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                  <text>36 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunda~, f'!ov. 23, 1975

Ileal ••• ,

;,')

Of the Bend
1~-r /lob llm'.fli('h

J· .

'
1100,000
' S6

15

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6929lJoo
'

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7910,.

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12/0 417 5

31 bb

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LOT , ,r l!lO. fOOE ,

059 7-18

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•

the Super Santa lottery ticket
CO LUMBUS - " Yes ,
Virginia, there is n Sonia
Claus. He's Super Santa!
Beginning Nov. 25 the Ohio
Lottery will Introduce the
people of Ohio to Super Sonia
:; via Ihe new holiday
promoti onal match game
with winnings up to $\OO,QOO.
The new dollar ticket,
' designed to run for a Pfriod of
' fi ve weeks with the drawing
dales of December 4th, lith,
' 18th, 26th and January 2nd is
: the rtt·st lime the lottery has
. offered a lotto game to the
, public .
Each week four two~Uglt
• numbers, and a four, five and
a six digit number wlll be
drawn for prizes . up to
$100,000. 'Matching the four
: digit •number wlll win $500,
mat ching the five digits will
win $5,QOO, · with the top
winner matching the six digit
number for $100,000.
• By matching all four
Snowflake numbers a player
will win $20,000. Three
: Snowflake numbers matched
I wins the $250, and $10 Is the

~
~ lloli(ay .
.

~ with Cire

Have a very enjoyable holt-

day.

your ,fomtly holiday

If

pl!ms include aome driving.
male sure fiJI or you are here

for the many holidays yot to
come. PLK!oSE DRIVE WITK
CARE.

CARROL K. SNOWDEN

,.

I
14 State

Street

446 - 4~11

Lilt AGocd Nlig/Wr,
S/111 Fnls Tllltr.
S11t1

hn1

hurenc1 Conlplf'lil1
HOftM Orfica:

lkMmlillfl•. liiMis

'

.

.

"

prize for matching any two of
the Snowflake numbers.
"Super Sonia will make -II a
super holiday for many lucky
Ohioons," said Gerald J.
Palronlle;llXecullv.e director
of the Ohio Lollery.
Ten dollar prizes can be
collected throu~h local lot,.

By Rep. Ron James
ference Riffe pointed out that
PROCTORVILLE - The Ohio's economic problems
Ohio House or Represen- are linked to the nation's
talives ga ve final en- economy and , therefore, the
dorsement last week to state's recovery is likely to be
legislation enabling the lengthy and dependent upon
Public utlttties Commission the recovery of the national
o1 Ohio to better scrutinize ·economy . There are, onthe automatic fuel ' ad- rorlunalely, no quick or easy
juslmenl clauses of electric solutions fqr recovery, but
utilities' rare formulas. The the conference will be a
bill, uf whl~h I was the chief . constructive beginni~g in
sponsor, now awJ~iiS the allacklng
the
slate's
Governor's approval;
economic troubles.
The present law , permits
Organization of the
electric ullllties to pass Economic Conference has
through to the ,consumers, begun and ,II will start 1mwithout ·a rate .hearing, ahy mediately Its Investigation of
Increases in · their energy Ohio's economic structure .
productjon costs which have The conference will conclude
occurred since their last rate Its work by January 31.
hearing before the PUCO.
What are your Ideas about
Under H.B. 579, only the how Ohio can Improve its
acquisition and delivery costs economic sllua lion ? I'm
aMOC.\Bied with the purchase Interested In knowing how
of 'fuel could be passed you reel about the matter. My
through to electric con- address Is Rep. Ronald ,
l!lllTlers without rate hearing. , James, The Statehouse,
Such costa as the cost of Columbus, Ohio 43215. Write
readying or refining the fuel soon.
for UliC, storage costs and the
cost , of disposing any fuel
residue could not be passed
through.
The' bill also requires the
MARKET RE;PORT
PUCO to review all fuel
Polnl Pleasant, W.Va.
adjustment cl8uses every six
Nov.!&amp;, 1975
months. In addition, H.B. 579
SLAUGHTER STEERS requires monthly PUCO Good &amp; Choice 900-10000 lbs.
verification or costs passed 34.75.
through to customers of
SLAUGHER HEIFERS electric companies. Any 900 lbs. plus 19.75-20.50.
overcharges would have lobe
SLAUGHTER COWS refunded to the customers Commercial (Fat) 23.50,
affected.
UlilUy 22.25, Canner &amp; Cutter
In another legislative 13.75-18.50, Bulls over 1,000
development, Ohio House lbs. 21-22.90.
Speaker Vernal G. Riffe, Jr.,
VEAL _: Chblce &amp; Prime
has proposed that a blpar- ,100-225 lbs. 51.75, 226-265 lbs.
llsan
conference
of 62.50.
legislators, executive of.
HOGS - U.S. 1--3 190o240
flclals, businessmen, labor lbs. 50.70, U.S. 2-4 2411-260 lbs.
leaders and economists 48.45-60.35, U.S. 2-4 260lbs. up
convene to explore Ohio's 48.75--19.75, Sows, U.S. 1-3 300-economlc weaknesses and 400 lbs. 39.50, U.S. 2-3 4110-li00
strengths in an effort lo lbs. 41.50, Boars 300-600 lbs.
delennlne If. stale govern- 36.75, Pigs (by head) 20-40
ment can do anything to lbs. 12.50-16, 40-00 lbs. Tlbolster the economy.
29.50, 60 lbs. plus 33.
AI a recent news conYEARUNG STEERS -

Market Report

ADMIRAL - MONEY SAVING
is here!
Admiral Super Capacity
Admi ral's Microwave Ovens will cook a
22-lb. turkey or large family sized roasts
with room to spare.

ENERGY WITH
ADMIRAL'S
MICRO-WAVE OVEN.

Super Browning Grill
Admiral's exclusive browning
grill with removable serYing

handles browns up to 6 half
pound hamburgers or 4 mansized steaks the way
you li ke'em.

Save 50% to. 75%

•

Auto Defrost Cycle
A dinner or a snack defrosted and ready to serve in a
matter of minutes.

;

'

UL L1slcd. F.C C AppiO"'ed. Ccrlll tnd lo

cornp!v wtlh the latest ~tllnd tuds otthe u S
Oeparl rncnt ~I HAahh, EducaltOn and Wet hu t!!

•
'

Automatic Cooking
Sicnal light
Automatically lights when
oven Is cooking, and shuts
•&gt;ff at the end Of the
cooking cycle.
Automatic Precision
Timer Control
for accuracy in cooking
just follow the recipe and

set the Automatic Timer
Contralto the specir.ed
time.

a

.

.

- Kathy King, Janis Schmoll, Rhonda Dailey
and Suzy Carpenter - look part. The four were tremendous·iry
IJ'esentlng outlines of their activities before Club members and
a panel of judges. The judges q)ust have had a real struggle in
roming up with the wlmer who was .Suzy Carpenter. You
would have had to hear the talks by the four girtls relating to
their activities and accomplishments to reali2e that you have
been standing still for a number of years. AU four were really
outstanding entries and It's somehow refreshing to know that
young people are getting it all together.
,

1

Fo~ entries

KAREN GRIFFITH, TilE FIRST WOMAN to have been
selected as a member of the ll'eviously all male Ohio State
Marching Band, will be returning home over the Thanksgiving
weekend to appear In the Fall Follies of the Big Bend Minstrel
ASsociation.
Karen has been an active cast member for a number of
years but has not taken part In shows for the past couple of
years due to her studies at Ohio Stale University. Karen will be
feature(on her golden trumpet in the show Saturday night at
Meigs High School and will make a second appearance as a
vocalist providing her own guiLar·accompaniment.
Incidentally, besides working on her master's degree· at
Ohio State University, Karen Is also employed full time in
veterinary medicine at the university.
MEMBERS OF TilE MEIGS BOARD OF ELECTIONS,
the director and the deputy director, are expressing thanks to
the 30 precinct boards for their work at the Nov. 4election. The
election day turned out to be "the loogest day" and one of the
,;roughest" elections In many years what with all of lhe
ballols. Thanks also were expressed lo the county highway
depariment, especially George Perry, who assisted in
distributing surplus fixtures from precinct to precinct.
MRS. RUTH BARTON WHO HAS BEEN a patient in
Camden-Clark Hospital at Parkersburg wi~ be observing her
birthday ~esduy. She would greatly apprectale cards to mark
the occas1on.

CoWity court has
38 cases settled
POMEROY - Twenty-four
defendants were fined and 14
others forfieled bonds In
Meigs County Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Robert E.
Buck were Earl J.
Williamson, Youngstown,
Roger D. Patterson, Marietta
and Keith · M. Krautter,
Minersville, $11 and costs
each, speeding; Wilford Lee
Cotton, Huntlnglon, $12 and
costs, speeding; Georgia M.
Smith, Pomeroy, James F.
·Good &amp; Choice 500-600 lbs. 31133.50, 6011-700 lbs. 29.50-34, 700
lbs. up 34.75.
YEARUNG HEIFERS Good &amp; . Choice 500-600 lbs.
23.75, 6011-700 lbs. 22.70, 700
lbs. up 19.75.
STEER CALVES - 3011-400
lbs. 26.2f&gt;-28, 4oo-500 lbs. 23.2f&gt;27 .50, 500-600 lbs. 25.50.
BABY CALVES (by head )
- Beef 32, Hoi. &amp; Brown
Swiss !&gt;-12, Other 5-11.

Auto hits bridge

.ADMIRAL'S
SUPER ENERGY SAVER!

•I t'(

..

in accidents

,

lery agents. other prizes will
IT'S ALWAYS ENLIGHTENING to learn also of the many
be redeemed at regional hoppies that others carry out sometimes unknown to every~ne
offices or by coqlacling local . except their very close friends and relatives.
regional offices for a mail-In
One of these-people is Bob Tewksbary, Middleport resident
fom1. As is true with aU other and long now a barber In Pomeroy, whO makes some oflhe
Ohio Lottery games, tickets classiest candles you've ever seen as a hobby. Bob, while
can be redeemed up to one vacationing In Gatlinburg, Tenn ., observed the many candle
full year after the drawing makers In that resort area and was fascinated with the
date.
IJ'OCCSSCS. So he studied the hobby and l!xperimented and now
IJ'Oduces numerous candles of various design which are quite
IJ'Ofesslonally done. Bob also Is an active member of the Meigs
Muzzle Loaders Club.

Statehouse view

•

:~-:

POMEROY - Monday night for the first time the Middleport Business and Professional Women's Club held its first
competition for . the selectio~ · of . Meigs County's' '•young

careerist."

.

Seve11 injured

POIMEROY - A car was
heavily damaged and Its
driver was cited to mayor's
court as the result of an accident on West Main St., at 3
a.m. Saturday.
Police said Joe Moore, Jr.,
63, New Haven, W. Va.,
· driving west, in turning oryto
the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
hit the bridge. Moore, taken
to Veterans Memorial
Hospital, was kept until
morning when he was
released. He was charged
with reckless operation .
FIRM CHARGED
COLUMBUS tUPI)_
Condomart International,
Inc., Wilmington, Del., was
charged Friday by Ohio
Attorney General William
Brown Friday with deeeptive
jraclices in the sale of an
overseas travel' package to
five Ohio high schools.
Named defendants in the suit
filed In Franklin Couniy
Common Pleas Court were
Condomart, doing business as
Youth Travel Abroad, and U.s
principal office, A. Lewis
Barnes of New York. They
were charged with failing to
make delivery on advetlised
g&lt;•ds and services .

Veeter, Winter Springs, Fla.,
Edit~! H. Reed, Athens, Roger
Lee Kruger, Belpre, and
Vance
H.
Delong,
Senecaville, $13 and costs
each, speeding.
Robert C. Wellzheimer,
Logan, $8 and costs,
speeding; Dianne Bupm,
Glouster, $14 and costs,
speeding; Jake W. Seth,
Buffalo, Minn., $10 and costs,
changing lanes without
caution; Harry W. Showalter,
Washington, C. H., and Owen
K. Kisar, Carbondale, $9 and
cos.ts each, speeding; Robert
L. Sellers, East Liverpook,
$100 and costs, attempting to
lake deer in closed season;
Robert Caplan, Athens, $30
and costs, speeding; James
B. Smith, Rt. I, Reedsville,
$20 and costs, failure to stop
within
assured
clear
distance.
Sheila R. Whaley, Rt. I,
Shade, $15 and costs,
speeding; Marvin E. Allen,
Racine, $9 and costs,
speeding ; .Daniel Swisher,
Rt. I, Cheshire, $8 and costs,
speeding ; Robert L. Dugan,
Rulland, $150 and costs, three
days confinement, driving
while Intoxicated, $100 and
costs, no operators license;
~thur J. Rumfield, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy , $150 and costs,
three days confinement,
driving while intoxicated;
Michael Barker, C~arleston,
$100 and costs, five days
confinement, possession of
deer in closed season, $150
and costs, aiding In atlempllng to take deer In
closed season; Joseph D.
Thomas, Charleston, $100 and
costs, possession of deer in
closed season: ·
Forfeiting bonds were
Michael R. Stewart, HI. 2,
Cheshire, Ronald K. James,
Catleltsburg, Ky., Ronald L.
Kuntz, Kent, Marshall A.
Miller, Beverly, William K.
Thomas, Brunswick, Donald
Smoot, Soulh Point, Dale E.
Chapman, Columbus, Neil B.
Thornasclk, fl. Wayne, Ind.,
Ronald E. Swisher, Marietta,
Leland E. Brown, Middleport, and Lawrence T.
Minnick, Steubenville, $27.50
each. spee~ing; Robert W.
Quillen, Mason, and I..evi A.
Partlow, Rl. 3, Pomeroy,
$357 .50,' drivin g while intuxica led.

BAZAAR ITEMS PREPARED - Patty Brogan, left, and Linda King display n sampling of the handmade items to be featured at the annual Christmas bazaar of Ohio Eta Phi
Olapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Soturday, Nov . 29 nt Trinity
Olurch in Pomeroy. Baked items and homemade goods will also be sold. The articles piclured are on display in the lobby of the Pomeroy National Bank. '

MEETING ENDS
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - The
annual two day mee ting of
the American Associa tion for
Cancer Education, hosted by
the University of Cincinnati

YOUR CilRISTMAS GIIT HF.ADOUARTERS

HOLIDAY
COAT SALE

one tenth miles east of Rt .
e n ~ in e

:125. The

I

on her car

stalled causing the power
steering unit to fa il. The
vehicle slid off the highway
into a dit ch. Mrs. Dray had

ON ANEW
FALL COAT
DURING THIS
THREE-DAY·
SALE!

...

minor injuries but was not

I'

immediately trea ted ,
Another inju ry mi shap

•

""

occurred at 3:45a .m. Sunday

. on Rt. 218, six and two tenths
miles squth of Rt. 7 where
Richard Clary, 19, Hl. I,
Crown Ci ly , lost control of his
car which ran orr the left side
uf I he highway striking a
dit ch li nd emba nkmen t
before turning over on its top .
Clary was taken to the
·Holzer Medical Center for
treatment of his injuries.
Jackie Freeman, 41 ,
Pomeroy, was charged with
fai\ure to slop within the
assured clear distance
following an accident at 4
p.m. Sunday on Rl. 7, one and
two tenths miles north of
Gallipolis. The patrol said
Freeman's car struck the
rear end of a vehicle opera ted
by Steve Be tz, 27, of
Gallipolis.
Ron Brezinski , 20, Rt. 3,
Washington, Pa.. wa s
charged with DWI following
an· accident at 4:50 a.m.
Sunday on Rt. 33 at the
junction of 681.
Officers said Brezinski lost
control of his car which ran
o£f the road and struck a
telephone pole .
A deer was killed in an
accident at 6: 16 P-11\.
Soturday on Rt. 325, eight
tenths of a mile south or Rt.
124 in Meigs County. The
animal ran into the path of a
car operated by May Napper,
48, Rl. I, Langsville.

PRIOLO , SICU.Y - THE U.S. GUIDED missile cruiser
Belknap, its superstructure sheared off like a tin can in a fiery
collision with an American aircraft carrier, docked safely at
dawn today. But the Belknap's crew raised the Stars and
Stripes over the twisted, blackened deck of their crippled
cruiser at 8a.m. - right on traditional Navy schedule.
Four men, three from the Belknap and one from the
·carrier John F. Kennedy, were•killed and 45 others injured in
the crash late Saturday In the Ionian Sea. Four Belknap
crewmen were mlssjng. "There was chaos," says Belknap
crewman U . Com. Rick Foley, 35, of Virginia Beach, Virginia.
You think of a crash like an auto crash, but this is seemed
lasted 15, 30 seconds," he Sllid. "There was no sudden impact ,
just shuddering and vibrating, followed by deadly silence then
people yelling instructions.

Monday • Tuesday • Wednesday
On~ Our Entire Stock of Women's
and Girls Coats Is Included.
•MISSES

BEIRUT, LEBANON - GUNFIGHTS RAGED across
war-tom Beirut today, paralyzing the capital and leaving
hospitals filled to overflowing. Premier Rashid Karaml called
rival political leaders Into an emergency session to try and
restore Saturday's ceaseflre - lhe 13th In !Oweeks.
The shooting between rival Christian and Moslem militias
cleared the streets in the downtown commercial sector and all
northern entrances to the city were declared unsafe. At least 60
persons were kUied and 200 wounded In Beirut's bloodiest
weekend In three weeks. A French peace envoy was nearly
killed Sonday In a mortar attack near the French ambassador's residence.

•JUNIORS

•HALF SIZES
ePRETEENS
eGIRLS 4 TO 14

On the 1st f loor - mens
and boys departm ent.

WASHINGTON - TilE STATUS OF DANIEL Patrick
Moynihan as U. S. ambsssador to the United Nations may be
about to change. He has told friends be is unhappy about lack
of support from the White House for his strident speeches, and
U. N. delegates from allied nations have complained that his
outspokenness has needlessly antagonized nonaligned coun tries.
AlthoURh Moynihan told reporters Friday he had not
resigned, the subject of his future at the United Nations was
likely to come up today at a meeting with President Ford at the
White House. White House press secretary Ron Nessen said
Saturday both Ford and Secretary of State Henry Kissinger
want Moynihan to stay In and the post he has held since June.

·Holiday
JACKET
SALE

WASHINGTON - HIGHER ENERGY PRICES will
reignite the recession unless the federal government expands
the money supply or reduces tues, according to a Brookings
Institution paper. George Perry, an economist, said In the
paper published Sunday by the nonprofit research
(Conllnued on page 12)

Save 25%
Includes all of our mens jackets,
sizes 36 to 54 - Boys jackets sizes
8 to 20 and luvenile size boys
jackets sizes 2 to 7. An excell ent
selection in .all sizes.
·

Weather
Cloudy
ton ig ht and
Tuesday , chance of light
snow. Low tonight in the
upper '20s. High Tuesday In
the mid 30s. Probability or
precipitation •H) per cent
today, 40 per cent tonight, 30
per cenl Tuesday.

·TUESDAY· WEDNESDAY ONLY

SELECT YOURS NOW AND SAVE DURING THIS SALE.
Main Store, Annex and Warehouse-Toyland open this week 'Monday,
Tuesday and Wednesday 9:30 to 5 (Closed Thanksgiving Day) .

EIberfeIds In Pom ero,

NOWYQUKNOW
A seven-Inch North Africa n

&gt;

ostrich egg lakes 40 minutes
to boll.

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DAY

•

CHRISTMAS

,.

.(

PAGEANT WINNERS - Becky Sayre, left, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Say re, a
student at Southern High School, was crowned Southeast Ohio Junior Miss Sunday afternoon
at Meigs Jr. High In .the Junior Miss Pageant, and Jamisue Mcllwain, Ironton, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. McDwain, was crowned Southern Ohio Junior Miss. Miss Sayre also captured
the talent, Youth Fitness and Scholastic Awards. Director of the pagean t was Ralph H.
Werry and Pat White and Tonya Keebaugh were coordinators. John Kerr , Jr., was master
of ceremonies. Music was provided by Dwight Goins and Randy Hunt.

•

U evoll~d

VOL XXVII

NO. 157

MORE WINNERS - Other winners in the Southeast Ohio Junior Miss Pageant Sunday
were 1-r, Melania Waldnlg, Southern High School, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Waldnig, was Southeast Ohio second 111nner-up; Christy McDonald, Southern Ohio first runnerup, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Olarles McDonald, Nelsonville-York, and Patsy McFadden,
also Nelsonville York, daughter of Mrs . Virginia McFadden and Lade! McFadden, was
Southeast Ohio first runner-up. Miss McDonald and Miss McFadden received the Spirit
awards. Judges were Richard Johnson, Janet Korn , John Zell, Susie Carpenter and Dean
Lulz.

at y

e

To 'J'he

lrriere.~lN

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

enttne

oj'1'he Meigs -Masun Area
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1975

PRICE 15'

Governors take
stands on issues
Uwted .l'ress lntematlonal
A dozen Republican governors were In Wichita, Kan.,
during
the
weekend
discussing what they saw as
the issues upon which the 1976
may turn. Seven Democratic
presidential candidates were
in Louisvllle, Ky., doing the
same thing.
About 2,0110 persons attended the · lle!Mcratle
•furwn. But em Satuiaay about
an equal niJ!Ilber demonstrated outside the convention hall protesting courtordered busing, an issue not
originally on the conference
agenda.
An antibusing leader was
allowed to address the forum
Sonday bul got a cool recep-

By United Press International
WASHINGTON - TilE GOVERNMENT IS hiring more
grain watchers to watch the grain watchers following scandalous disclosures In the grain trade. David R. Galllart, head
of the grain division of the Agrlcullure Department's
marketing !!el'Vice, said 25 new supervisors already h&amp;ve beoo •
hired and the number of Inspectors of the have reached 200 by
next sutruner.
Grain trade Is governed by prfvale inspectors who grade
and weigh the commodities under license. However, abuses,
including bribes, have been disclosed and the department was
called upon by Congress to improve the grain inspection
system.

SAVE 25%

MON~AY

Seven persons were injured
in seven separate traffic
-accidents investigated over
the weekend by the Gallia:
Meigs Post State Highway
Patrol.
· Thr~e persons were injured
in an accidenf at 2•40 p.m.
Saturday on Rt. 7, County
Road 5. An auto driven by
Ted Sir om, . 59, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, pulled into thepath
or a car driven by Lois
Rosenbaum, 39, of Pomeroy .
· Strom· was injured along
with a passenger in his ca r,
Leora Strom and a
passeng e r , · Dou glas
Rosenbaum who was in the
other vehicle. They were
taken to the Davis Clinic in
Middleport for treatment of
. cuts and abrasions. Strom
was charged with failure to
yield the right of way.
Two oersons w~r~ ini11rerl
at 5:15p.m. Saturday on Rt.
554, one and three tenths
miles west of County Road 3
ifi Gallia County. Emerson
Spires, 67, Rt. I, Cheshire,
lost control of his car which
ran off the highway, went into
a ditch and overturned .
Spires was taken' to the
Holzer Medical Center by the
Middlepor t Emergency
Squad for treatment of head
and shoulder in juries. 'A,
passenger, Rita Spires, was
transported to the hospital by
the Gallia County Volunteer
Emergency Squad. She had a
fractured arm and facial
injuries. There was heavy
damage to his car. No
citation was issued.
Alice Dra y, 27, Rl. 2,
Patriot, suffered injuries in a,
single car accident Saturday
on Tom Woods Rd. one and

1WO SOWISTS - Two of the dance soloists of the
Fall Follies Soturday night will be Esther Lowery, left ,
doing a toe number of "Solace" and June Wamsley, a
comedy tap to "Georgia Porcupine ."

lion. Sen. George McGovern, and government's inability to
the party's 1972 presidential deliver quality services could
candidate, told the delegates hurt President Ford's
that busing - more par- chances next year more than
ticularly the issue of in- any opponent.
tegration - is a voter conPollster louis Harris told
cern most of the Democratic the governors Saturday the
conlenders are Ignoring.
public has grown farther
McGovern, who said he apart from its political
would like to be nominated leaders in recent years. "The
again If next year's con- gulf between the pubUc and
venti1111J ia..deadloclted, IBid lta leadership baa rarelr liMn
"aU of us shl)uld· wam ·any so wide or deep,'' he said,
candidate who turns to the pqinting to polls showing a
tactic of racial division and sharp drop in Americans'
fear that in conscience we confidence In big business
should not support him even and the presidency.
If he is the nominee."
He also said most voters
Among the candidates pre- believe the Republicans are
sent, Sens. Henry Jackson dominated by big business
and Lloyd Bentsen said they and that its influence on
oppose busing.
national pqllcy must end.
The issue worrying the
Nine of the 12 governors at
Republican governors was the meeting signed a leiter of
the economy. Five of them support for President Ford in
appeared Sonday on ABC 's his battle against Ronald
Issues and Answers and Reagan for the GOP nominaspeculated thai lnflalion , tion .
high taxes, unemploy;n.~~~ .. ............................ .. .... .. .. ..

l:~: :·~:,;:::· :-::~:::;··;::· :·;~;:-:-:-:- :-:-[!1

.Fall Follies
are revived
The greatest range of variety in the over 20 years
existence of the Big Bend Minstrel Association will be offered
Saturday night at 8 •10 p.m. when the curtain goes up at Meigs
High School on the group's revived , "Fall Follies."
Adding to the variety of this year's presentation, featuring
not only veteran performers of the organization but several
newcomers, will be such artists as Bill Clark , who will be .
featured on his banjo; Karen Griffith, the first woman student
to be selected for membership in the previously all-male Ohio
State University Marching Band, who will return home to
present not only a trumpet number but will be appearing
vocally providing her own guitar accompaniment ; the
acrobatic work of a group of Meigs High School students including Paige Smith, Merri Aull , Shari Mitch, Jackie Brown,
Jane Sisson, Cathy Blaellnar, Lori Wood and Stephannie
Rough; comedy monologues by Allee Nease, Katie Crow and
Jayne Lee Hoeflich; two new vocal trios, and a novelty dance
by Cindy Paller son hidden. under a huge hat.
The dancers, Merri Auit, Cindy Patterson, Becki Fry,
Teresa Taylor, Esther Lowery, Christy Hess, Susan Wright,
Melody Snouffer, June Wamsley, Kim Krautter , Rhonda
Hudson, Marcia Dillard, Ann Pcarch, Velvet Swisher, Jane
Sisson and paige Smith will open the show with "That's Entertainment.''
Clark.and his banjo will prsent "Bye, Bye Blues" and a new
vocal trio, composed or' Roberta Kraeuter Malden, Bill Young
and Larry Brogan, all former soloists of the association, will
sing "Rocky Mountain High" with Brogan on the gut tar. The
group will make a second appearance later in the show doing
"Crooked Ultle Man."
Veteran pertormer June Van Vrankcn will sing "Moo;! lndogo" and Kalie Crow will be featured in a comedy sktl as
"Binnie Mearl .'' A line of 16 girls will sing·and dance, "Give
Me a I.Jtlle Kiss."
Miss Griffith will make her firsl appearance vocally and on
the guitar doing "Help 1-(!e Through the Night" and .Jim Soulsby, another veteran of the show, will do 11 musical reading. The
talent of Alice Nease will be presented with the vocal ·•Mobile"
hacked by a line of Southern belles, Kim Kraulter , Cindy
Patterson , Marcia Dillard, Bunny McGraw and Robin
Snowden.
(Continued on page 8),

\\:Woody Hayes for $1 million

i\)j

:::: CHICAGO (UPI ) - Chicago Son-Times columnist Bob
) Greene suggested today a $1 million bond issue be floated
•:::to buy Ohio State football Coach Woody Hayes for the
:':~wntrodden Olicago Bears.
:;:; " Woody Hayes and Chicago. Think how wonderfully
::::they fit together," wrote Greene.
:::: " Mean. Coldblooded. Vengeful. Savage. Brutal.
:;::vicious. Violent. Foul4empered. Spiteful In defeat. In:::~offerable in victory. Malicious. Disagreeable. Brutish .
{Belligerent. Hostile. Bullying. Remorseless.
:;:; "It is a marriage made in heave n. No more will there be
:::news of Bears players buying interests in trendy
( discotheques and chic restaurants. Discotheques? Under
::woody, the Chicago Bears will be locked In their cells al8
:::~·clock every night. They will need a map lo find Rush
.;::Street or Division Street. Under Woody, the Bears wlll be
}one thing : bloodthirsty, hungry singiWJinded footbsll
( players. Winners.
} "And to those few Chicagoans who may complain that
}::this is placing our priorities in the wrong place; thal
:::winning should not be considered so important, that to
:;:;place such stress on victory is oldfashioned and anti-.'!OCial
;:•:and against every humanistic principle of modern-day

::i

t

;';:
{
:;:;
:•::
:::\
:;:;
:::

•t

:::·

: ~ivilization ?

UNIQUE ROUTINE - Underneath this costume is
Cindy Patterson who will be presenting a unique dance
routine to "Fancy Pants" in Saturday night's Fall Follies.

•••: "Well, the only answer to them is the quintessential
}Woody Hayes quote •
:.' •'.·.•
;:;; '"Without winners, there wouldn't even be any god( ctamned civilization.'"

r
: ~;~: : : : : : : : : : : : :: : : : : : :·:::· : : ·:·: ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: ·:· :·: :: :·: : : : : :; :;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ::: :::: : ::: ;:;:;: ::: : :;:; :;::::~:~::

Walter Cleland dies of heart attack Sunday
RACINF. - Waller Cleland ,
64. widely kn own Racine
resident, di ed Sunday afternoon at
Vetera ns
Memm·ial Hospital wh et·e he
had bee n taken cmlier in the
day bi· the llucinc F.-R squad .
Dea th was attribut ed to a
he;:u·! rltlat k.

Mr. Clelaad was a member
of the Had ne Baptist Church,
the IOOF Lodge , and had
been chief . of the Racine.
Emergency squad 24 years .
He \HISs crr tury - trcH surer
of the Ha f'inc Fil·c Dept. and
had b~e n &lt;'lllployrfi by the

Ohio Liquor Department £or
the past 31 years. Mr . Cleland
had been manager of the
stale liquor store in Pomeroy
the past four years.
Born Aug. :lO, 1911, Mr.
Cleland was the son of the
lute Okey and Bla nche
Manuel Cleland . He is survived by his wife, Mae; seven
suns, Allen of New Cumberland, W. Va .; George, o£
Ashley, Ohio; David, Pearl
an d Carroll, all of Racine ;
John of · Parkersburg, and
Bruce of Pomeroy • a
daughter. Mury Slutcr of

Racine; a brother, F'rank , of
Racine; 18 gran dchildr en.
and several ni eces and
nephews.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the
Ewing Funera l Home wi th
the Hev. W. H. Perrin ofCLOTHINGOFFERED
Free Clothing Day will be
held at the Salvation Army,
115 Butternut. Pomeroy on
Wednesday , Nov. 26 £rom 10
a.m. until noon. All area
residents in need of clothing
~lrC welcome .

ficialing. Burial will be in the
Letart Falls Cemetery .
Friends may call at lhe
funeral home any lime after 7
this evening.
EXTENDED FORECAST
Wednesday through
Friday. fair Wednesday
and Thursday, and chance
of showers Friday. Highs
Wednesday In the upper ZOs
and 30s, with lows In the
teens and low 20s. Warming by Friday to hlgbs In
the upper fOs and 50s and
luws In the 30s.

�J-

2- The Da ily ~ nt inel, Midctle!Xlrt-Pomero)', 0., Nov. 24, 1975

Turkey Day alumni football teams get ready

Bohr: 'Athletes must want to win'

Today's
.

'

J.ne uauy ~nu~ 1muweporl-t'omeroy. u ., J'l~OV z~~:, Hill!

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

Second alumni Thanksgiving Day

IJ
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
ME,IGS· MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL

game is 2:30 p. m. on Thursday

Exec . Ed .

ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
Pwbl i shed d a l t y exc ep t

The sOOlnd annual alumni game between graduates of Middleport, ·Pomeroy,
Rutland and Meigs high schools will be played on Thanksgiving Day afternoon at %:30,
This year's clash will be on the old Middleport High School field - the present
Meigs Junior High field. Each team has approximately 30 players with some having
graduated over 10 years ago ,
The Pomeroy team practiced at the Rutland field Sunday sharpening work on
!heir rwmfng and passing game (lop two pictures).
. The Middleport squad, also practicing Sunday at the Middleport field, worked on
defense and their game plan (bottom pictures). Both coaches arc optimistic about the
outcome of the Turkey Day event won last year by Pomeroy,'"'·
The game Is being played for the benefit of the Meigs County Unit of the American
Cancer Society, Tickets may be purchased from participating players or at the gate.

s a ~ urday by The Oh io Vall ey

P ubl is h i ng compa n y , Il l
Cour t 5 !., Pom er oy , Ohio
~5 7 69 . Busi nes s Off ice P hone
99 ' 215 6. E d lloria l P hon e 991 .

? 157 .

Secon d c la ss pos tag e p a id
at P om er oy . Oh io .
Nat i onal
a d ve rt is ing
r e pr e sen tat ive
Ward G r i ff i th Co mp a n y . Inc .,
Botti ne ll i &amp; Gallagh er Di v .•
75 ! T h ir d A'lle .• New York ,
N Y 10017 .
S u b sc r i pt t o n
ral e s :
D eli ve re d by car r i er wher e
ava il a bl e 75 ce'nts p er week .
By M o to r R out e wh er e
c ar r ie r
se r vice
n ot
ava il ab l e . One m on lh , S3.25 .
By ma il i n Ohi o and W . V a ..
On e Ye ar , \2 2. 00 ;
Si x
mo nths ,
$ 11.5 0 ;
T h re e
months , Sl .OO . El se wh er e
26.00 yea r, Six mon t h s

13.50;,
ee pr1c
monelhS,
ubscrtp1hr
l tOn
tnc 57.50.
ludes J
unda y Tim es Sen Hne l.

_

Five guards held hostage
NEW YORK !UP I) About 1,600 inmates of the
Rikers Island men 's prison
overpowered their jailers
Sunday night . and held five
guards hostage , officials
reported.
There were no reports of
any Injuries. The inmates,
armed with mop handles,
lll"ooms and metal spears,
made no threats against the
hostages, officials said, but
they presented a list of eight
demandstodayforchangesin
prison conditions.
Hundreds of police and
correction officers were
massed near the prison with
gas masks, helmets and
nightsticks. Police launches
circled the island and guards

DR. LAMB
Good posture through exercise
lly l.a"r.' nct• E. l.:tmb, AI.IJ.
DE:A H DR . LAM B ~
Please tell me what exercises
;treng llwn the muscles lhul
will help me k e ~p my
;bould ers ln1ck? What ones
pull my shoulders forward'
DE:AR HF.: ADEH - Usi ng
proper exercise routines to
maintain good pos tw·e is
importan t to your health.
Keeping the shoulders back
and HvOiding compression of
the r ibs helps mainta in
nor mal respir at ion. Th nse
wh o want

to know wh;11

exercises to usc for post ure
r
shpulcl sc•11d 50 cents for The
! Hcallh Letter num ber 1-111.
,. F.xerclsc, Posture, Strength.
Address your letler to me in
• care of this newspaper, P. 0 .
Box 1551 , Radio City Stalion.
New Yor ~ . NY 10019. Send a
long ,
stamped ,
se lfjddre'Sed enve lope for
mai ling.
Any of lhr exerdsr &lt; llwt
(

I

rotate the arms backward.
li ke lht• back stroke in
swinnu l11g, will contract the
musc les

be tw een

yo ur

shoulder blndcs and help pull
vour shoulders back. These
r•m be do11e usin g pulle)'
weights or other clevices to
load the movemenl.
The opposit e movement , as
if you were ~ olng Ihe cra wl or
swim m in~ forward. uses the
muscles over I he front of your
ches t a11ct pu ll s your
shoulders forward .
Keep ing this principle in
mind .1 011 can see thai usi n~
strrt ch springs or anylhin ~
thul

1·equi res

greate r·

Hlrcngt h in rotin g your· anns
backward will help keep t11 e
slwuldcrs back.
DE:A R DR . LA MB ~ Your
&lt;'OIW11n regarding the· Wry
Neck was of parlicular inINest to me. My neck and
mouth sometimC's get in the
wuy uf I hi~ ""· il1!Wrlt·ntl. hut

1 am reminded

of an article
wri lien by a Harvey Graham
in which he recowits a must
·•sure cure for Wry Neck as
'approved' by the English
Barbars.SUI·geons" under the
impri malure of no less than
William Clowes · cirurglonto-His Majesty Henry Vlff as
follows :
"Wr)• neck is due to the
fi xed contraction of a long
musclt• which ari ses beh ind
the ear, sweeps down the
neck and Is inserted in to lhe
Inner end of the collar-bone :
this cunt raclion ca uses the
hrad to be pc1·petoall y bent
furward and twisted to one
side . Tho operat ion wa s
simply Ihe se vering of I he
fi xed and fibrous musclt so
that the head could swi n~
bat k to a more normal
posi tion.
'· Th is ope ratio n was
usually perfnnncd on the
Villa l!f' c;l't\t• n 1o 1hr uc.
"o'

companimenl of cla shi11g
cymbals, which served the
dual fun ction of advertising
the presence of the operator
and drowning Ihe howls of fhe
palien l. A short , sharp knife
was jabbed into the neck, just
above the collar-bene, and
out side the fix ed tendon of the
affecled muscle. It was swept
quickly inwards, severing Ihe
contracted tendon and lhcn
wilhdrawn. The twisled head
was restored to a normal
po sili~n with sensati onal
suddenness; a dressing of
cotton and egg whil e was
applied and Ihe operation was
over!
"Only occasionally were
th e great bl ood vessels,
directly under the muscle.
affected . This was fortunate
since such an accidenl was
almost invariabl y fatal. "
DEAH READER - Thank
you for a good laugh. I
cnuldn 'I resisl sharing Ihis
little gem with ri1y readers. II
should serv e lo remind
everyone how fortWlate we
all are lo ge t the kind of
medical lreatmenl available
today. II wasn't always so as
you1· story ctemor slrales so
vividly.
Such a treatment does 1·un
the risk of severing the arteries and veins In Ihe neck. II
Is closely akin to having your
throat cui. The proper
lrealin ent of a wry neck has
lobe ba sed on a careful sfudy
of the palil'nl lo delerminc
what iRcauHing it.

patrolled the only bridge versations seem to be getting
leading to the prison Com- somewhere.''
plex, which is in the East
" We 're going to keep
River near LaGuardia Air- talking in the hope we can
•
port.
reso lve this peacefully,"
Prisoners mel with officials Birnbaum said, adding,
and four newsmen early however, the situation was
today and gave a list of eight "extremely , potentially
demands. Quickly agreeing dangerous " and the inmates
to one of the inmates ' were "belligerent and have
grievances, prison officials expressed a great deal of
said they would assign more anger ."
Bert Wilson, a newsman
guards to the fa cility by
Wednesday.
wh o
joined
in
the
The commissioner of the negotiations, said he saw two
city correction department, of the hostages and "they are
Benjamin Malcolm, said the in good shape. " He described
hostages were held in two of the uprising as "organized ...
the five cell blocks controlled there is a leader in each cell
by prisoners. Inmates of block."
The disturbance began at
three other cell blocks were
out of their cells, he said, and about 9:30 p.m., just as tbe
prisoners in the jail's two inmates were concluding
other sections remained in their recreation period and
were about to be locked in for
their cells.
Each block of 240 cells the night. Malcolm said the
holds 300 to 400 prisoners, prisoners, normally kept out
officials said.
of their cells 8 to 10 hours a
Malcolm 's deputy , Jack day , "look over blocks with
Birnbaum, said "the con- manpower, massive man~

power.,

Court cases
in Meigs filed
Cases Wed since Saturday
in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court :
Mary !': Ii za beth Morri s.
Pomeroy , is sui ng to quiet
Iitle aga in st Geral d E.
Rought and Ellen Rough,
Pomeroy . The properly is
located in Pomeroy.
William W. Smith, Glenwood, W. Va., filed a suit for
$2,460.50 naming E:mployers
Insurance Co. of Wausau, N.
Y. defendant. Smith was
injured at Meigs Mine
Number 2. he alleges.
Filing for dissolution of

marr iage were Jo Ann

Only a few guards were on
duty at the time, he said.
Federal Judge Morris
Lasker , who ordered the
Manhattan
House
of
Detention closed because of
overcrowding and other
abuses, was summoned to the
scene at the . prisoners' insistence.
Lasker has been hearing
two class-action suits bcought
by inmates in ·an effort to
Improve prison conditions.
The prisoners' other
demands included Improved
medical
treatment ,
elimination of mice and
roaches and a reduction of
the jail's population.
They also demanded longer
visiting hours, an increase in
the number of phone caDs
they are allowed and greater
accountability for guards in
their dealing with prisoners.

McLaughlin, Pomeroy, and
J ohn
E. Mc La ughlin,
Pomeroy, and Sandra C.
Griffith , HI. I, Reedsville and
E:arl E. Griffith, same ad·
dress.
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
Sharon Ward, Middleport,
SATURDAY ' S OHIO
filed sui! lor divorce against
HIGH SCHOOL
BASKETBALL RESULTS
Wilbur Leo Ward ,' Middleporl
United Pre ss International
on charges of gros;; neglect of Col Eatmoo r 71 Athe ns 55
Col Sout h 58 Mar ion Hardi ng
dut y and extreme cruelly.
ss
Brady Edgar Sayre was Ohio De af 71 Se ve n H ills 2J
idgewood 79 We 'it Holmes 63.
gran led a divorce ft·om Sa lly HP. iq
h iAnd Sa Wayncd a le .t6
Anne ~ yre on charges of Ross. Southeastern 98 P ike
l:nst('r ll n
gross nipllecl of duly.

NEW YORK I UPI) - Everybody likes to make a good first
bmpression . That's only natural and Ken Shipp is no different.
He thinks the same way everybody else does, that winning
the first game makes winning the second one that much easier.
So as coach of the unimaginably pitiful New York Jets, having
been moved into the breach and "promoted" from being their
Qffensive coordinator, he came up with this Idea of his.
He would 'ask the,fans to become involved.
Why not? What could he lose? ·
The Jets had won only twice before all year. Th~y had lost
seven of their nine games and along with that they also had lost
whatever was left of their pride as well as their coach, Charley
WiMer. He was fired.
The perfect way for the fans to become involved, Ken Shipp
felt, was for them to get behind the Jets' players and support
them. He asked the fans to cheer the players, not boo tl~m­
Now that would be something new and who knows, It m1ght
motivate the players to the point where they would tum some
things around. Like maybe the final score._
The Jets did not receive the cheers Ken Shipp had asked for
when they were introduced at Shea Sladlum before Sunday's
game with the St. Louis Cardinals. They were booed. The Jets
pretended they didn't hear it. The players sprinted toward the
center of the field and lf you didn't know better you'dlhlnk
they were coming out for the start ofthe Super BowL
Up in the radio booth, Marty Glickman, doing the play-byplay, told his listening audience the Jets players looked
"determined, quiet, and like a sober team."
The Jets kicked off to open tbe game and as lf to show the
crowd of 53,169 they meant business, they swarmed all over
Gary Hammond, who returned the hall for the Cards, They
were so eager to bring down Hammond, they were a little
overzealous. The referee called them for piling on. Penalty, 15
yards.
Never mind. They were going to get those cheers yet.
Less than five minutes after the game started, they went in
fronl , ~. on Pat Leahy's 47-yard field goal.
There were some cheers. Only a few. You had to liJten
carefully to hear them. The Jets' lead lasted about as long as
raw hamburger does in front of a wolf. On a quick draw, Terry
Metcalf scooted 52 yards for a St. Louis touchdown. That
brought groans which graduated into full-blown boos again
when the Cardinals padded their lead to 20-3 by the end ol the
ru-st quarter.
.
By haiWme, the Cards' margin had burgeoned to »6 and lf
this wasn't a runaw.ay, it c.ertainly would do until the real thing
came along.
The Cardinals decbmated the Jets, 37~, with a suspicion they
were saving themselves because they have a Thanksgiving
Day date with the Buffalo BIDs.
There were few boos for the Jets at the end of the game. Most
of the fans had left and th011e who were still there simply didn't
care anymore. That, I think, puts them in the same category
with the Jets' players.

Swt"ck se•'L s new mark

United Press International
the third quarter provided the.
University of Toledo go-ahead score.
quarterback Gene Swick
Tangerine Bowl-bound_
closed his collegiate career Miami closed out Ita llelliOII
with an assault on the record with a lll-1 record.
books, becoming the first
Quarterback Sherman
collegian ever to amass more Smith accounted for two
than 8,000 yards Saturday touchdownsand tailback Rob
when the Rockets defeated Carpenter rushed UO yardl
Kent State 33-28.
for the Redsldns, who wtll be
Wittenberg University making their third ltralght
defeated Indiana Central 17- appearance in Ute Tangerine
13 in an NCAA Division III Bowl as MAC champlona.
playoff game to advance into UTA quarterback Doug
the division seml.finals.
Dobtlna scrambled for a twoElsewhere in Ohio college yard touchdown with 3~
foot hall, Ohio State won the seconds to go to atop Bowlinl
Big Ten Conference Iitle Green.
outright and Its un·
precedented fourth straight
trip to the Rose Bowl with a
hard-fought 21·14 win over
arch
rival
Michigan;
University o~ Texas at
ArUngton tripped up Bowling
Green 21·17; Miami of Ohio
downed Cincinnati 2I-13, and
WESTERVILLE, Ohler,
Ohio University defeated (UPI) -Stow won the Call'
Marshall 38-21.
AAA Volley ball Cham•
Swick rolled up ~ total pionshfp Saturday, Cincinnati·
yards and scored three touch· Ursuline Academy toot the.
downs to get a career total of Cla88 AA UUe and Frankfort
8,074 yards, breaking the Adena captured the Claa A:
record of former Standford crown at Otterbein College.:
quarterback Jim Plunkett. Of
Stow ran Its unbeaten!
the total yards, 7,'/S7 came on string to 20 garnet ln'
passing.
defeallnfl Clnclmati Seton 15Swick also set Mid- 10 and 1W for the Clus AJ.A.
American Conference single· tiUe.
'
season records in passing,
In Cla8s AA c.ompetltlon,;
total offense, pass com- Cincinnati Ursuline Academy
pletions and touchdowns knocked off Aknln St. Vln,.
responsible for.
cent.St. Mary In two straight.
Toledo never trailed, but 1111mes for the uue, and tbe&gt;
did not ice the victory Wltll undefeated Franifnrt Adena&gt;
Swick plunged for his third · Warriors took the C1a111 A•
touchdown in the third period championship behind the:
IOpuah the5-8Rocketstoa 33- dominating play of Cindy.,
20 lead.
Noble, defeating prevfoualy
The
Flashes, which unbeaten Newark Clthollc,;
finished at 4-7, stayed in the
Stow reached the flnall by
game on quarterback Greg knocking · off Dayton WIYJII:;;
Kokal's passing and Dan 15-10 and 15-11. Seton worked'~ ~ .
Watkins' rumlng. Watkins ita way .to the flnall with:;
netted 185 yards on 21 carrlet victories of 1W and 1$.4 over ••
in the offensive show, in- Lorain Senior.
!!
eluding one kickoff return of
Ul'llllllne advanced to the :I
85 yards..
flnaJa by beaU~ Ardlbold bt !I
Wittenberg, defeated last two straight aamt~ before ; ;
week for the Ohio Conference defeating Akron 1$o4 and IW.: 1
t!Ue, bounced back in the
St. VIncent-&amp;. Mary
NCAA playoffs to gain a berth Columbua Belley 15-1, 1-11; 1
In the seml.flqals with a 10-I end lW to rtach the Dnall, ••
mark. The Tigers' two !relitUrsuline entered the pme "
,'
men running backs arid with a 16-4 rtoonl, wllllel:
senior q~arterback Brian Akron llpOI'ted 1 1'-2 mart.
Aschenbrenner led the vic·
Frankfort loll the lint ,
Iars.
~
game of tbe belt-of-lhne lit 1
Dave Merritt picked up 143 15-I2, but raUled to win
yards in 26c11Tfes and IICOred nen C~Jntetta tw and 15-lS,;
the first touchdown wbfle
Earlier in the dly Frink-•
Sieve Fuller added 59 yards fort belt W)'ldcrd 1U and 1S.:
in his first start.
13 to advance to the flllall,:
The Graybounda led 13-10 while Newark CltboUc!!
at halftime, but Aschen· . defeated Montpelier l$.12111d
IJ;ffl!ler's one-yard plunge in 11-14. ,
1

Volleyball
champs
crowned

!lett::

I

the!

,,

.

\

SP,ECIAL AWARDS - Steve Boso, a 1untor, left,
received the· outstanding performer award, and right,
Randy Dugging was given the outstanding senior award .
- Jim Hamm picture.

Eastern alums
dominate gridfest
'

'

' •,

By Greg Hafley
EAST MEIGS - The game,
.!he place, and the faces were
:1he same. But years had
passed.
The scene was the football
!field at Eastern ·High School
SW1day afternoon, and the
•alumni of Ea'stern and
•Southern were on the gridiron
once more.
But much of th e old
:animosity' had disappeared,
'and as one partie! pan~ put it,
"We ali had a great time, and
·we were out !here just to have
:fwl ."

Behind the rWlning of Rick
Sanders, Ihe Eagles scored 20
:points in each hal( On the
first play from scrimmage ·
'Randy Boring ·caugM a 65'yard pass from Quarterback
' Jim Amsbary an!! .[l!et:d 'int.o
the end zone. From there on 11
was Eastern's bali game.
Sanders scored on a five yard
rW1 and Randy Blake caughl

another aerial from Amsbary
from seven yards away .
Sanders ran the extras for a
20-0 halftime lead.
In the second half Blake
caught another pass from
Amsbary and raced to the
e nd zo~e , and then the
quar terback ran a sneak for
the conv ersion . Southern
couldn't seem to generate
any offense , and was seldom
in E:agle territory . Sanders
scored from three yards out,
and !lob Ritchie ran to
paydirl from two years away
to complete the scoring,
The Eagle defense held
Southern to four first downs
in the entire contest, while
grinding out chunks of yardag e when the)l had the ball .
All In all, it wa s a cleanly
pla yed game , and lots or
fellows will sleep well for a
few days I if they can find a
s pot on their bodies that isn't
s ore ).

