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'
12 - The O.Uy Sentinel, mid&lt;Ueport-Pomeroy , 0 .. Monday, Dec. 22, 1975

Emmet Bartels Terrorists
died on SWlday tl'ontlnllt'li from pa~e I)
SYRACUSE _ Emmet r .
Bartels, so, Syracuse, died
Sunday at Albany. Born May
22, la95, he was a son of the
late William and Mary
Hamm Bartels . He was also
preceded in death by three
slslers.
Surviving are his wile,
Helen Sigrist Bartels ; two
sons, Vernon .of Cincinnati,
and William, of St. Joseph,
M' h . b other Everett of
H~ti~g':on: w.' va.; four
grandchildren, and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be at
3 p.m. Tuesday at the J:;wing
Funeral Home with the Rev .
Richard Jarvis officiating.
Burial will be in the LeU!rt
Falls Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home any,
ti

me.

SURGERY TAKEN
Gene Hwnphrey, 16-year·
old son of Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Humphrey, Pomeroy, un·
derwent an appendectomy
Saturday at Holzer Medical
Center. His room number is
525.

MEIGS THEATRE
TONITE
'I'HRU DEC . 25
NOT OPEN

FRI .. DEC. 26·28
"FUNNY LADY 11

(Tochnlcolor)
Show sluts II 7:00p.m.

n:rsterlous "Carlos" who
killed two French secret
agents and a .Le~nese mformer In Pans SIX ~onths
ago, conferred In the 81rport
VIP salon. ~lth Algerian F?·
reign Mm1ster Abdelaziz
Boutefllka .
The only Arab delegation
freed was the Algerian,
apparently because Algeria,
a traditional haven for .Arab
terrorists, allowed the V1enna
gunmen to land In Algiers.
T~e non-Arab ene~gy
mlrusters freed we~e Jaune
Duenas
VIllavicencio,
rnlnlster of natural resources
of Ecuador; Edou~d Alexis
M'Bouy Boutzlt, mmiSter of
mines of Gabon; Mofla T~njo
Akob •.commissioner of mt~s
of N1gerla, and Valentm
Hernandez Acosta, minister
of mines and ollofVenezuela.
Lt. Gen. lbnu SUtowo of Indonesia, OPEC delegate, also
was allowed tQ leave the
aircraft.
:Ibe Arab ministers still
held aboard the aircraft after
three hours of negotiations
Included Tayeh Abdul Karim,
oil minister of Iraq, Abdel
Moutaleb El Kazeml, oil
rnlnlster for Kuwait, and
Ezzedlne Mabrouk, oil
rnlnister of Ubya.
Algerian Minister of
Energy Belald Abdesselam
left the aircraft with other
Algerians who were In the
OPEC building when the
gang burst in SUnday, Abdesselam had mediated the
talks In Vienna between the
terrorists and the Austrian
govenunent.
Abdesselam, appearing
tired and worried, told
reporters at the Algiers
airport after the negotiations
had gone on for two hours, "I
don't think we're at the end of
these talks yet. They want to
continue."
The rnlnister did not say
whether he meant the
terrorists wanted to continue
their voyage to another city
or continue negotiating,

Wrestlers
1Continued

:'This time of year so many
folks ... will gayly say to
you .. . 'A very merry
Chrlstn•as and ... A Happy
New Vear'too' ... The cards
will come, the gifts will
come .. . You buy and give
and send ... To every loving
relative Md every special
fr iend ... 0 . yes, the days
are busy ones ... With not
an hour lo spere ... There Is
so much to celebrate ... So
many joys to share ... But
when the fire Is flickering
.. . And all Is finally still .. .
Th.ere comes a lime
think about ... holiday
goodwill .. . A time to see
the world at peace .. ; And
watch a New Year start ...
And to be sure your words
and gills ... Are coming
from the Heart.. ."
The
"FRIENDLY
ONES" wish oil our friends
lftd customers 1 very
MERRY CHRISTMAS.

CEM
BLOCK 00.

Tilt Dep1rtmtnt Store
Building Sine. 1915.

