=-+--1-H Coli
·,.

For T..-r, Jon. 13, 1171
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 181 SAGiTTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.

nllbl

II Meal

111-

... ..
•

G.o.G&gt;pp.
~-~--~

- ~---·

-· .. ··-··

1'1 Dessert
wiDe .
11 Jadlet
part
IIEJtcillh

You may be talkative today. 21) Be extra diplomatic In d8at.
and say more than you should ing with close·associates tOday.
to the wrong sel ot ears. Weigh even though their actions could
your words.
provoke you to do otherwise.

TAURUS (April 20·MIIJ 20) CAPIIICOIIN (Doc. 22·Jon.

"-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here•s how to work It:

WINNIE
lliE GIRLS AREN'T' INSPIRED DO )OJ HAVE
fWi~ .•.THEY DON'T
AllY IDEA WHO
SEEM 10 HAVE ANY
MIGHT BE
DIREC110N ,..
REPl.ACING.JANIE?

1
Pl!l"'''&lt; I MCNT
.JUST
leNT THE&amp;W.E

·~~~ J_HE DESIGN

~NCE.JANIE

lEFT.

lo

A X Y D L B A, A X a
IJ 0 N G F E L •L 0 W

One letter simply stands lor another. In thia sample A 11
used for · the three L's, X '"'the two O's, ~tc. Single letters.
.apostrophes, the length and formation or the words are aU
hints. Each day ·the rode letlers are different.

CRYPrOQUOTES

fencing,

and other
bldg• . DOWN PAYMENT
and bal. like rent. $38,000.
POMEROY - Close to Rl.

' BR,

2 Celerity
3 Athletes

II Hosea, In

frame, 2 BR , bath, dining
~ .. wash bldg .. garage. A
VERY GOOD BI.JY SB.SOO.
RUTLAND ~ 1 STORY
FRAME, b4th 2 BR,
carpeting,
panetlng,
garage .
CLOSE
TO '
SHOPPING. $9,500 . .
OEXTER - 157 acres,

large
home,
timber , barn

highway

DOWN
1 "- de Lune"

D Type of
Clrange
IS Railroad

J.·

CAS H p a id for all m&lt;l.KI..'!:. and
models of m ob il e horii es .
Phon e 'a re a"· co d e 61.t .123
953 1.
'' 13 tf c

works

41 Roman

( 2 words)
favor
. 4 Kicker's
II Encountered
gadget
17 Dilector's"
5 Tool kit
word
item
01 Bring back
&amp; French
II "Krazy - "
81Ululty
ll Eye pari
7 Purpose
lZ Tiny bit
1 Holding fast

A iet:chtoo

$299

Phone 992-2111

~PP

lli EndinB for

tfcxxx.

tliil

48 Site of the

ACROSS

6:0D-Columbus Today 4; Public Affallrs 10.

20,33.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

~·

·~-Jack W. C.rsey, Mgr.

J •

f:

=~=

--

" RM . and bath , unfUrnished
hou se at 1650 l ncoln Hgt~ .
Phone 992 3874 .
1,6 61 c

Several readers have
wanted to know what happens
when the wrong opponent
leads and the wrong dummy is
placed on Ihe table . The
answer is that the wrong
declarer proceeds to play the
hand and the result stands.
(Do you have a question
for the eKperts? Write "Ask
the Jacobys .. care ot this
newspaper. The Jacobys wifl
answer individual questions
if stamped. self-addressed
envelopes are encfosed. The
mos t interesting questions
wiff be used in this column
and will receive copies ·of

Jim : " The Jacoby transfer
can a lso be extended easily lo
FIIIST LET us the minor su its . The simplest
~IKf~
way is lo use lhe two~spade
"'FA _ ntEH response to one not rump as
"""'""""the transfer to clubs and the
OF ~Y · three-club response as the
transfer to diamonds ."
Oswald : " With a bad hand
you should only use a minor·
suit transfer when vou reallv
want. to play th·e
su it . JACOt;JY MODERN. !
'

Help Wanted

Wanted

I'&lt;IHs

;;,;;;.;;;..__•li""---

I.I'I''I'LS oa•HAJf AlflfiE-DOVBLII:·HSADII:a

1 If(

- ··--··

- ---·--

:l N.T. Pass

' ,. '"'

_

·-. - -----

Puss

By llswald &amp; James Jacoby

u tl&lt;~nd .- Oitio

r r ,rnmrt'\CJ

I 1/ t'-&lt; II

UTI1.E ORPHAN ANNIE

d u 1 er
c·,nn
d•lther
P
H,tlt ,r tt1 11ilrl..

&amp; D 11(E f·

South

1•a s~

E Y C II V r, l I N G

I)

North, t:ast

Opt•nin~ it•ud --

Plu•nbin q ,
nil lf P("; Of
Qf' I1 CI at
r cpa1 t
V/ork
quilri'lnl ('&lt;'tJ
JO V('ilr•, l'Y
prr~t"n ce
f&gt;t,nn • '192 7 tQ9

Chiirlf' ~

\hst

I N.T.

cHlCI

Hoc '•N ~ •cf.' R
PtW IW !.17 '2001;1

•K&amp;a

.JI7&amp; 2
tJK 5H

tKI0 6

fi E MUD[.t. I N ( .

bd ( kl10f'

• .IIOOH

•K 3

4(J. IOH 7
4 -SOllTII 1111

') I i JIC

~

12

4AK.T654
,F.AST

w~: sr

BORN LDSER

RE AQY M IX (OI'~ .::. RC, i:.
dt'livercd r•gt1r to your
proj ec t I· i'tSt uno t'ilSy r ree
estimate s Phone ??? 3/8\ ,
Got'gl ein R ead y M1 x Co ,
M id dl epo rt Oh io
6 ao ' t c

Remember . you h.ave gone
from one notrump all the way
to the three level. With a good
hand you should usually use
th e ll')inor·s uit · transfer as
so me
sort of Slam
suggestion .··
Jim : " Today 's North simply raised to three notrump . He
&amp;a w no reason td s how his sixcard club suit . Had he
transferred to clubs. South
with 18 high-card points might
well have made some slam
move

• 74 3
•lO S
• 94

N il t h.lt~ Biqq s
R,1dto:ttu r Sp e( i ,1.11 'io i

h~i:I11Ml

Nfi~TH

I

b~~~~~~~;,~~~

WO U LD YOU r\E LIEVE 'l
tluil d an all :n e&lt;' l budd u•CJ ~11
Pole B.1r n p rt ccs? Gol d en
Gia11 t /1!1 Sl &lt;::&lt; e l Buildmt.t··
Rt
.1,
13ox 1.:H . w,,vcr t y .
OhiO .Phone 9.t1 719.f&gt;
· 7 ?.I r tc

I :30-News 13.

TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 1976

EXCAVATING , £3/\CK H OES
/I. ND OOZER L/\RGE /,ND
SMAL L
~ EP11(
T/,Nj.( "J
lN S T /\ L LED
Bill
P ULLI N S. P H ONE 992 1-PB
D /\Y O R NI G H T
! 1 11 7Hip

e. EPli C T t• N K~ cle a nc·d
Mode rn Sdnilalion 991 39',.t
. or 997 /J .JQ
9 18 t lc

10 :30-To Keep And Beer Arms 20; Catch 33 33.
II :OD-N•w• 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
II :30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; David Frosf Prtstnls the
Best 6; Movie "Docl!)r.. You've Got To Be l(ld·
ding I" 8: Movie " Teacher's Pot." 10; Coll09t
Basketball 13; Jankl 33.
1:00-Tomorrow 3,-C ,

WIN AT BRIDGE

rron1 ltu.: I M q e~ l T'ruck or
13u tl rfl'nf'r RndiiliO t to lite
Snltl i i('S t Hec~tl' r Co re .

i '] I(

ELWOOD OO WE:: R 'J I([P/\ 110'
Sw eepe r s . I ousters , iron s.
a ll srnull (lpp tiance~ . Lawn
mow·cr . n e xt to &lt;:. tate Hiqh
w ,1y G,1r ,1qc . on Rout&lt;" l
Phon e 9115 382'1
-1 16 Ill

8:0D-Sandburg's Lincoln 3,4.15; On The Rocks 13;
College Basketball 6; Gunsmoke 8; Singly Nones
33; Rhoda 10; Dey Wllho&lt;tt Sunshine 20.
8:30-Happy Oays 13; Phyllis 10.
9:DO-Movle "The Guns of the ~gnlflcent S.von"
3,4, 15; ABC Theatre 13; All In The Family 8.10;
9 : 31&gt;-~ude 8, 10; World Press 20; RNIIdodn 33.
IO :DO-ABC Theatre 6: Medical Center 1,10; News 20;
BI-Ways 33.

