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                  <text>.10 - The

D~ily

Sentin&lt;'i ..MiddlrlXJrt-Pomet·oy, U.. Monthly, llt·t·
. If•. I!li5
.

HODGE IN HOSl'lTM .
Webster Hod ~e. Pomeroy ,
is a medical patient at !-lolze r
Medical Center . His room
number is 41 2 for those who
wi sh to send ca rds.

lltillt'r Mt•dkall't•nh-r
PL~~ASANT VALLEY
tllirths. Det•. 121
DISCHARGES - Richard
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Thomas, Sr ., Point Pleasant ;
Cha se. J r.. son, Point Mrs. L. E. Coulter, · leon;
Harvey Tipton, Gallipolis;
Plea~nt . W. Va. : Mr. _and
Mrs. Walter Loveday, son, Woodrow Kapp, · Point
Bidwell : Mr. and Mrs. James Pleasant; Herbert Amick,
Peck, son, Ga llipoli s: Mr . New Haven: Mrs. Perry
and Mrs . Larry Travis, sun, Oldaker, l..etart ; Mrs. Kelly
Wnv crl y: Mr . a nd Mrs. Marcum, Vinton ; Hazel
Robert
G.
Wiseman, Selby, Apple Grove ; Eva
daughter, Point Pleasant, W. Ooneh, Henderson; Donald
Miller , Hometow.n; Mrs .
Vn .
Howard Casto, Ripley;
tBirths, Dce. l3i
M1·. and Mrs . George George Mayes, Kenova ;
Blizza I'd, daughter, Po in l Julia Kirby , Gallipolis; Mrs.
Pleasa nt , W. Va .: Mr. and Henry Ohlinger, son, New
Mrs . Jimmy
Conn or , Haven; Mrs. Arlie Dilllard,
Point Pleaiiant; Delores Duff,
daugter, Coolville.
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Marion
1Births. Dec. 141
Mr. and Mrs. James Bush, Riddle, Mason; George
daughter, Gallipolis ; Mr. and Harmon, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Richard Moll ohan, Mrs . William Morgan,
daughter, Gallipolis; Mr .. and daughter, Apple Grove; Mrs.
Mrs . Harold
Russell, Clarence Roush, Letart;
Long ,
Point
daughter, Bidwell; Mr. and Tommy
Timothy
Baker,
Pleasant;
Mrs. James Swa nn, son, Oak
Gallipolis; Mrs. Jack Oliver,
Hill.
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Kenneth Martin, BUffalo, and
Grace DeVault, Leon.

" Soon it will cost so much

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$499

-~~!

BAKER
FU8ft!!~.RE
Ohio

Ferguson

HOSPITAL NEWS
'

money to send Christmas
&lt;:ards, it will be cheaper to
give a gift ."
We don't t:Jave " Cheap"
Gills but we do have
Inexpensive ones. Bring
r la st minute gift
!Proble ms
to
th e
I ENOL Y ONES" and

we'll help.

EROY
BLOCK CO.

The Department Store

Buitdinv Since 1915.

PRESENT Blt'Etn'ENNIAL FLAG - Members of
Syracuse Brownie Troop 1120 Thlirsday evening
presented Syracuse Mayor Hennan London with a
Bicentennial Flag which will be placed on the flag pole in

Carpenter
Personals

Mrs. Bernice McKnight,
and
Christy,
Sharon
Columbus, visited her
mother, Mrs. Goldie Gillogly,
also Mr. and Mrs. Otho
McKnight and other relatives
in the area .
Murl Galaway spent
Veterans Memorial Hospital Thanksgiving in McArthur
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS · with her son-in-law and
- Billy Joe Kennedy, Mid- daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Leon
dleport; Charlene Patterson, Woodrwn and family .
Middleport; Ruby Erb, . Mr. and Mrs. Bob Harrison
Pomeroy; Sally Smith ; and family, Stoutsville, spent
Reedsville ; Willie Collins , Thanksgiving vacation with
Cheshire; Ronald Bostic, her parents. Mr. and Mrs.
· William Cheadle and vis)led
Potnt Pleasant.
SATURDAY DIS· with other relatives here.
Mr. and Mrs . Reese
CHARGES - Rita Roush,
Ethel Collins, Harrison Prather, Columbus, called on
Robinson, Margie Schuler, her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Napper, Benjamin · I.Cwis Smith on Saturday.
Upton , Jr., Henry Phelps, · Guests of Mrs. Rolland
Pearl Scarberry, Leonard Crabtree on Thanksgiving
Day were her children Mr.
Smith.
and Mrs. Kenneth Crabtree,
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Charles Snider, Pomeroy; McArthur and Mr. and Mrs .
James 0 . Ohlinger, Mid- Donald Crabtree and Cindy;
dleport; Virgie Hobslelter,
Pomeroy ; Barbara Jewell, Secret arms aid
Middleport ; Sally Savage,
Racine ; Sam Bennett, hit by Mansfield
Albariy; Kathryn Weaver, .
Pomeroy ; Helene Nelson,
WASHINGTON I UP I) Middleport.
Warning against " another
SUNDAY DISCHARGES VIetnam ," . Senate
Car l Rairden, Viola Ed- Democratic · leader Mike
wards, Charlene Patterson,
Mansfield said today
&amp;illy Smith, Elsie Smith, Congress should demand
Angela Barton.
an explanation of secrel U.
S. arms aid to Angola fn\m
the secretary of stale and
CIA director.
He called for Senate
Foreign Relations Com·
mlltee hearings on lhe
Issue, and said Secretary of
Stale Henry .Kissinger and
William Colby, lhe CIA
chief, should be called to
testify.

l

Now that we're a real nation, we need a better way of
communicating with each other. And with the rest of the
world . We've had postal service before. And if we were
lucky, we'd actually get some of the letters people sent us.
Now, we're making postal service official. We're setting up
post offices all over the United States. When mail comes in,
whether it's by coach or rider, the post office will hold it until
it's called for. We'll let the sender pay the postmaster in
ad vance, or let the addressee pay when he gets his mail.
Someday , we might come up with a better way than having
the postmaster write on the letter whether postage has been
paid or not. Maybe something like a little sticker we can
paste on an envelope. For now,we're glad·to get our mail.

Mr . and Mr. Earl Starkey
visited their son-in-la w and
daughter, Mr. an d Mrs.
Donald Jones in Nelsonville
011 Monday .

"(&gt;~~
f r,-- ' '",

1

MEIGS THEATRE

Farmers Bank

DECEMBER lS
THRU OEC. 25
NOT OPEN

FRI ., DEC. 26-11 .
"FUNNY LADY"
I tochnlcolorl
Show starts at 7:00p.m.

MAIN STORE, ANNEX AND WAREHOUSE OPEN 9:30 10 9 PM

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

~

•

..

lr- _

SWORN-IN AS MAYOR - Sworn in as the new mayor of Pomeroy Monday ni ght was
Oarence Andrews, !ell, by County Court Judge Robert E. Buck . Mayor Andrews will
assume his new duties Jan. 1, 1976.

\\'i lh

pu blic ;1ffclirs i~ consulted. l'CJul1c1 1 1o con tad him in
Mic\dlepor l hos accepted ll(J r·cgctrd to the m" tter e:ts more
W!l l er fr (Jill Lhe l-'MnCfljY infon nH twn was needed.
system sin c.:c .J u nu ~r y, J97:J .
A letter from the Industria l
A lett er wa s read frtJm the C01 nmission of Ohi v was re"d
deparlmen l of the 1\rmy, ~ l (lting ce rt ain con ditions

~C(J U \t.;,

.hucecs, or any oth er
orwmiza1 ion for free pick up.
counC'i l was told Monday divitletl in to different ·cans, Puln am will begin hi s ser· night .
large il.crns such ns s_toves or vi ces on Jan . 2.
Accordin g to a lett er lrinn refrigerators, will be picked
Council also discu.&lt;Sed the
t•ontrart betw een Pomeroy
the ColumbiLt Gas of Ohio Co., up when conveni ent.
due ro the purchased gas costSinr:e heuvy woud cannot be and Middlcporl dated Oct. 26 ,
adjustm ent provision in its Jr an sported in a packer 1961, thai Pom eroy would
conlract with Pomeroy, rates truck , the company will make supply Middl eport with water
for· gas serviee it1 PomerO)' oth er arrangements ; i:t lso !OJ' $1,000 a month .
will be in crea Sed 10.18 cents bricks and dirt cannot be
Tlie contracl expires Nov.
per 1,000 cubic ·feet effecti ve transported . Billi ng will be by I , 1911. Pomeroy has bee n
wil h th e bill rendered Jan . H, coupons on a monthly basis. reli eved of ob lig ation to
1916.
Putnam said he will be furn ish l!l idd le por l wate r
In other acti on, Marple living here and will just be a s in ce it s ow n we lls ar e
Pu tnam of · the M&amp;P phone call away for anyone ' adequate .
Monday nigill it wa s
Sanitati on Co.
read his who has a problem. He also
proposed con tract to counci l, said he would use the council proposed thai Middleport pay
which was app roved and will landfill. He agreed to furnish Pomeroy $100 a month inhe signed today .
55 gallon drwns for the town stead of $1,000 fr om now until
Garbage pick-up will cost if the town will furnish lids. Nov. I , 1!111. Coun cil tabled
$3 a month, curb service, with
He al so will pick up lor the the matter un til its I~Jar d of
in

,January , town

Huntin g t on
C&lt;J rp s
uf
F. nginccrs, in reg&lt;-Jrd to the
cumpl etion of the wall on the

lh al did not meet slate
specifications such as ground

wires tu the w;.tler cooler,
stoves and fans .
A letter fr om E. H.
Hedrick, Culwn bus, was read
fin al in spection bas tleen by :vlrs. Jane Walton, clerk,
made and \h al a yearly in- i:!Sking that no parking signs
spection of the wall will be be placed from Marie Bichmade. II further noted that to man 's place past the DA V
help pre vent the ol d section par king lot. Hedri ck stated
from deteri orating it was thai he owned properly in the
recommended by the Corps area. tha t his driveway is
that all veg etati on be blocked as cars park on the
rem oved. Council accepted sid ewalk forcing people to
th e fina l in specti on.
walk out in the stree t. He
A letter fr om Frederick add ed that debris is thrown
Crow Ill. in re gar d to on hi s properly.
( 'unlinued 1111 Page 14
vacati ng North St. , adv ised

upper·parking lot. The letter
slated tha t the wall " ""
cumpleted on Nov. 25 anti th at

•

at y en tine
Auditors advised to use January 1
property values for tax purposes

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tnt•sday. Dt~cem bcr IIi , 1117:;

By United Press Jntemallonal
WASHINGTON - CONGRESSIONAL EFFORTS to
compromise with President Ford on a spending ceiling have
failed, and the Senate has passed .legislation extending this
year's tax cuts into the first six months of 1976. The question of
whether income tax withholding rates rise or remain the same
alter Jan. 1now will hang on a veto override vote unless Ford
backs down on his numerous threats to veto any tax bill U1at
does nol contain a ceiling on liscall9T7 spending . .
Wtth a 1975adjournment deadline only four days away, a
House-senate conference committee meets late today to iron
outlll\qor dillere"!''!.l!!~ouse ~nd Senate v~rslons of Lhe bills.
Fi nal congressional pjlssage C&gt;Uld come as early as Wednesday, but more likely will be Thursday. Ford Is expected to
veto the hill quickly, and leaders of both houses predict they
have the voles to override, although Ford's best chance appears to be in I he House .
BEIRUT, LEBANON - SECURITY FORCES today
patrolled around the ruins of militia-occupied !Wiury hotels in
Beirut's seafront battlefield where Lhe guns feU silent for the
first lime in a week. Radio Beirut said lbe cease-lire was
holding in the fifth round of civil war between Moslems and
Christians .
Premier Rashid Karam!, who negotiated the latest truce
with the help of Paiesllnlan guerrilla leader Yasser Arafal,
broadcast a warning tha t Israel had a plan to rescue Lebanese
Jews from their hOmes In Beirut.
Karam! sold he heard the plan on Israeli radio and said it
gave "new evidence that Israel is Involved in the security of
this country and stirs up a crisis whenever the situation tilts
towards calm. "II Israel altnll to use these circumstances to
launch an act of aggression, we will not hesitate to defend our
sovereignty and our pride," Karami said.
BOTH PRESIDENT t'ORD AND HIS OUTSPOKEN
CAMPAIGN manager say their strategy is to put Ronald
Reagan on the spot about his record as governor of California.
"This is a legitimate campaign exercise which we intend
to conttnue," Cailaway said in Boston Monday, two days after
he attacked Reagan's record at a meeting of southern
Republicans in Houston.
"It's not the place I would have liked to have done it, but
· we have a President whose record is known In 50 slates and
Reagan, whose record is only known in California . I admit
saying it at Houston got everyone's attention." Callaway's
remarks touched off criticism from Ford supporters trying to
hold the line in the South , where Reagan is preswned to be
strongest.

TO. IG"T·6130 t_o 7~!,~~!'!~:!!!~~Je!'"'..,....._.._.

r.

f)

.'

BRING YOUR CHILDREN TO SEE SANTA ClAUS
IN OUR THIRD R.OOR TOYlAND

heuvy IIUt l eriH I mu st he

,\':~

-~. .

(SALE ENDS WEDNESDAY AT 9 PM)

and musl be In btmdles, all

'

J
I

Separates Pants is Included I" this sale~

p,mcroy u\ltonwtically will

gu

_.r . ...,. ~ ~

r:v~:;: , ::;;'"B;;;r;l

Our entire stock of Mlues and Women's

COi! p Cntle

'

HILO TEMPS
NEW YORK tuPI) - The
highest temperature reported
Su nday to the Na tional
Weather Service, excluding
Alaska and Hawaii, was BJ
degrees at Cotulla , Tex .
Today 's low was 30 degrees
below zero at International •
Falls, Minn.

'

rmcl lwig."i nmsl be' separalcd

r·l

;.

.

YOUR CHRISTMAS GIFT HEADQUARTERS

BARRET!' CONFIRMED
WASHINGTON IUPI) - .
The Senate today confirmed . ·
the nomination of Robert E. ·
Barr~ tt of Pennsylvania to be
administrator of !,he Mining
Enforcement and Safely
Administration. The Senate
also confirmed, by voice vote,
the nomination of Andrew W.
Breidenbach of Ohio to be an
assls!anladministralor of lhe
Environmental Protection
Agency.

· indus!ry wi th natw·nl gns in

' •...~ "
.

'.,;.:!.1J:

Central St 84 Wabash 76

.I

town free of charge. He also
slat ed lil a\ il e woul d

&lt;/ ... ; (·

Blue Streak Classic
J Ohn Car roll 71 Ma lone 70
Oberlin 89 Walsh 77 ...
Cannonball ClaSSIC
wooster 79 Muskingum 69

(Continued from page 1)
in the subfreezing cold atlhe
grave of Falk Stern , his
maternal grandfather.
Although about 3,00() Jews
lived In . Fuerth when
Klssinger was born, most
died in the Nazi holocaust and
only about 200 now live in Lhe
city of 100,000. About 10 of
Klssinger's own relatives loss
lh~lr lives in Nazi concentration camps.
"We are very proud and
happy that he has come,"
said Simon Rottennan, who
prayed alongside Klssinger.
West German Foreign
Minister Hans -Dietrich
Gl!nscher welcomed
Klsslnget on his arrival from
'.
London.

:1

$40,o0o.OO Maximum Insurance For Each Depositor
Member Federal Dep-,slt Insurance Cor!JOratlon

weekend at Williamsport,
dhin.with Mr . and Mrs. Roger
McKnight and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Haley,
·Rutland, were Thanksgiving
guests of her sister and
brother-in-law , Mr. and Mrs.
John David Gillogly and sons.
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Nelson,
Columbus, were recent
guests at the Gillogly home.

ASK TOWED
A marriage license was
issued to Kevin Lee Syler, 18,
Rt. 1, Waterfort), and Melinda
Louise Evans, 17, Rt. l, Long
Bottom. ,

1799: The Post Office with no stamps.

POMEROY, OHIO

and daughter, M•·- and Mrs.
Larry Stanley and Anna, at
Edison, Ohio.
Mr . and Mrs. Earl Starkey,
local; Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Wise10an, Harrisonville and
Mrs . Margaret Parsons ;
Rutland spent Thanksgiving
Day in ' Woodsfield wi th
Reverend' and M•·s. David
Wiseman and family.
Mr. and Mrs.-John Foul ,
· Dayton, called on her
brother-in-law and sister, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Mattox on
Thanksgiving afternoon . Her
father, Charles Ya tes ,
Hamden, was a recent guest
at the Mattox home.
Mr. and . Mrs. Harold
Gillogly and fam ily spent the

!Jilt ' pit ·k Up a Wt!ck. ihrce
L'an s or three lmg limit. Brush

up

I

Natural gas cost raised

The cusl uf k cc pin ~ wu rm
ur run ning a business Ill'

...

Kissinger :·

From a Great American Bank

,......,.,_.

local.
Robert Mattox, area turkey
grower, along with his flock
of birds, was featured on a
program, "Short Road to
Adventur~,'' which was
shown on television on
Channel 10 on Thanksgiving
morning.
Tho se spending
Thanksgiv ing Day with Mr.
and Mrs . William Culwell
were their children and
grandchildren, Mr. and Mrs.
Rick Rice, Fayettesville,
North Carolina; Mr. and Mrs.
Alfred Rice, Col.wnbus, and
Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine Jordan,
Bryan and Sarah,Faye, local.
Mr. and Mrs . lewis Smith
visited with their son-in-law

·front of the Municipal Building. Making lhe presentation
were 1-r, Juanita Guintber, Becky Roush, Khristina
Haynes, Melinda Hill, Lori Stewart, Paula Winebrenner,
Sherry Sisson, Jill Nease and Becky Adkins, seated is
Mayor London.

1·

!Continued from page I)
funds were not being properly
deposited - and for all that
time neither the Bureau of
Motor Vehicles nor the state
auditor found any reason to
suspect wrongdoing or
conduct any sort of special
investigation," Andrews
said.
"Suddenly, two months into
a new stnt.e administrat!.on
and two weeks into a new
license year , the . slate
Auditor unexplainedly sends
i team of special examiners
to this agency-nod they
immediately uncover a multi,
' thousand dollar shortage,"
said Andrews.

WASHINGTON - THE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT will
prosecute former Florida Sen. Edward J . Gurney again on two
charges a previous jury could not decide.
The first trial earlier in the year ended with Gurney
. acquitted on five of seven counts and the jury unable to r.eaeh a
verdict on the other two. A Justice Department spokesma n
made the announcement Monday and said the decision to retry
Gurney was approved by Attorney General Edward H. Levi
and Deputy Attorney General Harold R. Tyler.'
CCJNCINNATI - A DIFFERENCE OF $34 MIWON
stands between the city of CinciMati and three city employe
unions on lhe issue o( pay raises, says the city's chief
negotiator. Joseph Rochford said Monday that union
bargainers representing policemen, firemen and nonWllformed city workers are askin~ lor wage and fringe benelil increases totaling $39 million.
But the city can only afford hikes o( $5 million without
layoffs and cutbacks, countered Rochford. Contracts with ail
three unions expire Dec. 31 and the city Is trying to avert
possible strikes by the l,m poli cemen, 975 firemen and 3,800
nonuniformed employes .
Rochford said city ~egotlators will "try to close the gap"
with more talks this week with representatives of the three
groups.
HI!.O TEMPS
NEW YORK I UPl l - The
highest lemperulure reported
Mond ay to the National
Weather Service, excl uding
Alaska and Hawaii , was 85
degrees at McAllen, Tex.
Today'a low was :W de~recs
below zero at Gunn ison, Colo.

•••

PLENTY OF TALK
NEW YORK iUPI) - The
American Telephone and
Telegraph Co. J)redlc t.s that
customers will make o record
total u( about 13.7 million
interstate calls this Christ·
mus day, traditionally the
bustnesl dhy uf the year ltir
the ~hon e tompany.

Fifte en Cents
Vol. l7, No. Hi4

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov .
.James A. Rhodes today suggested as a means of
reducing real estate taxes
that county auditors use Jan .
1, 1975 propery val ues lor tax
purposes and to "ignore" any
Inflation ary increases in
v.alue.
Rhodes earlier had asked
the chairman of the stall!
Board of Ta~ Appeals has to
see if there was any way to
freeze increasing property
taxes.
Board Chairman Charles S.
Lopeman !IBid Monday that
any freete on Ohio real estate
taxes should be accomplished
through a constitutional
amendment and should be
postponed until 1978.
The Ohio Farm Bureau
Federation Monday joined in

January 1, 1975 property
values for tax purposes, and
to ignore any inflationary .
increases in value that have
occurred since or will occur
in the future, " said Rhode s.
"Such .a move would provide
interim savings for taxpayers
running into the millions of
dollars, and woulil·give us the
time too bring about a permanent solution in which
taxpaye rs control what taxes
they pay."

the fight over the taxes and
sa id the Ohio Genera l
Assembly should impose a
ceiling on automatic properly
tax increases that occur
without a vote of the people .
Thcre is no way we can
prevent substantial future
increases which already are
programmed under an Ohio
Supreme Court mandate "
said Rhodes today in another
letter to Lopeman. "But we
can act now to reduce some of
those future increases and to
eliminate annual property
value updates which ill many ·
c-ounties have resulted in
crushing annual tax hikes (or
property owners.
"Specifically, I have asked
Mr. Loi&gt;eman to research the
possibility of requiring
cou nt y auditors to use
1

'

Lopeman said a freeze
"can beat be eftec\ol;l" by a

constitutional amendment ,
but he added the moratorium
should be delayed until alter
the current equaliza lion
period is completed at the end .
of 19n.
"An amendment which at-

U!mpted to freeze assessed
values prior to the completion
of this process wouid raise
serious questions of its
constitutionality under the
United States Constitution,"
Lopeman wrote.
The board chairman said
any slate constitutional
amendment
to freeze
properly tax es should ·
authorize the legislature to do
it and spell out permissible
exceptions, such as new construction, imp rovements to
existing structures and the
geqer8).11¥:re- In JA1e .~ll)ue
of a goographical area.
A state constitutional
amendment, once adopted by
the leg islature, must be
approved by a rote of the
people.

Lopeman said he had
con s id ered alternative
methods of establishing the
mo ratorium t hrou g h
legislation and a change in
Board of Tax Appeals rules.
He said these would lack
stability and would affect
other unrelated rules and
statutes , subjectin g the ·tax
freeze to judicial overthrow.
Federation Executive Vice
President C. William Swank,
responding to Lopeman' s
proposal, said a legislative
solution is preferable to a
Bllite _.c:UIIItii!IIO!Iat ' amend-.
ment. ~

•

"A cHange in law appears
preferable to a constitutional
amendment beause it would
bring . relief sooner and
pro vide more flexibility. "

said Swank.
" ll 's lorig,past tim~ that tbe
state government call attention to property tax in·
creases thai have gone
through the roof while
citizens stand by helplessly,''
said Swank.
Swank said a legislative
ceiling would have to :
- Lower the percentage of
true va lue used in assessment
in the same proportion that
properly tax va lues are reas:
sessed upwards.
- Provide a better means
d. ~king yearly pr"""rty
value assessments than sales
assement
ratio
data
currently used.
- Provide for a fair method
of achieving a complete
millage rollback.

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

EXTENDED
OUTLOOK
.. Thursday
through Saturday, a cold
period Is Indicated with a
chance of snow about
Saturday: Hlgh r will be In
the upper teens to the lower
20s Thursday, "'arming to
the lower 30s Saturday.
Lows will be In the teens to
the lower 20s.

Weather
Cloudy an d cold tonight and
Wednesday, lows to lower
20s . High Wednesday In the
lower 30s . Probability of
precipitation Is 20 per cent
today, 10 per cent tonight and
20 per cent Wednesday.

Learning
the fun way
By Ctuirlene Hoeflich
They strung cranberries.
They constructea colorful paper chains.
They made cut-out cookies.
And all the while the 25 boys and girls who were guests lor
a party at the St. Paul Lutheran Church Monday night were
hearing tips on the nutrition in holiday foods.
The party was planned by Expanded Food and Nutrition
Program Aides: Myrtle Oark and AMie Moon , with Miss
Marta Guilkey, Meigs County Extension Agent, and Patty
Kelly , the 1-H program asslstaint In charge.
Guests were children of low-Income families participating in
!Continued on page 11 )

..' ~
'

Blood given Monday
One htmdred and twenty- Elemen tary Sch ool were
live persons came lo an George A. Wolf, Sara Dill,
American
Red
Cross Janet Pickens, Dorothy
bloodmobil e in Pomeroy Whit e, Nancy Reed , Jan
Monday to contr ibute 105 Holter, Mike Wright, Roger
pints of blood.
Morgan, Jeanne Slawter ,
Of the total , 86 were giving Mar garet Barr, W. R.
in replaceme~t for blood used Chasteen, Ste ven Story.
by re latives and fr iends. Edward Schaeckel, Harold
First lime donors at the unit Deeih, Charles Nease, Lynn
set up at th e Pomeroy Shuler and Ruth Ann
Mulford.
James F. Gilmore became
a three gallon, Dorothy Badgley a lour gallon, RichardS.
Barton a 14 gallon, Charles
W. Searles, a seven gallon
donor .
Nurses were Ferndora
Story and Margrelta Roush,
and serving as the medical
staff were Drs. Lewis, Telle,
Esberdado Villanueva and
Raymond Boice.
Retired senior volunteers
\l'llr klng allhe canteen were

A moti on approved a week
agu by the Meigs Local
School Dis tri ct bQard of
education ehanging the pny
da y of 1eaehers from Dec. 19
to Dec. 31 was •·escinded

.

Marcia Denison, Edith
wi 11 i am son , Be It y
Chr istoph erson, Virg inia
Gulley, and Eva Dessauer.
Retired sen ior volunteers
also loaded and unloaded lhe
unit . '111al group included
Gene McElroy, Glenn
Lambert, Qarence McNeal,
William Quivey and Linuoil
Johnson .
Making up the clerical staff
were Paul Smart, Dorothy
· Will, Dick Karr, Mildred
lfawley, Mary Shuler, Mary
Nease, Jean Nease, Juanita
Sayre , Jean Sayre, Martha
Lou Beegle, Helen Pickens,
~' reda
Durham, Joy ce
!-loback, Emma K. Cla twgrlhy, Mildred Betzing,
Eloise While, Erma Roush,
Margaret Eskew, Jeannette
Lai\Tence, Vernon Nease and

Monda y night in a special
session at the junior high
school in Middleport.
Meeting with the board
were Ed Bariles, Charles
llow nie, and David Bowen of.

(Ctmtinued .on page l4l

the Mei gs Local Teachers
.Assn.
Bartels, on behalf of the
association, asked that the
motion changing the pay day
be rescinded because the

'
STRINGING CRANBERRIES to use on the Christmas tree was a new experience for
severe I.

motion is a violati on of the Jil e con lra et br oken . He
negotiations policy hl' lween commended Supl. C"harlcs
teachers and th e board. lie ~&gt;wie r and ilssistunt Sup t.
Murri s on the
said · thnt th e ass ociatioh Dan
wunts to be c1 pcrn li ve tllld "tremuJC!ous job'' they HJ'e
agreeHble. hut l. ~cs TW! Wit11 1 doin g in their posts . llnm;ver ,

he s111d lh&lt;Ji the board's
inabili ly to ntukc the Dec. 19
puy,·oll date as specified in
the agreement between the
board and th e teachers
l'untlnucd ou l'ugc 14
.;

�2 Till' lluilv &amp;•ntinl'i, Mi&lt;idlrl» rl -l'ou
.

;-~ !· ;. j

'

Court
holds
fates

Scriptural message in

Appalachia's soft high~sulphur coal

.

CHARI.F.STON. W. Va.1 UP! 1Appalachian coal might prove to be
otn ct•unumk bonanza to lhe m:ttion's
economy, if critics of West
Virginia 's high -sulphur reserves
would chan ~e their thinking, says
slate Sen . Todd Willis.
Willis told the Southern Interstat e Nuclear Board Monday thai
high-sulphur coal could add jobs and
more lax dollars to the economy
and, at the same time, head off the
mounting price· of steel and elec·
tricily .
But Willis, whose hometown lies
In the midst or West Virginia 's
southern reserves, said he doubted
the nation would realize such
benefits.
"What we have right now, I
believe, is a situation where the
· federal government and· many
private interests attempt to
downplay southern high-sulphur
coal," he declared.

By CLAY F- RICHARDS
WASHINGTON 1UPI) - A
dozen presidential candidates , some of them
desperate for federal money
to keep their campaigns
alive, are waiting for the
Supreme Court to decide
whether the law providing
that money is constitutionaL
The high court could rule
today on the new election
reform law passed in the
wake of Watergate campaign
abuses. If It upholds the law,
presidential candidates could
begin receiving federal ·
matching funds shortly after
the first of the year.
The Supreme Court never
announces what cases it is
going to rule on. It has said
only that It would have a
single decision today - the
last scheduled decision day
before It recesses for the
holidays.
The Federal Election Com- others who claims it violates
mission has been attempting the First Amendment's
to meet a Jan. I deadline on freedom of expression.
certifying candidates for
Specifically under
federal matching funds as · challenge are provisions.
provided in the law.
limiting individual campaign
U the court does not act contributions to $1,000 and
today, and the FEC goes spending in presidential
ahead with the matching campaigns to $10 miillon per
money, this too will be In· c~ndidate in primaries and
stantly challenged in the S20 million in the general
courta.
electioo.
The challenge to the new
McCarthy, an independent
law comes from Sen. James presidential canllldate, also
L. Buckley, CR-N.Y.. former has challen~ed the ron •.
Sen. Eugene McCarthy and sti:Utionality of the. provision

I.o~an· · Conn !ian

said it ·
wasn't lou late fur actiun, but "WC'
must ehange this attitude in our own
rc~ion and in Washin~ton , and
soon ."

Among other speakers was John
Oragos of the Consolidalion Coal Co.
who explained his firm 's development of a stack gas desulfurization
process for the.clean burning of coal.
Willis, who reported West
Virginia's mineable coal reserves at
more than 57 billion tons, urged
positive action on the part of federal
and state governments to use more
Appalachian high-sulphur coal.
He said more long term contracts and investment capital were
needed from American utilities.
The senator decried the policy of
the Tennessee Valley Authority in
reverting to nuclear power and
borrowing $10 billion from the
federal government to finance lhe
iob.

"Ten billion dollars wo!lld
develop, at one miilion Ions per year
prodilclion level, :111 new mines,"
Willis translated. "Wouldn't this be
a tremendous boost to the coal industry'P'
He said the revelation that the
National Coal Association in
Washington is changing ils office
buiidlng'b heating system from coal
to electricity "is almost more than a
person from our area can stand."
"Southern coal can be, I am
convinced, mined safely, without
major environmental damage to the
coal producing areas," he concluded. "It can be burned directly or
wllh some washing or other
cleaning , with only minor
modiflcallons of the Clear Air Acl."
But the first step, according to
Willis, .is to stop the "bureaucratic
Indifference" now demonstrated to
this valuable mineral resource.

Angola and another $25
million is eannarked for the
two antiConununlst groups
there, the liberals mounted a
three-tier attack:
- They blocked certain
passage of the S120.9 billion
defense a(lliroprtatlons bill
Monday, and Wednesday after a closed-door Senate
session - wlil seek to add an
amendment prollibiting any
money in the measure to be
-a In An&amp;ots except for
lntelll&amp;~atherlng.
They planned to add to
the foreign military aid, nol
expected to clear CongreBB
before adjournment, a
prohibition against the use of
any U.S. fWlds to aid Angola.
- They hoped for )l!lssage

Nearly $2 million -spent
COLUMBUS !UP!) - Ohi-

oans for Jobs and Progress,
the conunlttee [armed · to
push lor enaclment during
the November general
election of Gov. James A.
Rhodes' four point economic
package, spent nearly S2
million, it was revealed
today.
A post-election report filed
by the committee with
Secretary of State Ted W.
Brown, showed the Ohio
Contractors Aasoelatioo led
the Ust of contributOI'B with
$100,000.
Various financial in·
stitutions contributed a total
of $96,900.

Ohio Company of Columbus, an investment-banking
finn, led the financial institutions by giving $25,000.
Two Columbus banks, Bancohio Corp. and Ohio National
Bank, contributed $15,000 and
$10,000 respectively.
Other large contributors Included the Ohio Mining and
Reclamation Asaociation of
Cambridge, U7,1l00 and Ohio
Oil and Gas Association,
$15,000.
The largest expenditure by
the conuniltee went lo the
Washington D.C. media
consultant ftnn of Bailey,
Deardourff and Eyre which
received $1,195,000.

DR. LAMB

I

RUTLAND - Paul Me·
Null, baritone, will present
111 audio-visual concert titled,
"Promises of Jesus" at the
ChW'ch of the Nazarene here
at 7:30p.m. Wednesday.
As he sings !he scripiW'es
which give the promises,
picture~ of l.he promises are
SALES REPORT
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Decembl!r 13, 1973
STOCKER CATTLE
STF;ERS - 250 to 300 lbs. 17
to 31, 300 to 400 lbs. 20 to 32.50,
400 to 500 lbs. 20 to 35, 500 to
600 lbs. 221o 35, 600 to 700 ibs.
21.50 to 38, 700 lbs. and over 22
to 42.
HEIFER CALVES - 250 to
:roo lbs. 14 to 24, 300 to 400 ibs.
·· 1510 25, 400 to 500 lbs. 15 to 26,
500 to 600 lbs. 17to 32.50, 600 to
700 ibs. 18 to 33, 700 ibs. and
over 22 to 40.
STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS 1by the head) Stock Cows 90

How we're represented

Regula.

.

Republicans not voting :

Mosher.

Pain associated with brain tumor

.tUtti

Division . When he moves to
Por~mouth , he will take with
hilp more than 21 years of
eKperient-e in the electric
utility Industry.
He joined Ohio Power· in
1954 as lt commercial
representative at Ironton, a
part of what now is Portsmouth Division. He transferred to Canton In 1961,
became local manager at
Minerva in 1965, and was
promoted to administrative
assistant at Newark four
years later. He was named
customer services manager
in September.
A native of Philadelphia,
Pa., Leuby later resided at
Springfield, Ohio, and was

(;

TUESDAY
INSTALL AT ION
by
Middleport Masonic Lodge
363, F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m .
Tuesday at lemple . All
members asked to attend.
REGULAR meeting, Meigs
County Regional Planning
Commission, 3 p.m. Tuesday
at ASCS conference room,
Fa rmers Bank Building,
Pomeroy.

0. Box 1~1 . Radio City
Station, New York, NY 10019.
DEAR DR. LAMB Recently I had open heart
surgery , and my question
relates to rheumatic fever.
Never being sick and having
many physical examinations
in my 57 years or living, the
doctor t~inks my cause of
infection of the aortic heart
va lve was caused by
rhewnatic fever. Is there any
way a person can tell if they
have or have had rhewnatic
fever ?
DEAR READER
Rheuma tic fever is a complica tion of a strevtococcai
infection. A person usually
lms ~o many sore throats in
his lifetime that it is almost
impossible lo be sure one
wasn't causea by strep.
The strep Infection can and
usually does occur during
chiidhood.ll may be mild and
~o unnullced or more severe.
HhL'lllllitlie frvt•r llliiY rullow
~s ~ ~

t · uuJpti~

••i••lll

11 ,. ,,

also be mild u1 &gt;ntrt,
~

associated with immediate
involvement of the heart and
even red, hOt, swollen joints.
If it is mild it may go unnoticed and run Its course
without anyone knowing the
child is sick.
Even if the . attack was
mild, It may Involve the heart
and slowly over the years
cause changes in one or more
of the heart valves. The
damaged heart valve may
continue to show progressive
changes years later and
finally be so defective that
surgery becomes advlsable In
some cases.
The doctor can gel a pretty
good Idea from the looks of
the valve and studies with a
microscope what cause tlie
the vlilve damage.
Given these circwnstanca,
It is not uncommon for 1111
adult to have heart valve
damage from rheumatic
fever and still have no clear
histlry nl any rhewnatlc
ftver In previous years.

graduated from high school.
there. He earned a bachelor's
de gree in business ad- ·
ministration and economics
from Wittenberg University
in 1951 , and completed two
m~nagement courses at the
University of Michigan.
He was in the Army during
1952 and 1953, serving with
the 4th Infa ntry Division in
Germany.
l.euby is a direc tor of the
Newark Area Chamber of
Commerce and has spoken to
many groups.
He and his wife, Ruth, have
two children. Now living at
558 WiUrich Dr., Newark, a
move to the Portsmouth area
is anticipated.

RIVERSIDE STUDY Club,
Tuesday at I p.m. Mrs.
Claude Shahan, hostess, 918
Fourth Ave. White elephant
gift exchange .
HARRISONVILLE Senior
Citizens will have a Christmas potluck supper and gill
exchange Tuesday at 6 p. m.
at
the
HarrisonviHe
Elemen tary School. Birthdays will also be observed .
RIVERVIEW Garden Club
Christmas Party Tuesday,
Dec. t6 , at 7:30p. m. at the
home of Mrs . · Ernest
Whitehead.
XI
GAMMA
MU
SORORITY Christmas party
and exchange Tuesday at
7:30p.m. at home of Debbie
Finlaw. All gifts must be
wrapped In white paper with
a red bow.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Hospital Woman 's Auxiliary
6:30 Tuesday holiday covered
dish dinner and gift excl)ange, hospital cafeteria.
GROUP
II,
United
Presbyterian Church ol
Middleport , 7:30 Tuesday at
the home of Mrs. Myron
Miller with Mrs. William
Morris, co-hosless. Mrs.
Francis Anderson to have
devotions; Mrs. Harry
Moore, the program. Thank
offering to be turned in. $2.50
gift exchange .
WEDNESDAY
SILVER Circle Senior
Citizens Christmas party in
the old Rutland Bank
building, Wednesday, I to
3:30 p.m., with punch ,
cookies and coffee to be
served throughout the afternoon. Everyone welcome .

,\

j

hi

W. A. LEU BY JR.

planned at Rio

BOWLING
Early Wednesday Mhled
Dec. J, 1975
Zides Sports Shop

Oilers

~our

76
62
60
se
s2
52

Smith Nelson Motors
Youngs Super Mkt .
,Tenth Framers
Nelson Drug Co
High inct lvlduat game
Lllrry Dugan 233 , Pat Carson
S4J ; second high individual

game -:

Larry. Dugan 209,

Belly Smith 529 ; third high
Individual game Larrv
Dugan 205, Isabelle Couch ,
Carolyn Bachner ·47-1 .
High series - Larry Dugan
64 7. Pat Carson 211 ; second
h igh series - A. L. Phelps Jr .
S6() , Be tty S mith 191; third
high series - Bill Porter 55A ,
Belty Smith 185.
Team high game -- Oi l er's
Foi.Jr 699 : team high ser ies
Zldes Spor t Shpp 2, 025 .

POMER·OY LANES
Oec. 4,1915

Enfy Tt)unday Mixed
The Dragons
The Little One s

scooby ooo •s
Team No . 4
Hill Bil ly Bears

64 48
64 48

60 52
Sl 61
54 58

Jacks Club
45 67
High (women ) indiv idual
game -- Donna Mc F arland
114, Wanda Cross 159, Myr!lc
Norman ISS ; high (men )
Individual game -·· Jr Ph el ps
199, Bob Bowen 18().
Women 's high series 04j)nna
McFarland
464 ,
Wanda Cross 455, N!yrtle
Norman 4J4 ; men 's high
. !erles -· Jr Phelps 526, Moses .
Norman 5()1, Mike L illie 487 .
Team high game - The
Dragons 779 ; team high
series -- The Dragons 2. 187.

in lig

first at 4:10 to 6:10p.m. on
Tuesday, the second at the
same hour on Thursday.
Due to space limitations a
maxlmwn of 15 stridents is all
that can bl! accepted into
most of the art courses. The
courses will be given on a
first come, first serve basis.

Tile Daiij sentinel
DEVOT~O

TO THE
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
E~tc. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH
· Published
City Editor
dolly eMCept
I Sa(urdoy by The Ohio Volley
· Publishing company, Ill
Court st., Pom eroy; Ohio
45769. Business' Office Phone
992·2156. ~dltortal Phone 992·
21s1.
at s~~~:rg!~s~HfJ~~taoe paid
Nat ional adv ertising ·
representativ e
Ward '·
Grlftllh Company , Inc .,
Bottlnelll &amp; GallaOhfr Olv ,
· 157
Third Ave., New York,
N.Y. 10011 .
Subscription roles :
Delivered by carrier where
1 available IS cenls per week .
. By Motor Route wnere
: carrier , service
not
aval)oble. One month IJ 25
Bv ma ll in Ohio and W. Va .: ,
One Year. 122.00 : Six
months, SIJ .SO : Ttlree
· months , 11.00 . Elsewhere
' 126.00 year : Six mon ths /
'it3.SOc three months 17 so
~ubscrl ption price \~eludes
~unday Times .senH nel.
l
INT~RESTOF

I

A Christmas Tale by D. Floreck and D. Baur

kNOW YOU'RE SAFE, "CI-lUCKL.ED
SANTA,' 'IOU ,PENNY, AND YOU,
P£TER,ARE GOING lOBE MY VERY

5PI:CIA.!::_ i-ELPER5 1H ~ ORI5TMA5

RIO GRANDE -,- Rio
Grande College-Rio Grande
~ommunity College is offering 10 art classes the
upcoming winter quarter.
Registration for these and
other winter quarter courses
can be completed Monday,
Jan. 5, and Tuesday, Jan . 6,
from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. at the
college. The courses :
Crocheting, 6:30 to 8:30
p.m. Wednesday, and Patchwor k from 8:40 to 10:40 p.m.
Wednesday.
Tw 0 ph0 t ography courses,
'to
i Photograp hY(rom,.
Ba sc
5' p.m. Tuesday and Intermediate Photography
from 6 30 to 10 30
:
: p.m.
Tuesday. ·
Two ceramics courses,
Basic Ceramics, 1 to 5 p.m:
')'hursday and lntennediate
•• t 0 10 :30 p.m.
Ce ram i CS 6:,.,
hursday
T
·
t
'I·
Penc1 Sketchmg, 6:30 0
8·30 p m Tuesday.
·'
• •
Relief Printing 1:50 to 4:50
p.m. on Tuesd ay.
IntermediateWaterColors,
10:20 a.m. to 12:20 p.m.
Tuesday.
Two sections of the Princlples of Art Education, the

THE. Bl&amp; I OLD I FANCY

K~Y

FOR, SANTA'?" ASKED PENNY.
''WELL, I'LL TELL. YOU/SAID
SANTA.~5AY,PE1ER,I=Itt.Y ATTENTIOt-.1 .;'

. '

:

OOICE CENTER CUT

CHUCK ROAS.T

OHIO ETA Phi Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, gift
exchange party Tuesday,
6:30 p.m. at the home or
Debbi Buck, Pomeroy.

Ten art courses

,"..,~~:...-;;-:,.;;-~;:AT:;:-:~-::;;;:-;;;ER;;-;A:-:'N:;:O~OA~O;:;--,
By Lawreoee E. Lamb, M.D. with relatively mild headDEAR DR. LAMB - In aches, which can be relieved
your column not too long ago with aspirin and are often
you wrote to a woman whose intermittent.
son thought he could have ~
That shouldn't be too
brain tumor because of his surprising since you can have
headaches.
a brain tumor without any
Don't recall just how you headache at all. Tumors in ·
worded It, but the way I r~ad the front of the brain mjly
it you gave the impression cause no symptoms at first
that a brain tumor wasn't all other than a change in perthat painful. When did you sonality.
have one, doctor? I happen to
The symptoms of brain
have one and can tell you that tumor are highly variable
it is the worst pain one can and depend entirely on their
imagine. My head hurts so location and size.
that 1 get an upset stomach.
!_hope you do well now that
DEAR READER - You J'UUr surgery is over, which
misinterpreted my com- you mentioned in the rest of
ments. The point was not that your letler.
headaches !rom brain tumors
Readers who want inare not very painful. The formation on headaches can
point was thai you can have a send in SO cents for The
brain tumor with a headache Health Leiter, number 2-9,
th:11 is not very painful.
· Headache : Man:s Mosl
Mos t pe~.ple lhink all brain Common Pain, with a long,
twnurs crc•le severe head- stamped, self-addressed
aches. and indeed they can, mvelope for mailing. Adas in your case. But, most dres.~your letter to Dr. Ma,b.
people don't realize th:ot sume in care( ~ this newspaper, 1'.
bfuin tumors are associated

shown on a large screen . He
wiU be singing the accounts of
Jesus giving Ihe promises .of
his second coming, the
promise of the Holy Spirit,
and promises 1given to the
faithful followers of Jesus.
· McNutt recently received a
Freedom Foundation Award
for his patriotic concert from
the foundation at Valley
Forge, Pa. Recently he
presented Lhe concert In
Constitution
Hall
in
PAUL McNUTI'
Washington, D. C. where the
U. S. Navy Band played the
prelude and was then accompanied by Ruby Atwood, famous as the pianist on the
Old Fashioned Revival Hour .
DW'ing the past five years,
McNutt has been on the
to 135, Stock Cows and Calves
concert circuit, travelin g
125 to 250, Stock Bulls 90 to
across whe nation each year .
210, Baby Calves 5to 30; !By
He received his AB Degree in
the Pound 1 Canners &amp; Cutlers Cows 14 to 18, Holstein music. He studied at Cornish
Conservatory in Seattle,
Cows 17.50 to 23.50, tommercia! Bulls 21 to 28 ( 1,000 Wash., and was in the arined
forces during World War II
ibs. and over).
and the Korean War. He has
logged over 3600 hours of
flying time.
There will be no charge for
Wednesday 's concert but a
free will offering will be
taken. The public is invited.