Pom~roy

from page 1)
pinned N· Y's Bumgardner.
lost by decision In finals for
second place In Tourney.
105 lb. class - Lyons (see
results above.)
112 lb. class - Gheen (see
result• above I.
119 lb. class Kevin
Mclaughlin. Pinned Meek
from Chesapeake, lost
deQ Jslon to McCoy from
Mann, then won two straight
by pins to lake third place.
126 lb. class - Gory
Priddy .
Pinned
by
Che•apeake's Ellis.
132 lb. class - Mike
Harrison. Won a decision
over Wayne wrestler. lost
decision to Fairland, then
pinned two straight to take
third olace.
,
138 lb. class - Butch
Rou!h, lost two pins.
us lb. class - Duane
Mcloughlin. Pin over Lake
from Fairland, lost decision
to Nell from Barboursville.
won a decision over Russell
frorn
Wayne,
pinned
Chesapeake to take third
place.
·
155 lb. class - Bobby
Musser. Pinned Dutton from
Chesapeake, los to decision to
Barbourovllle, then won 2
straight by pins to take third
place.
167lb. class - No wrestler
from Meigs.
175 lb. class - Stan Star.
cher. Defeated by Fairland's
Sounder ,
pinned
Chesapeake's Edwards, to
take third place.
185 lb. class - Ray
Willford. Lost decision to
Chesapeake, won e decision
over Tabor trom Wayne.
Took third place.
Unlimited class - Meigs
had no wrestler.

Merchants

1l'untinnt'tl fro111

CHRISTMAS
GIVEAWAY

Wally's perennial Ouistmas card

season . Bullhe calls for peace had little effect.

Ry Tom Tiede

were sunken and dark, his
WASHINGTON- I NEAl - hair unbrushed, his teeth too.
As I remember it Wally was He wore a heavy pea jacket,
Mongoloid ; a stubby, homely and strapped overalls. In a
fellow with an intellectual cruel way, this was a part of
capacity wedged somewhere his use to my friends and I,
between slight and faint. I did Ihe worse among us being not
noI know his age , nor for that nearly so ugly . I recall when
matter much else of his Ihe girls in our gang set out to
private person save the ob- pr ove something among
COLUMBUS - THE METLING OF ffiGH-IMPACT, poly· servation he was a desolate lhemselves, one of them
carbonate plastic helmets worn by fir~men during a training creature. [ was a schoolboy in occasionally was dispatched
fire has led officials to order a full investigation. The helmets Everell, Wash.; Wally was on a dare to kiss Wally, a
of two firemen and a trainee melted unexpectedly in Friday's the slack jawecl shadow, deplorable duty done with
practice blaze.
·
forever in need of a bath, who much public demonstration
Aboul20 helmets annually are lost here because of melting, for want of purpose attached · and yet I suspect with
but they usually melt in hotter fires than those set for training himself to my crowd.
Freudian impressions that
purposes, said Capt. Charles Drumm. The helmets were
He was never formally served the need in us all.
purchased from the Sheridan Safety Co., Dayton, and the Mine accepted as a companion,
Wally did not attend our
Safety Appliances Co., Pittsburgh, said fire officials.
understand . He was just school , nor perhaps any
there, desperately hanging school, there being at the
about, a nuisance not easily lim e ' lil'le public undismissed. In some ways he derstan din g of, or comhad a usefulness, I suppose, passion for , the retarded.
Veterans Memorial Hosptutul John Veith, daughter, Crown logo buy the hamburgers for Each recess he was there,
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS City.
instance, therefore my bunch however, each noon hour and
(Births, Dec. 20)
- Emma Hayman Syracuse;
tolerated him in the spirit of each assembly. For a time he
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald E. resignation, as a macabre even came to the dances,
Pamela Theiss, Racine.
Carter, Jr., daughter, Ray; inevitability.
SATURDAY DIS.
wearing his tennis shoes, but
CHARGES
Betty Mr ..and Mrs. Grover Sheets,
Macabre? This was Wally 's gave this up in confusion
Hannons, John White, daughter, Crown City; Mr. singular fascin ation, rooted afler being refused entry on
Kathryn Weaver, Velma and Mrs . Thomas E. White, as much in his appearance one occasion by a chaperone
Imboden, Elsie Barnhart, son, Gallipolis.
as in his diffe rence . His eyes who said he'd been drinking
Virgie Hobstetter, Phyllis
wine. The accusation was a
Horns, Leopold Hysell, Alice
ruse, unfortunately. II the
Davis, James Andrews,
children of my town had
Jessie Swiger.
reservations about Wally, the
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS ad
ull s had outright subCoy Bly Starcher, Sr., 56, ficiating. Burial will be In
None.
jectivity.
Route 3, Pomeroy, died Rock Springs Cemetery. In
SUNDAY DISCHARGES - Saturday night at the Holzer
Still, Wally hung on, there
lieu of flowers, friends may
Helen Kennedy, John Powell, Medical Center. Born Dec. !3,
contribute to the Cancer being no alternative to his
Allee Dodson, Robin Ritchie, 1919, he was a son of the late
Society. Friends may call at second-cla·ss citizenship but
Eleanor Douglas, Willie
Edgar and LJuise Roberts the funeral home any time.
Collins, William Bush, Ethel
Starcher. He was also
Jeffers.
preceded in death by a son,
Holzer Medical Center
David.
PROGRAM SET
1Births, Dec. 191
Surviving are his wile, Ada
WASHINGTON UPI .,..- A 12
CHESTER
- A Christmas per cent increase In memMr .' and Mrs . George Hysell Starcher, six children,
Clendenin, son, Gallipolis Roger, of Minersville; Coy, program will be given at the bership this year made the
Ferry, W. Va .; Mr. and Mrs. Jr., Russell and Sherrie, all Chester Church of God United Mine Workers of
at home; Mrs. Robert (Judy) Tuesday at 7p.m., titled "The America one of the nation 's
Kautz, Cincinnati, and Terry, Gate of the Inn" by youths of faslest growing labor
of Findlay; two brothers, the church. There will be ocganizalions, according to
INSPIRATION AWARD
recitations and singing. The the
union 's
official
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) - Carl of Union Town, and public is invited.
publication.
Veteran San Francisco 49er Homer, of Spencer, W. Va .;
The Decembell' edition of
cornerback Jimmy Johnson seven grandchildren, and
several
uncles,
aunts,
nieces
the
"UMW Jour~al" reports
Sunday became the first
ASK
TO
WED
and
nephews.
union membership
that
player to win a second Len
Marriage
licenses
have
Mr.
Starcher,
a
pipefitter
from 134,000 to
jumped
Esluncnt award as the most
been
issued
to
Monid
Larry
and
welder,
belonged
to
150,000 since January; mainly
inspirational mem~r of the
Pipefttters Local No. 789 at Good, 48, Long Bottom, and because of a new organizing
team.
Donna Jean Imboden, 36, drive started in early 1974.
Johnson , a three-time all Princeton, W. Va.
Funeral services will he Minersville, and to Roy
Through the drive, the
pro completing his 15th NFL
Ethan
Stearns,
19,
Rt.
1,
held
at
I
p.m.
Tuesday
at
the
union
won representation
season, has hinted he might
Racine,
and
Cindy
Mae
Ewing
Funeral
Home
with
or
secured
elections
not return next year. He also
Boggess,
16,
Racine.
the
Rev.
Herbert
Grete
of·
recognition
as
the
bargaining
won the award in 1969.