Minor-Suit transfer asks slam

RT. 33 NORTH - 2 BR .
DlEPORT ! We are so sur e
bungalow.
bath ,
LP
1 2 29 1p
!h al you .wi l l lo ve our
~ating , r .p water , ·fa s t
apar tme nt s t hat w e giv e you LOCUST posts . Phon e 742
move . Aski.ng $6800.
two weeks RENT F REE .
2359.
WA N TED Old u pright p ianos
Just p ay your . sec urity
COZY BRICK - 3 BRs ,
12 9 76 tp
in an){ condi t ion . Wi l l pa y SlO
deposit and st ay six rnontll~
modern kit. , fine bath,
each . I ir s l fl oo r onl y W irt e
and I he firs t 2 weeks is free
dining an'd utility . Only
giving d 1rections to Wi tt en
You will e njoy month1y COAL FO R SALE . C/I.B 0oal
Pian o Co , Bo)( 188 , Sar d is .
Com
pa,
n
y
,
1
mile
nor
th
of
111,000.
.
leases. all e lectric l ivi ng ,
Ohio .t 39 -t6
Chesh ir e . on Rt 7 Pick your
MOOE RN - 3 BRs ., 1' '
car
p
eli
ng
,
rang
e
and
I 8 61p
own . S20 p er 1o n. Ope n t. days
baths ,
ful l
basement.
r e fr ige r ator , fr ee trash
'per week , or ca ll (61 .t ! 367
family room , 4 ca,. garage,
p ic:k up , cab le TV {opt i onal)
7330
lor
furth
er
i
nformation
HALL ·s Salvdge . /\ I I autos
i'ln d . launpry
facil i ties .
and good garden space .
I 8 7B tc
wilh fr ames and bodies wi t h
COnve n ient to shopping on
$31
.000.
cr wilhout motors , Sl ·hund
Thtrd and Mill in Mid 4 ACRES - 2 houses, one
r ed . Ti n .50 hundred . Will
d leport. V I LLAGE MANOR GRA IN led beet weighs be
tw een 500 and 600 l bs . Ph one
renovated , central hea t &amp;
bu y meta ls and sc rap iron . .clis you r s for on·e be d r oom
9·19 25-12.
air . Lots of pines with
On o ld R t. 33. i us t across
apartm en t s star t in g at SlO.t
1 8 6tc
spacious yard . 531.000 .
from Grueser's Chi pp €r .
monthly plus el ec. We pay
Monday through F rida -y 9
MIDDLEPORT - 3 large
for everythi ng else . See th e
rill 4. p .m ., Sa turd ay , 9 tit
Mana ger
at
Riv e r si d e 1971 H O NO f\ 350, e~cel lenl
BRs .. vast living room . ho t
noon..
A piJrtm en t s or ca ll 992 3273
con dition Low mileage . 5~75 .
water heat , 11'2 bath s, one
Thi s o~fcr w i ll enq soon : so
Phone 997 59 o 1.
enclosed. Lot 7Dx MO. Just
"'--·- .... -- · ~-~rnov e tn now and sav e nu.
I 8 61p
$16.500.
OLD furnili.Jr e, ice bp xes.
10.· 23 .Ttc.
COOLVILlE AREA - 4
brass beds. s ton e iar s, or
.....
·E; N D Ot S EA SON custome r
8Rs ., 21·2 baths , hot water
co mpl ete hou se h o ld s. Wrile
appreciation
sa
le
now
at
M
0 . M i l le r ,
Rt.
2. H Ol i ~.B in Rutland Ca ll 991
heaL enormous modern
Bob
's
Mark
et
.
1\pp
les
S2
.9B
~8',8
Pomeroy , Oh io
Ca l l 992
kitchen , full basement and
• buSh t"l , oranges two dozt"n,
1 J tic
7760 .
5 to 68 acres of land .
$ 1. tangerin es lhree do zen
for Sl. Grap es. thre e pound s . BUILDING LOT S AND
for-, s 1. W hil e the supply
-·- t-O R RENT OR SA LE , :'l
ACREAGE . IF
YOU
la sls . Bob 's Markel in
bcdrm . mobi le !lome , un
DON ' T
KNOW
Mason, W . Va . Ph one 773
furn ish ed, uti l i ties pa id on
PROPERTY
KNOW
5771 , hours 10 a .m . t ill S: JO
RET IRE D or semi r etire d
Rt. 33 in Burlingham . Phon e
YOUR REALTOR .
pm
.
99'1 775 1.
l ady to live in . rree room
1 1 10tc
crnd boa rd and sma ll wages
1231 t t c ·
to r light tli..1t ies . See at JOB
'
Page 51., Mid dl ep orl . Oh i o. HOU SE in Sy ra c use. 5 rms .
3
BEDRM . home ,
ju s l
I 11 lfc
f
i
nished
,
r
emodeling
,
Salem
and balh
Ph on e 992 2530
1 WEEKONLYI
r111 er 5 p .m
St.. Ru t land . Phone· 7412306
NEED c'apab le women to li ve
afler 4 p .m . or see Milo B .
1 8 61 c
Hu! chison .
in with e'lder l y l ady . r or
9 2J .Ifc
m or e i nformatip n , call· 992
CO-OP
~U R NI S H E O
apar tment
).\57 .
a d ul ts only . in Middleport..
Automatic W•ter
1 6 6tc
Phone 99 2 387 4.
Conditioner
J 25 .1fc
Model
h' EL IJ\E\ LE per so n to li ve in
-·'
--- .......
210,000
wilh e ld erl y l ady Cdll 9.t9
J A N 0 &lt;i RM . furnished ana
l'i.t7. f o r mOr e inlo r mat&lt;on
Wef!kly Grain
unfurnished apts . Phone 992 .
5434
1 9 Jt c
Capacity
11 .9 -tfc
-·-- --- ~ --WA ITR ES~ wante d fo r
12
COUNTRY
Mobile H ome
midnight Iii 8 a . m . sh ift
Park , Rt . 33, ten miles north
Ap p ly in person at Crow ·s
of Pom eroy , L arge lot s w i th
Steak H ouse . A l so, talo,ing
con crete patios . sidewa lk s, f'-·- - -4 Reg. $339.00 Val.
applications for grill c ooks .
runners and off s t reet
12·3 1 lfc
parking . Phon e 992 -7479 .
·
12 -31 -lfc
POMEROY LANDMARk
RUTLAND 1 otory

--

Fr-iends of Man IS; Marc o Sportllte 33 .

OtJR 05Vl0US r.JE)&lt;. r
MOVE IS TO CHECK VjiTM

-

..l

If

992 ·3.l~ S

W~ol es ate ,
F £&gt; ilhll' H1C'J :

'i ~ acu s. e, Ohio

Ph . YV2 -3993

O lh :::c

Fortn1•r to; We e d

lARRY
lAVENDER
'

Caii992-75J7
Pomeroy. Ohio

1 6 6tc

Pom~:rDy

l OS Butternu t

5TORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOO RS
REPLACEMENT .
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
~ IOIN G SOFFITT
GU TT.ER5 . AWN IN G5

Kuhl Cake Decor

Gfi S stove . See at llo,., 14·1, on

t Rt . 143, Rulland

ln s uiation Se 'r vic es
Blown tttf p W&lt;JJi s &amp; Allie s

Licensed
baker
and
decorator .
Kitchen State Inspected

BEO~M

I 12 )I C

197·1 CHEVROLET ' • to n
tr uc k
Se e Joe I mboden
Min er svi l le
I 6 6t c

6:0&lt;&gt;-News 3.~. 8,1 0.13, 15 ; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
1&gt;:30- NBC News 3,• , 15: ABC Newo 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8.10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Ourstory
33.
7:0&lt;&gt;-Tr•th or Consequences 3; To Tell The Trulh 4 ;
Bowling lor Dollars 6; Buck Owens 8; Buck Owens
8; News 10; Candid Camera 13; Family Affair 15;
On Agtng 20 ; Jeanne Wolf with .. . 33.
7:30-Thai Good Ole Na•hvllle Music 3; Don Adams
Screen Test 4; Match Game PM6; Price Is Right 8;
Evening Edition with . Maf)ln Agronsky 20; High
Road to Adventure 10; To Tell The Truth 13 ;

Quality Print Shop

Blown

CAKE BAKING

I{EO I•C E SO l e t! nd ta st W11h
Gol1ese Tabl et s ilnd E Vap
" wa 1 ~r p i ll s ," Ne ls on Drug
I 12 I i p

Whit e vinyl top , b lk . l inish , au t oma t ic. P . S., P. B., t ilt
wheel. radio, radial w .w t i r es , local lady owner, you
w ill thi nk this is a new car . So n i ce . Book Va l ue

FREE ESTIMATES

WANTED

For Sale

SEPTIC

Want Ad
Will Cut
Cost of
Living •••••• Reedsville

..