By Greg Bailey
HIICIN E - It 's immoral
not to wan I to win, " said Bill
Rohr.
.
Rohr, Alhletic Director at
Ohio University, was the
speaker Salurday night al the
annual Southern High School
roolball banquet.
He went on to explain that
winning is important, but the
desire to win is what cow1ts
most. Accompanied by his
wife, Mary Ellen, Rohr said
he believes the athletic arena
is the finest laboratory to
prepare yoWlg men for the
game or life. He continued his
analogy by saying that life,
like 'alhletics, has its ups and
downs, and a person must
learn lo li ve in the valleys of
life as well as on the moun·
tains.
Rohr, introduced by
Toaslmaster Jim Carnahan,
said a player can learn
loyalty from athletics loyalty to his team, his coach,
school, and even to his
COWl try. He said America has
to have heroes, and the coach
is his players' hero. He said
the coach and the players
should be aware of their hero
status. The players are
constanlly being imitated by
younger beys and the public 's
eye is also on them .
Rohr, while at Massillon
High School, was coached by
the now famous Paul Brown
of !he Bengals. The speaker
suggested to players, " Live
your lifeso that in some way
yo u can improve the world

arowul yuu , no rn aiLer how

i\ fter 1hc enUre team wa s

Pt·csidcnt Ocm Brown ex·

pre sen ted, special aw ard s
were ~iven lu Randy J)udding
and Steve Boso. Duddin g, a
lettcnnan and member of
la st year 's and this year 's 1111SV IIC Dream Team , received
th e Outs tandin g Senior
Award .
lloso, a junior and member
of t975 All SVAC Team, was
given the Out~ tandin g
looking into a mirror. "The Performer Award , an award
fellow whose verdict counts given 10 the besl all-around
mosl in life is th e one who's perform er .
Boso
acstaring back in the glass ." cwnulated the most points
Following Rohr's address, from a system based on
Mrs . Carla Shuler presented points given ror tackle s,
the Tornado cheerleaders , blocked punts, points scored,
JW1ior Varsity cheerleaders , and outstanding plays.
fr eshman Peggy Neigler,
Gifls bough t by the players
Debbi e
Brown,
Carla were then presented to the
Teaford , Janice Carnahan , coaches by Dudding and
and sophomores Kim Taylor Danny Brown . Both the Inand Patty Robinson; varsity vocati on and benediction
cheerleaders, juniors
were given by the Rev . Steve
Allen and Juli Gooch, and Wilson.
seni ors Cheryl Larkins,
Coac~ Jewell and Booster
Rhonda Wes t, Pam Parsons ,
and Debbie Houish.
Reserve coach Mike Boring
presented lhe freshman and
sophomore players, and
assistant coach John Dudding
presented lh e varsity
linemen . Then head coach
Bill Jewell introduced the
offensive and defensive
backs . Greg Dunning, an
outstanding senior fullback
who missed most of the
season because of a broken
leg, received an extended
ovation when he was in·
troduced by Coach Jewell.

tended thanks to paren ts,

small it may be."
He told them to "keep
hustling, don't bl"'ne others
for yo ur· . failur es, don' t
commit yourse lf to li vin g a
mi serable exis tence, and .
most of all, enjoy life."
In reference til this though t,
he concluded his address by
quoling from a poem by Dale
Winsl ow, de~cribing a man

Lisa

Tarkenton
sets mark

r------------,

:I

Pro

:I
!Standin~s :

boo sters , bus dri vers,
cheerlea ders, statis1icians

Larry Fisher and Per ry Hill ,
managers Ja ck Lyons,
Denni s Wolfe, and Da ve
Hupp , and game annoWlcer
James Hamm.
Gridd er s hon or ed w e r ~ ·
Freshmen .......c. John Wes t. Ed

Smith, :rodd Cumm ins, Barry
Allen , Tom All en , Ke lly
Taylor , Bob Deeler, Bi lly
Harr is, Dave Rob inson .
Sophomores · Mike
Huddleston , H erb Ervi n, Don

Dudding. Steve Hill. Mar ty
Foley. Greg Johnson , Mark
Forbes, Dan Dudding, Mik e·
Warner.
Juniors -

Kevin Wilford,

Dan Wolfe, Scot! Wolfe , Chip

Brauer , Eric Dunning , Doug
Warden, Roger Adk ins , Jerry
Johnson , T o ny Carnahan.

Chris Forbes , Chr is Hil l.
Steve Boso. Steve Hendricks,
Joe Brown , Greg Cundiff.
Seniors - Ken Rose, Randy
Dudd ing , Bill Shiveley, Gr.eg
Dunn ing , Dan Brown , Tr m

Jenkins, Brady Hutfman.

AT BANQUET - Bill Rohr and Bill Jewell, right, at
Southern grid banquet. Rohr is athleti c director of Ohio
University ; Jewell is head footbaU coach al Southern . Jbm Hamm picture.

SENIORS HONORED - Fronll-r, Tbm Jenkins, Bill Shiveley , Jim Cundiff; in ba ck,
Greg Dunning, Dan Brown , Ken Rose and Randy Ouilding. - Jbm Hamm picture.

Pirates roll in
opener, 76-57

NFL Standings
By FRED DOWN
Grant. "Fran is the greatest
sv United Pr ess lnlcrnational
quarterback there is." .
UPI Sports Writer
American Contere~ce
East
The
Baltimore
Colts
upset
Fran Tarkenton , the
W. Ll T . Pel .
7 3 0 700
scrambler, is No. I and the Miami Dolphins 33-17, the M iam i
Bal timore
6 4 0 .600
Johnny Unitas, the classic Oakland Raiders defeated the Buffal
o
640600
Washington Redskins 2&amp;-%3, New En g land
quarterback, is No. 2.
370300
The much-discussed and the Cleveland llrowns sur· N .Y . Jets Central1 80100
W. l T Pet .
often-criticized Tarkenton prised Ute Cincinnati Bengals
PiiiSburgh
8
I 0 .889
Led by Fred Lagan 's 28 points in the first period while defeated the Lillie Falcons,
35-23,
the
Kansas
City
Chiefs
surpassed Unitas and
Ci nc innat i
8 1 ' 0 .800
points,
Coach Jill' Fosler's James canned four. Max 34·29. Ocug Sisson, Marly
shaded
the
Detroit
Lions
24Hous
ton
1 2 1 • o ,n e
became the National Football
, 9 0 .100 North Gallia Pirates rolled to Barnhart led Miller during Hash, Ron Plants and Steve
Clev eland
21,
the
Los
Angeles
Rains
League 's all:ti me pa ss
We st
routed
the
Chicago
Bears
38W. l T Pet . an easy 76·57 non-league the ini tial quarter wi th fo ur Mundell had eight points ea ch
completion
leader
Sunday
I
I I '·'
•
'
Oa
kland
B
1 0 .BOO victory over Miller Saturday points.
for the winners . Judy Doss
·when he led the Minnesota 10, the Green Bay Packers Kansa s Ci ty
s 5 0 500 nighl. It was !he opening
led
Miller wit h 14 points.
II
was
Loga
n
agai
n
leading
4 6
0 .tOO
Vikings to a 23-13 victory over drubbed the New York Giants Denver
San
Diego
0
10
0
000
game
of
the
season
for
beth
Nor
th Gallia, 1.(), travels to
the way in the second period.
the San J;&gt;iego Chargers. It 41l-14, the Dallas Cowboys
Nat ional Conf~rence
clubs.
He had 13 points on the Plrale Soul hern Friday night in an
East
was the lOth straight victory topped the Philadelphia
W. L r . Pet . . Logan, a 6.-2 junior forward,
fast-break . James dumped in ea rly season showd own
for the unbeaten Vikings and Eagles 27-17, the St. Louis St Louis
8 2
o .800
also had II of the Pirates ' 48 seven points .
' Rio Grande' College ripped off 13 consecutive assured them of at least a tie Cardinals ripped the New Datla s
agai nst the improved Tor7 3 0
.700
in gt on
6 .1 o .600 learn rebeWlds .
During the four th period, nados.
'points ill' ttlN!e 'n'l'in'Utes and 14 seconds late in the for the NFL 's Central York Jets 37-6, the lluffalo NWash
.Y . Gianrs
3 1
AII-SVAC guard Greg Miller's Don Hern had 14 of
MILLER (57) - Hern 7·6·
Bills outscored the New Philad elph ia
2 B 00 .300
second ; 1\lllf' to ·pound Coach John Bryant's Division title.
.100
20 ; Barnhart 4-2·10; R. Baker
Central
James
added
20
points,
14
hi
s
20
poin
ts
on
the
night.
England
Patriots
4&gt;31,
the
Tarkenton
completed
24
of
'wilmington Quakers.'B0-70 before more than 1,ooo
W l . T . Pet.
9-1-19; Thompson 1-0-2;
10 0 0 1.000 rebounds, five blocked shots Hern led Miller with 20 Pom pey, 1-0-2 and Tay lor 2·0·
hardwood fans at Lyne Center Saturday night. 32 passes for 201 yards Miami Falcons downed the Minnesota
oit
6 ·1 0 .600 and was crediled with 10
points. Rick Baker had 19 and ' ' Totals 24-P-57.
raising his 15-year com- Denver Broncos 35-21 and the Detr
een Bay
2 8 0 700
Although Coa ch 1\rl before lhe Quakers trill''lled plelion total to 2,841 , 10 more San Francisco 49ers scored a Gr
North Gallia (76)
stea
ls.
Although
he
only
Barn
harl fini shed with 10.
Chicago
1 8 0 .100
Runyon
; C. Minnis 3.3.
Lanham's Red men never the final margin to 10 polnls. than the previous record held I~ triumph over the New
West
sc ored rour point s, Bretl
Sh ootin g-wise, North 9 ; log ans.t.ft
12-4·28; Ta ckett 2-Q.
W L . T. Pet.
trailed the Quakers enroule
Rio Grande placed four by Unitas. Tarkenton threw a Orleans Saints in Sunday's Los Angeles
Gallla sank 33 of B3 floor 4; Jam es 9-2-20; Theiss 1-0-2
B 1 0 .BOO Tackett , a junior, had a fine
to their second cage victory men in doubl e figures: Noc IS-yard touchdown pass to E:d other games.
san Fr an cisco
5 5 0 .500 defensive game.
att emp ts for 39 pel. and 10 of and Eg gle ton 1-0-2. Totals 33Atlan ta
3 7 0 .JOO
against
no
setbacks, led the Hedmen attack with Marinaro and set up two of
North Gallia jwnped Into a 15 al th foul lin e. Miller hit t0-76.
The Pittsburgh Steelers New Orl eans
2 B 0 .200
By Quarters:
Wllmingtbq, do\vn 6-ll_imd 25- 24 puinls, 18 coming in the Chuck Foreman's three play the Houston Oilers in the
Sunday 's Results
19-6 first period lead and was nine of 12 charity losses .
Mil ler
8 14 14 2t- 57
Balt
imor
e
33
M
iami
17
16 early in the first hair, second half. Gil Price, Jim touchdown
never
in
serious
trouble.
N.
Ga
llia
19
24 14 19- 76
In
the
reser
ve
lilt,
Coach
runs
with Monday night TV game.
Cleveland 35 Cin cin nati 23
rallied to pull within one, 33- Stewart and Paul Albanese passes.
Reser ves - Nor th Gall ia 34
Atlanta 35 Den ver 21
Logan had eight of hi s 28 Mike Mulford 's Li ttle Bucs
KC 24 Delroil 21 OT
Mil ler 29.
32, just before the halftime each had 10. Mark Swain and
With 285touchdown passes,
Buffalo .J 5 New Englan d 3 I
inlennission.
Mac Barbee each collected the 34-year old former
Gr een Bay 40 N Y Giants 1 ~
Dallas 27 Ph ilade lph ia 17
Midwest
With 13:18 tQmainlng in the eight markers for the Red· Georgia star is now only five
Buena Vis ta 24 S1. Ml'Jry Pllt lns St. Louis 37 N.Y. Jets 6
FREE AGENT mo
non-league contest, Rio en- men. AI Robinson, Hick shy of another all~ime Unilas 11
Mi nnesota 28 San D iego 13
MAKE YOUR OWN LOW COST STORM DOORS,
NEW YORK (UP!) - Andy
san
Fran
16
New
Orleans
6
joyed a 12-point spread•, M-42. Carrington chipped in wllh mark - 290 career touch- Il linois 28 Nor thwes tern 1
Oakland 26 Wash 23 OT
STORM WINDOWS, PORCH ENCLOSURES
Il linois Sl , 31 Esn. Illino is IJ
Messersmith, the Los
Following a Quaker timeout, four apiece and Dan Bise down passes.
Los Angeles 38 Chicago 10
Kanstts 42 Missour i 2~
Angeles Dodgers' ace rightMonday's Gam e
M iam i (Qhio l 1 t Cinc innati 13
lhe visitors closed the gap lo added two . Dave Brisker,
"lt'sa great compliment to M ich i ga n St. 27 Iowa 23
Pi TtSburgh at Houston , N
hander,
continues his bid for
[our points , 58,54 , 8:01 · Bob Caldwell and Dale Royse me and to my team for my Minnesota 24 Wi scon sin 3
.
Thursday' s Games
free
agency
today before
Los
Ange
tes
a t Detroit
Ohi
o
St
1
1
Mi
ch
igfm
14
remaining fn · the contest.
all saw action, but did nol breaking Unitas' completions
Buffal o at Sl . Louis
Ohi o J6 M ar sha l l 21
bmpartial
arbitrator
Peter M.
. Then it happened. Cap. Jim score.
Sunday' s Games
record ," said Tarkenton. Oklah oma 51 . 14 Iowa St. 1
Seitz.
Allan
Ia
a
t
Oa
kland
Stewart, who ,yt out most of
Irwin Shoulders, limited to "But I'll let everybody else do Purd u(' 9 Ind iana 7
SE Missour i St. 17 NE Miss ouri Ch icago at Green Bay
Seitz, the same man who
the second half because of two points during the first · the counting and talking
Houston a t Cinci nnat i
ruled in favor of Jbm "Cal·
Kan sas Ci ty at Baltimore
foul , trouble, slammed irt a · half, erupted ":ilh 16 in the about the records. I've got Toledo 33 Kent St. 28
Witt enberg 17 Ind i ana Ce ntral M innesota at Wa shington
fish"
HWJter In his contract
hook shot"at the 7 : ~1 mark. final 20 minutes of play to one and the rest will come in 13
New Orleans at Cleve l and
dispute
with the Oakland A's
N.Y . Gi an ts at Dallas
Junior forward Jimmy Nue 's pace the Quakers with 18 time.''
Pitt sburgh et N .Y . Jets
Southwest
a
year
ago, will decide
steal and layup resulted In a points . Bob Blanlon added 10,
San Diego ar Denve r
" All
can say is Ar kan sas J 1 Tex as Tech 14
whether
Messersmith,
a 19Br igham Young 20 Texas El San Fra n a t Ph ilad elph ia
three-point play with 6:05 Cliff Washington 12 , and congratulations," com- Paso
Monday' s Game
10
game
winner
last
year,
New England a l Miam L N
left. That made it 64'54.
Capt. Bob Deyo 14. Deyo, mented Minnesota coach Bud !- lor ida St . JJ Housron 22
played the entire campaign ·
La ma r 30 SI U Carbondal e 10
· Noe came back with a tip-in whose 24 points last year
New MeKico 52 New Mex ico sr.
without a signed contract, is
at the 5:30 mark, followed by helped down Rio 83-81 at
18
ABA Standing s
entitled
to gain an unOkl ah om a 35 Nebra ska 10
By Un ited Pres s International
a jumper .from ·the corner by Wilmington, was limited to
Ouachita Bap tist 21 Hend er son
four points.
conditional release on .the
Ea st
Mark Swain. ·With 4:37 left, four points in the final half
20
W L Pel. GB
Rebounds favored the SMU
grounds that by not signing a
J.t Saylor ll
Ken tucky
9 J .692
Moe tallied 'oii an easy layup Saturday night.
1J
contract he sh ould be
New Yo r k
Rcdmen, 39·32. Rio had 22 TCU 28 Rice 1t
9 5 .64 3
to push' th~ Lanhammen
Charles Taylor, who led the turnovers compar ed to Te)( as Ar li ngt on 21 Bowli ng St. L ou is
B B 500 '1 1 ' declared free from baseball's
Gr ee n 17 ,
Vi r g in ia
3 13 . 188 71 J
ahead'71-54: TMQuakers, 0-1, Quakers on the !&gt;oards, added
Ebersbach "' •;v~re 1 Main St., Pomeroy, 0.
west Texas Sr. 49 L ou isvil le 1J
Wilmington 's 19.
West
con.troversial reserve clause .
never recovered.
eight points for lhe losers.
W.
L
.
Pet.
GB
.
Rio Grande's next three
West
Indiana
10 4 .714 · The Redmen held 20-point Bryan Bickerstaff and Mike
games will be on the road . Ar izona 38 Utah 14
Den ver
10 4 .714 ·leads twice late t,n the game Levangie each finished with
Boise Sl. 20 Idaho Sl. 17
San An tonio
B S .61 5 1 ~ , .
Monday
,
the
Redmen
play
,,H -· 1
1•
t•
Ca l iforn ia 48 Stanford 15
Utah
2 11 . 154 71 ·,
Dyke College at Cleveland . Cal Po ly SLO 44 C.P . Pomona 6
. Saturday' s Result s
do 33 Kansas St . 7
Denver 144 VIrg in ia 119
Dec . 2, the Redmen play' at Colora
Hawaii 17 Pa cific 10
Ken tucky lOB lnd l j!Jn a 91
s r. Louis 124 san Ant on 122 OT
Otterbein and Dec. 4, Rio is al Idaho 25 Norlh errj ,Illinois H
Long Beac h Sl. 21 San D iego St
Sunday '!! Resulh
Wesl Virginia Tech.
17
New Yor k Il l Ula h 106
OR. RONALD F. RIVIERE
:ith ~ TOP QUALITY ACRYLIC P~~TIC
Ken tucky 93 St. Louis 85
Nexl home game Is Dec . 6, Millsaps 28 Col orado Coil. 21
01. A. J. nAEHLI Dl. FleEMAN MALTZ
Oregon 1.t Oreg on St. 7
Monda~ '! Gam e~
against Dyke College.
"
•Oil , CHII$ A. ~DOLE
Portland St 31 Pugel Sound 17
(No games sc hed uled )
In Saturday's prelirpinary so . orc oon J5 St. M ar y 's l J
Tuc sdav' s Game
Ctll~ !;O,llECT A,IJA CODE (614)
Ut ah Sl . 28 Co lor ado St. 17
Utah at Ken tuck y
game, Wilminglon 's Jayvees Washinglon
Pt«&gt;t;IE:, ~5~·3181 252·8445
2B w ashinglon Sl.
downed Rio Grande. 76-fll . 17
.QnG :or Two Day Full Denture
Weber St 19 No. Ar iz ona 8
Box score:
Wyom ing 24 Ai r r orc e 10
'Service, Partials, Extractions,
United Pr ess lnrcrnalional
SUNDAY ' S COLLEGE
WILMINGTON
(70)
" ' i&lt;. Ray's, Cleaning
Johns Hop kins 21 ws n. Marv
BASKETBALL RESULTS
Shoulders B-2·18; Washington lan d I I
JJrl \'
Lakeland Invitation.-!
6-0·t2 ; TaytOl" 3-2-B; Deye 7-0· L enoir Rhyne 54 Ca tawba 36
CLEAR LIKE GLASS,
Tournament
14; Blanton 3·4-10 ; Bicker . L SU J1 Tu lan e 6
Sin c lair CC 10 3 K() n t St
NON-YELLOWING, GUAR.ANTEED SHATTER-PROOF
staff 2·0·4; Levangie 0-H . 1 M Myland 62 VIrgin ia 24
AShltlbllla 57
M c N~s e St JJ SW Loui siu na 21
TOTALS n-12-70.
Flex·O-Giaze re quires no special skill s to
RIO GRANDE 180) - Noe M isS iSSiPP i 13 MISS. 51, 7
install . II is easy to cut , saw an d trim to fit
11 -2-24 ; AI banese 5-0-10 ;
or metal sto1m door fr ames . Comes
Barbee .4-0-8; Stewart 4,2.t0 ;
Carrington 2-0-4; Swain 4-0-8;
standard pre-cut sizes . Warp's Fl ex-0 Price 5·0-tO ; Robinson 2-0-4;
.
COLUMBUS, Cti!O 43205
laze Is the ORIGINAL safe ty approv ed
Royse 0·0-0; Blse t-0·2;
&amp;f'laislic Glazing . Ask tor II by name!
I.Ynu'IIS~it~ Tdmorrow![ Yow Tok e Care OJ Your '1'1'1'111 Tudu \.' Caldwell
0·0-0; Brisker 0-0·0.
OFF ICE
9:30 to 12, 2 to S (CLOSE
AI Hardware, Lumber and Building Supply Stores!
MQN)AY··THAOUGH FRIDAY
TOTALS 38-4-80.
AT
NOON
ON
THURS.l-EAST
COURT
Halltime
score:
Rio
33
·
Pioneers in Pla sl ics
• 8 :30A.M. TO 6:30P.M.
Wilmington 32.
WARP BROS. Chicago 60651 For Over soYears

Redb:ien defeat
Quakers· 80-70

Grid Scores

"

EPLACE BROKEN GLASS in

y

STOR-M DOORS

D.

E.

'•'

''

'

,,

�J-

2- The Da ily ~ nt inel, Midctle!Xlrt-Pomero)', 0., Nov. 24, 1975

Turkey Day alumni football teams get ready

Bohr: 'Athletes must want to win'

Today's
.

'

J.ne uauy ~nu~ 1muweporl-t'omeroy. u ., J'l~OV z~~:, Hill!

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

Second alumni Thanksgiving Day

IJ
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
ME,IGS· MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL

game is 2:30 p. m. on Thursday

Exec . Ed .

ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
Pwbl i shed d a l t y exc ep t

The sOOlnd annual alumni game between graduates of Middleport, ·Pomeroy,
Rutland and Meigs high schools will be played on Thanksgiving Day afternoon at %:30,
This year's clash will be on the old Middleport High School field - the present
Meigs Junior High field. Each team has approximately 30 players with some having
graduated over 10 years ago ,
The Pomeroy team practiced at the Rutland field Sunday sharpening work on
!heir rwmfng and passing game (lop two pictures).
. The Middleport squad, also practicing Sunday at the Middleport field, worked on
defense and their game plan (bottom pictures). Both coaches arc optimistic about the
outcome of the Turkey Day event won last year by Pomeroy,'"'·
The game Is being played for the benefit of the Meigs County Unit of the American
Cancer Society, Tickets may be purchased from participating players or at the gate.

s a ~ urday by The Oh io Vall ey

P ubl is h i ng compa n y , Il l
Cour t 5 !., Pom er oy , Ohio
~5 7 69 . Busi nes s Off ice P hone
99 ' 215 6. E d lloria l P hon e 991 .

? 157 .

Secon d c la ss pos tag e p a id
at P om er oy . Oh io .
Nat i onal
a d ve rt is ing
r e pr e sen tat ive
Ward G r i ff i th Co mp a n y . Inc .,
Botti ne ll i &amp; Gallagh er Di v .•
75 ! T h ir d A'lle .• New York ,
N Y 10017 .
S u b sc r i pt t o n
ral e s :
D eli ve re d by car r i er wher e
ava il a bl e 75 ce'nts p er week .
By M o to r R out e wh er e
c ar r ie r
se r vice
n ot
ava il ab l e . One m on lh , S3.25 .
By ma il i n Ohi o and W . V a ..
On e Ye ar , \2 2. 00 ;
Si x
mo nths ,
$ 11.5 0 ;
T h re e
months , Sl .OO . El se wh er e
26.00 yea r, Six mon t h s

13.50;,
ee pr1c
monelhS,
ubscrtp1hr
l tOn
tnc 57.50.
ludes J
unda y Tim es Sen Hne l.

_

Five guards held hostage
NEW YORK !UP I) About 1,600 inmates of the
Rikers Island men 's prison
overpowered their jailers
Sunday night . and held five
guards hostage , officials
reported.
There were no reports of
any Injuries. The inmates,
armed with mop handles,
lll"ooms and metal spears,
made no threats against the
hostages, officials said, but
they presented a list of eight
demandstodayforchangesin
prison conditions.
Hundreds of police and
correction officers were
massed near the prison with
gas masks, helmets and
nightsticks. Police launches
circled the island and guards

DR. LAMB
Good posture through exercise
lly l.a"r.' nct• E. l.:tmb, AI.IJ.
DE:A H DR . LAM B ~
Please tell me what exercises
;treng llwn the muscles lhul
will help me k e ~p my
;bould ers ln1ck? What ones
pull my shoulders forward'
DE:AR HF.: ADEH - Usi ng
proper exercise routines to
maintain good pos tw·e is
importan t to your health.
Keeping the shoulders back
and HvOiding compression of
the r ibs helps mainta in
nor mal respir at ion. Th nse
wh o want

to know wh;11

exercises to usc for post ure
r
shpulcl sc•11d 50 cents for The
! Hcallh Letter num ber 1-111.
,. F.xerclsc, Posture, Strength.
Address your letler to me in
• care of this newspaper, P. 0 .
Box 1551 , Radio City Stalion.
New Yor ~ . NY 10019. Send a
long ,
stamped ,
se lfjddre'Sed enve lope for
mai ling.
Any of lhr exerdsr &lt; llwt
(

I

rotate the arms backward.
li ke lht• back stroke in
swinnu l11g, will contract the
musc les

be tw een

yo ur

shoulder blndcs and help pull
vour shoulders back. These
r•m be do11e usin g pulle)'
weights or other clevices to
load the movemenl.
The opposit e movement , as
if you were ~ olng Ihe cra wl or
swim m in~ forward. uses the
muscles over I he front of your
ches t a11ct pu ll s your
shoulders forward .
Keep ing this principle in
mind .1 011 can see thai usi n~
strrt ch springs or anylhin ~
thul

1·equi res

greate r·

Hlrcngt h in rotin g your· anns
backward will help keep t11 e
slwuldcrs back.
DE:A R DR . LA MB ~ Your
&lt;'OIW11n regarding the· Wry
Neck was of parlicular inINest to me. My neck and
mouth sometimC's get in the
wuy uf I hi~ ""· il1!Wrlt·ntl. hut

1 am reminded

of an article
wri lien by a Harvey Graham
in which he recowits a must
·•sure cure for Wry Neck as
'approved' by the English
Barbars.SUI·geons" under the
impri malure of no less than
William Clowes · cirurglonto-His Majesty Henry Vlff as
follows :
"Wr)• neck is due to the
fi xed contraction of a long
musclt• which ari ses beh ind
the ear, sweeps down the
neck and Is inserted in to lhe
Inner end of the collar-bone :
this cunt raclion ca uses the
hrad to be pc1·petoall y bent
furward and twisted to one
side . Tho operat ion wa s
simply Ihe se vering of I he
fi xed and fibrous musclt so
that the head could swi n~
bat k to a more normal
posi tion.
'· Th is ope ratio n was
usually perfnnncd on the
Villa l!f' c;l't\t• n 1o 1hr uc.
"o'

companimenl of cla shi11g
cymbals, which served the
dual fun ction of advertising
the presence of the operator
and drowning Ihe howls of fhe
palien l. A short , sharp knife
was jabbed into the neck, just
above the collar-bene, and
out side the fix ed tendon of the
affecled muscle. It was swept
quickly inwards, severing Ihe
contracted tendon and lhcn
wilhdrawn. The twisled head
was restored to a normal
po sili~n with sensati onal
suddenness; a dressing of
cotton and egg whil e was
applied and Ihe operation was
over!
"Only occasionally were
th e great bl ood vessels,
directly under the muscle.
affected . This was fortunate
since such an accidenl was
almost invariabl y fatal. "
DEAH READER - Thank
you for a good laugh. I
cnuldn 'I resisl sharing Ihis
little gem with ri1y readers. II
should serv e lo remind
everyone how fortWlate we
all are lo ge t the kind of
medical lreatmenl available
today. II wasn't always so as
you1· story ctemor slrales so
vividly.
Such a treatment does 1·un
the risk of severing the arteries and veins In Ihe neck. II
Is closely akin to having your
throat cui. The proper
lrealin ent of a wry neck has
lobe ba sed on a careful sfudy
of the palil'nl lo delerminc
what iRcauHing it.

patrolled the only bridge versations seem to be getting
leading to the prison Com- somewhere.''
plex, which is in the East
" We 're going to keep
River near LaGuardia Air- talking in the hope we can
•
port.
reso lve this peacefully,"
Prisoners mel with officials Birnbaum said, adding,
and four newsmen early however, the situation was
today and gave a list of eight "extremely , potentially
demands. Quickly agreeing dangerous " and the inmates
to one of the inmates ' were "belligerent and have
grievances, prison officials expressed a great deal of
said they would assign more anger ."
Bert Wilson, a newsman
guards to the fa cility by
Wednesday.
wh o
joined
in
the
The commissioner of the negotiations, said he saw two
city correction department, of the hostages and "they are
Benjamin Malcolm, said the in good shape. " He described
hostages were held in two of the uprising as "organized ...
the five cell blocks controlled there is a leader in each cell
by prisoners. Inmates of block."
The disturbance began at
three other cell blocks were
out of their cells, he said, and about 9:30 p.m., just as tbe
prisoners in the jail's two inmates were concluding
other sections remained in their recreation period and
were about to be locked in for
their cells.
Each block of 240 cells the night. Malcolm said the
holds 300 to 400 prisoners, prisoners, normally kept out
officials said.
of their cells 8 to 10 hours a
Malcolm 's deputy , Jack day , "look over blocks with
Birnbaum, said "the con- manpower, massive man~

power.,

Court cases
in Meigs filed
Cases Wed since Saturday
in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court :
Mary !': Ii za beth Morri s.
Pomeroy , is sui ng to quiet
Iitle aga in st Geral d E.
Rought and Ellen Rough,
Pomeroy . The properly is
located in Pomeroy.
William W. Smith, Glenwood, W. Va., filed a suit for
$2,460.50 naming E:mployers
Insurance Co. of Wausau, N.
Y. defendant. Smith was
injured at Meigs Mine
Number 2. he alleges.
Filing for dissolution of

marr iage were Jo Ann

Only a few guards were on
duty at the time, he said.
Federal Judge Morris
Lasker , who ordered the
Manhattan
House
of
Detention closed because of
overcrowding and other
abuses, was summoned to the
scene at the . prisoners' insistence.
Lasker has been hearing
two class-action suits bcought
by inmates in ·an effort to
Improve prison conditions.
The prisoners' other
demands included Improved
medical
treatment ,
elimination of mice and
roaches and a reduction of
the jail's population.
They also demanded longer
visiting hours, an increase in
the number of phone caDs
they are allowed and greater
accountability for guards in
their dealing with prisoners.

McLaughlin, Pomeroy, and
J ohn
E. Mc La ughlin,
Pomeroy, and Sandra C.
Griffith , HI. I, Reedsville and
E:arl E. Griffith, same ad·
dress.
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
Sharon Ward, Middleport,
SATURDAY ' S OHIO
filed sui! lor divorce against
HIGH SCHOOL
BASKETBALL RESULTS
Wilbur Leo Ward ,' Middleporl
United Pre ss International
on charges of gros;; neglect of Col Eatmoo r 71 Athe ns 55
Col Sout h 58 Mar ion Hardi ng
dut y and extreme cruelly.
ss
Brady Edgar Sayre was Ohio De af 71 Se ve n H ills 2J
idgewood 79 We 'it Holmes 63.
gran led a divorce ft·om Sa lly HP. iq
h iAnd Sa Wayncd a le .t6
Anne ~ yre on charges of Ross. Southeastern 98 P ike
l:nst('r ll n
gross nipllecl of duly.

NEW YORK I UPI) - Everybody likes to make a good first
bmpression . That's only natural and Ken Shipp is no different.
He thinks the same way everybody else does, that winning
the first game makes winning the second one that much easier.
So as coach of the unimaginably pitiful New York Jets, having
been moved into the breach and "promoted" from being their
Qffensive coordinator, he came up with this Idea of his.
He would 'ask the,fans to become involved.
Why not? What could he lose? ·
The Jets had won only twice before all year. Th~y had lost
seven of their nine games and along with that they also had lost
whatever was left of their pride as well as their coach, Charley
WiMer. He was fired.
The perfect way for the fans to become involved, Ken Shipp
felt, was for them to get behind the Jets' players and support
them. He asked the fans to cheer the players, not boo tl~m­
Now that would be something new and who knows, It m1ght
motivate the players to the point where they would tum some
things around. Like maybe the final score._
The Jets did not receive the cheers Ken Shipp had asked for
when they were introduced at Shea Sladlum before Sunday's
game with the St. Louis Cardinals. They were booed. The Jets
pretended they didn't hear it. The players sprinted toward the
center of the field and lf you didn't know better you'dlhlnk
they were coming out for the start ofthe Super BowL
Up in the radio booth, Marty Glickman, doing the play-byplay, told his listening audience the Jets players looked
"determined, quiet, and like a sober team."
The Jets kicked off to open tbe game and as lf to show the
crowd of 53,169 they meant business, they swarmed all over
Gary Hammond, who returned the hall for the Cards, They
were so eager to bring down Hammond, they were a little
overzealous. The referee called them for piling on. Penalty, 15
yards.
Never mind. They were going to get those cheers yet.
Less than five minutes after the game started, they went in
fronl , ~. on Pat Leahy's 47-yard field goal.
There were some cheers. Only a few. You had to liJten
carefully to hear them. The Jets' lead lasted about as long as
raw hamburger does in front of a wolf. On a quick draw, Terry
Metcalf scooted 52 yards for a St. Louis touchdown. That
brought groans which graduated into full-blown boos again
when the Cardinals padded their lead to 20-3 by the end ol the
ru-st quarter.
.
By haiWme, the Cards' margin had burgeoned to »6 and lf
this wasn't a runaw.ay, it c.ertainly would do until the real thing
came along.
The Cardinals decbmated the Jets, 37~, with a suspicion they
were saving themselves because they have a Thanksgiving
Day date with the Buffalo BIDs.
There were few boos for the Jets at the end of the game. Most
of the fans had left and th011e who were still there simply didn't
care anymore. That, I think, puts them in the same category
with the Jets' players.

Swt"ck se•'L s new mark

United Press International
the third quarter provided the.
University of Toledo go-ahead score.
quarterback Gene Swick
Tangerine Bowl-bound_
closed his collegiate career Miami closed out Ita llelliOII
with an assault on the record with a lll-1 record.
books, becoming the first
Quarterback Sherman
collegian ever to amass more Smith accounted for two
than 8,000 yards Saturday touchdownsand tailback Rob
when the Rockets defeated Carpenter rushed UO yardl
Kent State 33-28.
for the Redsldns, who wtll be
Wittenberg University making their third ltralght
defeated Indiana Central 17- appearance in Ute Tangerine
13 in an NCAA Division III Bowl as MAC champlona.
playoff game to advance into UTA quarterback Doug
the division seml.finals.
Dobtlna scrambled for a twoElsewhere in Ohio college yard touchdown with 3~
foot hall, Ohio State won the seconds to go to atop Bowlinl
Big Ten Conference Iitle Green.
outright and Its un·
precedented fourth straight
trip to the Rose Bowl with a
hard-fought 21·14 win over
arch
rival
Michigan;
University o~ Texas at
ArUngton tripped up Bowling
Green 21·17; Miami of Ohio
downed Cincinnati 2I-13, and
WESTERVILLE, Ohler,
Ohio University defeated (UPI) -Stow won the Call'
Marshall 38-21.
AAA Volley ball Cham•
Swick rolled up ~ total pionshfp Saturday, Cincinnati·
yards and scored three touch· Ursuline Academy toot the.
downs to get a career total of Cla88 AA UUe and Frankfort
8,074 yards, breaking the Adena captured the Claa A:
record of former Standford crown at Otterbein College.:
quarterback Jim Plunkett. Of
Stow ran Its unbeaten!
the total yards, 7,'/S7 came on string to 20 garnet ln'
passing.
defeallnfl Clnclmati Seton 15Swick also set Mid- 10 and 1W for the Clus AJ.A.
American Conference single· tiUe.
'
season records in passing,
In Cla8s AA c.ompetltlon,;
total offense, pass com- Cincinnati Ursuline Academy
pletions and touchdowns knocked off Aknln St. Vln,.
responsible for.
cent.St. Mary In two straight.
Toledo never trailed, but 1111mes for the uue, and tbe&gt;
did not ice the victory Wltll undefeated Franifnrt Adena&gt;
Swick plunged for his third · Warriors took the C1a111 A•
touchdown in the third period championship behind the:
IOpuah the5-8Rocketstoa 33- dominating play of Cindy.,
20 lead.
Noble, defeating prevfoualy
The
Flashes, which unbeaten Newark Clthollc,;
finished at 4-7, stayed in the
Stow reached the flnall by
game on quarterback Greg knocking · off Dayton WIYJII:;;
Kokal's passing and Dan 15-10 and 15-11. Seton worked'~ ~ .
Watkins' rumlng. Watkins ita way .to the flnall with:;
netted 185 yards on 21 carrlet victories of 1W and 1$.4 over ••
in the offensive show, in- Lorain Senior.
!!
eluding one kickoff return of
Ul'llllllne advanced to the :I
85 yards..
flnaJa by beaU~ Ardlbold bt !I
Wittenberg, defeated last two straight aamt~ before ; ;
week for the Ohio Conference defeating Akron 1$o4 and IW.: 1
t!Ue, bounced back in the
St. VIncent-&amp;. Mary
NCAA playoffs to gain a berth Columbua Belley 15-1, 1-11; 1
In the seml.flqals with a 10-I end lW to rtach the Dnall, ••
mark. The Tigers' two !relitUrsuline entered the pme "
,'
men running backs arid with a 16-4 rtoonl, wllllel:
senior q~arterback Brian Akron llpOI'ted 1 1'-2 mart.
Aschenbrenner led the vic·
Frankfort loll the lint ,
Iars.
~
game of tbe belt-of-lhne lit 1
Dave Merritt picked up 143 15-I2, but raUled to win
yards in 26c11Tfes and IICOred nen C~Jntetta tw and 15-lS,;
the first touchdown wbfle
Earlier in the dly Frink-•
Sieve Fuller added 59 yards fort belt W)'ldcrd 1U and 1S.:
in his first start.
13 to advance to the flllall,:
The Graybounda led 13-10 while Newark CltboUc!!
at halftime, but Aschen· . defeated Montpelier l$.12111d
IJ;ffl!ler's one-yard plunge in 11-14. ,
1

Volleyball
champs
crowned

!lett::

I

the!

,,

.

\

SP,ECIAL AWARDS - Steve Boso, a 1untor, left,
received the· outstanding performer award, and right,
Randy Dugging was given the outstanding senior award .
- Jim Hamm picture.

Eastern alums
dominate gridfest
'

'

' •,

By Greg Hafley
EAST MEIGS - The game,
.!he place, and the faces were
:1he same. But years had
passed.
The scene was the football
!field at Eastern ·High School
SW1day afternoon, and the
•alumni of Ea'stern and
•Southern were on the gridiron
once more.
But much of th e old
:animosity' had disappeared,
'and as one partie! pan~ put it,
"We ali had a great time, and
·we were out !here just to have
:fwl ."

Behind the rWlning of Rick
Sanders, Ihe Eagles scored 20
:points in each hal( On the
first play from scrimmage ·
'Randy Boring ·caugM a 65'yard pass from Quarterback
' Jim Amsbary an!! .[l!et:d 'int.o
the end zone. From there on 11
was Eastern's bali game.
Sanders scored on a five yard
rW1 and Randy Blake caughl

another aerial from Amsbary
from seven yards away .
Sanders ran the extras for a
20-0 halftime lead.
In the second half Blake
caught another pass from
Amsbary and raced to the
e nd zo~e , and then the
quar terback ran a sneak for
the conv ersion . Southern
couldn't seem to generate
any offense , and was seldom
in E:agle territory . Sanders
scored from three yards out,
and !lob Ritchie ran to
paydirl from two years away
to complete the scoring,
The Eagle defense held
Southern to four first downs
in the entire contest, while
grinding out chunks of yardag e when the)l had the ball .
All In all, it wa s a cleanly
pla yed game , and lots or
fellows will sleep well for a
few days I if they can find a
s pot on their bodies that isn't
s ore ).

By Greg Bailey
HIICIN E - It 's immoral
not to wan I to win, " said Bill
Rohr.
.
Rohr, Alhletic Director at
Ohio University, was the
speaker Salurday night al the
annual Southern High School
roolball banquet.
He went on to explain that
winning is important, but the
desire to win is what cow1ts
most. Accompanied by his
wife, Mary Ellen, Rohr said
he believes the athletic arena
is the finest laboratory to
prepare yoWlg men for the
game or life. He continued his
analogy by saying that life,
like 'alhletics, has its ups and
downs, and a person must
learn lo li ve in the valleys of
life as well as on the moun·
tains.
Rohr, introduced by
Toaslmaster Jim Carnahan,
said a player can learn
loyalty from athletics loyalty to his team, his coach,
school, and even to his
COWl try. He said America has
to have heroes, and the coach
is his players' hero. He said
the coach and the players
should be aware of their hero
status. The players are
constanlly being imitated by
younger beys and the public 's
eye is also on them .
Rohr, while at Massillon
High School, was coached by
the now famous Paul Brown
of !he Bengals. The speaker
suggested to players, " Live
your lifeso that in some way
yo u can improve the world

arowul yuu , no rn aiLer how

i\ fter 1hc enUre team wa s

Pt·csidcnt Ocm Brown ex·

pre sen ted, special aw ard s
were ~iven lu Randy J)udding
and Steve Boso. Duddin g, a
lettcnnan and member of
la st year 's and this year 's 1111SV IIC Dream Team , received
th e Outs tandin g Senior
Award .
lloso, a junior and member
of t975 All SVAC Team, was
given the Out~ tandin g
looking into a mirror. "The Performer Award , an award
fellow whose verdict counts given 10 the besl all-around
mosl in life is th e one who's perform er .
Boso
acstaring back in the glass ." cwnulated the most points
Following Rohr's address, from a system based on
Mrs . Carla Shuler presented points given ror tackle s,
the Tornado cheerleaders , blocked punts, points scored,
JW1ior Varsity cheerleaders , and outstanding plays.
fr eshman Peggy Neigler,
Gifls bough t by the players
Debbi e
Brown,
Carla were then presented to the
Teaford , Janice Carnahan , coaches by Dudding and
and sophomores Kim Taylor Danny Brown . Both the Inand Patty Robinson; varsity vocati on and benediction
cheerleaders, juniors
were given by the Rev . Steve
Allen and Juli Gooch, and Wilson.
seni ors Cheryl Larkins,
Coac~ Jewell and Booster
Rhonda Wes t, Pam Parsons ,
and Debbie Houish.
Reserve coach Mike Boring
presented lhe freshman and
sophomore players, and
assistant coach John Dudding
presented lh e varsity
linemen . Then head coach
Bill Jewell introduced the
offensive and defensive
backs . Greg Dunning, an
outstanding senior fullback
who missed most of the
season because of a broken
leg, received an extended
ovation when he was in·
troduced by Coach Jewell.

tended thanks to paren ts,

small it may be."
He told them to "keep
hustling, don't bl"'ne others
for yo ur· . failur es, don' t
commit yourse lf to li vin g a
mi serable exis tence, and .
most of all, enjoy life."
In reference til this though t,
he concluded his address by
quoling from a poem by Dale
Winsl ow, de~cribing a man

Lisa

Tarkenton
sets mark

r------------,

:I

Pro

:I
!Standin~s :

boo sters , bus dri vers,
cheerlea ders, statis1icians

Larry Fisher and Per ry Hill ,
managers Ja ck Lyons,
Denni s Wolfe, and Da ve
Hupp , and game annoWlcer
James Hamm.
Gridd er s hon or ed w e r ~ ·
Freshmen .......c. John Wes t. Ed

Smith, :rodd Cumm ins, Barry
Allen , Tom All en , Ke lly
Taylor , Bob Deeler, Bi lly
Harr is, Dave Rob inson .
Sophomores · Mike
Huddleston , H erb Ervi n, Don

Dudding. Steve Hill. Mar ty
Foley. Greg Johnson , Mark
Forbes, Dan Dudding, Mik e·
Warner.
Juniors -

Kevin Wilford,

Dan Wolfe, Scot! Wolfe , Chip

Brauer , Eric Dunning , Doug
Warden, Roger Adk ins , Jerry
Johnson , T o ny Carnahan.

Chris Forbes , Chr is Hil l.
Steve Boso. Steve Hendricks,
Joe Brown , Greg Cundiff.
Seniors - Ken Rose, Randy
Dudd ing , Bill Shiveley, Gr.eg
Dunn ing , Dan Brown , Tr m

Jenkins, Brady Hutfman.

AT BANQUET - Bill Rohr and Bill Jewell, right, at
Southern grid banquet. Rohr is athleti c director of Ohio
University ; Jewell is head footbaU coach al Southern . Jbm Hamm picture.

SENIORS HONORED - Fronll-r, Tbm Jenkins, Bill Shiveley , Jim Cundiff; in ba ck,
Greg Dunning, Dan Brown , Ken Rose and Randy Ouilding. - Jbm Hamm picture.