HOSPITAL NEWS

Coy Starcher, Sr. dies

total . seclusion. Better card. He gladly compiled,
berated than isolated. Once explaining again that he'd ,
when he was walking behind just gotten it through the ,
the girls' gymnasium , the mail, and running his fingers ,
instructor called police with a over the colors. She held It up, :
" peeper" complaint, ana giggling what we ell knew but ,
Wally was taken away. Once wouldn't say, that the card !
when he spent an afternoon · was the same one Wally had ··
picking up li tier from the carried around the previous ~
schoolgrounds, the custodian Christmas, and the one '
chewed on him lor "in- before that, and going back ·
terfering"· and excluded him God knows how many years.
from the campus for a month. He had bought tt himself, no !
Even chased away, though, doubt, and given it to himself, '
even
wronged
and but told the world It was the '
;I
mistreated, Wally would gift of a friend.
There
was
nervous
return and hang on as before . ·~
Only one time do I laughter. Wally began to sob. ·
remember him alienated by For a moment I thought he ·
the forces against him, might strike out, there were ~
during a Chrisbnas, shortly in fact those of us who wished .,
before the. school vacation. he would have struck out. But .
'"ally showed up with a sprig he just wept, quietly, turning ,
' evergreen on his jacket, his face. Mter a time the
a"d with a large Chrisbnas crowd, now uncomfortable,
card in his hands . Without wandered away. So did
being asked, he opened the Wally, not to return until
card for everyone he met, after the holidays, and then ·
explaining that he'd received not so frequently as before
it in lhe mail, pointing out its perhaps, though as ever he .
quiet beauty and reverence of had but little choice.
He died some years later,
thought. But as he often did
when sensing he could add I'm told, in an accident OC· '
input lo the activity, he curring close to another
stretched a small matter into Chrisbnas, with no one even '
irritating proportions. He then paying much notice.
pushed too hard , he became a
pest. He thus had to be,
ACTOR DIES
deserved to be, reproached.
HOLLYWOOD (UP!)
One of the girls did it. Actor William Lundlgan ·
Gathering a crowd, she called started as a shoe saleaman in ..
Wally over and asked for his his father's store and grew up·
to perform in more than 125 :
movies, including "Climb the
Highest Mountain" and ·
"Pinky." Rosary was·
scheduled today for the tall,
agent at 35 mines.
The additional membership blond actor who died;
will increase the union 's Saturday of apparent heart'
health and retirement funds failure following a lengthy
by more than $25 million per illness. He was 61.
year, the journal said.
"The UMW Organizing
FINE LEVIED
Deparlmen t has succeeded In
Roger Hysell, 19, Pomeroy,
spite of tough operator was fined $10 and costs, In the:
resistance, flagrant court of Pomeroy Mayor Dale
violations of federal law by E. Smllh, Thursday night on·'
many coal companies and the conviclion of disturbing the'
NLRB's National Labor peace. In an earlier report ot
Relations Board's inability or the court, .. it was stated
~nwillingness to protect
erroneously that Hysell had
miners' right to organize In been fined $10 and costs on
some cases," siad Tom three charges, disorderly
Pysell, the union 's organizing conduct, intoxication, and
director.
driving
while
under
suspension,