1

t\n•"'•·r: .\ 't•e d ll a rlri l't 'r lt• t·n l&lt;·r U't11Jd .11- A SCREW

APPOINTMENT
c .1 se No . 2 1699

'

1

$3550.00.

(AnHMrn• lotuurr""'

Jun•bl· ·~: SHOWY

1973 CHEV . MONTE CARLO

11.1' 1 !(1/ ,

MONDAY, JANUARY 12,lt76

I Y It c_

Locnlli'!dy owned, fully equi p .. au tomatic , P . S., P. B . ,
radio , air c ond it ioned . Like new fires , good finis h &amp;
vinyl inter ior, truly i s dean as a new one . Book Value
! 3?00 00

:=~t-..:::.JJ::_J=~::;~::-~f\.~.-J~~s;-,':';';.:t'Rled by the above cartoon.

,...... - -... !HE t

1101'

1971 PONTIAC 2 SEAT WAG. SAFARI Clearance S279S

MI,JCH • WE16HT.

b

' Oia t!y

Pomeroy
Motor Co~

'!'j

for~

EDUC.4D

DROOrE

m nhil(• hume N ew
'-1',1) p~ ·r l!lt!IIIIJ ,
turn1 'i llf'fl
l 'lif&lt; tll

1'1/', tii(IC1CI

· 1 0 [j
SEROU

.B;;;r~;~;· Services l

For .Rent

Auto Sales

EDN\'U

JET

ONE REAL SOLUTION.

CEZT

ACTION Volunteers.

LD

'

Illiteracy is a plague. It fa&gt;ds on apathy and
breeds fear and ignorance. Hit's a problem
in your community, you need professional
help. ACTION is skilled voluntQers- people
of all ages, with ull kinds of skills, working
to solve problems in your conimunity arid
around the world. Soil you've got a·tough
community problem,
write : ACTION, Dept. PP. Washington.
D.C. 20525,

TIME FER .

BSDD't- BYE I
FELLERS

Between us,
.
there's got to be a solution.
"'PuD IIC Service o! Thll NDWIPIQef &amp; The M~lll l l lrl ll Counci l

'

r--,.....-r-----.,.--------::::::-:::--

ENOZ

APLC

TDPY
QD

CEYDJ

CYDPFBZL?

HNYMZC

ONBPZ,

CEZH

NJNT.-

N_BQ
LXEYNUZ
, Yesterday's Cr)optoqaote: AS A PEOPlE WE POSSESS A
1 PHENOMENAL CAPACITY FOR RIGHTEqUS INDIGNATION, - EUZABETH JACKSON

You manage your resources 11) Pace yourself sensibly to.
rather well early in the day : A.s day or you may take on more
the afternoon wears on you burdens than you can manage.
mav grow a trifle extravagant. Try to find a helper.

GEMINI (Mor 21·Juno 20) For AOUAIItUS (Jon, 20-l"llb. II)
best re s ults today . don't
auempt more than you can
competently handle . Try to
devote your energies to your
priorities.

Give all types of risky ventures
a wide berth today. Play
everything on the safe side. ·"-~
Don ' t expect· something lor
nothing .

CANCER (Junt .21·July 22) Be PISCES (Fob. 20·Morcll 20)
careful today fiOI to create un ~
necessary problems for
yourself . Plan wisely ~ Avoid
lruslrallons.

LEO (Julr 23·Auo. 221 Don't
make too la te a night of it if
you 're out on the town with
fr ie nds
th i s
even i ng.
Tomorrow's a work day! _

VIRGO (Allfl. 2:1-lept. 22) In
your eagerness to accomplish
whal yOll set out to do today
you may unthinkingty tread on
a few toes. Watch your image!

You may find it very difficult to .
please certain members of
your family today. no matter
how hard you try . Do so
anyway .

~~
Jon. 13, 1171

You're likely to attempt several
very ambitious undef~akings
LIBRA (Sopt. 23-0ct. 23) It's this poming ·year. You have
wise lo take advice offered by' what n takes If vou stav in areas
othe~s Into consideration. but ·within your means and talents,

�---

.··························.,=

8- The Daily Sentinel, Maddleport-P&lt;Hneroy, 0 , Monday, Jan. ll, IU16

~

·Shared revenue listed·
WASHrNGTON - Rep .
Clarence Miller Thursday
released here a report from
the U. S Department of the
Treasury
listing · the
distribution of general
revenue shanng funds to
101its of government In Ohto's
lOth Congressional D1strict
Local units of government
mclude cahes and villages,
to wnships and Cou nty
governments.
The report offered by the
Treasury Department includes two totals : general
revenue shanng funds
allocated durmg the second
quarterly payment period of
entitlement penod six 1July
I, 1975-June 30, 1976 ), and
secondly, the total general
revenue sharmg payments
made to governments in the
lOth Distrtct from January,
1972, through January 5, 1976.
The quarterly payment to

all governments m the lOth
Congresstonal District
totalled $1,758,235 while the
total payments to the same
governments from inception
of the program added up to
$24,983,602
A summation of village,
township, etly and county
governments revenue
sharmg payments under both
the quarterly and total
allocation shows local unit,
payment just made, and total
payments, in order
Athens County, $213,783,
$2,941.964
Fairfield County, $258,425,
$3,465,226
Gallia County, $78,797,
$1.268,175.
Hocking County, $82,092,
$1,247,079.
Jackson County, $93,785,
$1,452,251.
Lawrence County, $193,686,
$2,587,765.
Meigs Co~nty, J51,073.
$890,782.
Morgan County, $55,976 ,
$901,267.
Muskingum County,
$364,672, $5;o81,643.
Noble County, $32,402,
$529,505.
Perry County, $107,381 ,
$1,558,409.
Vmton County, $36,766, $507,907.

. _,.__

Y1JitU IIEV!IIIU&amp;T•••

Starts Wednesday
Two Days Only
MEIGS THEATRE
992-5303, Pomeroy
Showtimes 7:00

Fresh Him Hock
Navy Bean Soup
CARRY 0\jT ONLY

Crow's
Steak lbJse
Pomeroy, Ohio

Wa•hin~lon

('ounty,

over 39,000 units of local
~overnment nationally for
use in a wide variety of public
service programs . Rep.
Miller was a co-sponsor of the
origmal revenue sharing btll
approved by the Congress.
The current revenue shartng
program
will
exp1re
· December 31 unless Congress
acts to extend it.

Big Foot
~ ·~ ,!l'lih!•"l ft

om J)ilge 1}
about 15 feet or so. The color
was wh)te.
"I've done a lot of hunting
but I've never seen apything
ltke it. The thing was really
t

oversized,"
He said that if he sees 11
again he'll shoot it.
San Beruto pohce chtef Ted
Cortez said Big Bird ftrst was
reported to his department
about six weeks ago by a man
who rushed terrifted mto the
police station.
"He came down and told
us, 'I'm not drunk. I'm sober.
But I saw it'," Cortez said.
"Later two kids came over
and said they saw it. They
said it had kmd of a bald
head, like a monkey."
Last week, Alvertco
Guajardo, 35, told police he
heard somethmg' hit the
corner of his mobile home
near Brownsville, Tex.
Guajardo said he left his
wife and child in the house,
grabbed a knife and drove his
automobile to the back of the
trailer for a better look.
There, Guajardo said, he
"P@.nl three minutes eye to
eye with what he described as
"a strange animal" four feet
tall, eyes like silver dollars,
wings like a bird and a face
like a bat.