Pirates roll in
opener, 76-57

NFL Standings
By FRED DOWN
Grant. "Fran is the greatest
sv United Pr ess lnlcrnational
quarterback there is." .
UPI Sports Writer
American Contere~ce
East
The
Baltimore
Colts
upset
Fran Tarkenton , the
W. Ll T . Pel .
7 3 0 700
scrambler, is No. I and the Miami Dolphins 33-17, the M iam i
Bal timore
6 4 0 .600
Johnny Unitas, the classic Oakland Raiders defeated the Buffal
o
640600
Washington Redskins 2&amp;-%3, New En g land
quarterback, is No. 2.
370300
The much-discussed and the Cleveland llrowns sur· N .Y . Jets Central1 80100
W. l T Pet .
often-criticized Tarkenton prised Ute Cincinnati Bengals
PiiiSburgh
8
I 0 .889
Led by Fred Lagan 's 28 points in the first period while defeated the Lillie Falcons,
35-23,
the
Kansas
City
Chiefs
surpassed Unitas and
Ci nc innat i
8 1 ' 0 .800
points,
Coach Jill' Fosler's James canned four. Max 34·29. Ocug Sisson, Marly
shaded
the
Detroit
Lions
24Hous
ton
1 2 1 • o ,n e
became the National Football
, 9 0 .100 North Gallia Pirates rolled to Barnhart led Miller during Hash, Ron Plants and Steve
Clev eland
21,
the
Los
Angeles
Rains
League 's all:ti me pa ss
We st
routed
the
Chicago
Bears
38W. l T Pet . an easy 76·57 non-league the ini tial quarter wi th fo ur Mundell had eight points ea ch
completion
leader
Sunday
I
I I '·'
•
'
Oa
kland
B
1 0 .BOO victory over Miller Saturday points.
for the winners . Judy Doss
·when he led the Minnesota 10, the Green Bay Packers Kansa s Ci ty
s 5 0 500 nighl. It was !he opening
led
Miller wit h 14 points.
II
was
Loga
n
agai
n
leading
4 6
0 .tOO
Vikings to a 23-13 victory over drubbed the New York Giants Denver
San
Diego
0
10
0
000
game
of
the
season
for
beth
Nor
th Gallia, 1.(), travels to
the way in the second period.
the San J;&gt;iego Chargers. It 41l-14, the Dallas Cowboys
Nat ional Conf~rence
clubs.
He had 13 points on the Plrale Soul hern Friday night in an
East
was the lOth straight victory topped the Philadelphia
W. L r . Pet . . Logan, a 6.-2 junior forward,
fast-break . James dumped in ea rly season showd own
for the unbeaten Vikings and Eagles 27-17, the St. Louis St Louis
8 2
o .800
also had II of the Pirates ' 48 seven points .
' Rio Grande' College ripped off 13 consecutive assured them of at least a tie Cardinals ripped the New Datla s
agai nst the improved Tor7 3 0
.700
in gt on
6 .1 o .600 learn rebeWlds .
During the four th period, nados.
'points ill' ttlN!e 'n'l'in'Utes and 14 seconds late in the for the NFL 's Central York Jets 37-6, the lluffalo NWash
.Y . Gianrs
3 1
AII-SVAC guard Greg Miller's Don Hern had 14 of
MILLER (57) - Hern 7·6·
Bills outscored the New Philad elph ia
2 B 00 .300
second ; 1\lllf' to ·pound Coach John Bryant's Division title.
.100
20 ; Barnhart 4-2·10; R. Baker
Central
James
added
20
points,
14
hi
s
20
poin
ts
on
the
night.
England
Patriots
4&gt;31,
the
Tarkenton
completed
24
of
'wilmington Quakers.'B0-70 before more than 1,ooo
W l . T . Pet.
9-1-19; Thompson 1-0-2;
10 0 0 1.000 rebounds, five blocked shots Hern led Miller with 20 Pom pey, 1-0-2 and Tay lor 2·0·
hardwood fans at Lyne Center Saturday night. 32 passes for 201 yards Miami Falcons downed the Minnesota
oit
6 ·1 0 .600 and was crediled with 10
points. Rick Baker had 19 and ' ' Totals 24-P-57.
raising his 15-year com- Denver Broncos 35-21 and the Detr
een Bay
2 8 0 700
Although Coa ch 1\rl before lhe Quakers trill''lled plelion total to 2,841 , 10 more San Francisco 49ers scored a Gr
North Gallia (76)
stea
ls.
Although
he
only
Barn
harl fini shed with 10.
Chicago
1 8 0 .100
Runyon
; C. Minnis 3.3.
Lanham's Red men never the final margin to 10 polnls. than the previous record held I~ triumph over the New
West
sc ored rour point s, Bretl
Sh ootin g-wise, North 9 ; log ans.t.ft
12-4·28; Ta ckett 2-Q.
W L . T. Pet.
trailed the Quakers enroule
Rio Grande placed four by Unitas. Tarkenton threw a Orleans Saints in Sunday's Los Angeles
Gallla sank 33 of B3 floor 4; Jam es 9-2-20; Theiss 1-0-2
B 1 0 .BOO Tackett , a junior, had a fine
to their second cage victory men in doubl e figures: Noc IS-yard touchdown pass to E:d other games.
san Fr an cisco
5 5 0 .500 defensive game.
att emp ts for 39 pel. and 10 of and Eg gle ton 1-0-2. Totals 33Atlan ta
3 7 0 .JOO
against
no
setbacks, led the Hedmen attack with Marinaro and set up two of
North Gallia jwnped Into a 15 al th foul lin e. Miller hit t0-76.
The Pittsburgh Steelers New Orl eans
2 B 0 .200
By Quarters:
Wllmingtbq, do\vn 6-ll_imd 25- 24 puinls, 18 coming in the Chuck Foreman's three play the Houston Oilers in the
Sunday 's Results
19-6 first period lead and was nine of 12 charity losses .
Mil ler
8 14 14 2t- 57
Balt
imor
e
33
M
iami
17
16 early in the first hair, second half. Gil Price, Jim touchdown
never
in
serious
trouble.
N.
Ga
llia
19
24 14 19- 76
In
the
reser
ve
lilt,
Coach
runs
with Monday night TV game.
Cleveland 35 Cin cin nati 23
rallied to pull within one, 33- Stewart and Paul Albanese passes.
Reser ves - Nor th Gall ia 34
Atlanta 35 Den ver 21
Logan had eight of hi s 28 Mike Mulford 's Li ttle Bucs
KC 24 Delroil 21 OT
Mil ler 29.
32, just before the halftime each had 10. Mark Swain and
With 285touchdown passes,
Buffalo .J 5 New Englan d 3 I
inlennission.
Mac Barbee each collected the 34-year old former
Gr een Bay 40 N Y Giants 1 ~
Dallas 27 Ph ilade lph ia 17
Midwest
With 13:18 tQmainlng in the eight markers for the Red· Georgia star is now only five
Buena Vis ta 24 S1. Ml'Jry Pllt lns St. Louis 37 N.Y. Jets 6
FREE AGENT mo
non-league contest, Rio en- men. AI Robinson, Hick shy of another all~ime Unilas 11
Mi nnesota 28 San D iego 13
MAKE YOUR OWN LOW COST STORM DOORS,
NEW YORK (UP!) - Andy
san
Fran
16
New
Orleans
6
joyed a 12-point spread•, M-42. Carrington chipped in wllh mark - 290 career touch- Il linois 28 Nor thwes tern 1
Oakland 26 Wash 23 OT
STORM WINDOWS, PORCH ENCLOSURES
Il linois Sl , 31 Esn. Illino is IJ
Messersmith, the Los
Following a Quaker timeout, four apiece and Dan Bise down passes.
Los Angeles 38 Chicago 10
Kanstts 42 Missour i 2~
Angeles Dodgers' ace rightMonday's Gam e
M iam i (Qhio l 1 t Cinc innati 13
lhe visitors closed the gap lo added two . Dave Brisker,
"lt'sa great compliment to M ich i ga n St. 27 Iowa 23
Pi TtSburgh at Houston , N
hander,
continues his bid for
[our points , 58,54 , 8:01 · Bob Caldwell and Dale Royse me and to my team for my Minnesota 24 Wi scon sin 3
.
Thursday' s Games
free
agency
today before
Los
Ange
tes
a t Detroit
Ohi
o
St
1
1
Mi
ch
igfm
14
remaining fn · the contest.
all saw action, but did nol breaking Unitas' completions
Buffal o at Sl . Louis
Ohi o J6 M ar sha l l 21
bmpartial
arbitrator
Peter M.
. Then it happened. Cap. Jim score.
Sunday' s Games
record ," said Tarkenton. Oklah oma 51 . 14 Iowa St. 1
Seitz.
Allan
Ia
a
t
Oa
kland
Stewart, who ,yt out most of
Irwin Shoulders, limited to "But I'll let everybody else do Purd u(' 9 Ind iana 7
SE Missour i St. 17 NE Miss ouri Ch icago at Green Bay
Seitz, the same man who
the second half because of two points during the first · the counting and talking
Houston a t Cinci nnat i
ruled in favor of Jbm "Cal·
Kan sas Ci ty at Baltimore
foul , trouble, slammed irt a · half, erupted ":ilh 16 in the about the records. I've got Toledo 33 Kent St. 28
Witt enberg 17 Ind i ana Ce ntral M innesota at Wa shington
fish"
HWJter In his contract
hook shot"at the 7 : ~1 mark. final 20 minutes of play to one and the rest will come in 13
New Orleans at Cleve l and
dispute
with the Oakland A's
N.Y . Gi an ts at Dallas
Junior forward Jimmy Nue 's pace the Quakers with 18 time.''
Pitt sburgh et N .Y . Jets
Southwest
a
year
ago, will decide
steal and layup resulted In a points . Bob Blanlon added 10,
San Diego ar Denve r
" All
can say is Ar kan sas J 1 Tex as Tech 14
whether
Messersmith,
a 19Br igham Young 20 Texas El San Fra n a t Ph ilad elph ia
three-point play with 6:05 Cliff Washington 12 , and congratulations," com- Paso
Monday' s Game
10
game
winner
last
year,
New England a l Miam L N
left. That made it 64'54.
Capt. Bob Deyo 14. Deyo, mented Minnesota coach Bud !- lor ida St . JJ Housron 22
played the entire campaign ·
La ma r 30 SI U Carbondal e 10
· Noe came back with a tip-in whose 24 points last year
New MeKico 52 New Mex ico sr.
without a signed contract, is
at the 5:30 mark, followed by helped down Rio 83-81 at
18
ABA Standing s
entitled
to gain an unOkl ah om a 35 Nebra ska 10
By Un ited Pres s International
a jumper .from ·the corner by Wilmington, was limited to
Ouachita Bap tist 21 Hend er son
four points.
conditional release on .the
Ea st
Mark Swain. ·With 4:37 left, four points in the final half
20
W L Pel. GB
Rebounds favored the SMU
grounds that by not signing a
J.t Saylor ll
Ken tucky
9 J .692
Moe tallied 'oii an easy layup Saturday night.
1J
contract he sh ould be
New Yo r k
Rcdmen, 39·32. Rio had 22 TCU 28 Rice 1t
9 5 .64 3
to push' th~ Lanhammen
Charles Taylor, who led the turnovers compar ed to Te)( as Ar li ngt on 21 Bowli ng St. L ou is
B B 500 '1 1 ' declared free from baseball's
Gr ee n 17 ,
Vi r g in ia
3 13 . 188 71 J
ahead'71-54: TMQuakers, 0-1, Quakers on the !&gt;oards, added
Ebersbach "' •;v~re 1 Main St., Pomeroy, 0.
west Texas Sr. 49 L ou isvil le 1J
Wilmington 's 19.
West
con.troversial reserve clause .
never recovered.
eight points for lhe losers.
W.
L
.
Pet.
GB
.
Rio Grande's next three
West
Indiana
10 4 .714 · The Redmen held 20-point Bryan Bickerstaff and Mike
games will be on the road . Ar izona 38 Utah 14
Den ver
10 4 .714 ·leads twice late t,n the game Levangie each finished with
Boise Sl. 20 Idaho Sl. 17
San An tonio
B S .61 5 1 ~ , .
Monday
,
the
Redmen
play
,,H -· 1
1•
t•
Ca l iforn ia 48 Stanford 15
Utah
2 11 . 154 71 ·,
Dyke College at Cleveland . Cal Po ly SLO 44 C.P . Pomona 6
. Saturday' s Result s
do 33 Kansas St . 7
Denver 144 VIrg in ia 119
Dec . 2, the Redmen play' at Colora
Hawaii 17 Pa cific 10
Ken tucky lOB lnd l j!Jn a 91
s r. Louis 124 san Ant on 122 OT
Otterbein and Dec. 4, Rio is al Idaho 25 Norlh errj ,Illinois H
Long Beac h Sl. 21 San D iego St
Sunday '!! Resulh
Wesl Virginia Tech.
17
New Yor k Il l Ula h 106
OR. RONALD F. RIVIERE
:ith ~ TOP QUALITY ACRYLIC P~~TIC
Ken tucky 93 St. Louis 85
Nexl home game Is Dec . 6, Millsaps 28 Col orado Coil. 21
01. A. J. nAEHLI Dl. FleEMAN MALTZ
Oregon 1.t Oreg on St. 7
Monda~ '! Gam e~
against Dyke College.
"
•Oil , CHII$ A. ~DOLE
Portland St 31 Pugel Sound 17
(No games sc hed uled )
In Saturday's prelirpinary so . orc oon J5 St. M ar y 's l J
Tuc sdav' s Game
Ctll~ !;O,llECT A,IJA CODE (614)
Ut ah Sl . 28 Co lor ado St. 17
Utah at Ken tuck y
game, Wilminglon 's Jayvees Washinglon
Pt«&gt;t;IE:, ~5~·3181 252·8445
2B w ashinglon Sl.
downed Rio Grande. 76-fll . 17
.QnG :or Two Day Full Denture
Weber St 19 No. Ar iz ona 8
Box score:
Wyom ing 24 Ai r r orc e 10
'Service, Partials, Extractions,
United Pr ess lnrcrnalional
SUNDAY ' S COLLEGE
WILMINGTON
(70)
" ' i&lt;. Ray's, Cleaning
Johns Hop kins 21 ws n. Marv
BASKETBALL RESULTS
Shoulders B-2·18; Washington lan d I I
JJrl \'
Lakeland Invitation.-!
6-0·t2 ; TaytOl" 3-2-B; Deye 7-0· L enoir Rhyne 54 Ca tawba 36
CLEAR LIKE GLASS,
Tournament
14; Blanton 3·4-10 ; Bicker . L SU J1 Tu lan e 6
Sin c lair CC 10 3 K() n t St
NON-YELLOWING, GUAR.ANTEED SHATTER-PROOF
staff 2·0·4; Levangie 0-H . 1 M Myland 62 VIrgin ia 24
AShltlbllla 57
M c N~s e St JJ SW Loui siu na 21
TOTALS n-12-70.
Flex·O-Giaze re quires no special skill s to
RIO GRANDE 180) - Noe M isS iSSiPP i 13 MISS. 51, 7
install . II is easy to cut , saw an d trim to fit
11 -2-24 ; AI banese 5-0-10 ;
or metal sto1m door fr ames . Comes
Barbee .4-0-8; Stewart 4,2.t0 ;
Carrington 2-0-4; Swain 4-0-8;
standard pre-cut sizes . Warp's Fl ex-0 Price 5·0-tO ; Robinson 2-0-4;
.
COLUMBUS, Cti!O 43205
laze Is the ORIGINAL safe ty approv ed
Royse 0·0-0; Blse t-0·2;
&amp;f'laislic Glazing . Ask tor II by name!
I.Ynu'IIS~it~ Tdmorrow![ Yow Tok e Care OJ Your '1'1'1'111 Tudu \.' Caldwell
0·0-0; Brisker 0-0·0.
OFF ICE
9:30 to 12, 2 to S (CLOSE
AI Hardware, Lumber and Building Supply Stores!
MQN)AY··THAOUGH FRIDAY
TOTALS 38-4-80.
AT
NOON
ON
THURS.l-EAST
COURT
Halltime
score:
Rio
33
·
Pioneers in Pla sl ics
• 8 :30A.M. TO 6:30P.M.
Wilmington 32.
WARP BROS. Chicago 60651 For Over soYears

Redb:ien defeat
Quakers· 80-70

Grid Scores

"

EPLACE BROKEN GLASS in

y

STOR-M DOORS

D.

E.

'•'

''

'

,,

�·'

.
5- The Daily

4- 'fhe Oailv Sent mel, Middleport-Pomeroy , U., Nov. 24, 1975
•.· ·:·:·:·&gt;:·.·.·.·.;.·:·:•:•.•,•:·.·:·:·:·:: : :·.·:·.· ·.· ...;.,. ,. . ..... ; . ;.;.; .;. ;. ; . :·: · : · :· :·:·:·: ·:· :·:·::;.;. ;.:· :·:·;.:.:~:·:; :;:;::\~:

Browns upset ~ Roses sprout 1New faces on top in NBA
Cincy, 35-23 ~:, across Ohio -

]ohnsons
observe
60 years

',_

I

1:1

CLEVELAND (UP!) - "II
will end where it st8rted thai's aU we talked about all
week," Oeveland Browns'
coach Forrest Gregg said
after his winless team
knocked off the Cincinnati
Bengals 36-23 Sunday.
Gregg referred to the irony
of the Browns defeating the
team that beat them in the
season opener, since when
Oeveland sank to an 0-9
record while (lncinnati was
in playoff contention at 11-1
going into the game.
Greg Pruitt, who scored
two touchdowns, and Mike
Phlppi, Who pasaed for two in
his finest professional game,
were the offenalve stars for
the Browns, while the defenae
stopped Cincinnati with three
polnta in the second half after
Bengals star quarterback
Ken Ander8on went out with a
lrulaed chest.
"Ilia a game I wtJJ always
remember," said Pruitt, the
scatback from Oklahoma
who bettered 100 yards
rushing for the second
straight game. "There Is a lot
of personal satilfactlon for
myself, but especially for the
team becauae II dldn 'I make
any difference who we beat,
just so we beat somebody."
Pruitt ran for one touch·
down and scored another on a
paas from Phi)l)ll. And by
Pruitt's running, pau
receiving and klck returnlnB,
he; set up the rest of
Cleveland's IICOrea.
Phipps, the sixth year
qUarterback from Purdue
wqo has always been
''potentially great," hit on 23of-311 paases for Z/3 v.ards.

Holy Name is
AA champion

ij

·.;.

COLUMBUS IUP! ) - In a
football city whose residents
reached into the thesaurus to
find adjectives to describe
their distaste for Michigan
and their pleasure with their
Buc~eyes , Saturday's 21·14
win over the Wol verines
warmed a chilly Sunday and
sprouted the roses in central
Ohio.
Buckeye coach Woody
Hayes had no trouble in
describing the victory. He
used various superlatives aU centering around "great."
"This has got to be the
greatem game I've every
coached," said Hayes. He
said the game containe~ the
"greatest" Ohio State comeback ever, and repeated his
ofi-quoled claim that Archie
Griffin in the "greatest"
player with whom he has ever
been associated.
Michigan coach Bo Schem·
bechler dipped into his
vocabulary and said it was
"one hell of a game. "
Forty-eight OSU students
celebrated In jail - charged
with disorderly conduct,
resisting arrest and assault
on Colwnbus police who had
to work the 15th and High
campus scene late Saturday
night.
' Columbus·pollce said most
of those arrested would
probably forfeit the $30 bond
they paid to get out of jail and
continue their celebrations
into early Sunday. A court
hearing on those charged
with resisting arrest and
asault was scheduled today.
Ray Griffin, Archie's 19year old brother, was the

• .
•

11

.JSJ

-'' 1

Centr•l DiYision
W. L . Pet.

Atlanta
Wi thing ton
NttrN Orleans

9 6
7 s
7 1
5 a
5 10

08 .
.600 .583
'1
.500 1' 1
. ~1 5
l
.333 4

H&lt;luston
western conterene:e

C l~veland

...
a

Midwest Div ision
W. L . Pet. GB.
cltroi t
8 s .61 S Ailtwau kee
6 9 .400 3
Qtn sas City
~ lceg o

"

7 .36.4

3

3 10 . 231 s
•
Piiclf ic Division
•
W. L. Pet. GB .
O.lden State 10 4 .114
'\ngeles
12 6 .&amp;61
tllo
B 8 .500 J
8e"hc
5 6 .455 Jl J
f'trlllnd
6 9 ..too • 1 J

~

• . S.tvrd1y 's Results
~v eland 95 New York 9.4:

~w Orleans 89 Allanta IS
~lden State 111 Wash 71

Pf&gt;rtland 109 Bullalo 104
•·

Sunct1v's Results

Alllanlall5 Phi!a111
9Dston 105 Cleve 90
1:-11 10 Houston 99
S•t!le 112 Milwaukee 104

•

r ~~o

Monday's G1mes

games scht&lt;lulo!dl

•
Ta~esd1y ' s Gllftes
Seetlfe at N., York

... don Slot• II Philo

Hou ston •• washington
( lt·•,ela nd at Chicaqo

~hie' meanwhile, failed

w

get his ,. customary 100
yards for, 11\f first time in 32
games. The' sticky Wolverine
defense allowed Ohio State
only one first doii'JI after the
Buckeyes' 1 initial scoring
drive the first quarter until
Leach scored and put his
Wolverines tDn top 14-7 with
only 7:11 to play.
Archie ended the game, his
next to last as a collegian,
with 46 yards.
Michigan, of cotD'se, got a
consolation prize with the
defeat - th~ Wolverines ' first
in the BJg ' Ten Conference
this year - an Orange New
Year's Day headline thriUer
with Big Eight Champion
Oklahoma . · ·
Ohio Slate, with ita first
undisputed Big Ten championship tucked under its belt
in four years, will go against
th~ best in the West on New
Year's Day.

'·'

.•

li
po •ce
cti
a on • •

:

SABANTOSTAV
ORCHARD PARK, . N.Y. :• .
(UPI) - Lou Saban doesn 't •
think much of rumors, •
espectally when they deal ·
with his status as head coach
of the Buffalo Bills.
Saban was the subject of
numerous rumors Sunday. •
Wring the Buffalo Bills-New
England Patriots game. One
wry unconfirmed report had •
Saban resigning after the
game if his Bills lost.

•

•·
e
•
•
•
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1..
: puts~

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1-0 •. •e
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thea!.: :

'139'l•n'

•• :
•

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•

1NGELS '
FURNITURE
PH. 992-2m
Ml DOLE PORT, 0 .

ee
e
•
•

1:ra nl Blair
i~ thm· \ In

T\'

•

and nuJi(l,
rcl'"-1rting ~ n c rg~

•

11 ~\\'~ fflllll

•e.
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( \ •hunhiu Cia ...

•

·

I ee.. ee•• 'e e ••• e f e • • •ee ••e•

its ninth straight home court
victory . Abdui.Jabbar netted ·
22 points and guard Locius
ADen added ~I to support
Goodrich.
Celtics 105, cavs 90
Jo Jo White had '!I points to
spark Bo$1on. Charlie Scott
added 16 points for the Celtics
while Dick Snyder connected
on his. first six shots and .
· topped Cleveland with 21
points.
Soolcs 112, Bucks IIH
Tommy Burleson scored a
game high 28 . points, in·
eluding 18 in the first quarter,
w pace Seattle. Milwaukee,
trailing 511-47 at halftime, hit
11 of its first 12 field goat
attempts entering the foUrth
quarter to close to within one
at 101·100 with 3:05left. The ·
Sanies then outscored the
Bucks 11-4 down the stretch to
put it out of reach.
Nets 113, Stars 106
Julius Erving ootched 33
points and forward Tim
Bassett grabbed 17 rebounds
to lead New York. Rookie
Kim Hughes scored 16 points
for the Nets , while Brian
Taylor added 15. Ron Boone
led the Stars· with 24 points.

'•

The 60th anniversary of Mr.
and Mrs . Harley T. Johnson,
Rt. 4, . Pomeroy , was
celebrated last Sunday with a
family potluck dinner parly.
Athree-lier decora ted cake
with the numerals "60" on lop
was presented to the couple
by their gran ddaug hter, Mrs.
Larry Barr, Rutland.
Attending ·were Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Thoma, Mr.
and Mrs. Harley E. Johnson,
Tammy , Cheryl and Terry,
Mr. and Mrs·. John Do~&gt;n s,
Mrs. John R. Mercy, Peggy,
Carmel and Barbara, and
Donna LitUe, Rt. 4, Pomeroy ;
Mr. and Mrs. John E. Mercy
and Chris, Ra cine; Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Barr, David and
Cheryl, Rt. 1, Rutland. Mr.
and Mrs. ChaPiey Smilh of
Rl . 4, Pomeroy were unable
lo attend . Lincoln Russell
visiled in the afternoon.

.'

'

Social
Calendar

''

MONDAY
MEET the Basketball
Team , 7 p.m. at Larry R.
Morrison Gym, Meigs High
School.
SOUT HERN
Ban d
Boosters, 7:30 p.m. at high
school.
EASTE RN Foo t ba ll
Banquel at high schoo&gt;, 6:30
p.m. Tickets are $2 a person.
MEIGS Local Chapter 17 of
Oh io Associa ti on of Public
School Employes. 7:30 p.m.
at Meigs Ju nior Hi gh
cafe teria.
TUESDAY
PAN C AK E A N D
.: sAUSAGE Supper in the
: basement of Heath United
: Methodist Church from 4 to 7
: p.m. Adults $2, all you can eat
: and children $1. Sponsored by
- Uni ted Methodisl Men.
KARATE CLASSES every
: Tuesday and Thursday at
- Meigs Jun ior High in' Mid·
dleporl , 7 p.m .

Play it safe and sure
It may be time to
have your present
· policy updated.

Let's Jalk Soon

DALE C. WARNER
992-2143

l fl2 W. Main

Higher natural gas prices, or
higher iJnetnpJoyment-we have to make a choice.
NoW, while we
still have a choice.

e. .• e • • • • • e e

ee
seconds
The firstquartry, e
Wyomingleft.
· backup
terback Brian Allf's pass was e
knocked loose from receiver •
Fred Jacobs in the end zone,
and the second try, Holy e
Name tackle Bill Banish e
collared Allf in his own back· •
field for a IO.yard loss as Ume e
expred.

I

finished behind the Pistons in
the Midwest Division.
In Sunday 's action, Atlanta
scored a 116-111 victory over
Philadelphia in a nationally·
televised game to put the
Hawks just ahead of the
faltering Washington Bullets;
Los Angeles kayoed Houston
110·99, Boston
ripped
Cleveland lllli-90 and Seattle
beat Milwaukee 112-104.
The New York Nets downed
Utah 113-106 and Kentucky
defeated St. Louis 9~ in the
two ABA games.
Hawks ll5, 'l&amp;ers 111
Atlanta's Tom Henderson
almost ran out of time bef?re
tossing in a spectacular 22foot jump shot with juSt three
·seconds left in the game. The
game was tied at 111-lll with
26 seconds left. Atlanta then
took the ball and went into a
freeze while the seconds
ticked away .
"We wanted penetration
for the last shot ," said Hawks
coach Cotwn Fitzsimmons,
"but Henderson wasn't able
to make it and when (John)
Drew fed the baU back out to
him, he had no choice but to
shoot it at the last moment."
After Henderson's game·
breaking shot, Philadelphia
failed to get its in-bounds
pass to forward George
McGinnis and the ball
bounced out of bounds untouched. The Hawks retained
possession and Henderson
made two final free throws
for the margin of victory.
"We had McGinnis blocked
out by several people," Filz·
simmons said. "I believe
Jofin Brown held him up and
he never made it to the baU."
McGirmis and Drew were
the high scorers with 33
points each.
Laters 110, Rockets 91
Gail Goodrich had 28 points
and II assists , both season
highs, to help Los Angeles to

heritage house

e •e

6

time "

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UP!) . Rose Bowl and that a loss or
- Michigan Coach Bo lie would \ send them to
Schembechler started Miami. I
·
working on 1976 prospects no
The fact both teams knew
sooner than he had completed they were going to bowls
this football season, a · undoubtedly contributed to
heartbreaking 21·14 loss to both team's decisions to come
Ohio State Saturday.
out with wide-open game
"I'm sorry, he ian't here," plans.
his wife, MUUe, said Sunday
One of the new wrinkles when she answered the tele- . the tailback option pass - got
phone at their home. "He's Michigan a touchdown just 24
out recruiting. I don't expect seconds before haltime when
him back until after supper." Gordon BeD threw II yards to
The circumstances are wingback Jim Smith .
differeni this year than a
Six seconds later the
year ago, which also ended Wolverines had the baU again
against the Buckeyes . because Archie Griffin, w~
Michigan will be going to tbe failedtogsin IOOyardsforthe
Orange Bowl on New Year's first lime , in 32 games,
Day rather than sitting home fumbled t~e kickoff and
as it did the last three years Michigan.recovered.
with a share of the Big Ten
After two fruiUess plays,
championship.
Bell ran two yards to the Ohio
Scbembechler must State19butttleftkickerBob
wonder .what might have Wood with an atrocious angle
happened if his Wolverines from the left side and he
had not been betrayed by a missed Ill ~7-yard field goal
missed field goal again. Field try - to the left.
goalll they have not made are
one reasop Michigan missed
a chance at the Rose Bowithe
three previous years.
Ohio State's championship
Early While
Saturday was its first
Selettion Is Good.
outright crown since 1970;
though the Buckeyes wtll be
- Gift Certificatestaklng taUback Archie Griffin
Store Hours:
to Pasadena, Calif., for the
floS Mon . - Fri.
fourth time In a row.
flo ISat.
"We made up our minda
before the game to go for the
win," Schembechler said,
Middleport, Ohio
knowing it would .take a
victory to put his team in tbe
•
•

e

NfiW York

heroof Saturday's nationallytelevised game, reaching the
degree of reverence normally
given his fleet-footed brother
when he int~rc epted a Rick
Leach pass late in the fourth
quarter after the Buckeyes
had driven to tie the score at
14-14 on Pete Johnson 's 24th
touchdown this season.
The interception, which
Ray retuM)ed to the Michigan
three, igniter the Buckeyes,
and Johnson·plunged over to
a bed of rose~ on the next play
with his 25th -touchdown.
"[just couldn't believe it,"
said Ray .•"!'ve been wailing
so long, but I got it at the right

Bo looking toward '76

United Press fntematioaal
title.
" H I had to do it all over
Cleveland Holy Name's de·
fense stiffened and preserved again, I think I'd still do the
a five-point lead in the lalt same thing, '' said dlsapfew ~ds of regulation pointed Newark coach J.D.
' play for the state high lchool Graham after his team's 16-7
Class AA championship overtime loss to Carey.
Saturday, but it took Carey a
Tied 7·7 at the end of
little longer than four regulation, each team was
quarter~~ to win the Clasa A gi'len the baU on Its op·
ponent's lO.yard line. If you
scored In four plays and your
opponent didn't - you won.
Carey quarterback John
NHL Standings
aY United Press International Greer snapped a scoring
Patrick Olvllion
W. L. T. Ph. strike to Dennis Kessler on
Ph iladelphia
u
J s
JJ the first play of Carey's
N.Y. Islanders
9 6 5
23
A llante
B 10 2
18 series for the acore and the
- . Rangers
8 12 2 18 Green Wave faDed to move
•
Smythe Division
;
W. L . T. Pts, the ball the required 10 yards
c-..cago
10 4 1
21 in Ita four tries.
S ~ Louis
8 1 •
20
"H we had to lose it, we
vln couver
7 B s
19
K nsas City
5 12 2
12 couldn 'I have lost it in a more
Minnesota
A 15 0
8
thrU!ing game," added Gra·
•
Norris Division
'
W. l.T , Ph . ham, Who instructed his team
f4n 1rea1
14 4 l l l to ktck the PAT and tie the
LIS Angeles
12 B 2
16
l!ib ur gh
R 9 2
18 game after Newark scored
troll
6 IJ 4
16 with 8:10 remaining In the
sh lngton
2 17 2
6
•
Adams Dlvl t. lon
game in Akron's Rubber
•
W, L . T . Pts.
B&amp;llalo
16 l I ll Bowl.
Btslon
9 6 5
2l
"Sure, I thought about
Toronto
9 6 5
23 goilltl for two points, but I
Ctlltorn la
8 14 2 18
thought that we had
Saturc:tav's ResUlts
Plnaaelphla • N.Y. Rangers l momentum after that score
NIY . I slanders S Kansa! City 2
and thai we had time to score
A"anta 6 Minne,ota 3
Nt&gt;ntreal 4 -Toronto 2
again. The way we were
PD.tsburgh 6 L 05 Angeles J
moving the baD, I still think
s to: Louis 5 Detro I1 1
Ch icago 1 Vancou\ler 1
we
would have scored If we
Sunday' s Results
had a couple of more
N:r . Rangers l California 2
Detroit 4 Los Angeles 1
minutes," said Graham, who
Bltflalo 6 Kan .. s Clly 2
Tf onto l Boslon l
will have all winter to mull
•
Mond•y's Games
over
his decision.
!No games scht&lt;luledl
•
Tuesdly's Games
r.ater saturday in the•
•
M~t real at Atlanta
Rubber Bowl, Holy Name
L~ A"S''eles at Boston
quarterback Kevin Hartman
Buffa lo at Vancouv er
ran for two scores and passed
'
:
NBA Stanellngs
for a third in his team's 19-14 •
- United Pren International
11,
Eas.tern Conference
win
over
Cincinnall •
•
Atlantic Division .
~
W. l . Pet. Gl . Wyoming.
Pl\iladelphla 9 .5 .643 Wyoming drove to the Holy
Baston
8 s .615
' 'l
8ll.ffelo
9 6 .600
' 1 Name 23 with less than 30

Pro Standings

..

.~,.:,:

"Alot of teams would have
gone out there and not put out
as we did," he said. "We had
nothing to lose. We had
nothing to do but try to beat
Cincinnati and knock the!p
out of the divison race ."
Paul Brown, who built the
Browns dynasty and after he
was fired began anew with
the Bengals, had a hint of
disaster to come.
"They had their big
moment today," he said. "I
was afraid of that coming up
from Cincinnati. They have
some great football players
and so do we, but they won."
Btlly Lefear ran the
opening klckoff back 92 yards
to the Bengals' two , suffering
a broken leg when he was
tackled, knocking him out of
action for the rest of the
season . But on the next play,
Pruitt darted in for a
Cleveland touchdown.
Don Cockroft added a field
goal before Anderson threw
touchdown pases of 35 y~rds
to Bob Trumpy and 30 yards
to Isaac Curtis and Stan Fritz
ran for a third Bengals' score
. before Cockroft hit another
Cleveland field goal just
before the first half ended.
Cockrofi and Dave Green
alao swapped field goals in
the third quarter before the
Browns exploded for 20 points
In the final period.
Oscar Roa'n made a
magniflcent one-hand catch
of a Phipps pass for a TD,
Pruitt lroke three tackles on
a 13-yard completion for
another and free safety Jim
Hill ran an interception back
56 yards for the capping
touchdown.

Four teams who sat out the
playoffs last season are oow
leading or tied for the lead in
eac h of the National
Basketball Association 's
divisions.
At this point in the season ,
however, team standings in
the NBA . probably mean as
little as a first quarter rally.
It doesn't matter if you're
leading 15·3 after two
minutes; all that counts is the
final .score.
Similarly, a half-game lead
or even a five-game division
lead in November is hardly
cause for celebration. "See
me in May," says the
knowledgeable NBA fan , who
realizes the second season the playoffs - is the only
thing that really matters in
pro basketball.
1M on this November mor·
ning, you can't blame a few
young teams for feeling par·
ticularly chirpy . Atianta was
getting a good start on a 31·51
season this time last year
while Philadelphia was on its
way to a 34-48 campaign.
Today they are leading ,
respectively, the Central and·
Atlantic Divisions by a halfgame each.
Los Angeles was worse
than either of those teams
last season, finishing dead
last in the Pacific Division
with a 30-52 record but it, too ,
is getting some first place
exposure. The !..akers, now
featuring Kareem AbduiJabbar, have a 12-6 record
and are only percentage
points behind defending
champion Golden State, 10-4.
Detroit, another non-playoff
team last season with a 40-42
record, holds a three game
edge over Milwaukee, which

Senti~. M.l i(idlepolrl-P~o~nn;E~r(~
l Y~N;ov~.~24;,;19~75~--------------------.,

Columbia G as sees no alt e rnat ive . T il e
c·ritil:;il sht&gt;rtage o f natural gas and industry's dcpcndem:e on th is \'aluahlc reso ur~ c dictate the a nswer. A vo te agaimt
one is automaticall v a l't&gt;lc {i1r the other.
M u~h as we\llike."we can"t vote aga inst
both . It uocsn't wtuk that wav.
As ( ,&gt;iumbia points ou t. the price of
natural gas. where it is fou nd. has bee n
hdu su lo w fo r so long by govern ment
~:unlrnb . til &lt;ll we'w gnbbk u it up W&lt;lstefull' ltlf 1·cars with ou t co ncern for its
rcai 1·aluc . In recent yea rs. whi le &lt;h e
d ema nu fllr na tura l gas ha s be en
s k1rocketin~ . k " afiu kss gas has b"·n
fou nu and r r&lt;&gt;d uccd .
T he ~as indus tr1· is one t&gt;f the most
dosch ~c ~ ul a t c d i1idustrics in tile worl u.
Anu ihis ' is one of the pwbkms. T he
ri ~ in !! l'n ~ l ~ of dc\' clopi ng ne w gas
so u r•·~s. plu s the gmwnmcnt 's strict price
contrnb. h&lt;ll'c di s.:oura ged th e search l(lr
natural gas. Just last vc7tr. twice as much
natur;1i gas was used :ts was disC&lt;11·crc u.
WllCii' vou cnnsiucr the fa~l that natu ral gas pr;" ·idcs &lt;ll·~r h;ill'o f ali th e ~n~rgy
American inuu stn· needs. it is eas\' to
understan u that. a~' th e suppl y uwin;ll cs.
more ;uiu more inuustries fe el the pi m:h
o f nalu r&lt;d gas rati nnin g. Sl,lw ing down ,
cutting huck . .. do&gt;i ng down. Peo pl e out
o f ll'&lt;&gt; rk arc po,&gt;r c u , t nm~ rs fo r eve ry
other bu sin c&gt;S . And so the ca ncer
spreads.
Columbia want s us to rc;)li zc th at the
fc~cml gnl'crnmcnt must r ~ m ovc c\mtrols on the price nf ~~ ~ ~~· na tural gas.
ll'l1crc it is uisC\ll' crcJ . in oru er Ill pmvi dc
uriilcrs the necessary incc nti w to lind
uno Jc,·clop inorc 11(' 11.' gas.
Bc~ au se without more natu ral gas. Columbia sees no II'&lt;IY to avoiu hi ghe r un ·
cn1ploymcnt. Anu that's th e hard truth'.

Pomeroy

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PAST MATRON S OF
Pomeroy OES 186, 7:30p.m.
home of Mrs. Geraldin e
Young. All pas! matrons ore
invited.
RACINE American Legion
Auxiliary, F'ost 602, 7 p.m. at
the hall.
JUNIOR Ameri can Legion
Auxiliary, Feeney-Benne tt
Pos t128, 6p.m.at the homeof
Becky Roush.
WEDNESDAY
AME.RICAN
Legi on
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, 6:30 potluck a! the
hall with the Legionnaires,
.
7:30p.m. meehng.

:
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Joe Smit·h's Recipe Home Made

SAUSAGE ......~~~~. ~9.~.~........'.~~ .s1 19

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POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT Lions Club, noon
·at the Meigs IM.
OHIO VALLE Y Co mmandery 24, Knights Ternplar, 7:30 p.m.' at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.

-

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-'"'

USDA CHOICE

Clmed
Thanksgiving
Day.

PORK
STEAK

" '~

.......
•l --

Superiors

POLISH

SAUSAGE .............1~·••

.'

4

89

·~·''

LB.

Superiors 12 Ounce

WIENERS ..........................~~.~:. 794

·- ...

,. ~

' Jli

PORK ROAST

p

,

'"'i t(

SUPERIORS BONELESS

BOLOGNA ...........................Ill,. 89~
Superiors 12 Ounce

·.. -4+

~~

Superiors All Meat

All BEEF WIENERS........:.~ :.89~
Superiors
Ounce_
Pkg $129
SLICED BACON.................... :.. .

LB.$

12

1. 1·9

PICNIC$
ROAST . •

HAM
Whole
or
Half

.....

•'

SCOT. lAD

EGGS
"' "

.... ...

nw

U. S. Grade ALarge

._

.~.

~----------~~----~-----------------------------Superiors Fresh &amp; Lean
:.:··::

Superiors Semi- Boneless

I

2 ct.

PET RITZ

PIE SHEU.S•••••••••••• f~l·••••
•

RICH'S:: .

WHIPPED

DAIRY BUYS

39~

·

·.

BANQUET MINCE AND

49

EGG NOG........... ~~ 89'

BROUGHTON'S LOW FAT

,.

CHOC. MILK.t!:~:~.~!1 ~0=. sug

'

''

-

CONTAC
pk£ $119:?
COLD CAPSULES •••••~~... . ~-~
,,
-

....

...
~

"' '

MARK VLOW PRICE

PRESTONE
gal. $399 :~
ANTI-FREEZE••••••••• ~~~··
·. ::;

~

PUMPKIN PIES.........~.c.h.. ..

BROUGHTON'S 6 PCT.

•

REGUlAR 11.95

.

9 oz. 49~
TOPPING ••••• ~1·•.....
.

&amp;ge·
~

TOILET
4 PAK
SPECIAL
TISSUE •••••••••••••••• ,••• ,. . .

FROZEN FOODS

doz.69e

FROZEN OYSTERS

10 oz. can 11.29

BROUGHTON'S

COllAGE DiEESE
oz. 89'
MIRACLE WHIP

Salad Dressing

69e
79e

ENGLISH ' LARGE
s1zE
s'!'an
lb. 79'
SiZe
.
WALNUTS............•......••...• f.o,up~•••
RITZ
t-lb.
box
CRACKERS.•.............................
PINTO
.
.
~b.$}29
IIIEAN~ •••.•.. ~ .........................
ag
.
APPIAN WAY·
box
on~
PIZZA MIX•.••...•••...•....•..•.•... ~····
ARMOUR'S CHILl .'.
can
WITH IIEA·NS.........: . ~ ..•....... ~~~.... .
ARMOUR'S .
· 1sVz oz.
SLOPPY ·JOES....... ~ .......... ~~ ••.•••

COLAoz.
~6

bois.
pak

19

4

.

SATUR DAY ONLY

FAVORITE

BREAD

BEATS PH.D FOR TITLE
ATLANTIC CITY , N.J .
(UP!) - A. E. Gostomelsky,
39, an ac countant from
Skokie, Ill ., whose children
always beat him at Monopoly
became the first· U.S.
champion of the game here
Saturday.
He won a clock with a face
'of a Monopoly board BJ)d ·
played In the World Monopoly
Championship Sunday In
Washington.
Gostomelsky won $1!,410 in
Monopoly money and $4,895
In property in the game which
lasted two hours and 10
minutes. He beat three other
play~ra, Including Roger
Compton, a Ph .D ~andldate
and teacher at the University
of Miami in Oxford, Ohio .
'
'

..

Grade A First Oualitv Turkeys
Best For Thanksgiving - IE;:..~:-~:·~

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
PHONE 9~2-3480
.
Corner Mill and Second .Sis. We reserve the right to limit quantities. MIDDLEPORT

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We Will Feature

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 0
.su·n. 10 to 10

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RACINE LODG E 461 ,
F&amp;AM, special meeting, 7
p.m. ai temple. Work in rt rst
degree i all members asked to
attend .
MID D L E PORT
POMEROY Ar ea Bra nch,
American Association of
University Women, 7:30p.m.
al Meigs High Schoo l
Library . The program !heme
wi ll be "Think Hunger" and
wilt be presented by the In\ernaliona1 Relations commitl ee chaired by Mrs.
Rachael Downie.

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We ha ve ma ny thing s to be thankful for du ri ng this Bicentenn ial era . The
mo s t ch eri shed of our nation 's ble ssings ... freedom . . . has given
Am e rica ns th e right t o a life r ic h in liberty , justi ce, happines s. ·

4 LOAVES

$100

SCOT LAD

GINGERALE

49e
59e
79¢

' '\
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,.,

All WEEI&lt; SALE

"
"

DIET RITE
AND

R. C. COLA

age

IN 64 OZ.
'NO RETURN
BOffiES
Diet Rite Flavors- 5 qts. 11

·-·"
'·

· AND

CLUB SODA
3 qts. '1.00

ALL WEEI&lt; LONG

Thtow Away Boltles

16 oz.