More coal miners

.

'

YOUR CHRIS~AS GIFf HEADQUARTERS

OPEN TONIGHT TIL 9
Juniors and Women's
COORDINATE SPORTSWEAR

that will keep ~chool dt,trict&amp;
solvent.
However, Collier !18hl the
at~le faces a $70 million
deficit for Janyary becaQiil! of
the .cash flow problem tjJat
llrougltt on litis mon,th's
finiiOC!al crisis.
"We're deferring
a
ll!l!l!!d.
· The board Monday ap· December problpm until
[iroved 11 plan worked out by January an4 will be requireq
&amp;tJite Finance Director to ltpld up payments of $50
million to primary and
Qow~rd Colllet and statll
Al!llltor Tl!oiJ1llll Ef. Ferguson secondary education and

OOLUMBUS (UPi) - Ohio
will be able to make
December schpol payments
toiallng 010 rnllllon following
ajlprov!ll of a state funq
!lhlllfljpg plan by the alate
Cqqtrollin@ Boar&lt;l, ~ut the
8lllle'• flnimcl!ll crjsl~ ha~ not

On two dillerenl occasions

the younas\llrs turne~ ovfr
~mils tones jp Middleport lliQ
Cemetery, the c!Jief said. He
said lh~ e~ftcl doll~r figure of
qll(l1age~ cannot ~~ m~de
because of the ~ga of tile
markers.

Jlli

,.:.
By UQiled Pr~si&amp;Jeruatloul
•• WN!JiiNGTON - PRI!JSIDI!JNT FORD LEFT todaY. for a
wiek-lonB skiing vacaUon wllh his lamllY at Vall, Cjllo., where
J.•wJilaiiQ 111111 a tax cut al!eOSIQn IJili!IDd wor)l on !til alate of
·u.,.Union sddr~ to co~gre~s •.\lr li'orf!!l one, t~ f'l'ui~nr~
jtU!JWr' l119k off frl!m AnanwP .vo'B, f)!~ .• ~· 8:2jl
for Hit!.
:folll'&lt;llPI!r fllllbt to Vqil.
·~. W!*e jioulil! ~''~~ ~retary Ron NBillen 11al4 tile ll'lp '1ia
a!ehJJnce for the Prllli4!!1lt to ~at ~way for •lx or seven d@ys
,.jd relax will! 1111 fftllllly ," )l(e~ said Forq lilts beeP worlPnB
~ lately, IJII!ndlng 77 hour• In his o!fice durwa the [1!141
• • · 'lbe Pra~ldent has promised to sl11n the tu cut bill,
wl#h W@B iplrovecl by Oongrea ~ Friday aft!ll' It included
J ftter-.JodOwn pr~ tQ ll!JI!t federal Sjl!91!llflg irl f~l

•·m·

TONIGHT
6:30 TO 7:30
TUESDAY
6:30 TO 7:30

l.etf;
'iMI!lllNQ'IU!'f ·_ Pl\I!lSIDiilm' FORI! M.ONPAY s!JIIed
1 !Jill pnlvt41ng mpre ll!aq ~ ~illl9n !n OVIII"I!fl!B foocl @Ill!
!11\lllopment aid 1r1 fllcallf/8
19'/V, Most pfll!e fooq wllllld
io·Jo the world's ql!8!!1e~t JIIIUq~ . ·
'Tite lplernatlpn•ID!!veloP!'Ient and FlJIMI.U.I41alJce API
otlm, whlo~ mclu!lea tile li'ood for Pea!ll! PfOIII'Bm, -~lhor!a~
,\,11 bllqon fpr tltBil\lfrept f~oal fllf •ncl .1,1 billlpn fpF lfl'l.
N IJlllfBI~n !16 Jll't pen~ P!l!le foocl aid ilOIIJilll!dllln
IQ Ill
cgq~lrlllll will! l PI'F ~pi~ grg~ ll@lioll@! pf9!111cl @l!gyt lMOr