POMEROY NATIONAL BANK
of Pomeroy in the state of Ohio, at the cloae of business on December 31 1975

published tn response to call made by Comptroller of the Currency unde; title
12, Umted States Code, Section 161.
'
~

"
0

~

,

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Q

~

"

•

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1-

w

Ill
Ill

&lt;

w
"'-

-&lt;
1...1

I ll
...1

Cash and due from banks • • • • • • • . • • • • • • • • • •• 1,405,xxx.xx
U.S. Treasury securitles • · · • • •••••••••••••• 8,477,xxx.xx
Obligaltons of other U.S. Govt. agencies and corps .••••••• 137,xxx.xx
Obhgaltons of States and political subdivisions • • • • • •• 1,684,nx.JC&lt;
Other securities • · • • • • • • • • • • •
• • 4l,xxx.xx
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell • • • • • •
• 925,xxx.xx
Loans • • . • • • • • • • • • • • • •
• • • 9,106,:o:x.xx
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises • • •
. • • 320,xxx.xx
Other assets • • • • • • • •
. . • 72,xxx.xx
TOTAL ASSETS • • • • • • • • • • - • • • • • . • 22,167 ,xxx.xx
Demand deposits of individuals, prtnshps., and corps .•.•..•. 4,579,xxx xx
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnshtps, and corps. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 13,793,xxx.xx
Deposits of U.S. Govt. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 65,xxx.xx
Deposits of States and political subdivisions ••••••.••• 1,443,xxx.xx
Certified and officers' checks, etc. • • • • • • • • • • • • • 91,xxx.xx
TOTAL DEPOSITS • • • • • . • • • 19,971,n:x.xx
(a) Total demand deposits • • • • • • •
5,431,:o:x.xx
(b) Total time and savings deposits • • • .
14,540,:o:x lO:
Other liabilities • • • • •
,
319,xxx.xx
20,290,xxx.u
TOTAL LIABilJTIES • • • • · • • • • •
Reserve for bad debt IOIISeS on loans
I set up pursuant to IRS rulings) • • • • • • • • • •
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES

.......
11'1

ctz
I-:~

ii:o
.q:V
vv
ct

..
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:e"'w
:e
0

139,nx .xx
139,nx.xx

EQUITY CAPITAL, total • ••••• • • • • • • • • • • • 1,738,nx.xx
Common stock, total par value • • • • • • • • . - 200,DI.IX
I No. shares authorized 8000) No. shares outstanding 8000)
Surplus • . • . • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • l,IOO,nx.n
Undivtded profits . • • • • • • • •
• 438,:o:x .tc&lt;
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
11738,u.:x .u
TOTAL lJABilJTIES, RESERVES,
AND CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
22,167 ,nx .xx
AVerage of total deposits for the 15 calendar
days ending with call date • • • • • • • • •
Average of totalloana for the 15 calendar
days ending with call date • • • • • • • • •

• 19,827,xxx.xx
• • • • • 910t3,xxx .xx
•

I, Maxine Griffith
Cashier
of the abovHJamed bank do hereby declare that this report
of condition Is true and correct to the best of my khoWledge
and belief.
Maxine Grlffilh
January I, 1976
We, the undersigned directors sliest the correctnoss of this report ul&lt;'tolldllton
We declare that it has been examined by ua, to the best of our knowledge and
belief Is true and correct, and that it has been or will be pubh5hed in lite manner
)ll'eiletlbed by TiUe 12, U.S.C. 161, within twenty clays from the dale of the call
for report of condition, or aa otherwile pucribed by the Comptroller of the
CUrrency.

Edisc)n Hobltetter
Honce Karr
Warren Pickens

Dlrectora

' ( 'untiii\Wd ll Hill piige 1)

sin kill~ a lll jHllmx .
$216,980. $2,991,604.
There was nnnor dHmilgc Nu
The general revenue ('llalwn was tssued
sharing pro11ram began m
A three.vehJ cle mi sha p
1972 and has turned back occurred at 11 · 10 am on
about $6 billion annually to Mitchell Rd . three tenths uf a

REPORT OF CONDrriON, CONSOLIDATING
DOMESTIC SUBSIDIARIES OF 111E

Ill

Property ·
Y. d)'.

mtle south of US 35 Officers
said an auto dr1ven by Kerry
A. Rtnehart, 21, Palnot Star
Rt , wenl oul of , co~Lrol on

sltppery

pavement

The

Rinehart cHr struck an auto

operated by Re1d C
Brubaker, 32, of Galhpohs
A lhtrd car driven by
Carroll W. Shoemaker,2\, Rt ,
2, Galltpolis, ran off the ngh r'
stde of the highway to avmd a
colltslon . Rmeharl WRS
charged With speed for road
condalaons
Davtd Adkms, 18, Oak H1ll,
was shghlly mjured m a
traffic acc1dent at 12 ·05 p m
Saturday on Buhl Morton Rd .
one mtle south of US 35
The patrol sa td Adkms was
a passenger m a car operated
by Dav1d C Manders, 16, Rt'
4, Oak H1ll. Manders lost
control of h1s car on the ice
covered roadway
The
veh1cle lefllhe road, stiiking
an embankment
A smgle car accident occurred at 7· 30 p m on SR 554
at the junctiOn to Faarvtew
Rd where Alma J. B~rtley,
22, Rio Grande, lost control of
her car which ran off the
highway and over an embankment. There was mmor
damage. No charge was ftled.
Two acctdents mvolvmg
deer occurred a bout 8 p m on
SR 7 m Me1gs County where
an&gt;mals ran mto the path of
cars dnven by Goldie B
Chaphn, 37, Woodsfield, Ohio,
and Barbara E. Rousl&gt;, 38 of
Dexter. Both deer were
kill~d.

At 9 p.m Saturday on the
Rodney-Cora Rd Urias
Colley, Jr , 18, Vmlon, lost
control of his car on the icy
h1gh"ay The vehiCle went
mto a ditch
·
No c1lalion was ISsued u1 a
smgle car m1shap at I I. 05
p.m Saturday on SR 7 where
Wtlliarn S Kennedy, 51, Long
Bottom, lost control of hiS car
on the snow..,overed haghway. The vehicle also went
into a d1lch.

William {llafin

ATTEND OPEN HOUSE

The staff of the Metgs bookm~btle in Wellston Sunday to
allend an oP&lt;ln house at the
Ohto Valley Assoctahon of
William Wallace Chafm, 60, !Jbranes quarters included
_of 168 Mulberry Ave , Mr. and Mrs. C. E Blakeslee,
Pomeroy, d1ed Sunday ul Mrs . Vtlma Pikkoja and
Veterans Memorial Hosp1tsl. guest, Toomas Tubaklain, of
Mr. Chaftn was born June Lakewood , Mr. and Mrs.
9, 1915, the sop of the late Edgar Brewer of Portland,
Thomas and' Dacte Batsden Mr. and Mrs. Robert G.
Chafm.
Pieke It, Darwm, and Mrs.
.Surv1vmg are his wife,
l.eroy Watson, Mmersville.
Madehne Smith Chafin ;, The Meags ·bookmobile cirseven children, Carol Lan· culated 113,013 books durmg
ders, and Thomas A Chafin, 1975.
bOth of Columbus ; Judith

: Green
••• Thumb
••
•• Notes
•

died Sunday

Bacon, Middleport ; Wilham
R, of Macon, Ga.; Darlene

Vallance, Gallipolis ; Jo Lynn
Chafm , Columbus, and Rema
R Chafm, Pomeroy; mne
grandchildren ; a brother,
Howard ; two s1sters, Ann

Browmng and Columbia
Fouch, and several meces
and nephews
FW1eral services wtll be
held aliO a m Tuesday at the
Ewing Funeral Home with
the Rev. Herbert Grate offiCialmg . Burtal w1ll be m
Beech Grove Cemetery The
fam1ly will rece1ve friends at
the funeral home from 2 to 4
and from 7 to 9 lhJS evening