Large Golden Ripe

8 pak

BANANAS
Dad's Root Beer
~~~5~1~b_s~·~'~o~r~~----·~=~~~-s--~-s~._u9_~_~.~. Diet R~e Cola

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5- The Daily

4- 'fhe Oailv Sent mel, Middleport-Pomeroy , U., Nov. 24, 1975
•.· ·:·:·:·&gt;:·.·.·.·.;.·:·:•:•.•,•:·.·:·:·:·:: : :·.·:·.· ·.· ...;.,. ,. . ..... ; . ;.;.; .;. ;. ; . :·: · : · :· :·:·:·: ·:· :·:·::;.;. ;.:· :·:·;.:.:~:·:; :;:;::\~:

Browns upset ~ Roses sprout 1New faces on top in NBA
Cincy, 35-23 ~:, across Ohio -

]ohnsons
observe
60 years

',_

I

1:1

CLEVELAND (UP!) - "II
will end where it st8rted thai's aU we talked about all
week," Oeveland Browns'
coach Forrest Gregg said
after his winless team
knocked off the Cincinnati
Bengals 36-23 Sunday.
Gregg referred to the irony
of the Browns defeating the
team that beat them in the
season opener, since when
Oeveland sank to an 0-9
record while (lncinnati was
in playoff contention at 11-1
going into the game.
Greg Pruitt, who scored
two touchdowns, and Mike
Phlppi, Who pasaed for two in
his finest professional game,
were the offenalve stars for
the Browns, while the defenae
stopped Cincinnati with three
polnta in the second half after
Bengals star quarterback
Ken Ander8on went out with a
lrulaed chest.
"Ilia a game I wtJJ always
remember," said Pruitt, the
scatback from Oklahoma
who bettered 100 yards
rushing for the second
straight game. "There Is a lot
of personal satilfactlon for
myself, but especially for the
team becauae II dldn 'I make
any difference who we beat,
just so we beat somebody."
Pruitt ran for one touch·
down and scored another on a
paas from Phi)l)ll. And by
Pruitt's running, pau
receiving and klck returnlnB,
he; set up the rest of
Cleveland's IICOrea.
Phipps, the sixth year
qUarterback from Purdue
wqo has always been
''potentially great," hit on 23of-311 paases for Z/3 v.ards.

Holy Name is
AA champion

ij

·.;.

COLUMBUS IUP! ) - In a
football city whose residents
reached into the thesaurus to
find adjectives to describe
their distaste for Michigan
and their pleasure with their
Buc~eyes , Saturday's 21·14
win over the Wol verines
warmed a chilly Sunday and
sprouted the roses in central
Ohio.
Buckeye coach Woody
Hayes had no trouble in
describing the victory. He
used various superlatives aU centering around "great."
"This has got to be the
greatem game I've every
coached," said Hayes. He
said the game containe~ the
"greatest" Ohio State comeback ever, and repeated his
ofi-quoled claim that Archie
Griffin in the "greatest"
player with whom he has ever
been associated.
Michigan coach Bo Schem·
bechler dipped into his
vocabulary and said it was
"one hell of a game. "
Forty-eight OSU students
celebrated In jail - charged
with disorderly conduct,
resisting arrest and assault
on Colwnbus police who had
to work the 15th and High
campus scene late Saturday
night.
' Columbus·pollce said most
of those arrested would
probably forfeit the $30 bond
they paid to get out of jail and
continue their celebrations
into early Sunday. A court
hearing on those charged
with resisting arrest and
asault was scheduled today.
Ray Griffin, Archie's 19year old brother, was the

• .
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11

.JSJ

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Centr•l DiYision
W. L . Pet.

Atlanta
Wi thing ton
NttrN Orleans

9 6
7 s
7 1
5 a
5 10

08 .
.600 .583
'1
.500 1' 1
. ~1 5
l
.333 4

H&lt;luston
western conterene:e

C l~veland

...
a

Midwest Div ision
W. L . Pet. GB.
cltroi t
8 s .61 S Ailtwau kee
6 9 .400 3
Qtn sas City
~ lceg o

"

7 .36.4

3

3 10 . 231 s
•
Piiclf ic Division
•
W. L. Pet. GB .
O.lden State 10 4 .114
'\ngeles
12 6 .&amp;61
tllo
B 8 .500 J
8e"hc
5 6 .455 Jl J
f'trlllnd
6 9 ..too • 1 J

~

• . S.tvrd1y 's Results
~v eland 95 New York 9.4:

~w Orleans 89 Allanta IS
~lden State 111 Wash 71

Pf&gt;rtland 109 Bullalo 104
•·

Sunct1v's Results

Alllanlall5 Phi!a111
9Dston 105 Cleve 90
1:-11 10 Houston 99
S•t!le 112 Milwaukee 104

•

r ~~o

Monday's G1mes

games scht&lt;lulo!dl

•
Ta~esd1y ' s Gllftes
Seetlfe at N., York

... don Slot• II Philo

Hou ston •• washington
( lt·•,ela nd at Chicaqo

~hie' meanwhile, failed

w

get his ,. customary 100
yards for, 11\f first time in 32
games. The' sticky Wolverine
defense allowed Ohio State
only one first doii'JI after the
Buckeyes' 1 initial scoring
drive the first quarter until
Leach scored and put his
Wolverines tDn top 14-7 with
only 7:11 to play.
Archie ended the game, his
next to last as a collegian,
with 46 yards.
Michigan, of cotD'se, got a
consolation prize with the
defeat - th~ Wolverines ' first
in the BJg ' Ten Conference
this year - an Orange New
Year's Day headline thriUer
with Big Eight Champion
Oklahoma . · ·
Ohio Slate, with ita first
undisputed Big Ten championship tucked under its belt
in four years, will go against
th~ best in the West on New
Year's Day.

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po •ce
cti
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SABANTOSTAV
ORCHARD PARK, . N.Y. :• .
(UPI) - Lou Saban doesn 't •
think much of rumors, •
espectally when they deal ·
with his status as head coach
of the Buffalo Bills.
Saban was the subject of
numerous rumors Sunday. •
Wring the Buffalo Bills-New
England Patriots game. One
wry unconfirmed report had •
Saban resigning after the
game if his Bills lost.

•

•·
e
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•
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1..
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1-0 •. •e
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e• e -ee ee
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thea!.: :

'139'l•n'

•• :
•

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•

1NGELS '
FURNITURE
PH. 992-2m
Ml DOLE PORT, 0 .

ee
e
•
•

1:ra nl Blair
i~ thm· \ In

T\'

•

and nuJi(l,
rcl'"-1rting ~ n c rg~

•

11 ~\\'~ fflllll

•e.
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( \ •hunhiu Cia ...

•

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I ee.. ee•• 'e e ••• e f e • • •ee ••e•

its ninth straight home court
victory . Abdui.Jabbar netted ·
22 points and guard Locius
ADen added ~I to support
Goodrich.
Celtics 105, cavs 90
Jo Jo White had '!I points to
spark Bo$1on. Charlie Scott
added 16 points for the Celtics
while Dick Snyder connected
on his. first six shots and .
· topped Cleveland with 21
points.
Soolcs 112, Bucks IIH
Tommy Burleson scored a
game high 28 . points, in·
eluding 18 in the first quarter,
w pace Seattle. Milwaukee,
trailing 511-47 at halftime, hit
11 of its first 12 field goat
attempts entering the foUrth
quarter to close to within one
at 101·100 with 3:05left. The ·
Sanies then outscored the
Bucks 11-4 down the stretch to
put it out of reach.
Nets 113, Stars 106
Julius Erving ootched 33
points and forward Tim
Bassett grabbed 17 rebounds
to lead New York. Rookie
Kim Hughes scored 16 points
for the Nets , while Brian
Taylor added 15. Ron Boone
led the Stars· with 24 points.

'•

The 60th anniversary of Mr.
and Mrs . Harley T. Johnson,
Rt. 4, . Pomeroy , was
celebrated last Sunday with a
family potluck dinner parly.
Athree-lier decora ted cake
with the numerals "60" on lop
was presented to the couple
by their gran ddaug hter, Mrs.
Larry Barr, Rutland.
Attending ·were Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Thoma, Mr.
and Mrs. Harley E. Johnson,
Tammy , Cheryl and Terry,
Mr. and Mrs·. John Do~&gt;n s,
Mrs. John R. Mercy, Peggy,
Carmel and Barbara, and
Donna LitUe, Rt. 4, Pomeroy ;
Mr. and Mrs. John E. Mercy
and Chris, Ra cine; Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Barr, David and
Cheryl, Rt. 1, Rutland. Mr.
and Mrs. ChaPiey Smilh of
Rl . 4, Pomeroy were unable
lo attend . Lincoln Russell
visiled in the afternoon.

.'

'

Social
Calendar

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MONDAY
MEET the Basketball
Team , 7 p.m. at Larry R.
Morrison Gym, Meigs High
School.
SOUT HERN
Ban d
Boosters, 7:30 p.m. at high
school.
EASTE RN Foo t ba ll
Banquel at high schoo&gt;, 6:30
p.m. Tickets are $2 a person.
MEIGS Local Chapter 17 of
Oh io Associa ti on of Public
School Employes. 7:30 p.m.
at Meigs Ju nior Hi gh
cafe teria.
TUESDAY
PAN C AK E A N D
.: sAUSAGE Supper in the
: basement of Heath United
: Methodist Church from 4 to 7
: p.m. Adults $2, all you can eat
: and children $1. Sponsored by
- Uni ted Methodisl Men.
KARATE CLASSES every
: Tuesday and Thursday at
- Meigs Jun ior High in' Mid·
dleporl , 7 p.m .

Play it safe and sure
It may be time to
have your present
· policy updated.

Let's Jalk Soon

DALE C. WARNER
992-2143

l fl2 W. Main

Higher natural gas prices, or
higher iJnetnpJoyment-we have to make a choice.
NoW, while we
still have a choice.

e. .• e • • • • • e e

ee
seconds
The firstquartry, e
Wyomingleft.
· backup
terback Brian Allf's pass was e
knocked loose from receiver •
Fred Jacobs in the end zone,
and the second try, Holy e
Name tackle Bill Banish e
collared Allf in his own back· •
field for a IO.yard loss as Ume e
expred.

I

finished behind the Pistons in
the Midwest Division.
In Sunday 's action, Atlanta
scored a 116-111 victory over
Philadelphia in a nationally·
televised game to put the
Hawks just ahead of the
faltering Washington Bullets;
Los Angeles kayoed Houston
110·99, Boston
ripped
Cleveland lllli-90 and Seattle
beat Milwaukee 112-104.
The New York Nets downed
Utah 113-106 and Kentucky
defeated St. Louis 9~ in the
two ABA games.
Hawks ll5, 'l&amp;ers 111
Atlanta's Tom Henderson
almost ran out of time bef?re
tossing in a spectacular 22foot jump shot with juSt three
·seconds left in the game. The
game was tied at 111-lll with
26 seconds left. Atlanta then
took the ball and went into a
freeze while the seconds
ticked away .
"We wanted penetration
for the last shot ," said Hawks
coach Cotwn Fitzsimmons,
"but Henderson wasn't able
to make it and when (John)
Drew fed the baU back out to
him, he had no choice but to
shoot it at the last moment."
After Henderson's game·
breaking shot, Philadelphia
failed to get its in-bounds
pass to forward George
McGinnis and the ball
bounced out of bounds untouched. The Hawks retained
possession and Henderson
made two final free throws
for the margin of victory.
"We had McGinnis blocked
out by several people," Filz·
simmons said. "I believe
Jofin Brown held him up and
he never made it to the baU."
McGirmis and Drew were
the high scorers with 33
points each.
Laters 110, Rockets 91
Gail Goodrich had 28 points
and II assists , both season
highs, to help Los Angeles to

heritage house

e •e

6

time "

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UP!) . Rose Bowl and that a loss or
- Michigan Coach Bo lie would \ send them to
Schembechler started Miami. I
·
working on 1976 prospects no
The fact both teams knew
sooner than he had completed they were going to bowls
this football season, a · undoubtedly contributed to
heartbreaking 21·14 loss to both team's decisions to come
Ohio State Saturday.
out with wide-open game
"I'm sorry, he ian't here," plans.
his wife, MUUe, said Sunday
One of the new wrinkles when she answered the tele- . the tailback option pass - got
phone at their home. "He's Michigan a touchdown just 24
out recruiting. I don't expect seconds before haltime when
him back until after supper." Gordon BeD threw II yards to
The circumstances are wingback Jim Smith .
differeni this year than a
Six seconds later the
year ago, which also ended Wolverines had the baU again
against the Buckeyes . because Archie Griffin, w~
Michigan will be going to tbe failedtogsin IOOyardsforthe
Orange Bowl on New Year's first lime , in 32 games,
Day rather than sitting home fumbled t~e kickoff and
as it did the last three years Michigan.recovered.
with a share of the Big Ten
After two fruiUess plays,
championship.
Bell ran two yards to the Ohio
Scbembechler must State19butttleftkickerBob
wonder .what might have Wood with an atrocious angle
happened if his Wolverines from the left side and he
had not been betrayed by a missed Ill ~7-yard field goal
missed field goal again. Field try - to the left.
goalll they have not made are
one reasop Michigan missed
a chance at the Rose Bowithe
three previous years.
Ohio State's championship
Early While
Saturday was its first
Selettion Is Good.
outright crown since 1970;
though the Buckeyes wtll be
- Gift Certificatestaklng taUback Archie Griffin
Store Hours:
to Pasadena, Calif., for the
floS Mon . - Fri.
fourth time In a row.
flo ISat.
"We made up our minda
before the game to go for the
win," Schembechler said,
Middleport, Ohio
knowing it would .take a
victory to put his team in tbe
•
•

e

NfiW York

heroof Saturday's nationallytelevised game, reaching the
degree of reverence normally
given his fleet-footed brother
when he int~rc epted a Rick
Leach pass late in the fourth
quarter after the Buckeyes
had driven to tie the score at
14-14 on Pete Johnson 's 24th
touchdown this season.
The interception, which
Ray retuM)ed to the Michigan
three, igniter the Buckeyes,
and Johnson·plunged over to
a bed of rose~ on the next play
with his 25th -touchdown.
"[just couldn't believe it,"
said Ray .•"!'ve been wailing
so long, but I got it at the right

Bo looking toward '76

United Press fntematioaal
title.
" H I had to do it all over
Cleveland Holy Name's de·
fense stiffened and preserved again, I think I'd still do the
a five-point lead in the lalt same thing, '' said dlsapfew ~ds of regulation pointed Newark coach J.D.
' play for the state high lchool Graham after his team's 16-7
Class AA championship overtime loss to Carey.
Saturday, but it took Carey a
Tied 7·7 at the end of
little longer than four regulation, each team was
quarter~~ to win the Clasa A gi'len the baU on Its op·
ponent's lO.yard line. If you
scored In four plays and your
opponent didn't - you won.
Carey quarterback John
NHL Standings
aY United Press International Greer snapped a scoring
Patrick Olvllion
W. L. T. Ph. strike to Dennis Kessler on
Ph iladelphia
u
J s
JJ the first play of Carey's
N.Y. Islanders
9 6 5
23
A llante
B 10 2
18 series for the acore and the
- . Rangers
8 12 2 18 Green Wave faDed to move
•
Smythe Division
;
W. L . T. Pts, the ball the required 10 yards
c-..cago
10 4 1
21 in Ita four tries.
S ~ Louis
8 1 •
20
"H we had to lose it, we
vln couver
7 B s
19
K nsas City
5 12 2
12 couldn 'I have lost it in a more
Minnesota
A 15 0
8
thrU!ing game," added Gra·
•
Norris Division
'
W. l.T , Ph . ham, Who instructed his team
f4n 1rea1
14 4 l l l to ktck the PAT and tie the
LIS Angeles
12 B 2
16
l!ib ur gh
R 9 2
18 game after Newark scored
troll
6 IJ 4
16 with 8:10 remaining In the
sh lngton
2 17 2
6
•
Adams Dlvl t. lon
game in Akron's Rubber
•
W, L . T . Pts.
B&amp;llalo
16 l I ll Bowl.
Btslon
9 6 5
2l
"Sure, I thought about
Toronto
9 6 5
23 goilltl for two points, but I
Ctlltorn la
8 14 2 18
thought that we had
Saturc:tav's ResUlts
Plnaaelphla • N.Y. Rangers l momentum after that score
NIY . I slanders S Kansa! City 2
and thai we had time to score
A"anta 6 Minne,ota 3
Nt&gt;ntreal 4 -Toronto 2
again. The way we were
PD.tsburgh 6 L 05 Angeles J
moving the baD, I still think
s to: Louis 5 Detro I1 1
Ch icago 1 Vancou\ler 1
we
would have scored If we
Sunday' s Results
had a couple of more
N:r . Rangers l California 2
Detroit 4 Los Angeles 1
minutes," said Graham, who
Bltflalo 6 Kan .. s Clly 2
Tf onto l Boslon l
will have all winter to mull
•
Mond•y's Games
over
his decision.
!No games scht&lt;luledl
•
Tuesdly's Games
r.ater saturday in the•
•
M~t real at Atlanta
Rubber Bowl, Holy Name
L~ A"S''eles at Boston
quarterback Kevin Hartman
Buffa lo at Vancouv er
ran for two scores and passed
'
:
NBA Stanellngs
for a third in his team's 19-14 •
- United Pren International
11,
Eas.tern Conference
win
over
Cincinnall •
•
Atlantic Division .
~
W. l . Pet. Gl . Wyoming.
Pl\iladelphla 9 .5 .643 Wyoming drove to the Holy
Baston
8 s .615
' 'l
8ll.ffelo
9 6 .600
' 1 Name 23 with less than 30

Pro Standings

..

.~,.:,:

"Alot of teams would have
gone out there and not put out
as we did," he said. "We had
nothing to lose. We had
nothing to do but try to beat
Cincinnati and knock the!p
out of the divison race ."
Paul Brown, who built the
Browns dynasty and after he
was fired began anew with
the Bengals, had a hint of
disaster to come.
"They had their big
moment today," he said. "I
was afraid of that coming up
from Cincinnati. They have
some great football players
and so do we, but they won."
Btlly Lefear ran the
opening klckoff back 92 yards
to the Bengals' two , suffering
a broken leg when he was
tackled, knocking him out of
action for the rest of the
season . But on the next play,
Pruitt darted in for a
Cleveland touchdown.
Don Cockroft added a field
goal before Anderson threw
touchdown pases of 35 y~rds
to Bob Trumpy and 30 yards
to Isaac Curtis and Stan Fritz
ran for a third Bengals' score
. before Cockroft hit another
Cleveland field goal just
before the first half ended.
Cockrofi and Dave Green
alao swapped field goals in
the third quarter before the
Browns exploded for 20 points
In the final period.
Oscar Roa'n made a
magniflcent one-hand catch
of a Phipps pass for a TD,
Pruitt lroke three tackles on
a 13-yard completion for
another and free safety Jim
Hill ran an interception back
56 yards for the capping
touchdown.

Four teams who sat out the
playoffs last season are oow
leading or tied for the lead in
eac h of the National
Basketball Association 's
divisions.
At this point in the season ,
however, team standings in
the NBA . probably mean as
little as a first quarter rally.
It doesn't matter if you're
leading 15·3 after two
minutes; all that counts is the
final .score.
Similarly, a half-game lead
or even a five-game division
lead in November is hardly
cause for celebration. "See
me in May," says the
knowledgeable NBA fan , who
realizes the second season the playoffs - is the only
thing that really matters in
pro basketball.
1M on this November mor·
ning, you can't blame a few
young teams for feeling par·
ticularly chirpy . Atianta was
getting a good start on a 31·51
season this time last year
while Philadelphia was on its
way to a 34-48 campaign.
Today they are leading ,
respectively, the Central and·
Atlantic Divisions by a halfgame each.
Los Angeles was worse
than either of those teams
last season, finishing dead
last in the Pacific Division
with a 30-52 record but it, too ,
is getting some first place
exposure. The !..akers, now
featuring Kareem AbduiJabbar, have a 12-6 record
and are only percentage
points behind defending
champion Golden State, 10-4.
Detroit, another non-playoff
team last season with a 40-42
record, holds a three game
edge over Milwaukee, which

Senti~. M.l i(idlepolrl-P~o~nn;E~r(~
l Y~N;ov~.~24;,;19~75~--------------------.,

Columbia G as sees no alt e rnat ive . T il e
c·ritil:;il sht&gt;rtage o f natural gas and industry's dcpcndem:e on th is \'aluahlc reso ur~ c dictate the a nswer. A vo te agaimt
one is automaticall v a l't&gt;lc {i1r the other.
M u~h as we\llike."we can"t vote aga inst
both . It uocsn't wtuk that wav.
As ( ,&gt;iumbia points ou t. the price of
natural gas. where it is fou nd. has bee n
hdu su lo w fo r so long by govern ment
~:unlrnb . til &lt;ll we'w gnbbk u it up W&lt;lstefull' ltlf 1·cars with ou t co ncern for its
rcai 1·aluc . In recent yea rs. whi le &lt;h e
d ema nu fllr na tura l gas ha s be en
s k1rocketin~ . k " afiu kss gas has b"·n
fou nu and r r&lt;&gt;d uccd .
T he ~as indus tr1· is one t&gt;f the most
dosch ~c ~ ul a t c d i1idustrics in tile worl u.
Anu ihis ' is one of the pwbkms. T he
ri ~ in !! l'n ~ l ~ of dc\' clopi ng ne w gas
so u r•·~s. plu s the gmwnmcnt 's strict price
contrnb. h&lt;ll'c di s.:oura ged th e search l(lr
natural gas. Just last vc7tr. twice as much
natur;1i gas was used :ts was disC&lt;11·crc u.
WllCii' vou cnnsiucr the fa~l that natu ral gas pr;" ·idcs &lt;ll·~r h;ill'o f ali th e ~n~rgy
American inuu stn· needs. it is eas\' to
understan u that. a~' th e suppl y uwin;ll cs.
more ;uiu more inuustries fe el the pi m:h
o f nalu r&lt;d gas rati nnin g. Sl,lw ing down ,
cutting huck . .. do&gt;i ng down. Peo pl e out
o f ll'&lt;&gt; rk arc po,&gt;r c u , t nm~ rs fo r eve ry
other bu sin c&gt;S . And so the ca ncer
spreads.
Columbia want s us to rc;)li zc th at the
fc~cml gnl'crnmcnt must r ~ m ovc c\mtrols on the price nf ~~ ~ ~~· na tural gas.
ll'l1crc it is uisC\ll' crcJ . in oru er Ill pmvi dc
uriilcrs the necessary incc nti w to lind
uno Jc,·clop inorc 11(' 11.' gas.
Bc~ au se without more natu ral gas. Columbia sees no II'&lt;IY to avoiu hi ghe r un ·
cn1ploymcnt. Anu that's th e hard truth'.

Pomeroy

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PAST MATRON S OF
Pomeroy OES 186, 7:30p.m.
home of Mrs. Geraldin e
Young. All pas! matrons ore
invited.
RACINE American Legion
Auxiliary, F'ost 602, 7 p.m. at
the hall.
JUNIOR Ameri can Legion
Auxiliary, Feeney-Benne tt
Pos t128, 6p.m.at the homeof
Becky Roush.
WEDNESDAY
AME.RICAN
Legi on
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, 6:30 potluck a! the
hall with the Legionnaires,
.
7:30p.m. meehng.

:
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~

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i
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Joe Smit·h's Recipe Home Made

SAUSAGE ......~~~~. ~9.~.~........'.~~ .s1 19

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5

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POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT Lions Club, noon
·at the Meigs IM.
OHIO VALLE Y Co mmandery 24, Knights Ternplar, 7:30 p.m.' at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.

-

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-'"'

USDA CHOICE

Clmed
Thanksgiving
Day.

PORK
STEAK

" '~

.......
•l --

Superiors

POLISH

SAUSAGE .............1~·••

.'

4

89

·~·''

LB.

Superiors 12 Ounce

WIENERS ..........................~~.~:. 794

·- ...

,. ~

' Jli

PORK ROAST

p

,

'"'i t(

SUPERIORS BONELESS

BOLOGNA ...........................Ill,. 89~
Superiors 12 Ounce

·.. -4+

~~

Superiors All Meat

All BEEF WIENERS........:.~ :.89~
Superiors
Ounce_
Pkg $129
SLICED BACON.................... :.. .

LB.$

12

1. 1·9

PICNIC$
ROAST . •

HAM
Whole
or
Half

.....

•'

SCOT. lAD

EGGS
"' "

.... ...

nw

U. S. Grade ALarge

._

.~.

~----------~~----~-----------------------------Superiors Fresh &amp; Lean
:.:··::

Superiors Semi- Boneless

I

2 ct.

PET RITZ

PIE SHEU.S•••••••••••• f~l·••••
•

RICH'S:: .

WHIPPED

DAIRY BUYS

39~

·

·.

BANQUET MINCE AND

49

EGG NOG........... ~~ 89'

BROUGHTON'S LOW FAT

,.

CHOC. MILK.t!:~:~.~!1 ~0=. sug

'

''

-

CONTAC
pk£ $119:?
COLD CAPSULES •••••~~... . ~-~
,,
-

....

...
~

"' '

MARK VLOW PRICE

PRESTONE
gal. $399 :~
ANTI-FREEZE••••••••• ~~~··
·. ::;

~

PUMPKIN PIES.........~.c.h.. ..

BROUGHTON'S 6 PCT.

•

REGUlAR 11.95

.

9 oz. 49~
TOPPING ••••• ~1·•.....
.

&amp;ge·
~

TOILET
4 PAK
SPECIAL
TISSUE •••••••••••••••• ,••• ,. . .

FROZEN FOODS

doz.69e

FROZEN OYSTERS

10 oz. can 11.29

BROUGHTON'S

COllAGE DiEESE
oz. 89'
MIRACLE WHIP

Salad Dressing

69e
79e

ENGLISH ' LARGE
s1zE
s'!'an
lb. 79'
SiZe
.
WALNUTS............•......••...• f.o,up~•••
RITZ
t-lb.
box
CRACKERS.•.............................
PINTO
.
.
~b.$}29
IIIEAN~ •••.•.. ~ .........................
ag
.
APPIAN WAY·
box
on~
PIZZA MIX•.••...•••...•....•..•.•... ~····
ARMOUR'S CHILl .'.
can
WITH IIEA·NS.........: . ~ ..•....... ~~~.... .
ARMOUR'S .
· 1sVz oz.
SLOPPY ·JOES....... ~ .......... ~~ ••.•••

COLAoz.
~6

bois.
pak

19

4

.

SATUR DAY ONLY

FAVORITE

BREAD

BEATS PH.D FOR TITLE
ATLANTIC CITY , N.J .
(UP!) - A. E. Gostomelsky,
39, an ac countant from
Skokie, Ill ., whose children
always beat him at Monopoly
became the first· U.S.
champion of the game here
Saturday.
He won a clock with a face
'of a Monopoly board BJ)d ·
played In the World Monopoly
Championship Sunday In
Washington.
Gostomelsky won $1!,410 in
Monopoly money and $4,895
In property in the game which
lasted two hours and 10
minutes. He beat three other
play~ra, Including Roger
Compton, a Ph .D ~andldate
and teacher at the University
of Miami in Oxford, Ohio .
'
'

..

Grade A First Oualitv Turkeys
Best For Thanksgiving - IE;:..~:-~:·~

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
PHONE 9~2-3480
.
Corner Mill and Second .Sis. We reserve the right to limit quantities. MIDDLEPORT

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We Will Feature

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 0
.su·n. 10 to 10

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RACINE LODG E 461 ,
F&amp;AM, special meeting, 7
p.m. ai temple. Work in rt rst
degree i all members asked to
attend .
MID D L E PORT
POMEROY Ar ea Bra nch,
American Association of
University Women, 7:30p.m.
al Meigs High Schoo l
Library . The program !heme
wi ll be "Think Hunger" and
wilt be presented by the In\ernaliona1 Relations commitl ee chaired by Mrs.
Rachael Downie.

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We ha ve ma ny thing s to be thankful for du ri ng this Bicentenn ial era . The
mo s t ch eri shed of our nation 's ble ssings ... freedom . . . has given
Am e rica ns th e right t o a life r ic h in liberty , justi ce, happines s. ·

4 LOAVES

$100

SCOT LAD

GINGERALE

49e
59e
79¢

' '\
;.

,.,

All WEEI&lt; SALE

"
"

DIET RITE
AND

R. C. COLA

age

IN 64 OZ.
'NO RETURN
BOffiES
Diet Rite Flavors- 5 qts. 11

·-·"
'·

· AND

CLUB SODA
3 qts. '1.00

ALL WEEI&lt; LONG

Thtow Away Boltles

16 oz.

Large Golden Ripe

8 pak

BANANAS
Dad's Root Beer
~~~5~1~b_s~·~'~o~r~~----·~=~~~-s--~-s~._u9_~_~.~. Diet R~e Cola

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�6- The Dailv Sent~~l. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Nov . 24, 1975

Trinity Circle has
plans for holiday

0

Holiday plans were made
and a program on Thanks·
giving was given by Mrs.
Robert 1\. Wilson at a recen t
meeting of Trinity Circle held
at the church.
The Lord 's Pra yer in
WliSon opened the meeting
with Mrs. Wilson usin g ·the
topic, "First .Impressions,"
with all members par -

DAVEY DODSON

Birthday
observed
Davey Dodson, son of
David and Connie Dodson
Middleport, was honored
Nov. 8 with a party in
celebration of his sixth birthday .
Games were played with
both ·prlzes going to Melissa
Downing. Favors were given
to all the children.
A Winnie the Pooh theme
was carried out and refreshments of ice cream, potato
chips, coffee and Kool-Aid
were served ·to Mrs. Nellie
Hatfield, Davey's grandmother,Kevin and , Paul
Hatfield, Charles, Kay and
Corey Hatfield, Mary and
Greg Hibbs, Patsy and Scott
Ogdin, Melissa Downing,
Shlela, Bryan and Jamie
• Reeves, Carol Aull. Sending
, ,gifts were Mrs. Ernest
' Mitchell and family and Mr.
' and Mrs. George Anderson .
The cake was baked by
Mrs. Charles Hatfield and
assisting Mrs. Dodson with
the serving were Mrs. Dennis
Ault , Mrs. Robert Reeves and
' Mrs. Hughie Ogdin.

•

lic ipalin g. Th e thou ght
presented by M1·s. Wilson was
th at Thanksgiving is as fi ll ed
with blessings as the heart
will a llow. A readin g,
"Thanksgiving is More Than
a Day in November" and
pra ye r concluded the
program .
Miss Mary Virginia Reibel
was in ch.arge of the busin ess
meeting with plans being
completed for the annual
holiday project of remembering the elderly and ill of
the church . ·
Members brought in their
Christmas stocking offering
for finan cing the projects. A
Chri stm as
party
and
program was planned for
Tuesday, Dec. 16 at 7:30 at
th e church. Mrs . David
Ru sse ll will prese nt the
program . Miss Reibel will be
in charge of the party plans
with a $2 gift exchange to be
held .
It was reported that three
members at tended the
Church Women United
program at the Forest RWl
Church and that the circle
had purchased gift certificates for mission work and
paid yearly dues .for membership.
Mr s. Th.omas Youn g
reported on cards sent to
members who are ill or
bereaved. A thank-you note
was read from Mrs . Albert
Woodard . Mrs . Leonard
Jewell and Mrs. Kenneth
Harris served a dessert
course carryin g out the
Thanksgiving motif.