Leuby ·in for Carlini
as division manager

that gives matching federal fiuence elections.
The latest campaign statemoney only to Democratic
and Republican contenders. ments filed by four of the 10
The U.S. Court of Appeals Democratic contenders for the District of Columbia former Gov. Jimmy Carter of
last August unanimously Georgia, former Sen•. Fred
upheld the constitutionally of Harris of Oklahoma, former
the law, saying the need for Gov. Terry Sanford of North
election reform was greater Carolina and Rep. Morris ' PORTSMOUTH - William
than any possible con. Udall of Arizona - showed aU A. Leuby, Jr., has been ·
stitutional loss of rights. It four were COWitlng heavily on named Ohio Power Co.'s
Division
said thai by Umiting cam- the rna tchin~ lunda. The Portsmouth
paign contributions by lhe statements showed the four manager, according to Frank
wealthy, all voters would campaigns either in debt, or N. Bien , the company's
executive vice president.
have an equal rh•n..,. to In- ·just breaking even.
1.euby will succeed C. 0 .
Carlini, who on jan. I will
become Charleston tW. Va.)
Division manager for Ohio
Power's sister firm, Ap·
paiachian Power Co. Both
before adjournment ofa joint South Africa in ~ola "we companies. are members of
congressional resolution to will lose all of Africa In the the American Electric Power
bar U,s. involvement in process."
System.
Angola.
He said African nations do
The new Portsmouth
The Senate drive against not like Soviet ·Intervention, Division manager. t'Urrenlly
U.S. intervention is being led which the United States is is
customer
services
by Sens. John v·. TuMey. !). trying to balance with manager
for
Newark
Calif., Dick Clark, .!).Iowa, military aid, but added "they
Alan Cranaton, D-Callf., and like South African inChurch, and it is backed by tervention less."
GUU.l'Y I'Lt:A
Mansfield.
"We don't belong in
CINCINNATI CUP!) _ An
In a round of Senate Angola," Church said. "We . official of the 10,IJOO.rnember
speeches, the liberals should not start there a Teamsters Union Local 100
criticized the administration confla~~alion that is open- pleaded guilty Monday to
lor allegedly pw'aulng the ended.
extorting . ·u,soo from a
same course which led to the
Church added thai both Cincinnati company · that
Vietnam war,lor keeping the sides were using the two deals In gems and minerals.
program secret except for a· superpowers and added "the
James R. McNichOlas, 44,
few members of Congress, wmner wlll be Angolan. CincirinaU, a business agent
and for . allying the United These young Afric'!" COWl· for the Cincinnati-based
States with white South tries will not be dominated local, entered the guilty plea
Africa.
for lo.ng, and ce.~tainiy not by In u.s. District Court here.
Tunney said that by a wh1le power.
Hecouldbesentencedupto
fighting side-by-side wlt.h
20 years in prison or .fined
SlO,OOO, or both.
McNicholas waa arrested
by the FBI Iaiii Ocl. 29 and
acculed of extorting money
from an officer of the Con·
WASHINGTON !Ufl) - power at cOilllruction sites. tlnental Mineral Processing
Sen. Jolm Glenn, ~o. Co. in exchange for ending
Sen. John Glenn, O.Ohio,
joined 55 other Democrats and 18 other Democrats voted labor problema at the company.
and Sen. Robert Tan Jr., R· agail!'t the bill.
.::.::""!'
Ohio, voted with 16 other
Republicans.
WASHINGTON (UPI) Republicans Monday in
Oble, 8 Democrats, 15
helping the Senate, by a 73-19 Ohio delegation balloting in Republlcaas
·
wte, extend 1975's taK cuts the vote by which the House,
Democrats for: Ashley,
for another siK months. , on a :m-130 roll call, Monday Carney, Hays, Seiberling,
passed and sent to the SeMte
James Stanton, Stokes,
WASHINGTON (UPI)
an apprcprilltiona bill that Vanill.
Sen. Robert Tall Jr., R.Ohio, inCluded $2.3b11Uoo in 8ld for
Democrals against: Mottl.
joined 10 other Republicans New York City:
Republicans for: Brown, J .
In helping the Senate give
Voting for were 215 DemoWilliam Stanton, Whalen,
final congressional approval . crats and 80 Republicana.
Wylie.
Monday to leglslaU011 exVoting agabllt wen 51
Republican&amp; agalnal: Aahpandlng union picketing Democrats
and
79
broolt., Clancy, Devine,
Gradison, Guyer, Harsha,
Kindness, Latta, Miller,

Liberals act to cut off Angolan aid
By STEVE GERSTEL
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Stunned that the United
States has secretly supplied
arms 10 anti-Communist
factions in Angola, Senate
liberals are seeking to
quickly cut off any miUtary
aid to the strife-torn African
nation.
Sen. Frank Church, Dldaho, called the administration program "the
VIetnam aytllru'ne aU over
again." Senate Democratic
leader Mike Mansfield added,
"We do not want another
United States involvement as
In Vietnam."
Reacting swiftly to reports
that $25 million in arms aid
has already been sent to

I

song, pictures commg

is nation's hidden mother lode
The

,

U. S. Government Inspected

SOCIAL SECURITY
representative to be at the
Senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy, Wednesday , 9:30
a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
PAST
Pr esi d e nt s,
American Legion Auxiliary
of Drew Webster Post 39,7:30
- p.m. Wednesday al the home
of Mrs. Carrie Neutzling : gift
exchange.
WILDWOOD Garden Club,
Christmas dinner party at
' 6:30p.m. Wednesday at the
. home of Mrs . Kelly Grueser
; with Mrs. Don Grueser and
Mrs. Stacey Arnold , col hostesses. $2 gill uchange.
' MINERSVILLE United
! Methodist Women, Christmas
: dinner, at the Steamboat Inn,
• 6 p.m.
•
THURSDAY
: 'MIDDLEPORT Child
• Conservation League, 7:30
:j p.m. Thur~day at the home of
, Mrs. Harold Blackston.
: Christll)as party ~th gift
. : exchange. Each member to
: • take homemade Christmas
,' tree ornament.
l CUB SCOUT Pack 242,
'' Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the
Syracuse Elementary School.
SPECIAL Meeting ,
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM,
7:30p.m. Thursday with work
in Master Mason Degree. Ail
Master Masons invited.
CHRISTMAS Dinner of
Twin City Shrlnettes, 7:30
p.m. Thursday, at Meigs Inn.
Ail members invited.

USDA

BONELESS

CHOICE

Chuck Roast
lb.

. '109

lb.

. ......................
Fresh Lean
lb 7~
Ground
Beef
.
..
Fresh L•an
lb g~
Ground Chuck •••••••••••••••••••
;J
Fresh Lean
lb. $109
Ground Round ••••••••••••••••••
USDA Choice
lb. 89~
Beef Short R'lbS ••••••••••••••••
&amp;

&amp;

Grade 'B'

EGGS

&amp;

doz. 79~

A Christmas Tale by D. Floreck and D. Baur
''.,.WHEREVER THEI?E ARE CI-IILDREN
VMO BELIEVE II';J 5ANTA Cl.AI.Je&gt; ! COME!
LET SOME 01= 1l-!e. MAGIC. RUB 0~1= ON
'YOUR I=LIPPERS VOUNOSTE~ ! II

.

,,

lb. s~

USDA Choice
Arm Roast ••••••••••••••••••••••••••
~

2% MILK

usoA choice
tb 9f
Engll'sh Roast ••••••••••••••••••••••••
Superiors
lb. age
Poi.ISh Sausage ..............•..••.•.
'

Superiors All Meat
By The Piece
lb.
Bologna ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
8

1

SATURDAY DNl Y

.

PIE CREAM SHORTENING

.

BROUGHTON'S

2% MILK
BROUGHTON'S " LAFAYETTE"

9!r

.

HI-HO

-~.._.,

1~b.

CRACKERS

box

59~

•.,

PIE SHELLS
2pak

1·

-

FROZEN FOOD SPECIALS

.

42

.

:t-~~•fl•IS•b• .L'!,.. .~t..-.a.-c,.'t

PET RITZ

~

'

'

·Top Quality
Quart

:r

FAVO·RfFE-IB · EAD······•··········· 2 ~0~·· 59~
° '139
SWIFTN I NG·····················~·····~···~~.
.
KEEBL,ER COOKIES .•·•..~ •••••.••-... ~:::k:~ 79~
SWIFT'S BEEF STEW•..•••••.•••••••••• ~:;:. 79~
PRINGLES POTATO CHIPS .••• :l::. '1 1'

VALLEY BELL

DUNCAN HINES

COKE

39C

.. .... ,.."!NN ......................~C..aCJ.- .C...I

CAKE MIX
Instant Creamer

16 oz. bots.

RICH'S FROZEN

BREAD

COFFEE-MATE

box

59~

2~ oz. $}49
Jar

•

~ ·

2~pkg.59e
.;;..!&gt;iO-lf&lt;&gt;l.l!iia---·--"'"·""'"""""'""'""'--~.

HARRIS FROZEN

PUMPKIN PIES
large pie

MIRAa.E WHIP

79 e

SALAD DRESSING
QfOCK FULL of NUTS

SCOT LAD

ORANGE JUICE
16 oz. can

~~z. 79~

INSTANT COFFEE

ste

SCOT LAD

7-UP
and

FROSTIE
ROOT BEER

COLA
16 oz.

64 oz.

B

Throw- Away
Jug

bots
pak

79~

PAPER TOWELS
CARNATION'S

MIGHTY DOG

Beef &amp; Liver
Chef Style

STRONG HEART

DOG FOOD ·

All WEEI&lt; LON

251b.
bag

$399

PRODUCE BUY

Sale! Unclassified
'

POTATOES

WREATHS

'2"

N. !lecond St.
Middleport, Ohio

~

'

FRESH GREEN

From

•

•

CHRISTMAS
GREENERY
FOR THE
HOME

USDA CHOICE

20 lb.
Dad's R.oot Beer Diet Rite Cola
8 pall 1.19 6~~osll
·8

bag

.49

SUPER MARKET • Open Dai~ 9 to 10
Sun. 10 to 10
Jrle Accept Federal Fuud Stamps
PHONE 9~2-3480
Corner Mill and ·Second Sts.

we reserve the right to limit quantities. MIDDLEPORT, 0.

�2 Till' lluilv &amp;•ntinl'i, Mi&lt;idlrl» rl -l'ou
.

;-~ !· ;. j

'

Court
holds
fates

Scriptural message in

Appalachia's soft high~sulphur coal

.

CHARI.F.STON. W. Va.1 UP! 1Appalachian coal might prove to be
otn ct•unumk bonanza to lhe m:ttion's
economy, if critics of West
Virginia 's high -sulphur reserves
would chan ~e their thinking, says
slate Sen . Todd Willis.
Willis told the Southern Interstat e Nuclear Board Monday thai
high-sulphur coal could add jobs and
more lax dollars to the economy
and, at the same time, head off the
mounting price· of steel and elec·
tricily .
But Willis, whose hometown lies
In the midst or West Virginia 's
southern reserves, said he doubted
the nation would realize such
benefits.
"What we have right now, I
believe, is a situation where the
· federal government and· many
private interests attempt to
downplay southern high-sulphur
coal," he declared.

By CLAY F- RICHARDS
WASHINGTON 1UPI) - A
dozen presidential candidates , some of them
desperate for federal money
to keep their campaigns
alive, are waiting for the
Supreme Court to decide
whether the law providing
that money is constitutionaL
The high court could rule
today on the new election
reform law passed in the
wake of Watergate campaign
abuses. If It upholds the law,
presidential candidates could
begin receiving federal ·
matching funds shortly after
the first of the year.
The Supreme Court never
announces what cases it is
going to rule on. It has said
only that It would have a
single decision today - the
last scheduled decision day
before It recesses for the
holidays.
The Federal Election Com- others who claims it violates
mission has been attempting the First Amendment's
to meet a Jan. I deadline on freedom of expression.
certifying candidates for
Specifically under
federal matching funds as · challenge are provisions.
provided in the law.
limiting individual campaign
U the court does not act contributions to $1,000 and
today, and the FEC goes spending in presidential
ahead with the matching campaigns to $10 miillon per
money, this too will be In· c~ndidate in primaries and
stantly challenged in the S20 million in the general
courta.
electioo.
The challenge to the new
McCarthy, an independent
law comes from Sen. James presidential canllldate, also
L. Buckley, CR-N.Y.. former has challen~ed the ron •.
Sen. Eugene McCarthy and sti:Utionality of the. provision

I.o~an· · Conn !ian

said it ·
wasn't lou late fur actiun, but "WC'
must ehange this attitude in our own
rc~ion and in Washin~ton , and
soon ."

Among other speakers was John
Oragos of the Consolidalion Coal Co.
who explained his firm 's development of a stack gas desulfurization
process for the.clean burning of coal.
Willis, who reported West
Virginia's mineable coal reserves at
more than 57 billion tons, urged
positive action on the part of federal
and state governments to use more
Appalachian high-sulphur coal.
He said more long term contracts and investment capital were
needed from American utilities.
The senator decried the policy of
the Tennessee Valley Authority in
reverting to nuclear power and
borrowing $10 billion from the
federal government to finance lhe
iob.

"Ten billion dollars wo!lld
develop, at one miilion Ions per year
prodilclion level, :111 new mines,"
Willis translated. "Wouldn't this be
a tremendous boost to the coal industry'P'
He said the revelation that the
National Coal Association in
Washington is changing ils office
buiidlng'b heating system from coal
to electricity "is almost more than a
person from our area can stand."
"Southern coal can be, I am
convinced, mined safely, without
major environmental damage to the
coal producing areas," he concluded. "It can be burned directly or
wllh some washing or other
cleaning , with only minor
modiflcallons of the Clear Air Acl."
But the first step, according to
Willis, .is to stop the "bureaucratic
Indifference" now demonstrated to
this valuable mineral resource.

Angola and another $25
million is eannarked for the
two antiConununlst groups
there, the liberals mounted a
three-tier attack:
- They blocked certain
passage of the S120.9 billion
defense a(lliroprtatlons bill
Monday, and Wednesday after a closed-door Senate
session - wlil seek to add an
amendment prollibiting any
money in the measure to be
-a In An&amp;ots except for
lntelll&amp;~atherlng.
They planned to add to
the foreign military aid, nol
expected to clear CongreBB
before adjournment, a
prohibition against the use of
any U.S. fWlds to aid Angola.
- They hoped for )l!lssage

Nearly $2 million -spent
COLUMBUS !UP!) - Ohi-

oans for Jobs and Progress,
the conunlttee [armed · to
push lor enaclment during
the November general
election of Gov. James A.
Rhodes' four point economic
package, spent nearly S2
million, it was revealed
today.
A post-election report filed
by the committee with
Secretary of State Ted W.
Brown, showed the Ohio
Contractors Aasoelatioo led
the Ust of contributOI'B with
$100,000.
Various financial in·
stitutions contributed a total
of $96,900.

Ohio Company of Columbus, an investment-banking
finn, led the financial institutions by giving $25,000.
Two Columbus banks, Bancohio Corp. and Ohio National
Bank, contributed $15,000 and
$10,000 respectively.
Other large contributors Included the Ohio Mining and
Reclamation Asaociation of
Cambridge, U7,1l00 and Ohio
Oil and Gas Association,
$15,000.
The largest expenditure by
the conuniltee went lo the
Washington D.C. media
consultant ftnn of Bailey,
Deardourff and Eyre which
received $1,195,000.

DR. LAMB

I

RUTLAND - Paul Me·
Null, baritone, will present
111 audio-visual concert titled,
"Promises of Jesus" at the
ChW'ch of the Nazarene here
at 7:30p.m. Wednesday.
As he sings !he scripiW'es
which give the promises,
picture~ of l.he promises are
SALES REPORT
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Decembl!r 13, 1973
STOCKER CATTLE
STF;ERS - 250 to 300 lbs. 17
to 31, 300 to 400 lbs. 20 to 32.50,
400 to 500 lbs. 20 to 35, 500 to
600 lbs. 221o 35, 600 to 700 ibs.
21.50 to 38, 700 lbs. and over 22
to 42.
HEIFER CALVES - 250 to
:roo lbs. 14 to 24, 300 to 400 ibs.
·· 1510 25, 400 to 500 lbs. 15 to 26,
500 to 600 lbs. 17to 32.50, 600 to
700 ibs. 18 to 33, 700 ibs. and
over 22 to 40.
STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS 1by the head) Stock Cows 90

How we're represented

Regula.

.

Republicans not voting :

Mosher.

Pain associated with brain tumor

.tUtti

Division . When he moves to
Por~mouth , he will take with
hilp more than 21 years of
eKperient-e in the electric
utility Industry.
He joined Ohio Power· in
1954 as lt commercial
representative at Ironton, a
part of what now is Portsmouth Division. He transferred to Canton In 1961,
became local manager at
Minerva in 1965, and was
promoted to administrative
assistant at Newark four
years later. He was named
customer services manager
in September.
A native of Philadelphia,
Pa., Leuby later resided at
Springfield, Ohio, and was

(;

TUESDAY
INSTALL AT ION
by
Middleport Masonic Lodge
363, F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m .
Tuesday at lemple . All
members asked to attend.
REGULAR meeting, Meigs
County Regional Planning
Commission, 3 p.m. Tuesday
at ASCS conference room,
Fa rmers Bank Building,
Pomeroy.

0. Box 1~1 . Radio City
Station, New York, NY 10019.
DEAR DR. LAMB Recently I had open heart
surgery , and my question
relates to rheumatic fever.
Never being sick and having
many physical examinations
in my 57 years or living, the
doctor t~inks my cause of
infection of the aortic heart
va lve was caused by
rhewnatic fever. Is there any
way a person can tell if they
have or have had rhewnatic
fever ?
DEAR READER
Rheuma tic fever is a complica tion of a strevtococcai
infection. A person usually
lms ~o many sore throats in
his lifetime that it is almost
impossible lo be sure one
wasn't causea by strep.
The strep Infection can and
usually does occur during
chiidhood.ll may be mild and
~o unnullced or more severe.
HhL'lllllitlie frvt•r llliiY rullow
~s ~ ~

t · uuJpti~

••i••lll

11 ,. ,,

also be mild u1 &gt;ntrt,
~

associated with immediate
involvement of the heart and
even red, hOt, swollen joints.
If it is mild it may go unnoticed and run Its course
without anyone knowing the
child is sick.
Even if the . attack was
mild, It may Involve the heart
and slowly over the years
cause changes in one or more
of the heart valves. The
damaged heart valve may
continue to show progressive
changes years later and
finally be so defective that
surgery becomes advlsable In
some cases.
The doctor can gel a pretty
good Idea from the looks of
the valve and studies with a
microscope what cause tlie
the vlilve damage.
Given these circwnstanca,
It is not uncommon for 1111
adult to have heart valve
damage from rheumatic
fever and still have no clear
histlry nl any rhewnatlc
ftver In previous years.

graduated from high school.
there. He earned a bachelor's
de gree in business ad- ·
ministration and economics
from Wittenberg University
in 1951 , and completed two
m~nagement courses at the
University of Michigan.
He was in the Army during
1952 and 1953, serving with
the 4th Infa ntry Division in
Germany.
l.euby is a direc tor of the
Newark Area Chamber of
Commerce and has spoken to
many groups.
He and his wife, Ruth, have
two children. Now living at
558 WiUrich Dr., Newark, a
move to the Portsmouth area
is anticipated.

RIVERSIDE STUDY Club,
Tuesday at I p.m. Mrs.
Claude Shahan, hostess, 918
Fourth Ave. White elephant
gift exchange .
HARRISONVILLE Senior
Citizens will have a Christmas potluck supper and gill
exchange Tuesday at 6 p. m.
at
the
HarrisonviHe
Elemen tary School. Birthdays will also be observed .
RIVERVIEW Garden Club
Christmas Party Tuesday,
Dec. t6 , at 7:30p. m. at the
home of Mrs . · Ernest
Whitehead.
XI
GAMMA
MU
SORORITY Christmas party
and exchange Tuesday at
7:30p.m. at home of Debbie
Finlaw. All gifts must be
wrapped In white paper with
a red bow.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Hospital Woman 's Auxiliary
6:30 Tuesday holiday covered
dish dinner and gift excl)ange, hospital cafeteria.
GROUP
II,
United
Presbyterian Church ol
Middleport , 7:30 Tuesday at
the home of Mrs. Myron
Miller with Mrs. William
Morris, co-hosless. Mrs.
Francis Anderson to have
devotions; Mrs. Harry
Moore, the program. Thank
offering to be turned in. $2.50
gift exchange .
WEDNESDAY
SILVER Circle Senior
Citizens Christmas party in
the old Rutland Bank
building, Wednesday, I to
3:30 p.m., with punch ,
cookies and coffee to be
served throughout the afternoon. Everyone welcome .

,\

j

hi

W. A. LEU BY JR.

planned at Rio

BOWLING
Early Wednesday Mhled
Dec. J, 1975
Zides Sports Shop

Oilers

~our

76
62
60
se
s2
52

Smith Nelson Motors
Youngs Super Mkt .
,Tenth Framers
Nelson Drug Co
High inct lvlduat game
Lllrry Dugan 233 , Pat Carson
S4J ; second high individual

game -:

Larry. Dugan 209,

Belly Smith 529 ; third high
Individual game Larrv
Dugan 205, Isabelle Couch ,
Carolyn Bachner ·47-1 .
High series - Larry Dugan
64 7. Pat Carson 211 ; second
h igh series - A. L. Phelps Jr .
S6() , Be tty S mith 191; third
high series - Bill Porter 55A ,
Belty Smith 185.
Team high game -- Oi l er's
Foi.Jr 699 : team high ser ies
Zldes Spor t Shpp 2, 025 .

POMER·OY LANES
Oec. 4,1915

Enfy Tt)unday Mixed
The Dragons
The Little One s

scooby ooo •s
Team No . 4
Hill Bil ly Bears

64 48
64 48

60 52
Sl 61
54 58

Jacks Club
45 67
High (women ) indiv idual
game -- Donna Mc F arland
114, Wanda Cross 159, Myr!lc
Norman ISS ; high (men )
Individual game -·· Jr Ph el ps
199, Bob Bowen 18().
Women 's high series 04j)nna
McFarland
464 ,
Wanda Cross 455, N!yrtle
Norman 4J4 ; men 's high
. !erles -· Jr Phelps 526, Moses .
Norman 5()1, Mike L illie 487 .
Team high game - The
Dragons 779 ; team high
series -- The Dragons 2. 187.

in lig

first at 4:10 to 6:10p.m. on
Tuesday, the second at the
same hour on Thursday.
Due to space limitations a
maxlmwn of 15 stridents is all
that can bl! accepted into
most of the art courses. The
courses will be given on a
first come, first serve basis.

Tile Daiij sentinel
DEVOT~O

TO THE
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
E~tc. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH
· Published
City Editor
dolly eMCept
I Sa(urdoy by The Ohio Volley
· Publishing company, Ill
Court st., Pom eroy; Ohio
45769. Business' Office Phone
992·2156. ~dltortal Phone 992·
21s1.
at s~~~:rg!~s~HfJ~~taoe paid
Nat ional adv ertising ·
representativ e
Ward '·
Grlftllh Company , Inc .,
Bottlnelll &amp; GallaOhfr Olv ,
· 157
Third Ave., New York,
N.Y. 10011 .
Subscription roles :
Delivered by carrier where
1 available IS cenls per week .
. By Motor Route wnere
: carrier , service
not
aval)oble. One month IJ 25
Bv ma ll in Ohio and W. Va .: ,
One Year. 122.00 : Six
months, SIJ .SO : Ttlree
· months , 11.00 . Elsewhere
' 126.00 year : Six mon ths /
'it3.SOc three months 17 so
~ubscrl ption price \~eludes
~unday Times .senH nel.
l
INT~RESTOF

I

A Christmas Tale by D. Floreck and D. Baur

kNOW YOU'RE SAFE, "CI-lUCKL.ED
SANTA,' 'IOU ,PENNY, AND YOU,
P£TER,ARE GOING lOBE MY VERY

5PI:CIA.!::_ i-ELPER5 1H ~ ORI5TMA5

RIO GRANDE -,- Rio
Grande College-Rio Grande
~ommunity College is offering 10 art classes the
upcoming winter quarter.
Registration for these and
other winter quarter courses
can be completed Monday,
Jan. 5, and Tuesday, Jan . 6,
from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. at the
college. The courses :
Crocheting, 6:30 to 8:30
p.m. Wednesday, and Patchwor k from 8:40 to 10:40 p.m.
Wednesday.
Tw 0 ph0 t ography courses,
'to
i Photograp hY(rom,.
Ba sc
5' p.m. Tuesday and Intermediate Photography
from 6 30 to 10 30
:
: p.m.
Tuesday. ·
Two ceramics courses,
Basic Ceramics, 1 to 5 p.m:
')'hursday and lntennediate
•• t 0 10 :30 p.m.
Ce ram i CS 6:,.,
hursday
T
·
t
'I·
Penc1 Sketchmg, 6:30 0
8·30 p m Tuesday.
·'
• •
Relief Printing 1:50 to 4:50
p.m. on Tuesd ay.
IntermediateWaterColors,
10:20 a.m. to 12:20 p.m.
Tuesday.
Two sections of the Princlples of Art Education, the

THE. Bl&amp; I OLD I FANCY

K~Y

FOR, SANTA'?" ASKED PENNY.
''WELL, I'LL TELL. YOU/SAID
SANTA.~5AY,PE1ER,I=Itt.Y ATTENTIOt-.1 .;'

. '

:

OOICE CENTER CUT

CHUCK ROAS.T

OHIO ETA Phi Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, gift
exchange party Tuesday,
6:30 p.m. at the home or
Debbi Buck, Pomeroy.

Ten art courses

,"..,~~:...-;;-:,.;;-~;:AT:;:-:~-::;;;:-;;;ER;;-;A:-:'N:;:O~OA~O;:;--,
By Lawreoee E. Lamb, M.D. with relatively mild headDEAR DR. LAMB - In aches, which can be relieved
your column not too long ago with aspirin and are often
you wrote to a woman whose intermittent.
son thought he could have ~
That shouldn't be too
brain tumor because of his surprising since you can have
headaches.
a brain tumor without any
Don't recall just how you headache at all. Tumors in ·
worded It, but the way I r~ad the front of the brain mjly
it you gave the impression cause no symptoms at first
that a brain tumor wasn't all other than a change in perthat painful. When did you sonality.
have one, doctor? I happen to
The symptoms of brain
have one and can tell you that tumor are highly variable
it is the worst pain one can and depend entirely on their
imagine. My head hurts so location and size.
that 1 get an upset stomach.
!_hope you do well now that
DEAR READER - You J'UUr surgery is over, which
misinterpreted my com- you mentioned in the rest of
ments. The point was not that your letler.
headaches !rom brain tumors
Readers who want inare not very painful. The formation on headaches can
point was thai you can have a send in SO cents for The
brain tumor with a headache Health Leiter, number 2-9,
th:11 is not very painful.
· Headache : Man:s Mosl
Mos t pe~.ple lhink all brain Common Pain, with a long,
twnurs crc•le severe head- stamped, self-addressed
aches. and indeed they can, mvelope for mailing. Adas in your case. But, most dres.~your letter to Dr. Ma,b.
people don't realize th:ot sume in care( ~ this newspaper, 1'.
bfuin tumors are associated

shown on a large screen . He
wiU be singing the accounts of
Jesus giving Ihe promises .of
his second coming, the
promise of the Holy Spirit,
and promises 1given to the
faithful followers of Jesus.
· McNutt recently received a
Freedom Foundation Award
for his patriotic concert from
the foundation at Valley
Forge, Pa. Recently he
presented Lhe concert In
Constitution
Hall
in
PAUL McNUTI'
Washington, D. C. where the
U. S. Navy Band played the
prelude and was then accompanied by Ruby Atwood, famous as the pianist on the
Old Fashioned Revival Hour .
DW'ing the past five years,
McNutt has been on the
to 135, Stock Cows and Calves
concert circuit, travelin g
125 to 250, Stock Bulls 90 to
across whe nation each year .
210, Baby Calves 5to 30; !By
He received his AB Degree in
the Pound 1 Canners &amp; Cutlers Cows 14 to 18, Holstein music. He studied at Cornish
Conservatory in Seattle,
Cows 17.50 to 23.50, tommercia! Bulls 21 to 28 ( 1,000 Wash., and was in the arined
forces during World War II
ibs. and over).
and the Korean War. He has
logged over 3600 hours of
flying time.
There will be no charge for
Wednesday 's concert but a
free will offering will be
taken. The public is invited.

Leuby ·in for Carlini
as division manager

that gives matching federal fiuence elections.
The latest campaign statemoney only to Democratic
and Republican contenders. ments filed by four of the 10
The U.S. Court of Appeals Democratic contenders for the District of Columbia former Gov. Jimmy Carter of
last August unanimously Georgia, former Sen•. Fred
upheld the constitutionally of Harris of Oklahoma, former
the law, saying the need for Gov. Terry Sanford of North
election reform was greater Carolina and Rep. Morris ' PORTSMOUTH - William
than any possible con. Udall of Arizona - showed aU A. Leuby, Jr., has been ·
stitutional loss of rights. It four were COWitlng heavily on named Ohio Power Co.'s
Division
said thai by Umiting cam- the rna tchin~ lunda. The Portsmouth
paign contributions by lhe statements showed the four manager, according to Frank
wealthy, all voters would campaigns either in debt, or N. Bien , the company's
executive vice president.
have an equal rh•n..,. to In- ·just breaking even.
1.euby will succeed C. 0 .
Carlini, who on jan. I will
become Charleston tW. Va.)
Division manager for Ohio
Power's sister firm, Ap·
paiachian Power Co. Both
before adjournment ofa joint South Africa in ~ola "we companies. are members of
congressional resolution to will lose all of Africa In the the American Electric Power
bar U,s. involvement in process."
System.
Angola.
He said African nations do
The new Portsmouth
The Senate drive against not like Soviet ·Intervention, Division manager. t'Urrenlly
U.S. intervention is being led which the United States is is
customer
services
by Sens. John v·. TuMey. !). trying to balance with manager
for
Newark
Calif., Dick Clark, .!).Iowa, military aid, but added "they
Alan Cranaton, D-Callf., and like South African inChurch, and it is backed by tervention less."
GUU.l'Y I'Lt:A
Mansfield.
"We don't belong in
CINCINNATI CUP!) _ An
In a round of Senate Angola," Church said. "We . official of the 10,IJOO.rnember
speeches, the liberals should not start there a Teamsters Union Local 100
criticized the administration confla~~alion that is open- pleaded guilty Monday to
lor allegedly pw'aulng the ended.
extorting . ·u,soo from a
same course which led to the
Church added thai both Cincinnati company · that
Vietnam war,lor keeping the sides were using the two deals In gems and minerals.
program secret except for a· superpowers and added "the
James R. McNichOlas, 44,
few members of Congress, wmner wlll be Angolan. CincirinaU, a business agent
and for . allying the United These young Afric'!" COWl· for the Cincinnati-based
States with white South tries will not be dominated local, entered the guilty plea
Africa.
for lo.ng, and ce.~tainiy not by In u.s. District Court here.
Tunney said that by a wh1le power.
Hecouldbesentencedupto
fighting side-by-side wlt.h
20 years in prison or .fined
SlO,OOO, or both.
McNicholas waa arrested
by the FBI Iaiii Ocl. 29 and
acculed of extorting money
from an officer of the Con·
WASHINGTON !Ufl) - power at cOilllruction sites. tlnental Mineral Processing
Sen. Jolm Glenn, ~o. Co. in exchange for ending
Sen. John Glenn, O.Ohio,
joined 55 other Democrats and 18 other Democrats voted labor problema at the company.
and Sen. Robert Tan Jr., R· agail!'t the bill.
.::.::""!'
Ohio, voted with 16 other
Republicans.
WASHINGTON (UPI) Republicans Monday in
Oble, 8 Democrats, 15
helping the Senate, by a 73-19 Ohio delegation balloting in Republlcaas
·
wte, extend 1975's taK cuts the vote by which the House,
Democrats for: Ashley,
for another siK months. , on a :m-130 roll call, Monday Carney, Hays, Seiberling,
passed and sent to the SeMte
James Stanton, Stokes,
WASHINGTON (UPI)
an apprcprilltiona bill that Vanill.
Sen. Robert Tall Jr., R.Ohio, inCluded $2.3b11Uoo in 8ld for
Democrals against: Mottl.
joined 10 other Republicans New York City:
Republicans for: Brown, J .
In helping the Senate give
Voting for were 215 DemoWilliam Stanton, Whalen,
final congressional approval . crats and 80 Republicana.
Wylie.
Monday to leglslaU011 exVoting agabllt wen 51
Republican&amp; agalnal: Aahpandlng union picketing Democrats
and
79
broolt., Clancy, Devine,
Gradison, Guyer, Harsha,
Kindness, Latta, Miller,

Liberals act to cut off Angolan aid
By STEVE GERSTEL
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Stunned that the United
States has secretly supplied
arms 10 anti-Communist
factions in Angola, Senate
liberals are seeking to
quickly cut off any miUtary
aid to the strife-torn African
nation.
Sen. Frank Church, Dldaho, called the administration program "the
VIetnam aytllru'ne aU over
again." Senate Democratic
leader Mike Mansfield added,
"We do not want another
United States involvement as
In Vietnam."
Reacting swiftly to reports
that $25 million in arms aid
has already been sent to

I

song, pictures commg

is nation's hidden mother lode
The

,

U. S. Government Inspected

SOCIAL SECURITY
representative to be at the
Senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy, Wednesday , 9:30
a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
PAST
Pr esi d e nt s,
American Legion Auxiliary
of Drew Webster Post 39,7:30
- p.m. Wednesday al the home
of Mrs. Carrie Neutzling : gift
exchange.
WILDWOOD Garden Club,
Christmas dinner party at
' 6:30p.m. Wednesday at the
. home of Mrs . Kelly Grueser
; with Mrs. Don Grueser and
Mrs. Stacey Arnold , col hostesses. $2 gill uchange.
' MINERSVILLE United
! Methodist Women, Christmas
: dinner, at the Steamboat Inn,
• 6 p.m.
•
THURSDAY
: 'MIDDLEPORT Child
• Conservation League, 7:30
:j p.m. Thur~day at the home of
, Mrs. Harold Blackston.
: Christll)as party ~th gift
. : exchange. Each member to
: • take homemade Christmas
,' tree ornament.
l CUB SCOUT Pack 242,
'' Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the
Syracuse Elementary School.
SPECIAL Meeting ,
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM,
7:30p.m. Thursday with work
in Master Mason Degree. Ail
Master Masons invited.
CHRISTMAS Dinner of
Twin City Shrlnettes, 7:30
p.m. Thursday, at Meigs Inn.
Ail members invited.

USDA

BONELESS

CHOICE

Chuck Roast
lb.

. '109

lb.

. ......................
Fresh Lean
lb 7~
Ground
Beef
.
..
Fresh L•an
lb g~
Ground Chuck •••••••••••••••••••
;J
Fresh Lean
lb. $109
Ground Round ••••••••••••••••••
USDA Choice
lb. 89~
Beef Short R'lbS ••••••••••••••••
&amp;

&amp;

Grade 'B'

EGGS

&amp;

doz. 79~

A Christmas Tale by D. Floreck and D. Baur
''.,.WHEREVER THEI?E ARE CI-IILDREN
VMO BELIEVE II';J 5ANTA Cl.AI.Je&gt; ! COME!
LET SOME 01= 1l-!e. MAGIC. RUB 0~1= ON
'YOUR I=LIPPERS VOUNOSTE~ ! II

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lb. s~

USDA Choice
Arm Roast ••••••••••••••••••••••••••
~

2% MILK

usoA choice
tb 9f
Engll'sh Roast ••••••••••••••••••••••••
Superiors
lb. age
Poi.ISh Sausage ..............•..••.•.
'

Superiors All Meat
By The Piece
lb.
Bologna ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
8

1

SATURDAY DNl Y

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PIE CREAM SHORTENING

.

BROUGHTON'S

2% MILK
BROUGHTON'S " LAFAYETTE"

9!r

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HI-HO

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1~b.

CRACKERS

box

59~

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PIE SHELLS
2pak

1·

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FROZEN FOOD SPECIALS

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42

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:t-~~•fl•IS•b• .L'!,.. .~t..-.a.-c,.'t

PET RITZ

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·Top Quality
Quart

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FAVO·RfFE-IB · EAD······•··········· 2 ~0~·· 59~
° '139
SWIFTN I NG·····················~·····~···~~.
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KEEBL,ER COOKIES .•·•..~ •••••.••-... ~:::k:~ 79~
SWIFT'S BEEF STEW•..•••••.•••••••••• ~:;:. 79~
PRINGLES POTATO CHIPS .••• :l::. '1 1'

VALLEY BELL

DUNCAN HINES

COKE

39C

.. .... ,.."!NN ......................~C..aCJ.- .C...I

CAKE MIX
Instant Creamer

16 oz. bots.

RICH'S FROZEN

BREAD

COFFEE-MATE

box

59~

2~ oz. $}49
Jar

•

~ ·

2~pkg.59e
.;;..!&gt;iO-lf&lt;&gt;l.l!iia---·--"'"·""'"""""'""'""'--~.

HARRIS FROZEN

PUMPKIN PIES
large pie

MIRAa.E WHIP

79 e

SALAD DRESSING
QfOCK FULL of NUTS

SCOT LAD

ORANGE JUICE
16 oz. can

~~z. 79~

INSTANT COFFEE

ste

SCOT LAD

7-UP
and

FROSTIE
ROOT BEER

COLA
16 oz.

64 oz.

B

Throw- Away
Jug

bots
pak

79~

PAPER TOWELS
CARNATION'S

MIGHTY DOG

Beef &amp; Liver
Chef Style

STRONG HEART

DOG FOOD ·

All WEEI&lt; LON

251b.
bag

$399

PRODUCE BUY

Sale! Unclassified
'

POTATOES

WREATHS

'2"

N. !lecond St.
Middleport, Ohio

~

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FRESH GREEN

From

•

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CHRISTMAS
GREENERY
FOR THE
HOME

USDA CHOICE

20 lb.
Dad's R.oot Beer Diet Rite Cola
8 pall 1.19 6~~osll
·8

bag

.49

SUPER MARKET • Open Dai~ 9 to 10
Sun. 10 to 10
Jrle Accept Federal Fuud Stamps
PHONE 9~2-3480
Corner Mill and ·Second Sts.

we reserve the right to limit quantities. MIDDLEPORT, 0.

�5-- The Daily Sentinel, Mllt.llq&gt;~ri -Pum enoy, 0 .. 'l'm•sday. lio•o· Ih. 1!17;,

4- The Daily Scntilll'l, Midtlleport-Poom•roy, 0 , 'i)lesda) . llt c II .. 1· 1';!,

-: Swick, Suggs tops in MAC
COLUMBUS t UP ! I
Toledo quart erbac k Gene
"i·" Swick and Ball State cor,; ;, nerback Shafer Sug~s have
' ,., been voted the MidAmerican
:,; Conference players of the
· • year.
~·~

Coach of the year honors

went to Ball State's Dave
..-.' McClain, who !,'U ided the
1
" " Cardinals to a s urprisin~

third pb1ct' tit• m tht' ('OO-

fert'n&lt;·e and an ovl'rall 9-2
re&lt;·ord. Ball State hart l.oo•rn
picked to fi nish last in the
nine-tea m r~c~ .
It was the seeond strat ght

vear that Sw ick, the Rockets'
G-1, 188-powtct senior signal
&lt;'a ller. has been st•lected the
conference's top offensive
performer .

Swick, llll' nwnt•r of C\' 1'1')'
Mi\ C c·tu·t•cr ;md !' in~l c
st•astJn . total off ense and

tnlal nff&lt;'n SL' mark , rirn shm,;

f'!l rll f' "

,,,,,,

:;:!:· curto never had any doubt
,. ,.,

· ~: ·, he

could play Big 10 ball

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COL!JM BUS t UP I)
...! ·

There was never any doubt in

C

Pat Curto's mind , all he had
to do wa s convince his
coacl)es.
Curto, starling boundary
side defensive end for No. I
ranked Ohio Stale, always
fell he could play ·Big Ten
football, but it took him three
years to prove it.
The first lhree years, he
played behind three-year
regular Jim Cope with much
of his game action limited to
lhe special teams.
" It was a long wail and at
times It got a little difficult,"
.said the articulate 6-2, 226pound English major, who
was the leading vote getter on
lhis year's Big Ten Ali·

.,'
(
1

;'

'
I

\

•

1'

Academic Tea m.
"But, looking back and
including thi s year," he
added, "I'd say it was worth
it. I've lettered three times
and gone to four Rose
Bowls."
Curto, who was the slate
!~-pound wrestling champion his senior year at
Groveport Madison High
School In suburban Columbus, had numerous offers
when he graduated and
nearly
selected
Ohio
Univ ersity of the Mid·
American Conference.
"They tDU ) told me I had a
good chance to start as a
freshman," he relates. "I felt
I could either be a big fish in a
little pond or a big fish in a
big pond," he said. "Here, it
just takes you a little lon2Pr

to grow."

Curto would like a shot a
Another factor in Curto's pro ball, but like all the
decision was thai he had Buckeyes, a win over UCLA
grown up in the area and it and the nation al cham was "what my father wan- pionship is foremost on his
ted. "
mind. Curto, who will be one of
"This has been a good year
eight Buckeye senior s all around and I'm just glad
playing in a fow-th straight we have an opportunity to win
Rose Bowl Jan. 1 against the national championship,"
UCLA, was a second team all· he sa id.
Big Ten pick besides being on
" If I get the opportunity,
the allacademic team.
I'd like to give it (pro ball) a
"I was really surprised try," he said, but right now
about the all-academic," he I'm just thinking about that
said. "I knew I had a good ltnal game. I want to win the
chance to make it, but being Rose Bowl and then I'll worry
the leading voter."
about the NFL draft.
As far as the all-Big Ten
"I think l'rn good enough to ·
selection, he said, "I was play pro ball if I get the
happy with \hat, but not too chance," he said, ''just like I
concerned. I was just glad to thought I was good enough to
be starting and doing a good play here ."
job. It was icinP nn thr&gt; rakP "
11

Namath benched. for violation
SAN DIEGO fVPI) - Joe
Namath
seemed
embarrassed by it all.
Before the Nelf York Jets'
Monday night national televl·
slon game with the San Diego
Chargers, Jets' Interim head
coach Ken Shipp disclosed his

.•
'

: .•

celebrated quart erback
would start the game on the
bench because ol a curfew
violation.
"I was damn near si~k at
the annowocement," Namath
said. "It was no one's fa ult
but my own .

15,000 on hand for
By RICK VAN SANT
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - A
'li"J near capacity Riverfront
if;r Coliseum crowd of about
.~ 16,000 persons received Olga
Korbul and \he rest of her
;£- touring Russian National
··~ Gymnastics team with
~ thunderous applause and
"' standing ovations Monday
night.
~
Miss Korbut, the darUng of
the 1972 Olympic Games, and
her 20-member entourage
~·': dauled the throng wllh a two;t' · how- exhibition of vaulting,
:t#. tu111bling, acrobatics and
~ breath-taking stunts on the
parallel and horizontal bars.
The young Russian men
l'!! and women , sev~ral ~f them
:".(1 Olymmplc gold medalists,
~ displayed an unusual com.
8; binalion of strength and
-,;. grace.
-"·
The Soviets are winding up
a tour that began earlier this
~~.. month in New York City.
~- They stopped in Atlanta
Wednesday night and con·

elude the American visit in
Washington, D.C.
The heaviest applause here
went to Miss Korbut and two
men becoming known to
American audiences as "the
Valadimer's" -an acrobatic
team !hat began their
routines like ballet dancers
and finished like circus
strong men- performing
graceful movements one
perched atop the other.
.
Even the "warm-up" that
got Ute evening started soon
became an elaborate affair
as Olga and ' her friends
turned their back-bending
and legtwlsting exercises into
a "follow the leader" dance
to piano music that Included
the Beatles · tune "Yesterday ."
Miss Korbut , 20, was
quoted in Moscow just before
coming to America as saying
she was growing tired of
gymnastics and longed to '
become an actress.
Indeed, she seemed to
enjoy
mugging
for
photographers and the crowd
tw
just as much as perfonnlng
· · on the balance beam and
· uneven bars.
"What a s h o w g i r I!"
~S£,
~
· screamed the public address
~
DECORATION;) , . announcer as Olga puckered
For
' ' an applause-bringing smile
.,.,
QIRISTMASFrom ' alter taking a slight fall on
1
,p .
. Pot ,
· her dismoun t from the
otnseHta
s 4 •98 • balance beam.
~ · Poinset1ia
Bastcets~ During Intermission when
· ·
'11.95
. several of the Russia~ came
•Poinsettia Monument , back out to practice their ·
'f.&amp; .Markers •11.95
routines. hundreds of young~ ·~
sters left their seats and
~ crowded about the magnetic
· ~,..,
"-''~"
Miss Korbut trying to gel as
close to her as the security
d St
· police would allow.
59 N Se
•
. ' con
'
· Introduced simply as "the
.
'!ddlepo_rt ' ..
most beloved gymnast In the
'
~ -world," little Olga opened the

''I let the team down. ll
could have cost us the game. I
didn 'l feel good standing on
the sidelines."
In the game between two
AFC cellar dwellers, the
Chargers won, 24-16, and at
least one Charger felt that a
full~ime Namalh might ha ve
made the difference.
"Namath is super," said
offensive lineman Doug
Wilkerson. "You ,could see
the Jets change when he
came out. If they had had
Namath In from the start, it

IJ:';

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Mon .• Tues., Wed . &amp; Sat.-t :30ti15:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

FRIIMY UNnL 8 PM

MASON FURNITURE
773-5.592

Herm1n Orate

Mason. W. Va.

second hall of the show by
herself, batbed in a blue
spotlight as she breezed
through a set on lhe uneven
bars.
Several other women ex·
celled In a relatively new
event called "modem rhythmic gymnastics," a lreewheellng floor exercise in
which \he gymnast uses a
single prop such as a ball or a
whoop, to 'accent her
movements.
One lithe yowog lady sailed
through a routine by tossing
and spinning a rubber ball
with skills that would make
most male
American
basketball players enviotJs.
The ... exhibition
was
climaxed by five men trying
to to outdo each other tn
flying , twisting dismounts
ri-om th~ horizontal bar. Each
whirled 360 degrees arowod
lhe bar several times, then
loosened hi s 'grip and
somersaulted to a landing.
Four of \he five made double
backward somersaults. The
other did a triple.

might have made a big difference."
Maybe yes. Maybe no.·The
score was 14-3 at halftime.
"Joe was out after curlew," explained Shipp, who
said he consulted Jets' owner
Philip Iselin before taking his
action against Namath.
ln addition to being held out
wotil midway through the
second quarter, Namath was
lined. "I won't say how
much ," Shipp added . "Different coaches have different
fin es.' '
Namalh said, "I was ~
minutes late. I got hung up
talking to some friends from
back home."
Fresh from receiving a
vole of confidence from
Chargers' owner Gene Klein ,
Tommy Prothro watched his
team win its second straight
game after II consecutive
defeats.
John Riggins, the Jets'
standout. five-year running
back, picked up 75 yards, but
in 25 carries. He moved to
- within 57 yards ol becoming
the first Jet rusher to gain
i,OOO yards in one season.
Meanwhile, Rickey Young
gained more th an 100 yards
on lhe gromd for the second
consecutive game, carrying
21 times for 111 yards. Both
Young and Riggins scored
touchdowns.
"Rickey played very well,"
said a pleased Prothro. "He
blocked well and he ran
well."
San Diego quarterback Dan
Fouts suffered a concussion
in the third quarter and was
replaced by Jesse Freitas,
who directed the Chargers to
10 fourth-period points.

varsity letters.
llulh Su ~gs, who is passing
up lmsketba ll this season, and
Sw ick will play m the EastWest Shrine Game in San
Francisco Jan ~ and the
Senioo· Bowl .Jan . 11 at
Mobtlc, Ala .
Suggs ou tpull ed Ohio
University middle guard Rod
Day 21-jj in the defenstve
pl ayer ba llotmg, while
Mta[llt 's Sherman Smith was
a distant second to Swick with
41-- votes.
McC1ain, who is 29-20-3 in
five years at Ball Slate, is a ·
1960 graduate of Bowhng
Green. Prior to taking the
Ball State job, he was an
assistant at BG . Cornell,
Miami, Kansas and Ohio
State .
McClain rece ived 37 voles
from the MAC News Media
Association members who
did the voting to 16 lor Dick
Crum of league champion
Miami.