.na

m.r

IN POMEROY

uiilw l!lt f'r"l\lenl ina!lllll

n91!PIIP11~

Jill!'~'' 1m cow~ ~pproy~

for ''h1!mtmllorl8n
In eacll 0!11111·

:..,..~ - ,CUBAN PREMIER FIDEL CAS'I'IIO, ~n,
1

r

possibly $20 rnlllion to higher
education as well," Collier
Sllid.
In aqdition, Collier said
Ohio has spent
million
more tllan it has collected
durlpg the fir s~ five months of
fiscal 1976, 110d will have
spept '166 million more thl!n
collected b)' tile end of this
fiscal year, even if revised
revenue estimates are met.
"We can't cjo !IJIB for too
long of a time," Collier

•m.5

.~ , J.\YCEI!JS AT WO~K - 'lliese Melp County Jaycee6 wer, b1111y Mo~day evening
P!'•PI!ri!Jg apprn~I!Jlately 50 food ballkets for underprivileged families throughout the
county . The baskets have enough meat, caMed gooda and stliples lor a family for !IIJe W!'fk .
'll!e Jaycee&amp;, 'alllli&amp;!ed IIY JIOy Scout Troo~ Ut. Ill~ l!:nvlronmental Protection Club and the
sPI!Iliall au~ of t,telp High S¢1ool, oopd"cle!la houaao{o.PQIU!O ~lll1V~ for food Sslurday.
'Ilte ~aypee~ are worklnglp coopera!loq wiltl tile ll!llvatiP!I Army whtcjJ also will cllstrlbute
some 50 ~1k11ta of food. A few tpys and C11r.latm,aq tree~ wUI be given by the Jaycees.
Ton.lght Jaycees wlllltlljle their final Chr~t~ ~cllviiY, ~party al the county lnllrm~ry .
Plotureq are, front, 1tot, Vil!llel)t Klllght, Lql'ry Speitcer; JOhn Ohasteel) M~ JllcjJard
Poulin; bl!ck row, 11!11 YOIU]g, Steve Powell, Ron Van!'fl, ~~~~ Crow, l'lflke Mlll!en, Jeff
.Hqwell, apd Chuck Mullen.

~"ews . .. in Briefsfi

In Our Third Floor r•nd

ntrrfnl PreJI!I!!nl Fill'~'&amp; ~tatem!nt l"'el chanC~~s for
(ConUnued on page I!

I

'

said, however, tha t a car attempting such a turn could be hit by
another vehicle rounding the corner from Third onto Locust.
He asked council to take a look at the situation with the idea of
placing a "no turn on red " !ign at the intersection .
Council discussed an alley between Chestnut and Grant
Sts. agreeing that there is an eight foot alley in the location but
that a part of it is closed. They indicated that there appears to
be no reason to reopen it at this time.
Prayer by the Rev . Don Cole preceded the meeting . AI·
lending were Mayor Hoffman, Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate,
couneil members Brewer, King , Carl Horky, Bill Walters,
Marvin Kelly and George Meinhart. Meinhart is the new
council member, having been appointed to replace Mrs. Jean
Craig who resigned recently, ana was attending _his first
meeting Monday night.

en tine

Fifteen Cents
Vol 27, No. 177

School payment coming

'
r;:;=:~::::~&lt;&lt;;::::::;;::::::::.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:':·:::::·;;:·:·::;::;:;:;:;:::;:;:::::;:;:;:::;::::::::::::::~:::::::;~:::::f