Mr. and Mrs. Durst to
P,olly's Pointers . be honored SaturdOy

~~~··:::::~::::::::::::;:;:;::::::::::::-:·:·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~.~

Helen Help
USo
Uy IIden U&lt;••cl
0

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Distrust In the Suburbs
Dear Helen :
Our combined service clubs are sponsoring a home for
homeless teenage girls. One of our members has donated her
suburban house in a very elite part of town. lt's large enough to
accommodate 12girls and the couple who will be in charge .
But suddenly the neighbors have thrown up so many roadblocks that we may have to cancel our plans, even though we
have city and state backing on finances •. etc.
These paranoid people are afraid of "bad influences" for
their children. (Our girls are not "b~d"- they're from broken
or alcoholic homes and need a chance.) They don't want "an
institution" on their street and have invoked the one-family
home ordinance: (This wlll be a "famify"-no larger than tbe
Bob Kennedys once was.) They SIIY. there will be parking
problems, and too many kids cluttering up the neighborhood.
(Most won't have cars, and all will be in schoo,l, including
summer school. J
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Since residents of this area have•much influence at City
Hall we may lose the battle.
Tell me, Helen, .;,ould YOU complain if a "home" like ours
were to be established in your neighborhood? - MRS. T. C.
Dear Mrs. C. : '
You know I wouldn't! In fact I'd be over there offering to
help wherever I was needed.
.
Perhaps you can break down resistance by visiting each of
these paranoid residents personally -and I'd suggest you take
a couple of your girls along with you. When people come face to
face with their "fears, " they often realize how Imaginary they
really are. - H.

+++

Dear Helen :
We've had our two children. Now I want a \lasectomv. but
my wife says, "What if something happens to the family and
we want another child?" She'd rather take the pill, which I
believe Is potentially dangerous.
I'm psychologically ready for the operation. Now, would
you please conv.inee my wife? - HARRY

By Polly Cramer

APPLE GROVE - Mr . and
Mrs. P. M. Durst of 216 Sang
St., Ravenswood, · W. Va., .
former
Apple
Grove
residents, will be honored
Saturday Nov . 29, from 1lo 10
p.m. at the Cottageville, W.
Va . fire hall in celebration of

How to lower ·
utility !Jilts

INFLATION FIGHTER
detergent. The same goes for
DEAR RE.ADERS
the washing machine and
During these days uf inflated dryer. Many of us are prone
prices many of us are finding to toss in some sollcd things
our utility pri ces getting every day but should wait lor
higher and higher so ills up to a full load.
us, the consumers, to save
Never heat the oven to bake
anywhere we can. Thi.s will just one thing. Plan meals "so
not only save us money but that two or three things are
help those utility companies baked at the same time.
who fear a shortage of energy Practl&lt;ally an entire meal
In various forms. There are can be baked while a pic or
so many little things that can cake is baking. Even If II Is
add to the size of our· bills. more convenient to get them
When a bill was questioned a out of the way in the morning,
utility company said frost· wait and bake while cooking a
free refrigerators cost more casserole or other oven
to operate and that lee dlniler.
These are not new ideas but
makers also add to one's blll.
So during the winter months things we need to remember
when less Ice is used we could and be reminded of. Each
turn off the ice ·maker and savings we make may seem
fre.eze lee In trays.
small In Itself but, oh, how it
Shut off the heat In rooms adds up In a year's ttme.
not being used. Wearing a Think before you use · an
S\\'eater in the house can appliance - even Iron the
mean the difference between things that require little heat
betng comfortable :i.nd un· before changing the setting
comfortable If yuur lher· for Items requiring a really
mostat Is kept a bit lower hot iron. How are you fighting
than it used to be.
inflation? - POLLY.
II the dishwasher is not lull
at the end of the day do not
DEAR POLLY - I am a
turn It on but wall until It Is school custodian and to save
full and save energy, water, money on window washing
money and even dlshwashlng liquid I make a very good one

of my own. I mix two cups of
household ammonia, one cup
distilled whi te vinegar and
one gallon of water . This is
poured, as needed, into a
spray bottle. If one prefers,
two or three drops of either
blue or green food coloring
c&amp;n be added . - EUNICE.
DEAR POLLY - To save
on having to buy so much
expensive waxed paper, I
carefully remove the waxed
paper bags from empty
cereal boxes. They are great
when taken apart and laid out
flat to drop quick no-bake
cookies and such things on. MELANIE .
DEAR POLLY - Instead
of buying a king size electric
blankel buy two twin size and
sew them together. You have
two controls as well as save
money. - SYLVIA .

Up to. $30,000 is now
available to you when ·
you must enter a '
Convalescent
Nur sing Home.
For ltee 1nformciiion

with no·obligation, moil

"Great For
Christmas"

BAKER

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FURNITURE ~
Middleport

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A Sincere Thanks to the Voters of ..
Bedford Township for your vote and '
support.

•

HELEN SWARTZ
CLERK - BEDFORD TOWNSHIP
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Paid Political Adverlisement

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WHOLE FRYING

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We have the elegant E uropc:m-styk Crudkphonc,
for continental chit chat. And the no~talgic Candlestick Phone, one of the few practical inventions of
the Roaring 20's.
We ulso ha ve the St yldin t Phonc, cleverly di sgui.lcd ns a piece of modern sculpture. And the compact Stnrlitcfl Ph onc, with a lighkd di u! to el iminate
nocturnal £roping.

r I

Finall y. there ·~ our handsome wood-grnin Chest·
phonc..lhc only phone in the wnrld that comes with
a place to keep it.
If you'd like to have one of these "special phones,
we have ways to make it easy. Just call our business
ollicc.

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ij hi

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GEnERAL TELEPHOnE

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•

Chrbtmas seals. Mrs. i.uuise
Folmer gave devotions using
scripture fro)n St. .Juhn l and

a meditation
entitl ed
··Planting Seeds in the
Ma ster 's Garden ."
In a progra~tt prepared by
Mr s.
Lottie
Leonard ,
members gav e personal
thoughts on Thanksgivi1i g.
Mrs. Barbara Goegle in read
"Danger Over the Counter ,"
Mrs. Ethel Crueser; "Sign
through Sound, " Fran ces
flolm e r ;
&lt;~ Sta g nant
Water ,'"
Mrs .
Helen
Blackson ; ··canker Sores and
Cold Sores;'' Mrs. Louise
Folmer, " Arthri tis," and a
poem, "The Makin g of
Friends" by Mrs. Leonard .
The contest was won by
Mrs. Helen Blackston and
Mrs. Loui se Radford. Others

'•

. Naturally, dangly type plants look best. The ivys,
plulodendron, spider plant, ivy geranium, Christmas cactus,
' begonias or any you might have , including a cherry toma~J
plant or sprawling juniper. Create your own and use the plants
available and a little imagination.
The 'following are step by step directions. As mentioned
· previously, the new containers are ideal to use, but any bowl or
' container that you may have will do and make your own
. hanger. To provide for good drainage, first put a layer of
something like Turf ace in the bottom (or pebbles, broken
, crockery, etc. ). Next, add a layer of soil.

Society holds
holiday potluck

·i

Then put in the plants. Next, flllln around the sides of the
' planter and the sides of the plants with more soil.
Firm the soli in!O .p!Jee with Yliur fingertips. Then water
: well and hang the·planter up! What kind of soil to use? Some
' flower growers stick with a fibrous, cactus type mixtW'e.
Others pr~et&gt;a soU mix composed of one "part soil, one part
peat moss and one part perlite. Once plants are in place and
well started, add a slow release fertilizer as a top dressing so
that suffiCient nutrients are provided for the rest of the season.

.
:

What if ,the perso~ still has one of the moss lined wire
REVEALING is the
baskets? E!orl't toss It out. '!'here's a way to get around the fact
that these dry out so fast. Put in an aluminum foil liner
Paris word in fashion .lor
wrapped with plastic . You first moisten and put peat moss in
spring-summer. Black·
place. Next fit In the aluminum foil plastic wrapped liner. Then
white striped jersey dress
put a layer of drainage material in tl)e bottom. Put \he layer of has high sldNllls showing
soil on top and plant. Again firm the soil down, and·just before
off matching bikini.
watering punch a hole in the bottom so that excess water can
Glvenchy Gentleman outfit
drain off.
:
·
. for him has matching
Nowaeat.eyotD'self a hauging baSket or"two. Bring some : strl9ed jersey Ti.shlrt,
of summer indoors for the winter and hang it in a suMy win· ~ white cotton gabard!ne
dow to brighten up the coming cold wintry days.
pants.

' ending were Mrs . Sundy
att
F'ohn er, Mrs. Fran ces
f:ocglein , Mrs . nc una
Grueser , Mr s . Nan cy
Grueser. Mrs. Thelma Jeffers, Mrs. Wilmetta Le ifheit,
Mrs . Sus ie Pullin s , Mrs.
Phy.llis Skinner, Mrs. Vena
Whaley , Mr s.
Len ora
Leifheit, Mrs . Ja cki e Zirkle,
Mrs . Martha King, and a new
member, Mrs ..Judy Hwuphreys.

fli"Ojec ts were

from I he r:rundy Mlluntain

pla nned a l th e Th un ai ;-Jy
ni ght 111ct.• ti r1g !lf the l.oy&lt;:JI

Miss ion Sd wol thanki ng the
dtiSS for u gift uf money . Also
rc;:1d wf:l.s u leltcr frum Steve

Womcn"s Cltiss of the Mid·
dleporl Church of Christ at
the home of Miss Mild red
Hawley.
Shut -in pla tes will again be
made with Mrs. Elea nor
Lohse &lt;:mll her eumrn ill cc to

have charge. At tile Christmas dinner party scheduled
lor Dec. 4 at the church
members will take gifts hut 1n
lieu uf an exchange, the gifl s
will be sent to the Gallipolis
Slate Institu te. The Loyal
Bereans class wili se rve the
6:30 p.m. dinner with Mrs .
Pearl Reynold s and Mrs.
El eanor Loh se to hand le
decorati ons.
A communicat ion was read
APPLE GROVE - The
Apple · Grove
United
Methodi st Women held a
fellowship supper Saturday
evenin g at the Letart Falls
Community Center.
Preceding the6 p.m. turkey

Fetlowship
supper held

dinner

Sievers, il rnissi unury on the
campus of Ohi o Uni v(' rsi ly ,

thanki ng

the

class for

assislc:tnce with his wur k.
Anwn ~

those reported ill

were Mrs. l.esla Gothard,
hospit alized in Co lum bus,
Mrs. Virginia Scott, Mrs.
Margaret Hoyer and Mrs.
Donna Hussetl .

an d entitled '" Pa tchw ork
Pi ec.: es," "Quil ting Party "

an d ··r;r atitude " ad apted
fr om Theodore 1\oose velt .
She concluded with a Thanksgi ving prayer .
Refr eshmenls were served

by Mrs. Pratt , Mrs. Mabel·
Walb urn , Mrs. Maril yn
Bishop and Mrs. Hattie Swift.

Devo!i ons to open the
mee lin ~

were ~ iv c n by Mrs.
Grace Pra ll who look
scri pture from Psalm 100.
Mrs . Mary Ba iley read
"' Thanksg iving" from a book
by Helen Steiner Rice . The
program by Mrs. Beulah ·· t may not be th e boss in th is
Housh was taken from Id eals house . hut I've got seniority
over YOII :··

Lets keep it growing

the hymn , ' " We

for 200 more years.

Gat her Together" was sun g
by the group. AThanksgivin g
service of poetry, a serA poutluck Thanksgivin g monelle by the Rev. Howard
dinner was held by the Shiveley, scripture readings
Eva nge lin e Mi ss ionary and prayer followed th e
Societ y of th e . Pomeroy supper. For group singing of
Church of Christ recently at hymns, Dallas Hill led with
the home of Mrs. Elwood Jan /'iorris and Mrs. Howard
Bowers, Chester Road.
Shiveley at the pian o.
Mrs.
Evelyn
Smi th
Attending were Mrs. Paul
pr esided · at th e business Byers, Mr s. Edna Mcmeeting with Mrs. Richard Cartney, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Evanson giving the Thanks· Spencer, Douglas Barne~t,
giving devotions using Psalm Tracy Mearns, Mr. and Mrs.
117 and Phil 4. Mrs. Smith Darrell Norris and Tracy,
had prayer and Mrs. Betty Eddie and David Roush,
Spencer read "Thank You Cricket Carpenter, Cheryl
God for Little Things-"
· Roseberry, Tracey and Zane
Mrs. Denver Kapple read a Beeg le, Mr . and Mrs. Dorsey
letter fr om the Children 's Parsons, Eileen Buck, Alice
Mission in Mexico which has Balser, Dolly Parson s,
received support for the past Bertha Robinson, Earl y
year from the society and Roush, Dolly Hill, Mr . and
plans were made to send'" Mrs. Jack Ables, Mr. and
another gift of money. The Mrs. Russell Roush , Debbie
annual Christmas par ty was Barnell, Mr . and Mrs. Carroll
planned for Dec. 16 at the While , Darla, Deanna, Keith
home of Mrs. Louis Osborne . and Kevin, Mr . and Mrs.
Others att endin g were Mrs. Dallas Hill, John Hill , Mrs.
Edward Venoy, Mrs . Clyde Stella Jarrell, the Rev. and
Andrews and Mrs. Earl Mrs . Shiveley and Paul
Cleland.
Ables. ·

Welcome God to America's
bicentennial...
practice what you pray.
'LAST MINUTE
TURKEY TIME

SPECIALS'

.,

LONGHOR
CHEESEta ~~ 29

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CHUCK STEAK
QUANTITIES RIGHTS RESERVED
Many Thanks for your fine support since our
opening. We wish you a" Happy Thanksgiving
from all .of us at Gateway. We will be closed all
day Thanksgiving so our employees may spend
the holiday with their families . .

~·-

FRESH CRANBERRIES
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CHUCK
ROAST

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JELLO
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PILLSBURY

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FRESH.
CRANBERRIES

BROUGHTON'S

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Name ________ _

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PKG. ·

SWEET POTATOES

CitJL~-----Zip __ _

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BROWN &amp; SERVE
ROLLS PKG.
FOLGER'S
10 oz.$
49
COFFEE JAR

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BLEACH

s.,...,.

flrlclttlllt'ISCU •.

1'11urtUr ttsr•

Phone __ _. _____ _

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GOLDEN ISLE

Sun. 10·tD 5

BETSY ROSS

ENDS &amp; PIECES

YAMS

2LB.

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7 OZ. PKG.

BACON

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SLICED

PEAS

2/25~

2% MILK

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PKG.

ARGO

8 oz.

Gallipolis. Oh. 45431
446-1875

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Hol iday

CHICKEN

P.O. Box 4

Street_ _______ _

:for traditional Christrrzas meal

8:

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this coupon to:

Mutual Prvtective
Insurance Co.

;rcz·~;~;;·· :·:·~~· ;·;;·· pTa:~· · ·p:;~J;~~~,.:.:.]I I

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SEE THE

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: Better Health Club to meet

F111lowing a tradition uf
nwn y ye ar s, the Hock
: · Springs Bcttc1· Health Club
• will 111ce t for a Chri stmas
•
. t\ Wt.lt•.kly fc;_tlure of Meigs
• potluck dinner on Dec. 18 at
e l ow tt~ C~o.J r· 1en Club members.
• the Rock Springs Methodist
Church and spend the afteroo un
makin g
and
BY MRS. ROBERT LEWIS
deliv
ering
holiday
treats
to
WINDING TRAil~ GARDEN CLUB
shut-ins.
HANGING BASKETS ARE BACK
Plans for the day were
made when the club memHanging baskets are in again . Many green thumbs in the bers met Wednesday at the
~st b":C~e discouraged because plants growing in moss. home of Mrs. Barbara Offutt.
lined ':"lrebaskel.'l dried out so fast. It seemed t11at they needed AI the party, there will be a
watermg alm9st every day and sometimes twice a day during gift exchange and also a 50
sununer lllonths.
cent grab bag box.
But n~w there _is good news. Modern hanging planters
The club voted to make
have been fash1oned from plastic and ceramics some com- do nations to the Meigs
plete with attached saucers below: Thus tbe soil cto'esn 't dry out County Senior Citfzens and to
so fast. With the new rope hangers, or your own made from
'
cord, rope, macrame or yarn, a planter can be hWlg in any
appropriate place in the home. There is no reason why the
average home gardener can't enjoy a hanging basket any time
of year .

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ADMIRAL
ENERGY
SAVER
MICftO.WAVE
OVEN

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Tlt 1unb

••• J\otes
•

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ATTENTION All
SENIOR CITIZENS

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their 60th wedding an niversary.
They are the parents of two
children, a son, Chester Durst
of Niles, and a daughter, Mrs ..
Randall 1Agnes J Parsons of
Akopka, Fla. who will host
the affair in honor of their
parents . Mr. and Mrs . Durst
have seven grandchildren
and
ninegreatgrandchildren .
Relatives and friends ar~
invited to attend. The couple
requests the omission of gifts.

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: Green

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He is credited with inspiring the Declaration of
Independence and for having
kept the spirit of the
Revolution alive d11fing its
darkest hours, the reviewers
noted.
Mrs. Horky stated that his
writing of "Common Sense"
in 1716 stirred all Americans
and set them thinking of the
country's place in the family
of nations. She said .that
Payne saw clearly the
direction America must take
- complete freedom from
England. Thomas Jefferson
described Payne as the
greatest apostle of \he
American Revolution . '
Mrs. Dwight Wallace
presided at the 111eeting with
the members giving the
pledge and collect in Wlison.
For roll call members named
a modern revolutionary .
Refreshmenl.'l were served
by the hostess.

•

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Bicentennial study
continued at meet

Dear Harry's Wife :
Here's good news for "Whatif" people like you : Dr.
~erman J. Silber, assistant professor of urology at the
University of California Medical Center, San Francisco,
reporl.'l that a new surgical technique Is proving effective in
reversing vasectomy. He says the first 24 patients who ·unThe Middleport Literary
derwent the operation now register a normal sperm count and
Club 's bicentenn ial study
16 of their wives have already gotten pregnant.
lt'sdone by microsurgery, with thread and instrument tips theme was con tinued WedThe Sunday school class of
Mrs. Clifford Jacobs met at almost invisible to the naked eye. When male sperm ducts are nesday when the members
met at the home of Mrs.
the Laurel Cliff Free successfully rejoined, fatherhood becomes possible again.
Dewey Horton to hear Mrs.
Okay? - H.
Methodist Church Thursday
Ben Philson review W. E.
++
+
evening for program practice
.
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Woodward'
s
" Thomas
and then went to the home of
"
I
f'ayne"
and
an
original
the Rev. and Mrs. Floyd Dear Helen :
Shook for refreshments.
In reference to your commenl.'l on pay tollel.'l : don't count prayer on Payne's writings
entitled "Common Sense , Et
Refreshmenl.'l of cookies on keeping the door open for the next customer!
I live in New Jersey and visit tlie shore each summer. AI," by Mrs. Carl Horky.
and hot chocolate were
served by Mrs. Harold Bathrooms here are constantly watched by a custodian. If you
.The two presented a parHanson and Mrs. Harry E. try to hold the "pay" door open for someone else, this woman
Clark to the Rev . Mr. and rushes over, nudges you out of the way and slams the door, trait of what they described
Mrs. Shook, Mr. and Mrs. ~en holds out her hand fo~ tpe nextl!'_~jllan's d!!P'J, a~W P~!t as t_he ~ sl 'llaligoe,d
Ernie Haggy , Mr. and Mrs. m the slot. She's so busy running fmJ~·one toilet 1i';IJ)e'!lex~~ ~~ncan I , ,!!Je;, coun~r_s
•'
liistory, Woodward s book, 11
Randy Hawley, Haroid has no time for cleaning. .
What's
the
world
coming
to
when
you
can't
visit
Mother
•
was pointed out, Is the first
Hanson, Mr. and Mrs. Mike
NattD'e
wiUiout
worrying
about
a
"use"
tax'
TRIED
IT,
BUT
written about Payne which
Wright, Jane Jacobs, Diane
FAILED
neither glorifies nor distorsts
Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. Dick
and
gives the first complete
Folmer, Kathy Scarberry,
and
human ... picture of . the
Susan Fleshman and Sherri Dear TffiF :
OJme to California , where pay toilets in public places are man as he really was - a
Clark. Pam Haggy was a
champion of the Common
now baMed. - H.
guest.
Mim who believed in Iannan
rights, freedom and quality.
Payne has been called the
spiritual godfather of the
nation.

Class meets
for practice

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepo rt-Pomeroy, 0., Nov. 24, 1975

GAL

~RMOUR

VIENNA 5 oz.
·SAUSAGE CAN
ARMOUR
12 oz. CAN
TREET with Ham Flavor
'

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�6- The Dailv Sent~~l. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Nov . 24, 1975

Trinity Circle has
plans for holiday

0

Holiday plans were made
and a program on Thanks·
giving was given by Mrs.
Robert 1\. Wilson at a recen t
meeting of Trinity Circle held
at the church.
The Lord 's Pra yer in
WliSon opened the meeting
with Mrs. Wilson usin g ·the
topic, "First .Impressions,"
with all members par -

DAVEY DODSON

Birthday
observed
Davey Dodson, son of
David and Connie Dodson
Middleport, was honored
Nov. 8 with a party in
celebration of his sixth birthday .
Games were played with
both ·prlzes going to Melissa
Downing. Favors were given
to all the children.
A Winnie the Pooh theme
was carried out and refreshments of ice cream, potato
chips, coffee and Kool-Aid
were served ·to Mrs. Nellie
Hatfield, Davey's grandmother,Kevin and , Paul
Hatfield, Charles, Kay and
Corey Hatfield, Mary and
Greg Hibbs, Patsy and Scott
Ogdin, Melissa Downing,
Shlela, Bryan and Jamie
• Reeves, Carol Aull. Sending
, ,gifts were Mrs. Ernest
' Mitchell and family and Mr.
' and Mrs. George Anderson .
The cake was baked by
Mrs. Charles Hatfield and
assisting Mrs. Dodson with
the serving were Mrs. Dennis
Ault , Mrs. Robert Reeves and
' Mrs. Hughie Ogdin.

•

lic ipalin g. Th e thou ght
presented by M1·s. Wilson was
th at Thanksgiving is as fi ll ed
with blessings as the heart
will a llow. A readin g,
"Thanksgiving is More Than
a Day in November" and
pra ye r concluded the
program .
Miss Mary Virginia Reibel
was in ch.arge of the busin ess
meeting with plans being
completed for the annual
holiday project of remembering the elderly and ill of
the church . ·
Members brought in their
Christmas stocking offering
for finan cing the projects. A
Chri stm as
party
and
program was planned for
Tuesday, Dec. 16 at 7:30 at
th e church. Mrs . David
Ru sse ll will prese nt the
program . Miss Reibel will be
in charge of the party plans
with a $2 gift exchange to be
held .
It was reported that three
members at tended the
Church Women United
program at the Forest RWl
Church and that the circle
had purchased gift certificates for mission work and
paid yearly dues .for membership.
Mr s. Th.omas Youn g
reported on cards sent to
members who are ill or
bereaved. A thank-you note
was read from Mrs . Albert
Woodard . Mrs . Leonard
Jewell and Mrs. Kenneth
Harris served a dessert
course carryin g out the
Thanksgiving motif.

Mr. and Mrs. Durst to
P,olly's Pointers . be honored SaturdOy

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Helen Help
USo
Uy IIden U&lt;••cl
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1''!&gt;.1

Distrust In the Suburbs
Dear Helen :
Our combined service clubs are sponsoring a home for
homeless teenage girls. One of our members has donated her
suburban house in a very elite part of town. lt's large enough to
accommodate 12girls and the couple who will be in charge .
But suddenly the neighbors have thrown up so many roadblocks that we may have to cancel our plans, even though we
have city and state backing on finances •. etc.
These paranoid people are afraid of "bad influences" for
their children. (Our girls are not "b~d"- they're from broken
or alcoholic homes and need a chance.) They don't want "an
institution" on their street and have invoked the one-family
home ordinance: (This wlll be a "famify"-no larger than tbe
Bob Kennedys once was.) They SIIY. there will be parking
problems, and too many kids cluttering up the neighborhood.
(Most won't have cars, and all will be in schoo,l, including
summer school. J
·
'
Since residents of this area have•much influence at City
Hall we may lose the battle.
Tell me, Helen, .;,ould YOU complain if a "home" like ours
were to be established in your neighborhood? - MRS. T. C.
Dear Mrs. C. : '
You know I wouldn't! In fact I'd be over there offering to
help wherever I was needed.
.
Perhaps you can break down resistance by visiting each of
these paranoid residents personally -and I'd suggest you take
a couple of your girls along with you. When people come face to
face with their "fears, " they often realize how Imaginary they
really are. - H.

+++

Dear Helen :
We've had our two children. Now I want a \lasectomv. but
my wife says, "What if something happens to the family and
we want another child?" She'd rather take the pill, which I
believe Is potentially dangerous.
I'm psychologically ready for the operation. Now, would
you please conv.inee my wife? - HARRY

By Polly Cramer

APPLE GROVE - Mr . and
Mrs. P. M. Durst of 216 Sang
St., Ravenswood, · W. Va., .
former
Apple
Grove
residents, will be honored
Saturday Nov . 29, from 1lo 10
p.m. at the Cottageville, W.
Va . fire hall in celebration of

How to lower ·
utility !Jilts

INFLATION FIGHTER
detergent. The same goes for
DEAR RE.ADERS
the washing machine and
During these days uf inflated dryer. Many of us are prone
prices many of us are finding to toss in some sollcd things
our utility pri ces getting every day but should wait lor
higher and higher so ills up to a full load.
us, the consumers, to save
Never heat the oven to bake
anywhere we can. Thi.s will just one thing. Plan meals "so
not only save us money but that two or three things are
help those utility companies baked at the same time.
who fear a shortage of energy Practl&lt;ally an entire meal
In various forms. There are can be baked while a pic or
so many little things that can cake is baking. Even If II Is
add to the size of our· bills. more convenient to get them
When a bill was questioned a out of the way in the morning,
utility company said frost· wait and bake while cooking a
free refrigerators cost more casserole or other oven
to operate and that lee dlniler.
These are not new ideas but
makers also add to one's blll.
So during the winter months things we need to remember
when less Ice is used we could and be reminded of. Each
turn off the ice ·maker and savings we make may seem
fre.eze lee In trays.
small In Itself but, oh, how it
Shut off the heat In rooms adds up In a year's ttme.
not being used. Wearing a Think before you use · an
S\\'eater in the house can appliance - even Iron the
mean the difference between things that require little heat
betng comfortable :i.nd un· before changing the setting
comfortable If yuur lher· for Items requiring a really
mostat Is kept a bit lower hot iron. How are you fighting
than it used to be.
inflation? - POLLY.
II the dishwasher is not lull
at the end of the day do not
DEAR POLLY - I am a
turn It on but wall until It Is school custodian and to save
full and save energy, water, money on window washing
money and even dlshwashlng liquid I make a very good one

of my own. I mix two cups of
household ammonia, one cup
distilled whi te vinegar and
one gallon of water . This is
poured, as needed, into a
spray bottle. If one prefers,
two or three drops of either
blue or green food coloring
c&amp;n be added . - EUNICE.
DEAR POLLY - To save
on having to buy so much
expensive waxed paper, I
carefully remove the waxed
paper bags from empty
cereal boxes. They are great
when taken apart and laid out
flat to drop quick no-bake
cookies and such things on. MELANIE .
DEAR POLLY - Instead
of buying a king size electric
blankel buy two twin size and
sew them together. You have
two controls as well as save
money. - SYLVIA .

Up to. $30,000 is now
available to you when ·
you must enter a '
Convalescent
Nur sing Home.
For ltee 1nformciiion

with no·obligation, moil

"Great For
Christmas"

BAKER

&lt;
r

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l
L

L

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••

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FURNITURE ~
Middleport

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A Sincere Thanks to the Voters of ..
Bedford Township for your vote and '
support.

•

HELEN SWARTZ
CLERK - BEDFORD TOWNSHIP
'

Paid Political Adverlisement

.•

WHOLE FRYING

.

'

We have the elegant E uropc:m-styk Crudkphonc,
for continental chit chat. And the no~talgic Candlestick Phone, one of the few practical inventions of
the Roaring 20's.
We ulso ha ve the St yldin t Phonc, cleverly di sgui.lcd ns a piece of modern sculpture. And the compact Stnrlitcfl Ph onc, with a lighkd di u! to el iminate
nocturnal £roping.

r I

Finall y. there ·~ our handsome wood-grnin Chest·
phonc..lhc only phone in the wnrld that comes with
a place to keep it.
If you'd like to have one of these "special phones,
we have ways to make it easy. Just call our business
ollicc.

(

ij hi

•

GEnERAL TELEPHOnE

•
•

Chrbtmas seals. Mrs. i.uuise
Folmer gave devotions using
scripture fro)n St. .Juhn l and

a meditation
entitl ed
··Planting Seeds in the
Ma ster 's Garden ."
In a progra~tt prepared by
Mr s.
Lottie
Leonard ,
members gav e personal
thoughts on Thanksgivi1i g.
Mrs. Barbara Goegle in read
"Danger Over the Counter ,"
Mrs. Ethel Crueser; "Sign
through Sound, " Fran ces
flolm e r ;
&lt;~ Sta g nant
Water ,'"
Mrs .
Helen
Blackson ; ··canker Sores and
Cold Sores;'' Mrs. Louise
Folmer, " Arthri tis," and a
poem, "The Makin g of
Friends" by Mrs. Leonard .
The contest was won by
Mrs. Helen Blackston and
Mrs. Loui se Radford. Others

'•

. Naturally, dangly type plants look best. The ivys,
plulodendron, spider plant, ivy geranium, Christmas cactus,
' begonias or any you might have , including a cherry toma~J
plant or sprawling juniper. Create your own and use the plants
available and a little imagination.
The 'following are step by step directions. As mentioned
· previously, the new containers are ideal to use, but any bowl or
' container that you may have will do and make your own
. hanger. To provide for good drainage, first put a layer of
something like Turf ace in the bottom (or pebbles, broken
, crockery, etc. ). Next, add a layer of soil.

Society holds
holiday potluck

·i

Then put in the plants. Next, flllln around the sides of the
' planter and the sides of the plants with more soil.
Firm the soli in!O .p!Jee with Yliur fingertips. Then water
: well and hang the·planter up! What kind of soil to use? Some
' flower growers stick with a fibrous, cactus type mixtW'e.
Others pr~et&gt;a soU mix composed of one "part soil, one part
peat moss and one part perlite. Once plants are in place and
well started, add a slow release fertilizer as a top dressing so
that suffiCient nutrients are provided for the rest of the season.

.
:

What if ,the perso~ still has one of the moss lined wire
REVEALING is the
baskets? E!orl't toss It out. '!'here's a way to get around the fact
that these dry out so fast. Put in an aluminum foil liner
Paris word in fashion .lor
wrapped with plastic . You first moisten and put peat moss in
spring-summer. Black·
place. Next fit In the aluminum foil plastic wrapped liner. Then
white striped jersey dress
put a layer of drainage material in tl)e bottom. Put \he layer of has high sldNllls showing
soil on top and plant. Again firm the soil down, and·just before
off matching bikini.
watering punch a hole in the bottom so that excess water can
Glvenchy Gentleman outfit
drain off.
:
·
. for him has matching
Nowaeat.eyotD'self a hauging baSket or"two. Bring some : strl9ed jersey Ti.shlrt,
of summer indoors for the winter and hang it in a suMy win· ~ white cotton gabard!ne
dow to brighten up the coming cold wintry days.
pants.

' ending were Mrs . Sundy
att
F'ohn er, Mrs. Fran ces
f:ocglein , Mrs . nc una
Grueser , Mr s . Nan cy
Grueser. Mrs. Thelma Jeffers, Mrs. Wilmetta Le ifheit,
Mrs . Sus ie Pullin s , Mrs.
Phy.llis Skinner, Mrs. Vena
Whaley , Mr s.
Len ora
Leifheit, Mrs . Ja cki e Zirkle,
Mrs . Martha King, and a new
member, Mrs ..Judy Hwuphreys.

fli"Ojec ts were

from I he r:rundy Mlluntain

pla nned a l th e Th un ai ;-Jy
ni ght 111ct.• ti r1g !lf the l.oy&lt;:JI

Miss ion Sd wol thanki ng the
dtiSS for u gift uf money . Also
rc;:1d wf:l.s u leltcr frum Steve

Womcn"s Cltiss of the Mid·
dleporl Church of Christ at
the home of Miss Mild red
Hawley.
Shut -in pla tes will again be
made with Mrs. Elea nor
Lohse &lt;:mll her eumrn ill cc to

have charge. At tile Christmas dinner party scheduled
lor Dec. 4 at the church
members will take gifts hut 1n
lieu uf an exchange, the gifl s
will be sent to the Gallipolis
Slate Institu te. The Loyal
Bereans class wili se rve the
6:30 p.m. dinner with Mrs .
Pearl Reynold s and Mrs.
El eanor Loh se to hand le
decorati ons.
A communicat ion was read
APPLE GROVE - The
Apple · Grove
United
Methodi st Women held a
fellowship supper Saturday
evenin g at the Letart Falls
Community Center.
Preceding the6 p.m. turkey

Fetlowship
supper held

dinner

Sievers, il rnissi unury on the
campus of Ohi o Uni v(' rsi ly ,

thanki ng

the

class for

assislc:tnce with his wur k.
Anwn ~

those reported ill

were Mrs. l.esla Gothard,
hospit alized in Co lum bus,
Mrs. Virginia Scott, Mrs.
Margaret Hoyer and Mrs.
Donna Hussetl .

an d entitled '" Pa tchw ork
Pi ec.: es," "Quil ting Party "

an d ··r;r atitude " ad apted
fr om Theodore 1\oose velt .
She concluded with a Thanksgi ving prayer .
Refr eshmenls were served

by Mrs. Pratt , Mrs. Mabel·
Walb urn , Mrs. Maril yn
Bishop and Mrs. Hattie Swift.

Devo!i ons to open the
mee lin ~

were ~ iv c n by Mrs.
Grace Pra ll who look
scri pture from Psalm 100.
Mrs . Mary Ba iley read
"' Thanksg iving" from a book
by Helen Steiner Rice . The
program by Mrs. Beulah ·· t may not be th e boss in th is
Housh was taken from Id eals house . hut I've got seniority
over YOII :··

Lets keep it growing

the hymn , ' " We

for 200 more years.

Gat her Together" was sun g
by the group. AThanksgivin g
service of poetry, a serA poutluck Thanksgivin g monelle by the Rev. Howard
dinner was held by the Shiveley, scripture readings
Eva nge lin e Mi ss ionary and prayer followed th e
Societ y of th e . Pomeroy supper. For group singing of
Church of Christ recently at hymns, Dallas Hill led with
the home of Mrs. Elwood Jan /'iorris and Mrs. Howard
Bowers, Chester Road.
Shiveley at the pian o.
Mrs.
Evelyn
Smi th
Attending were Mrs. Paul
pr esided · at th e business Byers, Mr s. Edna Mcmeeting with Mrs. Richard Cartney, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Evanson giving the Thanks· Spencer, Douglas Barne~t,
giving devotions using Psalm Tracy Mearns, Mr. and Mrs.
117 and Phil 4. Mrs. Smith Darrell Norris and Tracy,
had prayer and Mrs. Betty Eddie and David Roush,
Spencer read "Thank You Cricket Carpenter, Cheryl
God for Little Things-"
· Roseberry, Tracey and Zane
Mrs. Denver Kapple read a Beeg le, Mr . and Mrs. Dorsey
letter fr om the Children 's Parsons, Eileen Buck, Alice
Mission in Mexico which has Balser, Dolly Parson s,
received support for the past Bertha Robinson, Earl y
year from the society and Roush, Dolly Hill, Mr . and
plans were made to send'" Mrs. Jack Ables, Mr. and
another gift of money. The Mrs. Russell Roush , Debbie
annual Christmas par ty was Barnell, Mr . and Mrs. Carroll
planned for Dec. 16 at the While , Darla, Deanna, Keith
home of Mrs. Louis Osborne . and Kevin, Mr . and Mrs.
Others att endin g were Mrs. Dallas Hill, John Hill , Mrs.
Edward Venoy, Mrs . Clyde Stella Jarrell, the Rev. and
Andrews and Mrs. Earl Mrs . Shiveley and Paul
Cleland.
Ables. ·

Welcome God to America's
bicentennial...
practice what you pray.
'LAST MINUTE
TURKEY TIME

SPECIALS'

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LONGHOR
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QUANTITIES RIGHTS RESERVED
Many Thanks for your fine support since our
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from all .of us at Gateway. We will be closed all
day Thanksgiving so our employees may spend
the holiday with their families . .

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BROWN &amp; SERVE
ROLLS PKG.
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49
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BLEACH

s.,...,.

flrlclttlllt'ISCU •.

1'11urtUr ttsr•

Phone __ _. _____ _

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GOLDEN ISLE

Sun. 10·tD 5

BETSY ROSS

ENDS &amp; PIECES

YAMS

2LB.

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7 OZ. PKG.

BACON

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SLICED

PEAS

2/25~

2% MILK

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PKG.

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8 oz.

Gallipolis. Oh. 45431
446-1875

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Hol iday

CHICKEN

P.O. Box 4

Street_ _______ _

:for traditional Christrrzas meal

8:

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this coupon to:

Mutual Prvtective
Insurance Co.

;rcz·~;~;;·· :·:·~~· ;·;;·· pTa:~· · ·p:;~J;~~~,.:.:.]I I

•

SEE THE

'
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•
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: Better Health Club to meet

F111lowing a tradition uf
nwn y ye ar s, the Hock
: · Springs Bcttc1· Health Club
• will 111ce t for a Chri stmas
•
. t\ Wt.lt•.kly fc;_tlure of Meigs
• potluck dinner on Dec. 18 at
e l ow tt~ C~o.J r· 1en Club members.
• the Rock Springs Methodist
Church and spend the afteroo un
makin g
and
BY MRS. ROBERT LEWIS
deliv
ering
holiday
treats
to
WINDING TRAil~ GARDEN CLUB
shut-ins.
HANGING BASKETS ARE BACK
Plans for the day were
made when the club memHanging baskets are in again . Many green thumbs in the bers met Wednesday at the
~st b":C~e discouraged because plants growing in moss. home of Mrs. Barbara Offutt.
lined ':"lrebaskel.'l dried out so fast. It seemed t11at they needed AI the party, there will be a
watermg alm9st every day and sometimes twice a day during gift exchange and also a 50
sununer lllonths.
cent grab bag box.
But n~w there _is good news. Modern hanging planters
The club voted to make
have been fash1oned from plastic and ceramics some com- do nations to the Meigs
plete with attached saucers below: Thus tbe soil cto'esn 't dry out County Senior Citfzens and to
so fast. With the new rope hangers, or your own made from
'
cord, rope, macrame or yarn, a planter can be hWlg in any
appropriate place in the home. There is no reason why the
average home gardener can't enjoy a hanging basket any time
of year .

'

ADMIRAL
ENERGY
SAVER
MICftO.WAVE
OVEN

·

Tlt 1unb

••• J\otes
•

:

.
ATTENTION All
SENIOR CITIZENS

!"

their 60th wedding an niversary.
They are the parents of two
children, a son, Chester Durst
of Niles, and a daughter, Mrs ..
Randall 1Agnes J Parsons of
Akopka, Fla. who will host
the affair in honor of their
parents . Mr. and Mrs . Durst
have seven grandchildren
and
ninegreatgrandchildren .
Relatives and friends ar~
invited to attend. The couple
requests the omission of gifts.

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•••••••••••••••
········~··

: Green

'

He is credited with inspiring the Declaration of
Independence and for having
kept the spirit of the
Revolution alive d11fing its
darkest hours, the reviewers
noted.
Mrs. Horky stated that his
writing of "Common Sense"
in 1716 stirred all Americans
and set them thinking of the
country's place in the family
of nations. She said .that
Payne saw clearly the
direction America must take
- complete freedom from
England. Thomas Jefferson
described Payne as the
greatest apostle of \he
American Revolution . '
Mrs. Dwight Wallace
presided at the 111eeting with
the members giving the
pledge and collect in Wlison.
For roll call members named
a modern revolutionary .
Refreshmenl.'l were served
by the hostess.

•

'

Bicentennial study
continued at meet

Dear Harry's Wife :
Here's good news for "Whatif" people like you : Dr.
~erman J. Silber, assistant professor of urology at the
University of California Medical Center, San Francisco,
reporl.'l that a new surgical technique Is proving effective in
reversing vasectomy. He says the first 24 patients who ·unThe Middleport Literary
derwent the operation now register a normal sperm count and
Club 's bicentenn ial study
16 of their wives have already gotten pregnant.
lt'sdone by microsurgery, with thread and instrument tips theme was con tinued WedThe Sunday school class of
Mrs. Clifford Jacobs met at almost invisible to the naked eye. When male sperm ducts are nesday when the members
met at the home of Mrs.
the Laurel Cliff Free successfully rejoined, fatherhood becomes possible again.
Dewey Horton to hear Mrs.
Okay? - H.
Methodist Church Thursday
Ben Philson review W. E.
++
+
evening for program practice
.
'
Woodward'
s
" Thomas
and then went to the home of
"
I
f'ayne"
and
an
original
the Rev. and Mrs. Floyd Dear Helen :
Shook for refreshments.
In reference to your commenl.'l on pay tollel.'l : don't count prayer on Payne's writings
entitled "Common Sense , Et
Refreshmenl.'l of cookies on keeping the door open for the next customer!
I live in New Jersey and visit tlie shore each summer. AI," by Mrs. Carl Horky.
and hot chocolate were
served by Mrs. Harold Bathrooms here are constantly watched by a custodian. If you
.The two presented a parHanson and Mrs. Harry E. try to hold the "pay" door open for someone else, this woman
Clark to the Rev . Mr. and rushes over, nudges you out of the way and slams the door, trait of what they described
Mrs. Shook, Mr. and Mrs. ~en holds out her hand fo~ tpe nextl!'_~jllan's d!!P'J, a~W P~!t as t_he ~ sl 'llaligoe,d
Ernie Haggy , Mr. and Mrs. m the slot. She's so busy running fmJ~·one toilet 1i';IJ)e'!lex~~ ~~ncan I , ,!!Je;, coun~r_s
•'
liistory, Woodward s book, 11
Randy Hawley, Haroid has no time for cleaning. .
What's
the
world
coming
to
when
you
can't
visit
Mother
•
was pointed out, Is the first
Hanson, Mr. and Mrs. Mike
NattD'e
wiUiout
worrying
about
a
"use"
tax'
TRIED
IT,
BUT
written about Payne which
Wright, Jane Jacobs, Diane
FAILED
neither glorifies nor distorsts
Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. Dick
and
gives the first complete
Folmer, Kathy Scarberry,
and
human ... picture of . the
Susan Fleshman and Sherri Dear TffiF :
OJme to California , where pay toilets in public places are man as he really was - a
Clark. Pam Haggy was a
champion of the Common
now baMed. - H.
guest.
Mim who believed in Iannan
rights, freedom and quality.
Payne has been called the
spiritual godfather of the
nation.

Class meets
for practice

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepo rt-Pomeroy, 0., Nov. 24, 1975

GAL

~RMOUR

VIENNA 5 oz.
·SAUSAGE CAN
ARMOUR
12 oz. CAN
TREET with Ham Flavor
'

..

�a- The Daily Senti~el, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Nov. 24, 1975

SCORES NOSE WIN
GROVE cm:,Ohio {UPI )
- Busy Excel nosed out
Geauga Bonsi at the wire to
take the first running of the
$16,875 Impala Handicap
Saturday at Beulah Park.
Risquer was third. The
wiMer, half the T.F. and
Mary Classen entry, returned
$5.110, $5.00 and $3.60.
The !ll-9daily double of Sea
Hoop and Misty Page paid

'o.~ -

lll\,. U4A I&amp;)

.

·

tJ\..11~1111....1 , lfiiLI~U\..1-'\11

\ - 1 Villi,:;

1 U) ,u. ,nvw . .t.'!,lill"

DICK TRACY

Television log for easy viewing

VVOULO YOU MIND
YOUF&lt; FOOT, MR.

MOVING

BULKY? YOU'I&lt;E STANDING

....._,..,... MY TOOTH.

n'IUNDAY, NOVEMBER 24,197S
6:DO--News 3,4,8,10,13, IS: ABC News 6 : Hodgepodge
Lodge 20: Special Educalion 33 .
6:30- NBC News3. 4, 15 : ABC News 13: Andy Griflilh 6:
CBS News 8,10: Making II Counl 20.
7:oo--Trulh or Cons. J: ToT elllhe Trulh 4; Bowling lor
Dollars6: Buck Owens 8: News 10: Candid Camera
13: Fami ly All air 15 : On Aging 20: Classic Theatre ~

$96.20.
The 4,382 fans bet $45!,548.

Preview 33.

730- That Good Ole Nashvi lle Music 3: Don Adams
Screen Tesl4: Ma1ch Game PM 6: Price Is Righl8:
~vening
E~illon
wllh Marlin Aqronsky 20:
High Road lo Adventure 10: To Tell the Truth 13:
Friendsol Man 15 : Marco Sportlite :Football 33 .

SOME FACTS FOR
INVESTORS IN

Mutual
Investing
Foul\dation's

WE 'l.l. l.CT

OUR MOVIEO

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FOR

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~r.'F
SAMPLE OF VARIETY - A sampling of the variety
in costuming featured in Saturday night's Fall Follies is
displayed by these girls who will walk the unray to

"Standing on the Corner." They are, I tor, Susan Wright,
Christy Hess, Kim Krautter , Melody Snouffer, Robin
Snowden, Shari Mitch, Lori Wood and Marcia Dillard.

NEW TRIO- This Is one of two new vocal trios appearing in Saturday night's Fall
Follies at the Meigs High School. All are former soloists of the Big Bend. Minstrel
AssoCiation and include, 1tor, Bill Young, Roberta Kraeuter Maiden and Larry Brogan.

(Continued !rom page I )

Wood, Susan Wright, Jayne Hoeflich, soloist; Jane Sisson,
Jack Brown, Shari Mitch , Paige Smith; back row, I tor,
Velvet Swisher, Ann Pearch, Teresa Taylor, Christy Hess ,
Meiody Snouffer, Cathy Blaettnar, Bunny McGraw and
Stephannie Rought.

Pictul-es of monsters coming
LONOON (UPI) - Once
there was just one very
elusive Loch Ness monster,
affectionately christened
Neaale. Now a Brltlsh
naturalist says there may be
dozens of them.
Sir Peter Scott, a noted
naturalist and son of An·
!arctic explorer Capt. Robert
Scott, said that on the basis of

against discovery of a · The pictures he saw were
monster from last week's 33-1 taken by an American
to 6-1.
• research team led by
A year ago the odds were physicist Dr. Robert Rines.
quoted at 100-1. .
Sco\t , said the photos
Scott 8aid he believed "~to showed "a very strange
50 animals, possibly 40 feet creature." But he declined
long" coUld live in the un- comment in detail untU the
charted depths of the 22-mile- pictures have been presented
long Scottish lake.
to an International gathering
of scientists in Edinburgh,
Scotland, Dec. 9.
The first recorded sighting
of a supposed monster in
U&gt;ch Ness was in 1871. The
most famous photograph is
Utat taken by a lAndon
surgeon in April, 1934,
allegedly showing a dinosaur·
obvious
that
it
is
unlikely
that
like small head and long neck
96 to defeat a resolution to
busing
foes
could
whip
up
the
I&lt;J!1ming out of the water.
require the Judiciary
"The photographs (taken
Committee to report within 30 required two-thirds vote
days a Constitutional needed to advance a Con· by the American team) do
amendment to "guarantee stitutional amendment , even suggest It may be a
each child the right to attend if the proposal could reach prehistoriC-type reptile,. one
of the plesiosaurians, of
the primary and secondary the floor.
Judiciary
Committee
which there is a great body of
schools nearest his own home
within his respective school Chairman Peter J . Rodino fossil evidence," Scott said .
"The most important thing
told the caucus "the Con·
district."
A discharge petition to stitutlon stands for this nation shown is the nipper . There is
force a committee to submit a as a statement of ideals no known whale or dolphin
bill to the floor requires 218 without parallel. This which has one like this."
Other scientists were less
signatures and the number document states for the ages
apparently will not be the rights of the most demo· convinced. Dr. John Sheals of
available in the House this cratic, the most free group of the British Museum said
session. It appears equally human beings the world has there was nothing in the
underwater photographs to
ever seen .''
Some of the ardent foes of (rove they were tak~ in
busing for desegregation Loch Ness or to Indicate· the
agreed the eunstitution was creature's size.
Scott said he was "violently
not the place to settle their
WINS BY THREE
dispute with court decisions. against" any attempts to
NORTH RANDAU,, Ohio
Reps . Walter Flowers of capture the Loch Ness
(UP!) - Strike the Anvil ran
Alabama and James MaM of monster , One English
the mile In 1:38 3-li Sunday for
South Carolina voted to kiU showman has offered $20,000
a three-length victory over the measure to the surprise of for the creature.
Double Tewn in the $7,000 some fellow southerners.
"There may only be a very
ninth race at Thistledown.
A former federal judge, small number hanging on by
The three-year-old, win· Richardson Preyer of North the skin of their teeth against
ning his lith race of the year, Carolina, told the caucus he extinction," Scott said.
was ridden by Carlos did not like busing as a tool o!
"I think it would be inex·
Rodriguez, Jr. The Chunker . desegregation but that he cusable to catch one and kill
finished third.