Snyder named
manager at

Indianapolis
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Jim
Snyder, 43, a manager in the
Cincinnati organization for 10
years, has been named to
direct Indianapolis of the .
·Class
AAA America n
Association, the Reds' lop
farm club.
A Cincinnati spokesman
also annowoced Monday that
Roy Majtyka, 36, will replace
Snyder as manager of the
Reds' Class AA learn al
Three Rivers of the Eastern
League .
After spending the last five
years with the Canadian
learn, Snyder replaces Vern
Rapp, who resigned tbe In·
dianapolis position last week
to manage lhe. American
Association's Denver team.
A former infielder whose
playing career began in 1959,
Majtyka has managed in the
St. !Allis farm system the
past eight years and directed
Arkansas of the Texas
League in 1975. He spent his ·
entire playing career in the
St. !Auis farm system.

Fritz named executive

secretary

of NAIA

KANSAS CITY, Mo. iUPil
- Dr. Harry G. fritz, dean of
the school of health education
at the State Uni~erstly of
New York at Buffalo, Monday
was named executive
secretary of the National
Association of Intercollegiate
Athletics.
Fritz assumes his duties
April · 12, succeedi'1 A.0 .
Duer, who retired July 31
after 26 years as administrative head of the
NAIA.
The 11-member llXecutlve
committee of the NAJA, to
which 523 schools belong,
chose fritz . The interim
secretary has been Dr.
Robert C. Livingston of the
Oregon College of Education,
the NAIA president.
Fritz coached football at
Centr8 1 Missouri State
Unlversity and basketball at
Brrnidji t Minn .) SIHIC
University, und wns athletit·
director at W~\ern Illinois

ml'ltiHJSI lo twhdo wn

his fom· ycnrs wilh 8,074' [)(ISSC!i .
Sug~s. d li-2. 1%-puundcr
~'ard !-i flfHI set 1he national
fru111
J-:lkhiirl , Ind., owns the
rct·ord fur must ufft~nsiw
1\:-dl
Slatt•
n·(·urd for l'&lt;-lreer
plays.
ml
el&lt;:l'
pli
un
~. 14. Ht· t.s also
Swick · also holds car e~r
the
first
H111l
Slat e playt&gt;r in
confercm·c marks for most
the
lrrst
17
years
to earn four
lou (·hrlnwns respons1blf~ for ,

passing record . was the UP!
fir st tea m All -A merican
quarterbat· k. He received
52 1.. votes out of a possible 60.
Swick, lrotn Hebron fllkt•wood Htgh School, broke nooSl pass uttempts, most
form er Heisonan Tr ophy completion s, most yards
wmner ,lin1 Plnnkr tt' c:

pa ss 1n1~

University before going to
Buffalo. He was educated at
Transylvania (Ky.) College,
the University of Kentucky
and Indiana University.

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Hoosiers are

:I

·still No. -1
NEW YORK t UP! 1 College basketball appears to
be having a resurgence in the
East.
Critics who have bee n
putting dow n Eastern
basketball the last several
years had better lake a hard
look at. Both Rutgers and St.
John's IN.Y.] currently spor(
IHJ records and are beginning
to gain recognition for their
talents from coaches across
the nation.
Rutgers, which thus far has
lived up to its preseason
bilUng ~s one of t!]e nation's
best teams, movj!d up three
spaces to No. 14'lhis week in
the United Press In lernational's Board of
Coaches ratings, while St.
John's cracked the top 20 for
the first time in the No. 17
spot. The Redmeo upset
nationally..-anked Tennessee
and also won the Cougar
Classic at Brigham Young
University to reach the select
circle.
"All I've ever read is that
Eastern basketball is dead,"
says St. John's coach Lou
Carnesecca. "It's gotten to
the point where I have to
check my players' pulses.·
But you go\ to give them
credit. for a bunch of corp·
ses, they're doing a hell of a
job."
Brigham Young coach,
Frank Arnold, was awed by
the Redmen 's smooth style of
play,
"We got a lesson on how to
play the game," said Arnold.
There was a big shakeup
among the top 10 In this
week's ratings, although the
first five reinained intact
from a week ago.
Indiana, which received all
41 first place votes, remained
in first place with 410 points

:I
:.

N Cl I 1 o , a I Footb.lll Lea gue
Stand ings
Bv Un1lcd Pre!.s lnl c-rnahon &lt;ll
Amer ICiln Con ferenc e
Ea!.l
W L T Pet
£'1,111imora
0 .j 0 6fJ')
Miilm i
9 ·10691
Bu lf il iO
8 5 0 o'J ~ ~
New Engl c.nd
3 10 0 73 I
N Y Jr tS
J 10 0 ] J 1
Cl• ntra l
W L T Pet
x Pil lsburQh
11
I 0 9'}3
Ci ncinnnh·
10 3 0 769
Houston
y
-1 D 691
Clcvc l.1nd
J 10 0 ]1 1
W es t
W L T Pet.
K Oulo.land
10 J o 769
Denv er
6 7 0 ..t6i
K 11n sas City
S 8 0 .3H5
San Dr cgo
1 11
0 JS.I
Nilhona l Co11f crenc c

and Marquette was No. 2 slot
with 324 points. Maryland
was third with 297 points,
North Carolina fourth with
259 and UCLA fifth with ZIJ4.
Notre Dame, which g;ve
Indiana a scare before losing,
6;J.jj0, won two other games
/ during the week and advanced two spots to No. 6.
Alabama won iL~ only game
and moved up three places to
No. 7, while Louisville, the
East
No. 7 learn a week ago,
W L T Pet.
droppfd all the way to 15th K St Louis
10 3 0 769
9 4 0 692
alter being upset by DePaul y Dall as
Washi ngton
8 s 0 667
Saturday night.
N Y Grant s
.t 9 0 308
3 10 0 '}J J
Nevada-Las Vegas also Phi ladelphra
Central
made a big advance, moving
W L T Pet.
up three places to No. 8, and x Mrnnesota
0 8·16
11
'
Dc tro1 1
7 6 o 138
Cincinnati climbed two spots Gr
een Bay
J 10 0 '})I
3 10 0 23 1
to No. 9 arter defeating two Ch 1cago
Wes t
opponents. Tennessee, sixth a
W L T Pet.
week ago, dropwd to No. 10 x Los 1\ng c l c~ 11 ' 0 846
1 ran cisco
~
8 o m
following its 79-70 loss at St. Ascm
tlanta
4 9 0 JOB
John 's.
New Orleans
1 t t 0 154
Cl inched dr v 1S10 n I ri le
Six coaches from each of )(v Clinched
wild ca rd p l ~yo fl
se ven geogra phical areas spol
Monday '$ Res ult
comprise the UP! ratings San D1ego
2.1 N Y Je ts 16.
board. Each week they vote twiligh l
Saturday, Dec. 20
on the top 10 teams and points Minnesola
at Bultalo
are awarded on a 10.~7-9-5- Denv er ill I Miam i
n sburgh at
Los Angeles,
4-:i-2-t basis for votes from Pi
twilig h l
first through lOth .
Sunday, Dec 21
NEW YORK (U PI I
Th e
U nit e d Pr ess lnlc-rnationa l
Board of Coac hes top 20 co ii CQC
basket b all teams w i th fi rst
place votes and record s in
par ent hese s
I Second Wet'k l .

Team

POtntS

A ll an I a a! Green Bay
Chicago at New Or I eMs
Cl eveland at Houston
Dal las at N Y Je ts
New England al Baltrmor c
N Y G1an ts at San r r anctsco
Kansas Cily a t Oakl And
Philadelphia a t WaShington
St Louis al Detrott
San Diego at Crn cin nat 1

1 lndiana, (J ll (3 OJ
J IO
7 Marquelle (J OJ
324
3. Mar y lancl IS OJ
19J National Basketball A!.soc iat.on
4 North Ca r o l ina (J 01
759
By United s~~~:~~~~crnafional
S UCLA (2 I J
'104
6 Noire Dame I S I I
165
eas t ern ConfN encc
7 Alabama 14 Ol
85
Atlantic 01 vis1on
w L Pel GB
8. Nev ada L as Vegas (6 OJ
67
9 Cinci nnat i 16 Ol
55 BoSion
16 7 696
10. Ten nessee 13 l l
SO
~~:\!f;tphia
~lg
I I Washi ng ton (5 OJ
49
12. Mich igan 13 t l
47 New York
9 19 .11 1 9'
13 Norm caroli n a ~ l ate ( J OJ 45
Conlrat ~ i-~,;~~~ Go
14 Rutgers 16 OJ
.13
15. Lou i svil le ( J 11
39 A&gt; ian••
IJ ' 591
10
10. San F ranc isco (5 1l
J-1
'::;~~~~
"
::
::
17 S! John 's I N Y l 16 OJ
17
18 fl. r lzona St at e (5 Ol
13 Cle•e tand
11 •• "o 1'
19 fo.r 110na (!.I 31
9
New o:;:::,~~n c!nt~6rc~3c': 6
10 WIC h il a Stat e !J OJ
8

g ,l

'

lgg l

~

Midwesl Div ision
De~ro; 1
~ ~ 1 P~Jo GB
M;twa ukee
10 13 m t' .

ho p m g 1 0 r repeat~~k~agsoet'v
H
Gold en
0

Gregg

Pro

.~Standin(!s

1

~

::

;:;

k

Paci f i c •D1 visio n

J

w
11

pen.onnance at
ouston
"There was a great deal ol
BEREA, Ohio IUP! I forrest Gregg basked in the pressure on him and he got
lingering sunshine of one of careless with the ball as be
hls team 's best efforts got closer to the 1,000," Gregg
Monday, hoping to launch a said.
repeat performance against
Gregg viewed the Kansas
City
game as an ell8mple of
the Houston Oilers next
weekend.
the fruits of hard Ia~ .
The , Cleveland Browns
"The way we started we
coach was especially en- had a lot of rough going," tbe
thusiastic about Greg Pruitt's coach said. The Browns lost
attainment of 1,000 yards nine games before they won
rushing In Sunday's 4().!4 their firsllhis year.
"The team hwog together
victory over Ute Kansas City
Chiefs.
and finally received SQme
Pruitt ran for 214 yards and type of reward for their
three touchdowns to finish the toughness and ability to stay
day at 1,030 yards through 13 together," he added. ''They
games . Naturally, he played hard , tough footbalI
credited lhe offensive line the entire year. They haven't
with making It possible.
changed their attitude, nor
"A lo\ of people said they What they are."
Gregg also praised quarweren't good enough but we
stuck together," Pruitt said. terback Mike Phipps, who
"You've got to have that completed nd14 ol20 pashseds for .
experience and time playing 204 yards a one touc own,
wide receiver Regg ie
together.
The coach was not upset Rucker , who caught six
that Pruitt had trouble pa sses for 130 yards and tbe
•
boldtng onto the ball on three defense, wfiich held the
occaalons. He attributed the Chiefs scoreless until tbe
problem to the shadow of the final quarter,
l,OOO.yard barrier.

HOLIDAY

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'

tion standings
Bv u"" .. Press lnlernallonat
W l Pet. GB
oenYer
18 1 .781
New York
'' 6 700 '' ·
Sen 1\r'll onio
1.t 8 636 3' .
Indiana
15 9 625 J' ,
&lt;enluckv
13 1o S65 5
St Louis
II 16 407 9
Virginia
4 n tl&lt; t5',
Monday's Resuu
Denver T~~~.~~:-~n~.~~.
Ken luckv a1 New York
s an Antonio at St Lou is

Nat ional Hockey League SlandBy Un itod Pr~s~sonternationa t
Campbell Conteronce
Patrick D i~sit• T Pis
Phitad~lphta
19 ' 1
J5

~i~~:~an ders

:! ,; ;

l~

Kentucky drops thriller
ll y BOB WESTON
LOll lSV II.l.E. Ky

Wlm1t•vt• r Kt•nhwkv I"H'ki'd

in

fi ncs~t· iii~Hlmil lup~rankrd

Indian(! Mund(l y 111 gh t, 1he

Wtldeaos all hut madt' up fur
with an tnl cnsity rrtn ini ~.a·t· nt
of cuadt Adolph Rupp's
fa mous "1-'i ddlin' Five."
Ken tucky emne within
eight seconds ul upset ling the
Hoosiers in r~ g ulutl on time ,
only to lose 77-ll3 in overttnJC .
And in a dl'fea t that
lowered Kentucky's record to
an unimpr essive 2-3, coach
.Joe Hall saw much hope lor
the futu r•·

Krnl 1wky 1n lht: N!'AA

seori n~ honors
10 poinL•.
wtth
27
points
apiece lor
Multasl Hl' ~-:i o nal finul i!t
No. 5 UCLA beat San Diego
Dayton. Ohio
Indiana , now 4-1!. '11te 6-11 State, 101-86, as Ric hard
!li t ·y il r c capc1hh• uf &lt;loin~ :·
Mll'r Benson rebounde-d a Benso n also wound up with a Washington scoretl a cij reer
What they ' huw,.d 16.615 111 is!-il'd shut by AUernethy gilme~tigh 14 rebounds, but high 28 points lo lead the
frrmted fcm~ in p un ~p; u ·k(~d wtth eight seconds to play and he was et harsh critic of his Bruins and Ralph Drolli nger
Freedom ll all wos !hot the) pul 11 tn 1he basket to rescut own performa nce .'
also had his best scoring
WPrt' c t~pi:lbl.e of reflll t tng the , the Hoosiers from defea t in
" I wasn 'I satisfied with my night with 22. Long Beach
exhalt ed Hoos iers to the re~ula11on play, the rugged offensive movement inside Slate handed No. 19 Wichita
ste~l us ,Jf mere mortuls.
mlhratl carne back to ignite and I wasn't blocking out on Stale its first loss in three
Unltl Kent Benson, Tom ' m1 ci~hiJXIint sur.L(e in the rebounds the way I should," games, 5tl-55.
.\hcrolt'lhy and
Qui nn uv er time w1th two fr ee he satd .
ln other games, Manhattan
~·or Kent ucky, Jack Givens beat Hofstra, 89-83 ; Georgia
Buekner got it together lor throws .
Abcrnclhy thrn hot a short was high with 20 points and blasted Furman, 97-76;
Indiana in the overtim(', it
appeared there would be a jumper, followed by layups il!rry Johnson, scrambling Virginia Tech clobbered '
repeil t of the only defeat bv Buckner and Benson, and over the cow-l with fanatical Morehea d Stale, I 12-71;
suffered by th e mighty it was all over for Kentucky . hustle, ·added 16 points.
l AJyola 1Ill. ) edged Toledo,
Rick Robey , Kentucky 's 78-77; Weste rn Mi chig an
Benson and Scott May
Hoosiers last season- 92-!lO to
leading scorer entering the topped Detroll , 81-71, and
game, got into early foul Seattle defeated Utah Stale ,
trouble and had to settle lor 75-66.

I llunk tills ts lin· ti':tl

1 til' I 1

Bengals need win over Chargers
to make playoffs via wild card
CINCINNATI IUPI) - Despite last Saturday's loss lo
Pittsburgh, the Cmcinnati
Bengals are still favored to

make the playoffs voa the
"wild card " berth.
However, it is still remotely
possible.the Bengals could be

Oilers ready
for Browns
HOUSTON 1UP! )- Ftve of fa ns, Houston was paired this
the eight NFL teams headed · season m lhe Amencan foot.
for the playoffs could end the · b ~ll Con(erence, Cen tral
regular season· with four . D~voswn With Pittsburgh and
losses apiece.
Cmcmnat1. Those two
The Houston Oilers with a playoflbound learns have a
win against Cl ~vela nd com.W.ned 22~.4 record in·
Sunday, could also finish the
season with £our losses.
The Oilers 9-4 are not one

ol the five. ' '
Those fa cts enough to gall
arden t Hou~ton fans and
confuse persons not up on
their wild cards, do not upset
coach Bwn Phillips. He's
seen it all and lhen some.
Uke Su~day in Oakland's
Alameda Coliseum.
"ll had to be one of the
most exciting games I've
ever seen," said Phillips
Monday, with a good night 's
I be tween h'tm an d a 27""
seep
..,
~:~ ;;::d::~ the playoff"I've never had a team win
1 " he
one on the f'tna 1 pay,
said. "I thought the Miami
he
win was a great one. Butt
Oakland game was more so."
0 '1
(' h
d M k
I ers tg t en
ae
Alston said his two-yard
touchdown catch, made with
\he sound of the final gun
going off, was easy. Viewers
saw il otherwise.
The pass was poorly thrown
an d behind AIston, and he had
toreachbackanddowntog_et
hi s f.mger t Ips
'
on 1't • . Sk'tp
Butler's extra point then won
it.
"Just wanted to keep the
peop 1e 1n1eres led," AI s t on
said.
.Phillips, meaowhile, was
waving his cowboy hat with
both arms upraised In a
similar move wh ich he
oshvoewredwaaslhllenr•wtoinnsalhndisMsel_aamsotn.

shmcd gmrw

IU I'ning JHrinl fnr us.·· hl' s;.tul
· Tht•st• kids now know what

cJudi~g two wms each over
the 01lers.
If H t
ous on could beat 0aklqnd withou t hopes of a
playoff berth, Phillips said,
his team could stay ready for
Cleveland, which travels to
th~. Astrod~me Swoday .
All durtng the olfsea.son
we wtll remember the ftnal
ga me," Phillips said "I think
the btg_ thi~g ts to have a big,
enlhustasltc crowd behmd us.
This team deserves il."

r-·1&gt;.-.. .

-~

.............._....................1

·,
f
i
i

squeezed out of the playoff
picture.
For Cin cy to lose th e
American Confere nce "wild
card" berth, three things
must happen this weekend :
I 1 The Bengals lose to San
Diego.
2) The Miami Dolphins beat
the Denver Broncos.
3) The Baltimore Colts beat
the New England Patriots.
U any of those three games
don't come out that way, the
Bengals win the wild card
and meet th e Oakland
Raiders in a playoff game at
Oakland the weekend of Dec.
27-28,
Although Miami and Bal·
recreated fo r your persona l enjoyment in your li ving
•
timore expect to be favored in
room , whenever you wan t - and reproduced by Ad·
'
\heir games, it is improbable
m rr al wi th impecc able sound.fi.delity . Admiral quali ty
.
makes the big difference. Ezqulslte fu rnitur e styling
that Cincinnati would lose the
wi th authentic · designs tn· Ma st~rpi ece cabinetry .
'
playoff spot because the BenEvery
1975 Adm iraJ Console Stereo cr eation is your
P.
gals are heavily favored to
living lmk to 'quality electronic engineering alid en.
,.
whip the hapless Chargers at
dur ing furniture cra ftsmanshi p. ' '
home.
The Beogals could have
'
clinched a playoff berth by
beating Pittsburgh but were
throttled 35-14.
"ll was really a very easy
"Christmas Gift !Jelldquarters"
ga me to sum up ," said
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .
·
Bengals coach Paul Brown.
'-~~~~~-~-~~~~~~~ ~~"They just blew us out."

!8Y~~
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2~o(
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CONSOLE STEREO FOR

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BAKER ·FURNITURE

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....

y Rangers tJ t5 • 10
o
Smylhe Di•ision
"I think we have this thing
Chicago
,~ ~ ;t; Pl~i turned around," he said. "Sid
Voncou'"r
tO 13 5 7; iGilhnan) turned it around
Sl LOUIS
10 IS 5
25 I
Kansas Ci•v
a 17 , 10
ast year, an d now we •ve
Mlnnesola
9 18 I
19 proved we can advance our
Wale\ conferen&lt;c
ti
d lh
Norris Division
record a 1It e bit, an
at
w L T Pis. we've got the type of team
Mont r ea l
n 5 s ·19
.
h
.
h'
Los Angeles · 17 11 2 J6 that IS C amptons tp
P l tiSburg h
11 14 4
26 caliber."
Detro it
~
18 4
?2
Unlortuna Ie1y, Ior Oilers
washington
10
3 24 ,
N

Adams Di¥ii ion

W L T Ph

Bu ff alo

18

7

4

&lt;~0

Boston

IS 7
10 11

8
8

l8
18

Toronto
Ca l ifornia
t 1 17 3
Monday ' s Res ulh
'{ No games sched ul ed I
Tuesday'\ Game
Kansas City a l 1\llanta

1S

Clcvctana

W. L T Pts.
14 1
77

IJ

12 IJ
11 15

10 16

2
'

2

16

16
22

West

Winn ipeg
Quoboc

W- L. T Ph

18 10
IJ II

36
27

1113
10 12
10 16

325
·1
2&lt;1
I
71

canadian
W L
12 9
19 11

T Ph .
o
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I
39

Clllgllry

IS 11

Edmonton
,.oronlo

13 17
9 17

,

0
I

2
2
J

Mondlv 's Resu lt s

(No g ames sched ul ed /
Tue,day ' s Gllmos
San Diego at H OUSIOn
Ci nc innati at D r.nv'P.r
E dmon ton at lndianilpo l is
Calgary At Quebec
Win nipeg il l Toronto

MONDAY'S
OHIO COI.LEGE
BASKETBALL RESULTS

&amp;

SE OAL FRESHME N

Standings
B v United Press International
east
•
Cincinnati
In dianapo li s
New EnRiand

SEO frosh
standings
Team
Ga ll ipolis

World H o &lt; k e y As!ociatlon

San Diego

11•11!! Ll!!'~ • • • • • • • • •

GB

Am erican Ba ske tball Anocia·

Ocnvl'r'

~~fried Ckiektlle

6 -'"

Poriland
to 17 .370
Monday 's Re,ulh
tNo gam es scheduted1
Tuesday's Games
At lant a at New Yo r k
Golden soate 01 Ch icago
HooSion a1 &lt;ansas Clly
8u ff11l o 111 Washing ton
ct cvetand at Los Angeles
Philade lph ia at Poru and

Houston
M lnn cS()td
Phoen iK

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dinner roll. Regular ly $1.95. It's now only
51.75 with th is coupon at participating
Kentucky Fr ied Chicken stor es. Lim it
one Shopper's Special Dinner Box per
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Offer good Mon. thru Thurs .

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�5-- The Daily Sentinel, Mllt.llq&gt;~ri -Pum enoy, 0 .. 'l'm•sday. lio•o· Ih. 1!17;,

4- The Daily Scntilll'l, Midtlleport-Poom•roy, 0 , 'i)lesda) . llt c II .. 1· 1';!,

-: Swick, Suggs tops in MAC
COLUMBUS t UP ! I
Toledo quart erbac k Gene
"i·" Swick and Ball State cor,; ;, nerback Shafer Sug~s have
' ,., been voted the MidAmerican
:,; Conference players of the
· • year.
~·~

Coach of the year honors

went to Ball State's Dave
..-.' McClain, who !,'U ided the
1
" " Cardinals to a s urprisin~

third pb1ct' tit• m tht' ('OO-

fert'n&lt;·e and an ovl'rall 9-2
re&lt;·ord. Ball State hart l.oo•rn
picked to fi nish last in the
nine-tea m r~c~ .
It was the seeond strat ght

vear that Sw ick, the Rockets'
G-1, 188-powtct senior signal
&lt;'a ller. has been st•lected the
conference's top offensive
performer .

Swick, llll' nwnt•r of C\' 1'1')'
Mi\ C c·tu·t•cr ;md !' in~l c
st•astJn . total off ense and

tnlal nff&lt;'n SL' mark , rirn shm,;

f'!l rll f' "

,,,,,,

:;:!:· curto never had any doubt
,. ,.,

· ~: ·, he

could play Big 10 ball

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COL!JM BUS t UP I)
...! ·

There was never any doubt in

C

Pat Curto's mind , all he had
to do wa s convince his
coacl)es.
Curto, starling boundary
side defensive end for No. I
ranked Ohio Stale, always
fell he could play ·Big Ten
football, but it took him three
years to prove it.
The first lhree years, he
played behind three-year
regular Jim Cope with much
of his game action limited to
lhe special teams.
" It was a long wail and at
times It got a little difficult,"
.said the articulate 6-2, 226pound English major, who
was the leading vote getter on
lhis year's Big Ten Ali·

.,'
(
1

;'

'
I

\

•

1'

Academic Tea m.
"But, looking back and
including thi s year," he
added, "I'd say it was worth
it. I've lettered three times
and gone to four Rose
Bowls."
Curto, who was the slate
!~-pound wrestling champion his senior year at
Groveport Madison High
School In suburban Columbus, had numerous offers
when he graduated and
nearly
selected
Ohio
Univ ersity of the Mid·
American Conference.
"They tDU ) told me I had a
good chance to start as a
freshman," he relates. "I felt
I could either be a big fish in a
little pond or a big fish in a
big pond," he said. "Here, it
just takes you a little lon2Pr

to grow."

Curto would like a shot a
Another factor in Curto's pro ball, but like all the
decision was thai he had Buckeyes, a win over UCLA
grown up in the area and it and the nation al cham was "what my father wan- pionship is foremost on his
ted. "
mind. Curto, who will be one of
"This has been a good year
eight Buckeye senior s all around and I'm just glad
playing in a fow-th straight we have an opportunity to win
Rose Bowl Jan. 1 against the national championship,"
UCLA, was a second team all· he sa id.
Big Ten pick besides being on
" If I get the opportunity,
the allacademic team.
I'd like to give it (pro ball) a
"I was really surprised try," he said, but right now
about the all-academic," he I'm just thinking about that
said. "I knew I had a good ltnal game. I want to win the
chance to make it, but being Rose Bowl and then I'll worry
the leading voter."
about the NFL draft.
As far as the all-Big Ten
"I think l'rn good enough to ·
selection, he said, "I was play pro ball if I get the
happy with \hat, but not too chance," he said, ''just like I
concerned. I was just glad to thought I was good enough to
be starting and doing a good play here ."
job. It was icinP nn thr&gt; rakP "
11

Namath benched. for violation
SAN DIEGO fVPI) - Joe
Namath
seemed
embarrassed by it all.
Before the Nelf York Jets'
Monday night national televl·
slon game with the San Diego
Chargers, Jets' Interim head
coach Ken Shipp disclosed his

.•
'

: .•

celebrated quart erback
would start the game on the
bench because ol a curfew
violation.
"I was damn near si~k at
the annowocement," Namath
said. "It was no one's fa ult
but my own .

15,000 on hand for
By RICK VAN SANT
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - A
'li"J near capacity Riverfront
if;r Coliseum crowd of about
.~ 16,000 persons received Olga
Korbul and \he rest of her
;£- touring Russian National
··~ Gymnastics team with
~ thunderous applause and
"' standing ovations Monday
night.
~
Miss Korbut, the darUng of
the 1972 Olympic Games, and
her 20-member entourage
~·': dauled the throng wllh a two;t' · how- exhibition of vaulting,
:t#. tu111bling, acrobatics and
~ breath-taking stunts on the
parallel and horizontal bars.
The young Russian men
l'!! and women , sev~ral ~f them
:".(1 Olymmplc gold medalists,
~ displayed an unusual com.
8; binalion of strength and
-,;. grace.
-"·
The Soviets are winding up
a tour that began earlier this
~~.. month in New York City.
~- They stopped in Atlanta
Wednesday night and con·

elude the American visit in
Washington, D.C.
The heaviest applause here
went to Miss Korbut and two
men becoming known to
American audiences as "the
Valadimer's" -an acrobatic
team !hat began their
routines like ballet dancers
and finished like circus
strong men- performing
graceful movements one
perched atop the other.
.
Even the "warm-up" that
got Ute evening started soon
became an elaborate affair
as Olga and ' her friends
turned their back-bending
and legtwlsting exercises into
a "follow the leader" dance
to piano music that Included
the Beatles · tune "Yesterday ."
Miss Korbut , 20, was
quoted in Moscow just before
coming to America as saying
she was growing tired of
gymnastics and longed to '
become an actress.
Indeed, she seemed to
enjoy
mugging
for
photographers and the crowd
tw
just as much as perfonnlng
· · on the balance beam and
· uneven bars.
"What a s h o w g i r I!"
~S£,
~
· screamed the public address
~
DECORATION;) , . announcer as Olga puckered
For
' ' an applause-bringing smile
.,.,
QIRISTMASFrom ' alter taking a slight fall on
1
,p .
. Pot ,
· her dismoun t from the
otnseHta
s 4 •98 • balance beam.
~ · Poinset1ia
Bastcets~ During Intermission when
· ·
'11.95
. several of the Russia~ came
•Poinsettia Monument , back out to practice their ·
'f.&amp; .Markers •11.95
routines. hundreds of young~ ·~
sters left their seats and
~ crowded about the magnetic
· ~,..,
"-''~"
Miss Korbut trying to gel as
close to her as the security
d St
· police would allow.
59 N Se
•
. ' con
'
· Introduced simply as "the
.
'!ddlepo_rt ' ..
most beloved gymnast In the
'
~ -world," little Olga opened the

''I let the team down. ll
could have cost us the game. I
didn 'l feel good standing on
the sidelines."
In the game between two
AFC cellar dwellers, the
Chargers won, 24-16, and at
least one Charger felt that a
full~ime Namalh might ha ve
made the difference.
"Namath is super," said
offensive lineman Doug
Wilkerson. "You ,could see
the Jets change when he
came out. If they had had
Namath In from the start, it

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second hall of the show by
herself, batbed in a blue
spotlight as she breezed
through a set on lhe uneven
bars.
Several other women ex·
celled In a relatively new
event called "modem rhythmic gymnastics," a lreewheellng floor exercise in
which \he gymnast uses a
single prop such as a ball or a
whoop, to 'accent her
movements.
One lithe yowog lady sailed
through a routine by tossing
and spinning a rubber ball
with skills that would make
most male
American
basketball players enviotJs.
The ... exhibition
was
climaxed by five men trying
to to outdo each other tn
flying , twisting dismounts
ri-om th~ horizontal bar. Each
whirled 360 degrees arowod
lhe bar several times, then
loosened hi s 'grip and
somersaulted to a landing.
Four of \he five made double
backward somersaults. The
other did a triple.

might have made a big difference."
Maybe yes. Maybe no.·The
score was 14-3 at halftime.
"Joe was out after curlew," explained Shipp, who
said he consulted Jets' owner
Philip Iselin before taking his
action against Namath.
ln addition to being held out
wotil midway through the
second quarter, Namath was
lined. "I won't say how
much ," Shipp added . "Different coaches have different
fin es.' '
Namalh said, "I was ~
minutes late. I got hung up
talking to some friends from
back home."
Fresh from receiving a
vole of confidence from
Chargers' owner Gene Klein ,
Tommy Prothro watched his
team win its second straight
game after II consecutive
defeats.
John Riggins, the Jets'
standout. five-year running
back, picked up 75 yards, but
in 25 carries. He moved to
- within 57 yards ol becoming
the first Jet rusher to gain
i,OOO yards in one season.
Meanwhile, Rickey Young
gained more th an 100 yards
on lhe gromd for the second
consecutive game, carrying
21 times for 111 yards. Both
Young and Riggins scored
touchdowns.
"Rickey played very well,"
said a pleased Prothro. "He
blocked well and he ran
well."
San Diego quarterback Dan
Fouts suffered a concussion
in the third quarter and was
replaced by Jesse Freitas,
who directed the Chargers to
10 fourth-period points.

varsity letters.
llulh Su ~gs, who is passing
up lmsketba ll this season, and
Sw ick will play m the EastWest Shrine Game in San
Francisco Jan ~ and the
Senioo· Bowl .Jan . 11 at
Mobtlc, Ala .
Suggs ou tpull ed Ohio
University middle guard Rod
Day 21-jj in the defenstve
pl ayer ba llotmg, while
Mta[llt 's Sherman Smith was
a distant second to Swick with
41-- votes.
McC1ain, who is 29-20-3 in
five years at Ball Slate, is a ·
1960 graduate of Bowhng
Green. Prior to taking the
Ball State job, he was an
assistant at BG . Cornell,
Miami, Kansas and Ohio
State .
McClain rece ived 37 voles
from the MAC News Media
Association members who
did the voting to 16 lor Dick
Crum of league champion
Miami.

Snyder named
manager at

Indianapolis
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Jim
Snyder, 43, a manager in the
Cincinnati organization for 10
years, has been named to
direct Indianapolis of the .
·Class
AAA America n
Association, the Reds' lop
farm club.
A Cincinnati spokesman
also annowoced Monday that
Roy Majtyka, 36, will replace
Snyder as manager of the
Reds' Class AA learn al
Three Rivers of the Eastern
League .
After spending the last five
years with the Canadian
learn, Snyder replaces Vern
Rapp, who resigned tbe In·
dianapolis position last week
to manage lhe. American
Association's Denver team.
A former infielder whose
playing career began in 1959,
Majtyka has managed in the
St. !Allis farm system the
past eight years and directed
Arkansas of the Texas
League in 1975. He spent his ·
entire playing career in the
St. !Auis farm system.

Fritz named executive

secretary

of NAIA

KANSAS CITY, Mo. iUPil
- Dr. Harry G. fritz, dean of
the school of health education
at the State Uni~erstly of
New York at Buffalo, Monday
was named executive
secretary of the National
Association of Intercollegiate
Athletics.
Fritz assumes his duties
April · 12, succeedi'1 A.0 .
Duer, who retired July 31
after 26 years as administrative head of the
NAIA.
The 11-member llXecutlve
committee of the NAJA, to
which 523 schools belong,
chose fritz . The interim
secretary has been Dr.
Robert C. Livingston of the
Oregon College of Education,
the NAIA president.
Fritz coached football at
Centr8 1 Missouri State
Unlversity and basketball at
Brrnidji t Minn .) SIHIC
University, und wns athletit·
director at W~\ern Illinois

ml'ltiHJSI lo twhdo wn

his fom· ycnrs wilh 8,074' [)(ISSC!i .
Sug~s. d li-2. 1%-puundcr
~'ard !-i flfHI set 1he national
fru111
J-:lkhiirl , Ind., owns the
rct·ord fur must ufft~nsiw
1\:-dl
Slatt•
n·(·urd for l'&lt;-lreer
plays.
ml
el&lt;:l'
pli
un
~. 14. Ht· t.s also
Swick · also holds car e~r
the
first
H111l
Slat e playt&gt;r in
confercm·c marks for most
the
lrrst
17
years
to earn four
lou (·hrlnwns respons1blf~ for ,

passing record . was the UP!
fir st tea m All -A merican
quarterbat· k. He received
52 1.. votes out of a possible 60.
Swick, lrotn Hebron fllkt•wood Htgh School, broke nooSl pass uttempts, most
form er Heisonan Tr ophy completion s, most yards
wmner ,lin1 Plnnkr tt' c:

pa ss 1n1~

University before going to
Buffalo. He was educated at
Transylvania (Ky.) College,
the University of Kentucky
and Indiana University.

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Hoosiers are

:I

·still No. -1
NEW YORK t UP! 1 College basketball appears to
be having a resurgence in the
East.
Critics who have bee n
putting dow n Eastern
basketball the last several
years had better lake a hard
look at. Both Rutgers and St.
John's IN.Y.] currently spor(
IHJ records and are beginning
to gain recognition for their
talents from coaches across
the nation.
Rutgers, which thus far has
lived up to its preseason
bilUng ~s one of t!]e nation's
best teams, movj!d up three
spaces to No. 14'lhis week in
the United Press In lernational's Board of
Coaches ratings, while St.
John's cracked the top 20 for
the first time in the No. 17
spot. The Redmeo upset
nationally..-anked Tennessee
and also won the Cougar
Classic at Brigham Young
University to reach the select
circle.
"All I've ever read is that
Eastern basketball is dead,"
says St. John's coach Lou
Carnesecca. "It's gotten to
the point where I have to
check my players' pulses.·
But you go\ to give them
credit. for a bunch of corp·
ses, they're doing a hell of a
job."
Brigham Young coach,
Frank Arnold, was awed by
the Redmen 's smooth style of
play,
"We got a lesson on how to
play the game," said Arnold.
There was a big shakeup
among the top 10 In this
week's ratings, although the
first five reinained intact
from a week ago.
Indiana, which received all
41 first place votes, remained
in first place with 410 points

:I
:.

N Cl I 1 o , a I Footb.lll Lea gue
Stand ings
Bv Un1lcd Pre!.s lnl c-rnahon &lt;ll
Amer ICiln Con ferenc e
Ea!.l
W L T Pet
£'1,111imora
0 .j 0 6fJ')
Miilm i
9 ·10691
Bu lf il iO
8 5 0 o'J ~ ~
New Engl c.nd
3 10 0 73 I
N Y Jr tS
J 10 0 ] J 1
Cl• ntra l
W L T Pet
x Pil lsburQh
11
I 0 9'}3
Ci ncinnnh·
10 3 0 769
Houston
y
-1 D 691
Clcvc l.1nd
J 10 0 ]1 1
W es t
W L T Pet.
K Oulo.land
10 J o 769
Denv er
6 7 0 ..t6i
K 11n sas City
S 8 0 .3H5
San Dr cgo
1 11
0 JS.I
Nilhona l Co11f crenc c

and Marquette was No. 2 slot
with 324 points. Maryland
was third with 297 points,
North Carolina fourth with
259 and UCLA fifth with ZIJ4.
Notre Dame, which g;ve
Indiana a scare before losing,
6;J.jj0, won two other games
/ during the week and advanced two spots to No. 6.
Alabama won iL~ only game
and moved up three places to
No. 7, while Louisville, the
East
No. 7 learn a week ago,
W L T Pet.
droppfd all the way to 15th K St Louis
10 3 0 769
9 4 0 692
alter being upset by DePaul y Dall as
Washi ngton
8 s 0 667
Saturday night.
N Y Grant s
.t 9 0 308
3 10 0 '}J J
Nevada-Las Vegas also Phi ladelphra
Central
made a big advance, moving
W L T Pet.
up three places to No. 8, and x Mrnnesota
0 8·16
11
'
Dc tro1 1
7 6 o 138
Cincinnati climbed two spots Gr
een Bay
J 10 0 '})I
3 10 0 23 1
to No. 9 arter defeating two Ch 1cago
Wes t
opponents. Tennessee, sixth a
W L T Pet.
week ago, dropwd to No. 10 x Los 1\ng c l c~ 11 ' 0 846
1 ran cisco
~
8 o m
following its 79-70 loss at St. Ascm
tlanta
4 9 0 JOB
John 's.
New Orleans
1 t t 0 154
Cl inched dr v 1S10 n I ri le
Six coaches from each of )(v Clinched
wild ca rd p l ~yo fl
se ven geogra phical areas spol
Monday '$ Res ult
comprise the UP! ratings San D1ego
2.1 N Y Je ts 16.
board. Each week they vote twiligh l
Saturday, Dec. 20
on the top 10 teams and points Minnesola
at Bultalo
are awarded on a 10.~7-9-5- Denv er ill I Miam i
n sburgh at
Los Angeles,
4-:i-2-t basis for votes from Pi
twilig h l
first through lOth .
Sunday, Dec 21
NEW YORK (U PI I
Th e
U nit e d Pr ess lnlc-rnationa l
Board of Coac hes top 20 co ii CQC
basket b all teams w i th fi rst
place votes and record s in
par ent hese s
I Second Wet'k l .

Team

POtntS

A ll an I a a! Green Bay
Chicago at New Or I eMs
Cl eveland at Houston
Dal las at N Y Je ts
New England al Baltrmor c
N Y G1an ts at San r r anctsco
Kansas Cily a t Oakl And
Philadelphia a t WaShington
St Louis al Detrott
San Diego at Crn cin nat 1

1 lndiana, (J ll (3 OJ
J IO
7 Marquelle (J OJ
324
3. Mar y lancl IS OJ
19J National Basketball A!.soc iat.on
4 North Ca r o l ina (J 01
759
By United s~~~:~~~~crnafional
S UCLA (2 I J
'104
6 Noire Dame I S I I
165
eas t ern ConfN encc
7 Alabama 14 Ol
85
Atlantic 01 vis1on
w L Pel GB
8. Nev ada L as Vegas (6 OJ
67
9 Cinci nnat i 16 Ol
55 BoSion
16 7 696
10. Ten nessee 13 l l
SO
~~:\!f;tphia
~lg
I I Washi ng ton (5 OJ
49
12. Mich igan 13 t l
47 New York
9 19 .11 1 9'
13 Norm caroli n a ~ l ate ( J OJ 45
Conlrat ~ i-~,;~~~ Go
14 Rutgers 16 OJ
.13
15. Lou i svil le ( J 11
39 A&gt; ian••
IJ ' 591
10
10. San F ranc isco (5 1l
J-1
'::;~~~~
"
::
::
17 S! John 's I N Y l 16 OJ
17
18 fl. r lzona St at e (5 Ol
13 Cle•e tand
11 •• "o 1'
19 fo.r 110na (!.I 31
9
New o:;:::,~~n c!nt~6rc~3c': 6
10 WIC h il a Stat e !J OJ
8

g ,l

'

lgg l

~

Midwesl Div ision
De~ro; 1
~ ~ 1 P~Jo GB
M;twa ukee
10 13 m t' .

ho p m g 1 0 r repeat~~k~agsoet'v
H
Gold en
0

Gregg

Pro

.~Standin(!s

1

~

::

;:;

k

Paci f i c •D1 visio n

J

w
11

pen.onnance at
ouston
"There was a great deal ol
BEREA, Ohio IUP! I forrest Gregg basked in the pressure on him and he got
lingering sunshine of one of careless with the ball as be
hls team 's best efforts got closer to the 1,000," Gregg
Monday, hoping to launch a said.
repeat performance against
Gregg viewed the Kansas
City
game as an ell8mple of
the Houston Oilers next
weekend.
the fruits of hard Ia~ .
The , Cleveland Browns
"The way we started we
coach was especially en- had a lot of rough going," tbe
thusiastic about Greg Pruitt's coach said. The Browns lost
attainment of 1,000 yards nine games before they won
rushing In Sunday's 4().!4 their firsllhis year.
"The team hwog together
victory over Ute Kansas City
Chiefs.
and finally received SQme
Pruitt ran for 214 yards and type of reward for their
three touchdowns to finish the toughness and ability to stay
day at 1,030 yards through 13 together," he added. ''They
games . Naturally, he played hard , tough footbalI
credited lhe offensive line the entire year. They haven't
with making It possible.
changed their attitude, nor
"A lo\ of people said they What they are."
Gregg also praised quarweren't good enough but we
stuck together," Pruitt said. terback Mike Phipps, who
"You've got to have that completed nd14 ol20 pashseds for .
experience and time playing 204 yards a one touc own,
wide receiver Regg ie
together.
The coach was not upset Rucker , who caught six
that Pruitt had trouble pa sses for 130 yards and tbe
•
boldtng onto the ball on three defense, wfiich held the
occaalons. He attributed the Chiefs scoreless until tbe
problem to the shadow of the final quarter,
l,OOO.yard barrier.

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'

tion standings
Bv u"" .. Press lnlernallonat
W l Pet. GB
oenYer
18 1 .781
New York
'' 6 700 '' ·
Sen 1\r'll onio
1.t 8 636 3' .
Indiana
15 9 625 J' ,
&lt;enluckv
13 1o S65 5
St Louis
II 16 407 9
Virginia
4 n tl&lt; t5',
Monday's Resuu
Denver T~~~.~~:-~n~.~~.
Ken luckv a1 New York
s an Antonio at St Lou is

Nat ional Hockey League SlandBy Un itod Pr~s~sonternationa t
Campbell Conteronce
Patrick D i~sit• T Pis
Phitad~lphta
19 ' 1
J5

~i~~:~an ders

:! ,; ;

l~

Kentucky drops thriller
ll y BOB WESTON
LOll lSV II.l.E. Ky

Wlm1t•vt• r Kt•nhwkv I"H'ki'd

in

fi ncs~t· iii~Hlmil lup~rankrd

Indian(! Mund(l y 111 gh t, 1he

Wtldeaos all hut madt' up fur
with an tnl cnsity rrtn ini ~.a·t· nt
of cuadt Adolph Rupp's
fa mous "1-'i ddlin' Five."
Ken tucky emne within
eight seconds ul upset ling the
Hoosiers in r~ g ulutl on time ,
only to lose 77-ll3 in overttnJC .
And in a dl'fea t that
lowered Kentucky's record to
an unimpr essive 2-3, coach
.Joe Hall saw much hope lor
the futu r•·

Krnl 1wky 1n lht: N!'AA

seori n~ honors
10 poinL•.
wtth
27
points
apiece lor
Multasl Hl' ~-:i o nal finul i!t
No. 5 UCLA beat San Diego
Dayton. Ohio
Indiana , now 4-1!. '11te 6-11 State, 101-86, as Ric hard
!li t ·y il r c capc1hh• uf &lt;loin~ :·
Mll'r Benson rebounde-d a Benso n also wound up with a Washington scoretl a cij reer
What they ' huw,.d 16.615 111 is!-il'd shut by AUernethy gilme~tigh 14 rebounds, but high 28 points lo lead the
frrmted fcm~ in p un ~p; u ·k(~d wtth eight seconds to play and he was et harsh critic of his Bruins and Ralph Drolli nger
Freedom ll all wos !hot the) pul 11 tn 1he basket to rescut own performa nce .'
also had his best scoring
WPrt' c t~pi:lbl.e of reflll t tng the , the Hoosiers from defea t in
" I wasn 'I satisfied with my night with 22. Long Beach
exhalt ed Hoos iers to the re~ula11on play, the rugged offensive movement inside Slate handed No. 19 Wichita
ste~l us ,Jf mere mortuls.
mlhratl carne back to ignite and I wasn't blocking out on Stale its first loss in three
Unltl Kent Benson, Tom ' m1 ci~hiJXIint sur.L(e in the rebounds the way I should," games, 5tl-55.
.\hcrolt'lhy and
Qui nn uv er time w1th two fr ee he satd .
ln other games, Manhattan
~·or Kent ucky, Jack Givens beat Hofstra, 89-83 ; Georgia
Buekner got it together lor throws .
Abcrnclhy thrn hot a short was high with 20 points and blasted Furman, 97-76;
Indiana in the overtim(', it
appeared there would be a jumper, followed by layups il!rry Johnson, scrambling Virginia Tech clobbered '
repeil t of the only defeat bv Buckner and Benson, and over the cow-l with fanatical Morehea d Stale, I 12-71;
suffered by th e mighty it was all over for Kentucky . hustle, ·added 16 points.
l AJyola 1Ill. ) edged Toledo,
Rick Robey , Kentucky 's 78-77; Weste rn Mi chig an
Benson and Scott May
Hoosiers last season- 92-!lO to
leading scorer entering the topped Detroll , 81-71, and
game, got into early foul Seattle defeated Utah Stale ,
trouble and had to settle lor 75-66.