SANTA CLAUS

by council in connection with the establishment of an auxiliary
force. Council will discuss the matter at the next meeting
Coun cilman Allen Lee King commended police for their
work but lodged a complaint against violations of an ordinance
which is supposed .to do away with through truck traffic. He
said he &lt;lid not feel the ordinanee is being enforced anq
Councilman James Brewer was of the same opinion.
Mayor Hoffman said that perhaps a better job can be done
on enforcing the ordinance. '!11e di scussion made clear that
heavy trucks are hard on village streets which must be
maintained by th e village since th ey are no longer stale high,
ways .
Couneilman Brewer said he beli eves the intersecllon at
Third and Locust Sts. is dangerous because motorists
traveling toward the river on Locust ca n make a right hand
turn on a red li ght in accordance with the n•w f\h in 1Rw He

at y

Pomeroy.Mil!dlepart, Ohio
Tuesday, De~emher 23, 1975

l

ELBERFELDS
(

for!hcommg 011 the improvement of Page St. in lower Mid·
dleport. The s!rl'ft w~s scheduled for major improvements
from State Issue I f!JIIds but the work never got underw~y
becaU!l~ of the ~yl~ of the money w~s spent on olher projects.
liRwever, HQ(fm@n s,aiq Bill Childs ol the Middleport
Plapning Col11!11i~io~ i~ wor!png with county and state officials on a propos!ll tq have the street resurfaced. About
$84 1QOIJ remains jn the fund - not e~ough to carry out the
oril!i!llll improvement plans - but enough for an Improvement
proj0(1t, the lllllyor said. Approval of the state highway
ooparlmept i~ nepessary, which appears to be forthcoming,
the mayor said.
·
. !)ouncil members were presented a copy of rules and
ri!j!ulallons Wlil~h would guide establishment of an auxiliary
poll~ force, prepared by solicitor Bernard Fultz at the request
of O!ief Cremeans. He also presented" ' """'"H"" to"" r•«&lt;&gt;rl

•

""r,iiddlellQrt pollee ~hiel J .
:J. cr~rneaps IJas ol\4!q fopr
IP·Yfl9r-ol~ P,oys lo t!J' Meiss
,Cpunty juvenile court on
ptlarges of vandall~m and
~!f~cl!o~ of property In
l!ldleport estjmat~d to cost
• jOOO.

Bring the Children

tlclpatlng Gold St1r Stores.

..

, Oliel qf Jloljpe J . J. Cremeans~and-~pt. Siq Utile of ~he
Middleport• Poljce Dept. ~ave chargeq four Juveniles with
recent CIJ!lle~ery VIIIJll~liBm aqd ot~er vandalil;m ip the
OOfllllll!J!I!f,
'Ibis rewrt WIIS liiv~n Ml~dleport village COU!\Cil Monday
night by .MIIYQr Fr!!d Hoffipan w~o said f.!ie juveniles apparently .mvojyj!d in the ex~ensive destruotlon at t~e Mill·
. c!leport Hill Cemetery haye betm tw-ned over to coiUlty juvenil~
authoriUes.
·
· ReoeqUy SQin~ 9Q grave markers" were turned pver or
damaged at the cemetery. The Jlll!tter h~s been 'of major
ooncern to village offi!Jilll~ WOP feelll!allhe village Is at least
JllOrally ohllgatecj Ill r03tpre the ~tones.
~ . M11yor IJoffman highly commended Chief Crerqei!JlS and
;C!IPI· Little fqr their work In apprehending the juveniles.
Mayor Hoffman reported also that help apparently is

cautioned.
Originally, Collier had said
December school subsidies
might have w be cut $57
million but state Schools
Superintendent Martin Essex
said some schools would he
IJarq hit because they would
not have money to repay
loand due the end of the
month.
Essex told the board
December payments were
more important because
school districts next month
could borrow money on anticipated revenues.
"This is 11 very com·
mendable solution to the
problem lor December ,"
Essex said . "If there mWJt be
a lowering [of subsidy) it is
better in January when
districts will be able to
tx&gt;rrow against taxes due ."
Among funds shuffled so
December school subsidy
copld be paid were $20 million
(rom liquor, $30 l)lilllon from
fll'!er~l revenpe sharing an~
fll.l million earmarked fq~
parochald. Some lesser
amounts transferred in~
eluded $3.6 million from
public school building rotary
fl!nd, $1.6 million from Ohio
fairs fund and $3.6 million
from waterway safety fund.
Ferguson said hls office
was ready to writll the checks
for the December school
subsidy, adding that all
checks should be in the rna il
by Friday.
In other aotion Monday, the
board approveq the transfer
of $2.6 million to the Department of Rehabilitation and
Corrections to prevent
massive layoffs.
The · ~apartment had
reque~ ~.9 million, but
Director GeorRe Denton ~aid
(Cool(nued on page 8)

Destruction was their thing

Save Now On Misses,

P1r·

.

.

OHIO HAD ALREADY BEEN CAUGHT IN A COLD GRIP
for several days when winter officially arrived ill 6:46a .m.
!Alday. The temperature fell to 9 degrees, the lowest in the state
SUnday, at Mansfield. Readini!S In the low 20s were common in
southern counties. Up to one foot of snow in Ashtabula and
Geeuga counties caused traffic snarls and brought growls
from Christmas shoppers.
Two American Airlines flights were diverted from
snowbound Cleveland Hopkins International Airport to Port
Columbus International Airport, where only traces ofthe white
stuff covered the runways SUnday.