· liked less amending the it - and you can't catch one
The 6-3-1 tenth race trifecta Constitution to achieve the without the grave risk of
of Pollywogger, Ya Got To Be desired result.
killing it."
Kid'n and Cerev~tza paid
$719.2ll and the 7-3 daily
. double of Round City 81111
Steady Stride returned U7.11U.

photographs taken receptiy
by an American team , "I am
quite certain there is a
population of very large
unknown animals In the
Loch."
Scientists may remain
dubious, but the evidence has
shaken bookmakers. They
quickly shortened the odds

A new girls' vocal trio, Jan
Van
Vranken,
Paula
Eichinger and June Warns·
ley, will sing "The Merry-Go,
Round Broke Down" as a
blacklighted merry.go-!'ound
is formed in the background.
Favorites of yesteryear · will
be included in a medley by
Charlene and Bob Hoeflich.
Adding to the variety of
this fall's presentation will be
the toe dance work of Esther
Lowery and a comedy tap
routine
to
"Georgia
Porcupine" by June Warnsley . Miss Patterson will
perform with her baton to
"Dark Lady." Debbi Buck In
a Carol Burnett type role will
present "Nobody" assisted
, by M erri Ault, Rhonda
Hudson, Jane Sisson and
Cathy Blaettnar.
A monologue and vocal,
"Standing·on the Corner" by
Jayne Lee Hoeflich will bring
on · a runway parade . by
Marcia .' Dillard,
Kim
Krautter , Susan Wright,
Christy
Hess,
Robin
Snowden, Shari Mitch, Lori
Wood and Melody Snouffe~ . A
newcomer to the assoc1~t1on,
Virginia Hendricks wtll do
"Bill Bailey." _ An.other
veteran, Kim Batey, wtll be
featured vocally with her
'
~ttar ·
. ,
For Once in My Life will
be Ute vocal solo of Jim Souls·

94th Congress kills' amendment to

outlaw busing by the Constitution
WASIDNGTON (UP!) The 94th Congress will not
advance a Constitutional
ameridrnent to abolish busing
to
achieve
school
desegregation . Some busing
foes joined In dealing the
proposal its fatal blow.
Antibusing amendments
have been attempted In the
last three Cungresses and
there were 25 measures stuck
In the House Judiciary
Coounittee when the Issue
was killed for this twoyear

session.
Altbough In recent years
the foes of busing had been
able to muster majorities in
the House of Represen·
tatlves, the amendment .
proposals were scuttied in the
House at a Democratic Party
caucus last week.
The democrats voted 1'12 to

'I

HUSKERS TO TEMPE
LINOOLN, Neb. (UPI) _ A
weekend of turnovers and
turnarounds sends the
Nebraska Cornhuskers~o the
Fiesta Bowl in Arizona in·
stead of the Orange Bowl in
Miami for the December
holidays.
Nebraska will be making
its seventh straight bowl
appearance and could
become the first team in
collegiate history to win
seven straight post-season
games. ' Turnovers cost
Ntbraska· a fourth ap·
pearance In the Orange Bowl.
Oklahoma converted five
Nebraska turnovers into
touchdowns Saturday to down
the Cornhuskers 3$-10 and
earn the Orange Bowl pid.
The turnaround was the
Huskers'
decision
to
reconsider a Fiesta, Bowl bid.
They unanimo~ voted tq
accept a berth In the Dec. ~
classic at Tempe, Ariz., after
rejecting the Sun Bowl offer
prior to the Okl"homa game.

'

"''ttl no
rr~e

HERITAGE
]~&amp; ~ ~

'""Q~

Sr

ROSE HONORED GUEST
BOSTON (UPI) - Pete
Rose of the Cincinnati Reds,
the Most Valuable Player In
the World Series, will be the
guest of honor at the Boston
Baseball Writers dinner •Jan.

by and the girls' trio, accompanied by June Van
vranken,
will
do
"Feelln'."Ciark on his banjo
will present "Five Foot
Two," and Miss Patterson
will do her unique hat dance
to "Fancy Pants." Wearing .
new read and white mod
costuming, a dance line
composed of Merri Ault,
Becki Fry, Lori Wood, Susan
Wright, Jane Sisson, Jackie
Brown, Shari Mitch, Paige
Smith, Velvet Swisher, Ann
Pearch, ·Teresa Taylor,
Christy Hess, Melody
Snouffer, Cathy Blaettnar,
Bunny
McGraw · and
Stephannie Rought ·will
perform on the song and
dance, "Sing, You Sinners,"
by Jayne Hoeflich.
"The Committee," composed of Jim Souisby, Alice
Nease, Susie Soulsby, Bob
Hoeflich, Debbie Buck,
Charlene Hoeflich, Katie
Crow and Bill Young will
repeat a number well
received at a previous
(resentation, "Cigareets and
Whuskey and Wild, Wild
Women."
A "teeny bopper" dance
line composed of April Clark,
. Debbie Werry, Cindy Soulsby, Gayle Hanning, Trina
Reeves • Kimi Eblin f i.Jaa
Baxter' and Laur~ ., Me·
'
Cullough, dressed In patriotic
costuming will dance to "I'm
a Yankee Doodle Dandy"
with Miss Hoeflich to lead the
audience In the singing of
"You're a Grand Old F1ag" .
for the patriotic closing.
Show accompanist will be
Mrs . Olive Weber and
traditionally, Joe Struble,
will be handling the role of
master of ceremonies.
Making up the staging,
lighting and costuming group

29.
Rose, who batted .317 in the
regular season, hit, .370
during the Series as the Reds
nipped the Boston Red Sox in
seven games.
The 34-year-old switch
hitter will be joined at the
head table In the Statler
Hilton Hotel by other baseball
personalities, including
members of the Red Sox.

SERVICE .HELD
Funeral services for the
stillbOrn infant son of Mr. and
Mrs . Gordon Fisher, West
Lafayette, were conducted by
the Rev . Jiinmy Robbins at
the Donald Thozeki Funeral
Home of Gnadenhutten. The
infant was born on Nov . 3 at
the Union Hospital. Surviving
besides the parents are
paternal grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. James F. Fisher,
Minersville, and , maternal
grandafther, Calvin Perrine
of Pennsylvania.

are Roger and Susie Abbott,
Debbi and Bob Buck, Mrs.
Lila Mitch, Mrs. Susie Souls·
by and Bill Young.
Saturday night's show is
sponsored by the Meigs High
School Athletic Boosters.

Col u"'l&gt;u~

,.,.,, '"'"

• Q 7 52
tA .J9R64

BORN LOSER
WEST
•2

' I 1111~\G 1 LL H.A-11!:
~ C.AARi..ES DICI&lt;BIS

• A K .J :1
+ K 10 7 3 2

PH. 992-2318

• Q43

Wisconsin.

Jim . "This is the sort of
hand with which you and I
might well get to six, as would
almost
any
expert
partnership. It is a trap hand
and only some confirmed un·
derbidders would slay out of
the trap ."
Oswald : "There are lots of
ways to bid it. However, in the
actual bidding South had no
reason to use Blackwood. He
should have simply bid five or
six spades over his partner's
four-spade bid . Finding about
aces did not help him ."

EAST

•KQ9
•

10 B6 4

+Q5

4J98 5
SOUTH IDI

.AJ87S3

·-¥9

• A K 10 7 6 2
Both vu lnerabl e

West

North East

Pass
Pass

4•

Pass
Pass

2t

Pass

5t

Pass

Pe~ss

South

t

.:0 "I "~ L ~ .. ,,: '"""'~'\!:.=:

.rv:,~ WJ il\;1 ~\,;~~

Pass
Pass

Our Wisconsin reader asked
specifically about the four·
HE YIISHED TO SI'!IRE HIS
spade bid. Our answer is that
SON· 50 HE GAVE HIM
we might not have responded
MllYTHIHG .. ALL HIS TIME
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
two diamonds. but if we had
'10 PlAY .. 5PENPIHG
Oswald : " We are ge t tmg
. a made that bid we would surely
1'40HH • HO D15CIPLINE ntE o.o 5TOI1Y .. WITH
lot of questions for our column have gone to four spades over
ntE USUAL EHDI~ ··
YOU and hope all our readers enjoy South's four clubs .
SAID this new feature ...
It Jim : "We are also receiving
(Do you have a question
many reque sts to analyze lor lhe experts? Write "Ask
complete hands. If the hands the Jacobys " care ol th is
arf sufficiently interesting for newspaper. The Jacobys will
the column. we will answer answer mdividual questions
the question with a complete il stamped. sell-addressed
arlocle. Otherwise. unless a envelopes are enclosed. The
stamped . addressed envelope · mosl interesting questions
accompanies the hand we may will be used in this column
not be able to reply at all." and will receive copies ot
Oswald : " Today's hand JACOBY MODERN.)
Opening lead - K •

WRL, TH' &lt;iRfA1
PfT!R lA

IT

PlATA

IS THE 01.0

STOR'I' - OLD
toiR . SUIGG

IIA! BEEH A140
GONE ·· HE SUR€
WAll A MESS ..

HAD A HARD
CHIIDHOOO -

BOT

YOUR CHOICE OF

3 COMBINATIONS:

I. BIG SHEF AND LARGE

CfKAV, DOC, SUPI'OSl: 'IOU "l'CL~ ME
HO'J.I 'THIS MV5'11iR:IOUS ..OUNG LAP'V
MANAGED 'TO GET HERSiaF JNCl.UDED IN 'TH\5 PllOJ£CT! ~
. .,...\

6bte1Md'

FRENCH FRIES.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Bavarian
I Maine river
river
5 Old hand
40 Amorous
11 Bard's
41 Gainsay
river
DOWN
12 Wife of
I "The
Paris
Divine -"
13 Frost
2 Spanish
14 Blue-pencil
province
15 Heavy·
3 Volunteering
weight
12 wds.)
champ
4 United
l&amp; Snuggery
5 With
17 - Na Na
distress
18 ''Messiah''
&amp; Adolescent
composer
7 Conjunction
ZO Growl
8 Have your
lvar.)
way It wds.)
%1 Plucky
9 Becharm
2% Covenant
10 Slows
23 Pitcher's
down
descriptive
25Fights
2C Medicinal
plant
27 Envelope

'
~.DOUBLE CHEESEBURGER
AND '
~
LARGE FRENCH FRIES. ;

:I. SKIPPER'S TREAT

AND
lARGE FRENCH FRIES.

He's tradin'

GALLIPOLIS

iHo 400

1503 Eastern Ave.

fer iii is
ol' can.
Tob4!

It's a

valuable ruses ii
antiquer ferq~baqe

Alllwer
27 Make-up
31 French
resort
31 Ellen or
cloUt
33 Famed
Quaker
36 Gaming
cube·
37 Cover

HURT YCRE FEELIN'S
- BUT THIS DCX'J'I LOa&lt;
LIKE" A TRAIN -

THINK ITS
TH' HAIDrr

1 1

~""'~"-....:l...l----'---..:....:.-'

-

Arrangements

PlENTY/ SIT DOWN A.ND
I 'LL FILL YOU IN ON AL L
THAT(:) HAPPENED WH ILE

®RIP, WHILE, YOU WERE
BUSY 13EIN(; 1NEIGHOORLYd

YOU WERE AWAY

W TJ.IE WIOOW NEXT

OOOR .... ..r---.rr-.

Take care of important matters
early In the day . You're apt to
miss connections if you let too
much time sli p by.

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 201

35 Head
wreath
37 Beastly
place
38 "Don
Pasquale"
heroine

Don't buy anything large lor the

house today on impu lse. Sleep
on It first , then discuss the
matter in !I family council.

r.-+--l--1----1
I

DAILY CRYPTOilUOTE- Here's how to work It :
AX Y D L B A A X R
Is L 0 :-1 G F E L L 0 w

I

YO

IJNL

KGKJ

SJ

EQK

XSOE

IKGYOKI

X HZ ! - S . H .

A H 0 E Y Z,L
DV

iT'S TIME ' FER

OL:

are.

in~f;j

'WORLDWIDE DELIVERY

..

POMEROY
FLOWER
SHOP
MRS. MILLARD VAN METER
,
PH. 992-2039

'

BULLen;

·'BATH NOW,
JUGHAID

POMEROY

1 CAN'T
FIND HIM
NOWHARS,
AUNT
LOWEEI'I'

.. AN' I'L L GIT
HI S BATHWATER ALL
HOTTED
UP

~::--

yau·ve let go till the las! minute.
The stores will be open again
tomorrow.

D HE E Y O.E H

ENJOYED HIS SCHOOL DAYS, AND I WIU. SHOW YOU A
BULLY AND A BORE. - ROBERT MORLEY

A f!AAREL
CACTUS!

wh o knows you to be the
generou s person yo u are may
cunningly IBke advantage of
you in a weak moment today .
Keep your guard up

L S 1.. . VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopl. 221 II

Yealerdlly'l CrypiiM!UOie: SHOW ME THE MAN WHO HAS

licarcats Swim Second
CARBONDALE, lll. ( UPI)
- The University of Cin·
clnnati finished . second
behind host Southern Illinois
which won 14 of 18 events to
capture the sixth ' annual
Saluki Invitational swim
meet Saturday.
SIU finished w~th 495 points
. while Cincinnati had 374 and
Kansas third with 316. Illinois
State registered 267 points,
Eastern Illinois 237 and
Eastern Kentucky, 159.

proposition becomes.
CANCER (Juno 21.July 22)
Drive cautiously this evening if

LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) One

CRYPTOQUOTES

USJT

talk. the less appealing your

ya u·re doing some errands

hinl•. Each day lhr code lrt tcrs arc diftrrt•nt.

Order ·.

GEMINI (Moy 21-Juno 20) Be

ca reful today you don"t oversell
or ove rstate th at which you
-.1......1.-L,-,~ have to offer The longer you

One letter simpl)' stands for another . In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Si ngle l &lt;' tters.
apostrophes. the length and (ormation ol the words are all

Order Your Grave Blankets
Early . Complete Selection .

10 :3il-Woman Alive! 20: Woman 33.
11 :DO--News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15: ABC News 33.
I1:3D-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15 ; Wide World Mystery 13 ;
FBI6: Banacek 8: Movie " Northwest Passage" 10:
Janak! 33.
12 :3il-Wide World Mystery 6.
!:DO--Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.
LIBRA (Sopt. 23-0ct. 23) Don't
wo rry about th ings today that
haven ' t happened and
prob ably never will. Be
positive. Take life a moment at

a time.

SCORPIO tOct. 24-Now. 22)
FO&lt; Tundoy, NO¥. 25, 1t75 You'll have most of the day well
under controL but toward
ARIES (Morch 21-April 11) evening your discipline may

"

Beautiful
Table Anangements
. Dried Floral .

10:llll-&lt;:elebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4,15: Dinah ! 6: Price
Is l&lt;lght 8,10: Mike Douglas t3 .
10 :3il-Wheel Of Fortune 3,4,15 .
11 :DO--High Rollers 3.15: I Dream of Jeannie 4:
Gambit 8,10: Electric Company 20.
II :3D-Hollywood Squares 3,15 : Happy Days 13;
Midday 4; Loveol Life 8,10; Sesame Streel20.
11 :55-Take Kerr 8: Dan Imel's World 10.
12 :DO--Magnlllcenl Marble Machine 3,15; Showolfs 13:
Bob Braun's 50·50 Club 4: News 6,8, 10.
12:3il- 3 For The Money 3,15: All My Children 6,13;
Search For Tomorrow 8, 10.
12:45--Eiecfrlc Company 33.
12 :S5-NBC News 3, 15 .
1:1)()-News 3: Ryan's Hope 6,13: Phil Donahue 8;
Young and the Restless 10: Not For Women Only 15.
1:31)-Days Of Our Lives 3,4.15: Let's Make A Deal
6,13: As The World Turns 8,10.
2:00-$10,000 Pyfamld 6,13: Guiding Light 8,10.
2:3il-Doctors 3,4, IS; Rhyme and Reason 6,13: Edge Of
Night 8,10.
3:DO--Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6,13:
Malch Game 8,10; Lllllas, Yoga and You 20.
3:3o-Qne Llle To Live 13; Bewitched 6; Tattletales
8,10: Romagnolls' Table 20.
4:DO--Misler Cartoon 3: Merv Grllfln ~ ; Somerset 15:
Mickey Mouse Club 8: Mister Rogers 20,33; Movie
"My Brother Talks lo Horses" 10; Dinah! 13.
4:3il-Bewllched 3; Mod Squad 6; Palrfrldge Family 8;
Sesame Slreet 20.33; Get Smart 15.
S:DO--Bonanza 3; Family Allalr 8; Star Trek 15.
S:3il-Adam·l2 4; News 6 ; Beverly Hlllblllles 8;
Electric Company 20,33; Adam ·12 13.
6:DO--News 3,4,8,t0,13,15: ABC News 6; Hodgepodge
Lodge 20; Jody's Body Shop 33.
6:3il-NBC News 3.~. 15; ABC News 13 ; Andy Grllflth 6;
CBS News 8,10; Your Fulure ls Now 33; Wood·
carvers' Workshop 20.
7:DO--Trulh or Consequences 3; To Tell The Truth ~ ;
Bowling For Dollars 6; Wilburn Brothers 8: News
10: Name That Tune 13: Family Affair 15; An·
Jlques 20: Wild Wild World ot Animals 33.
7:3il-Hollywood Squares 3: Soapbox 4; Let's Deal
With It 6 ; S25.000 Pyramid 8; Evening Edition with
Martin Agronsky 20: Price Is Righi lOk; To Tell
TheTrulh 13: Wild Kingdom IS; FamilyTheotre33.
Theatre 33.
8:DO--Movln' On 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13; Good Times
8, 10; Hanukkah 20,33.
8:31)-Welcome Back, Kotter 6,13; Joe and Sons 8,10;
Consumer Survival Kit 20,33.
9:QO--Pollce Woman 3,4,15: Rookies 6,13: Switch 8,10:
Ascent of Man 20,33.
lO :DO--Joe Forrester 3,4,15: Oscar's Greatest Music
6,13: CBS Reporls Inquiry 8,10: News 20 : Woman
Alive! 33.

• Bernice Bede Osol

(pre!.)
34 "All About

FLOWE.R

13 .
6:45--Morning Report 3.
6:55--C huck White Reporls 10; Good Morning, Tri·
Slale 13.
7:00-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, America 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny and Friends 10 .
7:3il-Schoolles 10 .
8:DO--Lucy Show 6; Captain Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame
Slreel 33.
8:3il-Big Valley 6.
9:00-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,15 ; Lucy Show 8: Mike
Douglas 10: Morning With D. J . 13.
9:3il-Not For Women Only 3: One Llle To Live 6: Give·
N.Take 8: New Zoo Revue 13 .

AstraGraph

win
or sin
2t Passage;
vent
3% Playing
marble
33 Prior

AH IXNT WANTA HM-Mr-AH

Make It
.More Beautiful
With Our .••.

Yeeterday'o
16 Paper size
19 Amour
appoint·
ment
2% Gravy 23 Tropical
shrub
24 Former
First Lady
25 Melancholy

. part
Zll Ending for

ABNER

Early

I,

·--

,, , . ..,,. 1,. "' "'" ~ ' ' '' '·' ~ ~, ,. CfJ
" ""''" IJ" •• Cor•.,., ~., O••.. ,

Pomeroy , Q.

cau sed some stimulated con·
24 versation when played in a
rubber bridge game in

NORTH
• tO 6 4

O ~ •&lt;l

P. J. PAULEY
804 W. MAIN

Concerns &amp; Comments 10; Rev . Cleophu5 Robinson

•
No need for Blackwood

81CURITII8, INC.

visible Man 4; Gunsmoke 8; Why Me? 20,33; Rhoda
10.
8:3il-We Think Yo" Should Know 3: Phyllis 10.
9:00-Movie " Doctor Zhivago" Part II 3,4,tS: NFL
Football 6,13: All in lhe Family 8,10; Why Me
Follow.uo 20,33
9:3il-Maude 8, tO: Sculpture in lhe Open 20 . .
10 :00- Medical Cenler 8, tO : News 20; Bl Ways 33.
10 :3il-Catch·33 33.
11 :Oil-News 3,4,8,10, IS: ABC News 33.
11 :3D-Johnny Carson 3,4.15; Mov ie "Hilchh Ike!" 8:
Movie "A Soulhern Yankee" 10: Janakl 33.
12 :00-News 6,13.
12 :3il-FBI 6, Unlouchables 13.
1:00-Tomorrow 3,4.
1:3il-News 13.
,
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2S, 197S
6:00-Columbus Today 4: Sunrise Semesler 10.
6 25--Farm Report 13.
6:3il-New Zoo Revue 4: News 6; Bible Answers 8:

WIN AT BRIDGE

lOCal t ep resen141tiYe Ol

~n or

Fall Follies

NEW COSTUMING - Wearing new mod costuming
this group will present a favorite of yesteryear, "Sing,
You Sinners" In the Fall Follies of the Big Bend Minstrel
Asaociation Saturday night at Meigs High School. The
group Includes front, I to r, Merri Ault, Beck! Fry, Lori

For your fr6e cOp~

obllga hon contac t

e:oo-Bobby Vmtorl.J ; America, You're On 6,13; In-

you ' r e too pus h y today ,
someone who was willing to
help you will suddenly
withdr aw hiS support. and be a
lltlle miffed. to boot

I'VE HEAR() THAT 't'OU
CAN GET WATER FROM

A CACTUS LIKE TfliS..

weaken . You coul d make some
wrong moves.

SAGITTARIUS (Now. 23·Dtc.
21) Without realizing it you
could be somewhat dictatorial
today. If you are . you ·re apt to
be dethroned abruptly.

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon.
19) Try not to mat..e an Issue of
someth in g that is quite trivial . H
won "t be wor th the ill feelings it
coul d pro ... cl&lt;e

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. It)
The small prin t is exceptionally
1mporta nt t oday i n any
agreemen ts you may enter in.
to Look it over carefully .
PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20)
Keep your prrorities in proper
perspective today The end
res ults will be pr ofitable and
pr o du ctive . Don ' t s weep
any th1ng under the rug .

A

Your

\ii1) Birthday
Nov. 25, 1t75
Don ·t be disCo uraged th•s co m·
rng year 1f the breaks ya u·re
hoprng lor are a blt slow rn
co ming Your prospects are
quite brrght Be p atrent.

�a- The Daily Senti~el, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Nov. 24, 1975

SCORES NOSE WIN
GROVE cm:,Ohio {UPI )
- Busy Excel nosed out
Geauga Bonsi at the wire to
take the first running of the
$16,875 Impala Handicap
Saturday at Beulah Park.
Risquer was third. The
wiMer, half the T.F. and
Mary Classen entry, returned
$5.110, $5.00 and $3.60.
The !ll-9daily double of Sea
Hoop and Misty Page paid

'o.~ -

lll\,. U4A I&amp;)

.

·

tJ\..11~1111....1 , lfiiLI~U\..1-'\11

\ - 1 Villi,:;

1 U) ,u. ,nvw . .t.'!,lill"

DICK TRACY

Television log for easy viewing

VVOULO YOU MIND
YOUF&lt; FOOT, MR.

MOVING

BULKY? YOU'I&lt;E STANDING

....._,..,... MY TOOTH.

n'IUNDAY, NOVEMBER 24,197S
6:DO--News 3,4,8,10,13, IS: ABC News 6 : Hodgepodge
Lodge 20: Special Educalion 33 .
6:30- NBC News3. 4, 15 : ABC News 13: Andy Griflilh 6:
CBS News 8,10: Making II Counl 20.
7:oo--Trulh or Cons. J: ToT elllhe Trulh 4; Bowling lor
Dollars6: Buck Owens 8: News 10: Candid Camera
13: Fami ly All air 15 : On Aging 20: Classic Theatre ~

$96.20.
The 4,382 fans bet $45!,548.

Preview 33.

730- That Good Ole Nashvi lle Music 3: Don Adams
Screen Tesl4: Ma1ch Game PM 6: Price Is Righl8:
~vening
E~illon
wllh Marlin Aqronsky 20:
High Road lo Adventure 10: To Tell the Truth 13:
Friendsol Man 15 : Marco Sportlite :Football 33 .

SOME FACTS FOR
INVESTORS IN

Mutual
Investing
Foul\dation's

WE 'l.l. l.CT

OUR MOVIEO

FILMSPEAK
FOR

PROSPECTUS

IT5~LF,

SU H!

~r.'F
SAMPLE OF VARIETY - A sampling of the variety
in costuming featured in Saturday night's Fall Follies is
displayed by these girls who will walk the unray to

"Standing on the Corner." They are, I tor, Susan Wright,
Christy Hess, Kim Krautter , Melody Snouffer, Robin
Snowden, Shari Mitch, Lori Wood and Marcia Dillard.

NEW TRIO- This Is one of two new vocal trios appearing in Saturday night's Fall
Follies at the Meigs High School. All are former soloists of the Big Bend. Minstrel
AssoCiation and include, 1tor, Bill Young, Roberta Kraeuter Maiden and Larry Brogan.

(Continued !rom page I )

Wood, Susan Wright, Jayne Hoeflich, soloist; Jane Sisson,
Jack Brown, Shari Mitch , Paige Smith; back row, I tor,
Velvet Swisher, Ann Pearch, Teresa Taylor, Christy Hess ,
Meiody Snouffer, Cathy Blaettnar, Bunny McGraw and
Stephannie Rought.

Pictul-es of monsters coming
LONOON (UPI) - Once
there was just one very
elusive Loch Ness monster,
affectionately christened
Neaale. Now a Brltlsh
naturalist says there may be
dozens of them.
Sir Peter Scott, a noted
naturalist and son of An·
!arctic explorer Capt. Robert
Scott, said that on the basis of

against discovery of a · The pictures he saw were
monster from last week's 33-1 taken by an American
to 6-1.
• research team led by
A year ago the odds were physicist Dr. Robert Rines.
quoted at 100-1. .
Sco\t , said the photos
Scott 8aid he believed "~to showed "a very strange
50 animals, possibly 40 feet creature." But he declined
long" coUld live in the un- comment in detail untU the
charted depths of the 22-mile- pictures have been presented
long Scottish lake.
to an International gathering
of scientists in Edinburgh,
Scotland, Dec. 9.
The first recorded sighting
of a supposed monster in
U&gt;ch Ness was in 1871. The
most famous photograph is
Utat taken by a lAndon
surgeon in April, 1934,
allegedly showing a dinosaur·
obvious
that
it
is
unlikely
that
like small head and long neck
96 to defeat a resolution to
busing
foes
could
whip
up
the
I&lt;J!1ming out of the water.
require the Judiciary
"The photographs (taken
Committee to report within 30 required two-thirds vote
days a Constitutional needed to advance a Con· by the American team) do
amendment to "guarantee stitutional amendment , even suggest It may be a
each child the right to attend if the proposal could reach prehistoriC-type reptile,. one
of the plesiosaurians, of
the primary and secondary the floor.
Judiciary
Committee
which there is a great body of
schools nearest his own home
within his respective school Chairman Peter J . Rodino fossil evidence," Scott said .
"The most important thing
told the caucus "the Con·
district."
A discharge petition to stitutlon stands for this nation shown is the nipper . There is
force a committee to submit a as a statement of ideals no known whale or dolphin
bill to the floor requires 218 without parallel. This which has one like this."
Other scientists were less
signatures and the number document states for the ages
apparently will not be the rights of the most demo· convinced. Dr. John Sheals of
available in the House this cratic, the most free group of the British Museum said
session. It appears equally human beings the world has there was nothing in the
underwater photographs to
ever seen .''
Some of the ardent foes of (rove they were tak~ in
busing for desegregation Loch Ness or to Indicate· the
agreed the eunstitution was creature's size.
Scott said he was "violently
not the place to settle their
WINS BY THREE
dispute with court decisions. against" any attempts to
NORTH RANDAU,, Ohio
Reps . Walter Flowers of capture the Loch Ness
(UP!) - Strike the Anvil ran
Alabama and James MaM of monster , One English
the mile In 1:38 3-li Sunday for
South Carolina voted to kiU showman has offered $20,000
a three-length victory over the measure to the surprise of for the creature.
Double Tewn in the $7,000 some fellow southerners.
"There may only be a very
ninth race at Thistledown.
A former federal judge, small number hanging on by
The three-year-old, win· Richardson Preyer of North the skin of their teeth against
ning his lith race of the year, Carolina, told the caucus he extinction," Scott said.
was ridden by Carlos did not like busing as a tool o!
"I think it would be inex·
Rodriguez, Jr. The Chunker . desegregation but that he cusable to catch one and kill
finished third.
· liked less amending the it - and you can't catch one
The 6-3-1 tenth race trifecta Constitution to achieve the without the grave risk of
of Pollywogger, Ya Got To Be desired result.
killing it."
Kid'n and Cerev~tza paid
$719.2ll and the 7-3 daily
. double of Round City 81111
Steady Stride returned U7.11U.

photographs taken receptiy
by an American team , "I am
quite certain there is a
population of very large
unknown animals In the
Loch."
Scientists may remain
dubious, but the evidence has
shaken bookmakers. They
quickly shortened the odds

A new girls' vocal trio, Jan
Van
Vranken,
Paula
Eichinger and June Warns·
ley, will sing "The Merry-Go,
Round Broke Down" as a
blacklighted merry.go-!'ound
is formed in the background.
Favorites of yesteryear · will
be included in a medley by
Charlene and Bob Hoeflich.
Adding to the variety of
this fall's presentation will be
the toe dance work of Esther
Lowery and a comedy tap
routine
to
"Georgia
Porcupine" by June Warnsley . Miss Patterson will
perform with her baton to
"Dark Lady." Debbi Buck In
a Carol Burnett type role will
present "Nobody" assisted
, by M erri Ault, Rhonda
Hudson, Jane Sisson and
Cathy Blaettnar.
A monologue and vocal,
"Standing·on the Corner" by
Jayne Lee Hoeflich will bring
on · a runway parade . by
Marcia .' Dillard,
Kim
Krautter , Susan Wright,
Christy
Hess,
Robin
Snowden, Shari Mitch, Lori
Wood and Melody Snouffe~ . A
newcomer to the assoc1~t1on,
Virginia Hendricks wtll do
"Bill Bailey." _ An.other
veteran, Kim Batey, wtll be
featured vocally with her
'
~ttar ·
. ,
For Once in My Life will
be Ute vocal solo of Jim Souls·

94th Congress kills' amendment to

outlaw busing by the Constitution
WASIDNGTON (UP!) The 94th Congress will not
advance a Constitutional
ameridrnent to abolish busing
to
achieve
school
desegregation . Some busing
foes joined In dealing the
proposal its fatal blow.
Antibusing amendments
have been attempted In the
last three Cungresses and
there were 25 measures stuck
In the House Judiciary
Coounittee when the Issue
was killed for this twoyear

session.
Altbough In recent years
the foes of busing had been
able to muster majorities in
the House of Represen·
tatlves, the amendment .
proposals were scuttied in the
House at a Democratic Party
caucus last week.
The democrats voted 1'12 to

'I

HUSKERS TO TEMPE
LINOOLN, Neb. (UPI) _ A
weekend of turnovers and
turnarounds sends the
Nebraska Cornhuskers~o the
Fiesta Bowl in Arizona in·
stead of the Orange Bowl in
Miami for the December
holidays.
Nebraska will be making
its seventh straight bowl
appearance and could
become the first team in
collegiate history to win
seven straight post-season
games. ' Turnovers cost
Ntbraska· a fourth ap·
pearance In the Orange Bowl.
Oklahoma converted five
Nebraska turnovers into
touchdowns Saturday to down
the Cornhuskers 3$-10 and
earn the Orange Bowl pid.
The turnaround was the
Huskers'
decision
to
reconsider a Fiesta, Bowl bid.
They unanimo~ voted tq
accept a berth In the Dec. ~
classic at Tempe, Ariz., after
rejecting the Sun Bowl offer
prior to the Okl"homa game.

'

"''ttl no
rr~e

HERITAGE
]~&amp; ~ ~

'""Q~

Sr

ROSE HONORED GUEST
BOSTON (UPI) - Pete
Rose of the Cincinnati Reds,
the Most Valuable Player In
the World Series, will be the
guest of honor at the Boston
Baseball Writers dinner •Jan.

by and the girls' trio, accompanied by June Van
vranken,
will
do
"Feelln'."Ciark on his banjo
will present "Five Foot
Two," and Miss Patterson
will do her unique hat dance
to "Fancy Pants." Wearing .
new read and white mod
costuming, a dance line
composed of Merri Ault,
Becki Fry, Lori Wood, Susan
Wright, Jane Sisson, Jackie
Brown, Shari Mitch, Paige
Smith, Velvet Swisher, Ann
Pearch, ·Teresa Taylor,
Christy Hess, Melody
Snouffer, Cathy Blaettnar,
Bunny
McGraw · and
Stephannie Rought ·will
perform on the song and
dance, "Sing, You Sinners,"
by Jayne Hoeflich.
"The Committee," composed of Jim Souisby, Alice
Nease, Susie Soulsby, Bob
Hoeflich, Debbie Buck,
Charlene Hoeflich, Katie
Crow and Bill Young will
repeat a number well
received at a previous
(resentation, "Cigareets and
Whuskey and Wild, Wild
Women."
A "teeny bopper" dance
line composed of April Clark,
. Debbie Werry, Cindy Soulsby, Gayle Hanning, Trina
Reeves • Kimi Eblin f i.Jaa
Baxter' and Laur~ ., Me·
'
Cullough, dressed In patriotic
costuming will dance to "I'm
a Yankee Doodle Dandy"
with Miss Hoeflich to lead the
audience In the singing of
"You're a Grand Old F1ag" .
for the patriotic closing.
Show accompanist will be
Mrs . Olive Weber and
traditionally, Joe Struble,
will be handling the role of
master of ceremonies.
Making up the staging,
lighting and costuming group

29.
Rose, who batted .317 in the
regular season, hit, .370
during the Series as the Reds
nipped the Boston Red Sox in
seven games.
The 34-year-old switch
hitter will be joined at the
head table In the Statler
Hilton Hotel by other baseball
personalities, including
members of the Red Sox.

SERVICE .HELD
Funeral services for the
stillbOrn infant son of Mr. and
Mrs . Gordon Fisher, West
Lafayette, were conducted by
the Rev . Jiinmy Robbins at
the Donald Thozeki Funeral
Home of Gnadenhutten. The
infant was born on Nov . 3 at
the Union Hospital. Surviving
besides the parents are
paternal grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. James F. Fisher,
Minersville, and , maternal
grandafther, Calvin Perrine
of Pennsylvania.

are Roger and Susie Abbott,
Debbi and Bob Buck, Mrs.
Lila Mitch, Mrs. Susie Souls·
by and Bill Young.
Saturday night's show is
sponsored by the Meigs High
School Athletic Boosters.

Col u"'l&gt;u~

,.,.,, '"'"

• Q 7 52
tA .J9R64

BORN LOSER
WEST
•2

' I 1111~\G 1 LL H.A-11!:
~ C.AARi..ES DICI&lt;BIS

• A K .J :1
+ K 10 7 3 2

PH. 992-2318

• Q43

Wisconsin.

Jim . "This is the sort of
hand with which you and I
might well get to six, as would
almost
any
expert
partnership. It is a trap hand
and only some confirmed un·
derbidders would slay out of
the trap ."
Oswald : "There are lots of
ways to bid it. However, in the
actual bidding South had no
reason to use Blackwood. He
should have simply bid five or
six spades over his partner's
four-spade bid . Finding about
aces did not help him ."

EAST

•KQ9
•

10 B6 4

+Q5

4J98 5
SOUTH IDI

.AJ87S3

·-¥9

• A K 10 7 6 2
Both vu lnerabl e

West

North East

Pass
Pass

4•

Pass
Pass

2t

Pass

5t

Pass

Pe~ss

South

t

.:0 "I "~ L ~ .. ,,: '"""'~'\!:.=:

.rv:,~ WJ il\;1 ~\,;~~

Pass
Pass

Our Wisconsin reader asked
specifically about the four·
HE YIISHED TO SI'!IRE HIS
spade bid. Our answer is that
SON· 50 HE GAVE HIM
we might not have responded
MllYTHIHG .. ALL HIS TIME
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
two diamonds. but if we had
'10 PlAY .. 5PENPIHG
Oswald : " We are ge t tmg
. a made that bid we would surely
1'40HH • HO D15CIPLINE ntE o.o 5TOI1Y .. WITH
lot of questions for our column have gone to four spades over
ntE USUAL EHDI~ ··
YOU and hope all our readers enjoy South's four clubs .
SAID this new feature ...
It Jim : "We are also receiving
(Do you have a question
many reque sts to analyze lor lhe experts? Write "Ask
complete hands. If the hands the Jacobys " care ol th is
arf sufficiently interesting for newspaper. The Jacobys will
the column. we will answer answer mdividual questions
the question with a complete il stamped. sell-addressed
arlocle. Otherwise. unless a envelopes are enclosed. The
stamped . addressed envelope · mosl interesting questions
accompanies the hand we may will be used in this column
not be able to reply at all." and will receive copies ot
Oswald : " Today's hand JACOBY MODERN.)
Opening lead - K •

WRL, TH' &lt;iRfA1
PfT!R lA

IT

PlATA

IS THE 01.0

STOR'I' - OLD
toiR . SUIGG

IIA! BEEH A140
GONE ·· HE SUR€
WAll A MESS ..

HAD A HARD
CHIIDHOOO -

BOT

YOUR CHOICE OF

3 COMBINATIONS:

I. BIG SHEF AND LARGE

CfKAV, DOC, SUPI'OSl: 'IOU "l'CL~ ME
HO'J.I 'THIS MV5'11iR:IOUS ..OUNG LAP'V
MANAGED 'TO GET HERSiaF JNCl.UDED IN 'TH\5 PllOJ£CT! ~
. .,...\

6bte1Md'

FRENCH FRIES.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Bavarian
I Maine river
river
5 Old hand
40 Amorous
11 Bard's
41 Gainsay
river
DOWN
12 Wife of
I "The
Paris
Divine -"
13 Frost
2 Spanish
14 Blue-pencil
province
15 Heavy·
3 Volunteering
weight
12 wds.)
champ
4 United
l&amp; Snuggery
5 With
17 - Na Na
distress
18 ''Messiah''
&amp; Adolescent
composer
7 Conjunction
ZO Growl
8 Have your
lvar.)
way It wds.)
%1 Plucky
9 Becharm
2% Covenant
10 Slows
23 Pitcher's
down
descriptive
25Fights
2C Medicinal
plant
27 Envelope

'
~.DOUBLE CHEESEBURGER
AND '
~
LARGE FRENCH FRIES. ;

:I. SKIPPER'S TREAT

AND
lARGE FRENCH FRIES.

He's tradin'

GALLIPOLIS

iHo 400

1503 Eastern Ave.

fer iii is
ol' can.
Tob4!

It's a

valuable ruses ii
antiquer ferq~baqe

Alllwer
27 Make-up
31 French
resort
31 Ellen or
cloUt
33 Famed
Quaker
36 Gaming
cube·
37 Cover

HURT YCRE FEELIN'S
- BUT THIS DCX'J'I LOa&lt;
LIKE" A TRAIN -

THINK ITS
TH' HAIDrr

1 1

~""'~"-....:l...l----'---..:....:.-'

-

Arrangements

PlENTY/ SIT DOWN A.ND
I 'LL FILL YOU IN ON AL L
THAT(:) HAPPENED WH ILE

®RIP, WHILE, YOU WERE
BUSY 13EIN(; 1NEIGHOORLYd

YOU WERE AWAY

W TJ.IE WIOOW NEXT

OOOR .... ..r---.rr-.

Take care of important matters
early In the day . You're apt to
miss connections if you let too
much time sli p by.

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 201

35 Head
wreath
37 Beastly
place
38 "Don
Pasquale"
heroine

Don't buy anything large lor the

house today on impu lse. Sleep
on It first , then discuss the
matter in !I family council.

r.-+--l--1----1
I

DAILY CRYPTOilUOTE- Here's how to work It :
AX Y D L B A A X R
Is L 0 :-1 G F E L L 0 w

I

YO

IJNL

KGKJ

SJ

EQK

XSOE

IKGYOKI

X HZ ! - S . H .

A H 0 E Y Z,L
DV

iT'S TIME ' FER

OL:

are.

in~f;j

'WORLDWIDE DELIVERY

..

POMEROY
FLOWER
SHOP
MRS. MILLARD VAN METER
,
PH. 992-2039

'

BULLen;

·'BATH NOW,
JUGHAID

POMEROY

1 CAN'T
FIND HIM
NOWHARS,
AUNT
LOWEEI'I'

.. AN' I'L L GIT
HI S BATHWATER ALL
HOTTED
UP

~::--

yau·ve let go till the las! minute.
The stores will be open again
tomorrow.

D HE E Y O.E H

ENJOYED HIS SCHOOL DAYS, AND I WIU. SHOW YOU A
BULLY AND A BORE. - ROBERT MORLEY

A f!AAREL
CACTUS!

wh o knows you to be the
generou s person yo u are may
cunningly IBke advantage of
you in a weak moment today .
Keep your guard up

L S 1.. . VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopl. 221 II

Yealerdlly'l CrypiiM!UOie: SHOW ME THE MAN WHO HAS

licarcats Swim Second
CARBONDALE, lll. ( UPI)
- The University of Cin·
clnnati finished . second
behind host Southern Illinois
which won 14 of 18 events to
capture the sixth ' annual
Saluki Invitational swim
meet Saturday.
SIU finished w~th 495 points
. while Cincinnati had 374 and
Kansas third with 316. Illinois
State registered 267 points,
Eastern Illinois 237 and
Eastern Kentucky, 159.

proposition becomes.
CANCER (Juno 21.July 22)
Drive cautiously this evening if

LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) One

CRYPTOQUOTES

USJT

talk. the less appealing your

ya u·re doing some errands

hinl•. Each day lhr code lrt tcrs arc diftrrt•nt.

Order ·.

GEMINI (Moy 21-Juno 20) Be

ca reful today you don"t oversell
or ove rstate th at which you
-.1......1.-L,-,~ have to offer The longer you

One letter simpl)' stands for another . In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Si ngle l &lt;' tters.
apostrophes. the length and (ormation ol the words are all

Order Your Grave Blankets
Early . Complete Selection .

10 :3il-Woman Alive! 20: Woman 33.
11 :DO--News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15: ABC News 33.
I1:3D-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15 ; Wide World Mystery 13 ;
FBI6: Banacek 8: Movie " Northwest Passage" 10:
Janak! 33.
12 :3il-Wide World Mystery 6.
!:DO--Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.
LIBRA (Sopt. 23-0ct. 23) Don't
wo rry about th ings today that
haven ' t happened and
prob ably never will. Be
positive. Take life a moment at

a time.

SCORPIO tOct. 24-Now. 22)
FO&lt; Tundoy, NO¥. 25, 1t75 You'll have most of the day well
under controL but toward
ARIES (Morch 21-April 11) evening your discipline may

"

Beautiful
Table Anangements
. Dried Floral .

10:llll-&lt;:elebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4,15: Dinah ! 6: Price
Is l&lt;lght 8,10: Mike Douglas t3 .
10 :3il-Wheel Of Fortune 3,4,15 .
11 :DO--High Rollers 3.15: I Dream of Jeannie 4:
Gambit 8,10: Electric Company 20.
II :3D-Hollywood Squares 3,15 : Happy Days 13;
Midday 4; Loveol Life 8,10; Sesame Streel20.
11 :55-Take Kerr 8: Dan Imel's World 10.
12 :DO--Magnlllcenl Marble Machine 3,15; Showolfs 13:
Bob Braun's 50·50 Club 4: News 6,8, 10.
12:3il- 3 For The Money 3,15: All My Children 6,13;
Search For Tomorrow 8, 10.
12:45--Eiecfrlc Company 33.
12 :S5-NBC News 3, 15 .
1:1)()-News 3: Ryan's Hope 6,13: Phil Donahue 8;
Young and the Restless 10: Not For Women Only 15.
1:31)-Days Of Our Lives 3,4.15: Let's Make A Deal
6,13: As The World Turns 8,10.
2:00-$10,000 Pyfamld 6,13: Guiding Light 8,10.
2:3il-Doctors 3,4, IS; Rhyme and Reason 6,13: Edge Of
Night 8,10.
3:DO--Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6,13:
Malch Game 8,10; Lllllas, Yoga and You 20.
3:3o-Qne Llle To Live 13; Bewitched 6; Tattletales
8,10: Romagnolls' Table 20.
4:DO--Misler Cartoon 3: Merv Grllfln ~ ; Somerset 15:
Mickey Mouse Club 8: Mister Rogers 20,33; Movie
"My Brother Talks lo Horses" 10; Dinah! 13.
4:3il-Bewllched 3; Mod Squad 6; Palrfrldge Family 8;
Sesame Slreet 20.33; Get Smart 15.
S:DO--Bonanza 3; Family Allalr 8; Star Trek 15.
S:3il-Adam·l2 4; News 6 ; Beverly Hlllblllles 8;
Electric Company 20,33; Adam ·12 13.
6:DO--News 3,4,8,t0,13,15: ABC News 6; Hodgepodge
Lodge 20; Jody's Body Shop 33.
6:3il-NBC News 3.~. 15; ABC News 13 ; Andy Grllflth 6;
CBS News 8,10; Your Fulure ls Now 33; Wood·
carvers' Workshop 20.
7:DO--Trulh or Consequences 3; To Tell The Truth ~ ;
Bowling For Dollars 6; Wilburn Brothers 8: News
10: Name That Tune 13: Family Affair 15; An·
Jlques 20: Wild Wild World ot Animals 33.
7:3il-Hollywood Squares 3: Soapbox 4; Let's Deal
With It 6 ; S25.000 Pyramid 8; Evening Edition with
Martin Agronsky 20: Price Is Righi lOk; To Tell
TheTrulh 13: Wild Kingdom IS; FamilyTheotre33.
Theatre 33.
8:DO--Movln' On 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13; Good Times
8, 10; Hanukkah 20,33.
8:31)-Welcome Back, Kotter 6,13; Joe and Sons 8,10;
Consumer Survival Kit 20,33.
9:QO--Pollce Woman 3,4,15: Rookies 6,13: Switch 8,10:
Ascent of Man 20,33.
lO :DO--Joe Forrester 3,4,15: Oscar's Greatest Music
6,13: CBS Reporls Inquiry 8,10: News 20 : Woman
Alive! 33.

• Bernice Bede Osol

(pre!.)
34 "All About

FLOWE.R

13 .
6:45--Morning Report 3.
6:55--C huck White Reporls 10; Good Morning, Tri·
Slale 13.
7:00-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, America 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny and Friends 10 .
7:3il-Schoolles 10 .
8:DO--Lucy Show 6; Captain Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame
Slreel 33.
8:3il-Big Valley 6.
9:00-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,15 ; Lucy Show 8: Mike
Douglas 10: Morning With D. J . 13.
9:3il-Not For Women Only 3: One Llle To Live 6: Give·
N.Take 8: New Zoo Revue 13 .

AstraGraph

win
or sin
2t Passage;
vent
3% Playing
marble
33 Prior

AH IXNT WANTA HM-Mr-AH

Make It
.More Beautiful
With Our .••.

Yeeterday'o
16 Paper size
19 Amour
appoint·
ment
2% Gravy 23 Tropical
shrub
24 Former
First Lady
25 Melancholy

. part
Zll Ending for

ABNER

Early

I,

·--

,, , . ..,,. 1,. "' "'" ~ ' ' '' '·' ~ ~, ,. CfJ
" ""''" IJ" •• Cor•.,., ~., O••.. ,

Pomeroy , Q.

cau sed some stimulated con·
24 versation when played in a
rubber bridge game in

NORTH
• tO 6 4

O ~ •&lt;l

P. J. PAULEY
804 W. MAIN

Concerns &amp; Comments 10; Rev . Cleophu5 Robinson

•
No need for Blackwood

81CURITII8, INC.

visible Man 4; Gunsmoke 8; Why Me? 20,33; Rhoda
10.
8:3il-We Think Yo" Should Know 3: Phyllis 10.
9:00-Movie " Doctor Zhivago" Part II 3,4,tS: NFL
Football 6,13: All in lhe Family 8,10; Why Me
Follow.uo 20,33
9:3il-Maude 8, tO: Sculpture in lhe Open 20 . .
10 :00- Medical Cenler 8, tO : News 20; Bl Ways 33.
10 :3il-Catch·33 33.
11 :Oil-News 3,4,8,10, IS: ABC News 33.
11 :3D-Johnny Carson 3,4.15; Mov ie "Hilchh Ike!" 8:
Movie "A Soulhern Yankee" 10: Janakl 33.
12 :00-News 6,13.
12 :3il-FBI 6, Unlouchables 13.
1:00-Tomorrow 3,4.
1:3il-News 13.
,
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2S, 197S
6:00-Columbus Today 4: Sunrise Semesler 10.
6 25--Farm Report 13.
6:3il-New Zoo Revue 4: News 6; Bible Answers 8:

WIN AT BRIDGE

lOCal t ep resen141tiYe Ol

~n or

Fall Follies

NEW COSTUMING - Wearing new mod costuming
this group will present a favorite of yesteryear, "Sing,
You Sinners" In the Fall Follies of the Big Bend Minstrel
Asaociation Saturday night at Meigs High School. The
group Includes front, I to r, Merri Ault, Beck! Fry, Lori

For your fr6e cOp~

obllga hon contac t

e:oo-Bobby Vmtorl.J ; America, You're On 6,13; In-

you ' r e too pus h y today ,
someone who was willing to
help you will suddenly
withdr aw hiS support. and be a
lltlle miffed. to boot

I'VE HEAR() THAT 't'OU
CAN GET WATER FROM

A CACTUS LIKE TfliS..

weaken . You coul d make some
wrong moves.

SAGITTARIUS (Now. 23·Dtc.
21) Without realizing it you
could be somewhat dictatorial
today. If you are . you ·re apt to
be dethroned abruptly.

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon.
19) Try not to mat..e an Issue of
someth in g that is quite trivial . H
won "t be wor th the ill feelings it
coul d pro ... cl&lt;e

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. It)
The small prin t is exceptionally
1mporta nt t oday i n any
agreemen ts you may enter in.
to Look it over carefully .
PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20)
Keep your prrorities in proper
perspective today The end
res ults will be pr ofitable and
pr o du ctive . Don ' t s weep
any th1ng under the rug .

A

Your

\ii1) Birthday
Nov. 25, 1t75
Don ·t be disCo uraged th•s co m·
rng year 1f the breaks ya u·re
hoprng lor are a blt slow rn
co ming Your prospects are
quite brrght Be p atrent.

�Local Bowling.;; l ·. p~~~·: ~~!~~

•

No. 5

66 36 19965

Quallly Pr int Shop

66 38 1a22 0
Pauley 's I ns . &amp;
Rea ll y
40 64 16637
No 1
36 68 13631
No , A
3470 1555 1
H ig h ind ivi dual game ·
me n , Gear ge Mu rr ey 190 ; Vic:
Wipp el 179' ; Lloyd Brooks
165 ;

Hig h series · me n. Geor g e
M ur ray 504 ; Vic Wipp el 476 .
H igh game - Women . J ea n
Sp encer 178 : Mary Hoove r
162; Dee Simon ds 154 .
Hi g h ser ies ~
wo m en ,
M ar y H oover A65 ; Jea n
Sp ence r 435 .
T eam hi gh ga m e · Team 5

137 .

T eam hig h series

1766

Team 5

Wedn e5 day Early
Bird L u au e
Nov . 12, 1975
Standing s

Ph .
Tea m
51
r a.rmers Bank
B ~n Tom
lS
54
Rov al Crown
49
Eve l yn ' s Grocery
Hll l ey's Cera m ics
45
Ki ng Buil ders
28
Hig h Ind i Vi d ual game
Debbie Hawley 13 1. Lo u i~e
Har ri son 209.
H igh series Ma rl ene
WUson 548 ; D ebbi e Haw ley

528

Tett m hi gh game
Cr own 917 .
Team h lg h se r ies
Crown 2600 .

Roya l
Royal

Wedn es da y earl y
Bi rd l eagu e
Nov . s, 197 5
Standings

TE AM

Ph .
r ar m er s Ban k
56
Ben To m
53
48
Roya l Crown
42
E v elyn ' s Gro cery
Ha l ey's Ceram lcs
37
I&lt; ing Builder s
18
H igh ind iv id ual game
M ar lene Wilson 186 ; rt ossie
M rucson 179 .
H igh ser i es
Ma rl ene
Wil son 51 9 ; F lossie Ma)Cson

472.

T ea m h igh ga m e- Ro y al
Crow n 859 .
T eam hig h series
Far
men Bank 2-!.97 .

DAN THOMPSON FORD
BOWLIN G LEAGU EO
we ek ot Nov . 11, 1915
Stand i ng \
Tea m
w.
No 3
12
No 17
64
No . 4
59
No . 1
56
No . e
54
No . 5
52
No . 10
52
No . l l
52
No . 13
52
No. 2
·14
No . 16
44

L.
2-1
32
37
40
42
44
44
44
44

52
57

NO. I S

39 57

No . 6

38

58

No . 9

34

62

No. I

38

No. 14

comp l,;n• ,, 1o

18 78

s

lhe

In Memory

991 .3509 .

10 12 •fc
WI TH OU T m y p er m iss io n ,
ther e will be no hunli ng Or
tr espassi ng on my pr opert y .
13o b McG r aw , M eag a n
r arm .. off lower Bow m !ln 's
Run ,
11 4 26 1(
NO H UN TIN G or tr espa ss ing
d ay or nigh\ on th ese far ms
Cha r les YOSI , Iva n WelL J.
A . Smit h .
1\ L L He ms must b e old . Ol d
k eys , ma tch tobs, gun s,
pow der fl asks , powd er
horns, bank , and toys, ti n or
i r on , sto r e llems . A d .
ve rt ising , etc . Posl car d s,
sil ve r wa r e, sewing items ,
thim bl es . e tc .
K n ives.
s m o k i n g
p 1 pes ,
phonog raphs, mu sic boxes,
pap erw eighls, mar bl es, ink .
wel l s , bottle s, h al p i n s,
cam pa ig n He m s, bells. oi l
!amp s and Janlern s, miner s.
ra ilroad, etc ., clocks, do lls,
ol d jew elry , wa tches. r ings.
c hain s. e lc. steel tra ps,
d er b vs. h igh ha ls , ey e
g lasses. poltery j ar s, jugs!
p ew ter .
p i ctur es
ana
tr am es , g lass. d ishes . and
ch in a . plll)(es , fu r n itur e ol
a ll t ypes, mon ey ~nd coin s,
a rr ow head s, and Indi an
a rt ifacts, p lu s a ll Na zi wa r
i tems . Ph one 992·2050 be
tween 3 p .m . and 11 p .m .
M ond ay l hroug h F r ida y.
11 · 19· 12tc
__ ~·~·-- ~ · : : : - - -

Wanted To Buy
RA CIN E F ire Oep \. want s to
buy a wal k In cooler or
co mpressor for se mi! . Cal l
949 2: 121 efler S p .m .
·-~-·

. LD

-----

I H I·3tc

--------~

u.ir n'llure, 1ce oo x!s ,
bra ss beds. o r com ple te
h ousehold s. W r ife M . ~
M i ll e r , R f. 4 , Po m er oy
Ohio . Ca ll 992 776 0.
'
10·7· 14
- - --··--

Wanted

w---- ----

AS H pa id for all makes ani
models ol mob ile homes .
Phone ar ea cod e 614 ·423 .

953 1.

4 13 ffc
ORGAN PLAVER lo lo in
·· -countr y r oc k ba nd to pl ay
n il e club . For more in ·
formation , ca ll 99 2 2969.
11 23.31c

1 fll 'I f \'"

• "!'

!

Coi~ Currency
. - . . . .. _.--

lmployment Wanted

•

Pl llm blng

. case N.o.,2 U ?' O
. ~alil')g and a l i t ypes o
Es tat e of 00 f]Je\ Sm i th ,
gen eral
re g.a l r .
Wo rk
Decease d.
.
.
gu ar •n teed , 'lO years e ...,.
Notice is h ere b v 'blv en l lha t ·,l ' per itnce
Phone 992 24U'il
Eve l yn S. Fo l k oto 932 A llowe'v ' '' '
5 11~

~~,s~ ~:C.or t~t~o,'C:!~~ r~~,;~,~~ 'f.~~~N.ri; .- ... ~ll-;;;i~ g ,

ROGER HYSEll'S

'

r

.b

~

1974 CHEVROLET 4-WHEEL DRIVE

B' body, 31• ton , 350, power steering and bra kes
automatic tra nsmissi on, R. step bum per, rad io. A
popular model &amp; priced to go .

I

Buy, Sell or Tr"'de
Appraisal servic 1 on
estates and collecti~1S.

1972 COMET 2 OR .
$179S
6 cyl . std . trans., radio , lik e new w-w t ires. blue flnl sh,
nice car with good economy.

1971 MATADOR

GARAGE

and Supplies

$449S

Fro m th e larg es t Tr uck . or
Bulldozer Radi ato r to th e
sm alleSt Heater ·Cor e.
Nath a n Biggs
Rad iator Speciali U

R&amp;J OOINS

$1395

4-door, loca l car, air cond it ioned, full equipment.

Pets
COLLI E pup s 10 gi v e aw ay .
Ph on e 992· 7012.
11 19 J1.1c

1967 F ORD 1 dr . hardtop
F a i rla ne XL aulo m al ic
tr ansm iss i on ,
c ons ol e
buck et seats, 289 motor and
ch r om e w heel s. Can be seen
al K in o sbury Hom e Sal es,
11 00 E . Main St. , Pom eroy ,
Ohi o
t1 -23-4tc

lot . Buy now and pldk your
color s. FHA linanclng
available. Price: $21 ,500.
Phone : 667-63Q4

Insulation Services

SaleS and Serke L

LARRY LAVENDER

Intersection of Rt. 33 &amp; 7
Pomeroy

Ph . 992 -3993
' 4 10.1 mo .

Ca II today for
Service Tomorrow
Busine" Phone : 992-5880
Residence : 992-3313
11 ·18·1 mo.•'

..

D &amp; 0 r REE Tr immi ng , 20 BEAUT I FY yo ur home wiJ h
Per ma .Sione New hom' l
yea r s exper ie nce . In sur ed,
as we l l as r emo del ing wo r ~.
t ree est im ates . Ca ll 99 2·3057
Expert install ation . Frf!£
or (11 667.]pd1. Coot vi ll e .
es ti ma tes . Phone 7142·2409\
10· 15·1fC

2 STO RY fra me. 4 t;&gt; edrms .•
bath , living rm ., d inin g r m .,
196a PONTI AC Sta tion Wagon ,
k i t che n , b a se m e~ l , floo r
'
I0.31·261t
S250. Good co ndilion . Phone
fu r nace, a ll ulil iHes. 317
74 2.30 88 .
-·-·-· ---~-·------ "'f
REfl
ln
M
I
X
LO
N
CRE
T
E
12 MEN needed , fyl l or par i
Lo c us t St., M i d,d l eport .
11 23 ·31c
d e li Ve,r ed rig h l l o yo ur EXCAVAT IN G'. dozer; loa de1 '
li me , S3.96 per hour . No
Ph one 992 ·373 1 lor a ppl .
p rojec t, r ast and easy . F r ee
rmd •backhoe .. won : sept"1
ex peri e n ce n ec es sary . 3 .1 TO N Int ernational pi d&lt;up . 4
11
·23·3t
c
• _, ___ .. _____ _j __ _
estima tes . Phone 992 328-1,
lanks
i ns t a ll ed ;
au mf)1
Phone (6141 44 6·0677 .
speed tr an smiss ion . H 0
Gocq lein Re ady Mi)C Co ..
tr uck s and lo boy s for hi re~
11 ·21·31c
spr ings to carry camper , HOU SE for sale i n ~ortlarid~
M idd lepor t. OhioJ
will hau l fi ll dirt. top soiL
hea vy ,bumper s w ilh hitch
lak e ove r paym ent $, 5 rm s.
ti tnes·tor'\e and gravel.c can
6 3o
for hor se tr ailer , low
and b a th , good we ll and 2
Bob or Rog er Jeff ers·, day ',
m
il
ec1ge
.
To
see.
conta
cl
99
2·
ac r es of ground . P ~o n e 843 ·
Opportun~ies
phone 1192 7089 . nigh ! phO'W I
7017 .
StPfiC TANKS clea ned .
2292 .
l
992 3'52 5 or 992 S2 J2 .
•1
11 23·31c
111. 11 .12tc
Moder n Sanilit t icn 992 J954
2 I I tfC '
or
991
1J.I9
R- -·-·--•-••••---'--:
9 18 tt c'
1966 DO D GE v an, good con . 3 B R H OME , ju st 1 f inished
~WOOU BUWCI-l S REP A I~ /
· d i lion . $600. Ph on e (614 ) 98 5·