I llunk tills ts lin· ti':tl

1 til' I 1

Bengals need win over Chargers
to make playoffs via wild card
CINCINNATI IUPI) - Despite last Saturday's loss lo
Pittsburgh, the Cmcinnati
Bengals are still favored to

make the playoffs voa the
"wild card " berth.
However, it is still remotely
possible.the Bengals could be

Oilers ready
for Browns
HOUSTON 1UP! )- Ftve of fa ns, Houston was paired this
the eight NFL teams headed · season m lhe Amencan foot.
for the playoffs could end the · b ~ll Con(erence, Cen tral
regular season· with four . D~voswn With Pittsburgh and
losses apiece.
Cmcmnat1. Those two
The Houston Oilers with a playoflbound learns have a
win against Cl ~vela nd com.W.ned 22~.4 record in·
Sunday, could also finish the
season with £our losses.
The Oilers 9-4 are not one

ol the five. ' '
Those fa cts enough to gall
arden t Hou~ton fans and
confuse persons not up on
their wild cards, do not upset
coach Bwn Phillips. He's
seen it all and lhen some.
Uke Su~day in Oakland's
Alameda Coliseum.
"ll had to be one of the
most exciting games I've
ever seen," said Phillips
Monday, with a good night 's
I be tween h'tm an d a 27""
seep
..,
~:~ ;;::d::~ the playoff"I've never had a team win
1 " he
one on the f'tna 1 pay,
said. "I thought the Miami
he
win was a great one. Butt
Oakland game was more so."
0 '1
(' h
d M k
I ers tg t en
ae
Alston said his two-yard
touchdown catch, made with
\he sound of the final gun
going off, was easy. Viewers
saw il otherwise.
The pass was poorly thrown
an d behind AIston, and he had
toreachbackanddowntog_et
hi s f.mger t Ips
'
on 1't • . Sk'tp
Butler's extra point then won
it.
"Just wanted to keep the
peop 1e 1n1eres led," AI s t on
said.
.Phillips, meaowhile, was
waving his cowboy hat with
both arms upraised In a
similar move wh ich he
oshvoewredwaaslhllenr•wtoinnsalhndisMsel_aamsotn.

shmcd gmrw

IU I'ning JHrinl fnr us.·· hl' s;.tul
· Tht•st• kids now know what

cJudi~g two wms each over
the 01lers.
If H t
ous on could beat 0aklqnd withou t hopes of a
playoff berth, Phillips said,
his team could stay ready for
Cleveland, which travels to
th~. Astrod~me Swoday .
All durtng the olfsea.son
we wtll remember the ftnal
ga me," Phillips said "I think
the btg_ thi~g ts to have a big,
enlhustasltc crowd behmd us.
This team deserves il."

r-·1&gt;.-.. .

-~

.............._....................1

·,
f
i
i

squeezed out of the playoff
picture.
For Cin cy to lose th e
American Confere nce "wild
card" berth, three things
must happen this weekend :
I 1 The Bengals lose to San
Diego.
2) The Miami Dolphins beat
the Denver Broncos.
3) The Baltimore Colts beat
the New England Patriots.
U any of those three games
don't come out that way, the
Bengals win the wild card
and meet th e Oakland
Raiders in a playoff game at
Oakland the weekend of Dec.
27-28,
Although Miami and Bal·
recreated fo r your persona l enjoyment in your li ving
•
timore expect to be favored in
room , whenever you wan t - and reproduced by Ad·
'
\heir games, it is improbable
m rr al wi th impecc able sound.fi.delity . Admiral quali ty
.
makes the big difference. Ezqulslte fu rnitur e styling
that Cincinnati would lose the
wi th authentic · designs tn· Ma st~rpi ece cabinetry .
'
playoff spot because the BenEvery
1975 Adm iraJ Console Stereo cr eation is your
P.
gals are heavily favored to
living lmk to 'quality electronic engineering alid en.
,.
whip the hapless Chargers at
dur ing furniture cra ftsmanshi p. ' '
home.
The Beogals could have
'
clinched a playoff berth by
beating Pittsburgh but were
throttled 35-14.
"ll was really a very easy
"Christmas Gift !Jelldquarters"
ga me to sum up ," said
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .
·
Bengals coach Paul Brown.
'-~~~~~-~-~~~~~~~ ~~"They just blew us out."

!8Y~~
I
2~o(
I ADMIRAL

II

CONSOLE STEREO FOR

CONCERT· HALL

. :

Ii ~.~~,~~~~.~~~~~:.~...

~

l
r

BAKER ·FURNITURE

'I

J

....

y Rangers tJ t5 • 10
o
Smylhe Di•ision
"I think we have this thing
Chicago
,~ ~ ;t; Pl~i turned around," he said. "Sid
Voncou'"r
tO 13 5 7; iGilhnan) turned it around
Sl LOUIS
10 IS 5
25 I
Kansas Ci•v
a 17 , 10
ast year, an d now we •ve
Mlnnesola
9 18 I
19 proved we can advance our
Wale\ conferen&lt;c
ti
d lh
Norris Division
record a 1It e bit, an
at
w L T Pis. we've got the type of team
Mont r ea l
n 5 s ·19
.
h
.
h'
Los Angeles · 17 11 2 J6 that IS C amptons tp
P l tiSburg h
11 14 4
26 caliber."
Detro it
~
18 4
?2
Unlortuna Ie1y, Ior Oilers
washington
10
3 24 ,
N

Adams Di¥ii ion

W L T Ph

Bu ff alo

18

7

4

&lt;~0

Boston

IS 7
10 11

8
8

l8
18

Toronto
Ca l ifornia
t 1 17 3
Monday ' s Res ulh
'{ No games sched ul ed I
Tuesday'\ Game
Kansas City a l 1\llanta

1S

Clcvctana

W. L T Pts.
14 1
77

IJ

12 IJ
11 15

10 16

2
'

2

16

16
22

West

Winn ipeg
Quoboc

W- L. T Ph

18 10
IJ II

36
27

1113
10 12
10 16

325
·1
2&lt;1
I
71

canadian
W L
12 9
19 11

T Ph .
o
.t.t
I
39

Clllgllry

IS 11

Edmonton
,.oronlo

13 17
9 17

,

0
I

2
2
J

Mondlv 's Resu lt s

(No g ames sched ul ed /
Tue,day ' s Gllmos
San Diego at H OUSIOn
Ci nc innati at D r.nv'P.r
E dmon ton at lndianilpo l is
Calgary At Quebec
Win nipeg il l Toronto

MONDAY'S
OHIO COI.LEGE
BASKETBALL RESULTS

&amp;

SE OAL FRESHME N

Standings
B v United Press International
east
•
Cincinnati
In dianapo li s
New EnRiand

SEO frosh
standings
Team
Ga ll ipolis

World H o &lt; k e y As!ociatlon

San Diego

11•11!! Ll!!'~ • • • • • • • • •

GB

Am erican Ba ske tball Anocia·

Ocnvl'r'

~~fried Ckiektlle

6 -'"

Poriland
to 17 .370
Monday 's Re,ulh
tNo gam es scheduted1
Tuesday's Games
At lant a at New Yo r k
Golden soate 01 Ch icago
HooSion a1 &lt;ansas Clly
8u ff11l o 111 Washing ton
ct cvetand at Los Angeles
Philade lph ia at Poru and

Houston
M lnn cS()td
Phoen iK

SHOPPER'S SPECIAL DINNER BOX
ONLY S1.7S REGULAR $1.95
The Shopper's Specia l Dinner ·&amp;; Includes 3 pieces of hot, tender, "finger
llckln' good" chicken, Origi nal Recipe
Only, cole slaw, pota toes and gravy and
dinner roll. Regular ly $1.95. It's now only
51.75 with th is coupon at participating
Kentucky Fr ied Chicken stor es. Lim it
one Shopper's Special Dinner Box per
cou pon.
Or igina l Recipe Only
Offer good Mon. thru Thurs .

L Pet .

:! .i m1· .

51810

882-2525

• •

"QUALITY and

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

32
28
21

Logan

W L
0

P
110

OP
12.5

I

JOS

wa~er l y

1

97

133
85

At hen s

1
3

BO
107

165

MCIQS

Jackson
Wellslo n

~a

3 130 173
0 J
71 127
17 12 866 866

~

Q

A
SUBSCRIPTION
TO THE
.~;;;~;;;.1
~ ~ DAILY SENTINEL
tJ
WILL
Q
KEEP ON
For Giving
GIVING THE
From •495
.~
YEAR ROUND

TOTALS

M o nda y's Resull ·
Lo g an 59 Meigs JO
D ec . 18 games !
Al h ens at Logan
Ga ll iPO li S ill Wave r ly

I
I

NAME _______________________
ADDRESS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Citr•- - - - - - - - State
ZiP - - - - -:1
BEGIN SUBSCRIPTION :
Month - -- - - -Date
Year- - - r.
ORDERED BY :
NAME ---------~----­

ADDRESS - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - City ________ State
Zip - - -

ARTIFICIAL

CHRISTMAS

ARRANGEMENTS , .

~~
. '

Bowling r.reen 68 Eastern Ill
63
Akron 78 Oakland 1Mich 1 68 '
S9 N. Second St.
I ;~yul a 18 Toledo 15
.
Middltport,
0.
S ~' l orida 75 Buldwin- ,____
..,.t'
.............
Wullm·t· 01

j

I
I

CHECK CHOICE
By mail In Ohio 1 year
6 mo .
3 mo .
and West Virginia ( ) $22 .00 ( ) Sll.SO ( ) $7 .00
(where newspaper bov delivery
is NOT available.
By mai l outside
Oh io and
West Virgin ia.

( ) $26.00 1 ) SIJ .SO ( ) $7.SO

Please enclose payment with order .. Gift
Subscription Card Sent before Olristmas.
, t\f'

J/AVE .4 HAPPY HOLIDAY SEASON
~
.Me
Jll: ~~'~vtU!IIJ!M IJfi~~UGWJIMI .JM

�I.

.;.~.}~~~..~~~~:...~~.tinc•l, Middl~port-Pumeroy. 0 . Tuesdoy . Dec. Hi. 1!1/o

lr·············.

if:

~,Rap:
:

~'~HURRY..
LAY-AWAY NOw!
GET THE A-'~ "
·' ·
1
·~ I
r
""
(0
::!'Kf .·
•
GIFT SHE
'
~
WILL
\.
•'
REMEMBER.
WHITE

'flu• Fir:.l Electron ic Jlurnc
s.n \. ing M:H:hiue In '11rc
f'l

1

II nr)

I!,Uik.'

(J I , I
ld{!lo, lo I
~O\J
"&gt;r·it'~' Y~'''l '\'1lr II lilUL il
d1•1l
lJUIIOn
,1f1CI
SCW
• II '• 1 ,I rl I

I\

(I 11••

I ) &lt;II' IIIII t• 1 ,. 1

•u•r''''"''t

';('\',
) Vhl\
'&gt; t '\'111 111!
lol! (ld\t '
1} (• II t'l 1, 1 riqPr
I &lt;I

IU '&gt;I\('&lt;,

fiJO IItm fw:&lt;por:tatl

The Fabric Shop
Mc C.l ii' S, Kw ick-Scw ,
Si m pl rcl ty Pa tt ern s

11 5 W. Second

992 1284

'..,.. , _~ro sr,.. GER ~~,..~~fi t\~ Pom eroy , Ohio~f/IJ.ik..ifrA..

-~~~- -;~If:::-~ w

'?&gt;--~~

111! 1111! ! 1 ) 1! 1 ! ! ! !!11 1 1 ~ 1111 1 1!!' 1 : '! ..

!111111

· ·. ··· · ··· · This is a

n.mm •11 c /r,un S.JWS

See it now ar:

. POMEROY HOME &amp;AUTO
TIRE BALANCING AL~~~~~NT
:~~~::.·:.~:;.; .::,"'' PH. 992-2094
POMEROY

BONUS
PRICE

ONEIDA
STAINLESS
TABLEWARE

'Pc.

Ci leSI Nol
Included

36

$1495

t-

MICROWAVE OVE

Counterl op Model RE9?2 : th e modern, quick and
easy way to cook! T h(1 ws rJ n d cooks fr oz en foods in a

few minutes. a grea t li me-saver lor meal s or

6'tlt.9~~

parties. It 's cosy to opercll e, l r1kes no speci al wi r ing ,
plu gs int o iln y co nven tiona l 170 v. ou tl e t . Food cook
· qui ckl y bu t oven sl ays coo l an d wi pes clea n in a
jif! y. HandsoiTle st yl ing wi th tran sparent black ·
door . Reg ulc'lr ly 5359.95.

OPEN EVENifo' tiS

RINGS FROM
5100.00 and up

SEWING CENTER

·H+

OHIO

Rap :

Here's a new participation sport devised by my sister and
me :
Equipment : one car.
Players : One or more adultish females.
Playing Field : Main Street, or your town's equivalent.
Name-of Game : "Hey, Hey! "
In "Hey, Hey! " the players drive down Main Street
hunting for "Hey, beys" - attractive males. When one i~
spotted,tiie spoiler yells, "Hey, hey!" at him. It's fun to walcll
the results, especially if you add, '.'Big fella," or "Dig the
gorgeous bod, big fella!" It's especially fun ifhe's talking to a
woma 0. The expressions are priceless.
ll'snol wise to "Hey, hey" in sluggish traffic. Like males
whistling at females, this is a game for cowards. The "Hey
hey" might come up to your car and try to start something:
either a fight or a tryst.
The purpose of this game is revenge. Ever since puberty .
I've been having remarks yelled at me from males in moving
vehicles. Could never tell whether they were complimentary,
erotic or insulting. So now : turnabout time!
Try It, girls, you'llllke it. - JANE

CHRISTMAS
Ll

-;

~aoo. THE

POMEROY
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr .

PH. 992 -2181 '
Serving Meigs, Gallia &amp;

The Lord's Birthday will be
upon us shortly. During this
• time there will be many
witnessing gifts exchanged.
: . •• To be sure that the world
will be able to recognize
your witness . .. Please

~
•

THINK

•

JOHN 8:12
what the world would be like
without the Light of Christ
Jesus.

Middleport Book Store

Dear Jane :
And maybe - so will the men. - HELEN
·H

Manufactu re r's Sugge sted Retail Price .
Destination charges, optional equipment, dea ler
prep., state ta xes not included.

RIVERSIDE AMC.JEEP

PARTY PLANNED
RACINE
Racine
American Legion Post 602
and its auxiliary wtll hold a
Christmas party Saturday
beginning at 6 p.m. at the post
home. All members of the
post and their immediate
families are invited to a!lend.
Women are to take a covered
dish and silverware for their
families.

Muon COunties

Poinsettias
'3.00 to '5.00
Choose from 600 pots.
Churches and
organiullons quantity
discount. Also Foliage
Plants &amp; Baskeh.

PORTABLE TV ·
Deco rator .
; ,;j

des ign ed

FOR
LESS

any where.

Zenith

to go
Full

includi ng
solid ·
state modul es ,

BUCKSI \

'N

qualit y ~

Portable,
Colors,

Buitt.$in, W,as S309 .9S ·.
Extr a .

_Power Mi ser swit ch helps cut elec-

Royally
Cr es t
tubes . Si• Colors.

Eff_icicnl fo rced clir dry ing is fast
working

AT fl EA lis
AN D SA VE

sHoP

LSears-· ]

220 E.' Main

st.
Ph. 992-WB
Lou Osborne . Pomeroy
ala tog Values for the Holiday" .-.41
IW

HONDA

GIFT
for t he Outdoorsman!
PERFECT

MINIBtKE

SEE THEM
TODAY I

Flowers.
For Every
Holiday
Occasion.

• Oyna Mike Gain Control

make up any Sile centerpiece you want .

CXder now .

Centerpieces. Cu.l Ftoweos, Polled
Plants and Permanent Christmas }
Arrangemenh .
Near or far,

We wire flowers everywhere."

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
r tt.t'

f

• Th e proii!Hional
ulc t-v f e.:alure .

MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO.
p

176

o.

PH-992-2039
10'

Butternut Pomeroy

$1·5995

Always
ppreciated

• Built-in Noise Limiting
• All 23 Channels

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY
Open Evenings

• Mini Size/Maxi Talk
Power

$129

SAYRE HARDWARE
New Haven, W. Va.

95

eM a son

~

"ONE NEAIR YOU"

I
•

PRICES
IN

EFFECT

NOW!
MEN'S REGULAR $1.00

TUBE

I

!special yule music «
N

The choir of ihe Sacred
Heart Catholic Church under
lhe direction of Mrs. George
Hackett, Jr . will present
special music preceding both
lhe Christmas Eve Mass and
I he Midnight Mass.
Music will begin at 6:45
p.m. wilh the Christmas Eve
Mass at 7:30 p.m. For the
Midnight Mass. the music
will begin at 11: lo p.m. The
Rev. Fr. Paul Welton has
prepared a Mass guide for

SOCKS
Wh ite with variou s
stripe top. Full cushion

distribution to non-Catholics
who are invited to attend the
services.
In the choir are Mrs. Susan
Baer, Mrs. Gemma Casci,
Mrs. "Philomena Follrod,
Guido Girolami, Mrs. Martha
Gress . Richard Gress,
George Hackett, Jr., George
Horak, Mrs . Barbara Mullen,
Mrs. Belly Ohlinger , Mrs.
Marie Robinson, Mrs .
Yvonne Scally, Ed Wehrung
and Mrs. Catherine Welsh .

foot - no heel. s&lt;&gt; they
never wear out. Fits 9 to
15.

Mrs. Dianne George entertained with a surprise
party honoring her son, Brent
Edward on his lOth birthday
at the home of his grandmother. Mrs. Lee McComas,
Sunday afternoon.
TIME SET
Judging In the Christmas
lighting contest for Middleport village sponsored
by the Middleport Amateur
Gardeners will begin at 6
p.m.
Thursday. . No
registration Is necessary as
the judg"' will tour the
community to view the
window
and
door
decorations. First prizes of
$10 ami second prizes of $5
will be awarded In the
categories of windows and
doors. Residents are asked
to have their decorations
lighted by 6 p.m.

CARNIVAL BLUE

·INDIANA GLASS

CARNIVAL
HEN ON NEST

Party honors birthday
Games were played under
the direction of Mrs. Judy
Burns and Brian Lee George.
After Brent opened his gills,
refreshments were served to
those named and Mrs. Anthony Nardei, Michael and
Michelle, Mr . and Mrs .
Russell E . Miller, Tina,
Timothy and Carma, James,
Rhonda and Wendi Burns,
Terri Marie Roush , Mark
McCloud, Tammy Jo Lan·
ders. Maggie, Gerry and
Jimmy Reynolds. Beth Ann
and Darin Wolfe, David,
Christopher and Margaret
George.
Favors of candy canes and
balloons were given to the
children. Refreshments were
cake, ice cream and nuts.

WEDDING
BOWL

Ideal for cand ies or
good ies , carn iva l blue,

gold or green . 7" long.

high
Boxed.

&amp;

5"

5'12"wide.

AND COVER
Measures

10"

high and

in d iameter . In-

63.~"

dividually boxed.

329 VALUE

. 1

'2.49 VALUE

OPEN EVERY NIGHT TILL 9 PM! ! !
/

!01\lm.!!
MEN'S DOUBLE KNIT POLYESTER
LOVABLE, CUDDLY

DRESS
PANTS
T~EY JUST ARRIVED!
Leggs Quality. Compare at $15 .00 to 120.00 .
Solid navy, brown, taupe. green or rust.

SPONSORING DANCE
RACINE - The Southern
High School Tri-M Society
will sponsor a Olrislmas
dance from 9 to midnight
Sal urday in the Southern
High gymnasiwn .

Hound stooth

check s. too . Flare legs. Waist

!iii zes ll to 40.

FURRY
DOG
Th is long hai r puppy
feel s lik e a rea l dog. 8"
long . Brown &amp; · white.

Reg ular 51.97 .

$ 22

Nothing e,.; prc sses the wo rmth of
Chrb\mu like o living gltt the
whole lomll y can en;oy ., . es~c ­

SATURDAY PROGRAM
ially this beeul lful FTD Ho lldo11y
BALD KNOB
A Glow" Bouquet . You con sen d this
011c o f our numy other beautllul
Olristmas program will be or
selections, such as o polnsetti" or
presented at the Freedom a Hon gin g Ga rden, to I he people
love, Thco v are
Gospel Mission Church at 7
I
•P
•clal
everv·
p.m. Saturday. The public is
I
g lad yo u
invited.
Call or visi t

SAFE :- HARMLESS

CLICK GUNS
98' VALUE

today.

so~
"TOMMY TURnE"
OR

..

SAT~

"SNOOPY"
STUFFED
ANIMALS
Two fa vorite plush toys

Stretch Nylon

SOCKS

CHRISTMAS
GIVEAWAY

Fits IOto 13
69c Value

at a redu Ced pri ce .
Children an d even teens

English Leather

TOILETRY
KIT
You got Travel Kif and

li ke them. Regular
11.96.

English Leahler Set now
at big savings .

$

DEC. 20

Ott FrH Tickets l't All
ticipating Gold St•r Stores.

only

ePoint Pleasant

l.~~~•"-"'u"':;a'ti.ill~~~~.-c:...~eu.~~w"-~~~~·

i:r:::::ch:~:;;:;:;: ;~::;:p;;;,~;:;t:: ::::::::::ili.

$100.00 Gift Certificate For Groceries

COBRA-19

~

eSilver Bridge Plaza

. TEENS FAVORITES

.NEXT DRAWING

To ftiends or family

W11r ld wrr h
rh" lnw

tended lo all eliKible single
persons and professional
people who are interested in
learning whal Parents
Without Partners · is about.
Bulllcworlh will speak on
Radio WJEH at 10:30 a.m .
Friday on the organization .

.

\1

A OISC.OU NT
DOAitf Mf.NT STOlE

·

special in vitation being ex-

Gold Star

only

ellluminated Meter
• Switchable Noise Limiter

J

MEN•s

COBRA-21

Let us ·design a beautiful floral selling
for your holi day tabl e. Our experts will

Mrs. Milia rd ~ • n Mel or

"Whal Arc the Benefi ts of
Parents Without Parlnei's''"
The meeting is open to all
inlercsled · persons with a

erehan

I

ROM MINI TO

th~

I'

~~~~~~,.._'I!t...

J

~

'.)'

Paren ls Willwut Partners.
Holling Hills Chapter 8:18, will
hold an open house meeting
al Grace Unilcd Methodist
Church in Gallipolis at 7::10
p.m. rrtday.
Speake1· fQI' the session will
be Harry Bultleworlh from
Chapter 20:1 of Parents
Witlwul Partners, Cincinnati.
and also president of the
Soulhern Ohio Regional
Council of Prents Without
Partners. on lhe suhiecl.

. ..

t

be hekl Frida11

I'

GI VE HIM

rrr

tO

NO MEETING
There will be no meeting of
the Middleport Literary Club
this week, Mr.s . Dwight
Wallace announced . The next
meeting or the club will he
held on Jan. 7.

Shipping, tn slallation Extra
Sate Ends Dec. 31

As advertised '"
- OL Media .

h 1•1 ht.;~• P .11

bra

Ha s a Credit Plan to· Suit Most Every
Prices are Cata log Prices
Satisfaction Quaranteed or Your Money ·

~

f 1 , 1~

Syracuse

PROGRAM SET
LONG BO'ITOM - The
annual Christmas program of
the Long Bottom United
Methodist Church has been
set for 7:30p.m. on Tuesday,
Dec. 23. There will be
recitations, special music,
dialogue, "Who Is the
Saviour? " and Christmas
meditations by the pastor,
Dennis Creeger. The public is
invited.

SJJ9.9S .scra ps
1ncal use

MIDDLEPORl

Or1ly \,Jw

992 - ~m

25995

soli d -st at e t.uning ,

heritage house

Hubbard
Greenhou.-

INITIATED
'Linda Rupe, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Rupe ,
was Initiated into Omega
Chapter of Kappa Della Pi,
honorary society in education
at Ohio Universily·on Dec. 7.
Mrs. Rupe and Mrs. Eddie
Smith of Pomeroy attended
the ceremony held at Baker
Center. Linda is a junior at
Ohio. She graduated from
Meigs High in 1972.

pulvenzer han dles soft

WAS

INGELS
FURNITURE
992-2635

'--"' .

. ___.

15

+

NOTE FROM SUE : Let's ask them a~d see : Fellas, how
would YOU like to be "Hey, heyed" by a girl in a passing car?
1And if you wouldn't, remember that, next time you feel a
whistle coming on. )

PACER ... ...... .. ... .... ... ..•349900

On the Tin Middleport

MORE BOOT

{

NOTE FROM HELEN : Isn't it strange how a person who
gets so much pleasure from giving seldom realizes that others
find pleasure in giving too ? Your l)lOther-in-law might be
shocked to know that she comes off a little selfish and
"superior" when she can't accept graciously.
.
ISomeone should tell her this, but better her husband than
a new d-in-1. )

A perfec t Keepsake diamOnd
bril lian t and beautrh!l forever

on the go homemaker!

'

Sho'sGeneroustoaFauu

+ l+

.just the thing for today's

.

•

f

anrl Sue• Bnllt'l

lldt•ll

G.S.:
You probably can 't do much to change an overgenerous
person, so, if she's "terrific" in every other way, don 't be offended by her pampering, but don'I lake advantage of it either.
- SUE
.

Portable, easy to car'},

'&gt; !{• p
W II h

l lrp I\

•.r 1q

I

AWHITE SEWING
MACHINE

·
fl'

II 1'1

KE~PSAKE

DIAMOND

lh

..,...,ii.l PWP open house

My new mother-in-law is terrific. Whenever we visit h&lt;'l'
:ego home laden with eight tons of groceries. 1avoid shopping
Ith her because she wants to pay for ever)1hing. 1appredate
her kmdness but makes us feel like small children.
. She cannot accept a gift graciously. On one of their anmversanes we gave them a gift certificate to their favorite
restaurant. They used it to take US out to dinner. Another lime
we gav~ them a deluxe cheese gifli&gt;ack. We got half of it back.
I gave her a loaf of my h?~~~emade bread. She slipped it in the
car because we'd "need it for breakfast." ·
I mean , what do you do with a woman who wants you to
return a caftain because it's "too big," and keep the money
yourself' - GE'ITING SPOILED

'

Atbentz 2000
\\'tr r ld .

MAKE IT A

·G·;,~,;;;~,i~':··' ''il;;,,

. ,'CI...~~-~~...'il..~·Y.•·~-~~~-~~

Par-

BOYS TUBE SOCKS
1.00 VAWE

1

For Boy s or Girt s. Fils
size Blo \I. Agill they 'll
use year round -

at

savings. too .

PRACTICAL GIFTS!

66~,..

"Your-Christmas Store"

�I.

.;.~.}~~~..~~~~:...~~.tinc•l, Middl~port-Pumeroy. 0 . Tuesdoy . Dec. Hi. 1!1/o

lr·············.

if:

~,Rap:
:

~'~HURRY..
LAY-AWAY NOw!
GET THE A-'~ "
·' ·
1
·~ I
r
""
(0
::!'Kf .·
•
GIFT SHE
'
~
WILL
\.
•'
REMEMBER.
WHITE

'flu• Fir:.l Electron ic Jlurnc
s.n \. ing M:H:hiue In '11rc
f'l

1

II nr)

I!,Uik.'

(J I , I
ld{!lo, lo I
~O\J
"&gt;r·it'~' Y~'''l '\'1lr II lilUL il
d1•1l
lJUIIOn
,1f1CI
SCW
• II '• 1 ,I rl I

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';('\',
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'&gt; t '\'111 111!
lol! (ld\t '
1} (• II t'l 1, 1 riqPr
I &lt;I

IU '&gt;I\('&lt;,

fiJO IItm fw:&lt;por:tatl

The Fabric Shop
Mc C.l ii' S, Kw ick-Scw ,
Si m pl rcl ty Pa tt ern s

11 5 W. Second

992 1284

'..,.. , _~ro sr,.. GER ~~,..~~fi t\~ Pom eroy , Ohio~f/IJ.ik..ifrA..

-~~~- -;~If:::-~ w

'?&gt;--~~

111! 1111! ! 1 ) 1! 1 ! ! ! !!11 1 1 ~ 1111 1 1!!' 1 : '! ..

!111111

· ·. ··· · ··· · This is a

n.mm •11 c /r,un S.JWS

See it now ar:

. POMEROY HOME &amp;AUTO
TIRE BALANCING AL~~~~~NT
:~~~::.·:.~:;.; .::,"'' PH. 992-2094
POMEROY

BONUS
PRICE

ONEIDA
STAINLESS
TABLEWARE

'Pc.

Ci leSI Nol
Included

36

$1495

t-

MICROWAVE OVE

Counterl op Model RE9?2 : th e modern, quick and
easy way to cook! T h(1 ws rJ n d cooks fr oz en foods in a

few minutes. a grea t li me-saver lor meal s or

6'tlt.9~~

parties. It 's cosy to opercll e, l r1kes no speci al wi r ing ,
plu gs int o iln y co nven tiona l 170 v. ou tl e t . Food cook
· qui ckl y bu t oven sl ays coo l an d wi pes clea n in a
jif! y. HandsoiTle st yl ing wi th tran sparent black ·
door . Reg ulc'lr ly 5359.95.

OPEN EVENifo' tiS

RINGS FROM
5100.00 and up

SEWING CENTER

·H+

OHIO

Rap :

Here's a new participation sport devised by my sister and
me :
Equipment : one car.
Players : One or more adultish females.
Playing Field : Main Street, or your town's equivalent.
Name-of Game : "Hey, Hey! "
In "Hey, Hey! " the players drive down Main Street
hunting for "Hey, beys" - attractive males. When one i~
spotted,tiie spoiler yells, "Hey, hey!" at him. It's fun to walcll
the results, especially if you add, '.'Big fella," or "Dig the
gorgeous bod, big fella!" It's especially fun ifhe's talking to a
woma 0. The expressions are priceless.
ll'snol wise to "Hey, hey" in sluggish traffic. Like males
whistling at females, this is a game for cowards. The "Hey
hey" might come up to your car and try to start something:
either a fight or a tryst.
The purpose of this game is revenge. Ever since puberty .
I've been having remarks yelled at me from males in moving
vehicles. Could never tell whether they were complimentary,
erotic or insulting. So now : turnabout time!
Try It, girls, you'llllke it. - JANE

CHRISTMAS
Ll

-;

~aoo. THE

POMEROY
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr .

PH. 992 -2181 '
Serving Meigs, Gallia &amp;

The Lord's Birthday will be
upon us shortly. During this
• time there will be many
witnessing gifts exchanged.
: . •• To be sure that the world
will be able to recognize
your witness . .. Please

~
•

THINK

•

JOHN 8:12
what the world would be like
without the Light of Christ
Jesus.

Middleport Book Store

Dear Jane :
And maybe - so will the men. - HELEN
·H

Manufactu re r's Sugge sted Retail Price .
Destination charges, optional equipment, dea ler
prep., state ta xes not included.

RIVERSIDE AMC.JEEP

PARTY PLANNED
RACINE
Racine
American Legion Post 602
and its auxiliary wtll hold a
Christmas party Saturday
beginning at 6 p.m. at the post
home. All members of the
post and their immediate
families are invited to a!lend.
Women are to take a covered
dish and silverware for their
families.

Muon COunties

Poinsettias
'3.00 to '5.00
Choose from 600 pots.
Churches and
organiullons quantity
discount. Also Foliage
Plants &amp; Baskeh.

PORTABLE TV ·
Deco rator .
; ,;j

des ign ed

FOR
LESS

any where.

Zenith

to go
Full

includi ng
solid ·
state modul es ,

BUCKSI \

'N

qualit y ~

Portable,
Colors,

Buitt.$in, W,as S309 .9S ·.
Extr a .

_Power Mi ser swit ch helps cut elec-

Royally
Cr es t
tubes . Si• Colors.

Eff_icicnl fo rced clir dry ing is fast
working

AT fl EA lis
AN D SA VE

sHoP

LSears-· ]

220 E.' Main

st.
Ph. 992-WB
Lou Osborne . Pomeroy
ala tog Values for the Holiday" .-.41
IW

HONDA

GIFT
for t he Outdoorsman!
PERFECT

MINIBtKE

SEE THEM
TODAY I

Flowers.
For Every
Holiday
Occasion.

• Oyna Mike Gain Control

make up any Sile centerpiece you want .

CXder now .

Centerpieces. Cu.l Ftoweos, Polled
Plants and Permanent Christmas }
Arrangemenh .
Near or far,

We wire flowers everywhere."

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
r tt.t'

f

• Th e proii!Hional
ulc t-v f e.:alure .

MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO.
p

176

o.

PH-992-2039
10'

Butternut Pomeroy

$1·5995

Always
ppreciated

• Built-in Noise Limiting
• All 23 Channels

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY
Open Evenings

• Mini Size/Maxi Talk
Power

$129

SAYRE HARDWARE
New Haven, W. Va.

95

eM a son

~

"ONE NEAIR YOU"

I
•

PRICES
IN

EFFECT

NOW!
MEN'S REGULAR $1.00

TUBE

I

!special yule music «
N

The choir of ihe Sacred
Heart Catholic Church under
lhe direction of Mrs. George
Hackett, Jr . will present
special music preceding both
lhe Christmas Eve Mass and
I he Midnight Mass.
Music will begin at 6:45
p.m. wilh the Christmas Eve
Mass at 7:30 p.m. For the
Midnight Mass. the music
will begin at 11: lo p.m. The
Rev. Fr. Paul Welton has
prepared a Mass guide for

SOCKS
Wh ite with variou s
stripe top. Full cushion

distribution to non-Catholics
who are invited to attend the
services.
In the choir are Mrs. Susan
Baer, Mrs. Gemma Casci,
Mrs. "Philomena Follrod,
Guido Girolami, Mrs. Martha
Gress . Richard Gress,
George Hackett, Jr., George
Horak, Mrs . Barbara Mullen,
Mrs. Belly Ohlinger , Mrs.
Marie Robinson, Mrs .
Yvonne Scally, Ed Wehrung
and Mrs. Catherine Welsh .

foot - no heel. s&lt;&gt; they
never wear out. Fits 9 to
15.

Mrs. Dianne George entertained with a surprise
party honoring her son, Brent
Edward on his lOth birthday
at the home of his grandmother. Mrs. Lee McComas,
Sunday afternoon.
TIME SET
Judging In the Christmas
lighting contest for Middleport village sponsored
by the Middleport Amateur
Gardeners will begin at 6
p.m.
Thursday. . No
registration Is necessary as
the judg"' will tour the
community to view the
window
and
door
decorations. First prizes of
$10 ami second prizes of $5
will be awarded In the
categories of windows and
doors. Residents are asked
to have their decorations
lighted by 6 p.m.

CARNIVAL BLUE

·INDIANA GLASS

CARNIVAL
HEN ON NEST

Party honors birthday
Games were played under
the direction of Mrs. Judy
Burns and Brian Lee George.
After Brent opened his gills,
refreshments were served to
those named and Mrs. Anthony Nardei, Michael and
Michelle, Mr . and Mrs .
Russell E . Miller, Tina,
Timothy and Carma, James,
Rhonda and Wendi Burns,
Terri Marie Roush , Mark
McCloud, Tammy Jo Lan·
ders. Maggie, Gerry and
Jimmy Reynolds. Beth Ann
and Darin Wolfe, David,
Christopher and Margaret
George.
Favors of candy canes and
balloons were given to the
children. Refreshments were
cake, ice cream and nuts.

WEDDING
BOWL

Ideal for cand ies or
good ies , carn iva l blue,

gold or green . 7" long.

high
Boxed.

&amp;

5"

5'12"wide.

AND COVER
Measures

10"

high and

in d iameter . In-

63.~"

dividually boxed.

329 VALUE

. 1

'2.49 VALUE

OPEN EVERY NIGHT TILL 9 PM! ! !
/

!01\lm.!!
MEN'S DOUBLE KNIT POLYESTER
LOVABLE, CUDDLY

DRESS
PANTS
T~EY JUST ARRIVED!
Leggs Quality. Compare at $15 .00 to 120.00 .
Solid navy, brown, taupe. green or rust.

SPONSORING DANCE
RACINE - The Southern
High School Tri-M Society
will sponsor a Olrislmas
dance from 9 to midnight
Sal urday in the Southern
High gymnasiwn .

Hound stooth

check s. too . Flare legs. Waist

!iii zes ll to 40.

FURRY
DOG
Th is long hai r puppy
feel s lik e a rea l dog. 8"
long . Brown &amp; · white.

Reg ular 51.97 .

$ 22

Nothing e,.; prc sses the wo rmth of
Chrb\mu like o living gltt the
whole lomll y can en;oy ., . es~c ­

SATURDAY PROGRAM
ially this beeul lful FTD Ho lldo11y
BALD KNOB
A Glow" Bouquet . You con sen d this
011c o f our numy other beautllul
Olristmas program will be or
selections, such as o polnsetti" or
presented at the Freedom a Hon gin g Ga rden, to I he people
love, Thco v are
Gospel Mission Church at 7
I
•P
•clal
everv·
p.m. Saturday. The public is
I
g lad yo u
invited.
Call or visi t

SAFE :- HARMLESS

CLICK GUNS
98' VALUE

today.

so~
"TOMMY TURnE"
OR

..

SAT~

"SNOOPY"
STUFFED
ANIMALS
Two fa vorite plush toys

Stretch Nylon

SOCKS

CHRISTMAS
GIVEAWAY

Fits IOto 13
69c Value

at a redu Ced pri ce .
Children an d even teens

English Leather

TOILETRY
KIT
You got Travel Kif and

li ke them. Regular
11.96.

English Leahler Set now
at big savings .

$

DEC. 20

Ott FrH Tickets l't All
ticipating Gold St•r Stores.

only

ePoint Pleasant

l.~~~•"-"'u"':;a'ti.ill~~~~.-c:...~eu.~~w"-~~~~·

i:r:::::ch:~:;;:;:;: ;~::;:p;;;,~;:;t:: ::::::::::ili.

$100.00 Gift Certificate For Groceries

COBRA-19

~

eSilver Bridge Plaza

. TEENS FAVORITES

.NEXT DRAWING

To ftiends or family

W11r ld wrr h
rh" lnw

tended lo all eliKible single
persons and professional
people who are interested in
learning whal Parents
Without Partners · is about.
Bulllcworlh will speak on
Radio WJEH at 10:30 a.m .
Friday on the organization .

.

\1

A OISC.OU NT
DOAitf Mf.NT STOlE

·

special in vitation being ex-

Gold Star

only

ellluminated Meter
• Switchable Noise Limiter

J

MEN•s

COBRA-21

Let us ·design a beautiful floral selling
for your holi day tabl e. Our experts will

Mrs. Milia rd ~ • n Mel or

"Whal Arc the Benefi ts of
Parents Without Parlnei's''"
The meeting is open to all
inlercsled · persons with a

erehan

I

ROM MINI TO

th~

I'

~~~~~~,.._'I!t...

J

~

'.)'

Paren ls Willwut Partners.
Holling Hills Chapter 8:18, will
hold an open house meeting
al Grace Unilcd Methodist
Church in Gallipolis at 7::10
p.m. rrtday.
Speake1· fQI' the session will
be Harry Bultleworlh from
Chapter 20:1 of Parents
Witlwul Partners, Cincinnati.
and also president of the
Soulhern Ohio Regional
Council of Prents Without
Partners. on lhe suhiecl.

. ..

t

be hekl Frida11

I'

GI VE HIM

rrr

tO

NO MEETING
There will be no meeting of
the Middleport Literary Club
this week, Mr.s . Dwight
Wallace announced . The next
meeting or the club will he
held on Jan. 7.

Shipping, tn slallation Extra
Sate Ends Dec. 31

As advertised '"
- OL Media .

h 1•1 ht.;~• P .11

bra

Ha s a Credit Plan to· Suit Most Every
Prices are Cata log Prices
Satisfaction Quaranteed or Your Money ·

~

f 1 , 1~

Syracuse

PROGRAM SET
LONG BO'ITOM - The
annual Christmas program of
the Long Bottom United
Methodist Church has been
set for 7:30p.m. on Tuesday,
Dec. 23. There will be
recitations, special music,
dialogue, "Who Is the
Saviour? " and Christmas
meditations by the pastor,
Dennis Creeger. The public is
invited.

SJJ9.9S .scra ps
1ncal use

MIDDLEPORl

Or1ly \,Jw

992 - ~m

25995

soli d -st at e t.uning ,

heritage house

Hubbard
Greenhou.-

INITIATED
'Linda Rupe, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Rupe ,
was Initiated into Omega
Chapter of Kappa Della Pi,
honorary society in education
at Ohio Universily·on Dec. 7.
Mrs. Rupe and Mrs. Eddie
Smith of Pomeroy attended
the ceremony held at Baker
Center. Linda is a junior at
Ohio. She graduated from
Meigs High in 1972.

pulvenzer han dles soft

WAS

INGELS
FURNITURE
992-2635

'--"' .

. ___.

15

+

NOTE FROM SUE : Let's ask them a~d see : Fellas, how
would YOU like to be "Hey, heyed" by a girl in a passing car?
1And if you wouldn't, remember that, next time you feel a
whistle coming on. )

PACER ... ...... .. ... .... ... ..•349900

On the Tin Middleport

MORE BOOT

{

NOTE FROM HELEN : Isn't it strange how a person who
gets so much pleasure from giving seldom realizes that others
find pleasure in giving too ? Your l)lOther-in-law might be
shocked to know that she comes off a little selfish and
"superior" when she can't accept graciously.
.
ISomeone should tell her this, but better her husband than
a new d-in-1. )

A perfec t Keepsake diamOnd
bril lian t and beautrh!l forever

on the go homemaker!

'

Sho'sGeneroustoaFauu

+ l+

.just the thing for today's

.

•

f

anrl Sue• Bnllt'l

lldt•ll

G.S.:
You probably can 't do much to change an overgenerous
person, so, if she's "terrific" in every other way, don 't be offended by her pampering, but don'I lake advantage of it either.
- SUE
.

Portable, easy to car'},

'&gt; !{• p
W II h

l lrp I\

•.r 1q

I

AWHITE SEWING
MACHINE

·
fl'

II 1'1

KE~PSAKE

DIAMOND

lh

..,...,ii.l PWP open house

My new mother-in-law is terrific. Whenever we visit h&lt;'l'
:ego home laden with eight tons of groceries. 1avoid shopping
Ith her because she wants to pay for ever)1hing. 1appredate
her kmdness but makes us feel like small children.
. She cannot accept a gift graciously. On one of their anmversanes we gave them a gift certificate to their favorite
restaurant. They used it to take US out to dinner. Another lime
we gav~ them a deluxe cheese gifli&gt;ack. We got half of it back.
I gave her a loaf of my h?~~~emade bread. She slipped it in the
car because we'd "need it for breakfast." ·
I mean , what do you do with a woman who wants you to
return a caftain because it's "too big," and keep the money
yourself' - GE'ITING SPOILED

'

Atbentz 2000
\\'tr r ld .

MAKE IT A

·G·;,~,;;;~,i~':··' ''il;;,,

. ,'CI...~~-~~...'il..~·Y.•·~-~~~-~~

Par-

BOYS TUBE SOCKS
1.00 VAWE

1

For Boy s or Girt s. Fils
size Blo \I. Agill they 'll
use year round -

at

savings. too .

PRACTICAL GIFTS!

66~,..

"Your-Christmas Store"

�Nellie Tracy honored
at
.

Polly's Pointers

.J ACKSON ~- Mrs. Nellie presi!lent . Mrs. Vess was
'li·aey of Meigs County was w1ablc to attend , but a tribute
nne of th ree teachers honored to her was given by F.lizabeth
"' the Sat urday luncheon i.antz. Mrs. Ge~trude Trace
rrecling of Alpha OMicron gave the tribute to Mrs.
Chapt er of Delt a Ka ppa ~'ehrm an , and Mrs. Nellie
&lt;;a mrn u Society held at Vale presented the tribute to
Sadler's Restaurant here. · Mrs. Tracy .
The &lt;~I her lwo teachers
In addition to the corsages
honored were Anna Maude the chapter presented each
Fehrman of Jackson Co un ty, one with a gold plaque with
and Grace Vess of Vinton appr·opriate inscription.
County. Tri bute~ were given
In her tribute to Mrs.
to eac h of th e te achers Tracy, Mrs. Vale noted that
selected to represent their · she was born in Sal em
respective counties on the Township In Meigs county
basis of experience and ex- and taught for 4$ years and
cellence. Mrs. Tracy and substituted for .15 years. She
Mrs. Fehrman were guests at noted that Mrs. tracy had
th e lun cheon and were started teaching when she
presented corsages by the was 18 yearsoOld and taught

Putting a stop to
slipping spectacles
POlLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POIJ.V - I have an
IIMoylng problem with my
eye glasses. They slide down
vn my nose and I am always
pushing them up. The doctor
ket!pS adjusting them and I
have used pOwder on the nose
piece, rubber In the temple
hinges but nothing seems to
help. Does anyone have a
~ood answer that will help me
see better and feel beller. MARIAN.
•
DEAR MARIAN - I am
1111re we will 10011 be geutnc
110me anawen from olhen
who WHr ctaues. - POlLY.

DEAR POI.I.Y - I think
the colUmn Is lhereapeutlc to
those of us with Peeves so
here Ia mine. I abhor thOIIe
llllcky messy salt and pepper
llhakers In most restaurants.
People who use salt on
t'lllcken leave greasy marks
all over the shaker, not to
mention the ge11118 they pass
R1ong. I prefer those In·
divldual salt and papper
packets. If they are not used
It seems tile shakers could be
wiped off between patrons. I .
carry those dampened.
toweleltes to use to eliminate
tile mess but they do not help
the genlll that could be a
health l)aurd, - M11.UE.
DEAR POlLY - Cut~fl
blue jean lep are great to use
as a bag far crushing Ice.
They are tough and can be
IISed over and over again.
Sew acroa the cut edges to
make a bag tllat the cubes
can be sii!Jped ln.
·U you have several jars
with just a bll of jelly and
preaerves, put them all
together and mix with peanul
bultec ,so you are prepared to
IIUike quick sandwiches lor

Family home
from trip
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Davis
have returned home after
spending the weekend In
Culumbua and Springfield.
Friday they were dinner
guests of Mr . and Mrs .
Robert l.ehew aild chUdren.
On Saturday Mrs. Davis and
her sister, Mrs . Alma
Johnson, Springfield, went to
Orient to visit another sister,
Dorothy t.ellhett.
On Sunday Christmas was
celebrated at the home of
Mrs. Johnson. Besides Mr .
and Mrs. Davia other auesli
were Mr. and Mrs. Richard
l.elfhelt and children Emma
Jo and !Curt, and Mrs .
Garney Runyan , Springfield.
Glfll were exchanged around
a lighted tree.