NDT DRAWING SAT., DEC. 24
3- 1100.00 Gift Certificates For Groceries

Juvenile cemetery wreckers charged

!Ja~e 1)

To See

Gold Star

Get FrH Tickets At All

TOM TIEDE

News .. in Briefs

--··

On South Fourth ~1. win dows were broken in a
private home and con ·
siderable damage was
caused to its alwninun1 siding
when a hall brick was thrown
against it, fremeans said.
In another lncjdent, two
Christmas wreaths were
stolen from the front doors of
the Mt. Moriah Church on
South Fourth and Main while
church services were in
progress and windows were
broken in the Middleport
Elementary School.
The chief estimated all acts
of destruction and vandalism
charged to the boys will
vehlcl~ p~rk~d an. {l~~e $t. amount )o some .6,000.
"Someone is gping to have
ne~di to be painted Q\lcause
to
pay the bill," Cremeans
~gg~ were thrpwp onlo il.
said.
Chief Cremeans urged all
' Middleport residents not only
to be watchful of their own
properties but also their
neighbors'. !fe
yrged
c!XlPeration of all resld~nts iQ
~ringing an end to the vand~llsm by providing in·
formation to police when
anything IUlusual is noticed.
About the cemeteries, the
chief said:
11 0ur cemeteries are for
our loveq ones. Tj1ey are not
to be use!l for any p~her
PIJI'PQ~e. They ~re ii!!cred ,
l!Jll! we ln~n4 to ke~p tll~IJl
that waY· M!yone oa\11\h'
qoin~ any IUilawful pot In tha
pemeterlea will be prosecuted
IP the fullust extent of lhe
law.''
~
.,
!Jowever, lie said, tllree
vi!lpge employes 1\'orked one
w~e~ in resetting the stones
which were turned over in
le~s than an hour by two of
tl)~ 12-year-ol~ ·~oys. They
remain unn~m~~ because of
juvep[le court policy.
Pollee tlad been checking
~oth pemeleries of Miq41~port ev~ry ~WP how~ when
llJe vanaallsm !n the Mid·
dleport Hill Cllmetery )\las
dlscoverecj on Oj!c. 7.
Ot h~r acts of vandalism,
such as throwing rocks and
~ggs at ho~ses have been
commll~ed ~y the ljQys, the
chle! sajd. He Sj!jd " new

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

1

Fire at
Inn got
•
•
mtrme

BUDDY BOY IS HOME; - "Buddy Boy," the approximately 17-year-old dog of Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Wining of Pomeroy, above, !fisappeared from near the Wining residence last
week . Afew hours later a member of the Meigs County HllJllane Society was told by a family
on Soulh Second Ave., Middleport, that, "an Injured dog is in our yard." Members of the
Humane Society took lhe dog at once to a veterinarian in Point Pleasant. "Buddy Boy" had
a fractured pelvis and was said too old to benefil frPm surgery. Identified by his tag "Buddy
Boy" was returned to the Winings who were extremely perturbed at the loss of their family
pet and were delighted upon his return. It is unknown how the animal got to Middleport. A
likely explanation is that the animal was dognaped, taken to Middleport, then thrown from a
vehicle.