r e mode lin g . Salf m 5 1. ,
3594 .
WO U LD Y'OU BE LlE ·VE ?
Sweepe r s , loast ers , irons '
OPERATE YOUR
R
u!l~
Phon
e
742
2'3
06
11.23·71p
Build iJn all ste.el building af
al l smal l applian ces . Lawif,
after
. m . or sed Mi lo B.
OWN BUSINESS
Po le ea r n p r ices? . Go lden
mowe r , ncx.t ta Stat e Highs
Hul c:hi n n .
I
1975 OL D SMOBI L E Cutlass,
Cian r All Stee l Buitdin~s ,
W~v
Garage on Rou t e i(
1 10.. 9.1fc
Phone 9B5 3B15
·
CO ymo l . automat ic, ai r. -·- ·----R
l:
A, Box
148,
Weve
r
y,
4 l'.., . t',.· .,~.·
fac tor -; l&amp;pe, lill steer ing
Oh
io
.
Phone
9471796
AGE OR EXPEORIENCE
wh eel . Phon e 742 2667 aff er 4 HousE on L {nco ln H'eig hl s, 2
7·24 ·11(
NOT A FACTOR
...
bedrm, lar ge k it chen . full
p .m .
- ·---- C. B R A D FO RD, Auc: lionee(,
bas
eme
nt.
n
ice
ba
t
k
y
ard
.
J1 .2J.6 1p
onl y 58,900·. Wi th new fur
O'DE LL Atine m ent toceted
Co mpl ~ t e Ser vice . Phone
nilur e, on ly 510, 300. Phon e
b ehi nd R u lla nd
Gr ade
949 2487 or 94 9 2000. Rac ine.
Own and manag e vending
I
992 76 48
r
Sc hoo l T uneup br~k es 1 1 Ohi o , Cr ill Bra dford .
route di spen sing nut, gum
'
'
~ '
cP
"':'i' i1( I / I'\
10 9 If(
I 11 6· 20\ c
whee
l balan c in g, ali nementi \·.,:~-..1-~·_L~LLL. --~- and cand~ confection s in
P h 0lie ~ n2 · 2 0 0:4 . '"' ••
~
·
·
·
-..
~
Pomeroy or vicinity . High
11 .f6 .1fc E '~CAVAT IN G , BACK HO ES
MINI B I KE , S50 . 26 inch bike ,
profit ihlms. Car needed to
AND DOZE.jl , L ARGE AND
530 . 24 Inch b i k e. S25. Phon e
ser vice your v ending route .
SMALL . S£ PTIC TA NKS
I
992 7551.
Ideal pa r:t time or full time
WOME N 'S RI N GS , sem i ·
'• I 'N SfiA L L-E 'D .
BIL L
11 24 3\c
bu siness. SU9S to $4795 and
pr ec ious sto n es •. perf ec t
~ P UL LI NS', PHON E 992 2478 ,
up. For details call our toll
g ift s for Chrislm a s. Size 5 CU STO M Homes , no d own
DAY OR NI GH T.
free number 1·800·l21·UU
and 6. Re cenll y ap prai sed .
I I 11 78t p
p a vme nt. V A Loans. F H A POTAT
O
E
S
to
r
sat
e
50
and
100
Phon e 992 -78 05.
or write Bo • 16275, MinAs low as 3 per cent do w n .
lb
be gs . Acro ss from
1 J1 .23.3tc
neapolis , Minn. S5416 .
You r plans o r o,urs . Cal l or S E W I N G
M A C H-1 N 13'1
Sham ro c k In Hender son , W.
w r i\e , Shepa r d Contr a c1 ing ,
Repairs . serv ic t , a ll m ak e:r,
Va . Donald Wal hu, Rl. 35 , 1975 KAWASAK I 4d O motor
Box . 28A, R\l tlar) d, 4~775 .
,99 7 12B.t. ,Th e. F.,p br i c Sh OJh
Henderson . W . Y a .
cyc le , llctual m i l e~ . 15, 00 4.
Ph one 742 .2409.
Pom er oy /\ uthorl.z e d~ i n9efi
11 18261C
Co nta ct 992·3293. !
·
J
"
10&lt;t1; 26tc
~ ales and 1 se rvic e . vr~
_ ----· ____ j_ ~~t6tc
sh'.llpen ~CI~) OfS
·•
1971 DODGE Charg er S.E., A
3291i~ ,
F IRe w ooD fo r sal e'an d coat.
1 cond ition. ne w motor and
al so: oen er at ha uling. Phon e
tra{l smlss1on . P ho ne 949 ·
WE SPE:CI ALIZE In tl'.Ob / (~
99 2 3640.
I
?41~ Bashan .
hom e furna ce r epai r . PhonLP
PHONE
992-3325
11·23·61c
11 18 6tp
121&lt;65 T R AIL ER : small cot
992 '5858.
•
10~chanlc
Pomeroy , 0 .
ra ge , sui ta ble tor 1 or 2 m en ,
9 - 18 · 11 ~·
MYER 'S deep well we ter
Ro u sh lane , Ch es hire , DO N ' T
m erely
br igh te n
pump , 52 gallon ,; a ir con .
COI:INTifY - _l' BR's, 1'1&gt; --.-------------:;::.
Ohi o ; 3 bedr oom lr ail er •
. Blue Lustr e
c ar pe t s .
troll ed tan k , Cu ll iga n wilt er
baths . equipped kitchen '
Cli fton , W. Va . Constr uc ti on
th em . . no rap id r eselling .
soft ener com pl etj' · Phon e
and \6 acres .
·· 1
Rent sh ampooe r , Nel son 's
worker s pr eferr ed . Call 304
7A2 2600, Frances m boden .
77 3 5813.
Dr ug Store .
IT'S 'NICE 2 BR 's.
1 l1 .23.61c
3 B E O RIM . m obile ho m·e.'
11 20 6tc
11 20 ·61C
equipped kltc~en, oak
pa n e l ! ing , w alt . \o . wa.ltf
-- - '
BUTT E RNU T SQuas!'l , makes
car p eli ng , ga rage , u lilif ~
floors. basement· and att ic.
belt er p ies than p Umpk ins.
buil di ng , 3 &amp; 4·10 acr e lof)
3 RM and ba th furn ished , MOD E RN Walnul Console,
ACREAGE - .Wacres near
Qu iunb er r y, PhO ne 99 2.
Ru tlan d St. M iddl epo r~\ .
house . adult s only . ~ h on e
AM F M radio , 4 spee d
old Rt . 33.
2954 , Sy r ac use, Ohio .
Ph one 992 3843 .
992 5535 .
' changer , Ba lan ce SIOUO or
HANDY - 3 BR 's In town
111.'2 3.3tc
11 20.\f c
term s. Cllll 99 2·396.5.
~--~
11 28 1 (~
on Main St. Modern k it.,
---· ------------11 20 tt c
full
basement
and
hot
AM ER I CA N 2 pc . liv )ng roo m
TWO Jots In the cou ntr v . 1 0 5~
water heat .
suit e, opens to f ull .size bed ,
tl05 (each), Tup pers Pla i"F URN I SHE D or unfur nished
wa l er , near M ei g s H i ~
IT'S LARGE - 5 BR , llke
HOGS r eady 10 bu tc her . Also,
ooo.d condili,an . S1 76. Ph one
apa rl m ent s, t or t urth er
Sc hool. s2,500 each . One 101
bee f an d da ir y c atll e. Ca ll
992·3801 . ..
1
new home, 3 bath s, large
d e la ih . pho n e Wend all
js se t up l or m obile hom e,
949 211 5.
,
_ __ , ll:2_':_31 c famlly 'room , 2 car garage,
Frecke r , 949 2 00 ~ .
~ w • • -1+~ 9 1 6h:· - ---.- ..,.. - -·
__.1. ___ _
M ob i le
· hom e
sold
Eastern Schooh •
11 2l ·61 C
se p ar atel y .: Phon e 992 ·7060i
REASONABLE.'- 2 BR' s,
'
I,
11 ·18.6f "'
NOW ~ ell !n g Fuller Brush
bath, Nat. gas furnoce, city
--'-~'-------------7 RM . HOU SE In Syr acu se.
Produc ts . Phone 99~31 1 ~
water, fenced ~rd. Asking
HOUSE lor sa le In Porll anek
Oh io . Ba se mep11 , g arage, _ _ _ _ _1_•...
I"' "J ' I '+·If..n
510,000.
_ ...;...:_2...:......'.:_.:_
T ake ov er pay me nt s . ~
re al n ice hom e, must hlllfe
room s and balh, good w ei 't
OUT - 3 BR 's, bath. nat.
refer ences If Interes ted . Ca ll
and 2 acres of oroun
gas furnace, 2 car garag·e
d ay (614) 446.7699, eveni ngs.
1
Ph one a~3 . 2292 .
and
garden.
( 614 1 446-9539 .
11 18· 1
11·5-lfc

Help Wante41

"'I

Business

,.

-

-

-..--- -

Fqr Sale

Jr. High honor
.puplls listed

"'

Syracu se, Ohio

11 · 1 ~· 1 mo.

Real Estate For Sale

11 -21· 1 mo.

D&amp;M ~pliance .

Blown into Walls &amp; Attics
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM '
SIDING -SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

Five
new
J. bedroom
homes. Now under con·
structlon with Carpet,
cerami c tile, garage, large

1 mile on State Route 124
Toward Rutland

FREE ESTIMATES
Blown

Tuppers Plains.:Ohio

1115 D A T SUN 6 -2 10 Hatch
ba ck with air condllioni ng ,
elec. c lock . r ea r window
s had ~. ra d ial ti r es. also 4
fa clor y tir es and 2 snow
! ir es . 53, 490. Call 992 3453 .
11 18·61p

PHY.LLIS LARKINS
LONG BOTTOM
Phyllis M. Larkins of here
has graduated from
Marietta Beauty School
and Is now employed at
Shirley Kay' s Beauty
Salon, 234 East Main.
Street. Pomeroy.

PH. 992-5682

Pom er oy

Ph . 992-2114

POMEROY
·MOTOR-CO,@:
..· MORLAN
OPEN EVES. 8:00
:
,
POMEROY,
OHIO·.
·
.
.
Construction ;Co.

All MechanicaiWork

I

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC. _

Phone 742-2331 1
Roger Womsley-Ruiland
10-1 5-1 mo.

RACINE - The Southern
Junior High School honor roll
for the second six weeks
period lists :
SEVENTH GRADE
Crista Beegle . Paul Cardone.
Eric Hall , Sonja Hill. Teresa
Holstein, Della John son.
Terry McNickle, Mary Beth
Obllz, Berta Robinson, John
Williams, Bryan Wolte .
Paule Wolle, all A and B, end
Jack Wolle, Bonnie Boso,.
Peggy Bush, Steve Cir cle.
Bob Lee, Janel Mlddleswart,
C.rl Morris, Mark Simpson ,
·Mary Beth Slav in, Danny
Talbott, Melissa Yonker. all

Honor pupils at
Wahama listed

For Sale

Real Estate For S.

For Rent

'"' ·

TEAFORD REALTY

- -·- ----·------- --

Real Estate ·Fa,r Sale ·..:

- -----------+---

-~--··----

_____ ., ___

'"I

.f R AiL E R spac e ' tn Ru l lan d .
Phon e 74 2 '2 397.
11 .18.6\c

MEET THE
nNGLEY
OOOT SAVER

TRAile-R-s;;~ ; f~;:-r-;~ ~ All
Ul ili lies . Phon e 992 .5.5 35.
' · J6.1fc

--------------TR AILER lol Oil Kingsbury

Road near Herrlsonvlll e.
Free n a tural g as, cit y
water . Phone 742·2377 .
J1. 18·13tc

WAS HER ahd drver i l~ QOOd•'l
condi1 lon . ' 1P,tJo11 e , 'lf~ · 2?~~.. 1 1.,r 1

-·-· ____ l_:_ :._~-il~·~no"·

11.21 ·61 c

TWO used li0h'f 1Wi! lijtl t11HIYi nH•11t
saws. Porheroy Hom e &amp;
Auto , Phon9 \.n2 ,20.t 4r :1' 1: q1h! 1.
'
. . d •1 .-:1 hl ,, l2,\ ;lt~lf·"~ :

3--BeO~M~- ho-;,e~IUsl,'
fin ished. rem9~e 11 n g, Salem ,
s r., Rutland . Phon.e rA7·D \19
eft er ~p . m . or see Milo B.
Hutch is on .
9.23.tfc

•

-----------T---,
3

v.• •• ,,

.. .

5 RO OM ho use ~ pa rt ia ll Y
fu r ni shed
Cr etr lge r a tOr ;
stove, w asher and dryer,'
bedroom su i te, and d inette
suit e) . N e wiv r em o de led
and newl y c arp eted . Good
l oc ell on .
E x t er i or
w as
palnl ed this vear . Cal l 14 2·
2801 alt er S: 30 p.m . or 992 .

5795 .

Hemlock Groy• P h t' t ~~ve. · '! lOoting and ce il ing . Phone
1'1'\ IJ ,' \
'
'· •
ol/1
"1 9 2. 1 2 17 5 ~
b
'
E~;~u lrlc~su 1 Jt 1 ' t~l'log~~\1~ 1 i~ 11 1 · .~, .. ,, '
10 21.301c
Oorsel S mith ,&lt;~ ~eCe~ , · ~lfe- 1 t' f l li/lllfi,!··-·-· - - - · · • ·-7
3 A N D 4 r m furn is hed lind T'R'A'il"E"R~J~-~bl"l.;-lfun~~ : ,; b
of Me;gs Cou n l~ . · o~;O\ dp;, ' •' Unhll.
r
l'...J..
Credltors are requ ired IQ·n ~"";P'"
1$ rQI' ....unfur nish ed apt s. Phon e 99 2
Will consider lan d co nlr acl'. ~~·l f
fi le !heir c l aims w i th sai d
·
·.
5434 .
Phon e 992-3960 .
fi ducia r y wi t hi n to ur months. 197 5 14)C70 T RAlLEI&lt;I: , \.A
11 .9.1fc
I,I -21 ·121C
Dated thls 70th dll Y of
ce ll en t co nd ition , espec iall y
November 197S .
bull! lor Off ices . L ow pr i ce
·BASSETT B. • R.
af)er tm t n't .
for quic k sa l ~ . Ph one (304 ) ~ URNI S H E D
new . Gn
•
adults
onlv
In
M
ld,qleport,
Ma~~-....,A,l,\d,i;1.,hRf 615 ·5829,
f 8, pool
.
Phone
99
2
·
387~
.
'
~
·
Judge
10 JO ·Ifc
593&lt; .
)
.25.11&lt;;
Court of Common Pleas,
·--·-· -·-·-- • - - - ... , _ ____________ ...JI •
.
Proba!e D iv ision
Meigs Counly, Ohio

Hom

..

-

BE DRM . larg e ki tc hen,
li'w'i n g rm , di ning ~ m . · Jl1
b ath , dispos al , cen lral air ,
ce ntr al
he a l,
wa te r ,
p ur ification system , ful l'f
carp eled , w i r ad lh r oug hout
for T .V . a nd te l e phon e.
V inyl Si d in g , doubl e g lass
wi ndow s, ex c)ess ,stor age
spa ce In closet s and 11x 11
m etal !awn bui lding . On e of
M iddl eport 's b eller homes,
Cal I 99'2 ·312 9 bei Wee fl · 2: IS
and 4 p, m . fo r appo intm ent.
' ··:
1.1-20·61 c

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

, no snaps, no1
washes inside and
.seconds. Stretchy

to go on and off
Great for work

6 kOO M Hou se wifh bal h •.
gar age, basement. bultl ·ln,
por ch . 1 1 11cre, Hobson .
P h o~e

992·7733 .

11 - I J·IfC

- ------- --,...----·-

.'

608 'E'.
MAIN

.... ~OME

GEORGE WARD
RUTLAND - Airman
George R. Ward, son of
retired U. S. Air Force
Technical Sergeant and
Mn. David C. Ward of
Rutland; has been selected
lor tethnlcaltralnlng In the
U. S. Air Force aircraft
maintenance fi eld at
Sheppard AFB, Tex. The
airman recently completed
baste training at Lackland
AFB, Tex., where he
studied the Air Force
mission, organization and
cuotoms and received
opeclai Instruction in
human relations. Ward Is a
1975 graduate of Meigs
High School.

NCAA PLAYOFFS
SHAWNEE MISSION, Kan.
IUPIJ - Ithaca College of
New York will host Widener
College of Chester, Pa ,, In a
battle of unbeatens next
Saturday
in a semifinal
A.
pairing
of
the
NCAA Divlsioo
EIGHTH GRADE - Meg
Amberger, Camellia
m football championships.
Brlneger , Kenny Cook,
Ithaca, which lost to cham·
Sharon Crouch, Jack Duffy.
pion
Central College of Iowa
Kim Ouaan, Dave Foreman.
In
last
year 's final, has a ~
Richard Furbee. Carri e
Guinther , Pam Harden, record Wid Widener 18 1().0.
Rosemary Hubbard. Brian
In the other semifinal,
Joltnson. James Meadows,
Kent Verney, Cindy Warden, Wittenberg of Springfield,
Mall Weaver, Karen Wines , Ohio, with a 1~1 record, will
O&lt;!bble Zirkle. A and B. and host Millsaps of Jackson,
Cricket Carpenler , Amy
Ftsher . Melissa lhle, all A. Miss., 8-1.

+

I' 1l--~· -~ - · - - - - - - - - ·-.-

(Ill •o . 11 . 1" &lt;1211 . e. 11. ~~~ ...
NOTICE OF
b" -- ·
APPOINTMENT .H!. c; J l'~f\1,1:1DE LIN G,

AND ON TO YOUR T-SHIRT
.A ..

!I 14 Sip

Notice

~.

'

Business Services

IN M EMO R Y of Thom as B.
Mi ll er w ho passe d away 6
yea r s ago l od ay, Nov . 24,
1969 .
Sad ly mi sse d b y h is w i l e 69- ( H EV ROL E T tor sal e or
and fam il y .
tr ad e lor pi cku p . Ph one 949
1121111c
20 18.

ROOM and boa rd for senior
citi zens, very nice . Ph one

;,tinel . Classifi~ds

Auto Sales

1971 DOD GE F' icku p , 1 , ton ,
v a engin e a ul oma t ic, g ood
r un ning con dit ion . S800.
Ph one (6 14l 247 2 1 ~1
11 14 81p

WA N TE D E..: p erienc ed
La rr y Spenc:er . Peek A ·POo Stud lo breed
1~ l e r k .q t CP,ur ls t .~~ ~~T.~~ ~~ P ee~~: A Poo . Ph on e
· Meigs "&lt;J oUnt y ! •
·
·
Comrh on Pleb'C.,rt . , ·1 . , ·'
11 .21 6t p

58

Team 3 l ook a poln l s fr om
Tea m 1• . Va l Ha rper was
h ig h to r Tea m 3 w llh 553 p ins
and Jack Fer guson was h ig h
lor Team 12 wit h 533 p ins .
Team 4 took 6 po in ts tr om
Team 11. Lar ry Plllri ck was
hig h lor Tea m 4 wit h 497 p ins
an d F r an k K rautt er was h ig h
for Tea m 11 w llh 473 p jns .
Tea m 1 look 6 points from
Te am S. Harol d Laoll. edo was
high lor Tea m 1 w ith 506 p ins
and Georgia cook was h ig h
lor Tea m
w ith 462 p in s .
T ea m 2 to ok 8 point s fr om
Team 6. Dan Mi nk tsub l was
hig h l or Team 2 wilh 487 pins
Bnd Geor ge Ra tliff wa S h igh
for Team 6 wit h 482 p in s.
Team 13 took 6 points from
Team a. George Roac h was
hiGh tor Team 13 wit.h 504 pins
an d Charlie Neat was hig h lor
Team 8 with 498 pins. •
Team 14 took 6 poin l s fr o m
Team 7. Ly ll e Shillington
hub l was high fo r Team 14
w llh 498 p ins and Ri chard
Smith was high for Team 7
with 46? pins .
Team 10 took 6.Points t rom
Team 6 Joe Studer was hhJh
for Teem 10 with SOl pins and
Harold Sk idmore was high
lor Teem 16 wilh 474 pins .
Team 9 r.pllt 8 points with .
Team I S V irgin ia Grover
wuh iVh for Team 9w l1 h 457
pin s and D~bbio Ollvls wfts
hlgn tor Team IS with 456
pins
Val Harper had high gemt
tor tnt ltdles with 214 pins
an d olso had hig h ser i es with
5~J pins .
Jack F erf,]uson had h igh
game l or the men wUh 225
p ins and Tom Roe tt ker had
h igh series w ilt\ 54S pins .
Other hi gh !.Cor es w~re :
to m Roenker , 211 ; F rank
Kraulter ,
205 ;
Haro l ~
lookado. 200 .

p a r~ r • ron

f o llowing d escr ib ed real
esta te, to wit : Situ ated in the
Tow n shi p ol Oli ve, Counl y of
Meig s and Sta te ol Ohi o, and
being a PIH I o f No . 35 , In Town
3. ot Ra nge No . 11. bou nd ed as
fo ll ow s: Beg in ning 104 rods
West fr om lh e so u l hw es !
corner of sa id sec lion : th ence
Wes t 127 ro ds ; thence Nor rh 96
r od s \o the cenler of Shllde
River , thence sou th 83 d egrees
East 16 rods ; thence Nor th
831.· deg r ees E as 1 22 r ods ;
thence Nor th 701 1 d eg r ees
Eas t 15 rods ; th ence North 6J
degrees Eas t 11 r ods ; ! hence
Nor th 68 degrees Eas t '26 ro ds ;
then ce Nor th B3deg rees Eas1 8
ro ds ; thence South lo ! he pl ace
of , beg inn ing , contai ning 78
acres , be !h e sa m e m or e or
tess, cxcep·t th e r ight or a
r oadway 20 feet wi de as nea r
w her e !h e roa d now run s f r om
the sout h sid e of sai d tr ac t to
lhe counl y roa d near rhe
mou th o f Spr uce Run . fls lo
exc epti ng tha t there has been
sol d a tracl o f 18 acres out ol
the above describ ed prcm lses .
as is r ecord ed in Volume 105,
Page 259 , Me igs Co un t y
Reco r ds of Deed s IO which
re l erence is her eby ma de.
/\I so eJtCepting tha i por i ion of
land ac q uired by the United
States ol Ame r ica lh rough
c:o ndem nalion pr ocee d ings in
Civil No . 14 209, of the Un ited
Stares Dis tr ict Cour r of the
Sout h ern Dis lr ic l of Oh io
eastern Division , as show n in
Vo l um e 139, Page J67 of th e
Meig s County Deed Record s,
an d ~a l ed Jun e 5. 1969 .
A l so rhe oi l p r iv ileges i n an d
under !he a bove desc ri bed
real es tare sil uated in the
Tow(lshl p of Olive , Counly of
M eigs , an d Sta te of Ohio .
fllso . the o il p r ivileges in
and under lhe fo llo w i ng r eal
esta t e silua ted in !he Town
ship o f L ebanon, Coun t y of
Meigs and Sta te of Ohio , being
more par Hc ul arl y descri bed
as fol lows : Begin n ing on lhe
center lin e 126 rods tr am lhe
west li ne of Sec lion 34, Tow n 3,
Range 11 of th e Oh io Com pany
Purc hase ; th ence Eas t to !he
sout h west cor n er of 50 ac r es of
the Easl en d of the Nor th half
ol Sec lion 34 , Tow n 3, Ra ng ~ 11
of th e Oh io Companv PUr
chase . sold by joh n ca r l
wr ig ht b y Gab r ie l Si ms ;
thence Nor rh Ia !he Ce nt er of
l he N or th ha lf of sa id Sec t ion
34 ; thence wes t to w ilhin 126
rods of the Wes t ~ i ne of Sec: lion
34 : the nce Sou!h to the pl aceol
beg inni n g , co nt aining 50
acres , mor e or less .
You are r eQu ire d to answer
w l !,h ln 18' days af ter the las!
publicat ion o f noti ce. wh ich
w i ll be publi shed once each
w ee k for she. success ive weeks .
b eg inning ,
Monday .
Novem ber l Oth , l 97S . The last
pub l ic:alion will be made on
Mon d ay , Decem ber 15th , 1975 .
and I he 28 days fo r answer w i ll
commence on t hai dale . tn
case of your f a ilu re , or
ot h er wise resp_Q r:t.91.5..fJtgl.jjr,~ d
by l h e Ohio 'Rul es ol Civ il
Proce du re .
iud g m c nl by
de f au l l wi ll b e r en de r ed
aga in sl you far the relief
demanded In the cl ai m .

.I

'

Po m eroy Bow lfn g lan~s
10 Gladys Oliv er f\ Cidn•ss
M or n i ngG iories
, l JJlk
. nown ; £1.£rniJI4-"' ".t.lsh~· ~ -, ~
'i,•,'l
a~
Rcr ni CC .'1' \U CI\N \'1 whOSQ,;
'
Nov . 11, 197S
let sJ l&lt;nown a~dr css .Wils 6~ ·~ ..
·~. WAN T AD S
Sta nd i ngs
_,
" t
l ~_ a 'tl
Cr ccts 'eo auJ
i l ~} , •,
l~FOAMA T IO~
Team
Ph .
d1ltnapolis . Ind iana ; M&lt;trvin
D EA DLIN ES
Git)I)S Gro&lt;erv
67
S
M c Et l rcsh , w ho":&gt;c li1 S. 1 5
P .M .
Dev
Be fort
E~«.telsio r Oil Co
!:» 7
k.now n
res iden ce
wa!&gt;
Publi cation .
Newell Sunoco
~:
Madison . West V1rqinia ,
M11n day Deadl ine 9 a . m .
G. &amp; J Aulo Pari -.
Cl yd e Ri nc w h o~ I~ \ k~ow~ f • ~ancella t ion · Cor rectio n s
16
W M P 0
lJ
&lt;lddr c~;s was ~,
ton RdUqc . ,...ill be a ~ ce p le d until 9 a . m .
Spencer 's Markel
S&lt;t ll'f'
L o~i siana . iH'i.d
Cimf~o wn 'f9r Da y Qf Pub lica tion .
H igh ind gam e
hei.~s , d evis~c . lk9"l ' '*s , ..) _
RI: GULATIONS
Lamb erl 209 an d 196
exec u tors . ildm in i s tra Tors.
Th e Pub lisher r eser ves the
H igh ind . 3 g am es
Sally
and a~siq n s of each of th e right t(l edi l or rP.Iec. l any ads
Lamber 1 544 , Bec k v Dunfe e
totlow in q i ndi vidua l s, t~ll deemed obiec t io nal. Th e
471.
deceas ed
T S She l don . publi sh er
will
not
be
H igh 1eam Game
Gibbs
L OHie
~ he l don .
Wi ll iam respon sible for m or e l han on e
Grocery 8A8 .
Sheld on , Edward Sh e l don ... in corre£ 1 insert ion .
High !ea m 3 9amcs
Mary Sheldon . Maud German .
RAT E S
Gi bbs Groc.er y 1337 .
Effi e Ge rman . Adda Nanna .
For Want Ad Service
Emmell Nanna . Sr .. M abel 5 cents per wor d one inserlio n
Tu es day T r i plica te
Nann~ . Bcr! Germa n , Lu cill e
M ini mum Charge $1.00
Nov . I I , 19?S
Germa n . M
/1
St ewart ,
1&lt;1 ce nt s per word three
Stand ings
Emma S Ca ldw elL Ber ni ce co n!lecu live mserli on s.
w. L. fishe r . aka Ber n ice Tucker ,
Team
26 ce nts per word Si l&lt; con ·
68 70
Mitchell Painting Co
Winnie S Chase , Marvin S
scc uti\IC inser !lons
~6
47 M c Elfr esh ,
Roya l Oak Par k
Ca r rie
s.,.
25 P erCen!D isco unt onpal d
Ha ci ne Home Nat Bank
M c Elfresh , Bertha s. Re ed . ad s an d ad s pa id w it h in 10
45 43
Josephin e Rin e , Cl yde Rine . da ys
Dew Drops
42 46
Edgar R i ne and G ladys
CARD OF THANKS
Dairy Va lley
41 11 7 Ol iver .
&amp; OBITUARY
New Yo r k Clothing
HI 70
You ar e hereby noli l ied Ihat
51.00 for 50 w or d mi ni mum
High individu·al game
you
have
b een
named
Eac h addll lo n a l wor d 3
WcJn d a Tea f ord 220 ; Pat
De fendants in a legal action cen ts.
Carson 198 .
eniH ied Emm et! H. Nan na.
BLIND ADS
H igh series
wanda
Jr , e t a1 Plaintiffs , vs. John
/\ dd ilional 25c Chllr g e p er
Tea for d 546 . Sh irley Mitchel l
M . We ll s, Jr ., e t al. , Del en
fldvert isemen I .
518
da nrs . This ac tion has been
OFFICE HOURS
Team h igh seri es
M il
as signed Case No . 15,9.5 8. and
8 : 30 a . m . to 5 :00 p . m.
chel l Paint ing Co . 1477
is pend ing in the Cour l of Dai l y . 8: 30a . m . lo 12:00 Noon
M il
Tel!m hig h game
Co man Pleas , Meigs Coun ty , Satur d ay .
chell Pai n t i ng Co . 539
Ohio
T h e o b jecl o l the
Sunda y. late Night
Mht ed L ea g\l e
Nov . 16 , 197S
Standlna s
Tea m
W. l. TP
No 6
68 36 21020

'r

!'J)j/'or Fast Results

10 - The Daily Sentinel, MiddleJ19rl-Pomeroy, p, ;Nov.•~.j8 .,. , 1 ~ , ~.

MASON. W. Va . - The
honor roll for Wahama Senior
and Junior High schools for
the first nine week s grading
pti'iod listed;
SENIORS - Paula Bocock.
Joe
Boston ,
Debbie
Brenham, Linda Bumgard·
ner.
Teresa
Dillon ,
Llll'ry Duncan. Rick D,ye.
Crystal
Fruth ,
Marc
Fultz, Shirley Gerlach,
Carlotta Gibbs, Keith Gibbs,
Tammy
Gibbs , ' Cindy '
Grinstead. Mark Harmon.
Ruth Ann Hendr ickson,
Tammy Hoffman. Marty
Holbrook, Cherrl Hube r.
Phillip
Jerre l •
Diana
Joltnson. Cindy Kay, Rock y
Kearns.
Kim
Kn ight ,
Christina Llevlng , Vickie
~orthrup. Joe
Parsons ,
Mindy Raynes. Dan Rickard,
Dreama Riffle, Joyce Alley,
Eddie Robinson , Beverly
Roush.
Jeff
Rus sell.
Dewnetle Sheffer ,
Joe
Shepard, Betty Shields, Dan
Stodola, Richard Siders,
Robin SteWart, Terry Tucker,
Greg Weaver, Rick Wolf,
Mark Wright, Russell Young
and O&lt;!xter Zerkle.
, JUNIORS
Cheryl
Adams, Cheryl Circle, June
Garnes. Carr ie Hatcher ,
Christi Kearns , Shirley
~~earns. Jay Layne, Carla
MCfarland, VIckie Moore,
Qlneh Myers, Judy Needs,
Q.lela Ohlinger , Louella
tlldektr, Lois Peter! , Teresa
Jlrofitt, Tammy Richards.
Cleroly~ Rickard. Tim Sayre,
linda Tesf, Jennifer Weaver
..d Mona Weaver .

'

.

SOPHOMORES - Diane
.bel, Bob Barnltz , Greg
Blenlng, Conn ie Burton ,
Beverly Click , Kim Conard,
Darla Fowler, David Fowler ,

'

Honor
'roUpupils

anrwunced
'
: RACINE The Racine
Elementary School honor roll
for the second six week s ( B or

belltr) :

, Grade I - Matthew Jewell,
Rachel Reiber. Boatriz
Wagner.
Bruce
Wolfe ,
tammy Wolfe, Wendy Wolfe,
Ronnie Rice.
~
·,· Grade 2 - Ker r I Beegle.
Bostick, Dixie Dugan.
&lt;'llne Foresttr. Mandy Mill ,
"""Iissa lhle. Lisa Parsons,
~PIIr Rl1er. Kenda Ri zer.
if!ob n Savage, Rebecca

.,_.Y

~nMeter .

Lisa Gilland, Brent Hart,
Linda Hobbs. Brett Holbrook ,
Kelvin Hona ker , Jenny
James, Kim Javlns, Rhonda
Kay, Donne Kearns, Randy
Lavender, Mary McFarland,
Mar la M cGinn is. Lance
Oliver, April Parsons, Karla
Richards. Ben Roush. Kurtis
Sayre. Gary Siders. Rick
Stafford . Mike Stevens,
Karen
Stodola .
Teddy
Swartz. Kathy Tes t, David
Thompson . Dwayne White,
Bill Wolfe, Dora Wyatt,
Belinda Zerkle. Charles
Zuspan and Sarah Zuspan .
FRESHMEN Jennifer
Badgley, Lisa Brown, Eric
Bumgardner , Oavld Camp,
Jonl Clark , Susan Edwards.
Danny
Fie lds,
Lyndon
Fields,
Mark
F1sher .
~usan
t&gt;erlach,
Linda
Gllll5ple , Lesa Grimm . Lorry
Johnson , Terri Johnson,
Pa'trlck Kearns . Bonnie
Marr , Carol Nelson. Brenda
Roush. Cathy · Ao&lt;Jsh . Mike
Roush, Sheryl Roush, Donald
Russell, Duane Savre, Jell
Staats , Gregory Stodola.
John Stewart and Randy
Thorne.
EIGHTH GRADE - Jeff
Arnold, Eric Barnltz, John
Bennett, Connie Brown,
Karen
Brown .
Jeff ·
Bumgardner, Annette
Campbell . YvQnnt Coll ier.
Brian Dingey. Nellie l:sque,
~tephanle Estes , Julie !ilbbs,
Rlema Goodnlte , Barbara
Gordon, Mike Grimm. Brett
Grinstead, Judy Hell , Mlcki
Hank inson, Lisa Hayes, Troy
Hesson , Lisa Hill , Mary
Hollman, Terri Johnson,
Terri Lynne Johnson. Kevin
Jones. Teresa Jones, Greg
Kearns, Jeff Lathey, Debbie
MacKn i ght,
Maurine
Morrison. Tammy Oltllnger,
Jerrr Oldaker . Angela
Prof Itt. Gary Richards .
Jeckle Ridgeway, Allee
Roush, Connie Roush, Tim
Roush , Doug Russell . Joyce
Steven• . LISII Stewart, Jill
Taylor. Richard Thornton
and Randy Wright.
SEVENTH GRADE Scoll Barnitz, Kim Bash,
Terri
Brown,
Rodney
Buill gardner, M ike Buzzard,
Julie Clark, Carl Dugan;
Peggy Douthit, Mary Elias,
Peggy Fisher, Larry Gibbs,
Char lie Goodnlte, Conn ie
Hart. Jeff Fowler, Larry
Hesson, Carle Hood, Chris
Howard. York Ingles. Ronald
Johnson, Todd Kitchen,
Sherrl McCa~th• Scott
McDermitt, Mar
cKnlght,
Robert Man
n. Anna
Parsons, Charles !Joey)
Roush.
Donald
Roach.
Donald Roush. Dollie Roush.
John Roush. Kti!Y Roush,
Lou Roush, LH Roush, M.
Lei Roush. Terry Roush,
Sherrl Russell, Rlsa Sayre,
Doug Smith, Debra Star,
Todd Tucker, Bary Van ·
Metre. Jell VanMeter, Jane
Wyatt end Martin Zl[kle.

"' Grade l ~ Alen Crisp.
ph Fisher. Sandre Har·
, Lois I hie, bivid Powell.
rlano Wagner. Lori Wolle.
• • rade ~ - James Bush,
'-1C111in Curfman, Beckl
~hnson . Linda Proffit ,
ren Wolle. Tony Wolfe. •
BIR'tHDA\' NEARS
• Grade s - Becky ~"· Lori ,
Mrs.
Alma Rupe will
erdtfl. Kathy Btker, Zane
It, Clair Morris, ferry celebrate her 9211d birthday
t erson. John Porter . on Friday, Nov. 28. She
vld Salmons. Toni• Salaer,
remains a patient _ at the
l~~nlt WHM.
Grade 6 - Kim Bickers, Angel uf, Mercy Nu.rslng
dy
Cross,
~IInde
Hume at Albany and ·cards
mons, Aiflt Stoler. Laura m•y be sent tu her there .
ft. Kent Wolfe.
I

INSTIUCTIONS
.. rCif bwll rnulfs, apply lo material
made with at l"sl 50 percent
polyester Mid 50 percent cotton .
Shirts of 100 perc:ent cotton do nof
hold the colors after repeated

wBihfntl.

6. Set the Iron to the " cotton" setting
and allow It to heat uP· Apply with

3. 1'18cu proltclllll piece of cloth or
bomleil typing paper over the
w.tlng botrd to kMP excess Ink
11'0111 stainlnt ir011\ng board cover.

tlrm , even

7. Use a dry Iron. not steam. ·

·bNrd 10 that lhe front lor back) Is

8. Allow to cool tor at least one
minute before removing paper .

dlritctly over the board's protective

.

'

ADVERTISER.
.

~

..

)

pressure over entire

surface for 30 se~onds .

~. Slip the T ·lhlrtow~thUnd Of the

MR~

LAUNDERING
No spKial IIUIIderlng Ia required.
ZAP's colors wilt mellow with the
first washing , You can wash 1nd dry
with other per,.ntnl prns clatlm
·using the proper settings Of' ftrn·
peratures . Do no! use chlorine
bleach en any perm111111t press
meteri1fs . tt properly 8fllllltd and
laundered your ZAP T·Shlrl ••ltn
Wilt 1111 through riPHted WISh ings
and drylngs .

pape!'.

2. Cutout pettem al011g dolled lines.

o:ov«.

CAUTION
If you have ne111r used en iron
before have 1n adult apply ZAP to
your T-lhlrt 10 everything will come
out lust right.

5. Pla ce ZAP tace down on the area
ot the T-shlrt you wlshn to decorate
and pin It to the sh irt so It will not
slide. Place a clean sheet of paper
directly over ZAP to protect the
Iron 's surf ace. Do not use heavy

••

'

YOU CAN PUT MORE ZAP INTO YOUR ADVERTISING

MEssAGE BY USING OUR NEW mON-ON TRANSFER
•
'

INK•• • They see, they like, they iron, they wear, they anT)'
yoUI' sales message wherever.they go. New heat transfer
'

.

.

ink gives you the hottest
ads in town. They leave a 1asting
.
'

"

'

bnpression with young people. Newspapers
reach 3 out of 4
.
'

.

_,

yoUDg .people on the average weekday.

I I

•

I

�Local Bowling.;; l ·. p~~~·: ~~!~~

•

No. 5

66 36 19965

Quallly Pr int Shop

66 38 1a22 0
Pauley 's I ns . &amp;
Rea ll y
40 64 16637
No 1
36 68 13631
No , A
3470 1555 1
H ig h ind ivi dual game ·
me n , Gear ge Mu rr ey 190 ; Vic:
Wipp el 179' ; Lloyd Brooks
165 ;

Hig h series · me n. Geor g e
M ur ray 504 ; Vic Wipp el 476 .
H igh game - Women . J ea n
Sp encer 178 : Mary Hoove r
162; Dee Simon ds 154 .
Hi g h ser ies ~
wo m en ,
M ar y H oover A65 ; Jea n
Sp ence r 435 .
T eam hi gh ga m e · Team 5

137 .

T eam hig h series

1766

Team 5

Wedn e5 day Early
Bird L u au e
Nov . 12, 1975
Standing s

Ph .
Tea m
51
r a.rmers Bank
B ~n Tom
lS
54
Rov al Crown
49
Eve l yn ' s Grocery
Hll l ey's Cera m ics
45
Ki ng Buil ders
28
Hig h Ind i Vi d ual game
Debbie Hawley 13 1. Lo u i~e
Har ri son 209.
H igh series Ma rl ene
WUson 548 ; D ebbi e Haw ley

528

Tett m hi gh game
Cr own 917 .
Team h lg h se r ies
Crown 2600 .

Roya l
Royal

Wedn es da y earl y
Bi rd l eagu e
Nov . s, 197 5
Standings

TE AM

Ph .
r ar m er s Ban k
56
Ben To m
53
48
Roya l Crown
42
E v elyn ' s Gro cery
Ha l ey's Ceram lcs
37
I&lt; ing Builder s
18
H igh ind iv id ual game
M ar lene Wilson 186 ; rt ossie
M rucson 179 .
H igh ser i es
Ma rl ene
Wil son 51 9 ; F lossie Ma)Cson

472.

T ea m h igh ga m e- Ro y al
Crow n 859 .
T eam hig h series
Far
men Bank 2-!.97 .

DAN THOMPSON FORD
BOWLIN G LEAGU EO
we ek ot Nov . 11, 1915
Stand i ng \
Tea m
w.
No 3
12
No 17
64
No . 4
59
No . 1
56
No . e
54
No . 5
52
No . 10
52
No . l l
52
No . 13
52
No. 2
·14
No . 16
44

L.
2-1
32
37
40
42
44
44
44
44

52
57

NO. I S

39 57

No . 6

38

58

No . 9

34

62

No. I

38

No. 14

comp l,;n• ,, 1o

18 78

s

lhe

In Memory

991 .3509 .

10 12 •fc
WI TH OU T m y p er m iss io n ,
ther e will be no hunli ng Or
tr espassi ng on my pr opert y .
13o b McG r aw , M eag a n
r arm .. off lower Bow m !ln 's
Run ,
11 4 26 1(
NO H UN TIN G or tr espa ss ing
d ay or nigh\ on th ese far ms
Cha r les YOSI , Iva n WelL J.
A . Smit h .
1\ L L He ms must b e old . Ol d
k eys , ma tch tobs, gun s,
pow der fl asks , powd er
horns, bank , and toys, ti n or
i r on , sto r e llems . A d .
ve rt ising , etc . Posl car d s,
sil ve r wa r e, sewing items ,
thim bl es . e tc .
K n ives.
s m o k i n g
p 1 pes ,
phonog raphs, mu sic boxes,
pap erw eighls, mar bl es, ink .
wel l s , bottle s, h al p i n s,
cam pa ig n He m s, bells. oi l
!amp s and Janlern s, miner s.
ra ilroad, etc ., clocks, do lls,
ol d jew elry , wa tches. r ings.
c hain s. e lc. steel tra ps,
d er b vs. h igh ha ls , ey e
g lasses. poltery j ar s, jugs!
p ew ter .
p i ctur es
ana
tr am es , g lass. d ishes . and
ch in a . plll)(es , fu r n itur e ol
a ll t ypes, mon ey ~nd coin s,
a rr ow head s, and Indi an
a rt ifacts, p lu s a ll Na zi wa r
i tems . Ph one 992·2050 be
tween 3 p .m . and 11 p .m .
M ond ay l hroug h F r ida y.
11 · 19· 12tc
__ ~·~·-- ~ · : : : - - -

Wanted To Buy
RA CIN E F ire Oep \. want s to
buy a wal k In cooler or
co mpressor for se mi! . Cal l
949 2: 121 efler S p .m .
·-~-·

. LD

-----

I H I·3tc

--------~

u.ir n'llure, 1ce oo x!s ,
bra ss beds. o r com ple te
h ousehold s. W r ife M . ~
M i ll e r , R f. 4 , Po m er oy
Ohio . Ca ll 992 776 0.
'
10·7· 14
- - --··--

Wanted

w---- ----

AS H pa id for all makes ani
models ol mob ile homes .
Phone ar ea cod e 614 ·423 .

953 1.

4 13 ffc
ORGAN PLAVER lo lo in
·· -countr y r oc k ba nd to pl ay
n il e club . For more in ·
formation , ca ll 99 2 2969.
11 23.31c

1 fll 'I f \'"

• "!'

!

Coi~ Currency
. - . . . .. _.--

lmployment Wanted

•

Pl llm blng

. case N.o.,2 U ?' O
. ~alil')g and a l i t ypes o
Es tat e of 00 f]Je\ Sm i th ,
gen eral
re g.a l r .
Wo rk
Decease d.
.
.
gu ar •n teed , 'lO years e ...,.
Notice is h ere b v 'blv en l lha t ·,l ' per itnce
Phone 992 24U'il
Eve l yn S. Fo l k oto 932 A llowe'v ' '' '
5 11~

~~,s~ ~:C.or t~t~o,'C:!~~ r~~,;~,~~ 'f.~~~N.ri; .- ... ~ll-;;;i~ g ,

ROGER HYSEll'S

'

r

.b

~

1974 CHEVROLET 4-WHEEL DRIVE

B' body, 31• ton , 350, power steering and bra kes
automatic tra nsmissi on, R. step bum per, rad io. A
popular model &amp; priced to go .

I

Buy, Sell or Tr"'de
Appraisal servic 1 on
estates and collecti~1S.

1972 COMET 2 OR .
$179S
6 cyl . std . trans., radio , lik e new w-w t ires. blue flnl sh,
nice car with good economy.

1971 MATADOR

GARAGE

and Supplies

$449S

Fro m th e larg es t Tr uck . or
Bulldozer Radi ato r to th e
sm alleSt Heater ·Cor e.
Nath a n Biggs
Rad iator Speciali U

R&amp;J OOINS

$1395

4-door, loca l car, air cond it ioned, full equipment.

Pets
COLLI E pup s 10 gi v e aw ay .
Ph on e 992· 7012.
11 19 J1.1c

1967 F ORD 1 dr . hardtop
F a i rla ne XL aulo m al ic
tr ansm iss i on ,
c ons ol e
buck et seats, 289 motor and
ch r om e w heel s. Can be seen
al K in o sbury Hom e Sal es,
11 00 E . Main St. , Pom eroy ,
Ohi o
t1 -23-4tc

lot . Buy now and pldk your
color s. FHA linanclng
available. Price: $21 ,500.
Phone : 667-63Q4

Insulation Services

SaleS and Serke L

LARRY LAVENDER

Intersection of Rt. 33 &amp; 7
Pomeroy

Ph . 992 -3993
' 4 10.1 mo .

Ca II today for
Service Tomorrow
Busine" Phone : 992-5880
Residence : 992-3313
11 ·18·1 mo.•'

..

D &amp; 0 r REE Tr immi ng , 20 BEAUT I FY yo ur home wiJ h
Per ma .Sione New hom' l
yea r s exper ie nce . In sur ed,
as we l l as r emo del ing wo r ~.
t ree est im ates . Ca ll 99 2·3057
Expert install ation . Frf!£
or (11 667.]pd1. Coot vi ll e .
es ti ma tes . Phone 7142·2409\
10· 15·1fC

2 STO RY fra me. 4 t;&gt; edrms .•
bath , living rm ., d inin g r m .,
196a PONTI AC Sta tion Wagon ,
k i t che n , b a se m e~ l , floo r
'
I0.31·261t
S250. Good co ndilion . Phone
fu r nace, a ll ulil iHes. 317
74 2.30 88 .
-·-·-· ---~-·------ "'f
REfl
ln
M
I
X
LO
N
CRE
T
E
12 MEN needed , fyl l or par i
Lo c us t St., M i d,d l eport .
11 23 ·31c
d e li Ve,r ed rig h l l o yo ur EXCAVAT IN G'. dozer; loa de1 '
li me , S3.96 per hour . No
Ph one 992 ·373 1 lor a ppl .
p rojec t, r ast and easy . F r ee
rmd •backhoe .. won : sept"1
ex peri e n ce n ec es sary . 3 .1 TO N Int ernational pi d&lt;up . 4
11
·23·3t
c
• _, ___ .. _____ _j __ _
estima tes . Phone 992 328-1,
lanks
i ns t a ll ed ;
au mf)1
Phone (6141 44 6·0677 .
speed tr an smiss ion . H 0
Gocq lein Re ady Mi)C Co ..
tr uck s and lo boy s for hi re~
11 ·21·31c
spr ings to carry camper , HOU SE for sale i n ~ortlarid~
M idd lepor t. OhioJ
will hau l fi ll dirt. top soiL
hea vy ,bumper s w ilh hitch
lak e ove r paym ent $, 5 rm s.
ti tnes·tor'\e and gravel.c can
6 3o
for hor se tr ailer , low
and b a th , good we ll and 2
Bob or Rog er Jeff ers·, day ',
m
il
ec1ge
.
To
see.
conta
cl
99
2·
ac r es of ground . P ~o n e 843 ·
Opportun~ies
phone 1192 7089 . nigh ! phO'W I
7017 .
StPfiC TANKS clea ned .
2292 .
l
992 3'52 5 or 992 S2 J2 .
•1
11 23·31c
111. 11 .12tc
Moder n Sanilit t icn 992 J954
2 I I tfC '
or
991
1J.I9
R- -·-·--•-••••---'--:
9 18 tt c'
1966 DO D GE v an, good con . 3 B R H OME , ju st 1 f inished
~WOOU BUWCI-l S REP A I~ /
· d i lion . $600. Ph on e (614 ) 98 5·
r e mode lin g . Salf m 5 1. ,
3594 .
WO U LD Y'OU BE LlE ·VE ?
Sweepe r s , loast ers , irons '
OPERATE YOUR
R
u!l~
Phon
e
742
2'3
06
11.23·71p
Build iJn all ste.el building af
al l smal l applian ces . Lawif,
after
. m . or sed Mi lo B.
OWN BUSINESS
Po le ea r n p r ices? . Go lden
mowe r , ncx.t ta Stat e Highs
Hul c:hi n n .
I
1975 OL D SMOBI L E Cutlass,
Cian r All Stee l Buitdin~s ,
W~v
Garage on Rou t e i(
1 10.. 9.1fc
Phone 9B5 3B15
·
CO ymo l . automat ic, ai r. -·- ·----R
l:
A, Box
148,
Weve
r
y,
4 l'.., . t',.· .,~.·
fac tor -; l&amp;pe, lill steer ing
Oh
io
.
Phone
9471796
AGE OR EXPEORIENCE
wh eel . Phon e 742 2667 aff er 4 HousE on L {nco ln H'eig hl s, 2
7·24 ·11(
NOT A FACTOR
...
bedrm, lar ge k it chen . full
p .m .
- ·---- C. B R A D FO RD, Auc: lionee(,
bas
eme
nt.
n
ice
ba
t
k
y
ard
.
J1 .2J.6 1p
onl y 58,900·. Wi th new fur
O'DE LL Atine m ent toceted
Co mpl ~ t e Ser vice . Phone
nilur e, on ly 510, 300. Phon e
b ehi nd R u lla nd
Gr ade
949 2487 or 94 9 2000. Rac ine.
Own and manag e vending
I
992 76 48
r
Sc hoo l T uneup br~k es 1 1 Ohi o , Cr ill Bra dford .
route di spen sing nut, gum
'
'
~ '
cP
"':'i' i1( I / I'\
10 9 If(
I 11 6· 20\ c
whee
l balan c in g, ali nementi \·.,:~-..1-~·_L~LLL. --~- and cand~ confection s in
P h 0lie ~ n2 · 2 0 0:4 . '"' ••
~
·
·
·
-..
~
Pomeroy or vicinity . High
11 .f6 .1fc E '~CAVAT IN G , BACK HO ES
MINI B I KE , S50 . 26 inch bike ,
profit ihlms. Car needed to
AND DOZE.jl , L ARGE AND
530 . 24 Inch b i k e. S25. Phon e
ser vice your v ending route .
SMALL . S£ PTIC TA NKS
I
992 7551.
Ideal pa r:t time or full time
WOME N 'S RI N GS , sem i ·
'• I 'N SfiA L L-E 'D .
BIL L
11 24 3\c
bu siness. SU9S to $4795 and
pr ec ious sto n es •. perf ec t
~ P UL LI NS', PHON E 992 2478 ,
up. For details call our toll
g ift s for Chrislm a s. Size 5 CU STO M Homes , no d own
DAY OR NI GH T.
free number 1·800·l21·UU
and 6. Re cenll y ap prai sed .
I I 11 78t p
p a vme nt. V A Loans. F H A POTAT
O
E
S
to
r
sat
e
50
and
100
Phon e 992 -78 05.
or write Bo • 16275, MinAs low as 3 per cent do w n .
lb
be gs . Acro ss from
1 J1 .23.3tc
neapolis , Minn. S5416 .
You r plans o r o,urs . Cal l or S E W I N G
M A C H-1 N 13'1
Sham ro c k In Hender son , W.
w r i\e , Shepa r d Contr a c1 ing ,
Repairs . serv ic t , a ll m ak e:r,
Va . Donald Wal hu, Rl. 35 , 1975 KAWASAK I 4d O motor
Box . 28A, R\l tlar) d, 4~775 .
,99 7 12B.t. ,Th e. F.,p br i c Sh OJh
Henderson . W . Y a .
cyc le , llctual m i l e~ . 15, 00 4.
Ph one 742 .2409.
Pom er oy /\ uthorl.z e d~ i n9efi
11 18261C
Co nta ct 992·3293. !
·
J
"
10&lt;t1; 26tc
~ ales and 1 se rvic e . vr~
_ ----· ____ j_ ~~t6tc
sh'.llpen ~CI~) OfS
·•
1971 DODGE Charg er S.E., A
3291i~ ,
F IRe w ooD fo r sal e'an d coat.
1 cond ition. ne w motor and
al so: oen er at ha uling. Phon e
tra{l smlss1on . P ho ne 949 ·
WE SPE:CI ALIZE In tl'.Ob / (~
99 2 3640.
I
?41~ Bashan .
hom e furna ce r epai r . PhonLP
PHONE
992-3325
11·23·61c
11 18 6tp
121&lt;65 T R AIL ER : small cot
992 '5858.
•
10~chanlc
Pomeroy , 0 .
ra ge , sui ta ble tor 1 or 2 m en ,
9 - 18 · 11 ~·
MYER 'S deep well we ter
Ro u sh lane , Ch es hire , DO N ' T
m erely
br igh te n
pump , 52 gallon ,; a ir con .
COI:INTifY - _l' BR's, 1'1&gt; --.-------------:;::.
Ohi o ; 3 bedr oom lr ail er •
. Blue Lustr e
c ar pe t s .
troll ed tan k , Cu ll iga n wilt er
baths . equipped kitchen '
Cli fton , W. Va . Constr uc ti on
th em . . no rap id r eselling .
soft ener com pl etj' · Phon e
and \6 acres .
·· 1
Rent sh ampooe r , Nel son 's
worker s pr eferr ed . Call 304
7A2 2600, Frances m boden .
77 3 5813.
Dr ug Store .
IT'S 'NICE 2 BR 's.
1 l1 .23.61c
3 B E O RIM . m obile ho m·e.'
11 20 6tc
11 20 ·61C
equipped kltc~en, oak
pa n e l ! ing , w alt . \o . wa.ltf
-- - '
BUTT E RNU T SQuas!'l , makes
car p eli ng , ga rage , u lilif ~
floors. basement· and att ic.
belt er p ies than p Umpk ins.
buil di ng , 3 &amp; 4·10 acr e lof)
3 RM and ba th furn ished , MOD E RN Walnul Console,
ACREAGE - .Wacres near
Qu iunb er r y, PhO ne 99 2.
Ru tlan d St. M iddl epo r~\ .
house . adult s only . ~ h on e
AM F M radio , 4 spee d
old Rt . 33.
2954 , Sy r ac use, Ohio .
Ph one 992 3843 .
992 5535 .
' changer , Ba lan ce SIOUO or
HANDY - 3 BR 's In town
111.'2 3.3tc
11 20.\f c
term s. Cllll 99 2·396.5.
~--~
11 28 1 (~
on Main St. Modern k it.,
---· ------------11 20 tt c
full
basement
and
hot
AM ER I CA N 2 pc . liv )ng roo m
TWO Jots In the cou ntr v . 1 0 5~
water heat .
suit e, opens to f ull .size bed ,
tl05 (each), Tup pers Pla i"F URN I SHE D or unfur nished
wa l er , near M ei g s H i ~
IT'S LARGE - 5 BR , llke
HOGS r eady 10 bu tc her . Also,
ooo.d condili,an . S1 76. Ph one
apa rl m ent s, t or t urth er
Sc hool. s2,500 each . One 101
bee f an d da ir y c atll e. Ca ll
992·3801 . ..
1
new home, 3 bath s, large
d e la ih . pho n e Wend all
js se t up l or m obile hom e,
949 211 5.
,
_ __ , ll:2_':_31 c famlly 'room , 2 car garage,
Frecke r , 949 2 00 ~ .
~ w • • -1+~ 9 1 6h:· - ---.- ..,.. - -·
__.1. ___ _
M ob i le
· hom e
sold
Eastern Schooh •
11 2l ·61 C
se p ar atel y .: Phon e 992 ·7060i
REASONABLE.'- 2 BR' s,
'
I,
11 ·18.6f "'
NOW ~ ell !n g Fuller Brush
bath, Nat. gas furnoce, city
--'-~'-------------7 RM . HOU SE In Syr acu se.
Produc ts . Phone 99~31 1 ~
water, fenced ~rd. Asking
HOUSE lor sa le In Porll anek
Oh io . Ba se mep11 , g arage, _ _ _ _ _1_•...
I"' "J ' I '+·If..n
510,000.
_ ...;...:_2...:......'.:_.:_
T ake ov er pay me nt s . ~
re al n ice hom e, must hlllfe
room s and balh, good w ei 't
OUT - 3 BR 's, bath. nat.
refer ences If Interes ted . Ca ll
and 2 acres of oroun
gas furnace, 2 car garag·e
d ay (614) 446.7699, eveni ngs.
1
Ph one a~3 . 2292 .
and
garden.
( 614 1 446-9539 .
11 18· 1
11·5-lfc

Help Wante41

"'I

Business

,.

-

-

-..--- -

Fqr Sale

Jr. High honor
.puplls listed

"'

Syracu se, Ohio

11 · 1 ~· 1 mo.

Real Estate For Sale

11 -21· 1 mo.

D&amp;M ~pliance .

Blown into Walls &amp; Attics
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM '
SIDING -SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

Five
new
J. bedroom
homes. Now under con·
structlon with Carpet,
cerami c tile, garage, large

1 mile on State Route 124
Toward Rutland

FREE ESTIMATES
Blown

Tuppers Plains.:Ohio

1115 D A T SUN 6 -2 10 Hatch
ba ck with air condllioni ng ,
elec. c lock . r ea r window
s had ~. ra d ial ti r es. also 4
fa clor y tir es and 2 snow
! ir es . 53, 490. Call 992 3453 .
11 18·61p

PHY.LLIS LARKINS
LONG BOTTOM
Phyllis M. Larkins of here
has graduated from
Marietta Beauty School
and Is now employed at
Shirley Kay' s Beauty
Salon, 234 East Main.
Street. Pomeroy.

PH. 992-5682

Pom er oy

Ph . 992-2114

POMEROY
·MOTOR-CO,@:
..· MORLAN
OPEN EVES. 8:00
:
,
POMEROY,
OHIO·.
·
.
.
Construction ;Co.

All MechanicaiWork

I

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC. _

Phone 742-2331 1
Roger Womsley-Ruiland
10-1 5-1 mo.

RACINE - The Southern
Junior High School honor roll
for the second six weeks
period lists :
SEVENTH GRADE
Crista Beegle . Paul Cardone.
Eric Hall , Sonja Hill. Teresa
Holstein, Della John son.
Terry McNickle, Mary Beth
Obllz, Berta Robinson, John
Williams, Bryan Wolte .
Paule Wolle, all A and B, end
Jack Wolle, Bonnie Boso,.
Peggy Bush, Steve Cir cle.
Bob Lee, Janel Mlddleswart,
C.rl Morris, Mark Simpson ,
·Mary Beth Slav in, Danny
Talbott, Melissa Yonker. all

Honor pupils at
Wahama listed

For Sale

Real Estate For S.

For Rent

'"' ·

TEAFORD REALTY

- -·- ----·------- --

Real Estate ·Fa,r Sale ·..:

- -----------+---

-~--··----

_____ ., ___

'"I

.f R AiL E R spac e ' tn Ru l lan d .
Phon e 74 2 '2 397.
11 .18.6\c

MEET THE
nNGLEY
OOOT SAVER

TRAile-R-s;;~ ; f~;:-r-;~ ~ All
Ul ili lies . Phon e 992 .5.5 35.
' · J6.1fc

--------------TR AILER lol Oil Kingsbury

Road near Herrlsonvlll e.
Free n a tural g as, cit y
water . Phone 742·2377 .
J1. 18·13tc

WAS HER ahd drver i l~ QOOd•'l
condi1 lon . ' 1P,tJo11 e , 'lf~ · 2?~~.. 1 1.,r 1

-·-· ____ l_:_ :._~-il~·~no"·

11.21 ·61 c

TWO used li0h'f 1Wi! lijtl t11HIYi nH•11t
saws. Porheroy Hom e &amp;
Auto , Phon9 \.n2 ,20.t 4r :1' 1: q1h! 1.
'
. . d •1 .-:1 hl ,, l2,\ ;lt~lf·"~ :

3--BeO~M~- ho-;,e~IUsl,'
fin ished. rem9~e 11 n g, Salem ,
s r., Rutland . Phon.e rA7·D \19
eft er ~p . m . or see Milo B.
Hutch is on .
9.23.tfc

•

-----------T---,
3

v.• •• ,,

.. .

5 RO OM ho use ~ pa rt ia ll Y
fu r ni shed
Cr etr lge r a tOr ;
stove, w asher and dryer,'
bedroom su i te, and d inette
suit e) . N e wiv r em o de led
and newl y c arp eted . Good
l oc ell on .
E x t er i or
w as
palnl ed this vear . Cal l 14 2·
2801 alt er S: 30 p.m . or 992 .

5795 .

Hemlock Groy• P h t' t ~~ve. · '! lOoting and ce il ing . Phone
1'1'\ IJ ,' \
'
'· •
ol/1
"1 9 2. 1 2 17 5 ~
b
'
E~;~u lrlc~su 1 Jt 1 ' t~l'log~~\1~ 1 i~ 11 1 · .~, .. ,, '
10 21.301c
Oorsel S mith ,&lt;~ ~eCe~ , · ~lfe- 1 t' f l li/lllfi,!··-·-· - - - · · • ·-7
3 A N D 4 r m furn is hed lind T'R'A'il"E"R~J~-~bl"l.;-lfun~~ : ,; b
of Me;gs Cou n l~ . · o~;O\ dp;, ' •' Unhll.
r
l'...J..
Credltors are requ ired IQ·n ~"";P'"
1$ rQI' ....unfur nish ed apt s. Phon e 99 2
Will consider lan d co nlr acl'. ~~·l f
fi le !heir c l aims w i th sai d
·
·.
5434 .
Phon e 992-3960 .
fi ducia r y wi t hi n to ur months. 197 5 14)C70 T RAlLEI&lt;I: , \.A
11 .9.1fc
I,I -21 ·121C
Dated thls 70th dll Y of
ce ll en t co nd ition , espec iall y
November 197S .
bull! lor Off ices . L ow pr i ce
·BASSETT B. • R.
af)er tm t n't .
for quic k sa l ~ . Ph one (304 ) ~ URNI S H E D
new . Gn
•
adults
onlv
In
M
ld,qleport,
Ma~~-....,A,l,\d,i;1.,hRf 615 ·5829,
f 8, pool
.
Phone
99
2
·
387~
.
'
~
·
Judge
10 JO ·Ifc
593&lt; .
)
.25.11&lt;;
Court of Common Pleas,
·--·-· -·-·-- • - - - ... , _ ____________ ...JI •
.
Proba!e D iv ision
Meigs Counly, Ohio

Hom

..

-

BE DRM . larg e ki tc hen,
li'w'i n g rm , di ning ~ m . · Jl1
b ath , dispos al , cen lral air ,
ce ntr al
he a l,
wa te r ,
p ur ification system , ful l'f
carp eled , w i r ad lh r oug hout
for T .V . a nd te l e phon e.
V inyl Si d in g , doubl e g lass
wi ndow s, ex c)ess ,stor age
spa ce In closet s and 11x 11
m etal !awn bui lding . On e of
M iddl eport 's b eller homes,
Cal I 99'2 ·312 9 bei Wee fl · 2: IS
and 4 p, m . fo r appo intm ent.
' ··:
1.1-20·61 c

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

, no snaps, no1
washes inside and
.seconds. Stretchy

to go on and off
Great for work

6 kOO M Hou se wifh bal h •.
gar age, basement. bultl ·ln,
por ch . 1 1 11cre, Hobson .
P h o~e

992·7733 .

11 - I J·IfC

- ------- --,...----·-

.'

608 'E'.
MAIN

.... ~OME

GEORGE WARD
RUTLAND - Airman
George R. Ward, son of
retired U. S. Air Force
Technical Sergeant and
Mn. David C. Ward of
Rutland; has been selected
lor tethnlcaltralnlng In the
U. S. Air Force aircraft
maintenance fi eld at
Sheppard AFB, Tex. The
airman recently completed
baste training at Lackland
AFB, Tex., where he
studied the Air Force
mission, organization and
cuotoms and received
opeclai Instruction in
human relations. Ward Is a
1975 graduate of Meigs
High School.

NCAA PLAYOFFS
SHAWNEE MISSION, Kan.
IUPIJ - Ithaca College of
New York will host Widener
College of Chester, Pa ,, In a
battle of unbeatens next
Saturday
in a semifinal
A.
pairing
of
the
NCAA Divlsioo
EIGHTH GRADE - Meg
Amberger, Camellia
m football championships.
Brlneger , Kenny Cook,
Ithaca, which lost to cham·
Sharon Crouch, Jack Duffy.
pion
Central College of Iowa
Kim Ouaan, Dave Foreman.
In
last
year 's final, has a ~
Richard Furbee. Carri e
Guinther , Pam Harden, record Wid Widener 18 1().0.
Rosemary Hubbard. Brian
In the other semifinal,
Joltnson. James Meadows,
Kent Verney, Cindy Warden, Wittenberg of Springfield,
Mall Weaver, Karen Wines , Ohio, with a 1~1 record, will
O&lt;!bble Zirkle. A and B. and host Millsaps of Jackson,
Cricket Carpenler , Amy
Ftsher . Melissa lhle, all A. Miss., 8-1.

+

I' 1l--~· -~ - · - - - - - - - - ·-.-

(Ill •o . 11 . 1" &lt;1211 . e. 11. ~~~ ...
NOTICE OF
b" -- ·
APPOINTMENT .H!. c; J l'~f\1,1:1DE LIN G,

AND ON TO YOUR T-SHIRT
.A ..

!I 14 Sip

Notice

~.

'

Business Services

IN M EMO R Y of Thom as B.
Mi ll er w ho passe d away 6
yea r s ago l od ay, Nov . 24,
1969 .
Sad ly mi sse d b y h is w i l e 69- ( H EV ROL E T tor sal e or
and fam il y .
tr ad e lor pi cku p . Ph one 949
1121111c
20 18.

ROOM and boa rd for senior
citi zens, very nice . Ph one

;,tinel . Classifi~ds

Auto Sales

1971 DOD GE F' icku p , 1 , ton ,
v a engin e a ul oma t ic, g ood
r un ning con dit ion . S800.
Ph one (6 14l 247 2 1 ~1
11 14 81p

WA N TE D E..: p erienc ed
La rr y Spenc:er . Peek A ·POo Stud lo breed
1~ l e r k .q t CP,ur ls t .~~ ~~T.~~ ~~ P ee~~: A Poo . Ph on e
· Meigs "&lt;J oUnt y ! •
·
·
Comrh on Pleb'C.,rt . , ·1 . , ·'
11 .21 6t p

58

Team 3 l ook a poln l s fr om
Tea m 1• . Va l Ha rper was
h ig h to r Tea m 3 w llh 553 p ins
and Jack Fer guson was h ig h
lor Team 12 wit h 533 p ins .
Team 4 took 6 po in ts tr om
Team 11. Lar ry Plllri ck was
hig h lor Tea m 4 wit h 497 p ins
an d F r an k K rautt er was h ig h
for Tea m 11 w llh 473 p jns .
Tea m 1 look 6 points from
Te am S. Harol d Laoll. edo was
high lor Tea m 1 w ith 506 p ins
and Georgia cook was h ig h
lor Tea m
w ith 462 p in s .
T ea m 2 to ok 8 point s fr om
Team 6. Dan Mi nk tsub l was
hig h l or Team 2 wilh 487 pins
Bnd Geor ge Ra tliff wa S h igh
for Team 6 wit h 482 p in s.
Team 13 took 6 points from
Team a. George Roac h was
hiGh tor Team 13 wit.h 504 pins
an d Charlie Neat was hig h lor
Team 8 with 498 pins. •
Team 14 took 6 poin l s fr o m
Team 7. Ly ll e Shillington
hub l was high fo r Team 14
w llh 498 p ins and Ri chard
Smith was high for Team 7
with 46? pins .
Team 10 took 6.Points t rom
Team 6 Joe Studer was hhJh
for Teem 10 with SOl pins and
Harold Sk idmore was high
lor Teem 16 wilh 474 pins .
Team 9 r.pllt 8 points with .
Team I S V irgin ia Grover
wuh iVh for Team 9w l1 h 457
pin s and D~bbio Ollvls wfts
hlgn tor Team IS with 456
pins
Val Harper had high gemt
tor tnt ltdles with 214 pins
an d olso had hig h ser i es with
5~J pins .
Jack F erf,]uson had h igh
game l or the men wUh 225
p ins and Tom Roe tt ker had
h igh series w ilt\ 54S pins .
Other hi gh !.Cor es w~re :
to m Roenker , 211 ; F rank
Kraulter ,
205 ;
Haro l ~
lookado. 200 .

p a r~ r • ron

f o llowing d escr ib ed real
esta te, to wit : Situ ated in the
Tow n shi p ol Oli ve, Counl y of
Meig s and Sta te ol Ohi o, and
being a PIH I o f No . 35 , In Town
3. ot Ra nge No . 11. bou nd ed as
fo ll ow s: Beg in ning 104 rods
West fr om lh e so u l hw es !
corner of sa id sec lion : th ence
Wes t 127 ro ds ; thence Nor rh 96
r od s \o the cenler of Shllde
River , thence sou th 83 d egrees
East 16 rods ; thence Nor th
831.· deg r ees E as 1 22 r ods ;
thence Nor th 701 1 d eg r ees
Eas t 15 rods ; th ence North 6J
degrees Eas t 11 r ods ; ! hence
Nor th 68 degrees Eas t '26 ro ds ;
then ce Nor th B3deg rees Eas1 8
ro ds ; thence South lo ! he pl ace
of , beg inn ing , contai ning 78
acres , be !h e sa m e m or e or
tess, cxcep·t th e r ight or a
r oadway 20 feet wi de as nea r
w her e !h e roa d now run s f r om
the sout h sid e of sai d tr ac t to
lhe counl y roa d near rhe