Hospital

Nc~ws

Holzer Medical Crnler
(Births, Jan. 9)
Mr. and Mrs Rtcky Boyd,
son, Oak Htll; Mr. and Mrs.
Fredenck Mercer 1 Jr ,
daughter, Jackson; Mr and
Mrs. John Northup , son,
Mason, W Va.; Mr. and Mrs .
Pope ,
son,
Johnny
M1ddleport ; Mr and Mrs
Arthur Storms, son, Hamden.
( BPrths, Jan.10)
Mr and Mrs. Frederick
Carpenter, daughter . Oak
Htll; Mr and Mrs. James
Cruse, son, Jackson, Mr . and
Mrs. David Janke, son, Pt .
Pleasant , Mr and Mrs .
Harry Roush, son, Letart, W.
Va.
1Births, Jan.ll)
· Mr and Mrs. Allen Jones,
son, Wellston; Mr. and Mrs
Carl Shenefteld, daughter ,
Langsvalle

Pleasant Valley Hospital
DISCHARGES - Freddte
Spence, Mayme Huff, Mrs C
Paugh, Doris Dalton, Mrs
Robert Greenlee, daughter,
,.
Fary Treadway, all Point
Pleasant;
Garlan
D
Bonecutter, Henderson, Mrs.
1Co11ttnu"l from page I)
Floyd Hill, Palrtot; Mrs.
Lewis
Dursl, Point Pleasant;
health serv1ce agency by
Flora
Wtlhams,
New Haven;
Apnl 19 to meet the second
fundmg cycle deadhne for Mrs Robert Hinkle, Hartsuch agenctes whtch has been ford; Carl Gillenwater,
Mrs.
Earl
set by the Department of Galltpolis;
Freeman,
Alderson;
Goldie
Health, Education and
Cremeans, GalhpoliS , Jesse
Welfare
The Ohw Valley Health Van .Meter, West Columbta;
Serv1ces Foundation mcludes and StoUte McComas, Vmton
I
Hocking, Athens, Vtnton, VeleraDli
Memorial Hospital
Jackson, Meigs, Galha and
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
Lawrence counties.
- Hazel Ph1lhps, Wellston;
The Southeast Ohto Health Lela Forrest, Rutland; Lettie
Plannmg Association co.vers Spencer, Syracuse; Loren
Coshqcton,
Muskingum. Wolfe, Portland; Cathy
Perry, Morgan, Guernsey. Weaver, New Haven
Noble, WaSlunglon, Hamson,
SATURDAY
DISJefferson, Belmont, Monroe. CHARGES - Ernest Halley, Angela Manuel, John
PTA TO MEET '
Wise, Dixie Cadle, Okey
The Pomeroy Elementary Bennett, Margaret Goett,
PTA will meet at 7:30 tonight Gene Yost, Willie Blaine,
at the school
Sandra Stover, George
Carson, Golda Epple, Jeffrey
WRESTLING SET
Reuter,
A three-way wrestling meet Carson, Nora
Raymond
Hartley,
Paul
will be held at the Metgs High
Andrews,
Effie
Norman,
Sc~ool nasium al7 p.rn :
Tue y Taking part will 'be Lester Swtger, Sarah Jarrell
N sonville-York, Glouster and Allee Addason.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS and Meigs High School wrestNeva
Grimm, Pomeroy 1
lers. Admission will be 50
John
Gilhlan,
Chester; Helen
cents and $1.
Swartz, Reedsville; Jacob
Schuler, Portland; Zally
Medors, Rutland; Vernon
Blevins, Pomeroy; Samuel
McKmney, Pomeroy
SUNDAY DISCHARGESDenniS Hackett, Vada Rigor,
Gilbert Cooper, Georgia
Darst, Danlel Dewitt, Lettie
Spencer, Samuel Pickens,
Ellen Stewart, Marvin
Moore, Marcia Spauldmg,
Mary Wippel.
REVIVAL SET
RUTLAND - A revival will
be held at the Rutland Church
of God beginning Wednesday,
Jan. 14, through SWtday, Jan.
18. Services will be 7:30
nfghUy. Sunday School will be
at 10 a.m., worship service at
11 a.m., and evening service
"lht fuel vou ~c1ve today
at 7 p. m. 'l1le Rev. Billy
may well be the fuot you'll
Plll'ter is the evangehst. The
be needing nut YHr" ...
public i• .•, vited.
tnsulaf~ng your home.today
SORORITY TO MEET
witt nof only help In fhe . Xi Gamma Mu Chapter of
energy crisis, if wilt also Bets Slgma Phi Sorority will
puf money In your pocket
meet at 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
thru fuel saving•. See fhe
the
Columbus and Southern
"FRIENDLY ONES" for
Ohio
Electric Co. building In
all the supplies you need.
·Middleport. "My Half of the
Apple,"
the
cultural
protirarn, will be given by
Lynn Shuler and Sarah
Tile Ditta"-! s.Wo of ' Bechtle. Hosteuea lite Iris
..11111,. liltCII trlJ. ~
Payne and Donna Byer.

Merger

,,.

JICI1EROY CEMENt
lOCK CO•.

•

I

•
•
•

A weekly foalure of Me1p
County G1rden Club mm• o.

•:
·=
e:
••
•:
••
••
•••
••
•:
·~

ConUnued from page S
The club memben have assisted with the Meigs County·
Histcrical Society and some of the members are on
Bicentenmal Committee for the county.
.:
They are active ln the therapy program both at the ·
Gallipolis State Institute and the Mental Health Center at •
AlbeRS. This past year they entertained members of the Good ;:
U.ck Garden Club of the Health Center In one of the club-~
member's borne. Floral arrangements have been placed in
area churches for Sunday services. Mrs. G. A. Radeltin is the :
immediate past president.
~
MIDDU!PORT AMATEUR GARDENERS
·;
There are 22 active members in the Amateur Gardenero~
Club and their many civic pro~ have Included-:;
beautification at the Middleport Fire Department, village hall, :
the George Washington Encampment marker at Great Bend. .!
They help with the co181ty flower shows and make filll'al ~
arrangements fiJI' many organizaUons. The members are abo !
active participants In the therapy programs at the AthenJJ •
Mental Health Center and alsO assist the Center at Christ- ;
mastime.
:
In cooperatioo with the Pomeroy and Middleport Clubs, :
the 1975 regiooal meeting was hosted by the Amateur Gar- •

the-:

Greene,Sehnon
win honors in

Hula classic
HONOLULU (UPI) - Ohio
stale's Cornelius Greene and
Oklahoma's Leroy Selmon
were named top offensive and
defensive performers at the
Hula Bowl, but many though!
that some award should have
gone to the smallest man on
the f1eld.
Don B1tterhch of Temple
accounted for 10 of hts team's
pomls m the 16-0 blankmg of
the West, first shutout in the
30-year hastory of the classic.
Two of h1s field goals were 46
yards long and set a Hula

deners.

Last month the club sponsored a Chriatmas lighting ~
contest in Middleport . Mrs. Harold Lohse is the immediate :
past president, and following the recent resignation of Mrs::
John Reece as club president, Mrs. Guy Reynolds is now
serving In the position.
'
'

record .

"Actually, I don 'l think I
MOST OF THE CLUBS contribute to the Sentinel's "Green •
had that good a game," said Thumb Noles", this weeldy educational feature, and par. ;
B1llerlich, who missed on hts ticipate ln a moo\ltly radio program.
ftrst field goal attempt. "The
folks back home know I can
·:..:: ,:, ,:, ;:; ;: :;·,:: ;: ;: ':';: :·. ': ·: ·.; ·.:: ·:;::~~
kick much better."
"I don 'l know if f really
HICKORY BY DOCK!
deserved 11 ," Greene said of
HARAHAN, La. t UPI) the award. " A lot of guys
If you w.aled to go from
played a great game. But it's
Hickory Stuet to Dlctory ·
a great Ieelmg to gel It
Street, wbal better way to
conSidering there are a lot of
go th.. from Hickory to
ST. LOUIS !UPI) - 'l1le
great athletes here."
Dlckory
by Dock?
Another East standout was American Association of Col·
Tbe
Jefleroon
Parish
Kentucky running back lege Baseball Coaches
Council
Is
coDsiderlog
Sonny Collins, who galloped honored sill coaches Sunday
naming the street belweea
night at the c:Onchwon of its
or 41 yards in the first half
Hickory and Dlckory
31st annual convention.
and had two 14-yard scamunock.
"
Named as coach of the year
pers durm~ a lon£ F.a.•t
in their respective divisions
scormg drive M) s tertously 1
were .
he ~1d not carry the ball in the
Cliff Gustafson, Texas;
tiCCQnd half
Don Scbaly, Marietta, Ohio,
Colle~e; Bill Brooks, North
PTA TO MEET
AID GIVEN
Carolina-Wibnington;
Wally
SYRACUSE
The
The Pomeroy E·R squad
answerl!d a call at 9:58 p m. Kinc8ld, Ceritos Community Syracuse PTA wtll meet
Sunday to 2J8lf, Condor Sl for College, Norwalk, Calif. ; Tuesday at 7:30p, Jl1,With the
Samuel McKmney who was Tom Graeffenaur, Whltenall Rev. William Mlddieawarth
High School, Greenfleld, showing fllml he has taken of
ill He was taken •to Veterans
Wls . ; and Dtck Wagner, school eventa.
Memorial Hospital
Burllnglon, Iowa, High
School.
Former major league inASK DISSOLUTION
Filmg for dissolutton of fielder Danny Ut&gt;rhller, now
•
LOCAL TEr.tPS
mamage m Meigs County coach at Michigan State
The
temperature
in
Common
Pleas
Court University, was named
downtown
Pomeroy
at
11 •
Saturday were Delmer winner of the "Lefty Gomez
a.m.
Monday
was
36
degrees
Shamblin and Dorothy Marie Silver" award for his contribution to college baseball. Wider cloudy skies.
Shambhrl'.