Santa visits
Rutland party
RUTI..AND - The Rutland
Youth Center was the scene
of an advocacy program
Christmas part~ for the
re.lllrded and disabled. Santa
Oaus came at 2:30 p.m. to
distribute glfll to all the
"prvteges." Ice cream Santa
Oaus, cookies shaped like
sian, bells and Santaa and
punch were 1erved to all
!bote pre~ent. Forty children
llld adults were present.
The advocacy program Is
an agency of the ''641" Board
with Mary Skinner, coor·
dinator. Her offtce Is located
In the Community Mentel
Health Center (the old Meigs
General Hospital) . Mrs .
Skinner thanks all the
parents and advocates who
have made the program a

the kids.
While cooking a good
dinner, fill rnarg•rlne tubs
with enough to take to a
lonely neighbor.
To launder shoelaces .
remove from the shoes and
tie into the buttonhole of a
shirt or blouse. They go
through the laundry cycle
and come out with no knots.
- · KAY.
DEAR POIJ.Y - I learned
the following fast and easy
way to make a quantity of
.hamburger patties for the
freezer . l.ay out five inch
squares of waxed paper .
Using an ice cream scoop
make mounds of hamburger
and place each on a square.
Pitt another square of waxed
paper on top of each mound
and press It down with a large
can full of something. You
will have nicely shaped
patties within waxed paper
that can be stacked and put in
the freezer to he used as
needed. - LIZ .
DEAR POI.I.Y - Those
who have back trouble and
·lind It hard to wash the
bathtub should use a new
lollet liowl brush kept lor tills
purpose. You can scour
around tile tub wltllout too
muchbendlng,andthenclose
LETART, W. Va. the shower curtain and turn Weddin g vow s we re ex·
the shower on to rinse it out. changed at the Church of
- MRS. A. E.
Christ In Christian Uni on
DEAR READF..RS -Such June 21, when Miss Sonia
a brush II alaO great lor Elder. daughter of Mr. and
cleaning a square tub met In a Mrs. Rev. Harry Elder, of
oorner. - POlLY.
. Letar t, became the bride of
You wut recelce a dollar II Larry Q. Huffman, son of Mr.
Polly uses your favorite and Mrs. Darrell Huffm an, of
homemaking Idea, Pel Point Pleasant.
Peeve, Polly's Problem
Rev. George Sadler per·
10lulion to a problem. ~rf
formed the ceremony. Music
Polly in care of this ne • was provided by Miss Sheila
paper.
Elder.
Th e bride entered th e
church with her fa ther and

Circle enjoys party

Mr. and Mrs. Larry Huffman

Vows solemnized
in June rites

i

Wedding plans
are finalized
THURSDA\'
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club, 11 :30 a.m.
Thursday, potluck dinner at
the Rock Springs Church.
Members to take .e covered
dish, secret pal gift for exchange and 50-eent grab bag
items. Following tile dinner
cans will be filled wllh candy
and cookies for the shut·lns.
TWIN-. CITY Shrlneltes
Christmas dinner Thursday
7:30 p.m. at Meigs Inn. Ali
members invited to attend.
MIDDI.EPORT Cub Scout
Pack 245 Thursday at 7 p.m.
al · Middleport American
Legion Post. Membership
open for any ·boy eight years
Ill age or In second grade.
FRIDAY·
MEIGS High School
Christmas Concert Friday 7
p.m. Meigs Junior High
Middleport. Participating
will be the concert band,
choir and jaa band under
direction of Dwight Goins and
Randy Hunt.
TRI · M seml · formal
Christmas Dance at Southern
High School Friday 9 lo 12.
· Music by the Cobras. AdmiBaion $1.50 single, $2.50 a
couple.
CHRISTMAS Program will
be held Friday 7:30 p.m. at
Portland Metllodlst Church.
PAST
Matrons
of
Evangeline Chapter 7:30
Friday night at the h~ne of
Mrs. Mary Hnghes. $2 gift
exchange.

POINT PLEASANT
Wedding plans of Janie Lynn
Phillips, daughter of Mr . and
Mrs , J. W! Phillips of Point
Pleasant, and Gary J. Bur·
delle, son of Mrs. Garnet
Burdette, New Haven and the
late Bevan Burdette, have
been finalized.
The ceremony will lake
place Saturday, Dec. 20; at
7:30p.m. at St. Paul United
Metllodist Church, Jackson
Avenue, Point Pleasant. Prenuptial music wlll begin at 7
p.m.
The gracious custom of
open church wlll be observed,
and the receplion will follow
lmmedlately In the church
social room.

was attired in a gown of white
satin trimmed in lace around
waistline; neck and sleeves
with a Juliet cap of chantilly
lace. arm length. She carried
a colonial bouquet consisting
of yellow rosebuds, yellow
daises. feathered carnations
and baby's breath.
Miss Diana Elder, sister of
the bride, was lhe bride's
maid of honor. Miss Elder
was attired in a blue and
whlte fl owered gown . She
carri ed . a lon g-stemm ed
carnation dipped in blue and
blue sat in streamers.
Miss Della Huffman, sister
of groom, was a bridesmaid.
Miss Huffm an wore a pink
and white fl owered gown. She
car ried a lon g.s temmed
carnation dipped in pink and
pink satin streamers .
Terry Huffman, brother of
the groom, served as best
man. Usher Ronnie Riner,
cousin df groom, was usher.
Mrs. Elder, moth er of
bride, chose a blue knit floor·
length dress ensemble with
matching accessories and a
corsage of white carn ations
dipped in blue.
The gr oom's moth er
selected mini green knit
fl oor-length dress ensemble
with matching accessories
and a corsage of while car·
nations dipped In m]nt green.
A reception followed at
Krodel Park. The bride's
table was covered with a
white tablecloth and a three·
tiered wedding cake. Those
assisting at the reception
were Mrs. Ann Elder and
Mrs. Shirley Riner.

VISIT IN WAVERI.Y
RUTLAN D- Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Sisson and children
Robbie, Johnnie and Melissa
of Rutland made a pre·
Christmas vlsil in Waverly
LUNCHEON GUESTS
with the children's god father,
RUTLA ND Friday
Charles H. Wise.
lunc heo n guests of Mrs.
Nellie Vale, Rutland , were
Mrs. C. 0 . Chapman, Mrs.
Nellie Tracy and Mrs. C. W.
VISITED HERE
Stansbury. Sunday visitors of
Michael Turner of Bucyrus Mrs. Vale wer,e Mr . and Mrs.
spent the we ekend here G. A. Radekln and daughter
visitin g his grandparents, Tina Marie and her boyfriend
Mr . and ¥ts. Joe Turner1 of Alban y.
Middleport.

RA CIN E - The Ruth
Missionary Circle of the
Racine First Baptist Church
ha d a Christmas party
r·ecently al the home of Mrs.
Martha Lou Beegle, Dorcas,
with 11 members and two
guests attending.
Each
perso n
read
something pertaining to the
Christmas sea son . The
readings were "Christmas
Time" by Mrs. Beegle;
"Receipe of Christmas" by
Mrs. Olie Mae Cozart ; "What
Is Chri stmas" by Mrs .
Mildred Hart; "We Have to
Find a Christmas Angel" by.
Mrs. Phyllis Bailey; "Joys of
Chris tmas," by Ba rbara

Gheen; "Through the Eyes of
a Clriid " by Debbie Beegle ;
"Let's Keep Christmas" by
Mrs. Mary Kay Yost ; "We've
Come a Long Way Since that
First Christmas Day" by
Samdra Boolh; "Let tJs Live
Christmas Everyday," Mrs.
Emma Adams ; "Unto Us a
Child is Born," Marjorie
Grimm ; "Christmas is a
Season of Kindness" by Linda
Grimm ; "Abiding Gifts" by
Nondus Hendricks; "In the
Lillie Stable Long Ago" by
Caraline Miller. ·
Gills are exchanged and
refreshments were served by
Mrs. Martha Lou Beegle and
Mrs. Debbie Beegle.

Legion plans
Faith Baptist
church events treat giveaway
MASON, W. Va. - Sunday
school attendance Dec. 14
was 45 at the Faith Baptist
church and the speaker for
the morning services was
Pastor Cliff Colema n uf
Jackson,
Ohi o,
area
missionary from the Scioto
Valley Association.
Sunday. Dec. 21, at 7 p. n).
children and teenagers will
prese nt a Christmas program
and the Spellker for the
evening se..Vtces at 7:30 will
be Pastor Robert Baldwin, 36,
fo rmerly of Charles ton, now
living in Georgia.
Sunday school each Sunday
Is at to a.m. ; Bible study
Sunday and Wednesday at
7: 30 p.m. in the Steelworkers
Union Hall on Railroad St.
between Horton and Pomeroy
Sis. The public is invilt'li.

DEADLINE NEARS
Deadline lor submitting
the names of shut·lns or
persons who wlll be alone
on Christmas Day lor a
holiday dinner to be
prepared and delivered by
the stall at the · Senior
Citizens 'center Is Friday.
' Nam es
should
be
telephoned to the Center.
Approximately 50 dinners
wlll be prepared with most
of the food beiAg provided
by Powell's Super-Vatu and
the Chester Young Wives
Club.

J~t

Christmas treats for the
residents of lhe Syracuse
Nursing Home, the Meigs
County Infirmary and the
children of the community
will again this year be
distributed by FeeneyBennett Post 120, American
Legion .
The legionnaires will meet
at the hall at5 p.m. Sunday to
sack the candy. On Christmas
Eve they will leave from the
hail at 5p.m. accompanied by
Santa for a trip to the
Syra cuse Nursing Home,
then to the Infirmary at 5:30
und back to the Middleport
Legion hall at 6 p.m. to begin

luncheon.~.....

her first term in Ray In J¢rusalem and Mary, ~
Vinton County and the rest of Moth er of Jesus, notlqljt::
the time in Meigs County.
characteristics of each ~
Mrs. Tracy attended Rio comparing them to deslrabltJ::
Grande College and Ohio qualitle~ in teachers.
University, married Everett
During the buslne lli '.
Tracy, also a teacher and had meeting arrangements were•
one son, Dr. E. A. Tracy, a made to send flowers to Mrs.~
Columbus dentist. Mr. and C. 0 .. Chapman and ~~
Mrs. Tracy taught together 38 Beatrice Rinehatt both ot'
years,' she the first through Meigs County who we~e.'
the fourth grades, and he, lhe recently hospitalized. It wa! 1·
fifth lhrough the eighth reported that ~5 had been
grades.
added to the scholarsHip fund
Mrs. Vale, namesalre of from a recent silent auction.
Mrs. Tracy, gave recollec·
Meigs County members
tions ofher early associations attending were Mrs. Ruth
with Mrs. -Tracy and personal Euler, Mrs. Martha Husted,
· happenings which Influenced Miss Mildred Hawley, Mrs.
her classroom activities. Now Nan Moore , Mrs. Nellie
living alone on 'l/7 acres In Parker, Mrs. Margaret
the Harri!!Onviile Road area, Parsons, Miss Mary VIrginia
Mrs. Tracy remains active in Reibel, Miss Rosalie Story,
the Order of Eastrn Star, the Mrs. Anne Elizabeth Turner,
White
Shrine, · the Mrs. Nellle Vale, Mrs.
Harrisonville Grange, the Roberta Wilson and Mrs.
Meigs co·unty Retired Dorothy Woodard.
Teachers, the Laurel Cliff
.Better Health Club, and the
Senior Citizens. She Is noted . Gifts He Can Wear
From HIS Store
for giving recitations and
readings and at the conclusion of Mrs. Vale's tribute
to her, Mrs. Tracy recited
'' Mandy ' s Christmas
Present."
Mrs.
Vale
presented her with a book of
poetry.
Both International
Women 's Year 1975 and the
Bicentennial Year, 1976, were
celebrated during the
meeting. Tables for the
· dinner were decorated with
green garlands trimmed with
red and white checked bows
and favors were handmade
pin cushions in bell, tree and
animal replicas. Hariett
Wood , one of the hostesses,
made the favors and
decorations.
For the program the theme
All the I ies are her e he
used by Mrs. Fehrman was would
bu v himself · g ive
"The Graces of Mary ." She him several !h is Chri st
spoke of Anesalh, ·Anna, mas .
KERM ' S KORNER
Dorcas, Rachael, Rulh and .
Hannah of the Old Testament
NEW YORK
and Elizabeth, Martha, Mary
of
Bethany,
Mary
a.DTHING HOUSE
Magdalene,
Mary
of

f.

Pom eroy, Ohio

;~--p-c)iN§'EtiiAs .

,,

Fami~

...

·' ·,

..

•'

FRYING
CHICKEN

I

CASH 'N CARRY. ·
.G uido Girolami, Vidia
,G1rolami to May Mayle, Pl.
Lot 107, Pomeroy.
GUARANTEED TO BLOOM AU THRU
Olive M. Osburn, dec. to
'"
Delmar J. Osburn, Delmar
THE HOLIDAYS
•
Gordon Osburn, Larry Leroy
Osburn, Cert. of trans., Olive.
'
Delmar J . Osburn to
Delmar Gordon Osburn
Larry Leroy Osburn, 21.88'
•
acres, 21.67 acres, Olive.
59 N. Second St.
•
Jodeena Sauvage to Carl
Middleport
.. ,""'""~Moll&lt;lo....._\lillltlill\lilll...... .. ~
Sauvage, 1.9fl acre, Chester. ...,___.,.

------

In Time For Christmas Giving/

.

79

&amp; THIGHS.M~69~

purchase necessary - All
you have to do is enter -

e

6 FOR

16 OZ. BOX

BETSY
~tra

Large
Red or Golden

694

FRUIT
BASKETS

Delicious
Apples

MADE TO ORDER

$1.-95

~

~~~.......~.~.79
RDSEYE

0~ CTN.
~ttl~ ...............
9

Isle
FROZEN

4

,.

49,.

CLUSTER

RED
GRAPES
3LB.

12

$}00

0~

••••••••••••••••••
~

COUPON

.._.

95~

DEL MONTE
.
16 0~ CAN
MIXED VEGETABLES
.. ~......................
.

EAM

%GAL
ILK •••••••••••••

cid for winners' names.

16 oz.
bois.

NAVEL
.ORANGES

Pillsbury Nut, Date
Nut, or Banana
Nut Bread

You need not be present
to win -Check our Monday

7-UP or PEPSI-COLA

CALIFORNIA

CAN

2I 59

GOLDEN ISLE
.
FRUIT COCKTAIL..~~-~~-~~.

3/$100

~~~N~!~~. . . . . ~.~.~~2/99~

~~~~INS ..........?.;!~;: . 3/$1 OO

·THANK YOU
· 14 OZ. CAN 59~
SP.ICED APPLE RINGS .............................. .
THANK YOU
I&amp; oz. w
e
SPICED WHOLE CRABAPPLES....................
EMPRESS
11 OZ. CAN
00
MANDARIN ORANGES ......................

59
3/ '1
COUPON

;-,-, '"7 :- 1

. . ·I

ONLY

$4488.

·. .I

EA.

. .]

You'll iovethe plastic overlays on the doors and
the simulated wood grained finish on these tables.

•I

·)
.. I
. ' .I

COLONIAL STYLE

Knolly PIM wood grolnod linloh

Twin Cities Gateway
Expires 12-20·75

Squue Commode
with hln~eel door,

2411 It 24'' • 2011 hig h
Clblnel Coc k11111 T11bla
S4\4"- 20" J1 171• high

SUNDAY

INGELS FURNITURE
••

992-2635

MIDDLIPORT

¢

R~~~L FOOD CAKE..~: ......~~:~:~:~~....} g~

. 'I

OPEN FOR BUSINESS

10:00 A.M. • 5:00 P.M.
Ed's
Grocery

17- Final drawing. 12:00
noon Wed., D.ec. 24. No

LB.79e

PIECES
~
.BREASTS............ !-!~:. .

EESE

20%0FF.
••

Daily beginning Wed., Dec.

Polish Sausage

•

f

LB.69e

12-14 lb. Turkey Drawing

FRESH

8 OZ. PKG.

~

LET US
YOUR CHRISTM
TURKEY

Ground Beef

FRYING
CHICKENS

'I H

Pack

FRESH LEAN

FAMILY PACK

...

If _you have spols on dishes,
glones and silver

Boston Tea Party."
In 1835, one of history's
worst fires swept over whole
city blocks in New York City,
razing 600 buildings and
caused' damage estimated at
more than $20 mlUion .
In 1944, the Germans
The Almauac
launched
a great counter·
IIICa!SS.
By United Pre11 Ia,
offensive
in the Ardennes
lerllltloul
SAYRE HARDWARE
Forest
of
Belgium, in what
Today Is Tuesday, Dec. 16,
the S50th day of 1975 with 15 to was called "The Battle of the
Bulge."
follow.
The moon Is approaching
SANTA COMING
Ill full phue.
RACINE - Santa Claus
The mornlna alan are
wiU arrive tn Racine Sunday, Venus and Saturn.
Dec. 21 at 2 p.m .. at the fire
The evening stars are Mer·
RT. 124-143-RUTlANO ROAD
houae annex. Treat. will be cury, Mars and Jupiter.
given to children 12 years of
Thole barn on thl8 date are
ace and undec who Uveln the Wider the li&amp;n of Sa&amp;illarlua.
. HOURS- Monday thnl Saturday
area lltrYices by the Racine
~lilh actor, play'M'I&amp;ht
Fire Department and and CCIIIIpOa Noel Coward
5:00 A.M. • 9:00 pm.
emergency sqllld.
Wll born Dec. 18, 11199.
On thll day In hlltory:
MONDAY PROGRAM
In 1773, protealln&amp; the
SYRACUSE - A Cluiat· llrlllah Ill on t•, 110111e 50
mas prOifUI will be American patriOts dlagul.ied
rn-W Ml
bee. 22, ulndlllll dumped 341 chests
Cr~d•
at 7:30 p.m111 lilt
rl ~)ntc Bolton lfltllor In
Prttbyterlan OMirdl.
lrhat tiiiiOI')' rteGI'di .. '"!'tie

.1). .,acue

"

iladelphia

;; "THE TRADITIONAL GIFT"
FOR HOME OR CHURCH

''"';;;as II
Property
Transfers

•

...

32 oz.
J31

gg~ith

5 lb.
Coupon

bag

79¢

With Coupon

�Nellie Tracy honored
at
.

Polly's Pointers

.J ACKSON ~- Mrs. Nellie presi!lent . Mrs. Vess was
'li·aey of Meigs County was w1ablc to attend , but a tribute
nne of th ree teachers honored to her was given by F.lizabeth
"' the Sat urday luncheon i.antz. Mrs. Ge~trude Trace
rrecling of Alpha OMicron gave the tribute to Mrs.
Chapt er of Delt a Ka ppa ~'ehrm an , and Mrs. Nellie
&lt;;a mrn u Society held at Vale presented the tribute to
Sadler's Restaurant here. · Mrs. Tracy .
The &lt;~I her lwo teachers
In addition to the corsages
honored were Anna Maude the chapter presented each
Fehrman of Jackson Co un ty, one with a gold plaque with
and Grace Vess of Vinton appr·opriate inscription.
County. Tri bute~ were given
In her tribute to Mrs.
to eac h of th e te achers Tracy, Mrs. Vale noted that
selected to represent their · she was born in Sal em
respective counties on the Township In Meigs county
basis of experience and ex- and taught for 4$ years and
cellence. Mrs. Tracy and substituted for .15 years. She
Mrs. Fehrman were guests at noted that Mrs. tracy had
th e lun cheon and were started teaching when she
presented corsages by the was 18 yearsoOld and taught

Putting a stop to
slipping spectacles
POlLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POIJ.V - I have an
IIMoylng problem with my
eye glasses. They slide down
vn my nose and I am always
pushing them up. The doctor
ket!pS adjusting them and I
have used pOwder on the nose
piece, rubber In the temple
hinges but nothing seems to
help. Does anyone have a
~ood answer that will help me
see better and feel beller. MARIAN.
•
DEAR MARIAN - I am
1111re we will 10011 be geutnc
110me anawen from olhen
who WHr ctaues. - POlLY.

DEAR POI.I.Y - I think
the colUmn Is lhereapeutlc to
those of us with Peeves so
here Ia mine. I abhor thOIIe
llllcky messy salt and pepper
llhakers In most restaurants.
People who use salt on
t'lllcken leave greasy marks
all over the shaker, not to
mention the ge11118 they pass
R1ong. I prefer those In·
divldual salt and papper
packets. If they are not used
It seems tile shakers could be
wiped off between patrons. I .
carry those dampened.
toweleltes to use to eliminate
tile mess but they do not help
the genlll that could be a
health l)aurd, - M11.UE.
DEAR POlLY - Cut~fl
blue jean lep are great to use
as a bag far crushing Ice.
They are tough and can be
IISed over and over again.
Sew acroa the cut edges to
make a bag tllat the cubes
can be sii!Jped ln.
·U you have several jars
with just a bll of jelly and
preaerves, put them all
together and mix with peanul
bultec ,so you are prepared to
IIUike quick sandwiches lor

Family home
from trip
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Davis
have returned home after
spending the weekend In
Culumbua and Springfield.
Friday they were dinner
guests of Mr . and Mrs .
Robert l.ehew aild chUdren.
On Saturday Mrs. Davis and
her sister, Mrs . Alma
Johnson, Springfield, went to
Orient to visit another sister,
Dorothy t.ellhett.
On Sunday Christmas was
celebrated at the home of
Mrs. Johnson. Besides Mr .
and Mrs. Davia other auesli
were Mr. and Mrs. Richard
l.elfhelt and children Emma
Jo and !Curt, and Mrs .
Garney Runyan , Springfield.
Glfll were exchanged around
a lighted tree.

Santa visits
Rutland party
RUTI..AND - The Rutland
Youth Center was the scene
of an advocacy program
Christmas part~ for the
re.lllrded and disabled. Santa
Oaus came at 2:30 p.m. to
distribute glfll to all the
"prvteges." Ice cream Santa
Oaus, cookies shaped like
sian, bells and Santaa and
punch were 1erved to all
!bote pre~ent. Forty children
llld adults were present.
The advocacy program Is
an agency of the ''641" Board
with Mary Skinner, coor·
dinator. Her offtce Is located
In the Community Mentel
Health Center (the old Meigs
General Hospital) . Mrs .
Skinner thanks all the
parents and advocates who
have made the program a

the kids.
While cooking a good
dinner, fill rnarg•rlne tubs
with enough to take to a
lonely neighbor.
To launder shoelaces .
remove from the shoes and
tie into the buttonhole of a
shirt or blouse. They go
through the laundry cycle
and come out with no knots.
- · KAY.
DEAR POIJ.Y - I learned
the following fast and easy
way to make a quantity of
.hamburger patties for the
freezer . l.ay out five inch
squares of waxed paper .
Using an ice cream scoop
make mounds of hamburger
and place each on a square.
Pitt another square of waxed
paper on top of each mound
and press It down with a large
can full of something. You
will have nicely shaped
patties within waxed paper
that can be stacked and put in
the freezer to he used as
needed. - LIZ .
DEAR POI.I.Y - Those
who have back trouble and
·lind It hard to wash the
bathtub should use a new
lollet liowl brush kept lor tills
purpose. You can scour
around tile tub wltllout too
muchbendlng,andthenclose
LETART, W. Va. the shower curtain and turn Weddin g vow s we re ex·
the shower on to rinse it out. changed at the Church of
- MRS. A. E.
Christ In Christian Uni on
DEAR READF..RS -Such June 21, when Miss Sonia
a brush II alaO great lor Elder. daughter of Mr. and
cleaning a square tub met In a Mrs. Rev. Harry Elder, of
oorner. - POlLY.
. Letar t, became the bride of
You wut recelce a dollar II Larry Q. Huffman, son of Mr.
Polly uses your favorite and Mrs. Darrell Huffm an, of
homemaking Idea, Pel Point Pleasant.
Peeve, Polly's Problem
Rev. George Sadler per·
10lulion to a problem. ~rf
formed the ceremony. Music
Polly in care of this ne • was provided by Miss Sheila
paper.
Elder.
Th e bride entered th e
church with her fa ther and

Circle enjoys party

Mr. and Mrs. Larry Huffman

Vows solemnized
in June rites

i

Wedding plans
are finalized
THURSDA\'
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club, 11 :30 a.m.
Thursday, potluck dinner at
the Rock Springs Church.
Members to take .e covered
dish, secret pal gift for exchange and 50-eent grab bag
items. Following tile dinner
cans will be filled wllh candy
and cookies for the shut·lns.
TWIN-. CITY Shrlneltes
Christmas dinner Thursday
7:30 p.m. at Meigs Inn. Ali
members invited to attend.
MIDDI.EPORT Cub Scout
Pack 245 Thursday at 7 p.m.
al · Middleport American
Legion Post. Membership
open for any ·boy eight years
Ill age or In second grade.
FRIDAY·
MEIGS High School
Christmas Concert Friday 7
p.m. Meigs Junior High
Middleport. Participating
will be the concert band,
choir and jaa band under
direction of Dwight Goins and
Randy Hunt.
TRI · M seml · formal
Christmas Dance at Southern
High School Friday 9 lo 12.
· Music by the Cobras. AdmiBaion $1.50 single, $2.50 a
couple.
CHRISTMAS Program will
be held Friday 7:30 p.m. at
Portland Metllodlst Church.
PAST
Matrons
of
Evangeline Chapter 7:30
Friday night at the h~ne of
Mrs. Mary Hnghes. $2 gift
exchange.

POINT PLEASANT
Wedding plans of Janie Lynn
Phillips, daughter of Mr . and
Mrs , J. W! Phillips of Point
Pleasant, and Gary J. Bur·
delle, son of Mrs. Garnet
Burdette, New Haven and the
late Bevan Burdette, have
been finalized.
The ceremony will lake
place Saturday, Dec. 20; at
7:30p.m. at St. Paul United
Metllodist Church, Jackson
Avenue, Point Pleasant. Prenuptial music wlll begin at 7
p.m.
The gracious custom of
open church wlll be observed,
and the receplion will follow
lmmedlately In the church
social room.

was attired in a gown of white
satin trimmed in lace around
waistline; neck and sleeves
with a Juliet cap of chantilly
lace. arm length. She carried
a colonial bouquet consisting
of yellow rosebuds, yellow
daises. feathered carnations
and baby's breath.
Miss Diana Elder, sister of
the bride, was lhe bride's
maid of honor. Miss Elder
was attired in a blue and
whlte fl owered gown . She
carri ed . a lon g-stemm ed
carnation dipped in blue and
blue sat in streamers.
Miss Della Huffman, sister
of groom, was a bridesmaid.
Miss Huffm an wore a pink
and white fl owered gown. She
car ried a lon g.s temmed
carnation dipped in pink and
pink satin streamers .
Terry Huffman, brother of
the groom, served as best
man. Usher Ronnie Riner,
cousin df groom, was usher.
Mrs. Elder, moth er of
bride, chose a blue knit floor·
length dress ensemble with
matching accessories and a
corsage of white carn ations
dipped in blue.
The gr oom's moth er
selected mini green knit
fl oor-length dress ensemble
with matching accessories
and a corsage of while car·
nations dipped In m]nt green.
A reception followed at
Krodel Park. The bride's
table was covered with a
white tablecloth and a three·
tiered wedding cake. Those
assisting at the reception
were Mrs. Ann Elder and
Mrs. Shirley Riner.

VISIT IN WAVERI.Y
RUTLAN D- Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Sisson and children
Robbie, Johnnie and Melissa
of Rutland made a pre·
Christmas vlsil in Waverly
LUNCHEON GUESTS
with the children's god father,
RUTLA ND Friday
Charles H. Wise.
lunc heo n guests of Mrs.
Nellie Vale, Rutland , were
Mrs. C. 0 . Chapman, Mrs.
Nellie Tracy and Mrs. C. W.
VISITED HERE
Stansbury. Sunday visitors of
Michael Turner of Bucyrus Mrs. Vale wer,e Mr . and Mrs.
spent the we ekend here G. A. Radekln and daughter
visitin g his grandparents, Tina Marie and her boyfriend
Mr . and ¥ts. Joe Turner1 of Alban y.
Middleport.

RA CIN E - The Ruth
Missionary Circle of the
Racine First Baptist Church
ha d a Christmas party
r·ecently al the home of Mrs.
Martha Lou Beegle, Dorcas,
with 11 members and two
guests attending.
Each
perso n
read
something pertaining to the
Christmas sea son . The
readings were "Christmas
Time" by Mrs. Beegle;
"Receipe of Christmas" by
Mrs. Olie Mae Cozart ; "What
Is Chri stmas" by Mrs .
Mildred Hart; "We Have to
Find a Christmas Angel" by.
Mrs. Phyllis Bailey; "Joys of
Chris tmas," by Ba rbara

Gheen; "Through the Eyes of
a Clriid " by Debbie Beegle ;
"Let's Keep Christmas" by
Mrs. Mary Kay Yost ; "We've
Come a Long Way Since that
First Christmas Day" by
Samdra Boolh; "Let tJs Live
Christmas Everyday," Mrs.
Emma Adams ; "Unto Us a
Child is Born," Marjorie
Grimm ; "Christmas is a
Season of Kindness" by Linda
Grimm ; "Abiding Gifts" by
Nondus Hendricks; "In the
Lillie Stable Long Ago" by
Caraline Miller. ·
Gills are exchanged and
refreshments were served by
Mrs. Martha Lou Beegle and
Mrs. Debbie Beegle.

Legion plans
Faith Baptist
church events treat giveaway
MASON, W. Va. - Sunday
school attendance Dec. 14
was 45 at the Faith Baptist
church and the speaker for
the morning services was
Pastor Cliff Colema n uf
Jackson,
Ohi o,
area
missionary from the Scioto
Valley Association.
Sunday. Dec. 21, at 7 p. n).
children and teenagers will
prese nt a Christmas program
and the Spellker for the
evening se..Vtces at 7:30 will
be Pastor Robert Baldwin, 36,
fo rmerly of Charles ton, now
living in Georgia.
Sunday school each Sunday
Is at to a.m. ; Bible study
Sunday and Wednesday at
7: 30 p.m. in the Steelworkers
Union Hall on Railroad St.
between Horton and Pomeroy
Sis. The public is invilt'li.

DEADLINE NEARS
Deadline lor submitting
the names of shut·lns or
persons who wlll be alone
on Christmas Day lor a
holiday dinner to be
prepared and delivered by
the stall at the · Senior
Citizens 'center Is Friday.
' Nam es
should
be
telephoned to the Center.
Approximately 50 dinners
wlll be prepared with most
of the food beiAg provided
by Powell's Super-Vatu and
the Chester Young Wives
Club.

J~t

Christmas treats for the
residents of lhe Syracuse
Nursing Home, the Meigs
County Infirmary and the
children of the community
will again this year be
distributed by FeeneyBennett Post 120, American
Legion .
The legionnaires will meet
at the hall at5 p.m. Sunday to
sack the candy. On Christmas
Eve they will leave from the
hail at 5p.m. accompanied by
Santa for a trip to the
Syra cuse Nursing Home,
then to the Infirmary at 5:30
und back to the Middleport
Legion hall at 6 p.m. to begin

luncheon.~.....

her first term in Ray In J¢rusalem and Mary, ~
Vinton County and the rest of Moth er of Jesus, notlqljt::
the time in Meigs County.
characteristics of each ~
Mrs. Tracy attended Rio comparing them to deslrabltJ::
Grande College and Ohio qualitle~ in teachers.
University, married Everett
During the buslne lli '.
Tracy, also a teacher and had meeting arrangements were•
one son, Dr. E. A. Tracy, a made to send flowers to Mrs.~
Columbus dentist. Mr. and C. 0 .. Chapman and ~~
Mrs. Tracy taught together 38 Beatrice Rinehatt both ot'
years,' she the first through Meigs County who we~e.'
the fourth grades, and he, lhe recently hospitalized. It wa! 1·
fifth lhrough the eighth reported that ~5 had been
grades.
added to the scholarsHip fund
Mrs. Vale, namesalre of from a recent silent auction.
Mrs. Tracy, gave recollec·
Meigs County members
tions ofher early associations attending were Mrs. Ruth
with Mrs. -Tracy and personal Euler, Mrs. Martha Husted,
· happenings which Influenced Miss Mildred Hawley, Mrs.
her classroom activities. Now Nan Moore , Mrs. Nellie
living alone on 'l/7 acres In Parker, Mrs. Margaret
the Harri!!Onviile Road area, Parsons, Miss Mary VIrginia
Mrs. Tracy remains active in Reibel, Miss Rosalie Story,
the Order of Eastrn Star, the Mrs. Anne Elizabeth Turner,
White
Shrine, · the Mrs. Nellle Vale, Mrs.
Harrisonville Grange, the Roberta Wilson and Mrs.
Meigs co·unty Retired Dorothy Woodard.
Teachers, the Laurel Cliff
.Better Health Club, and the
Senior Citizens. She Is noted . Gifts He Can Wear
From HIS Store
for giving recitations and
readings and at the conclusion of Mrs. Vale's tribute
to her, Mrs. Tracy recited
'' Mandy ' s Christmas
Present."
Mrs.
Vale
presented her with a book of
poetry.
Both International
Women 's Year 1975 and the
Bicentennial Year, 1976, were
celebrated during the
meeting. Tables for the
· dinner were decorated with
green garlands trimmed with
red and white checked bows
and favors were handmade
pin cushions in bell, tree and
animal replicas. Hariett
Wood , one of the hostesses,
made the favors and
decorations.
For the program the theme
All the I ies are her e he
used by Mrs. Fehrman was would
bu v himself · g ive
"The Graces of Mary ." She him several !h is Chri st
spoke of Anesalh, ·Anna, mas .
KERM ' S KORNER
Dorcas, Rachael, Rulh and .
Hannah of the Old Testament
NEW YORK
and Elizabeth, Martha, Mary
of
Bethany,
Mary
a.DTHING HOUSE
Magdalene,
Mary
of

f.

Pom eroy, Ohio

;~--p-c)iN§'EtiiAs .

,,

Fami~

...

·' ·,

..

•'

FRYING
CHICKEN

I

CASH 'N CARRY. ·
.G uido Girolami, Vidia
,G1rolami to May Mayle, Pl.
Lot 107, Pomeroy.
GUARANTEED TO BLOOM AU THRU
Olive M. Osburn, dec. to
'"
Delmar J. Osburn, Delmar
THE HOLIDAYS
•
Gordon Osburn, Larry Leroy
Osburn, Cert. of trans., Olive.
'
Delmar J . Osburn to
Delmar Gordon Osburn
Larry Leroy Osburn, 21.88'
•
acres, 21.67 acres, Olive.
59 N. Second St.
•
Jodeena Sauvage to Carl
Middleport
.. ,""'""~Moll&lt;lo....._\lillltlill\lilll...... .. ~
Sauvage, 1.9fl acre, Chester. ...,___.,.

------

In Time For Christmas Giving/

.

79

&amp; THIGHS.M~69~

purchase necessary - All
you have to do is enter -

e

6 FOR

16 OZ. BOX

BETSY
~tra

Large
Red or Golden

694

FRUIT
BASKETS

Delicious
Apples

MADE TO ORDER

$1.-95

~

~~~.......~.~.79
RDSEYE

0~ CTN.
~ttl~ ...............
9

Isle
FROZEN

4

,.

49,.

CLUSTER

RED
GRAPES
3LB.

12

$}00

0~

••••••••••••••••••
~

COUPON

.._.

95~

DEL MONTE
.
16 0~ CAN
MIXED VEGETABLES
.. ~......................
.

EAM

%GAL
ILK •••••••••••••

cid for winners' names.

16 oz.
bois.

NAVEL
.ORANGES

Pillsbury Nut, Date
Nut, or Banana
Nut Bread

You need not be present
to win -Check our Monday

7-UP or PEPSI-COLA

CALIFORNIA

CAN

2I 59

GOLDEN ISLE
.
FRUIT COCKTAIL..~~-~~-~~.

3/$100

~~~N~!~~. . . . . ~.~.~~2/99~

~~~~INS ..........?.;!~;: . 3/$1 OO

·THANK YOU
· 14 OZ. CAN 59~
SP.ICED APPLE RINGS .............................. .
THANK YOU
I&amp; oz. w
e
SPICED WHOLE CRABAPPLES....................
EMPRESS
11 OZ. CAN
00
MANDARIN ORANGES ......................

59
3/ '1
COUPON

;-,-, '"7 :- 1

. . ·I

ONLY

$4488.

·. .I

EA.

. .]

You'll iovethe plastic overlays on the doors and
the simulated wood grained finish on these tables.

•I

·)
.. I
. ' .I

COLONIAL STYLE

Knolly PIM wood grolnod linloh

Twin Cities Gateway
Expires 12-20·75

Squue Commode
with hln~eel door,

2411 It 24'' • 2011 hig h
Clblnel Coc k11111 T11bla
S4\4"- 20" J1 171• high

SUNDAY

INGELS FURNITURE
••

992-2635

MIDDLIPORT

¢

R~~~L FOOD CAKE..~: ......~~:~:~:~~....} g~

. 'I

OPEN FOR BUSINESS

10:00 A.M. • 5:00 P.M.
Ed's
Grocery

17- Final drawing. 12:00
noon Wed., D.ec. 24. No

LB.79e

PIECES
~
.BREASTS............ !-!~:. .

EESE

20%0FF.
••

Daily beginning Wed., Dec.

Polish Sausage

•

f

LB.69e

12-14 lb. Turkey Drawing

FRESH

8 OZ. PKG.

~

LET US
YOUR CHRISTM
TURKEY

Ground Beef

FRYING
CHICKENS

'I H

Pack

FRESH LEAN

FAMILY PACK

...

If _you have spols on dishes,
glones and silver

Boston Tea Party."
In 1835, one of history's
worst fires swept over whole
city blocks in New York City,
razing 600 buildings and
caused' damage estimated at
more than $20 mlUion .
In 1944, the Germans
The Almauac
launched
a great counter·
IIICa!SS.
By United Pre11 Ia,
offensive
in the Ardennes
lerllltloul
SAYRE HARDWARE
Forest
of
Belgium, in what
Today Is Tuesday, Dec. 16,
the S50th day of 1975 with 15 to was called "The Battle of the
Bulge."
follow.
The moon Is approaching
SANTA COMING
Ill full phue.
RACINE - Santa Claus
The mornlna alan are
wiU arrive tn Racine Sunday, Venus and Saturn.
Dec. 21 at 2 p.m .. at the fire
The evening stars are Mer·
RT. 124-143-RUTlANO ROAD
houae annex. Treat. will be cury, Mars and Jupiter.
given to children 12 years of
Thole barn on thl8 date are
ace and undec who Uveln the Wider the li&amp;n of Sa&amp;illarlua.
. HOURS- Monday thnl Saturday
area lltrYices by the Racine
~lilh actor, play'M'I&amp;ht
Fire Department and and CCIIIIpOa Noel Coward
5:00 A.M. • 9:00 pm.
emergency sqllld.
Wll born Dec. 18, 11199.
On thll day In hlltory:
MONDAY PROGRAM
In 1773, protealln&amp; the
SYRACUSE - A Cluiat· llrlllah Ill on t•, 110111e 50
mas prOifUI will be American patriOts dlagul.ied
rn-W Ml
bee. 22, ulndlllll dumped 341 chests
Cr~d•
at 7:30 p.m111 lilt
rl ~)ntc Bolton lfltllor In
Prttbyterlan OMirdl.
lrhat tiiiiOI')' rteGI'di .. '"!'tie

.1). .,acue

"

iladelphia

;; "THE TRADITIONAL GIFT"
FOR HOME OR CHURCH

''"';;;as II
Property
Transfers

•

...

32 oz.
J31

gg~ith

5 lb.
Coupon

bag

79¢

With Coupon

�10 - The Da~y Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Dec. 16, 1975

PlENTY
OF Hli!E

PARK ING

STARTS
8600

MORNING

KODAK

10:00 AM

CAROUSEL
PROJECTOR

AFINE SELECTION OF

lOW

THROUGH

CHRISTMAS

S 988

Preconditioning of ~l ides
Dual-action "select" odvonce

BOYS &amp; GIRLS

e Priced for ecooomy·minded

AU.

HECK'S REG.
$89.96

cu!lomer

TIMEX WATCHES

JEWEI.RY DEPT.

BICYCLES

ON SALE

ALSO

EVE

DEC. 24.

54001

ARGUS CAMERA

· OSTER 10 SPEED
J.

KIT

ALSO

OiRISTMAS

H:~::s

$27.99

INLAND MATRIX

8 TRACK CAR STEREO

Smo1lu1, lig h1t1t p«h' mod.
1!1, rlrop rn load111{1 - d~ar
tolorlo.JI pic tvrn

Four cycle \peed~ (sift a nd grate in lo Range,
Chop ond Grind in Hi Ronge ) proceH pieces of
solid food foro multitude of delicious recipe\.

DEOORATIONS

WEDNESDAY
MORNING 1
10:00 AM

~

BLENDER

1i

•

STARTS

7

~ui:..·~~:e~d~~;
!Y o~·.~~li!e
e

5

$1·997

WITH 2 SPEAKERS

f'.l u~ ilo•' lu ll· rio

r· :, O•·•·JP r! '-0••(1 ~ !h U! !'lnlr J•.•1hlr •, !(''""' 'J·
•
r 1~,! i', • ,
R t•nr. " 'l .. ''l·•·•~··• ., .. , r- 1 _,_'(J~.o l~ n-u ! n o
roi' C;I,- o ,;t (J··~·'"'•'''l ~-- 1,,.,,-f'·'
o. I·
1rJO .· HJ tPc:·ut"'!&lt; .;.o".l rt.&lt;' 1t1 1 .
;.,.,.·,oo,! u.n l» ,,,,,, . n:: ·o.~,o it
.. •
1

1599

-.-.w•

HICK'S RIG.
' $19 .96

'•1 ''"fJf&lt; '

0

r- ~\i~)

""~'II. ~·~·

fo1t /or .. ooc', o~d Ro,,nd l~no:~e&gt;~l
o•r ~ ~ "~ r~., ""' ..,,, rou.. ''"''Ill .lo •od ''••
51-iKUa &lt;t !!.rou1101 • &amp;..na n pr .-...W&lt; IH&lt;odo&lt;-lll fl l
o.t_..&lt;

, ,

o"'f ,,,..,

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,

,.,,~, • " •'·•r. 1 ~_,,, 1 ..,. ,~, 0 ,.~

,

., '

HECK'S REG.
$69.96

I

87

('

~

PR0-2

SUPER PRO DRYERv..,..,.

Plu1

tl'd otto,• ,t..,r on

•·

•· • I,, ,,~:. T('_ lcf,•' n'lci :_ 1

A601R

G.E.

~N,J~

.,0.0 ...... t t (OO. d I I &lt;'11'Q9'd
t~••oot~ &lt;l fltd"' bll'l!l

r:'!l,
,._. ·_·

1

lo&gt;o '" pr~ t . hi91t ift W~l"' 1tu1 Gt POtltJCI! ( ()&lt;..,If
lapt •• o•df&lt; · ••~ ~ " " '" '"~ dol ~ " ' "'~'llfli&gt;C"•

ltO'••r&lt; U l ) IO lilt ~~~~ &lt;&gt; "'"' ' I bot &lt;onl •ol

''

, dr·uil·~ f(l'
• ,, .- 11 "d'

,

JEWELRY DEPT.
:L,-

•pCKI un•

•l r ••-

t q n•ddccr r• 1 t'··. '' (!i(l•...,

JIWIUYDnT.

JEWElRY DEPT.

• !I~~~~ •Mt

-~ ·'

(j'v• ' '\• ·-- ••rr(O''"

,-u•· .. •··u ' ' "

ipll

1100 '""" u•ofto.,..,..,..J &gt;i)lod dof" .,,.., utu• -~ llod)
" "',.~""" '
lr tt toll nu~ko·~ t~rough and c .. , o-.,..,9 hooo IG&lt; hw•"-) ""'' "'" • lf&gt;l'l
l~• • (h yl'• "'o'ft ' """'"'• IJ9"''" lo•~r l&lt;toh 'lj [~' '' Au U&gt;&gt;t ento •oto• oM
&lt;'r&gt;"tl••&lt;lwllo-d

bhe-o l lfl~cd(fOI'O~

135/63$

MUNSIY

KODAK CAMERA

COIIITIIIIUOIUS CL EAN

WITH TlUPHOTO UN$

BROILER
OVEN
,.,,,,oc-

... ..,,_,

i,.lol ·~!t nt '~'"'lu. tt-

""' ' ""'
,~,.,1,

()11&lt;1''&gt; ' " " '~"'\o '··•

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l I

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(,.odocolvdood

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'U

1' ,-~

'''" ' .

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$4999

•

&lt;t

Airquipt

'•

,. ' ' '

~~8Jf.CTOR

Heck's Reg. '59.96
Jewelry Dept.

JEWIEL BOX

CAMERA

A lod 1c~ lm c n f(' 1-!,d .. ·e· .... c:y fo•l e• ·· 1..-1 ',,, •
an d nn~;s

CASE
Pouch Case For
SX70

$399

SHCUBES

SJ39
COIMBT

HECII'S CIIAIGE-A-CARD

OPEN DAILY

HEC 'S EVERYDAY LOW

DISCOU T PRICES

10 TO 9
SUNDAY
11108

Jewelry Dept.

HECK'SREG. $' 73 ~

PURSE

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

JEWElRY III/IT.

$1U6 ·
JEWII.RY DIPT.