mou th o f Spr uce Run . fls lo
exc epti ng tha t there has been
sol d a tracl o f 18 acres out ol
the above describ ed prcm lses .
as is r ecord ed in Volume 105,
Page 259 , Me igs Co un t y
Reco r ds of Deed s IO which
re l erence is her eby ma de.
/\I so eJtCepting tha i por i ion of
land ac q uired by the United
States ol Ame r ica lh rough
c:o ndem nalion pr ocee d ings in
Civil No . 14 209, of the Un ited
Stares Dis tr ict Cour r of the
Sout h ern Dis lr ic l of Oh io
eastern Division , as show n in
Vo l um e 139, Page J67 of th e
Meig s County Deed Record s,
an d ~a l ed Jun e 5. 1969 .
A l so rhe oi l p r iv ileges i n an d
under !he a bove desc ri bed
real es tare sil uated in the
Tow(lshl p of Olive , Counly of
M eigs , an d Sta te of Ohio .
fllso . the o il p r ivileges in
and under lhe fo llo w i ng r eal
esta t e silua ted in !he Town
ship o f L ebanon, Coun t y of
Meigs and Sta te of Ohio , being
more par Hc ul arl y descri bed
as fol lows : Begin n ing on lhe
center lin e 126 rods tr am lhe
west li ne of Sec lion 34, Tow n 3,
Range 11 of th e Oh io Com pany
Purc hase ; th ence Eas t to !he
sout h west cor n er of 50 ac r es of
the Easl en d of the Nor th half
ol Sec lion 34 , Tow n 3, Ra ng ~ 11
of th e Oh io Companv PUr
chase . sold by joh n ca r l
wr ig ht b y Gab r ie l Si ms ;
thence Nor rh Ia !he Ce nt er of
l he N or th ha lf of sa id Sec t ion
34 ; thence wes t to w ilhin 126
rods of the Wes t ~ i ne of Sec: lion
34 : the nce Sou!h to the pl aceol
beg inni n g , co nt aining 50
acres , mor e or less .
You are r eQu ire d to answer
w l !,h ln 18' days af ter the las!
publicat ion o f noti ce. wh ich
w i ll be publi shed once each
w ee k for she. success ive weeks .
b eg inning ,
Monday .
Novem ber l Oth , l 97S . The last
pub l ic:alion will be made on
Mon d ay , Decem ber 15th , 1975 .
and I he 28 days fo r answer w i ll
commence on t hai dale . tn
case of your f a ilu re , or
ot h er wise resp_Q r:t.91.5..fJtgl.jjr,~ d
by l h e Ohio 'Rul es ol Civ il
Proce du re .
iud g m c nl by
de f au l l wi ll b e r en de r ed
aga in sl you far the relief
demanded In the cl ai m .

.I

'

Po m eroy Bow lfn g lan~s
10 Gladys Oliv er f\ Cidn•ss
M or n i ngG iories
, l JJlk
. nown ; £1.£rniJI4-"' ".t.lsh~· ~ -, ~
'i,•,'l
a~
Rcr ni CC .'1' \U CI\N \'1 whOSQ,;
'
Nov . 11, 197S
let sJ l&lt;nown a~dr css .Wils 6~ ·~ ..
·~. WAN T AD S
Sta nd i ngs
_,
" t
l ~_ a 'tl
Cr ccts 'eo auJ
i l ~} , •,
l~FOAMA T IO~
Team
Ph .
d1ltnapolis . Ind iana ; M&lt;trvin
D EA DLIN ES
Git)I)S Gro&lt;erv
67
S
M c Et l rcsh , w ho":&gt;c li1 S. 1 5
P .M .
Dev
Be fort
E~«.telsio r Oil Co
!:» 7
k.now n
res iden ce
wa!&gt;
Publi cation .
Newell Sunoco
~:
Madison . West V1rqinia ,
M11n day Deadl ine 9 a . m .
G. &amp; J Aulo Pari -.
Cl yd e Ri nc w h o~ I~ \ k~ow~ f • ~ancella t ion · Cor rectio n s
16
W M P 0
lJ
&lt;lddr c~;s was ~,
ton RdUqc . ,...ill be a ~ ce p le d until 9 a . m .
Spencer 's Markel
S&lt;t ll'f'
L o~i siana . iH'i.d
Cimf~o wn 'f9r Da y Qf Pub lica tion .
H igh ind gam e
hei.~s , d evis~c . lk9"l ' '*s , ..) _
RI: GULATIONS
Lamb erl 209 an d 196
exec u tors . ildm in i s tra Tors.
Th e Pub lisher r eser ves the
H igh ind . 3 g am es
Sally
and a~siq n s of each of th e right t(l edi l or rP.Iec. l any ads
Lamber 1 544 , Bec k v Dunfe e
totlow in q i ndi vidua l s, t~ll deemed obiec t io nal. Th e
471.
deceas ed
T S She l don . publi sh er
will
not
be
H igh 1eam Game
Gibbs
L OHie
~ he l don .
Wi ll iam respon sible for m or e l han on e
Grocery 8A8 .
Sheld on , Edward Sh e l don ... in corre£ 1 insert ion .
High !ea m 3 9amcs
Mary Sheldon . Maud German .
RAT E S
Gi bbs Groc.er y 1337 .
Effi e Ge rman . Adda Nanna .
For Want Ad Service
Emmell Nanna . Sr .. M abel 5 cents per wor d one inserlio n
Tu es day T r i plica te
Nann~ . Bcr! Germa n , Lu cill e
M ini mum Charge $1.00
Nov . I I , 19?S
Germa n . M
/1
St ewart ,
1&lt;1 ce nt s per word three
Stand ings
Emma S Ca ldw elL Ber ni ce co n!lecu live mserli on s.
w. L. fishe r . aka Ber n ice Tucker ,
Team
26 ce nts per word Si l&lt; con ·
68 70
Mitchell Painting Co
Winnie S Chase , Marvin S
scc uti\IC inser !lons
~6
47 M c Elfr esh ,
Roya l Oak Par k
Ca r rie
s.,.
25 P erCen!D isco unt onpal d
Ha ci ne Home Nat Bank
M c Elfresh , Bertha s. Re ed . ad s an d ad s pa id w it h in 10
45 43
Josephin e Rin e , Cl yde Rine . da ys
Dew Drops
42 46
Edgar R i ne and G ladys
CARD OF THANKS
Dairy Va lley
41 11 7 Ol iver .
&amp; OBITUARY
New Yo r k Clothing
HI 70
You ar e hereby noli l ied Ihat
51.00 for 50 w or d mi ni mum
High individu·al game
you
have
b een
named
Eac h addll lo n a l wor d 3
WcJn d a Tea f ord 220 ; Pat
De fendants in a legal action cen ts.
Carson 198 .
eniH ied Emm et! H. Nan na.
BLIND ADS
H igh series
wanda
Jr , e t a1 Plaintiffs , vs. John
/\ dd ilional 25c Chllr g e p er
Tea for d 546 . Sh irley Mitchel l
M . We ll s, Jr ., e t al. , Del en
fldvert isemen I .
518
da nrs . This ac tion has been
OFFICE HOURS
Team h igh seri es
M il
as signed Case No . 15,9.5 8. and
8 : 30 a . m . to 5 :00 p . m.
chel l Paint ing Co . 1477
is pend ing in the Cour l of Dai l y . 8: 30a . m . lo 12:00 Noon
M il
Tel!m hig h game
Co man Pleas , Meigs Coun ty , Satur d ay .
chell Pai n t i ng Co . 539
Ohio
T h e o b jecl o l the
Sunda y. late Night
Mht ed L ea g\l e
Nov . 16 , 197S
Standlna s
Tea m
W. l. TP
No 6
68 36 21020

'r

!'J)j/'or Fast Results

10 - The Daily Sentinel, MiddleJ19rl-Pomeroy, p, ;Nov.•~.j8 .,. , 1 ~ , ~.

MASON. W. Va . - The
honor roll for Wahama Senior
and Junior High schools for
the first nine week s grading
pti'iod listed;
SENIORS - Paula Bocock.
Joe
Boston ,
Debbie
Brenham, Linda Bumgard·
ner.
Teresa
Dillon ,
Llll'ry Duncan. Rick D,ye.
Crystal
Fruth ,
Marc
Fultz, Shirley Gerlach,
Carlotta Gibbs, Keith Gibbs,
Tammy
Gibbs , ' Cindy '
Grinstead. Mark Harmon.
Ruth Ann Hendr ickson,
Tammy Hoffman. Marty
Holbrook, Cherrl Hube r.
Phillip
Jerre l •
Diana
Joltnson. Cindy Kay, Rock y
Kearns.
Kim
Kn ight ,
Christina Llevlng , Vickie
~orthrup. Joe
Parsons ,
Mindy Raynes. Dan Rickard,
Dreama Riffle, Joyce Alley,
Eddie Robinson , Beverly
Roush.
Jeff
Rus sell.
Dewnetle Sheffer ,
Joe
Shepard, Betty Shields, Dan
Stodola, Richard Siders,
Robin SteWart, Terry Tucker,
Greg Weaver, Rick Wolf,
Mark Wright, Russell Young
and O&lt;!xter Zerkle.
, JUNIORS
Cheryl
Adams, Cheryl Circle, June
Garnes. Carr ie Hatcher ,
Christi Kearns , Shirley
~~earns. Jay Layne, Carla
MCfarland, VIckie Moore,
Qlneh Myers, Judy Needs,
Q.lela Ohlinger , Louella
tlldektr, Lois Peter! , Teresa
Jlrofitt, Tammy Richards.
Cleroly~ Rickard. Tim Sayre,
linda Tesf, Jennifer Weaver
..d Mona Weaver .

'

.

SOPHOMORES - Diane
.bel, Bob Barnltz , Greg
Blenlng, Conn ie Burton ,
Beverly Click , Kim Conard,
Darla Fowler, David Fowler ,

'

Honor
'roUpupils

anrwunced
'
: RACINE The Racine
Elementary School honor roll
for the second six week s ( B or

belltr) :

, Grade I - Matthew Jewell,
Rachel Reiber. Boatriz
Wagner.
Bruce
Wolfe ,
tammy Wolfe, Wendy Wolfe,
Ronnie Rice.
~
·,· Grade 2 - Ker r I Beegle.
Bostick, Dixie Dugan.
&lt;'llne Foresttr. Mandy Mill ,
"""Iissa lhle. Lisa Parsons,
~PIIr Rl1er. Kenda Ri zer.
if!ob n Savage, Rebecca

.,_.Y

~nMeter .

Lisa Gilland, Brent Hart,
Linda Hobbs. Brett Holbrook ,
Kelvin Hona ker , Jenny
James, Kim Javlns, Rhonda
Kay, Donne Kearns, Randy
Lavender, Mary McFarland,
Mar la M cGinn is. Lance
Oliver, April Parsons, Karla
Richards. Ben Roush. Kurtis
Sayre. Gary Siders. Rick
Stafford . Mike Stevens,
Karen
Stodola .
Teddy
Swartz. Kathy Tes t, David
Thompson . Dwayne White,
Bill Wolfe, Dora Wyatt,
Belinda Zerkle. Charles
Zuspan and Sarah Zuspan .
FRESHMEN Jennifer
Badgley, Lisa Brown, Eric
Bumgardner , Oavld Camp,
Jonl Clark , Susan Edwards.
Danny
Fie lds,
Lyndon
Fields,
Mark
F1sher .
~usan
t&gt;erlach,
Linda
Gllll5ple , Lesa Grimm . Lorry
Johnson , Terri Johnson,
Pa'trlck Kearns . Bonnie
Marr , Carol Nelson. Brenda
Roush. Cathy · Ao&lt;Jsh . Mike
Roush, Sheryl Roush, Donald
Russell, Duane Savre, Jell
Staats , Gregory Stodola.
John Stewart and Randy
Thorne.
EIGHTH GRADE - Jeff
Arnold, Eric Barnltz, John
Bennett, Connie Brown,
Karen
Brown .
Jeff ·
Bumgardner, Annette
Campbell . YvQnnt Coll ier.
Brian Dingey. Nellie l:sque,
~tephanle Estes , Julie !ilbbs,
Rlema Goodnlte , Barbara
Gordon, Mike Grimm. Brett
Grinstead, Judy Hell , Mlcki
Hank inson, Lisa Hayes, Troy
Hesson , Lisa Hill , Mary
Hollman, Terri Johnson,
Terri Lynne Johnson. Kevin
Jones. Teresa Jones, Greg
Kearns, Jeff Lathey, Debbie
MacKn i ght,
Maurine
Morrison. Tammy Oltllnger,
Jerrr Oldaker . Angela
Prof Itt. Gary Richards .
Jeckle Ridgeway, Allee
Roush, Connie Roush, Tim
Roush , Doug Russell . Joyce
Steven• . LISII Stewart, Jill
Taylor. Richard Thornton
and Randy Wright.
SEVENTH GRADE Scoll Barnitz, Kim Bash,
Terri
Brown,
Rodney
Buill gardner, M ike Buzzard,
Julie Clark, Carl Dugan;
Peggy Douthit, Mary Elias,
Peggy Fisher, Larry Gibbs,
Char lie Goodnlte, Conn ie
Hart. Jeff Fowler, Larry
Hesson, Carle Hood, Chris
Howard. York Ingles. Ronald
Johnson, Todd Kitchen,
Sherrl McCa~th• Scott
McDermitt, Mar
cKnlght,
Robert Man
n. Anna
Parsons, Charles !Joey)
Roush.
Donald
Roach.
Donald Roush. Dollie Roush.
John Roush. Kti!Y Roush,
Lou Roush, LH Roush, M.
Lei Roush. Terry Roush,
Sherrl Russell, Rlsa Sayre,
Doug Smith, Debra Star,
Todd Tucker, Bary Van ·
Metre. Jell VanMeter, Jane
Wyatt end Martin Zl[kle.

"' Grade l ~ Alen Crisp.
ph Fisher. Sandre Har·
, Lois I hie, bivid Powell.
rlano Wagner. Lori Wolle.
• • rade ~ - James Bush,
'-1C111in Curfman, Beckl
~hnson . Linda Proffit ,
ren Wolle. Tony Wolfe. •
BIR'tHDA\' NEARS
• Grade s - Becky ~"· Lori ,
Mrs.
Alma Rupe will
erdtfl. Kathy Btker, Zane
It, Clair Morris, ferry celebrate her 9211d birthday
t erson. John Porter . on Friday, Nov. 28. She
vld Salmons. Toni• Salaer,
remains a patient _ at the
l~~nlt WHM.
Grade 6 - Kim Bickers, Angel uf, Mercy Nu.rslng
dy
Cross,
~IInde
Hume at Albany and ·cards
mons, Aiflt Stoler. Laura m•y be sent tu her there .
ft. Kent Wolfe.
I

INSTIUCTIONS
.. rCif bwll rnulfs, apply lo material
made with at l"sl 50 percent
polyester Mid 50 percent cotton .
Shirts of 100 perc:ent cotton do nof
hold the colors after repeated

wBihfntl.

6. Set the Iron to the " cotton" setting
and allow It to heat uP· Apply with

3. 1'18cu proltclllll piece of cloth or
bomleil typing paper over the
w.tlng botrd to kMP excess Ink
11'0111 stainlnt ir011\ng board cover.

tlrm , even

7. Use a dry Iron. not steam. ·

·bNrd 10 that lhe front lor back) Is

8. Allow to cool tor at least one
minute before removing paper .

dlritctly over the board's protective

.

'

ADVERTISER.
.

~

..

)

pressure over entire

surface for 30 se~onds .

~. Slip the T ·lhlrtow~thUnd Of the

MR~

LAUNDERING
No spKial IIUIIderlng Ia required.
ZAP's colors wilt mellow with the
first washing , You can wash 1nd dry
with other per,.ntnl prns clatlm
·using the proper settings Of' ftrn·
peratures . Do no! use chlorine
bleach en any perm111111t press
meteri1fs . tt properly 8fllllltd and
laundered your ZAP T·Shlrl ••ltn
Wilt 1111 through riPHted WISh ings
and drylngs .

pape!'.

2. Cutout pettem al011g dolled lines.

o:ov«.

CAUTION
If you have ne111r used en iron
before have 1n adult apply ZAP to
your T-lhlrt 10 everything will come
out lust right.

5. Pla ce ZAP tace down on the area
ot the T-shlrt you wlshn to decorate
and pin It to the sh irt so It will not
slide. Place a clean sheet of paper
directly over ZAP to protect the
Iron 's surf ace. Do not use heavy

••

'

YOU CAN PUT MORE ZAP INTO YOUR ADVERTISING

MEssAGE BY USING OUR NEW mON-ON TRANSFER
•
'

INK•• • They see, they like, they iron, they wear, they anT)'
yoUI' sales message wherever.they go. New heat transfer
'

.

.

ink gives you the hottest
ads in town. They leave a 1asting
.
'

"

'

bnpression with young people. Newspapers
reach 3 out of 4
.
'

.

_,

yoUDg .people on the average weekday.

I I

•

I

�12 - The DBUy Sentinel, Middlep(lrt-l'llmeroy, 0 ., Mpnday, Nov, 24, 1975

News •• in Briefs

,
(co~tlnued from page I)
.
orgamzauon that newly lilcreased oil prices eoflld spark inflation throughout the econQIIlY. .
..
.
..
H the government respondl ,with ant1-1nflat1un puhcleslimiling the money supply al\(1 avoiding Ulx reduction production and employment will iuffer, Perry 'said. But if the
government responds with Ia~ cuts or the Federal Reserve
Board adopts easier monetary l\oJicles, the problem o_f energy,
stimulated inflation can be · overcome more raptdly, the
Brookings fellow wrote.

Berry's Wo'rid'

WASHINGTON - CONGRESS IS READYING a farm bill
that may test President Ford's ability to string together
vetoes, according to a Minneaota House member. In an m·
tervlew Sunday, Rep. Bob Bergland, D·Minn, said, "My
·Republican friends are telling me there's a strong support for
an override" if President Ford vetoes a bill to raise m1lk price
supports.
Ford has successfully vetoed two similar bills, but farmoriented congressmen keep delivering bUlB. The measure
would set up faster adjustments in the support price for milk
production. To encourage farmers to keep their cows, the
government promises prices will not tumble too far.

50 arrested for·hooliganism
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) estimated at more than 10,000
About 50 persons were and officers blocked off a·
arrested, most of them on large area near cainpua1 .
charges of destruction of pollee said. Autom{lblles ·
property and disorderly Were damqed and wfudows
· ·.
conduct, during a i!o,j$Y lroken.
victory celebration In the :• Patrolman James Delfino
. ..
~mlverslty area after Ohio · was
Injured, but not·state's win over Michigan aerlouslv when he was hit in
"
Saturday.
the head with a bottle, puUce
Teargas was lobbed Into said. One . person was
the area to break up a .crowd · arrested ·for , felonious
assault.
.
' ., '
.,
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,
.•
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BODY FOUNrJ,.''.'
TONITE THRU THURS.
NOV.l4·27
NOT OPEN

FRI. THRU TUES.
NOV.lB·DEC.'l ' '' '\
THE RETURN OF
THE PINK PANTHER
Show storts at 7:00p.m.

'·

Seeret promise
. +- made
·
J
}
·
J
}i
to Srae · say Srae
1

j

1

Fronf a Great ,Atnretican;Ba'nk

'

'I

,,,

by IH) rml~~lOn ol 1'1II: UI: T"n1r\~ ,\ A IU I II VI:

1790: A plan we could bank on.

.'40.-.oo Maaimum Insurance
tor Eadl DePGitor
'

~tiq~~~:d 0~:!tems~:~

recovered.

&amp;.1

Christ dnited M'eth'odist
Church lofated ·~wt~". RL
7 north of Eureka, reP&lt;&gt;rted
someone entered the church
parsonage and took a new 23
inch color television.
Bryc~ , G\lpin ~I . Point
1
PIeaaan~ r.eport""
~eo""
-~ , ,-"·
.,,
tooka · radioanleiJ118frOm
hi.s car whil:')l-was parked at
the H0lida Y 1M and Dana
Cooper of Wor~hington
reported someone ,took the
wheeIs and ·gauges 'nff
, an old
car whif:h has lle!!n .llllrked
for the p,ast yeaf' at the
_Hobart Dll101i Suhilivisfon off
Raccoon Creek ·

011

hOlders, a sewing machine, a
thermos, a five gallon water Cage standings
cooler, lamps. guns and .
,
•
anuno,
· •
ALL GAMES
'A cB railio 'speaker and TEAM ~
w'l T OP
·'
'
Waverly
0 o o 0
"fuzzbuster" !radar tronton
0 o. 0 0
detector) wete taken in an Galttpotls
o
0 0 o
•u·to. B'-G' Sunday on the Pt. Pleasant
oo o 0
a
. """
Holz
South Point
0 0 0 0
parkmg lot at the
er Wheelersburg o ~ o o
Medical Center. Ray Sacon, Meigs '
0 ·o 'o o
Kerr said the items were Logan
oo o o
'
i
while he Jackson
o o o o
taken from h scar
Wetlston
o o o ,p
was inside the hospital.
'" " ~
'
Marvin Gardner, Rt. I, PorlsiT)outh
0 ':1 55 65
o 1 55 , 11
d l Athens
Gallipolis (Roush R ·
Friday's reso'tt:"'
reported someone took a Marlon Franklin 65 Ports' freshly butchered beef from a mouth 55
building at his home. The
Saturday's resullo
beef was hanaing up to cool Col . Eastmoor 11 1\thens 55
..-.
Tuesday's gameS&gt;
out.
Portsmouth West at Jackson
Rev. Larry Pulling of the VInton G:o\.on!f.. at wetlston
Wednesday d games:
Athens at Nelsonville-York
Logan at Hilliard
Green at Wheelersb\Jrg
Portsmouth at Milford,
Friday's games:
Ironton at Athens
Wetlston at Gatllpolls
Logan at Jackson
Meigs at Waverly
Soufh Point at H61)'1'\n Trace
Portsmouth at Springfield
saturday's game:
Waverly at Portsmouth West

'I::

There's plenty of disagreement in Washington's
Cabinet. A'nd out of it. Mr. Hamilton, our Federalist
Secretary of the Treasury, is in the throes of creating a
financial plan to pay ofT our war debts and make us look
more confident to the rest of the world. He comes up
with everything from a tariff to a National Bank, chartered by Congress to be the government's financial
agent. Secretary of State Tom Jefferson and his Republicans oppose the bank. After all, he says, chartering a
bank is not one of the Constitutional powers given to
Congress. Besides, who knows what the capitalists will
do once they get the President and Congress into their
control? After months 'o fdebate, Hamilton persuades
Washington to ~ign the bill. But the Republicans stop
the bank's rech!lrter twenty years later!. We're beginning to learn that the nation:s economy doe~n't always ·
run smoothly.5?

MANJAD..ED
Meigs County Sheriff
Robert C. Hartenbach's Dept.
arrested Michael Lee Sigler,
IS,Rt.I,RuUand,ona charge
of breaklrig and enl«ing the
home of Grace Ga,r""er, Rt.
~·
I, Rutland, Wednesday, Nov.
19. Sigler was lodged in Me;•s
..,
, County jal'l. His bond has
beensetat ...,500.Takenfrom
••
the Gardner home were a TV,

$1,5'o·o worth. of
l
z·te·."."' s $8 r·d s*o en

I

THE ·FARMERS BANK·
AND SAVINGS. Ql.

TAKENTOHOSPITAL
The Pomeroy E-R squad
was called at 4:28 p.m. for
Mrs. Oms Smilh, who was ill.
~e was tslien. to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she
was admitted.

'"

·
..
d h
.
t th
· UnltedPre_ss!ntel'lll\tl,,e,aal
Un ert ecommttmen • e
· h 1 sources said, Washington
The Un1ted States_· as
,
k
th
d
d
1 1o •, pledged not 1o rna e ano er
secre 11 y . p1e ge
no
f
reassessment of U. S. Middle
pressure Israel or any more
Ia .
.
• East policy or a11ow de ys m
than cosme 1•c concess1ons m
· on a arms deliveries to Israel
possible talks wit h Syna
Golan Heights accorJI: high !~:ui~Y:~~k~n ~~~~"; 8~1:."~
level Israeli go~~rntnent ~
l accord become deadlocked.
sources sa id toda'•'
•· 1
Meanwhile, 1U.
N.
CHILLIOifrHJ!l·."~. Ohlo Secretary General Kurt
Waldheim, encouraged by
1UPI) _ Tlie ldeatlfy of a
woman's body dlscevered
"very helpful" · talks In
west of be~ s.tu.rday by a Damascus; flew to Tel Aviv
hunter was' expected lo be Wllh Syria s Ideas on future I
determined ''luclay after a Middle East peace talks.
I!.,. ,
coroaer's Inquest. Ross
The Israeli sources said the r
County •l!e~~l's d~P\!IIes
U. , S. .commitment was In '·i\pp'roxltnately $1, 500
\ aid the • ~w;/8 filll bGCiy; ' ' wru{Ing - apparenUy In a 1 worth of miscellaneous items
about w and dark-hatred,
letter from _President Ford to , .were taken in a breaking and
was dlscevered Ia, a plastic
Prime Mmlster Yltzhak entering Sunday at the
baa.
Rabin.
residence
of
Henry
Whealdon, Rt. 2, Patriot (Eh·
man Rd. off Mt. Zion). Gallla
Coll!lty sherifflll~depu••·
.....a sald
11011\ircineenteredlhehomeby
""ing tllrough a kitchen door.
ov
' Missing
was
a
Westinghouse electric range,
a 10-epeed 26 inch bicycle, a
power mower, a tape
recorder, 1 IarKe tool chest
wltflllrawen, two tool boxes,
...'
8 large camera case with
j(
.. . · '!fl'.
graphicl{latlc holders, a
small camera ease with

Pomeroy, Ohio ·

,~

llANlll.F: nRF.lJ
CHt\llLO'ITI&gt;:SVlJ .l.E. Va .
· ! Ill'! 1 - Sonny Randle, who
.:-_::~_;!!._ _ _ _ __;__ _;_.....;._ _..,..,;"---'-, failed in two stormy ye~rs to
-reverse Virginia's long.standing habil of losing
football games, has been
fired .
Randle who made a preseason v~w to quit if he didn't
produce a winner Ulis year
and then said he wouldn't
resign as Ule team headed for
it.;; worst finish in 15 years,
was sacked Sunday by UV A
Director
of
Athletic
Programs Gene Corrigan.
Corrigan said Ule search
for Randle's successor at the
Atlantic Coast Conference
school would begin im·
mediately. Randle has Ulree
l years remaining on a fiveyear -contract. He was f&gt;-17 in
two years at Virginia .
. Virginia ended its season I·
10 Saturday with a 6~24 loss
to Maryland, the third time
Ulis season the Cavaliers
yielded 60 or more jloints.

COLuMBUS - OHIO FARM BUREAU Federation
President Wallace Hirschfield gave the keynote address today
before some 1,200 reprentatlves at the group's three-day
gathering here.
The 292 voting delegates will decide pulley in exports,
Intangible taxes, federal Inheritance taxes, real estate
•
FJrl.:. P:J'ivr. _.
e 'liJS·tyNE.\,
11\C . "-tfi'J'r~ .. ,.,.~
f
f
property taxes, rural crlme,land use, reduced rates or arm
license plates and other Issues during the conference. Other
.. ... No! OUR generation js.the BESl generafirst day activities included afternoon speclallivndestock, datyy.
lion ..1. t;·
field crops and public relations conferences a an everung L - - - - - - - - -t' +'~----:-----'
honor awarda program.
. ·,

MEIGS tHEATRE

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By United

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~op·author .. ha~.
.

to quit force

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MEMBER 'FEDERA.l.
DEPOSIT
INSURAN«;E
CORPORATION
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DISCHARGES

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ifon.

The incident occurred
ouistde the college cafeteria
after a practice session
where Ketvirtls elbowed
Barnes in Ule mouth while
scrambling for a ball,
lop~g a few of his teeth.
CAS!' TO MEET
Afull cast rehearsal of the
Fall Follies of the Big Bend
Minstrel Association will be
held at the Pomeroy
Elementary School Tuesday.
Dancers w!U report at 6:30
p.m. and vocalists and other
specialty performers at 7:30
p.m.

AUXIUARYTOMEET
The Ladies Auxiliary of
Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, wiD meet
at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the·
post home. There will ~be.
initiation of new members.
Mrs: Roy Reute_r Is ch1ir:
person of membership · an~:
Mrs. Olin Knapp Is initiation
officer:
•
ASK TOWED
Marriage license wa S:
Issued to John William.
Mailuel, 21, Rt. 2, Racine, and: ·
Megan Christine Brown, 18 "
Mineravllle.

SAVE 25% ON COATS

Penn St . 7, Pittsburgh 6

FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY

Rutgers 56 Colgate 1•

"One of tho worst troged1es
that can befall a man.ls to
have ulcers and still not be
a success."

~vr.acuse 20

w. Virginia

The "FRIENDLY ONES"
would tike to take this
opportunity to wl_sh att ..,r

19

Temple 44 Drake 7
Wagner 40 Seton Hall 0
Widener 14 Albr i gh t ~

.

.

.

South

MEN'S - I)YS' • M)MEN'S • GIRLS'

1

51 Oa&gt;tictson 7

Arkansas $1. 30 Loulalllhil Tecfl

13

Austin Peay 37 Ea.~t Tennessee
21
l
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!)' •

SHOP TUESDAY AN~ WEDNESDAY 9:30 TO 5 PM

friends and customers A

VERY
PLEASANT
THANKSGIVING DAY ...

FIREMEN "ro MEET
Members ol the Puneroy
E-R squad and Fire Dept. are
to meet at the headquarters
at 7 p.in. today '1\elore gqlng ·
to the Ewing Funeral Home
to pi~ ,..eda to !he lale
Walltr a.IIIId.

'

(WE WILi. BE Q.OSEO THAHKSGIVJNG DAY) ·

Elberfelds In Pom
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··'

By Michael J. Conlon
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - We have two related
questions on tea, the first from Little Hocking, Ohio:
"For as long as I can remember we have been able to
buy green tea or gunpowder tea from the grocery shelf grain store or independent.
"Now, over the past year we find it gone from the
grocery line and can 'I find it any more. How come ?
"We get the answer that they no longer make it or that
the wholesaler does not handle it. What has happened to
it? It was used by a large number of people here and the
· stores could not keep it in stock.'' .
.
According to a tea expert at the Agriculture Department, nothing has happened to green . tea, except that
consumers stopped buying it. Upwards of 98 per cent of
all tea marketed in this country is black. Green teas are
considered specialties; the expert said, " ... with only a
limited market. Most retailers have been trying to cut out
minor items on which there Is no profit."
He added that retailers and wholesalers simply are
responding to consumer tastes. You can.still buy green
tea, but mainly in specialty stores or gourmet departments. You might try writing McNulty 's Tea and Coffee
Co., 109 Christopher St., New York City. This dealer has ·
an extensive selection of exotic teas, including some from
mainland China, and a catalogue-mail order form .
The difference between the black and green teas is In
the processing. Tea comes from the tender, green shoots
of the tea plant. The leaves are fermented before drying in
the case of black tea, but not fermented for green.

Th1~

Meigs Counly Com-

missioners Tuesday 111urnin g
told members of 1he Gallia,
Meigs and .Jackson fi48 BCJa rd ·
that there are no coun ty
dollars available io operalc a
mental hc'alth' cente r . in
Pomeroy the rest of this year .
Me etin g with the co mmissioners were Maxin e
Plummer, exec utiv e
director, Maxine Wi ngett ,

nnd Mary Skin ner·, \yho infor med !he comru is~ i {Jncrs

lh ey hav e $4 ,95~ . bul need an
additional $ti ,Oll.
The Mental Heal th Center
in

Pomer oy serves ap·

proximalely 200 per·sons a
month . The 648 Board
renewal .levy voted on in
November was defeated.
Mr·s : Wingett told the
commissioners the center's

" a~eomplis hm e nts have been
lremendous." Persons are
charged a small fee according lu what they can
afford . She also said that
most persons treated are in
Ihe 30 lo 40 age group, with
"qui le a few" teenagers,
even some in£ants.
The levy in Gallia County
was in crea sed from $22,1100 a
vear lo $60,000, according to

The Meigs County Regiona l
Pla nnin g Commi ssio n
Monday ni ght recommended
top priority to the housing
rehabililation project und er
the Community Development
block grants program ..
They also recom mended
second , third and fourth
priority respectively to rural
house numbering and road
signs, access roads to the

•

county an d capital im provemen ts.
Thereon fohnson, president
of the commiss ion presi!led.
The recommendations must
be approved by the county
commissioners. A local
government body must make
the application for the
communi ty development
grants which in this ease is
the board of county com.

at y

e

missioners.
The commissioners were to

acl on the recommendations
at their meeting this mornin g. Meetin g with the
planning commission
Monday evening were two
memhci'S or the board of
commissioners, Warden Ours
and Henry Wells ; from all
indications they will support
the recommendations.

•

NO. 158

-::~::f.::r~m::::::::::-:::-:

The commissioners were

also told that if the center in
Pomeroy is closed , the people
using lhe service would
become the problem of the
commissioners.
Also meeting with the

commission ers wer e Robert
Lon char, C. E. Blakeslee and

Barbara Leading regardin g
the Community Block Grants
an d lhe proposals made by
the Meigs County Planning
Commission . The commissioners told them they
would approve the proposals
an'd suggested they be rewritten and presented next
Tuesday.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1975

:-:·:·:·:·:-:-:-:-:-:-:·:·:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:::·:::::·:·:·:·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;

ews. . .in Briefs\t
:;~

By United PresslntemaUonal
WASHINGTON - TWO OHIO RIVER BRIDGES now
being built to connect West Virginia and Ohio should be open to
traffic by this time next year. The $28.9 million bridge between
St·. Marys, W. Va., and Newport, Ohio, is scheduled to carry
tr.affic by Nov. I, 1976.
The '14. 7 million structure between Chester, W. Va., and
East Uverpuol, Ohio, Is slated to have Its westbou~ lanes
open by October of next year, providing two-way traffic. Theeastboul!d lanes would be ·~ed within another year, according to a Federal Highway Administration report revealed
by Sen. Jennings Randolph, D-W . Va . Both spans have 100 per
cent federal funding .

WASHINGTON - A HOUSE SUBCOMMITTEE says
Oil Co. and Tenneco, Inc., have pal!led up chancea to
J-"1!'-·,.,.III·Nill!e procludiGI! of a natural gas-field In I.Aiulallna, ap·
parently beeaua the!' lllllclpate higher prices in the future .
A report of the HOUle Conunen:e Conunittee's oversight
and Investigations subc:ommlt!H Monday said the two companies "have not undertaken sufficient drlillng to maintain
dellverablllty" at their field at Bastian Bay in southern
I.Duislana. Ala result, it ._td, ·~he field may be produced over
a period of 82 years Instead of the 20 to 25 years orlglnslly
scheduled." The report suggested the Federal Power Com. mission force the operators to do more to meet fully their
contracts to supply gas to pipeilne flnns.

The community develop- represented as much as
ment block grants permit a they should be. Most elderly
federal share or 100 percent. persons would not comment,
Application deadline is Dec. she noted . Residents to the
tO.
east al ong the river are ready
Mrs.
Edith
Talbert for industry and for a bridge
reported on a survey made by across the river at Ravensher of Meigs County wood . Mrs. Talbert al so
excluding Pomeroy, Syra- observed that persons living
cuse and Racine in "back in the hills" prefer to
which
she
concluded keep their privacy .
elderly citizens are not
C. E. Blakeslee observed
that a swnmary of Mrs.
Talbert's work will he ready
in two months .
Commissioner Ours stated
he would like to find the
answer to the problem how to
finance the community
school for mentally retarded
in Meigs County. He
welcomed suggestions. He
got none.
Edison Baker of the
PRICE 15' planning
commission said a
nursing home should be the
number one project. He noted
Ulat is definitely an urgen t
priority for 976.
In a related report, it is
known that Mrs. Eleanor
Thomas, executive director
of the Council on Aging,
expects to meet with state
officials Wednesday about
obtaining land out of the flood
area, possibly combining a

enttne

Devoted 1'o 1'he lnterests of The Me_ig.'i-MIIsotl Are11

VOL. XXVII

Mrs. Plummer. She said that
some Gallia County money is
used in Meigs Coun ty. Mrs.
Wingett suggested a fund
drive could be initialed .

The co mmissioners
gran ted Eleanor Robson, ·
county re corder , approval to
allend a meeting in Columbus
Dec. 1-4 .
Attending were Henry
Wells, Warden Ours, and
Bernard Gilkey; commissioners, Martha Cham·
bers, clerk , and Wesley
Beuht , eng ineer .

Highest priority is given housing

Alberta

TRIAL CONTINUES
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (UP!)
- The $1.5 million damage
sui\ against pro star Marvin
Barnes entered its fifth da'y
today In U.S. District Court .
The plaintiffs were expected to complete their case,
with testimony by two final
witnesses, including
Providence College Head
Coach Dave Gavitt.
Barnes, last year's
American Basketball
Association rookie of the year
w!Ul the Spirits of St. Louls,lll
being sued by former .
Providence College team·
mate Lawrence Ketv!rtis.
Ketvlrtis, 25, of Milton,
M113S., seeks compensation
for injuries in an incident
with Barnes three years ago.
He contends he suffered e
lroken cheekbone and per·
manent Injuries from an
alleged attack with a tire

N . Y ''Tec~ ~

Har~ard 'to Yale 1
~
Lehigh 40 Latayelle H
Ohio U . 38 Marshall21
Penl') 27 Cornell 21

green tea anymore

Unclhlcum.

HOLIDAY COAT SALE

1

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648 board funds depleted

Hardly anybody wants

Syracuse~

DartmoUth 11 Princeton 16
Delaware 46 Indiana St . (Ind . l

Appalacnllin St.

A FULL
SERVICE
B!\NI&lt;

Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY
- Pearl Garnes, Dexter; Joe
Moore, Jr-., New Haven;
Letitia Rea, Pomeroy;
Michael Taylor, New Haven;
Lester Swiger, Center Point.
W. Va.; Oms Smith,
Pomeroy.
SATURDAY . DIS·
CHARGES Howard
English, Kevin Mowery,
Allee Balser, Joe Moore, Jr.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Christy Ward, Shelba Dye,
Racine; Mary Baldwin,
Pomeroy; Emma Hayman

Press lnternatiDnill

C.W. PosJ 34

....

'\

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Mrs.
'
I..ewis·Brady, Mason; George
Fisher, Lorena Miller, Mrs.
Okey Hurlow, Mrs. · Keith
. Davis, Delores Dalton, .Mrs.
Glenn Cunningham, all of
Point Pleasant· Willard .
.
.
•
.
Laudermllt, Mason ; Mavis
Cox , Middleport; Katie
01'
1ver, Clifton ., Geneva
Sh aff er • . Ga II lpo
' I'IS , an d
Robert Balles, Leon .
24- A
· ,BIR:n!S, Nov·
daughter to Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Metheny •. Nel'!
H_aven :. a daughter to Mr. a~d .
Mrs. Romeo Gormez, Lakin,
· d ht IM
d
and a aug er 0 r. an
)\Irs. Kelly Worth, Southside. "

berfelds· In Pomeroy

Boston U . 20 Villanova 14
Brown 48 Columbia 13
Connecticut 3.5 Holv Cross 14

i

Hospital News

.
. , . h B'U
HOLLYWOOD I UP!) - Jo- _televisiOn mov1e Wll
I
seph Wambaugh, cop4urned- Holden.
Wambaugh · has .so much
author, had to quit the Los
'th . ''Th Ch . Bo ., he
r
Angeles Police Department a1 m e ou: ys
to write the best book of his wrote . the movie script
.-~ · ~
If
hi
life, "The Choir Boys."
mse
· •Productions
• ·~ will
'
Lorimar
He could not have written
the novel while still a make it a feature .film .
Wambaugh iOOk no money
membe~of the force because,
from
the company,' ch()osing
as he says, "Somebody would
have had me assassinated." instead to participate as a
and sharE; in the
The personable Wambaugh coproducer
.t.
. ,'
. ' ' ~
fl
isn't kidding.
pros.
,.
'!·
·
"I want to make itlhe bes
In his profane, brutal,
bitterly Iunny account of 10 possible movie,"· he said,
patrol car officers, Warn· "We're not looking for one big
haugh lets Los Angeles pollee star who would want to tall9r
lrass have all six chambers the script to hlmseH. This is
of a .38 special right between the story or 10 men. I'll take
an active part In the casting."
the eyes.
Wambaugh still is very
"There's no way I could
mucha cop ~~ )leart. He
have written this hook and
·'
stayed.on the force," he said. continues to atte11cl cho"
"A lot of cops would ..have pracilces .at an ·allnude bar
been offended and punched with old cop palS.
"I miss the camaraderie of
me out. I simply couldn't face
being
a cop," he sa'Iil. ''I had'
the brass I wrote about.
a
lot
of
partners in the black
"I guess I got rid of a lot of
and
white
units. Most were
pent -up hostilities and in the
process converted the great guys. But even lf I
frustrations into comedy didn 'I like the guy sittipg next
to me, I knew he would stake
situations.
"I
became
almost his life for me.
"You don 'I find that in
hysterically depre'ssed as I
Hollywood.
The guy closest to
wrote. To maintain my sanity
you
would
be
the first one to
I turned the scenes into
put the knife in your back."
gallows humor.
"But I swear to you,
'
Bit
Parts :
CBS-TV .
everything in the book is true.
It's a serious book shout December SMCiaJs \Will star
emotionally wounded men." Lucille Ball, Bing Crosby,
The, content of ' 'Th e Choir Fred Astalre and Jackie
Boys" surpasses Warn- Gleason ... Marjoe Gartner
. be
11
baugh's prev10us st--se ers, will star in American In·
"The Blue Knight," . "The ternatlonal's "The Food of
New Centurions" and "The the Goda" ... Sid!ley Lumet
Onion Field" - aU written will direct "They Shall Not
whl.1e hewasst Ill on the force. Pass" at Universal.
"Choir practice'.' is a euWHA Standinn
phemistic term cops apply to Bv United
Press lnterni-flonal
their drunken parties to
East
W . L . T . Pts.
escape the emotional torture
Cincinnati
9 9 0
18
of police work. The brawls New
England
S 10 I
17
7 1 '2
16
are a safety valve for sen- Cleveland
sltive officers wfio otherwise Indianapolis West6 10. 0 12
W. L. T. Pts.
couldn't cope with the
11 1 0
22
Hous ton
pressures of the job.
8 8 I
17
Minnesota
1 8 2
16
"Choir practice is common San Diego
1 •
2
16
to all pollee forces," Warn- PI\Oenlx
6' 11
I
IJ
Denver
canadian
haugh explained. " It goes by
W . L. T Pts.
other names in some cities. I Quebec
15 7 0
30
\4 6 0
28
was in Chicago recently. Winnipeg
Calgary
10 8 1
21
They call them picnics."
Edmonton
9 11 1
20
10 . 2
12
. Accordln. g to Wambaugh, TorontoSaturday's sResults.
policemen have the highest New England 7 Phoenil'! .5
Cle11etand 6 Winnipeg 3
divorce rate of any Quebec
6
pr
. ofession. They also rank CBigary 96Cincinnati
Mlnnesola 4
'Edm onton 3 San Otego 2 lOT )
near the top in suicides.
Sunday's Results
· "I only write about the Winnipeo 3 New Enol and. 2
emotionally wounded cops," Houston 4 Quebec 0
Denver 5 Cinc innati 3
·said Wambaugh. '"The other
Mondav•s Games
guys are boring. It's the (No games scheduled )
'
'Tuesday's Games
sensitive cop who has to Cle11e1and
at Toronto
lreak loose from the horror Indianapolis at Houston
New Engl~nd at Minnesota
of seeing children abused, the · Edmonton at San Diego
ugliest sort of deaths,
unimaginable cruelties.
"'The sensitive cop has to
believe all of humanity is
UNIT CALLED
The
Middleport
E-R squad
garbage. The best way to
answered
a
call
to
Route I,
escape that conclusion Is by
becoming a choir boy, by Middleport, at 7:59 p.m.
letting doWn at choir prac- Saturday for Carl Stew,art
who was taken to Holzer
tlce."
"The Choir Boys" is a Hoapital Center with a
Literary Guild alternate polt:.il.le leg fracture,
selection. Sales in book stores
so far are higher than any of
Wambaugh's
previous
k
TWO ASSISTED'
wor s.
When not at the typewriter,
SYRACUSE
The
Wambaugh Is script editor of Syracuse E-R squad was
television's "Police Story" caUedat6:30 p.m. Sunday lor
and the new "Blue Knight" Mrs. Tom Hayman who was
serlea which debuts in mid· Ill. She was tsken to Veterans
season with George Kemedy Memorial Hospital where she
• the tl'tle role.
was admitted. Friday the
10
·· "The New Centurions". squad was called for Thelma
b
fll
tarring Russell, Carroll St., who was
ecame a
m s
George C. Scott. "The Blue taken to the Holzer Mf\llcal
Knight" was a four-part Center.

EaSt
Boston Colt. 24 . Massachusells
14

l

.,

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·

NO PAPER
The Dally Sentinel will
not be published Thursday,
Thanksgiving Day, so thai
employes may enjoy the

....

,.,a.-e.-a.p~ar

~Y

•'.~~tt•• ~!"'-- ··~~

senior citizen building with a
community center in
Pomeroy .
Other developments
discussed included:
- The Syracuse project,
which has ·been approved,
includes a swimming pool
and two tennis courts. It is
worth $114,1100, and the senior
citizens gran t which has also
been approved totals $160,000.
- Baker said he has
received from West Virginia
an environmental impact
report on the proposed bridge
at Ravenswood_
- Members discussed the
closing of the Pomeroy .
Mason Bridge next March
and Blakeslee disclosed the
Pomeroy Chamber of
' Commerce is asking state
officials to meet with the
chamber in order to shorten
the lime the bridge will he .
closed.
Attending were Thereon
Johnson, Blakeslee, Mrs .
Talber t, Baker, Ours, Wells,
Naomi Brinker, Jeff Burt, E.
F. Robinson , Carl Denison
and the Rev. Robert:
Bum garner. The next•
meeting will be on Dec. 16 at 3
p.. in the ASCS confetence
room at the Farmers Bank
Building.

I\

Everybody will ,
pay to altend

:Fa1l Follles

Teacher passes and
"golden cards" for school
events will not be honored
Saturday night when the Fall
Brownies, and Mrs. Marge Goett, teallher of tbe Rutland
FLAG PRESENTATIONS - The American Legion
Follies is presented by the
Class. Pictured left to right at the presentation are Nancy
Audllary of Drew Webster Post 39, Pomeroy, presented
Bend
Minstrel
RAVENSWOOD - Persons Big
flags to Brownie Troops of Pomeroy 271 and Chester 1061
Johnson, a Brownie, Mrs. Johnson, Mrs. stewart, Mrs.
Association
at
8:10 p.m. at
Interested
in
using
the
ferry
and the fourth grade class at the Rutland Elementary
Goett, Mrs. Pratt, Mrs. Veda Davis, the Junior activities
to cross the Ohio River at Meigs High School.
chairwoman, and Robin Campbell, Junior Auxiliary
School Monday afternoon at the Pomeroy Elementary
Officers of the Meigs High
Ravenswood on Wednesday
SchooL Mrs. Grace Pratt, president of the Auxiliary,
Americanism leader. Mrs. Goett is also the Senior
School
Athletic Boosters, who
or Thursday will have to
Auxiliary's Americanism chairwoman.
made the presentations to Mrs. Vera Johnson of the
are
sponsoring
the show.
NEW YORK - REBElLIOUS INMATES at the en's
make other plans.
Pomeroy Brownies, Mrs. Unda Stewart of the Chester
stated
that
they
regret
passes
!l'ison on Rlkera bland, promised amnesty amd better living
Ralph Brewer, operator of
condlUbns, finally rellnqulahed control of the jail tbey held for
the service, said his service and the golden cards cannot
11 hours. But the end of the Inmate revolt and the release of
on those two days will not be be honored.
"The purpose of sponsoring
five guardl taken hoetage wu not the end of the prison's
available.
the
show - which is not a
Normal ferry service will
troubles Monday.
~
school
event - is to raise
Some 300 correcU011 officers, angered by the promise of
Naming a replacement for experience . in government, the post because he ran lor a represent young people of the be resumed on Friday. The
amnesty for the prisoners, walked off their jobs for an hour coun cilwoman Jean Craig I&gt;oth at the local and stale council seat at the Nov. 4 community. No motion was ferry operates on a seven day funds for the athle tic boosters
so tha t projects can be
and a baH, returning only after Mayor Abraham Beame who resi gned two weeks ago level.
election, thereby indicating made on his appointment, basis from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m.
carried out," a spokesman of
agreed to meet with leaders of their union today to discuss was tabled until the next
However, it appeared to be his In teres!. King and Brewer however, because of the
the group said.
grievances. Benjamin H. Malcolm, the city's commissioner of mee ting on Dec. 8 when the desire of the majority of said they felt council would apparent desire of council to
It was further slated that
correction told Beame Monday night that "all was quiet" at Middleport village counci l council tu wait until the next be abiding by the wishes of wall until the next meeting.
the
$1.25 admission charge on
the lllland' facility, with all Inmates back In their cells and met in regu lar session meeting to fill the vacancy. voters of the town if they
Meigs County's local school
Council has 30 days from
advance tickets will he for
correction officers at their posts.
Monday night.
Kell y's mol ion was not . named Gerard since he had the time of Mrs. Craig 's districts have received
both adults and children.
Tw o names were offered seconded.
· been strongly supported on resignation to name a $190,949.31 as their slate
Tickets
at the door Saturday
GLENDALE, CALIF.- FffiEFIGHTERS MOUNTED a for the vacancy and CounBoth Coun cilm en Alien Nov. 4, losing by only a few replacement and the next school foundation subsidy
nigh
t
will
he $1.50.
massive aerial assault today against the worst California cilman
Marvin
Kell y King and James Brewer votes.
meeting would fall within payments for November
Advance
tickets - limited
bnish fire in five years. Thousands fled the names raging nominated George Meinhart suggested that John David
Brewer and King added that
period . If the after deductions for trans- to 600 - are on sale at the
across 100 square miles and eating through suburban homes. who has had many years of Gerald should be named to Ulat they felt Gerard would replacvment is not named porta lion and employes
New York Clothing House,
A gigantic smoke cloud billowed 100 miles into the _!'aclflc
within 30 days then the ap- retirement.
Ocean casting a twilight pall over the Los Angeles area.
Amounts of the total Swisher and Lohse 's;
pointment of a replacement
Nelson 's in Pomeroy ; Miller
Motorists 30 mlleaaway had to use headlights in the darkness
falls upon Mayor Fred received include Eastern, Brothers Grocery in Rutland
at noon amid a rain of ashes "like snowflakes." The sun shrank
$40,920.20; Meigs Local ,
Hoffman .
and at ·Bahr Clothier and
to a small red dllk In an eerie murk of pink and gray. Gov.
Gerard, who is heading a $110,885 .08, and Southern , Dutton's in Middleport. Any
Edmund G. Brown Jr. declared the first state of emergency of
Railroad Days Festival to be $39,144.00. In addition the advance tickets not sold will
his term. Sen. John Tunney, IU:Blif., appealed to Pr~~ldent
staged as a community county board of education be removed from the'
Ford for federal aid against "the terrible fire now raging m the
celebr a lion on July 4 received $10,979.42 which locat ions at 7 p.m. Friday.
Los Angeles area."
weekend met with council to included allotments from
present a report on progress each district plus a $6,146.56
GENEVA, SWITZERLAND - WANTED - ONE
to date. He asked council to as a direct allotment from the
TWO RUNS MADE
(Continued on page 8)
visit the community park state .
RACINE
- The Racine Ewhere many of the cele'
R
Squad
made . two rWls
SPECIAL NAMED
bration activities will
Monday
.
At
4:09 a.m. they
LONG BOTTOM
be held
and
make
a decision on what Layman George Pickens will transported Maxine Sellers,
action they can take on be speaker at Thanksgiving Rt. 3, Racine, to Veterans
The Meigs County sheriff's
Larry O'Brien , Rt. 2,
preservation of the ca~ose services to be held at 7:30 Memorial Hospital. At II :45
Dept. said today Robert Racine, traveling easl on 124
p.m.' Wednesday at the Long p.m. Clarence Napper,
located there.
Riffle, Pomeroy, on charges had a buck deer run into the
He also asked village of- Bottom United Methodist Racine, was taken to
of aggrevated arson has been path of his car. It was killed .
(ConUnued on page 8)
Church. The public is invited . Veterans Memorial Hospital.
placed under $5,1100 bond and
Sunday at 11 :50 p.m. in
CHECK PRESENTED - Maming Kloes, C!Uzens' National Bank of Middleport,
will appear before CoWlly Salem Township on SR 325, presents a check to Wilma Reece, president of the Meigs County Unit of the American
Court Judge Robert E. Buck James H. Large , 22, Vansant, Cancer Society. The check wlll help defray costs incurred by the local cancer unit In conFriday on a charge qf Va ., was traveling north
nection with Thursday 's second annual alumni game between graduates of Pomeroy,
aggravated arson.
when a buck deer ran Into the Middleport, Rutland and Meigs high schools.
'' Michael Sigler , Rt. 1, path of the car and was killed .
,,
Rutland charged with
the bases or face the threat of an armed
I
'
h
LISBON,
Portugal
IUPI)
Leftist
breaking and · entenng, as
attack against them.
paratroops revolted against Portugal's
been bound over to the grand
"To avoid a grave situation, orders have
central government today and seized
, jll'y under $2,500 bond, also
not
yet
been Issued for Intervention by force ,'
Walla ce Hat field , lo an elec tric nppllance : Jewelers, Hartley Shoes, control of four air bases without bloodshed.
will appear. Both men are
which can he Imposed If this Irresponsible
chairman of the Thanks- M&amp;H Foodii nor, Heritage Chateau Beauty Salon, New The northern military command backed the
lodged in Meigs County Jail.
adventure
is maintained," the president
House,
Villa
ge
Pharmacy,
York Clothing House, L&amp;Z government and ordered warplanes Into the
giving Da y football classic
The Sheriff's Dept. also
said.
"We
hope
the rebels will show sense to
Mark
V.
Dulton
Drugs,
.
Dress Shop, Swisher &amp; Lohse air.
between graduates or
investigated three separate
avoid
a
deterloralio~
ul their criminal ac-: ,
Reports circulated that other units were
Pomeroy,
Mlddlep orl , Ga te wa y Supermark et, Drugs , Chapman's Shoes ,
accidents involving three
lion."
Rutland and Meigs High Baker Furniture, Dudley's Elberfeld 's, Nelson 's Drug on the march both for and against the
deer.
The rebels replied lu the president's
Florist
,
Ben
Franklin,
King
Store,
Sears,
Pomeroy
schools,
is
completing
plans
governmenL
but
this
l'I!Uld
not
be
coil'
John E. Garnes, 25,
communique
wllh a statemr.nl calling lor
Builders
Supply,
McClure's
Fabric Shop, Crow's Steak llrmed. The far left Issued calls for a
for this year's clash.
Gallipolis, was traveling east
the
purge
of
the
air Ioree high •·ummand and
Hatfield said today the Dairy Isle , Downing-Childs House, Moore's Stiffler's, general strike, but they had lillie Immediate
on SR 124 Monday when he
the
replacement
o! the slrlklng sixth
following businesses have Insurance, J« ck's Furniture Smlth·Nelson Motors.
Impact in Lisbon.
struck a deer. The deer,
government with one of the far left.
Several Indi viduals and
President Franctsr.o du Costa Gom&lt;•s
donal ed it ems for prizes and Upholster y Supplie s,
apparently injured, crawled
,,
Pomeroy
Pastry
Silnp.
K&amp;C
(Continued
on
page
8)
warned the r.•!, . clth.-r to withdraw from
ranging from gift ce•·tific!Jtes
from the sc ne ·

..

Ferry down on
Tlumksgiving

'

Replacement_for Craig p~t off

Subsidy comes

Three deer hit by cars.

Leftist troops revolt

Alumni football game shaping up

DAYS
CHRISTMAS

·If

·•

.

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