Six baseball
coaches noted

Elberfelds -In Pome
Continuing Our
Annual

January r._
Clearance
SALE
NOW SAVE UP TO

50%
ON
WOMEN'S Md GIRLS'

WINTER
COATS
Still a nice selection
of
Misses and
Juniors, Girls 4 to 14
and Preteen Sizes.
Main St?re, Annex and-WarehOuse Open WHkdays 9:30
to 5, FrldMS 9:30 to 8.

ds In

Increase proposed in water. and sewer tap fees
.

I

An ordinance raising the charge for sewer and \\aler U!ps whH:h Hl'&lt;·umpanu.•tltht• ordincuu:r lu t&gt;Siahli';h the uni1 He sa uJ
was approved tn lts farst reading and formation of an auxt.hary the by-laws dtscrlltnnut ed ag:a1nst won1en and age s1nec lhcy
unit for the poli~e department 1/as tabled for further study by state that auxiliar) members "111 be beiWt:.' e ll th(• agrs nf 21
Middleport VIllage council in a regular session Monday mghl. and 55 and will be males
King moved to gtve a f1rst rending of the ol'dtmmec
Willis Anthony. a member of the board of pubhc affairs,
recommended to council it increase the pnce for water and changed to read that the fiUxthary woullt operate in accordsewer taps from the present $75 to $125 each He pointed out ance Wlth the st&gt;Jlules of Oh1o and the Conslitutton of the
that minimum costs involved for the vlJiage on water taps is Umted States However, several members expressed eoncern
$108, not counting lab&lt;lr It was also pointed out that the price over approvmg the auxihary umt but noiiL&lt; b~-laws in thai the
of sewer and water taps has remained a l $75 ~ince 1967
orgamzalion would be approved but there would be no
Councilman Allen Kmg nevertheless said he was m favor regulations through which to govern 11
of the lower pnce because it encouraged growth in the comMuch of the resgonsib1lily of supervtsion of the unit will he
munity.
up to the mayor. 'Councal members md1cated they were m
It was stated that the $125 f1gure will he low, compared to favo• of the unit but felt that by-laws should be accept&gt;Jble
other areas. The ordinance to increase the price to $125 was . King d1d get a second on h1s malton and he withdrew 11 Kmg
approved tn a first readmg with Councilmen Marvin Kelly , was named to note changes m by-laws he would recommend so
Carl Horky, Wilham Walters and George Meinhart favoring that they will be accept&gt;Jble
the increase and Kmg voting no.
Mrs Clyde Ingels asked council about repair of Chestnut
An auxiliary unat for the pohce department was diScussed St where she res1des Sfle sairl th::. t "tu~ h;::p;:: rrn,.~tf' rih• a sked
at length. Counctbnan King objected to pronosP&lt;i hv -bw&lt;

•

e

rur repairs bul thcH any work done hus IJr-en "very temPf'rary, " Sh£&gt; ~ lso spoke to cuWlcll on the 111a intenance of an

alley belund Chestnut St . She said that she fell expen.es on
mainuunmg the alley were out of line when s treets are not
being cared for properly She d1d state, however. that if council
is msistent upon maint&gt;Jming the alley, 11 should be
blacktopped Counc1l members agreed to look at the alley and
dls&lt;·uss the maHer at

3

later meeting

Council reelected Marvm Kelly t'Ounell pres1dent and
approved the f)ccemher report o[ Mayor Fred Hoffman
showing a total of $968 10 which included $830 10 m fines and
fees and $138 in merchant pohce collections.
Bob F1sher and Wayne Dav1s, new Middleport ~·1re Ch1ef
and assistant, respecllvely , told council they hoped lhe 1r
department could work closer w1th c ouncil this year and Indic ated that they will attend meetmgs to answe1 any questwns

village off1c1als may have about the department.
Upon the recommendatiOn of Mayor Hoffman, Ruby
Vaughan, Richard Hovatter and Paul Gerard were appomled

fmant.oe coumuttee come up w1th suggestions on tax measures

lo be placed mdiv1dually before Mtddleport voters. These
would be designa ted for vanous departments of the vtllage and
one would be for street hghlmg The vtllage now has no method
of mlleclton for street hghtmg and will be unable to pay for
such llghtmg out of tegular fund s unless some wx measure is
ap proved by voters
Atlendtng the meetmg also were Clerk-Treasurer Gene
Grate and the Rev Don Cole, pastor of the Mtddleport Church
of the Nazarene, who gave prayer preceding the meetang.
: ·:: ·: :

•

.:

: ,•:

... . . -:·· :

:· : : ..

.... ··.. :··: .. · ·=···

..•

· Crime, unemployment and
welfare still Ohio issues

enttne

at y

to f1v e year terms on the cmnmumty's recreation commission .

'11le council dJScusst&gt;d a suggestion that a "No right turn on
red " not1t-e be placed at the traffic light at Locust and ·nurd
for traffic traveling on Locust toward the river maktng nght
turns However, several council members said they felt the
sign was not necessary
A reque st for f1ll d1rt m•a r the end of the Joe Turner
property on Vine St. will be stud1ed by tlie street committee .
In condu swn, Co uncilman Horky recommended that the

t'

COLUMBUS IUPI ) - Gov. James A. Rhodes says the:::
Issues fa cmg Ohto are the same as they were during hts ::

_V_O_L_X_X_V_II_N_O_._1_90___P_O_M_E_R_OY_·M_ID_D_lE_P_O_RT_,_O_H_IO-'---'--'-- - -T
_U_E_SD_A_Y_._JA_N_U_AR_Y
_ l_3,_1_9_76________P_R_IC_E_F_Ifl_E_E_N_C_E_N~TS . ~!ir~;:. .~erms as gover~or, "cnme, unemptoyinent anct .:~
Rhodes made the comment m an mterv1ew with ·:~

Candidates needed
in county offices
Ten county elechve off1ces
are up for the taking thts
year .
Voters will elect two county

the1r common pJeas court

judge.

Candidates for these posts.
commissioners, a sher1ff, whether
Republican,
recorder, coroner. treasurer , Democrat or Indepe ndent
clerk of courts, engmeer , must ftle pettllons of canprosecultng attorney and dtdacy w1th the Me1gs County
ir====:===:===:=·====.==·====:====·=·= ··= =·· .·=·=·=· ·=· ·.·.·=· ·=·=···=

· =···:·:-: :.: :·= ··=··=·· =···=···=·· =·· =···==··=:··=:··==·-:::::

iNews. . •in Briefs;\\

»

~

By United Press International
WASHINGTON - CONSUMER ADVOCATE Ralph Nader
says cancer should no longer be constdered a strictly medical
disease but mstead should he called "corporate cancer "Since
many estunates attribute the vast majority of cancers to
enVIronmental causes, it should be recogmzed that cancer is
caused primarily by the products of business and mdustry.
Nader told a Captlol Htll conference Monday.
He said White House pobctes call for $60 milhon a year in
"subSidies for the tobacco industry but only $900,000 for the
Department of Health, Education and Welfare to educate
people agamst smoking. "The ml1te House ts more concerned
with the health of the tobacco tndustry than with the he~lth of
the tobacco industry's VICltmS," Nader told several hundred
representaltves of congressaonal offtces attending .a meeting
sponsored by the1 Envaronment&gt;Jl Study Conference.