.O

~··
~~~g·

!!Xl....

rT10IIY

sty le~

JEIYEUIY DIP T.

JEWEl/IY DEPT.

JEWEl. flY DEPT.

O··r~
. ~"
•I• t::••"'; "B
~- 'W ~~

,....
. ~.

~·,,

... .:~

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EEP. FRYER
. .

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Or,ip Frhef ·Colfr?t

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(.!t.
~·
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l t'gu lot e~ lt!AifH roture ond brew1ng !1n1e to
u rrac t lh ttliO~ I dtlll(lb te elemcr•l) ol

flo.,.ar ond aron•o. Co ttr-e never bolt~ lO ll's
never bitter. H&lt;1ld'l coff ee ut the perle&lt;.!
wmng lt'mpertlhHe :)(llcty gloH
ner

&lt;Ort ltli·

C(l$y t o cll'ul't, e;omy to hold, tto~y I&lt;J

pOuL H o ld ~ t '} clJp\,

~2987
$35.99
JIWEllr DIPT.

'F::oo,;-~
q'll '·i.·J~'I=..,J

3-5504

Mll~er

'

G.E. LOUDMOUTH

8-TRACK PLAYER
HECK'S REG.
$49.96

JEWELRY DEPT.

$4487

SOUNDESIGN
fh i~

AM-FM
DIGITAL CLOCK RADIO
ullro·modern digital clock rod to r- nh'! k11r1\

wtlh favo!de AM onrl FM
yo u in st •tk·.

HECK'S REG.

$44 .96

JEWElRY DEPT.

proqro!l·~

,.

'

O"

_,

,,

' '

·, '

I

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I

•

JEWEL NY 1/EPT.

' '

NORELCO 12 CUP

DRIP-0-LATOR

'"'

1

,, • • '

HECK 'S REG.
$ 11.96

. . 1~.

1\

,

"" '

"

HECK's reg.
$5.99 EACH

•

..

EACH .:· ·.

$32.96

••

$4.99

FRENCH CLUTCH

$2737 $387

$599

REG .

LAD I IS'

Sf.'lec tlrom

HECK'SiEG.

DOES NOT INCLUDE TRICYCLES AND WAGONS

HARDTOP
HAIR DRYER

1400 wotH of super drying power. hdu~ive
comfort con trol po nel to toke the heo t oil the
fo ce . lOOO~r u'&gt;ic i nch ~onnc t l o t even the
lorcje~t roll e n . Completcty collapsible for tr ov ·
el o nd ~ t oroge .

MAGICUBE

USE YOUR

SCHICK TIME MACHINE

Heck's Reg. '6.99

HECK'S

) 0"

nnd •u ·nh•" "

lUCK 'S
REG.
$39 .96

$

JEWELRY DEPT.

�10 - The Da~y Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Dec. 16, 1975

PlENTY
OF Hli!E

PARK ING

STARTS
8600

MORNING

KODAK

10:00 AM

CAROUSEL
PROJECTOR

AFINE SELECTION OF

lOW

THROUGH

CHRISTMAS

S 988

Preconditioning of ~l ides
Dual-action "select" odvonce

BOYS &amp; GIRLS

e Priced for ecooomy·minded

AU.

HECK'S REG.
$89.96

cu!lomer

TIMEX WATCHES

JEWEI.RY DEPT.

BICYCLES

ON SALE

ALSO

EVE

DEC. 24.

54001

ARGUS CAMERA

· OSTER 10 SPEED
J.

KIT

ALSO

OiRISTMAS

H:~::s

$27.99

INLAND MATRIX

8 TRACK CAR STEREO

Smo1lu1, lig h1t1t p«h' mod.
1!1, rlrop rn load111{1 - d~ar
tolorlo.JI pic tvrn

Four cycle \peed~ (sift a nd grate in lo Range,
Chop ond Grind in Hi Ronge ) proceH pieces of
solid food foro multitude of delicious recipe\.

DEOORATIONS

WEDNESDAY
MORNING 1
10:00 AM

~

BLENDER

1i

•

STARTS

7

~ui:..·~~:e~d~~;
!Y o~·.~~li!e
e

5

$1·997

WITH 2 SPEAKERS

f'.l u~ ilo•' lu ll· rio

r· :, O•·•·JP r! '-0••(1 ~ !h U! !'lnlr J•.•1hlr •, !(''""' 'J·
•
r 1~,! i', • ,
R t•nr. " 'l .. ''l·•·•~··• ., .. , r- 1 _,_'(J~.o l~ n-u ! n o
roi' C;I,- o ,;t (J··~·'"'•'''l ~-- 1,,.,,-f'·'
o. I·
1rJO .· HJ tPc:·ut"'!&lt; .;.o".l rt.&lt;' 1t1 1 .
;.,.,.·,oo,! u.n l» ,,,,,, . n:: ·o.~,o it
.. •
1

1599

-.-.w•

HICK'S RIG.
' $19 .96

'•1 ''"fJf&lt; '

0

r- ~\i~)

""~'II. ~·~·

fo1t /or .. ooc', o~d Ro,,nd l~no:~e&gt;~l
o•r ~ ~ "~ r~., ""' ..,,, rou.. ''"''Ill .lo •od ''••
51-iKUa &lt;t !!.rou1101 • &amp;..na n pr .-...W&lt; IH&lt;odo&lt;-lll fl l
o.t_..&lt;

, ,

o"'f ,,,..,

·•

.

,

,.,,~, • " •'·•r. 1 ~_,,, 1 ..,. ,~, 0 ,.~

,

., '

HECK'S REG.
$69.96

I

87

('

~

PR0-2

SUPER PRO DRYERv..,..,.

Plu1

tl'd otto,• ,t..,r on

•·

•· • I,, ,,~:. T('_ lcf,•' n'lci :_ 1

A601R

G.E.

~N,J~

.,0.0 ...... t t (OO. d I I &lt;'11'Q9'd
t~••oot~ &lt;l fltd"' bll'l!l

r:'!l,
,._. ·_·

1

lo&gt;o '" pr~ t . hi91t ift W~l"' 1tu1 Gt POtltJCI! ( ()&lt;..,If
lapt •• o•df&lt; · ••~ ~ " " '" '"~ dol ~ " ' "'~'llfli&gt;C"•

ltO'••r&lt; U l ) IO lilt ~~~~ &lt;&gt; "'"' ' I bot &lt;onl •ol

''

, dr·uil·~ f(l'
• ,, .- 11 "d'

,

JEWELRY DEPT.
:L,-

•pCKI un•

•l r ••-

t q n•ddccr r• 1 t'··. '' (!i(l•...,

JIWIUYDnT.

JEWElRY DEPT.

• !I~~~~ •Mt

-~ ·'

(j'v• ' '\• ·-- ••rr(O''"

,-u•· .. •··u ' ' "

ipll

1100 '""" u•ofto.,..,..,..J &gt;i)lod dof" .,,.., utu• -~ llod)
" "',.~""" '
lr tt toll nu~ko·~ t~rough and c .. , o-.,..,9 hooo IG&lt; hw•"-) ""'' "'" • lf&gt;l'l
l~• • (h yl'• "'o'ft ' """'"'• IJ9"''" lo•~r l&lt;toh 'lj [~' '' Au U&gt;&gt;t ento •oto• oM
&lt;'r&gt;"tl••&lt;lwllo-d

bhe-o l lfl~cd(fOI'O~

135/63$

MUNSIY

KODAK CAMERA

COIIITIIIIUOIUS CL EAN

WITH TlUPHOTO UN$

BROILER
OVEN
,.,,,,oc-

... ..,,_,

i,.lol ·~!t nt '~'"'lu. tt-

""' ' ""'
,~,.,1,

()11&lt;1''&gt; ' " " '~"'\o '··•

_;, ; ..... "'" ' """"&lt;i '•'&gt;" ·""tn."
l I

" '"" ' '

.1 ''"'""'' 1. lf.,..t""' "

~~··

,,.

' ~"""'

(,.odocolvdood

·~

f

•

'1t• dl•·
'U

1' ,-~

'''" ' .

I'

I

$4999

•

&lt;t

Airquipt

'•

,. ' ' '

~~8Jf.CTOR

Heck's Reg. '59.96
Jewelry Dept.

JEWIEL BOX

CAMERA

A lod 1c~ lm c n f(' 1-!,d .. ·e· .... c:y fo•l e• ·· 1..-1 ',,, •
an d nn~;s

CASE
Pouch Case For
SX70

$399

SHCUBES

SJ39
COIMBT

HECII'S CIIAIGE-A-CARD

OPEN DAILY

HEC 'S EVERYDAY LOW

DISCOU T PRICES

10 TO 9
SUNDAY
11108

Jewelry Dept.

HECK'SREG. $' 73 ~

PURSE

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

JEWElRY III/IT.

$1U6 ·
JEWII.RY DIPT.

.O

~··
~~~g·

!!Xl....

rT10IIY

sty le~

JEIYEUIY DIP T.

JEWEl/IY DEPT.

JEWEl. flY DEPT.

O··r~
. ~"
•I• t::••"'; "B
~- 'W ~~

,....
. ~.

~·,,

... .:~

d

EEP. FRYER
. .

""~··

.. ..

.

"

•••• el,

~0--

Or,ip Frhef ·Colfr?t

~

t• t!~

~

(.!t.
~·
.., _ .d?

· ~.J'

ou lomotiwlly
l t'gu lot e~ lt!AifH roture ond brew1ng !1n1e to
u rrac t lh ttliO~ I dtlll(lb te elemcr•l) ol

flo.,.ar ond aron•o. Co ttr-e never bolt~ lO ll's
never bitter. H&lt;1ld'l coff ee ut the perle&lt;.!
wmng lt'mpertlhHe :)(llcty gloH
ner

&lt;Ort ltli·

C(l$y t o cll'ul't, e;omy to hold, tto~y I&lt;J

pOuL H o ld ~ t '} clJp\,

~2987
$35.99
JIWEllr DIPT.

'F::oo,;-~
q'll '·i.·J~'I=..,J

3-5504

Mll~er

'

G.E. LOUDMOUTH

8-TRACK PLAYER
HECK'S REG.
$49.96

JEWELRY DEPT.

$4487

SOUNDESIGN
fh i~

AM-FM
DIGITAL CLOCK RADIO
ullro·modern digital clock rod to r- nh'! k11r1\

wtlh favo!de AM onrl FM
yo u in st •tk·.

HECK'S REG.

$44 .96

JEWElRY DEPT.

proqro!l·~

,.

'

O"

_,

,,

' '

·, '

I

'o

I

•

JEWEL NY 1/EPT.

' '

NORELCO 12 CUP

DRIP-0-LATOR

'"'

1

,, • • '

HECK 'S REG.
$ 11.96

. . 1~.

1\

,

"" '

"

HECK's reg.
$5.99 EACH

•

..

EACH .:· ·.

$32.96

••

$4.99

FRENCH CLUTCH

$2737 $387

$599

REG .

LAD I IS'

Sf.'lec tlrom

HECK'SiEG.

DOES NOT INCLUDE TRICYCLES AND WAGONS

HARDTOP
HAIR DRYER

1400 wotH of super drying power. hdu~ive
comfort con trol po nel to toke the heo t oil the
fo ce . lOOO~r u'&gt;ic i nch ~onnc t l o t even the
lorcje~t roll e n . Completcty collapsible for tr ov ·
el o nd ~ t oroge .

MAGICUBE

USE YOUR

SCHICK TIME MACHINE

Heck's Reg. '6.99

HECK'S

) 0"

nnd •u ·nh•" "

lUCK 'S
REG.
$39 .96

$

JEWELRY DEPT.

�JJi~:. ~·:.::.::::·,:·For Fast Results Use The Sentinel .Classifieds
t'n."t'ntnlhh• th(•:ool'fnur.lumhlt·s.
unt lt'Ht•r tu t•m•h ~ quart'. tu

(orm

(tiUI'

·

.

ordilliJt ' "'utd!Oo .

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
OF.ADIIII f- 1.

Auto Sales

REGULATIONS

RATES

For Want Ad Service
~ r &lt;'nrs per word one Inser tion
M in imum Cnarge SI.OO
t t cc nr s pPr
N'J rd !hrCt'
fl"' tl :·,t•c ut lv t' in sert ions .
76 ce nts per word sh' con
~.cc 111 i vl' in:;c-r ' ior.s
7 .~ Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10
dlly s

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

S? 00 for SO word m lnim urn
Each ad dit iona l word 3
cenrs .

I

-·

.: -·--· - -- ~
.

QU~TY

!Motor"Co·· ·i~E.x~i~liNcEo
-' ... .

1?13 BUICK LeSABRE
531?5
Custom H.T. Cpe .. loca l owner, that's really sharp

r Serv.lce

Inside &amp; out, good w.w tires, custom wheels. dark
green vinyl roof, green finis h • AM ra d'10 &amp; tape, factor y
air, automatic, P . steering &amp; brak es.

NEW LOCATION
GENE'S

BODY SHOP
Top of Lincoln Hill,
Pomerov.
Ph. 992·2280
Free Estimates

A Low Cost
Want Ad

Will Cut
Cost of
Uving •• ~ ...
WRIJE YOUR

OWN AD!
IrS EASY TO
ORDER BY
MAIU
SPECJAL!--

12 MlRDS
4 DAYS
ONLY

$125

CASH WITH
ORDER

AVAilABLE TO
INDIVIDUALS ONLY!
NON COMMERCIAL
NO REFUNDS.
Each initial and
group of figures
counts as one word.
Be sure to count
name and address, if
used, and your phone
number.
Including
prices for items offered in vour want ad
will
increase
response.

1. ~---

2. _ _ __
3. _ _ _ __
4,_ _ _ __
5, _ _ __
6. _ _ _ __
7. _ _ _ __
8.._ _ __
9, _ _ _ __
10._ _ __

11. - - - - - 1
12, _ _ __
NAME _ __
-ESS,- - -

Louk~.

I

::e~Hs::::::;::~ARo

=
.9~'T•:~_,,o~:-~·-.S~~~.m_c•Nr· ~-

5

s1m ,.
Motor overhaul. good tires, pleasing orange finish with •.&gt;'1
blk . vinyl interior, radiO. Sharp.

I~

Notice
ROOM and board for Sr
Citizen s wilh low income.
very nice . Phone 997 3509.
1130 11 c

fragrance li..-es on forev er.

The s pan of living brings on
weithted wings a thousand

tlm ·es .

The

NEW store opening . th e
fl atwoods Genera l Sto re on
Co unt y Rd . 26
I l atwoods
Rd. Open trom 9 a .rn . 6 p .m
daily . M ea t . grocer ies. icc
cream . pop · ~tn d c andy .
Phone 991 7873. Mrs . Hclrley
Han in g .
1'} 16 ,If p

ha ~

poet

written, "Only those are
crowned and sainted who
with grief have been
acquainted . "

Spiritual

growth comes from grief,

di1appo l ntm~nt
and
hrllure. Home 16 where the
happiest m~morl e1 are
spent. Pictures of memorv
on wall ol dream s. Think of
th e tittle bird witl't il song
left if1 his t i ny throat. We
wilt always feel th e bfeilfh
of God warm around us
everywhere .
Family .

SOMEO N E to lh1e in wilh
el derly lady . Phone 9Y2 3·157 .
12 16 31C
Pti\ NO LE SSO N S
Now
a ccepting new Sludent s .
Beginners ,
interm ediat eS.
advanc ed .
June
!Mrs .
Harveyl Van Vr anken ..n .t
~p rin g
1\ve . , Pom c ro-v
Phone 992 2272 .
11 16 6tc

Notice
MEIG S •COUNTY HUMANE

SOC IETY H AS :' Miss y ,''
black and wr-ite , " Happy ,"
gray and white, 12 week ol d
female kl fl ens . Vet c h~cked ,
hav e shots and wormed .
Wou ld like to loin a, fam ily
that gives TLC . Call '992 2639
or 991 5427 aft~r 0.

BL I:J ETICK femal e hO!Jnd in
Danville area . Call Rober t
''' Stewart. phon e 992789-1 .

12 16 lip

11 16 Jlc

HAVE your deer . rrophles . LOST in the area of Langsv ille
six months old oran oc and
mounted
Blrchfields
while Brittany bird dog . has
Ta)(l derrr.y , St . R:l. 124, east
no name tag . If found call
of Rut land Phone (0 141 1-11

7'1 2884 or 367 0511.

1178 .

1115 Jlc

I I 2B lfc

W IL L give away fema le half
Bass~tt . h alf Beagle pup
pie s. B weeks old . Phon e 985

LOST
BlliCk brown while
l em!!rle Beagle dog In back
or ar ound Ph It I !p Spor·n
Mine .
Conlact . Hom~r
Jeffers , 773 5291 or 773 5490 .

MAIL WITH
'1.25
TO THE

IMILY SENTINEL
111 COURT ST.

__

_

.

Buy, Sell or Trade
on

R&amp;J COINS

GARAGE
r

350, Heavy duty LWB . ex
ce ttent condition . Ca ll 30·1
773 53 08 after 5 p .m .
11 16 t f

·'

spCed

·I

~~.~ soin c:1~r¥92g2~~~ - s~ape.
12 12 61p

CARPE:NTRY , fl ooring .
ceiling and panc linQ . Phone
992 2759' .
u 1.1 !Ole

Mobile Homes For Sale

PH, 992-5682

I ? 16 Jtp

1 mite on Stale Route 124
Toward Rutland
11 -11 -1 mo.

For Sale

For Sale

WA NTED old upright pianos NOW se lling Fuller Brush
t 97~
1Jx70 TRJ\tLER , ('X
in any condition . Will pay
Products. Pnon e · 992 34 10.
cc ll ent cond ition. especia ll y
SIO ea ch . r irs t floor only .
10 6 tfc
bu ilt to r offices . L ow pr ice
Write · giv.ing d irect ions to
•·· - for quick sr~lc . Ph one ()Q ,! )
Will en Pii.ln o Co .• Box 188, fl rRCO welding machine ,
6 7 .~ t91 1 or 675 ~ 82'i' .
Sa r dis. Otlio• 43946.
:! new , ctcc . all accessor ies
10 .30 tfc
•
12 10 6 tp
in c luded . Phone 992 34 10.
tO 28 1fc
8 x 46 LIBERTY, e)C
DA SH 23 ch ann el c itizens
.
ceptionally clean , furni shed . INband
MODERN Wa ln ut Console ,
transc ei v er . am lm
Also, 10 x 50 Peerl ess, new
mp x radio , 8 rrack Stereo .
AM F M rad i o. 4 speed
gas furnace , 2 bedroom, eye
Call 992 3965 . 1\ lso olh t:! r
chan ger , Balance $101. 80 or
l evel oven and surface unit .
mode ls.
• termS . Call 9~2 . 3 965.
Can be see'n at' ' Kingsbury
I 2'9 tiC
11 20 l fC
Hom e Sa tes. noo E . Ma in ,
51 ., Pomeroy , Ohio .
12 1.11 .tt c U . 5,; Gold coi ns, $2.50, $75 POT ATOE!) lor saie 5"0and 100
each ; S5. S90 eac h ; WI! eat
lb . bags . Across from
back penn ies, 85c roll silver"
NA NT to . bui ld your own
Shamrock in Hend.erson , w.
ce r tif ica tes, SI.1S each ; Big
mobile office , vacation
Va . Done l d Wa lhu , Rt . 35,
Dollar fhors c bl anke t ) l)i lfs ,
Henderson . w. Va .
house or storage build ing?
s to each Ca ll Rutland . 742
We hav e a 12 by 60 mobile
11 18 26tc
1331. Roger Wa m sley .
nom e frame . complete with
12
10
61(
axles . tires an d wheels .
r~ad.,. to roll . Can be seen at
P AR T Siora 19.68FordCougar
Ki ng s bury Mobile Home
and lir ~s and rims . Phone
Sales , 1100 E . Main St..
HOUSE for sal e in Por t lan d,
949 2829 .
Pomeroy . Ohi o. 99 2 7034 .
lake over payments, musl
1114 4fp
11 14 41(.
se ll . 5 rooms and balh , good
well and~ acres of ground .
DINING room labt e with 4
Phone 8-13 2292 .
chairs, also venetian blind ~ .
12 5 12fc
Phone 992 2429 .
,

Real Estate For Sale

For Rent

TWO

BEDROOM

mobile

11 1, 3tp

home . Phone 992 3429.

D&amp;M Appliance
Sales and Service

lflil

lnlersection of Rt. JJ &amp;1
Pomeroy

Ca II today for

Service Tomorrow
Business Phone: 992 ·S8BO
Residence : 992·3313
11-18·1 mo .

Phonem.2111

r;nnement

o'DELL

· , ocat~d·

be Mind
R unand Gr ade
Sc hool. T u neup, brakes ,
w heel bal ancing. alin ement.
Phone 742 2004 .
11 16 tic

...

,I

lll ,l&amp;lc LOCUST eost• . Phone 741
.
.
23S9 .
wllhframesandbodleswllt'P 'cti • N l ~ ~ Mobile ttomc.•
11 9-261p
or without motors. $1 hUI\d · '" f'Mk , f.lt "ll. ttn 1H ilcs nbrth
rcod . Tin ..SO hundred . Will
of romcroy Larg t• to ts with
buy m~tals and scrap Iron .
concr e te ~lcl lios , si dewalks , I IR EWOOD . Edward Ba ll .
991 7580 .
On Old Rt . 33 , lust across·
runn ers ~l nd oil s treet 1
from Gruner 's CM_I pper .
pnr\. inq . 'f"llOIH! 99~1 /. t79 .
1
11 9 121c
Monday throuoh Fr tdey 9
t 2l 1 tfc .
till 4 p.m ., Saturd ay, 9 111
FIREPLACE g re le $5 , record
noon ,
player , S1.5 . stovelld litters.
11 l4 ·2&amp;1c
$2, buffel, Sl5. Phone 367
-

-

- -

HAL L'S Salvage . All au1o$

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
case No . 2uu

Es lilf~ ot Luther V. Ciltdwctl,
Deceased.
Nofice is hereby given that
Tress I~ Hend rlc~s of R ., D . 4,
Pomeroy , Oh io. has been dulY.
appointed Exec utri x of the'
Estate of L ut her V. Caldwell,
decea !e d . lat~ o f Meigs
County , Ohio .
Creditors are requirecr to SECR:ETAR't'
recrptlonist :
Iii ~ their claims with said
ka th erine · Gibbs graduate·
liduciary within tour 1months .
and or 5 years background
Daled this 12th day of
experience ;
acc ura te
December; 1975 .
typist ;
use of
office
machines ; ability to relate
HBrotd o. We bster
to
p eople :
references
Judge
r~qulred ; send resume to P .
Cour t of Common Pleas
0 . Drawer R4S , Athens , Ohio
Probate Division
4.570 1 an equal op
1111 1&amp;. 13. 30. Jtc
portun il y em pi oyer .
12·1,. ·3tc

""Wanted

· ·---- --· -- - -·--

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
ANO APPRAISEMENT

CARRIER

Tl'le State of Ohio, Melts
County , Probatt Court.
To the Co Executrices of the
~s ta te ; to such of the following
as arc residents of th~ State of
Ohio , v iz :
lhe surviving
spouse , the ne)( t of kin , the
benefic ia r ies under the Will ;
and to the atto rney or at
lorneys represe nting any Of
the aforer12entlon~d persons :
Dorset ;)mlfh, Oec~ascd .
Hemlock Grove , Ohio . Sed
ford Township , No . 21670.
You are hereby notified thai
the
Inventory
ancr
Ap
praisement of the es tate of the
992-2156
aforement ion ed .
dec:encd.
late of sa i d Count y, was fil ed
In lhls Court. Said Inventory .CI\PADLE WOITH'In l&lt;o care for
and 1\Q pre tsement will be for
elderly, semi invalid man In
hear (ng before this Court on
h is l'lom e. Phone " ' ~6~2 or
he 26th day of Deumber,
?91 JJ07 .
.
\ 97S, at 10 : 00 o ' clocll. A .M .
12 11 61p
.. Any penon crnirlng to tile
uceptions thereto must file !-IE"R\IICE Manager lor new
them at feast flvt days prjor to
car dealer ship. Write Box
the date set tor l'lear lng .
743, Pomeroy, Oh io. 4$769.
Given under my hand ahd
127121c
SUI Of Sli d Cour I, lhil 11th
day of Onctmber 1975

WANRD

MULBERRY
AVENUE,
POMEROY, 0.

The DiiJ S.llillll

Milnn ing 0 . W•~ hstcr
Judge end ex otticio
Cled, of said Court

POMEROY, C»&gt;IO

4570
rm 16.

n

Oy /\nn o , Watson
Dcpu!y Clerk

Wanted

au makts-.n.,

p.7,~., patd for
modfols of mobile homes •..
· Phone arelt coc:le 61.t 423·

9531 .

~

ltc

\

13 tiC ..

COAST!

For Sale

7719.

.

STEREO radio ,
modern
12 · 1&lt; · ~1p
dCSion . R !rack tape , am fm ~. -·~·W·-------- · '" ·~
rad io combination . Ba lance
s 107 ..&amp;0 or terms . Call 992

Estate For S. ':

Real

3965.

17 16 If(

Slrout11
Realty

BEEf cow, also Hereford cow
to freshe n soon . Phon e 843

1JSJ.

12 16 Stc

IHCO&amp;PORA'ICD

NE W automatic washer and
also antiQue dre-sser. Call

3!8 8369.

12 10 4t(
Po inse t lias
at
· ·L·A R G E
Cleland's Greth House ,
Racine . Ohio . Gera ld ine
Cleland .
12 16 7tc
1000 )( 10 NE W fires . price
1115 each. Call 991 666&amp; .

.11 16 51p .

GUITARS and amps at
bargain prices . /\11 gultors
are ad lusted by me . Ready
and easy to Hngtr .· S. trlng s,
picks , cords , etc . Se e Tracv
Wh al ey . 1~0 Lincoln Rd ..
F'omeroy.
,, 1641(

NO. 152 - 3 BR; lull ba se.,
frame older home, alum.
siding, slorm wlndowa,
new gas F..... furnace: HW
floors , In Wilking distance ·
of stores. Sll,500.00.

. 804 W. Main

Pomeroy

992-2298

992-7133

•·

La Salle

HOTEL'

Real Estate For Sale

c . BRA-~F oil'D . Auctioneer .

or Month

-

\

1-\CX.D,I.

WD'IS ... _

(::1&lt;1!~...

_,_..l

~~THIIJio

PHONE 992-3325
10 Mech8nic
Pdmeroy. 0 .

WOULD

YOU BELIEVE?
Bui l d an all sre cl buil ding a t
Pole Barn pri ces 7' Go lden
Giant All Stee l Bu ild ing s,
Rt · " · Bolt 148 , waverly ,
Ohio . Phone 947 7196 .
1 24 tfc

MIDDLEPORT - 3 B.R.s.

', [ p T I (

furnace ,

f . · basement.

carporl.
$31 ,500.

barn

8.

I

11

1~"

."l

r:ode rn ' ~1r1i tMion
or ~9 '/ n tit

ALLEY OOP
VOU OON'T

997 395.1

~VIi

MIND ... I . .. I'LL~

b &amp; -OI JH : I!- Trimm ii'lg , - 20

WITH Mil. OOP.

years experience. l nsur~d.
free eslima1es . Call 992·3057
or (l) 667 .30.111 , Coolville.
10.15 lf c

~ . -- - · -~~-~·---- - E. XCAV'/\ 1 tNl.J . u v.t.,;~ , loader ·

baCkhO&lt;! work , !..CPfi C
installed .
du n)p .
tr uck s and lo beys l or hire .
will hitU I lilt dirt . lOp SOi l.
limcsfone and gravel,. Ca ll
ob or Ro9cr Jeff er s•. dlly '
phone H9 2 7011 9, n iqhl phon e
9'• '.' t~ 7~ or 99 7 5131
? 1t tf c
oll1d

l il n ks

1

W ILL

·d o

build i ng
ana
roofing ,
plumbin g, furnace repa i r
gas or oil , and genera~!
repair : Free eslimales anif'
reasonable rates . Phone ,
Charles Sincla ir , C61ot l
4121 or 991 2121 .
r
r~modetfng ,

GASOUNE A!.LEY

995,.

II JO .J21G '

EX CAVAT I NG ,
doz ~r .
back hoe
and
ditcher .
en aries R . Hallleld Ba ck
Hoe Serv ice , Rutland , Ohio.
Phone 742 2008 .
11 3078tc

etc .

.. -

LISTEN TO

"Great Country Stereo"

~

•Q54

.1 6
• .JY8 54
•K10 2
6AK82
6.)916 5 :1
SOUTH lUI
6AK 132

UL ABNER

SCORPIO (Oct. 24· Nov. H)

Jlbblr, for

Don't be overly concerned with

eumple
Seamln

- I DONT KNOW WHY THAT OIL.- MAD HENRY
KISSINGER 15 CON\If\XS H~~- WE: CCU3LE: T~ PRICE
E\I'ERY WEEK AND THEY KEEP PAYING r- DO THEIR
CAMELS DRINK OIL.?-

I,U.o--

P01 Wodi

t.. Jlunsle;

You can gain in a slluallon to·
day If vou'lll•k• lime to show
another person how he. 100.
can profll from vour Ideas.
TAURUI (April :JG-IIIr 10)

jumble
Daughter

li Cadmus
Fonn of
John
Break

Where money Is concerned.
you're still under -very lavorable
aspecls. Jusl be sure not lo lei
anyone else count your

Athwart
Summon

change.

\~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::::::::::::~~~~~~:~~~~~~~
-

GEMINI (May 21-.luno 20)

You'll have a chance loday lo
do somelhlng for a conla~t
you 're developing. Your ac·

E118u.h

DAILY

1KNOWJANIE
HATES LEAVINCl
' OCJNNAZ A&amp;
HATE lD&amp;ING-

13UT WITH ANOTHER CHILD ON THE:
WAY. SHE fJELlJNGO AT HOV\f: . I
IVI~H I COULD HAVE STAY£:0
":--::--:' HOME DURING MY TWIN&amp;'
MOST R:lRMAT~E

will make him mOte ready
CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It : 1ions
lo help you.

II

..

GJHA

wee

·W LWJDBH
HJJ,RQ

{

50 DON'T COME
WHIIIIIN'iO ME
THirr 'IE AIN'T HAD
FAIR WARtllltiJ'

PICKPOCKET 15
ON TH ' PROWL
AG 'IN, SNUFfY ..

AXYDLIIAAXI
LONGFELLOW

CANCER (J..,. 21-July H) To
get what you want today, use

One letter aimply standi for onolher. Jn this sample A II an lnd lrecl approach . You'll
used for the three L's, X for the two O's. etc. Single letters. have a bailer chance 10 realize
opoatrophes, the length and formallon o! tho word• are olt vour desires than If you meet
Issues head~on .
hlnls. Each dRY the code !ellen are dllrerenl.
LEO (July 23·Aut· 22) Don't
CRYPTOQUOTES

YEARS/

lr!lr::n/'r---:;::r-r.i;;:H. HOOTit-J' HOLLER

loy, Dec. 17, lt?S

ARIEl (llen:ll 21 ·April 11)

river

AUCTION

7:0D--TodaV) ,4, IS ; Good Morning, America &amp;.1 3; CBS
News 8: Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7: 30-Schoolles 10.
B:OD--Lucr Show 6: Copl. Kangar.oo 8.10; Sesame St.
33.
8:3o-Bia Valley 6.
9:oo--A .M. 3; Phil Donahue 4.15; Lucy Show B; Mtke
Douglas 10; Morning with D. J. 13.

. u-;:: Domingo
:. r /~ :=

•

MIKE SnYENS

WMPO FM STEREO 92

6:00-Columbus Today 4; Sunrise Semester 10.
6: 15-Folk Literature 3.
6:25-Farm Report 13..
6:30-New Zoo Revue 4; News 6; Bible Answers 8;
Farnntlme 10: The Sory 13.
6:4()-{)unce of Prevention 10.
6: 45-Mornlng Reporl 3.
6: 55--Chuck White Reports: Good Morning, Trl State
13.

loday. unless you sit on your
hands Instead of being truly
aggressive. Move out on )'Our
ideas.

lnad

ON

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1t7S

I: 25 -

WITH

Weekdays 6:00 A.M. tillO:OO A.M.

11 :3()-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Wide World Myster~. 13:
FBI 6; Movie "The Great Sioux Massacre 8;
Movie "Enchantment" 101 Janak I 33.
12:30-Wide World Mystarv 6.
l: OD--Tomorrow 3,~ ; News 13.

or

a

·exc.\vi\Tii-. 6."

8A"ci&lt;.HoEs
ANO DOZER . LARGE AN D
SMALL . SE PTIC TAN KS
IN STAL LED .
BI~L
PULL INS. PHONE 991 WB ;
DAY OR NIGHT .
1111781p

EAST
• 84

IO :OD--Joe Forrester3.~.15; Marcus Welby. M.D. 6,13;
Switch 8,10; News 20; Woman Alive! 33 .
10: 30-Woman All vel 20; Woman 33.
11 :OD--News 3,~.6.8. 10,13,15: ABC News 33.

~wd'

10 00 11-W! I'VE
CHAN&lt;SeJ&gt; I.N

9 I I:! tt c

11· ·~~'T

.. y

Since queen and three small in
the East hand was more likely
than a singleton queen in the
West hand , South led dunnmy 's jack of hearts and let it
ride . West produced the queen
and another slam had bitten
lhe dust.
South 's pl ay had not really
been bad but it had not been
the bes t percentage . He
should have' played .West for
the queen because the location
of the queen was a lifty·fifly
proposition . He could have led
a heart to his ace and given
himself the extra chance of
picking up a singleton queen .
This time il would have
worked ·and the better play
wou ld have triumphed .

Consumer Survival 20,33. ·
9:0D--Pollce Woman 3,1,15; Rookies 6,13; Mash 8,10:
Ascent of Man 20,33 .
9:30-&lt;lne Day at a Time 8, 10.

9:3()-Not For Women Only 3; One Life to Live 6; Andy
Griffith 8; New Zoo Revue IJ.
.~
10:00-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4,15; Edge of Night 6:
Price I• Right 8,10; Mike Douglas 13 .
10:30-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; I Dream of Jeannie 4:
,.
• A 10 3
Dinah 6.
•11 16
11: OD--Hollywood Squares 4; Gambit 8, 10.
6Q4
11 :30-Hollywood Squares 3.15: Happy Days 13:
Neither vulnl'r&lt;tblc
Midday 4;·Love ol Life 8, 10; Sesame St. 20,33.
11 · ss-Take Kerr 8; Dan Imel's World 10.
\\'est Norlh ~o;ast South
12 :oo-Hlgh Rollers 3,15; Showofls 13: Bob Braun's 50·
SO Club 4; Ni!JNS 6,8, 10.
Ia
12 :30-NdOnday 1,15; All My Children 6,13; Search for
Pass 3 .
Puss
Tomorrow 8.10; Elec . Co. 33.
Pass 5.
l'etss
12:55-NBC News 3,15.
P:.~ss
Pas!'i P&lt;l!oiN
1:OD--News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Donohue 8;
Pe~ss
Young 8. the Restless 10; Nol For Women Only 15.
Opeqing lead - K 6
1: 30-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15; Let's Make a Deal 6, 13;
Today ·s hand came from a
As the Woorld Turns 8, 10.
2:0D--SIO,OOO Pyr.mld 6,13.
New Jersey reader. He asked
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
2: »-Doctors 3,4, l l: Rhyme 8. Reason 6,13; Guiding
us to comment on the bidding
Light 8, 10.
and play . The article discuss·
West shifted to a trump al ed the play. As for the bidding
3:0D--Another World 3,4,1S; General Hospital 6,13: All
trick two . South played his ace North overbid a trifle but the
tn The Family 8,10; Kup's Show 20; Know Your
and led a second trump back fina l co ntract was a very
Schools 33.
to dummy·s queen. Then he reasonable one.
3:JO-One Life to Live 13; Bewitched 6: Andy Griffith
studied the heart sui l.
8; Match GamelO; Children wlfh Special Needs 33.
(For a copy of JACOBY
4:oo--Mister Cartoon 3; Sommenet 15; Mickey .Mouse
He saw thai he needed five
Club 6,8; Mister Rogers 20,33: Movie "The Buster
~earl tricks and decided to MODERN. send $1 to: ''Win
Keaton Slory" 10; Call II Mactronl 13.
play East for the queen. In at B rid ge . " clo I his
• .JO-Bewltched3; Alterschool Speclal6,13; Partridge
case the queen was guarded newspaper. P. 0. Box 489,
Family 8: Sesame St. 20,33; Sanla's Workshop 15.
by three small hearts a first Radio City Station. New York,
5:0D--Bonanza 3; Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
round finesse was necessary . N. Y. 70079)
5:30-Adam·12 4; News 6 ; Beverly Hltlblllles 8; Elec.
·co. 20,33; Adam ·l2 13
6:0D--News
3,U, 10,13,15; ABC News 6; Hodgepodge
... WELl. I DuN NO
Lodge 20; Teaching Children 33.
IF I WANT, 10 TA.l&lt;E
6:30-NBC News 3.~.1S; ABC News 13; Andy Grlffllh 6;
YOU J«JW:::_·:_....----.:-]
CBS News e,10; Attack Heart Attack 20; Boak Beat
by
THOMAS
JOSEPH
?
?
33.
ACROSS
tO Ending for
/ :DO-Truth or Cons.3; To Teii~Trlrth 4; Bowling lor
1 No rllk
lau&amp;h
Dellw• 6; Pop Goes n.e country I I Mews 10; !tiQht
.Involved
n Streetcar,
Before Christmas 13; Family Affair 15: BoOk Beat
20; Know Your School 33.
5 Pabn
in Blighty
7:30-Laslofthe Wild 3: Name That Tune~; Wild Wild
leaf
DOWN
World of Animals 6; Wild Kingdom 15: Match
8 Paris
1 Piqued
G1me PM 8; Evening Edition with Martin
airport
% U.S.S.R. lake
Aqronsky_ 20; AQuestion of Hunting 10; Chrlstmos
t Tnas 3 With Is ... 13; Episode Action 33.
IS Martha ol
( gallantly )
e:oo--Litlle House on the Prairie 3,1, 15; When Things
comedy
( 2 wds.)
·••
Were Rotlen 13; College Basketb•ll 6; Tony
If Chant
4 Watch
Yeslerdliy'sAuwer
Orlando 8. Dawn 8,10; Evening of Championship
15 Biblical
5 MIM
12 Atomic
Z7 Bar order
Skating 33; Mel Torma In Concert 20.
device
Jl Man or
8:30-Th11'1 My Mama 13.
·
judge
Chriatie's
11
Uberate
Capri
9:0D--Doctors
Hospllal3
••
,
15;
Baretla
13:
Cannon
8,10;
11 Nourished
Express
u
••
bor
Great
Performances
20,33.
17 - Hagen
s AUght
33 -.,.. '
IS Heraldic
IO :OD--Petrocelll 3,4,15: St1nky &amp; Hutch 6,13; Blue
11 Teulonle
7 Formic acid
,
..
wreaBridgthes
~:::.S
Knight 8,10; News 20; Say Brother 33.
goddess
34
IIOIIJ'ce
""
10:»-Jau Set 33.
•~%1 n....r..-ina
d fate
10 HII"'"
~·-..,or 3t "Malter
ll :OD--News 3,4.6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
Ill Buy
ceiling
roulette
MelVIn"
11 :3()-Johnny Carson 3,1,15: Movie " Returning
on ( $ wd.!l.)
%! Heighten
n Servin&amp; af 1 ~ Home" 13: F B16; Movie "Pirate oflhe Half·Moon"
JJ Alliance
25 - Connery
.1 8: Movie " Two Loves" 10: Janakl 33.
URue
r.--r;-,r;-T.'12 :30-Movle " Returning Home" 6.
Elchlh
1:oo--Tomorrow 3.~ ; News 13.
.-&gt;....~, _;;:
I gallon
;:;...··&gt;-'!
U Ted, to
GOOd lhlngs will happen lo you
, Caroline

..

l.I Cil!lCd

I'L.L.

r®e€T!

Comp l ete Service . Ph one
2487 or 9A9 -2000 . Rac ine ,
0 11i o. Crill Br adford .
10 9 tfc

irEAFORD REALTY/

610

~..~V~IJ ~IJ':&gt;T ~ WOO f\11._,

1111\'i,ti!?:r~~~~! I ~·r

9,19

Mercury, Super A Farm-All tractor, wagons,
.heaters, chain s~ws, sander, cut-off saw, table saw, drill,
assorted tools,, stoves, dryers, T.V., rugs, chairs,
sweeper~, sewing machines, toys. Antiques. other items
too numerous to mention.

\·

Specl•llatet

t.mu:.

Mi~TWDI ~,

1968

...., 15.00 up

....

•·

ABQJI m

M f\ 1, t·fl N t: ,
Rcp,lirs . se r vice . all ma tor. cs .
'IQ } ~nu
1 he r rlb r ic 1ohop .
ron 1croy 1\ uthorizcd ~ . inqer
,lt CS an d ~; cr vic e
W~
\ twrp c n •,c 1ssors
J 29 1IC

EVERYONE WELCOME

Mltllo,.rt, 0 . '~ ~ 'H·271l

.,

I'M ~

CONSIGNMENT SALE

CONTACT:
loll P•uley
ll&lt;encll MIJNtter

.

• A3

BORN WSER

del i v er ed ricd1 t to your
proj cCI . t .1~1 ,1nc1 easy . 1 rce
rs l irn .l1C&lt;; P ho ne 997 3? 8.1.
Gol'&lt;li Cin R C' ~ldy MiK. Co.
/l.:•cfd lc porr . Otl io 4
u('
6 30
•, E W I N (,

lti

NORTit

6QJ 10ti5
. K.I9H 2

MUCfl AB I

.

After Hours C. II

10 cu . I T r elrlg ~rator , l ike
new . IllS . Phone ?91 H57.
12 16 Jtc
NOliCE 01 PUBLiC SA I.E
To whom il mby c-onc ern :
Notice il hereby given th at
on Oec . 30, t?H , ~~ 10 l\.m a
pUblic sa l(l will be held at
Citizens Nat iona l Oan il. ,
M i ddl~por1. Ot-~io . to Sell lor
cft5h I he tolto\tfinq coiJatera t
towir : l ~,ft) G ~ aroh lractor.
!'I N :10'16.1\. 1no It&lt; Nt1r lona l
Lc1.'1dr,r . I Mudcl 6 701
Lancrscnpcr ,
Cili1cns
Neotlional f\ornk , Midd lrporr ,
Ohio , rcs c rv~s 1hC r lqhl lo
bid I I Thr '"ul t('

. R·UTLAND - 2 BR , balh.
dining R.. carpet, p•nellng,
gor1ge . S9,500. (m ake an
offer)
DEXTER AREA - 1&gt;7
acres, large home, barn &amp;
olher "''&gt;ldgs., fencing ,
limber. SJ8.000. Financing
available.
.
POMEROY - 711&gt; acro;s,
(hilly) , 4 BR; balh, Clr ·
peling,
, N. gas,
hot w1ter heat,
$15,000.
.
HARRISONVILLE
NEW HOME, about 1 acre.
3 BR , Jl;, baths, brick &amp;
frame . kllchen wllh
tras , •garage , carpeting,
525,900.
TO BUY OR SELL US HELP YOU.
m .2259 or m .u,e

Best percentage play wins

kE Ati\,. M.t X(O NC.RETE

ROOF l NG an d gutter of all
kind . not asphatr . we fix l t1e
fl at ones . P hon ~ 367 059 1,
. Cheshire . Pau l Wa lk er .
11 15 261 p

NEW LISTING - 3 B.R.
brick near slores In
Pomeroy . Larg e d ining
with firepla ce and mod. kit.
3 car gar•ge. $17,500.
NEW LISTING - 49 acres
andnew2 B.R. home. Bath,

eo·

-

TO

ke:MOOEL I NG ,
Plumbing·. EL WO OL • uUWER ~, REPAIR
•,weepe r s. toasters . irons ,
healin g end all t ypes of
rl ll 5111,1 11 •lPPt ia nc cs Law n
qencri:rl
re p a i r .
Work1
n ~ ower . ne xt to '. laTe High
quarantccd 20 years CA~1
w~1v GitraQ.c on Rout e 7 ~
pcri cnce . Phone 992 2.1 09 .j
Phone 9H'. JK2 ..
.
S I lifo
.1 16 ti c

-

Wanted To Buy

-

FliGHT FROM COI\:&gt;T

Pom erov Olfic~
lO S Butternut
992 -3345
Form erly Weed Whol esa l ~.
F ea tu ring :
Delu x zerox Copy S e~vice ,
O ffi ce
S upp lr ~s ,
Mim eo graph
Supp l ieS ,
larg es t selection of wed
ding supp lies in So uth
eastern Ohio
The Print SMop Cof!lplel~
(Still in busi ness rn Mrd·
dleportl
1282mo.

m.soo.

3 /\NO 4 rm . furnished and
unf urnished apt s. Phone 992
COAL, limeston e and all tyt:~es
5&lt;13 .1 .
REAR gear cue or en lire r B
of salt and rock salt for.tfce:
II 9 tfc
Minneapolis Moline trac lor
and snow remo-vH. Ex)
·.
lor parts . Phon e 992 57 95. ~ uRN 1 s-:-H
celsjor ·sa l t Works, · ~ast
· ~· -aTaitM ~;;,--;
121631C
Main St ., Pom eroy. Ohio .
adults only In Middleport .,
Phone 992 3891.
992
38'
1
4
.
Pl'lone
:.=o tUr Flr tur e. · ice boxfs,"
J 25 II.~,
brass b~d s, or co mplet'e
hou&amp;eholds . Write M . ~
Miller , Rl . 4. Pomeroy, 6 RM . HOUSE~nd·~ be th for CHR I STMAStrees . Phone742
renl in Pomer oy . Ca ll 992
2535 , Main St ., Rutland .
Ohio, Call 99 2 7760.
1741.
12-9 121c
10·7., .. ,
-

Ehl ROUTE!

S KYSCRAPER AFTER
IT$ HEADLINE- MAK IN&amp;

Quality Print Shop

\

·w,_

-·-

ATOP A ~EW YORK

WIN AT BRIDGE

'99.99

-

DOW~

YOU

MOVIES TO PflOVE
YOUR SEISATIOIJAL AI1VSNTI1Ril$

.t 10 1 mo

ONLY

-

HAVE' rHO S~

Ph . 992 ·399!

/633.

197 3 CH EVY Vega GT ,

Employment Wanted

' Work
All Mechanical

1?. GREM LIN ~1.200 . Must*bc
so lr;j hy Januar y. Phone 99?

OOMWTEXL
CHAIN SAW

M

... A'D ,_0 THE M&lt;KEE

''FAMILY FLYER" TOUCHES

'l( r acuc,e, Ohio

.

Wont Ads doesl 11

.
W~,L.BOV~ .. tNS T~U$T

~-------------.

.

"Try humming while you worlt,
dear, like 1ho plumber in the

CAPTAIN EASY

16, 197S

1:30-Bewltched 3: Mod Squad 6: Partridge Famllv B;
Sesame St . 20,33; Sanla's Workshop IS.
S:OD--Bonanza 3; Family Affair 8; Slar Trek IS.
s:·30-Adam .J2 4,13: News 6; Beverly Hillbillies B:
Elee. Co . 20.33.
6:0D--News 3,4,8.10.13, 15: ABC News 6; Hodgepodge
Lodge 10; Jody 's Body Shop 33.
6:3G-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griff ith 6;
CBS News 8,10: Your Future Is Now 33; Wood ·
c•rvers' Workshop 20.
7 : ~ral Roberts' Christmas Is Love 3; To Tell the
Truth 4; Bowling lor Dollars 6; Wilburn Brolhers 8;
News 10; Name That Tune 13; Family Affair IS;
Antlqll.OS 20; Wild Wild World of Animals 33.
7 30-Hollvwood Squares 4 ; Let's Deal With It 6;
$2S,OOO Pyramid 8; Evening Edition with Marlin
Agronsky 20: Price Is Righi 10 ; To Tell the Truth
13; Wally's Workshop 15; Family Theatre 33.
8:0D--Movln ' On 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6,13; G~ Times
8, 10; Ours tory 20,33.
8:30-Welconne Back, Kotler 6;13; Joe 8. Sons 8.10:

'...

LARRY LAVENDER

Phone 74HJJ1
· Roger Wamsley; Rutland
11 .18-75

Pets

..