Board of Elechons by 4 p m
on _March 25 preparatory lo
the June 8 pnmary eleclton
No~un~es wtll run in the

November election
Petiltons of candidacy are
available at the board of
elecltons office located in the
Masonic Temple bu1ldmg.
Mulberry Ave , Pomeroy
The of!tce IS open from I to 4
p.m .. Monday through Fnday
fo r the convemence of
residents \\tsh tn g to file
pehtwns .

Ail of the offt ces up for
electiOn lhJS year wtth the
exception of

~he

common

pleas court )Udgesht p, whach
carnes &lt;J

year lerm, are
for a four year term John C.
Bacon lS current JUdge In SIX

cwnbents tn the other posts
are Henry Wells and Ralph
W Ours, commiSSIOners ,

Bernard Fultz, prosecultng
Rllorney; Robert C Har·
lenbach , s henff; Eleanor
Rubtns, recorder , Dr R R

Pte kens , coroner; George
Cu llms , treasurer; Larry

School
ravaged

.
Shenff Robert c Harten bach•5 Dept reported
today that sometime between
Fnday evening and Saturday

HENRY WELLS
Henry
Wells,
Republican,

p11mar;. Central comm1ltee
posts carry two year terms.
As yet, no petitions have
been flied wtlh the board of
elections HoWever, several
pehllOns are reported m

c1rcu lat10n
candtdates

by

potenltal

been

reelected pres1denl ol the
Meigs County Board of
Commissioners. He is
serving his first full term.

Other members of the
commission are Warden
Ours and Hernard Gilkey,

both Republicans.

Spencer, clerk of courts, and
Wesley Buehl, engmeer
Both the Repubhcans and
the Democrats w1ll elect
central committeemen m the

has

Weather
Ram chang1ng to snow late

lontghl, endtng Wednesday
morning, and then cleanng

Lows tomghl m the upper 20s,
haghs Wednesday 111 the nnd
30s.
Probabaltly
of
prec tpttahon 70 per ce n t

today, 80 per cent tomghl , 30
per cent Wednesday

mornmg persons unknown

heavily

damaged

th e

Ha~n so nvalle Elementary
School
Doors were knocked down,
glass broken out of them,
panels were kicked out and a
large deep freeze full of meal
was stolen.
The mcidenl IS under tn·
vesllgatton .
The department reported
Larry Earl Curttss, 34, Long
Bottom, escaped InJury '" a
stngle car acc adenl Saturday
at 4.30 a.m.
Curltss, lravehng west on
ICY SR 248 shd across it onto
TR 113 and across 1t mlo an
embankment The acCident
occurred one a~d three tenths
mtle east of Chesler. There
was heavy damage lo the
front of the car
1

Chester delegation: answered
A delegatton from Chesler
mqw1 ed of the Mmgs Coumty
Comrmss10ner s

Tuesday

mornmg why lhe proposed
new semor ctttzens center

BEIRUT, LEBANON - MOSLEM AND PALESTINIAN
gunmen .·•tacked Christian vtllages north and south of Beirut cannot be erected on the
lodny m civil warfare that spread across Lebanon. In the commons winch JOins the old
capital, fighting raged mto tts seventh day.
courthouse, at Chester .
Pollee said at least 40 persons were killed and 90 wounded
Mildred Gaul, spokes·
during the past 48 hours, raismg the esltmated toll for mne woman for the group, wanted
months of civtl war to about 8,400 dead aod 17,850 wounded. reasons why the building 1s
Pierce rocket, mortar and machine gun battles that raged gomg to be buill on Mulberry
acroa Beirut spread north to Tripoli agam and south to Heaghts back of the former
villages near the Sadon port overnight when Puiestiman chaldren 's home
guerrillas and,Moslem left1st mtlibamen atwcked Chrl&lt;han Eleanor Thomas, executtve
areas in retaliation for an 11-&lt;lay food blockade aga1nst three dareclor of the Meigs Couinty
Palestinian camps
Council on Agmg, cxplamed
the counctl has a grant of
COLUMBUS - AN OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY
economist said today Ohio's economic and populabon growth
has changed to a ''very slow growth or no growth cond1tion"
and manulaeturmg will not regain the key status it has held in
the state's economy.
James C. Yocum, professor of business research, writmg
In the current ·issue of the "Bulletin of Buslness Research"
Maddleporl vtllage councal
published by the OSU Cen\er fill' Business and Economic
Monday
mght approved the
Research said the greatest growth would be in service in·
dustries. Yocum said manufacturing m Ohio will recover three required readtngs of an
ground lost ln the 197'1-75 recession but despite this, ln 10 years appropnattons ordanance
manufacturing will provide only about 33 per cent of Ohio's provtdtng for expenditru·es of
jobs compared wlth the slightly more than 38 per cent the $365,008.61 for operation~ tn
/the town thts year ~
industries supplied in 1960.
It was pointed out that the
appropnalton
·r1gures mclude
TAlLAHASSEE, FLA. - FLORIDA STATE UN·
all
anltcipated
mcome plus
VERSITY'S new Football Coach Bobby Bowden gave up a
_ head CMching job at the University of West Vlrginis to take ex1stmg balances m varwus
•
the pooltloo at Florida State. Named FSU's coach Monday, the funds
"Economy"
will
be
the key
flamboyant Bowden succeeds Darrell Mudra, who was fired
word
m
Middleport,
Mayor
after winning only four games m two years and having sharp
Fred
Hoffman
.
and
council
disputes with alumni.
Bowden, who compiled,a 42-26 record smce becoming head agreed since the town wall be
coach at West VIrginia in 1970, has the 14th best won-lost mark penniless Jan . I, 1977 if all of
among current major college coaches. He had a !1-3 record in the appropriated money is
spent.
1975, lncludilll! a Peach Bowl victory.
fund
ap·
General
proprialions whtch total
$$74,436 include council, $576;
Young GOP club to hear senator
mayor, $7.000; clerk, $4,500,
ATHENS - U.S. Senator Athens, Ohio 45701. T1ckets solicttor, $500; bujldmgs,
Robert Tan, Jr. will be guest are $7.50 each
$6,000 , miscellaneous,
$15,000; lrllJisfers, $30,700 ,
speaker at a dmner for the
Ohio Untverslly Young
street hghts, $8 ,000; and
SAM IN SECOND
Republican Club, January 23
hydrants, $2,160.
Sam Flanagan of Parkershere. The dinner ts the
Safety fund appropnations
campus Republican Club's burg, W. Va .. and a naltve of lola! $38,500; ch1ef of pohce,
Syracuse, Ohio, was second ~.400; other. poht-e, $20,000 ;'
first annual fundralser.
Other guests at the dinner with 1,777 pins after the first rehrement, $3,600; gasoline,
will he U. S. Congressman round tn the $100,000 $3,500; miscellaneous, $1 ,500;
lnvilaltonal
Clarence Mtller, State Showboat
Blowlng
Tournament
1n Las
Senator Oakley Collins, and
Vegas
today.
COFC TO MEET
State Representstlve Claire
The Mtddleport Chamber of
"Buzz" Ball, Jr.
Commerce
will meet ThursThe dinner will be at 7. 15
LOCAL
TEMPS
day
at
The
Marlin
p.m. at Nelson Commons on
Temperature
in
downtown
Restaurant
ut
12
15
p.m.
the Ohio University Campus.
Pomeroy
T
ucfday
at
II
a
m
Midd)eport
merchants
are
Persons desiring llckets to
the dinner should write Linda was 42 degrees under cloudy asked lo attend to reach a
dCCI SIUn nn CVl'IIIOI' hoUr '\
Avedon, 605 College Inn, skies.