',,

ln1ulation Services
Blown rnlo Wa lis &amp; Attics
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING .SOFFITT
GUT TERS·AWNINGS

,

ROGER HYSEll'S

TUESDAY, DECEMBER

Blown

3 ~ BEDHM . hom e,-- juSf
bath, large new kit ., gas
12 11 61p ' 396 CHEVY engin e
frnlshed , rem odeling , Salem
h i ri se
furnace, 2 por ches &amp; level
.
St., RuiiMd . Phone H2 . 2~06
J969 ,
manifold , 780 Ho lley car
lot .
I REE RENT AT VILLAGE
atrer 4 p.m . or see Mi lo B.
12 14 41p
buretor
.
headers
.
Call
992
MANOR
IN
MID
NEW LISTING - 3 B.R.,
Hut chison .
12·1S Jlp
5870 after 5: 30p.m .
DLEPORT! We ar e so su r e
all
elec . hom e, mod. kit.,
9·2l
·IIC
S25 R: EWAR D TO anyone who
I? 1? Al e
rha l you w i ll love our apart
large liv . with wood .
giv'es th e name of person or
ments !hat we give you two
HOU SE . Phone9923129or 992
persons responsible for
burning fireplace . F.
weeks RENT r REE . Just 13.1"x30'' REAR tractor tires
5914.
vandalism i n the M iddl epor t
for
modified
pull
ing
tractor
.
basement 8. dbl. garage .
pay -vour secur it -v deposit
12
14
J!c
Cem~terv ludlng to the
Ca ll 99' 5870 alter 5: 30, 992
and stay six months and !h e
517,500.
conv iction. Pleas~ no Iffy th e
2176 8 5 ask fo r Ma rk , -~
ADULT peacocks , $50 . Pa ir ,
fi rst 2 weeks is fr ~e . You will
SPECIAL - 2 concrete blk .
pollee or author:illes . The
Jl .Ji 61( HOU SE modern , 2 b~drrn . ,
idea l Chrl!.!mas gifts . P . 0 .
enloy
montMiy
leases.
all
buildings
&amp; dr illed well ,on
lntormer '!. nerne will be
.
.larg
e
tiv
i
n.fl
r
..
oom
,
lull
B.O)( '2S6 , Coohdllt, Ohio or
elec tric lhdng , cerp~tlng .
kepi 1ecret .
H I DE fl BEO ; : 555 .
Tw O
basement ; n~w roof , g4 rag e ~ . 114. Only $8 ,000 .
phone (61 ~) 667 3358 .
.
ra ng~ and re fri gera tor . fr ~e
1
12. 14 3tc
cushio n sofa', cover -'120.
3 a cres garden , 1~ acre
t l 10 71p
COUNTRY LIVING - Like
trash p ick up . cable TV
· Used two w~eks . Phone 94?
woods . Phone 949 2635, only
fop
t
ional
l
and
leundry
new 3 BR 's, kit . with bar ,
AUCTION Tuesday night 7 1\KC Reg . Sai ni Bernard
2719.
Phone
9491719.
517
.500
.
tac lt il ie s. C onv~n !e n t to
sliding glas s doors · In
p.m . N~w and used mer
12 11 41p
11 10 61p
shopp ing on Third and Mi ll
Puppies. R ca dy for Christ
chandise at Mason Aucllon .
dining.
F. basement &amp; dbl .
in
Middl
ep
ort
.
VIL
LAGE
mas . Phon e" 9J9 2008 .
Horton St ., Mason , W . Va .
539,000.
garage
.
MANOR iS yours tor one
12 166tc
3 ~R HOME , lust finished
12.14 3tc
LINCOLN HTS. - 2 B.R..
bedroom
aparrment s
A SPECIAL GIFJ
r'eiTlode.ling . Sa l em St .,
starting at Sl04 mon thly plus
AKC registered Dachshunds ,
~vtlan'd : Phon e 742 ·130&amp;
horne, bath, gas fu rnace •
For Someone Sp-.:1•1
elec . we pav for everything
r ed, male and female .
after '4 p . m . or see Milo B .
aluminum
siding . Storm
else . See the Manager a1
Phone 742 2809 .
HutchiMon .
windows 8. drs . Only
R i v~rside
Apartments or
12 14 ltc
IQ .-9 1fC
SIO,OOO.
ca ll 992 3273 . Th iS offer will
end soon . so move In now
NEW LISTING - 3 large
RE 0 IRI SH Seller puppies,
FA RM for sa le by owner , ;
and sa"e ssss.
tull blooded se tters but don 't
BR
. brick, I''' baths. nat.
miles west of Rutland on
10 23 rtc
hav~ papers , price $3 0.
New Lima Roa d , 141 acres , gas furnace, walnut sta irs,
would be nice Chr istmas
large bar n. h ou s~ . other
dlshw•sher and family
gills . Delton Fowler . phone House 5 r ms. and bath In
'buildings . A ll
m i neral
room with wood.burnlng
~u9 2'248.
Racine . Ph o n~ 99 2 5858 .
rights , 60 acres tillable, rest
fireplace, $34,000.
12 14 lip
12 J lfC
in pasture . also pond .
With 10" biund c.,. in .
144 ..500. Phone · (4 191 865· RUSTIC HILLS - 3 B.R.'s,
COONHOUND pups, 7 mos . TRI\ILER l ot tor rent. Phone
3291
famllv room . mod. kit .,
POMEROY
LANDMARK
old . Phone 992 7149.
992 SSJ5.
11 J0261c
dining, all elec . central a ir
12 11 6tc
J••k W. Coney, Mgr.
12 J lfC
on landscaped lot. $24,500.

Cont1ct

CITY- - - PHONE _ __

.• .

Television log for easy viewing

FREE ESTIMATES

Coins, Currency
and Supplies
Appraisa I service
estates and collec;,ions .

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialir.t

Blk. vinyl roof. grey finish. good tires. automatic,

1973 TRUCK, I ton rord,

1961 . The time of vcar she
loved most, one of the
greatest moth&amp;ri . The
body. mind and soul, no two
alike, the soul ne:v e r di es.
The rose fades but tht

!

:Jma ltcs t He~tCr Core .

8: 30 a . m . ro S:OO p . m .
Daily ,.8 ' 30a . m . ro 1" :00 Noon
Sa lurdlly .
·

who went away Dec . · 16.

'&gt;.

1'l\iJ
. ron1
th er larqcst
Truck
IIdo7c
Rildiator
to thore

Sl 2 9s

1t70 NOVA V-8 CPE .

.

. :i adla'lo
') c
, ·

Ad ditional 75c Charge per
Adverrlsemenr .

.In Memory of 1/iola

I

.

Business Services

OFFICE HOURS

NOTICE

.

'•

BLIND ADS

In Memory

,

.,

2 SIGNS ' :P omeroy I

.

The Publisher reserves the
r lqhl 1(1 ed it or rt~i t•&lt;.t ~nv ilt.Afl
deemed oblec tlon al. T"e
puhf is h, ·r
w i ll
110 1
bt·
rl'sp onsibl e for mort than one
incorr ec t insertio n .

.

Auto Sales

-

P .M .
Dll'r'
Before
Pub l ication .
o'.' ~ ' l l iJ~l~ U!o!ol dllll\.' '/ :d . Jll , .
Cttn cell at ion
Corl-eclions
will be arc~pled un lil t9 a m .
tor Day of Publication .

Jmnllln; CABIN USUR'V DEBATE PURITV
l•·-lrr•l•"'•
·
Att•••·' : \rlwl fltt • Humntu lt't•rt• tdtilc• Xt ·ru
riddlt •ff-"'BURNEO UP"

~,

.

HAR
AJE ,

WDT

HRRHA
EWD

WDT

OCWGB

SR W H

You'll find IMre·s somelhlng In

HAR il lor you .
VIRGO (Aut . 23-Sepl. 22)

SRWQ . - WQH-

HAR

shy from what you consider at
llrst to be a friend 's far~out
scheme . Weigh all aspe&lt;:ts.

Don't hesitate to approach the
boss today 11 you see an oppor·
tun ily that could mean mOre
money for you. It's no time to

AXQ
ERR
YHieniay's CryploqaOie :· VERY OFTEN WHAT WAS A be falnlheaned .
CRISIS IN THE MORNING HAS BEEN RESOLVED BY THE LIIRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23)
.AFTERNOON. - DR. HAIM GINOTI'
' (C U75 Klo1 '""'"' SJncll&lt;olo, ID&lt;,)

I

~006f.IT

l(OO A

LITTLE PRESENT...

WEU., nw« 1(00... JUST
WHAT I'VE ftJ.WA~5IIWITED

Twin· City Sh·rine Club ·
RACINE, OHIO
TIME-10130 a.m.

.
I'

•

v

..

self·lnleresls loday . Look oul
for the other guy. Laler ,' he'll be
be11er able to look out for you.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dtc.
'2 t) Don't turn down any In·
vitalions today to a social event
ir.volving many people. You'll
learn something valuable.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon.
11) Be alert for unusual career
opport unities today. Should
one co me up. you must be
prepared to move swiftly and
decisively .

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20·Fob. 11)
New people you meet today
could turn out to be very impor t ant t o you . either
businessw lse or socrally . Take
time to be gracious and plea ~
sam.
PISCES (Fob. 20·Morch 20)
You 're better equipped to face
challenges today than you give
yoursell credit for. Vou can
reason ~our way around Bny

barrier .

~Your

~Birthday
Doc. 11, 1175
New channels for addtng to
your resources w1ll be opened
10 you this coming year. One
will be tl"rough a large cor·
poration or lnstilutlon.

I

l
\'

I

�JJi~:. ~·:.::.::::·,:·For Fast Results Use The Sentinel .Classifieds
t'n."t'ntnlhh• th(•:ool'fnur.lumhlt·s.
unt lt'Ht•r tu t•m•h ~ quart'. tu

(orm

(tiUI'

·

.

ordilliJt ' "'utd!Oo .

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
OF.ADIIII f- 1.

Auto Sales

REGULATIONS

RATES

For Want Ad Service
~ r &lt;'nrs per word one Inser tion
M in imum Cnarge SI.OO
t t cc nr s pPr
N'J rd !hrCt'
fl"' tl :·,t•c ut lv t' in sert ions .
76 ce nts per word sh' con
~.cc 111 i vl' in:;c-r ' ior.s
7 .~ Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10
dlly s

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

S? 00 for SO word m lnim urn
Each ad dit iona l word 3
cenrs .

I

-·

.: -·--· - -- ~
.

QU~TY

!Motor"Co·· ·i~E.x~i~liNcEo
-' ... .

1?13 BUICK LeSABRE
531?5
Custom H.T. Cpe .. loca l owner, that's really sharp

r Serv.lce

Inside &amp; out, good w.w tires, custom wheels. dark
green vinyl roof, green finis h • AM ra d'10 &amp; tape, factor y
air, automatic, P . steering &amp; brak es.

NEW LOCATION
GENE'S

BODY SHOP
Top of Lincoln Hill,
Pomerov.
Ph. 992·2280
Free Estimates

A Low Cost
Want Ad

Will Cut
Cost of
Uving •• ~ ...
WRIJE YOUR

OWN AD!
IrS EASY TO
ORDER BY
MAIU
SPECJAL!--

12 MlRDS
4 DAYS
ONLY

$125

CASH WITH
ORDER

AVAilABLE TO
INDIVIDUALS ONLY!
NON COMMERCIAL
NO REFUNDS.
Each initial and
group of figures
counts as one word.
Be sure to count
name and address, if
used, and your phone
number.
Including
prices for items offered in vour want ad
will
increase
response.

1. ~---

2. _ _ __
3. _ _ _ __
4,_ _ _ __
5, _ _ __
6. _ _ _ __
7. _ _ _ __
8.._ _ __
9, _ _ _ __
10._ _ __

11. - - - - - 1
12, _ _ __
NAME _ __
-ESS,- - -

Louk~.

I

::e~Hs::::::;::~ARo

=
.9~'T•:~_,,o~:-~·-.S~~~.m_c•Nr· ~-

5

s1m ,.
Motor overhaul. good tires, pleasing orange finish with •.&gt;'1
blk . vinyl interior, radiO. Sharp.

I~

Notice
ROOM and board for Sr
Citizen s wilh low income.
very nice . Phone 997 3509.
1130 11 c

fragrance li..-es on forev er.

The s pan of living brings on
weithted wings a thousand

tlm ·es .

The

NEW store opening . th e
fl atwoods Genera l Sto re on
Co unt y Rd . 26
I l atwoods
Rd. Open trom 9 a .rn . 6 p .m
daily . M ea t . grocer ies. icc
cream . pop · ~tn d c andy .
Phone 991 7873. Mrs . Hclrley
Han in g .
1'} 16 ,If p

ha ~

poet

written, "Only those are
crowned and sainted who
with grief have been
acquainted . "

Spiritual

growth comes from grief,

di1appo l ntm~nt
and
hrllure. Home 16 where the
happiest m~morl e1 are
spent. Pictures of memorv
on wall ol dream s. Think of
th e tittle bird witl't il song
left if1 his t i ny throat. We
wilt always feel th e bfeilfh
of God warm around us
everywhere .
Family .

SOMEO N E to lh1e in wilh
el derly lady . Phone 9Y2 3·157 .
12 16 31C
Pti\ NO LE SSO N S
Now
a ccepting new Sludent s .
Beginners ,
interm ediat eS.
advanc ed .
June
!Mrs .
Harveyl Van Vr anken ..n .t
~p rin g
1\ve . , Pom c ro-v
Phone 992 2272 .
11 16 6tc

Notice
MEIG S •COUNTY HUMANE

SOC IETY H AS :' Miss y ,''
black and wr-ite , " Happy ,"
gray and white, 12 week ol d
female kl fl ens . Vet c h~cked ,
hav e shots and wormed .
Wou ld like to loin a, fam ily
that gives TLC . Call '992 2639
or 991 5427 aft~r 0.

BL I:J ETICK femal e hO!Jnd in
Danville area . Call Rober t
''' Stewart. phon e 992789-1 .

12 16 lip

11 16 Jlc

HAVE your deer . rrophles . LOST in the area of Langsv ille
six months old oran oc and
mounted
Blrchfields
while Brittany bird dog . has
Ta)(l derrr.y , St . R:l. 124, east
no name tag . If found call
of Rut land Phone (0 141 1-11

7'1 2884 or 367 0511.

1178 .

1115 Jlc

I I 2B lfc

W IL L give away fema le half
Bass~tt . h alf Beagle pup
pie s. B weeks old . Phon e 985

LOST
BlliCk brown while
l em!!rle Beagle dog In back
or ar ound Ph It I !p Spor·n
Mine .
Conlact . Hom~r
Jeffers , 773 5291 or 773 5490 .

MAIL WITH
'1.25
TO THE

IMILY SENTINEL
111 COURT ST.

__

_

.

Buy, Sell or Trade
on

R&amp;J COINS

GARAGE
r

350, Heavy duty LWB . ex
ce ttent condition . Ca ll 30·1
773 53 08 after 5 p .m .
11 16 t f

·'

spCed

·I

~~.~ soin c:1~r¥92g2~~~ - s~ape.
12 12 61p

CARPE:NTRY , fl ooring .
ceiling and panc linQ . Phone
992 2759' .
u 1.1 !Ole

Mobile Homes For Sale

PH, 992-5682

I ? 16 Jtp

1 mite on Stale Route 124
Toward Rutland
11 -11 -1 mo.

For Sale

For Sale

WA NTED old upright pianos NOW se lling Fuller Brush
t 97~
1Jx70 TRJ\tLER , ('X
in any condition . Will pay
Products. Pnon e · 992 34 10.
cc ll ent cond ition. especia ll y
SIO ea ch . r irs t floor only .
10 6 tfc
bu ilt to r offices . L ow pr ice
Write · giv.ing d irect ions to
•·· - for quick sr~lc . Ph one ()Q ,! )
Will en Pii.ln o Co .• Box 188, fl rRCO welding machine ,
6 7 .~ t91 1 or 675 ~ 82'i' .
Sa r dis. Otlio• 43946.
:! new , ctcc . all accessor ies
10 .30 tfc
•
12 10 6 tp
in c luded . Phone 992 34 10.
tO 28 1fc
8 x 46 LIBERTY, e)C
DA SH 23 ch ann el c itizens
.
ceptionally clean , furni shed . INband
MODERN Wa ln ut Console ,
transc ei v er . am lm
Also, 10 x 50 Peerl ess, new
mp x radio , 8 rrack Stereo .
AM F M rad i o. 4 speed
gas furnace , 2 bedroom, eye
Call 992 3965 . 1\ lso olh t:! r
chan ger , Balance $101. 80 or
l evel oven and surface unit .
mode ls.
• termS . Call 9~2 . 3 965.
Can be see'n at' ' Kingsbury
I 2'9 tiC
11 20 l fC
Hom e Sa tes. noo E . Ma in ,
51 ., Pomeroy , Ohio .
12 1.11 .tt c U . 5,; Gold coi ns, $2.50, $75 POT ATOE!) lor saie 5"0and 100
each ; S5. S90 eac h ; WI! eat
lb . bags . Across from
back penn ies, 85c roll silver"
NA NT to . bui ld your own
Shamrock in Hend.erson , w.
ce r tif ica tes, SI.1S each ; Big
mobile office , vacation
Va . Done l d Wa lhu , Rt . 35,
Dollar fhors c bl anke t ) l)i lfs ,
Henderson . w. Va .
house or storage build ing?
s to each Ca ll Rutland . 742
We hav e a 12 by 60 mobile
11 18 26tc
1331. Roger Wa m sley .
nom e frame . complete with
12
10
61(
axles . tires an d wheels .
r~ad.,. to roll . Can be seen at
P AR T Siora 19.68FordCougar
Ki ng s bury Mobile Home
and lir ~s and rims . Phone
Sales , 1100 E . Main St..
HOUSE for sal e in Por t lan d,
949 2829 .
Pomeroy . Ohi o. 99 2 7034 .
lake over payments, musl
1114 4fp
11 14 41(.
se ll . 5 rooms and balh , good
well and~ acres of ground .
DINING room labt e with 4
Phone 8-13 2292 .
chairs, also venetian blind ~ .
12 5 12fc
Phone 992 2429 .
,

Real Estate For Sale

For Rent

TWO

BEDROOM

mobile

11 1, 3tp

home . Phone 992 3429.

D&amp;M Appliance
Sales and Service

lflil

lnlersection of Rt. JJ &amp;1
Pomeroy

Ca II today for

Service Tomorrow
Business Phone: 992 ·S8BO
Residence : 992·3313
11-18·1 mo .

Phonem.2111

r;nnement

o'DELL

· , ocat~d·

be Mind
R unand Gr ade
Sc hool. T u neup, brakes ,
w heel bal ancing. alin ement.
Phone 742 2004 .
11 16 tic

...

,I

lll ,l&amp;lc LOCUST eost• . Phone 741
.
.
23S9 .
wllhframesandbodleswllt'P 'cti • N l ~ ~ Mobile ttomc.•
11 9-261p
or without motors. $1 hUI\d · '" f'Mk , f.lt "ll. ttn 1H ilcs nbrth
rcod . Tin ..SO hundred . Will
of romcroy Larg t• to ts with
buy m~tals and scrap Iron .
concr e te ~lcl lios , si dewalks , I IR EWOOD . Edward Ba ll .
991 7580 .
On Old Rt . 33 , lust across·
runn ers ~l nd oil s treet 1
from Gruner 's CM_I pper .
pnr\. inq . 'f"llOIH! 99~1 /. t79 .
1
11 9 121c
Monday throuoh Fr tdey 9
t 2l 1 tfc .
till 4 p.m ., Saturd ay, 9 111
FIREPLACE g re le $5 , record
noon ,
player , S1.5 . stovelld litters.
11 l4 ·2&amp;1c
$2, buffel, Sl5. Phone 367
-

-

- -

HAL L'S Salvage . All au1o$

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
case No . 2uu

Es lilf~ ot Luther V. Ciltdwctl,
Deceased.
Nofice is hereby given that
Tress I~ Hend rlc~s of R ., D . 4,
Pomeroy , Oh io. has been dulY.
appointed Exec utri x of the'
Estate of L ut her V. Caldwell,
decea !e d . lat~ o f Meigs
County , Ohio .
Creditors are requirecr to SECR:ETAR't'
recrptlonist :
Iii ~ their claims with said
ka th erine · Gibbs graduate·
liduciary within tour 1months .
and or 5 years background
Daled this 12th day of
experience ;
acc ura te
December; 1975 .
typist ;
use of
office
machines ; ability to relate
HBrotd o. We bster
to
p eople :
references
Judge
r~qulred ; send resume to P .
Cour t of Common Pleas
0 . Drawer R4S , Athens , Ohio
Probate Division
4.570 1 an equal op
1111 1&amp;. 13. 30. Jtc
portun il y em pi oyer .
12·1,. ·3tc

""Wanted

· ·---- --· -- - -·--

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
ANO APPRAISEMENT

CARRIER

Tl'le State of Ohio, Melts
County , Probatt Court.
To the Co Executrices of the
~s ta te ; to such of the following
as arc residents of th~ State of
Ohio , v iz :
lhe surviving
spouse , the ne)( t of kin , the
benefic ia r ies under the Will ;
and to the atto rney or at
lorneys represe nting any Of
the aforer12entlon~d persons :
Dorset ;)mlfh, Oec~ascd .
Hemlock Grove , Ohio . Sed
ford Township , No . 21670.
You are hereby notified thai
the
Inventory
ancr
Ap
praisement of the es tate of the
992-2156
aforement ion ed .
dec:encd.
late of sa i d Count y, was fil ed
In lhls Court. Said Inventory .CI\PADLE WOITH'In l&lt;o care for
and 1\Q pre tsement will be for
elderly, semi invalid man In
hear (ng before this Court on
h is l'lom e. Phone " ' ~6~2 or
he 26th day of Deumber,
?91 JJ07 .
.
\ 97S, at 10 : 00 o ' clocll. A .M .
12 11 61p
.. Any penon crnirlng to tile
uceptions thereto must file !-IE"R\IICE Manager lor new
them at feast flvt days prjor to
car dealer ship. Write Box
the date set tor l'lear lng .
743, Pomeroy, Oh io. 4$769.
Given under my hand ahd
127121c
SUI Of Sli d Cour I, lhil 11th
day of Onctmber 1975

WANRD

MULBERRY
AVENUE,
POMEROY, 0.

The DiiJ S.llillll

Milnn ing 0 . W•~ hstcr
Judge end ex otticio
Cled, of said Court

POMEROY, C»&gt;IO

4570
rm 16.

n

Oy /\nn o , Watson
Dcpu!y Clerk

Wanted

au makts-.n.,

p.7,~., patd for
modfols of mobile homes •..
· Phone arelt coc:le 61.t 423·

9531 .

~

ltc

\

13 tiC ..

COAST!

For Sale

7719.

.

STEREO radio ,
modern
12 · 1&lt; · ~1p
dCSion . R !rack tape , am fm ~. -·~·W·-------- · '" ·~
rad io combination . Ba lance
s 107 ..&amp;0 or terms . Call 992

Estate For S. ':

Real

3965.

17 16 If(

Slrout11
Realty

BEEf cow, also Hereford cow
to freshe n soon . Phon e 843

1JSJ.

12 16 Stc

IHCO&amp;PORA'ICD

NE W automatic washer and
also antiQue dre-sser. Call

3!8 8369.

12 10 4t(
Po inse t lias
at
· ·L·A R G E
Cleland's Greth House ,
Racine . Ohio . Gera ld ine
Cleland .
12 16 7tc
1000 )( 10 NE W fires . price
1115 each. Call 991 666&amp; .

.11 16 51p .

GUITARS and amps at
bargain prices . /\11 gultors
are ad lusted by me . Ready
and easy to Hngtr .· S. trlng s,
picks , cords , etc . Se e Tracv
Wh al ey . 1~0 Lincoln Rd ..
F'omeroy.
,, 1641(

NO. 152 - 3 BR; lull ba se.,
frame older home, alum.
siding, slorm wlndowa,
new gas F..... furnace: HW
floors , In Wilking distance ·
of stores. Sll,500.00.

. 804 W. Main

Pomeroy

992-2298

992-7133

•·

La Salle

HOTEL'

Real Estate For Sale

c . BRA-~F oil'D . Auctioneer .

or Month

-

\

1-\CX.D,I.

WD'IS ... _

(::1&lt;1!~...

_,_..l

~~THIIJio

PHONE 992-3325
10 Mech8nic
Pdmeroy. 0 .

WOULD

YOU BELIEVE?
Bui l d an all sre cl buil ding a t
Pole Barn pri ces 7' Go lden
Giant All Stee l Bu ild ing s,
Rt · " · Bolt 148 , waverly ,
Ohio . Phone 947 7196 .
1 24 tfc

MIDDLEPORT - 3 B.R.s.

', [ p T I (

furnace ,

f . · basement.

carporl.
$31 ,500.

barn

8.

I

11

1~"

."l

r:ode rn ' ~1r1i tMion
or ~9 '/ n tit

ALLEY OOP
VOU OON'T

997 395.1

~VIi

MIND ... I . .. I'LL~

b &amp; -OI JH : I!- Trimm ii'lg , - 20

WITH Mil. OOP.

years experience. l nsur~d.
free eslima1es . Call 992·3057
or (l) 667 .30.111 , Coolville.
10.15 lf c

~ . -- - · -~~-~·---- - E. XCAV'/\ 1 tNl.J . u v.t.,;~ , loader ·

baCkhO&lt;! work , !..CPfi C
installed .
du n)p .
tr uck s and lo beys l or hire .
will hitU I lilt dirt . lOp SOi l.
limcsfone and gravel,. Ca ll
ob or Ro9cr Jeff er s•. dlly '
phone H9 2 7011 9, n iqhl phon e
9'• '.' t~ 7~ or 99 7 5131
? 1t tf c
oll1d

l il n ks

1

W ILL

·d o

build i ng
ana
roofing ,
plumbin g, furnace repa i r
gas or oil , and genera~!
repair : Free eslimales anif'
reasonable rates . Phone ,
Charles Sincla ir , C61ot l
4121 or 991 2121 .
r
r~modetfng ,

GASOUNE A!.LEY

995,.

II JO .J21G '

EX CAVAT I NG ,
doz ~r .
back hoe
and
ditcher .
en aries R . Hallleld Ba ck
Hoe Serv ice , Rutland , Ohio.
Phone 742 2008 .
11 3078tc

etc .

.. -

LISTEN TO

"Great Country Stereo"

~

•Q54

.1 6
• .JY8 54
•K10 2
6AK82
6.)916 5 :1
SOUTH lUI
6AK 132

UL ABNER

SCORPIO (Oct. 24· Nov. H)

Jlbblr, for

Don't be overly concerned with

eumple
Seamln

- I DONT KNOW WHY THAT OIL.- MAD HENRY
KISSINGER 15 CON\If\XS H~~- WE: CCU3LE: T~ PRICE
E\I'ERY WEEK AND THEY KEEP PAYING r- DO THEIR
CAMELS DRINK OIL.?-

I,U.o--

P01 Wodi

t.. Jlunsle;

You can gain in a slluallon to·
day If vou'lll•k• lime to show
another person how he. 100.
can profll from vour Ideas.
TAURUI (April :JG-IIIr 10)

jumble
Daughter

li Cadmus
Fonn of
John
Break

Where money Is concerned.
you're still under -very lavorable
aspecls. Jusl be sure not lo lei
anyone else count your

Athwart
Summon

change.

\~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::::::::::::~~~~~~:~~~~~~~
-

GEMINI (May 21-.luno 20)

You'll have a chance loday lo
do somelhlng for a conla~t
you 're developing. Your ac·

E118u.h

DAILY

1KNOWJANIE
HATES LEAVINCl
' OCJNNAZ A&amp;
HATE lD&amp;ING-

13UT WITH ANOTHER CHILD ON THE:
WAY. SHE fJELlJNGO AT HOV\f: . I
IVI~H I COULD HAVE STAY£:0
":--::--:' HOME DURING MY TWIN&amp;'
MOST R:lRMAT~E

will make him mOte ready
CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It : 1ions
lo help you.

II

..

GJHA

wee

·W LWJDBH
HJJ,RQ

{

50 DON'T COME
WHIIIIIN'iO ME
THirr 'IE AIN'T HAD
FAIR WARtllltiJ'

PICKPOCKET 15
ON TH ' PROWL
AG 'IN, SNUFfY ..

AXYDLIIAAXI
LONGFELLOW

CANCER (J..,. 21-July H) To
get what you want today, use

One letter aimply standi for onolher. Jn this sample A II an lnd lrecl approach . You'll
used for the three L's, X for the two O's. etc. Single letters. have a bailer chance 10 realize
opoatrophes, the length and formallon o! tho word• are olt vour desires than If you meet
Issues head~on .
hlnls. Each dRY the code !ellen are dllrerenl.
LEO (July 23·Aut· 22) Don't
CRYPTOQUOTES

YEARS/

lr!lr::n/'r---:;::r-r.i;;:H. HOOTit-J' HOLLER

loy, Dec. 17, lt?S

ARIEl (llen:ll 21 ·April 11)

river

AUCTION

7:0D--TodaV) ,4, IS ; Good Morning, America &amp;.1 3; CBS
News 8: Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7: 30-Schoolles 10.
B:OD--Lucr Show 6: Copl. Kangar.oo 8.10; Sesame St.
33.
8:3o-Bia Valley 6.
9:oo--A .M. 3; Phil Donahue 4.15; Lucy Show B; Mtke
Douglas 10; Morning with D. J. 13.

. u-;:: Domingo
:. r /~ :=

•

MIKE SnYENS

WMPO FM STEREO 92

6:00-Columbus Today 4; Sunrise Semester 10.
6: 15-Folk Literature 3.
6:25-Farm Report 13..
6:30-New Zoo Revue 4; News 6; Bible Answers 8;
Farnntlme 10: The Sory 13.
6:4()-{)unce of Prevention 10.
6: 45-Mornlng Reporl 3.
6: 55--Chuck White Reports: Good Morning, Trl State
13.

loday. unless you sit on your
hands Instead of being truly
aggressive. Move out on )'Our
ideas.

lnad

ON

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1t7S

I: 25 -

WITH

Weekdays 6:00 A.M. tillO:OO A.M.

11 :3()-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Wide World Myster~. 13:
FBI 6; Movie "The Great Sioux Massacre 8;
Movie "Enchantment" 101 Janak I 33.
12:30-Wide World Mystarv 6.
l: OD--Tomorrow 3,~ ; News 13.

or

a

·exc.\vi\Tii-. 6."

8A"ci&lt;.HoEs
ANO DOZER . LARGE AN D
SMALL . SE PTIC TAN KS
IN STAL LED .
BI~L
PULL INS. PHONE 991 WB ;
DAY OR NIGHT .
1111781p

EAST
• 84

IO :OD--Joe Forrester3.~.15; Marcus Welby. M.D. 6,13;
Switch 8,10; News 20; Woman Alive! 33 .
10: 30-Woman All vel 20; Woman 33.
11 :OD--News 3,~.6.8. 10,13,15: ABC News 33.

~wd'

10 00 11-W! I'VE
CHAN&lt;SeJ&gt; I.N

9 I I:! tt c

11· ·~~'T

.. y

Since queen and three small in
the East hand was more likely
than a singleton queen in the
West hand , South led dunnmy 's jack of hearts and let it
ride . West produced the queen
and another slam had bitten
lhe dust.
South 's pl ay had not really
been bad but it had not been
the bes t percentage . He
should have' played .West for
the queen because the location
of the queen was a lifty·fifly
proposition . He could have led
a heart to his ace and given
himself the extra chance of
picking up a singleton queen .
This time il would have
worked ·and the better play
wou ld have triumphed .

Consumer Survival 20,33. ·
9:0D--Pollce Woman 3,1,15; Rookies 6,13; Mash 8,10:
Ascent of Man 20,33 .
9:30-&lt;lne Day at a Time 8, 10.

9:3()-Not For Women Only 3; One Life to Live 6; Andy
Griffith 8; New Zoo Revue IJ.
.~
10:00-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4,15; Edge of Night 6:
Price I• Right 8,10; Mike Douglas 13 .
10:30-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; I Dream of Jeannie 4:
,.
• A 10 3
Dinah 6.
•11 16
11: OD--Hollywood Squares 4; Gambit 8, 10.
6Q4
11 :30-Hollywood Squares 3.15: Happy Days 13:
Neither vulnl'r&lt;tblc
Midday 4;·Love ol Life 8, 10; Sesame St. 20,33.
11 · ss-Take Kerr 8; Dan Imel's World 10.
\\'est Norlh ~o;ast South
12 :oo-Hlgh Rollers 3,15; Showofls 13: Bob Braun's 50·
SO Club 4; Ni!JNS 6,8, 10.
Ia
12 :30-NdOnday 1,15; All My Children 6,13; Search for
Pass 3 .
Puss
Tomorrow 8.10; Elec . Co. 33.
Pass 5.
l'etss
12:55-NBC News 3,15.
P:.~ss
Pas!'i P&lt;l!oiN
1:OD--News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Donohue 8;
Pe~ss
Young 8. the Restless 10; Nol For Women Only 15.
Opeqing lead - K 6
1: 30-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15; Let's Make a Deal 6, 13;
Today ·s hand came from a
As the Woorld Turns 8, 10.
2:0D--SIO,OOO Pyr.mld 6,13.
New Jersey reader. He asked
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
2: »-Doctors 3,4, l l: Rhyme 8. Reason 6,13; Guiding
us to comment on the bidding
Light 8, 10.
and play . The article discuss·
West shifted to a trump al ed the play. As for the bidding
3:0D--Another World 3,4,1S; General Hospital 6,13: All
trick two . South played his ace North overbid a trifle but the
tn The Family 8,10; Kup's Show 20; Know Your
and led a second trump back fina l co ntract was a very
Schools 33.
to dummy·s queen. Then he reasonable one.
3:JO-One Life to Live 13; Bewitched 6: Andy Griffith
studied the heart sui l.
8; Match GamelO; Children wlfh Special Needs 33.
(For a copy of JACOBY
4:oo--Mister Cartoon 3; Sommenet 15; Mickey .Mouse
He saw thai he needed five
Club 6,8; Mister Rogers 20,33: Movie "The Buster
~earl tricks and decided to MODERN. send $1 to: ''Win
Keaton Slory" 10; Call II Mactronl 13.
play East for the queen. In at B rid ge . " clo I his
• .JO-Bewltched3; Alterschool Speclal6,13; Partridge
case the queen was guarded newspaper. P. 0. Box 489,
Family 8: Sesame St. 20,33; Sanla's Workshop 15.
by three small hearts a first Radio City Station. New York,
5:0D--Bonanza 3; Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
round finesse was necessary . N. Y. 70079)
5:30-Adam·12 4; News 6 ; Beverly Hltlblllles 8; Elec.
·co. 20,33; Adam ·l2 13
6:0D--News
3,U, 10,13,15; ABC News 6; Hodgepodge
... WELl. I DuN NO
Lodge 20; Teaching Children 33.
IF I WANT, 10 TA.l&lt;E
6:30-NBC News 3.~.1S; ABC News 13; Andy Grlffllh 6;
YOU J«JW:::_·:_....----.:-]
CBS News e,10; Attack Heart Attack 20; Boak Beat
by
THOMAS
JOSEPH
?
?
33.
ACROSS
tO Ending for
/ :DO-Truth or Cons.3; To Teii~Trlrth 4; Bowling lor
1 No rllk
lau&amp;h
Dellw• 6; Pop Goes n.e country I I Mews 10; !tiQht
.Involved
n Streetcar,
Before Christmas 13; Family Affair 15: BoOk Beat
20; Know Your School 33.
5 Pabn
in Blighty
7:30-Laslofthe Wild 3: Name That Tune~; Wild Wild
leaf
DOWN
World of Animals 6; Wild Kingdom 15: Match
8 Paris
1 Piqued
G1me PM 8; Evening Edition with Martin
airport
% U.S.S.R. lake
Aqronsky_ 20; AQuestion of Hunting 10; Chrlstmos
t Tnas 3 With Is ... 13; Episode Action 33.
IS Martha ol
( gallantly )
e:oo--Litlle House on the Prairie 3,1, 15; When Things
comedy
( 2 wds.)
·••
Were Rotlen 13; College Basketb•ll 6; Tony
If Chant
4 Watch
Yeslerdliy'sAuwer
Orlando 8. Dawn 8,10; Evening of Championship
15 Biblical
5 MIM
12 Atomic
Z7 Bar order
Skating 33; Mel Torma In Concert 20.
device
Jl Man or
8:30-Th11'1 My Mama 13.
·
judge
Chriatie's
11
Uberate
Capri
9:0D--Doctors
Hospllal3
••
,
15;
Baretla
13:
Cannon
8,10;
11 Nourished
Express
u
••
bor
Great
Performances
20,33.
17 - Hagen
s AUght
33 -.,.. '
IS Heraldic
IO :OD--Petrocelll 3,4,15: St1nky &amp; Hutch 6,13; Blue
11 Teulonle
7 Formic acid
,
..
wreaBridgthes
~:::.S
Knight 8,10; News 20; Say Brother 33.
goddess
34
IIOIIJ'ce
""
10:»-Jau Set 33.
•~%1 n....r..-ina
d fate
10 HII"'"
~·-..,or 3t "Malter
ll :OD--News 3,4.6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
Ill Buy
ceiling
roulette
MelVIn"
11 :3()-Johnny Carson 3,1,15: Movie " Returning
on ( $ wd.!l.)
%! Heighten
n Servin&amp; af 1 ~ Home" 13: F B16; Movie "Pirate oflhe Half·Moon"
JJ Alliance
25 - Connery
.1 8: Movie " Two Loves" 10: Janakl 33.
URue
r.--r;-,r;-T.'12 :30-Movle " Returning Home" 6.
Elchlh
1:oo--Tomorrow 3.~ ; News 13.
.-&gt;....~, _;;:
I gallon
;:;...··&gt;-'!
U Ted, to
GOOd lhlngs will happen lo you
, Caroline

..

l.I Cil!lCd

I'L.L.

r®e€T!

Comp l ete Service . Ph one
2487 or 9A9 -2000 . Rac ine ,
0 11i o. Crill Br adford .
10 9 tfc

irEAFORD REALTY/

610

~..~V~IJ ~IJ':&gt;T ~ WOO f\11._,

1111\'i,ti!?:r~~~~! I ~·r

9,19

Mercury, Super A Farm-All tractor, wagons,
.heaters, chain s~ws, sander, cut-off saw, table saw, drill,
assorted tools,, stoves, dryers, T.V., rugs, chairs,
sweeper~, sewing machines, toys. Antiques. other items
too numerous to mention.

\·

Specl•llatet

t.mu:.

Mi~TWDI ~,

1968

...., 15.00 up

....

•·

ABQJI m

M f\ 1, t·fl N t: ,
Rcp,lirs . se r vice . all ma tor. cs .
'IQ } ~nu
1 he r rlb r ic 1ohop .
ron 1croy 1\ uthorizcd ~ . inqer
,lt CS an d ~; cr vic e
W~
\ twrp c n •,c 1ssors
J 29 1IC

EVERYONE WELCOME

Mltllo,.rt, 0 . '~ ~ 'H·271l

.,

I'M ~

CONSIGNMENT SALE

CONTACT:
loll P•uley
ll&lt;encll MIJNtter

.

• A3

BORN WSER

del i v er ed ricd1 t to your
proj cCI . t .1~1 ,1nc1 easy . 1 rce
rs l irn .l1C&lt;; P ho ne 997 3? 8.1.
Gol'&lt;li Cin R C' ~ldy MiK. Co.
/l.:•cfd lc porr . Otl io 4
u('
6 30
•, E W I N (,

lti

NORTit

6QJ 10ti5
. K.I9H 2

MUCfl AB I

.

After Hours C. II

10 cu . I T r elrlg ~rator , l ike
new . IllS . Phone ?91 H57.
12 16 Jtc
NOliCE 01 PUBLiC SA I.E
To whom il mby c-onc ern :
Notice il hereby given th at
on Oec . 30, t?H , ~~ 10 l\.m a
pUblic sa l(l will be held at
Citizens Nat iona l Oan il. ,
M i ddl~por1. Ot-~io . to Sell lor
cft5h I he tolto\tfinq coiJatera t
towir : l ~,ft) G ~ aroh lractor.
!'I N :10'16.1\. 1no It&lt; Nt1r lona l
Lc1.'1dr,r . I Mudcl 6 701
Lancrscnpcr ,
Cili1cns
Neotlional f\ornk , Midd lrporr ,
Ohio , rcs c rv~s 1hC r lqhl lo
bid I I Thr '"ul t('

. R·UTLAND - 2 BR , balh.
dining R.. carpet, p•nellng,
gor1ge . S9,500. (m ake an
offer)
DEXTER AREA - 1&gt;7
acres, large home, barn &amp;
olher "''&gt;ldgs., fencing ,
limber. SJ8.000. Financing
available.
.
POMEROY - 711&gt; acro;s,
(hilly) , 4 BR; balh, Clr ·
peling,
, N. gas,
hot w1ter heat,
$15,000.
.
HARRISONVILLE
NEW HOME, about 1 acre.
3 BR , Jl;, baths, brick &amp;
frame . kllchen wllh
tras , •garage , carpeting,
525,900.
TO BUY OR SELL US HELP YOU.
m .2259 or m .u,e

Best percentage play wins

kE Ati\,. M.t X(O NC.RETE

ROOF l NG an d gutter of all
kind . not asphatr . we fix l t1e
fl at ones . P hon ~ 367 059 1,
. Cheshire . Pau l Wa lk er .
11 15 261 p

NEW LISTING - 3 B.R.
brick near slores In
Pomeroy . Larg e d ining
with firepla ce and mod. kit.
3 car gar•ge. $17,500.
NEW LISTING - 49 acres
andnew2 B.R. home. Bath,

eo·

-

TO

ke:MOOEL I NG ,
Plumbing·. EL WO OL • uUWER ~, REPAIR
•,weepe r s. toasters . irons ,
healin g end all t ypes of
rl ll 5111,1 11 •lPPt ia nc cs Law n
qencri:rl
re p a i r .
Work1
n ~ ower . ne xt to '. laTe High
quarantccd 20 years CA~1
w~1v GitraQ.c on Rout e 7 ~
pcri cnce . Phone 992 2.1 09 .j
Phone 9H'. JK2 ..
.
S I lifo
.1 16 ti c

-

Wanted To Buy

-

FliGHT FROM COI\:&gt;T

Pom erov Olfic~
lO S Butternut
992 -3345
Form erly Weed Whol esa l ~.
F ea tu ring :
Delu x zerox Copy S e~vice ,
O ffi ce
S upp lr ~s ,
Mim eo graph
Supp l ieS ,
larg es t selection of wed
ding supp lies in So uth
eastern Ohio
The Print SMop Cof!lplel~
(Still in busi ness rn Mrd·
dleportl
1282mo.

m.soo.

3 /\NO 4 rm . furnished and
unf urnished apt s. Phone 992
COAL, limeston e and all tyt:~es
5&lt;13 .1 .
REAR gear cue or en lire r B
of salt and rock salt for.tfce:
II 9 tfc
Minneapolis Moline trac lor
and snow remo-vH. Ex)
·.
lor parts . Phon e 992 57 95. ~ uRN 1 s-:-H
celsjor ·sa l t Works, · ~ast
· ~· -aTaitM ~;;,--;
121631C
Main St ., Pom eroy. Ohio .
adults only In Middleport .,
Phone 992 3891.
992
38'
1
4
.
Pl'lone
:.=o tUr Flr tur e. · ice boxfs,"
J 25 II.~,
brass b~d s, or co mplet'e
hou&amp;eholds . Write M . ~
Miller , Rl . 4. Pomeroy, 6 RM . HOUSE~nd·~ be th for CHR I STMAStrees . Phone742
renl in Pomer oy . Ca ll 992
2535 , Main St ., Rutland .
Ohio, Call 99 2 7760.
1741.
12-9 121c
10·7., .. ,
-

Ehl ROUTE!

S KYSCRAPER AFTER
IT$ HEADLINE- MAK IN&amp;

Quality Print Shop

\

·w,_

-·-

ATOP A ~EW YORK

WIN AT BRIDGE

'99.99

-

DOW~

YOU

MOVIES TO PflOVE
YOUR SEISATIOIJAL AI1VSNTI1Ril$

.t 10 1 mo

ONLY

-

HAVE' rHO S~

Ph . 992 ·399!

/633.

197 3 CH EVY Vega GT ,

Employment Wanted

' Work
All Mechanical

1?. GREM LIN ~1.200 . Must*bc
so lr;j hy Januar y. Phone 99?

OOMWTEXL
CHAIN SAW

M

... A'D ,_0 THE M&lt;KEE

''FAMILY FLYER" TOUCHES

'l( r acuc,e, Ohio

.

Wont Ads doesl 11

.
W~,L.BOV~ .. tNS T~U$T

~-------------.

.

"Try humming while you worlt,
dear, like 1ho plumber in the

CAPTAIN EASY

16, 197S

1:30-Bewltched 3: Mod Squad 6: Partridge Famllv B;
Sesame St . 20,33; Sanla's Workshop IS.
S:OD--Bonanza 3; Family Affair 8; Slar Trek IS.
s:·30-Adam .J2 4,13: News 6; Beverly Hillbillies B:
Elee. Co . 20.33.
6:0D--News 3,4,8.10.13, 15: ABC News 6; Hodgepodge
Lodge 10; Jody 's Body Shop 33.
6:3G-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griff ith 6;
CBS News 8,10: Your Future Is Now 33; Wood ·
c•rvers' Workshop 20.
7 : ~ral Roberts' Christmas Is Love 3; To Tell the
Truth 4; Bowling lor Dollars 6; Wilburn Brolhers 8;
News 10; Name That Tune 13; Family Affair IS;
Antlqll.OS 20; Wild Wild World of Animals 33.
7 30-Hollvwood Squares 4 ; Let's Deal With It 6;
$2S,OOO Pyramid 8; Evening Edition with Marlin
Agronsky 20: Price Is Righi 10 ; To Tell the Truth
13; Wally's Workshop 15; Family Theatre 33.
8:0D--Movln ' On 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6,13; G~ Times
8, 10; Ours tory 20,33.
8:30-Welconne Back, Kotler 6;13; Joe 8. Sons 8.10:

'...

LARRY LAVENDER

Phone 74HJJ1
· Roger Wamsley; Rutland
11 .18-75

Pets

..