$160.000 approved to pur·
chase' and renovate the old
Pomeroy Semor H1gh School
bmld1ng but due to th e
Natwnal Flood Insurance Act
lhe bruldmg was ruled out,
s mce It ts in a £load prone

area
The -reason they chose the
stle behand the former
chtldren's home 1s because
the properly is county owned,
and the village of Pomeroy 1s
seekmg a $100,000 grant to
e1·ecl a commwuty building
m connection wtth the semor
citizen's bmidmg. It also was
necessary that a site be

selected w1thm a fixed penod sub..ctlvtslon regula_tlOns
of ltme, Mrs. Thomas satd .
Crow subdt VISIOn ts a 12Also meeltn g wtth the acre tract along SR 7 m
commJsstoners were Chester Twp tn the Fave
res tdents of the Crow sub- Pomts area.
divisiOn m regard to havmg
In other busaness the
the 1 oad m th&lt;Jt area Im(Contmued oo page 10)
proved The conumsstoners
will grade and d1lch the road
bul it wall be the respon.
stbtlily of the residents to
furmsh ltmeslone Matn·
taming the road w1ll then
become the responstbihly of
Chester Township Trustees.
Any addtltonal develop·
menl m the area wtli have to
ab1de by the Meags Coun tv

Scnpps-Howard Newspapers following the ftrst year o! .::
his lh1rd term as governor
·;:
"The tssues are the same," sa1d Rhodes. "Cnme, :;;
·· unemployment and welfare. We've been saymg that for -~!
years a nd now people are begnming to reahze we were ;::
nght."
.;,
Rhodes saad "we pay $64 06 per head m Ohto" m Aad to :::
Dependent Chi ldren benefits.
·:;
"Southern stales pay $14 hke Mtssissippt," satd Rhodes :::
"South Carolina pays $27 and Alabama pays $29 51
-::
"Thts causes forced migration," Rhodes said. "People:.:;
·
from the south are commg to Ohio because they get more :·;:
welfare here. And we have no residency reqUirements·.·:
anymore so we don't really know how many are commg .:;
here, but we can't take much more of at."
.·:;
"They did the same thing m New York City and that's ·:
why they are m fmancaal trouble m New York," said ..:;
Rhodes.
:::
:: The governor satd unemployment causes mcreases in ..,
.. cnme and welfare and unless Oh1o can f1gure a way to : ;
:: allract new mdustry and keep the old ones, unem- :::
·· ploymenl wall contmue to riSe and welfare and crime will :
destroy the state
•
·
::: "We knew that a long lime ago," sa1d Rhodes. ''Now :..:
·:, everyone's talking about it..
·
.. ;
' Rhodes IS agamst mcreased welfare for the poor, but ·;
, favors tax breaks for mdustry and he was asked tf thiS :;
:· was welfare for the nch?
'
::·; "They can cal11t what they want," sa1d Rhodes. "I'm ;
::: not pro-busmess or antt-labor or pro.;,ommerce. I'm pro- :
::: people and pro-Jobs.
:.:
·
"Unless we can brmg mdustry to thts stale and keep our :.
.:; own industry here , we won't have the jobs we need for our ;
:; peop1e," saad Rhodes. "And lax mcenlives for mduslry :;·
·: wtll do it for us"
.:
Rhodes said for 30 years the government has taken a ··
:; "token-approach" to solvmg social problems like
.: welfare.
"It's the gave-away approach for these people m the
:: tnner ctty," satd Rhodes "They don't want that, they
:: want jobs."
;.;
· "But I have faath m Ohw," sa1d Rhodes, " because we
know what our problems are and we are going to solve :·:
them.
::·.
"We wall get more mduslry here but we'll waat to see :;::: what happens before we go after l&gt;lx abatement agam. :;:
:: The problems with other slates IS that they don 't know ::
: what their problems are."

;:

~

~

:·.•: : •, :·: ····=·=·=·· :· ·:· ·: :· ·=·. : ·=·=·=·=· ·: ;.. •'. ·.· ·:· ·:· . ·: :·· ..· . : .·. .· ·:·.·: ·.... •'•'•' .· ·. '• .·.

Economy a must

.

)

I

radto, $500, and cruiser ,
$1,000,
Cemetery
fund
ap·
propnaltons total $10,307;
employes, $6,700 , clerk, $982;
reltrement, $925, matenals
and supphes, $500, maintenance of eqrupment, $250;
offtce expense, $100; tools
ami
eqmpment, $600 ;

lota hng $10,525, bonds ,
$8,000; interest, $2,025, and
mascellaneous, $500
Sanitary sewer fund total
approprtahons $45,867; clerk,
$7 ,000; employes, $10,250;
retirement , $2,070 ;
miScellaneous, $3,000; pia~ I

nnscellaneous, $250

$17,547; office expense,
$1,000
Federal revenue sharmg
fund , an appropriation of
$15,388 61 for projects whtch
have been or wtll be carrted
out in the town with the
money
Wa ter fund, total ap(Continued on page !0)

Fire eqrupment fund, total
appropnations $4,665;
salaries, $625; retirement,
$37; eqrupmcnl, buildmg and
uhllhes, $3,200; schooling and
convenlton, $315; eqmpment
maintenance. $488
Planmng commtssion fund
total
$1,000;
$500,
nuscellaneous, $500, labor.
Swtmmmg pool fund total
appropnataons $8,710; employes, $4,200, mcidentals,
$1 ,600; chemtcals, $1,000, '
electncaty, $750; Insurance,
$250, and park eqwpment,
$910
Bond

fund

rellrement

BOARD TO MEET
The Gallia-Metgs Com.
muntly Aclton Agency Board
wtll hold its orgamzatlonal
· meetmg Thursday, Jan . 15,
begmmng at 7:30p.m. m the
Cheshire Central offtce. All
regular and alternate board
members are urged to attend
The personnel and budget
ftnancing &lt;"ommiltees will
lllf't•f a1 7 fUll.

(

maintenance and equipment,
$5,000; sewer Improvement,

Fire damages
home furnace
Damages to a fuel oil
furnace were set at $1,000 as
the result of a fire at the Tom
Wtlson residence on old Route
33 at II ·59 a.m. Monday
Pomeroy Ftre
Chaef
Charles Legar said fuel oil
was delivered for the furnace
Monday mormng When tl
was ~~ehghted the furnace
backfared and a fire broke out
m all around the furnace .
Tht!re was some

smoke

dan1age to the home, O\\ned
by
Manning WPbsler.
Pnmeroy . but the fire was
confmed to the baserpent.
\.

-.

f' ,. ,•

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

~

TAKES IN OVER $400,000 - Larry Spencer, Meigs County Clerk of Courts, at his desk
runs totals of figures for the offtce which in 1975 took m well over $400,000 m taxes and
servtce fees.

Clerk topped $400,000
in business.lll;st year
By BOB HOEFLICH
Operahon of the Meigo
Coun ly Clerk of Courts office
- conducted by Larry
Spencer of Racme - 1s big
busmess as attested by the
more than $400,000 collected
by tl\e offtce during 1975.
The biggest collection of
money, of course, during 1975
came from sales tax on

vehtcles and the casual and
use tax, that figure reaching
$371,648 45 The clerk's office
collected $279,444.06 tn sales'
tax and $92,201.39 m the
casual and use Ia~. The
stale's share of the salos tax
r~ceipls is $276,653.55; the
county recetves $2,793.51 Of
the casual and use tax tot~! .
the slate's share ts $1)1,219.27;
the coun ly's share $922 12.
Dunng the vco r the office

collected $26,664 [rom
automotive title activities.
The office issued 10,411
cerltftcales of ltlle, 3,116
notaltons of hen, 1,852
memorandum hlles, 74
salvage titles, 10,764 applications, afftdavi,ts and
ass1gnments or lilies, 761
penalltes, and 244 cet;11fied
coptes of lilies Of the total
collected, t he county's share
IS $21;724.25 while the state's
sl)IIIJ' is $4,929 75. Receipts of
$425 for salvage mspections,
85 an all , wen l to the state
There were 1,314 auto inspechons with $3,942 being
collected Of that total,
$3,613 50 went to the state and
$328 50 to the county.
The clerk's offace assued
125 certificates of lttle on
boats: 13 nolallons uf hen ,

I

five memorandwn ltlles, 128
applicallons, affidavits and
assignments, and five certified copies of title to collect
$218 50 The county's share
was $117.50, the stale's, $41
In addttion, Spencer and hls
staff durmg 1975, had 262 cavil
cases filed which included 127
divorce actions, 42 dassolution
of marnage ac ltons, 61
judgment achons and 51
miscellaneous court actiOns
' winch mcl ~ ded reciprocal
support actums, partitaon of
real estate smls and stmllar
acltons. There were 38
criminal cases flied and 12
cases flied for the Court of
Appeals bringing the overall
total of 332 cases f1ied durmg
the year.
Row1dtng out the business
1Continued on Pllge 10)

•

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