',,

ln1ulation Services
Blown rnlo Wa lis &amp; Attics
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING .SOFFITT
GUT TERS·AWNINGS

,

ROGER HYSEll'S

TUESDAY, DECEMBER

Blown

3 ~ BEDHM . hom e,-- juSf
bath, large new kit ., gas
12 11 61p ' 396 CHEVY engin e
frnlshed , rem odeling , Salem
h i ri se
furnace, 2 por ches &amp; level
.
St., RuiiMd . Phone H2 . 2~06
J969 ,
manifold , 780 Ho lley car
lot .
I REE RENT AT VILLAGE
atrer 4 p.m . or see Mi lo B.
12 14 41p
buretor
.
headers
.
Call
992
MANOR
IN
MID
NEW LISTING - 3 B.R.,
Hut chison .
12·1S Jlp
5870 after 5: 30p.m .
DLEPORT! We ar e so su r e
all
elec . hom e, mod. kit.,
9·2l
·IIC
S25 R: EWAR D TO anyone who
I? 1? Al e
rha l you w i ll love our apart
large liv . with wood .
giv'es th e name of person or
ments !hat we give you two
HOU SE . Phone9923129or 992
persons responsible for
burning fireplace . F.
weeks RENT r REE . Just 13.1"x30'' REAR tractor tires
5914.
vandalism i n the M iddl epor t
for
modified
pull
ing
tractor
.
basement 8. dbl. garage .
pay -vour secur it -v deposit
12
14
J!c
Cem~terv ludlng to the
Ca ll 99' 5870 alter 5: 30, 992
and stay six months and !h e
517,500.
conv iction. Pleas~ no Iffy th e
2176 8 5 ask fo r Ma rk , -~
ADULT peacocks , $50 . Pa ir ,
fi rst 2 weeks is fr ~e . You will
SPECIAL - 2 concrete blk .
pollee or author:illes . The
Jl .Ji 61( HOU SE modern , 2 b~drrn . ,
idea l Chrl!.!mas gifts . P . 0 .
enloy
montMiy
leases.
all
buildings
&amp; dr illed well ,on
lntormer '!. nerne will be
.
.larg
e
tiv
i
n.fl
r
..
oom
,
lull
B.O)( '2S6 , Coohdllt, Ohio or
elec tric lhdng , cerp~tlng .
kepi 1ecret .
H I DE fl BEO ; : 555 .
Tw O
basement ; n~w roof , g4 rag e ~ . 114. Only $8 ,000 .
phone (61 ~) 667 3358 .
.
ra ng~ and re fri gera tor . fr ~e
1
12. 14 3tc
cushio n sofa', cover -'120.
3 a cres garden , 1~ acre
t l 10 71p
COUNTRY LIVING - Like
trash p ick up . cable TV
· Used two w~eks . Phone 94?
woods . Phone 949 2635, only
fop
t
ional
l
and
leundry
new 3 BR 's, kit . with bar ,
AUCTION Tuesday night 7 1\KC Reg . Sai ni Bernard
2719.
Phone
9491719.
517
.500
.
tac lt il ie s. C onv~n !e n t to
sliding glas s doors · In
p.m . N~w and used mer
12 11 41p
11 10 61p
shopp ing on Third and Mi ll
Puppies. R ca dy for Christ
chandise at Mason Aucllon .
dining.
F. basement &amp; dbl .
in
Middl
ep
ort
.
VIL
LAGE
mas . Phon e" 9J9 2008 .
Horton St ., Mason , W . Va .
539,000.
garage
.
MANOR iS yours tor one
12 166tc
3 ~R HOME , lust finished
12.14 3tc
LINCOLN HTS. - 2 B.R..
bedroom
aparrment s
A SPECIAL GIFJ
r'eiTlode.ling . Sa l em St .,
starting at Sl04 mon thly plus
AKC registered Dachshunds ,
~vtlan'd : Phon e 742 ·130&amp;
horne, bath, gas fu rnace •
For Someone Sp-.:1•1
elec . we pav for everything
r ed, male and female .
after '4 p . m . or see Milo B .
aluminum
siding . Storm
else . See the Manager a1
Phone 742 2809 .
HutchiMon .
windows 8. drs . Only
R i v~rside
Apartments or
12 14 ltc
IQ .-9 1fC
SIO,OOO.
ca ll 992 3273 . Th iS offer will
end soon . so move In now
NEW LISTING - 3 large
RE 0 IRI SH Seller puppies,
FA RM for sa le by owner , ;
and sa"e ssss.
tull blooded se tters but don 't
BR
. brick, I''' baths. nat.
miles west of Rutland on
10 23 rtc
hav~ papers , price $3 0.
New Lima Roa d , 141 acres , gas furnace, walnut sta irs,
would be nice Chr istmas
large bar n. h ou s~ . other
dlshw•sher and family
gills . Delton Fowler . phone House 5 r ms. and bath In
'buildings . A ll
m i neral
room with wood.burnlng
~u9 2'248.
Racine . Ph o n~ 99 2 5858 .
rights , 60 acres tillable, rest
fireplace, $34,000.
12 14 lip
12 J lfC
in pasture . also pond .
With 10" biund c.,. in .
144 ..500. Phone · (4 191 865· RUSTIC HILLS - 3 B.R.'s,
COONHOUND pups, 7 mos . TRI\ILER l ot tor rent. Phone
3291
famllv room . mod. kit .,
POMEROY
LANDMARK
old . Phone 992 7149.
992 SSJ5.
11 J0261c
dining, all elec . central a ir
12 11 6tc
J••k W. Coney, Mgr.
12 J lfC
on landscaped lot. $24,500.

Cont1ct

CITY- - - PHONE _ __

.• .

Television log for easy viewing

FREE ESTIMATES

Coins, Currency
and Supplies
Appraisa I service
estates and collec;,ions .

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialir.t

Blk. vinyl roof. grey finish. good tires. automatic,

1973 TRUCK, I ton rord,

1961 . The time of vcar she
loved most, one of the
greatest moth&amp;ri . The
body. mind and soul, no two
alike, the soul ne:v e r di es.
The rose fades but tht

!

:Jma ltcs t He~tCr Core .

8: 30 a . m . ro S:OO p . m .
Daily ,.8 ' 30a . m . ro 1" :00 Noon
Sa lurdlly .
·

who went away Dec . · 16.

'&gt;.

1'l\iJ
. ron1
th er larqcst
Truck
IIdo7c
Rildiator
to thore

Sl 2 9s

1t70 NOVA V-8 CPE .

.

. :i adla'lo
') c
, ·

Ad ditional 75c Charge per
Adverrlsemenr .

.In Memory of 1/iola

I

.

Business Services

OFFICE HOURS

NOTICE

.

'•

BLIND ADS

In Memory

,

.,

2 SIGNS ' :P omeroy I

.

The Publisher reserves the
r lqhl 1(1 ed it or rt~i t•&lt;.t ~nv ilt.Afl
deemed oblec tlon al. T"e
puhf is h, ·r
w i ll
110 1
bt·
rl'sp onsibl e for mort than one
incorr ec t insertio n .

.

Auto Sales

-

P .M .
Dll'r'
Before
Pub l ication .
o'.' ~ ' l l iJ~l~ U!o!ol dllll\.' '/ :d . Jll , .
Cttn cell at ion
Corl-eclions
will be arc~pled un lil t9 a m .
tor Day of Publication .

Jmnllln; CABIN USUR'V DEBATE PURITV
l•·-lrr•l•"'•
·
Att•••·' : \rlwl fltt • Humntu lt't•rt• tdtilc• Xt ·ru
riddlt •ff-"'BURNEO UP"

~,

.

HAR
AJE ,

WDT

HRRHA
EWD

WDT

OCWGB

SR W H

You'll find IMre·s somelhlng In

HAR il lor you .
VIRGO (Aut . 23-Sepl. 22)

SRWQ . - WQH-

HAR

shy from what you consider at
llrst to be a friend 's far~out
scheme . Weigh all aspe&lt;:ts.

Don't hesitate to approach the
boss today 11 you see an oppor·
tun ily that could mean mOre
money for you. It's no time to

AXQ
ERR
YHieniay's CryploqaOie :· VERY OFTEN WHAT WAS A be falnlheaned .
CRISIS IN THE MORNING HAS BEEN RESOLVED BY THE LIIRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23)
.AFTERNOON. - DR. HAIM GINOTI'
' (C U75 Klo1 '""'"' SJncll&lt;olo, ID&lt;,)

I

~006f.IT

l(OO A

LITTLE PRESENT...

WEU., nw« 1(00... JUST
WHAT I'VE ftJ.WA~5IIWITED

Twin· City Sh·rine Club ·
RACINE, OHIO
TIME-10130 a.m.

.
I'

•

v

..

self·lnleresls loday . Look oul
for the other guy. Laler ,' he'll be
be11er able to look out for you.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dtc.
'2 t) Don't turn down any In·
vitalions today to a social event
ir.volving many people. You'll
learn something valuable.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon.
11) Be alert for unusual career
opport unities today. Should
one co me up. you must be
prepared to move swiftly and
decisively .

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20·Fob. 11)
New people you meet today
could turn out to be very impor t ant t o you . either
businessw lse or socrally . Take
time to be gracious and plea ~
sam.
PISCES (Fob. 20·Morch 20)
You 're better equipped to face
challenges today than you give
yoursell credit for. Vou can
reason ~our way around Bny

barrier .

~Your

~Birthday
Doc. 11, 1175
New channels for addtng to
your resources w1ll be opened
10 you this coming year. One
will be tl"rough a large cor·
poration or lnstilutlon.

I

l
\'

I

�•
14

'

Ttw l);tily SenI irw11 Middit' J)l,l rl · Pt~tll t' l'll~· . ll .. 'l'nt •:q lay . I )t•c. Hi. I!l'i5 ,

Learning the fun way
1t 'ull t lllll L't l frul ll

p:tgL' 1)

I 'All \1'111':1 'KI•:II
Flnyd ll. Pullins, ~ 1. ill . 2,
t•ntUl'ruy , l'St'apcd l)tlssiiJitr
st'l'ions injw·y Munday ni~hl .

tliMING
MASON , W. Va . ·-· l'cvple
ht•rc will soon t~ur a new
t•l!.~lrunic siren un one of
U1eir police cruisers sint'C
town council Monday evening
Hccepted " grant uf $175.2!!.
Mayor ~· red Taylor said
Mason expects ·to recei~
addiliona I money to buy
belle•· polit'C radio \!11\liPment. CoWtcil agreed to cut
down two maple trees on
Third St. Also present were
Recorder Carl Cline and
council members Charlotte
Jenks, Catherine Smith,
Bernard White and Lawrence
Roush.
N~;W SIR~:N

Concert will

Mrs. Linthicwn :/'' ' ' ' ' i' ''B.,., /:J:'' ch;:;::''' ;~';i:g''' ' ' ' ' ' ''''Tif{
died on Monday!~!:
''
:~: ~

f{Et·;DsvtLt.~: ~

ij!\ ~

14 infinnary residents

Mrs. ijij
Albert ~ Linthicum , 57, ltoute i:i Prospects for a Merry Christmas for the 14. residents - f~
1, l!eedsvi1Ie, die&lt;l Monday i i: seven men and seven women - at the Meigs County In- :::;-;
Dt!pl . he went off the r.oad on
afternoon "t he r home ;:;: firmary appear bleak accordong to Mrs. Mildred Jacobs, ;:;: •
lhe ri~hl, his right rear wheel
following an extended illness. iii~ superintendent. Only a few groups have indicated in- ::;::
'l'h&lt;' M&lt;·IK• lllgh School
struck a t•oncrele culvert and t•mwrrt band, choir, and
Mrf Linthicum was born :::: tention of remembering them she said.
'}i
w:•s lorn from the vehicle jazz band will present a
here, he daughter of the late ;:;: Individuals and organizations are invited to help in ;:;:•
~·hich traveled an additional
Roy &amp;nd Ellen Baker Barber. i:i mnking Christmas a special day for the residents. Per- :::i~
Christmas t•onccrt Friday,
:l!i feel backwards, slopping
She
had been a resident of the :;: sons needing information may call the infirmary, 992-5469. i) ,
DL~' . t9 at 7 p.m. ol Meigs
in a ditch, demolished. No Junior high School, MidJoppa community for the :i'i Gifts do not need to be wrapped.
;;:: ·
cilulion was issued.
past ~7 years.
i'i: Individuals or groups planning some action in this : :L
dleport. undrr dlrer.tktn of
Survivo1s include her {respect are asked to notify the infirmary at once. By this ::::,
D\\·Jght · ·Goins,
In·
I)IVORCE ASKED
husband
, Harold I Rink J :;:; time each year in the past, each resident has packages :::!:•
Filing for divorce In Meigs strum~nlal ·music suJt&lt;rUn
lhicum;
two sons, Glen E.
under their tree.
:;::;
County Common Pleas Court vlsor, and Randy Hunt,
Lin thicum, Cuyahoga Falls, ::) As of today, there are none.
};
was Carl Sue Layne, New tl!reclor of the jazz ·band.
and
E,1
Rinkie
Linthicum,
:,:,::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
:
:::::::
:
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::
:
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::\,
H8ven, vs LeO Francis,
stationed at Greenfield, Calif.
RACINE- The band and
Layne, Racine, charging
Knighl
loses
with the U. S. Army; three
choir
of
Southern
High
gross neglect of duly and
•
daught
e rs,
Gertrude
extreme cruelty. Filing lot Scilool wlll pr~ se ot a
PROGRAM SET
derson;
Lee
Flora,~
THREE CALLS TAKEN
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
court
battle
Pellegri
no,
Belpre;
Mrs.
Cilrlstmas concert at 8
'11te Salisbury· Elementary partition of real estall! is p.m. Thursday In·the high
RACIN E -- The Hacine EADMITTED
Ru th Southside ; Homer Johnson,:
Beverly Bailey, Tuppers
Ronnie
W,
Cowdery,
Reed$R squad answered three calls Sehoul progrum will be prschDol auditorium .
BEDFORD, Ind. fUPl) Plains, and Mrs. Sherrie Lutheran, Racine; William Mason; Henry Steele; Apple
ville,
et
al
,
against
Jean
Monday and Tuesday morA variety of Christmas Indiana University basket- Lynn Rosen , Cincinnati ; Barnhart, Middleport ; Elsie Grove.
' . senled Thursday, Dec. 18, at
BIRTH, December 15, a son
ning. AI 12: 35 p.m. Monday, 7::10 p.m. allhe school by the Durst, Pomeroy . The music will feature a ball coach Bobby Knight three brothers, Ancil Barber, Barnhart, Middleport ; unna
properly Is located in Olive
to
Mr. and Mrs . Melvin
the squad took Brent Cundiff, student body .
Lenz
,
Coolville;
Bonnie
quartet composed of. today lost his court battle Marietta ; Raymond Barber,
Township.
Kinniard
, Apple Grove.
Racine, suffering from a
Denise Hendricks, Becky against
the
National Coolville, and Walter Barber, Jewell, Dexter ; Stella Eberslacerated forehe ad to
Sayre,CoreenaRhodesand Collegiate
Athlelic Belpre ; four sisters, Mrs. bach, Pomeroy; Raymond
·Holzer Medica l Center ~
Vei&lt;!rans Memorial Hospital.
He.ldl Ashley and male
Association's I!Hnan limit.on Lydia Chevalier and Mrs. Johnson, Racine ; Willi am
(Discharges, Dec. 15)
"'
At 5:55 p.m., Mayme
Tiffany Colema n, Tim ~
vocal soloists wiD be Larry
traveling .sqliads. ·
Ruth Ba rring er, both of Bush, Middleport.
Mallory, Racine , was lnkcn
1C'ontinu~d from page 1)
DISCHARGED - Julia Davis, Ruby Hall , Willioll),~
1 Continu&lt;'&lt;i froin page 11
Fisher and Steve Boso.
It was not known im- Reedsville; Mrs. Alice Rood,
to the Holzer Medical Center . creates a hardship for some
Pollce Chief Jed Webster
Acco 111 panlst for the choir mediately whether he would Toronto, and Mrs . Belva Spence, Nellie Lemley, Hill, Helen Hughes, James; ·
Sl1e was believed to have teachers who were planning reported he wa&amp; issu ed
Is Mrs. Jocelyn Baer. .
appeal.
.
Lowers, Parkersburg, W. Lester Swiger, Ethel Hal- Jarrell , Co nni e Jones,'
suffered a heart attack . At on the Dec : 19 pay dale.
several warnings to violators. :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::.::::::::::::::: Law rene&amp; Circuit Court Va., and nine grandchildren. field , Lester Weatherby , Newton King, Leo Light. ~
6:20a.m. Tuesday, the squad
Mayor Dale Smith read
Judge H. Wayne Baker
Supt. Dowler said he has
Mrs. Linthicum was Charles Snider, Billy Ken- Ronny Stanley, Phyllis:
took l'ylaxine Sellers, Route 2, sent notes to all teachers of Olief Websll!r 'sreport for the
denied
Knight's
request
for
·
0
Slobarl, Wilma Wat kins,!
preceded in death by three nedy.
Racine, a medical patient, to lhe district advising them month that his department
an injunction against the sisters and four grandWeodall West, Deborah Wolf, ~
PLEASANT VALLEY
Veterans Memorial Hospital. ·that the board would not be made 49 arrests, Investigated
e~
rule, saying he lacked children.
Tara
Wolfe.
DISCHARGES - Margaret
jurisdiction.
able to meet the t:&gt;ec. 19 pay- 17 accidents; Issued 1,69tl
1Births, Dec. 15)
,
Funeral services will be Woomer, Robert Lisle, both
I \.onunued from page Il
roll becalll!e of the lack of tickets, received $3,100 from
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Buckl ey, ~
held at 1p.m. Thursday al lhe Mason ;
Mrs.
Donald
CURFEW LIFTED
money In the general fund. parking meters, and drove Don Beizing.
I,.OCAL TEMPS
White Funeral Home in Sprague, Tuppers Plains ; daughter, Wellston; Mr. and '
Donations were made by
MANI!.A , Philippin es He said he had contacted the 4,319 miles: Webster reported
The . temperature in Coolville with the Rev. Roy
Mrs. Harold Darst, daughter , 'l
thallhenew
cruiseristobein
the
Quality Print Shop, the downtown .Pomeroy at · II Deeter officiating. Burial will Mrs. Homer Austin, Hen- Rutland; Mr . and Mrs. ·
1UP!) - President Fer- State
Department
of
Daily Sentinel, the Athens a.m. Tuesday was 46 degrees be In the Eden Ceme.tery at
dinand E. Marcos Monday Education as to when the by De c. •'1 '
Robert J . Lang ley,
Newly
elected
Mayor
Messenger, the Meigs · under cloudy skies.
lifted the martial law curfew district will receive its
I Reedsville. Friends rnay call
Jackson.
for a period beginning foundation payment and a Clarence Andrews submitted Local School Disirlct,
•
u
u
u
__
,.
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
,.,.,.,.,.,. ..
Tuesday morning up to New supplemental foundaton a letter, from the· department Veterans Memorial Hospital
Year's day ·to enable payment, but no one has of . housing and urban and the ·Pomeroy Emergency
Filipinos to celebrate the given him a specific answer. development in regard to the Squad.
Donors by community
Christmas season without
Representatives of the village having submitted its
restrictions.
teachers assn. were assured pre-application for a grant were :
fo r a commun ity •build!
POMEROY
- Charles
M.
. ng.
Werry,
James
O' Brien,
.....- - - - - - • by the board and Dowler that
This Week's Special,
payment to the teach~rs will
The letter staled ·that ap- Harlan WehrunR , Gerald
be made just as soon as the plica lions for grants had been Rought, Anno Ward, Carol
foundation money arrives. extended from Jon . t51b Feb. Carter, Sara Dill, Robert
Barbara Fields.
The money amounts to about 13, but Pomeroy's application Vaughan.
Helen Blackslon.
Hugh
$110,000, the payroll around must be submitted by Jon . 7. Custer. James Gilmore.
Mrs, Walton asked for an George Harris, Lois Harris,
$80,000. The board would not
.
William l. Buckley, Leo
dd
USED CA.RS
commit Itself, however, to a 1tlonal appropriation of Vaughan, VIrgil Windon ,.
pay by Dec. 31 because of the $3,3001or the fire department Dorothy Douglas, Nancy
'
uncertainly as to when the fund and $1,500 for the water Jeflrey, Howard Logan .. Boy8
fund,
which
council
ap·
·
Ruth,
Dorothy
White,
David
foundation funds will arrive.
J. Koblentz, Erma Smith,
The
meeting
ended proved. Council also ap· Albert E. Parker, Mark
amiably, as Bartels staled proved a transfer of $3,150 Werry, Nanc·y Reed, Ted
Reed , Carl Hendricks,
that he understood the Irom Ihe par kl ng meter fund Marvin L. Keebaugh, Everell
White with V-trlm Inside,
J . Michael. Jan Holler,
auto. trans.. radio, gOOd situation and that his group to the street fund.
Davis
said
Cecil
See,
Homer Smith, Joe Gloeckner, S.·"·'oll!'i'ooll!'iio'_.........,,......Ot..!Nollliol!!iie'lio'l!iPUI'-"''-"''-"'Y-'INI&gt;l&lt;iiO...'!Iia......'INI&gt;'!Iia!No'!lia!No!Nollliol!!iie'INO!No*-11&gt;"' .... ·
Harry
would
not
want
the
board'
to
rubber, 1 owner~ low miles .
Eskew, Joan Ward,
cqmmll itself for funds which who worked for the street Margaret
Danny Zirkle, Waller
It, had not received. The department, !tad resigned. he Chasteen , Isabelle Couch ,
representatives were assured recommended hiring Randy Walter Couch, Harold Deeth,
George Nash, Edward
that payment will be made at, White, to which council Cozart.
Richard A. Shuler,
once when the funds do arrive agreed.
Ruth Ann Mulford, Steven
®
CoWicllmon John Manley Story, Marvin E. Taylor,
and it was mentioned that the
L. Miller. Richard
money could actually arrive said 13 complete single Tom
Rosenbaum .
You'll Like Our Quality
by Uie Dec. 19 date.
20
two-hour
SYRACUSE
- Kathy J.
meters
and
Way of Doing Business.
Cumings,
James
' H. Crow,
mechanisms
are
needed.
Attending
besides
those
GMAC FINANCING
Council
took
no
action
as
they
Janet
Pickens.
'Bob
Wingett.
mentioned above were board
992-5342
Ptlmoroy
Richard
Ash.
Rex
F.
CumOpen Evenings '1116:1Hl
members , Carol Pierce, are going to ask a mings, Jeanette Duffy,
Til s p.m. Sat.
Wendell Hoover, Virgil King representative . of the Rock· Charles Nease, Lawrence
well Company to attend the Ebersbach .
and Robert Snowden . .
t
1 10
·
Mll!lDLEPORT - Bur~-----------------""" , 'meters
nex meet ng
regard to netta Anderson. Ron Hanthat some -members nlng, Katheryn L. Denison,
felt had been ordered. •
Freda Durham, Joan L.
Attending were Mayor Edwards, Martha J. Hackett,
Robert V. King , Charles
Smi,lh, Ralph Werr}', Phil Searles, Dr. Clyde Ingels,
_. Giobokar, John Manley, Roger Morgan, Sarah J.
Harry Davis, William Fowler, Edward W. Durst,
Norma G. Wilcox, Mary E.
and Louis Osborne, Bacon ,' Charles Wayland,
.. Snouffer
council members; Mrs. Clara France, George Harris,
Walton , Phyllis Hennessy, ~nn Shuler, Sarah Bechtle,
treasurer ·, Chief Webster,
ke Wright, Milton Hood,
Eric A. Paarch.
Mayor-elect Clarence AnRACINE - ,Charlotte
drews, Chuck Bartles and Wam~tey , Dugar Richards,
1 1 ted Darrell Dugan , Bertha
Harold ""'own, new Y e ec
Garnes, Lowell McNickle,
ACOMPLETE
councilmen.
James R. Hill, Dorothy
Sayre, Dorothy Badgley,
George Circle, Aaron Wolfe,
Karen L. Lemley, Forrost
RANGE
Nelgler, Clifford Ashley.
PROGRAM SET
MINERSVILLE
Carolyn
MORNING STAR - The
A. Charles. Reid Young,
OF SIZES
annual Christmas program of Stacy Arnold, Jeanne
the Morning Star United' Slawter, Floyd Hendricks,
Methodist Church has been Harry G. Brown and William
Jon".
1
set fo~ ,.7:30 p.m. Monday, H.RUTLAND
-' Rosella f.
Dec. 22. The public Is Invited. Birchfield, Mark J . Watson,
Norman C. Will, Mary E.
Davidson, and Leo Davidson.
It doesn't matter how you're
LONG
BOTTOM
dressed, because you don't have to
Richard Barton, Ruth Karr,
George Wolfe, Henry Barr.
leave your car - so you can do your
I
Ivan L. Wood, Howard
Parker, Oris Smith .
banking at our drive-in window in
DECEMIER15
CHESTER - Roy Miller.
your curlers, when you're dressed
THRU DEC. 2S
Albert Martin.
.
NOT OPEN
:;:;;;~i~~ HANES . ta•lor for com!ort
HARRISONVILLE
for housework or cleaning out the
The difference is •n the wearing
Robert Alkire.
garage, on your way to or from
BIDWELL - Loren Neal.
because HANES underwear Is
HANESET• T·shl rl1
RACINE
Marlin
made
'w•lh you in mind'
shopping - or at any time during
FRI .. DEC. M·21
Wilcoxen, William Cleland,
You can wash them and wash them and wash
Gripper
boxer: .
"FUNNY
LADY"
Dorothy Alkire, Rhonda L.
our convenient drive-In banking
them. And 1hey'll still reel good. They're made or
Now. labulous no-bind comfort
(Todllllcelorl
Dailey.
hours. from 9 a.m. til 3 p.m. Fridays
LANGSVILLE - Margaret ' · colton that keeps Its shape. And reinforced where
Show slarll at 7:00p.m.
Combination boxer-top w•lh
Mike Barr, Ellis E.
Barr,
It counts, to resist sagging, Small, medium, large,
5 ti I 7 and Saturday 9 til noon.
fly Irani in while. paMerns.
Myers.
extra large.
colors. Gnpper snap lasteners
Isn't it time you did your banking
MASON
Edward
3 for $4.49
.. heaHesistant. shnnk
Schoeckel.
with us?
Doulii•P.anel Briefs
resistant. covered elast•c
Give him perfect cpmfort. Hanes briefs have reinwa1stband. Reinlorced lly
WALK· UP 'I i:LLER WINDOW AND
forced seams and a scientific cut- for gentle supPerma·wh •te alhlel1c sh•rt :
PLAYING
NnELY
AUTO TELLE•R WINDOW OPEN
port all day long. The elastic waistband is heat
Super-quality Swiss nbbir1\J...,
FRI. EVENINGS5To 7 P.M.
resl$tant, so the comfort lasts longer. Sizes 28
w1th smooth narrow reinlorced
shoulder strap Trad•t•onal all
10 44
·
3 for $4.29
"THE FRIENUJ~Y 8ANA "
season perlormer!
. From the HANES fam•ly of
TUESOAY THRU SATURDAY
fine underwear.
the Nutrition Program.
Familv assistance in purchasin~ and prepuring foods has
been going on for several years now und some of the em phasis
on teuching nutriloon will now be shifting to youths.
Guests were children nf low-ineome fmnilies participating in
U1e Nutrition Progrnm .
Family assistance in purchasing and preparln~ foods has
been going on for severul years now &lt;lnd some of the emphasis
on teuching nutrition will now tie shifting to youths.
1l10se at last night 's purty will later be Invited to participate in 4-H- d ub activiti es.
Tite boys and girls used the cranberry strings and the
pupcr chains to decorate a tree. They ale the cookies they
made along ivilh other refreshments including some nutritious
l]oliday treats made from cranberries. '
TI1e party was a lesson In lea rning the fun way .

be presented
by students

iii a · ~inglc ear· al'ddent ••t
II ::mp.111 travelirlg S!JUIII nn
SH 14:!. He told the Sheriff's

Human Resources Council has
new officers, Meigs program

t

'·

OFFICERS ELECTED - Officers of the newly
organized Meigs County Human Resources Council
elected at Tuesday'~ meeting were left to right, Margaret

HOSPITAL NEWS

'i
I•

School pay Natural gas

'

Ella Lewis, secretary; and chairpersons, Leafy Chasteen,
John Rice and Slaron Ihle, R.N.; each to serve three
months during 1976. The fourth chairperson is Chester
· King who was unable lo attend the meeting.

e

Pomeroy-Middlepqrt, Ohio
Wednesday, December 17, 1975

•

Hy t' IIARLENE HUEFI,I(; Il
Election of officers and an
informative talk un th e
serv ices of the Center for
Human
Deve lopment
highl ighted a meeting of the
Meigs Co unty · Human
Resources 'Council Tuesday
noon at the Meigs Inn.
Officers for the newly
organ ized coun cil are
c hairp e r s o n ~ John Ri ce,
Meigs Coun ty Extens ion
Service, January to March ;
Leafy Chasteen, Sen ior
Citi ze ns Ce nt er , Ap ril to
June; Chesler King, Citizens

at y

Bank emp loyee, July to
September, and Sharon fhl e,
Meigs
Cou nt y Health
Department, October to
December.
Secretary an d publi city
chairperson for the Council is
Margaret Ella Lewis.
Marjorie Walrath , director
of the medical linkage project
of the Center for· Human
Development, Athens, talked
of the project, defining it as
an effort to develop a compr ehensive pr ogram for
"developmentally disabled"
persons whom she described

independent care.
Normalization of the child 's
life in the home and with the
family is the goa l, rather than
seg rega tion
or
tnstituli onalizati on, Mi ss
Walrath said.
She spoke of the teams
working at the Center, one
group for the under six year
olds and the other for the
older children, noting that
Nora Eason of Flalwoi&gt;ds is
involved in Gallla and Meigs
County Work as a family
nurse practitioner and as a
(Continued on page 14 )

as the men tally retarded, the
cerebral
palsied , the
epileptic, those who cannot
relate or respond to their
_environmen t, and those who
cannot read.
Miss Walrath said that the
program is geared for those
children who have conditions
which will be chronic dW"ing
their.lifetime. She said that in
years past physical care had
been the primary conc"ern ,
but now-it is known that early
intervention co n make a
difference in developmental
patterns and lead to some

en tine

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 27, No. 164

~

BJ00· d .mven

Gallia teachers offered loans against salaries
Guilla County l.Dcal School Superintendent C. Comer
(B) Go to the First National Bank in Gallipolis on Dec. 19
Bcadbury and board clerk 1\!rs. Naomi Beman Tuesday In- or later and sign a note for the amount of your check.
formed district employes on procedures to follow in order to
(C) Endorse the check which will be·althe hank.
receive their Dec. 19 pay prior to arrival of State Foundation '
(D)The bonk wlU deduct $7.50 minimum interest from the
funds.
employees' checks. That interest must be paid by the emIn Meigs Local School District, authorities have made no ployee. It is illegal for the board to pay the interest on inpublic announcement of recommendations to employes, dlvidtialloans.
teachers, or non.academlc, about how to obtain loans against
(E ) Employee will receive pay minus interest. Mter Jan.
future salary checks.
1, the Gallia County Board of Education will be able to borrow
Teacher representatives and the board have agreed ln- money to meet its payroll and operating expenses . At this
fonnaUy that non-payment of paychecks on Dec. 19 as had time, the board cannot borrow money since, by law, it is
been agreed earlier, will not constitute breach of the required.to repay all loans by Dec . 31.
agreement!
It is anticipated that the board will have a $376,000 deficit
When Meigs Local will make the salary payment was left at the end of December of which, $150,000 is a loon borrowed
on the basis that it,would be "made as soon as possible."
last June to meet the district's payroll.
According to\,on article ln today's Columbus.citizen
Meanwhile, according to the C.J report, Slate finance
Journal, school sulJildy lunda for the month of December may officials are planning to withhold $57 million in school subsidy
be' withheld by state finance officials,
funds this month to prevent a budget deficit, it was learned
The procedures In GaWa Local are as follows :
Tuesday.
(A) Notify bullding principal of your request lor pay.
As required by law, Howard C. Collier , state budget and

l

YOUR CHRISTMAS GIFT HE.ADQUARTERS
'

73 QiEV. VEGA

OPEN TONIGHT and EVERY NIGHT
.. . TIL CHRISTMAS EVE TIL 9

EST. WAGON

lI
\.

·Give him
Comfort
from
Hanes®

'2395

Ka" &amp; Van laridt

Hanes

A·Shirt &amp;Boxer

••

l
I

OUR CONVENIENT
COME-AS-YOU-ARE

DRIVE~ IN

A-SHIRT
3 for 3.99

.BANKI G

SHORTS.
3 for $5,29

MEIGS 1HEATRE

l

lltbens

'

GEO. H.ALL
TUES.- THURS.
8:30-1:00

'
Alto 1 complete selection of boys Hanes Underwear in sizes 2to 20.
.
Brlnt tht children to Jrd Floor Toyland to see S.nta Claus tonight, 6:30 to 7: 30
p.m. TIIMday 6:30 to 7:30p.m."and Wednesday 6:30to 7:30p.m.

FRI.&amp;SAT.
9:30-2:00
.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

. The MEIGS 11\~
992-3629

Member Federal Deposit Insurance COipoialitJI
Best 'In
Live Entertainment

DEPOSITS INSURED TO •40,01Jb
I,

•'

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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
..........................................,............,.

H.ints Is • teclatcrtd lfldernlrk of HJnu Corpoulion, Winuon S.tlelh, N.C.

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(

11JV;,;;,·::- ·:·:····:::·i·; ·: ·: n ;i;f;,,; Rabbit
hunter
killed
·
ByualtedPreiiiDtematinal
:
CINCINNATI - AU. HOURLY EMPLOYES at the
Monsanta Plaatica plant in subw:ban ,\ddyston will be laid off
ne~.""*
jllll two dlya belpre &lt;llriltmal.
•• Bl1l WegmM,I)Niidlnt Of,~Mt of the ln~lional
&lt;llemlcal Workerl, said the &amp;~ tmployes were notified of the
layoff Tuesday. R. 0. Jacklorl, plant manager, said the shutdown would last "no more than two weeks" and would completely stop production at the plani. "This Is purely an
economical move," Jackson said. "We're facing an economic
turndown requiring a change in the plant's operations.
Business Is jll8t down ."
'
WASHINGTON - LABORSECRETARY John Dunlop will
be forced to consider qulttq his Cabinet post If President
Ford vetoes a controver8ial bill dealing with the rights striking
111lon members, sourcres close to Dunlop say.
The aources said a veto. would seriously damage the
secretary's credibility. Dunlop fashioned the compromise
me8811'e earHer this year and assured labor leaders that Ford
would sign it. Ford has been under heavy pressure recently
from Republican conservallves to veto the b!U ID placate
supporters of Republican presidential chullenger Ronald
Reagan,
veto it. who opposes it. White House officials predict he will

.,l

•.

WASHINGTON - JOHN PAUL STEVENS was assured
confirmation today as a Supreme Court justice, succeeding
Justice William 0 . Douglas who retired Nov. 12 becau¥ of
poor health. Stevens, 55, a U. S. Appeals Court judge from
&lt;lllcago, saUed through Senate Judiclaty Corrunlttee hearings
last week with no sub&amp;tantial opposition. The committee approved him unanimously.
The Senate was expected to vote on Stevens' confinnation
later today after lesa than an hour of debate. Opposition to
Steven•' nomination came from aome women's rll!hts groups
because of his remark during the hearings that the Equal
Rights Amendment may have only "symbolic importance,"
and because of decisions he has made In women's rights cases.
BEffiUT, LEBANON - SPORADIC SHOOTING jolted the
cease-fire agreement in Beirut today, prompting the slate
radio to suggest a "dialogue with the devil" may be the only
way to bring peace to the war-weary nation.
· Nine persons were killed In fighting Tuesday between
leftist Moslems and right·wing Christians as the two-day-old
cea~ire began to deteriorate. "Whenever hopes of peace
build up, we hear of renewed clashes and fighting ," Radio
Beirut announcer Slarlf Akhawi said.
·
"We have no answers. The angels have closed their doors.
Maybe a dialogue with the devil will give the answer."
WASHINGTON - THE PRICE OF A FIRST class letter
may not be going up to 13 cents this month after aU Federal '
'
Judge John Sirlca ruled Tuesday the postal rate Increase
planned Dec . 28 was imposed Illegally.
Sirlca said the Postal Service did not follow ull the legal
requirements In applying for the proposed Increase and must
do 80 before the .rates can go up. Postmaster General Benjamin F. BaUar said the ruling would be appealed because any
delay would resullln worsening of the Postal Service's $200
million a month deficit.
The law provides that the Postal Service board of
governors file requests for rare Increases with the Postal Rate
Conunilslon, an Independent body set up by Congress to approve rates after considering the public Interest. None was
ftled.
FRONTERA, CALIF.- WOMEN INMATES angered over
the canellation of a Christmas party stonned through the
gro111da of the California Institute for Women Tuesday night,
aettq flrea and lreaklnll wlndowa.
·
·
Authorities apparently gained control of the disturbance
nrtly aftertp.m. PST, twohounafler the first alarm. There
ware no reports of lnjuries or gunfire, but early reporls in.dicatedone peraon may have suffered a heart attack.
The lnlilatea include three member• of the Charles
1Continued on page 14 )

management director , will ask the State Controlling Board
Monday to delay distribution of the money until February or
March.
Meanwhile, Martin W. Essex, state superintendent of
public instruction, issued a statement late Tuesday warning
that delaying payments would prevent many Ohio school
districts from meeting their December payrolls .
The statement was entitled "School disiricts face default
on December payrolls without state funds."
The statement appears· to be an Indication the school
community will mobilize in an attempt to prevent a halt to
state subsidy payments.
Essex said a survey by his department showed 179 of the
state's 617 school districts would not be able to pay their em·
ployes if $57 million of
millicm in subsidy payments
scheduled for this month is not released.
" In anticipation of state funding in December, at least 93
districts borrowed money from local banks and elsewhere to
cover operating expenses," according to Essex's statement.
"By law they are required to repay all loans by Dec. 31.

'200

'I;;ig~ Andrews

" If the state Is to default on its payments during the
reported current cash flow shortage, it would be more practical to have such defaulting in January or February when
school districts will be able to borrow against future receipts,"
Essex continued.
The Department of Education was unable to identify
specific schoOl distriCts which would be affected by a delay in
state funding .
Paul Spayde, assistant state superintendent, said 'the
survey was. comprised of :&gt;XI per cent of the state's school
districts. Area coordinators called in the results without
identifying individual schools, he said.
The decision to withhold school subaidy lunda foUowed a
meeting between State Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson and
Collier on Monday.
Even though budget officials estimate the state faces a $22
million deficit this month, Ferguson said they want approval to
hold up payment of $57 million so there is a cushion irl state
co(fers.
(Continued on page H)

pushing
£
d al
~~::nt~~o=;~;o:o.F=d~ or "
new.·. e on
E:::,::,::~,:, bridge's closing
Saturday. Snow likely and

•

a little warmer Sunday.

Highs will be In the upper

·
, ..
LONG BOTI'OM - Jack lower 30s Sunday. Lows
Wilburn Anderson, 32, Long will be 5 to 15 degrees
Bottom, is dead as a result of
a hunting accident Tuesday
at 3 p.m. ·
Sheriff Rober t C. Harte nbach, in vestigating offleer , said 'Anderson and
Kenny Reynolds were rabbit .
hunting in Olive Township,
about 100 yards off county
road 399. Anderson was
carrying a .410 shotgun when
he slipped and slid down a
hill, the gun going off, the
shot striking Anderson in the By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
head.
COLUMBUS (UPI ) Also going to the scene was
Charles
S. Lopeman,
Dr R R p· k
. . . 1c ens, Meigs chairman of the state Board
County Coroner. The body of Tax Appeals, said today he
was taken to White's Funeral . will ask the board to establish
Home in Coolville.
temporary rules prohibiting
Jac k Wilburn Anderson real estate lax increases
was born at New Burgh, Ind. without a vote of the people,
He Is survived by his wile, at least through 19'17 in 30
Emma Ande rson ; l wo Oltio counties.
daughters, Traci and Beth,
Lopeman said he would
and one son, Jeff, all of make his request at a 3 p.m.
Columbia , Ill. ; two step- board meeting today. He said
children , Debbie Smlth, Port- he hoped the freeze on unland , and Russell Burns, at voled real estate taxes in the
home ; his parcnts, Roy and 30 counties could be in 'effect
Dorothy Smith Anderson , within 30 days .
New Burgh; two brothers,
Lopeman 's ac tion was
Tom of Chandler, Ind., and taken at the direction of Gov.
Rand, of New Burgh, one James A. Rhodes, who asked
sister, Pal Barnell, New lor a morat.Prium on any
Burgh, and several nieces unvoted real esta te tax inand nephews.
creases, contending they are
He was a member of the burdensome to taxpayers.
Sharon Baptist Church, New
Rhodes and Lopeman said
Burg. A welder for the Single the board's temporary rule
Sheet Metal Company, would buy lime in the 30
Parkersburg, he had resided counties to permit a con·in Long Bottom the past stitutional amendment to be
seven years.
placed on the ballot allowing
Funeral services will be voters to prohibit unvoted
held T~ursday at3p.m. at the real estate tax Increases in
White r uneral Home In Cool- all 88 counties.
lth th R v F
d
v111 e w . . e . e . ree1an
They said the amendment
Nor:ls offlclatmg. Burial will probably would be placed on
be 10 Sand Hill .Cemetery' the hallot next year.
Long Bottom. Fmnds may
Lopeman said he was conficall ~~ the funeral home at dent the other two members
of the Board of Tax Appeals
any lme. _
'cunllnucd on Page i4 '-,
UNIT CALLED
SYRACUSE
The
Syracuse Fire Dept. was
called Tue~dliy at 1 p.m. to
the Louise London residence
where a kitchen stove was on
fire . Minor damage was
reported. Hollie Stewart, a
member oi the fire depart·
ment reported that this was
the 14th run this Y.ear .
Thirteen men answered the
call. At5:50 p.m . Tuesday the
E-R squad was called for Lisa
Parsons, a medical patient,
who was ta ken to Holzer
Medical Center .

Relief .on

reappraisal
to he asked

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

)

Po meroy 's Mayor-elect
Clarence Andrews said
Tuesday Glen Smith, director
of the Division of the Ohio
Department of Highways, Is
hopeful of reducing the lime
the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
will be closed in 1976.
This was the report given
by Mayor-Elect Andrews at
the final 1975 meeting of the
Meigs County Re gional
Plannin g Co mmi ssion
Tuesday afternoon at the
Farmers Bank Building,
The mayor-&lt;!lecl sa id he
had mel with the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce and
Smith when Smith sa id ef·
forts are being made to increase the work day on the
bridge to 10 or 12 hours each
day and to cut down the
closing time on both ends of

the sc hedule.
At present, the bridge is
scheduled to be closed from
March through 'November.
Andrews said when he takes
office as Pomeroy's new
mayor he will go to work In
earnest on the problem of the
bridge closing.
The commission set its
annual meeting for Jan. 'll at
3 p.m. at the Farmers Bank
building and at that lime a
list of priorities for 1976 will
be discussed and projects
placed in order of importance.
A hearing in Rutland in
reference to waste water
disposal was announced for
Jan . 12, a\ the Rutland
Elementary School. An
outline of the proposed
project may be seen by in-

lerested persons at the
Rutland Furniture Store . C.
E. Blakeslee, executive
director of the commission,
said that hearing will be one
of many steps required for'
Rulland before the disposal
project is approved.
Blakeslee gave a financial
report showin g the commission to have a nine cent
balance at the end of this
year , The county commissioners are again being
asked to appropriate money
lor operation of the commission. It was indicated that
the Jackson Area Ministries
of the United Methodist
Church which has aided the
commission dW"ing the past
year does not wish to make a
committment of more funds
fContinued on page 14)

Center-Clinic staffs.
face pa~less holidays
As a result of deficit
spending by the community
mental health center and
clinic, and no additional
funds In the County County
treasury lor the remainder of
the county 's current fiscal
year, 16 employees of Ihe
comm unity mental health
center and clinic which
serves a three county area
(Gallia, Meigs and Jackson 1
will not receive paychecks
Friday.
This was brought to light
Tuesday by Mrs. Maxine
Plwnmer, executive director
of the Mental Health and
Retardation 648 Board.
Mrs. Plwnmer sa id she
was informed earlier this
month by Gallla Cou nty
Audltqr Dorothy Condee that
th e last payroll durin g
Gallia 's fiscal year ending
Dec . 31, would be rr.et, but
later 'was informed by the
auditor that the county did
not have the additional funds,
and that it would bQ Jan. 2
before employees would

\
'

'

receive their next paychecks.
Mrs . Condee told th e
Tribune that since there is a
deficit of $9,000, and since
advances have already been
made to the organization
during the first three months
of 1976, no additional advances could be made
bec_ause, "The money is
sim ply not there." The
organization's fiscal year Is
June 30 through June 30.
Mrs. Candee added, "You
can't write checks for money
you don't have. ll's illegal."
She added that with
payment of other bills, includin g $66,000 for excavation
of the lot for the new menial
hospital (of which one-half
will be reimbursed) there
were no more funds in the
treasury for this year .
Mrs. Condee sa id the 16
employees checks would
amount to $5,589.43. Four
other employees cboard
officials ) will receive their
checks totaling , 1,632 according to the uudilor.
Meanwhile, Mrs. Plwumer

said she could have transferred funds from another
account into their account
had th ey been given 10
working days notice.
Mrs. Plwnmer said It is not
uncommon to be operating
$9,000 in the red, but Mrs.
Condee pointed out that at
one lime, Ute cen ter was
operating $33,000 in the red.
The county is permitted to
carry the program up to
$25,000 because this is what
the tax levy bri ngs in.
"I'm only trying to help
Ihem out ," Mrs . Condee told
the Tribune. "We've got to
start
cutting
back
somew here . With various
freezes being ordered, and
other uncertainties, it would
not be wise for the county to
overspent at this time ," she
concluded .
Mrs . Plwnmer said the
organization ha s a case load
totaling 700 patients, and that
employees will continue to
see patients although they
won't be paid until Jan . 2.

'

DON EICHINGER
Doa Elchluger, a senior
at Eastern High School,
bas been named to the
Class A third team AU-Ohio
Football Team. The son ol
Mrs. Opal Eichinger,
Chester, Don has been a
running back for the
Eagles and has lettered
four years. He averaged
over 5 yards per carry and
gained over 2,200 yards In
his career. He was an A I~
SV AC running back the last
two years, and lo 1975 wa
voted the Outstanding
Back In the SVAC.

Dozer slid into

Rl. 7 guardrail
Still under investigation by
the Meigs County Sheriff's
Department is a traffic accident thai occurred Tuesday
at 10:30 a.m. in Salisbury
Twp. on SR 7.
.Gregory C. Davis, 20, Richfield , Ohio, was pulling a
trailer carrying a bulldozer
south when he made a right
turn onto SR 1'24 at a speed of
approximately 15 miles per
hour . The chain pulling the
trailer broke, letting the bulldpzer slide off in to a guard
rail.
CLAIM PAID
One animal claim was paid
and routine business was
conducted by the Meigs
Co unty Commissio ners
Tuesday mo rning. Brent
Stanley, Rt. 2, Albany, was
paid $127 for the loss of three
sheep. Allendlng were Henry
We ll ~, and Waren Ours,
commissione rs , Martha•
Chambers, clerk, and Wesley
Buehl, engineer .

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