Pomeroy Fire Chi ef
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Charles J.egar sci damages
Thursday through
at $1,000 in a fire at the Mei gs
Saturday
, chance of snow
Inn al 2:14 a.m. Tuesday
Thursday
aud colder
when a pa tron apparently set
friday
and
Saturday
\lith a
drapiers in a hall on fire .
chance of snow flurries
Ch ief Legar comm ended
employes and a night northeast. Highs will drop
watchman for their work from the 30s Thursday to
in fighting the fir e which lhe 20s Friday and
damaged wall paneli ng and Saturday. Lows will be ln
burned carpeling. Usin g fire the 20s Thursday and in the
extinguishers, they had the teens Friday and Saturday.
fire out by ihe lime firemen ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;.;:;.;:;:;:
arrived. Chief Legar said the
inciden t is still IUlder in·
vesilgation . He slated th at
apparently a customer at th e
inn set fire to draperies al a
window locat ed near a
s lairway goin g from th e
seconqlo the th ird floor . The
chief said it was fortunate the
A nun or accident occurred
fire was discovered when it Monday at 1:4a p.m. in
Chesler township at the inwas.
tersection of SR 248 and old
SR 7.
Aid, fire units
Philip R. Gaul , 20, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, pullin g fr om a
of Racine called privale parking lu i onto 248
RACINE - The Racin e E- had his view blocked by a
R squad was ca lled at 7:25 truck parked alongside of 248
a.m. today lo the Earl Dill in fr ont of Gaul 's Markel,
residence, HI . I , Ha cine coll ided with a ca1· dril'en by
where Mr. Dill was dead on David J. Koblentz, 47, 11t. :1,
its arrival. AI 6:4a a.m. Pomeroy, driv ing wes l of 248.
firemen were called to · I he Sheriff 's Dep ut y Mann ing
Vista Service Station where 'a Roush reported that there
truck owned by Lawrenre wa s modera te damage . No
citalions were issued.
R~e, Rt. 2, Rucine, was
AI 7:30 p.m. Monday on SR
engulfed in fl ames. Property
681 Gary L. Durst, 29, HI. I,
lo55 was estimated at $200.
Eight men answered the call . Re edsv ille , was traveli ng·
Monday al 4:10 p.m. theE - east when a dee1· ran into th e
R unit transported Haymond path of his car and was killed.
Hartley, Racine, to Vetet·ans
Memorial Hospll11l.

Autos collide

at jWiction in
OJester Twp.

Vehicle sales
UNIT CALLED
The Pomeroy E-R squad
was called to Harrisonville at
7 a.m. Tuesday for Gold ie .
Motor vehicles lax receipts
Epple, a medical patient, who
in
Meigs County for
was taken to Veterans
were up 87.81 pet.
November
Memorial Hospital.
over November , t974, according to Mrs . Gertrude
CLQSING AT NOON
The Middleport Bo~rd of Donahey, slate treasurer.
Receipts for November this
Public Alfairs office and the
year
total ed $33,358.74
mayor 's office will cl ose at
compared
to $17,818 .16 in
noon Wednesday, Dec. 24, for
November,
1974
. Hetail sales
the Christm as Holida y
ljlx receipls were down 7.28
perioq .
percenl , or $5,088.76, for the
month of November, thi s
year, compared to receipts
J.OCM. T~tMPS
for Novemoer,• 1974. This
The temperature
In year receipts for that month
downtown Pomeroy at II we1e $64,743.94 while reoejpts
!!.·ffi· Tuesdijy was a1 degrees for N!•V•IJlbtr, 197i, to taled •
with light snow fallin g.
$&amp;9,632.70.
1\

tax take is up

Ur~iiium plant
wanted in Ohio
COLUMBUS IUP I ) Earlier this year, Ohio lost a
$237 million coal conversion
plant to Olinois . Monday ,
state Development Director
James A. Duerk said he 's
pulling all the stops to lw-e a
federa lly-funded uranium
plant 10 the Buckeye State
and awa)' from Alabama .
Duerk said Alabama and
Ohio are the main contenders
for the ura nium plant which
manufactu res fuel for
nuclear power facilities.
Duerk said Ohio officials
want the plant constructed
near Portsmouth, adjacent to
the Goodyear Atomic Corp.
Duerk said the construction
would also help ease the
area's 12 per cent unemployment.
The state Departmen t of
Economi c and Community
Dev elopment has been
working with federal enecgy
offi cials and Rep. William
Har sha, · R-Ohio, in at·
tempting to attract the plant
lo Por tsmouth.
"The Joint Comrnl ttee on
Atomic Energy has been
supplied with facts which
prove the Ohio site will be
much less expensive than
an other site und er co n·
sideralion in Dothan, Ala 1' '
added Duerk .
Duerk said that the federal
government Generai Ac·
counlin ~ Office has recommended the Ohio site over the
Alabama location.
Duerk said Gov. James A.
Rhodes ha s written Sen. John
0 . Pastore, D,Rhode Island ,
chairman of the Joint
Committee on Atomic
Energy, claiming that the
government-owned plant

SUITS FILED
Tw o. suits for money have
bee n fil ed in Meigs County
Common Ploas Co urt.
Pomeroy Cement Block Co .,
asks for $1,262.84 from Dana
W. l'y!urray, and The Home
Credit Comp~ny, Fl. Wayne,
lnq., is sui ng Adam B. and
Mary E. Collin s, Rt. 1.
Pomeroy, for $1 1 ~1~. 611 .~

"should logically be located
on the site occupied by the
existing Goodyear Atomic
plant near Portsmo~th ."
"Aside from the savings
fa ctor !here are other
powerful arguments for the
Ohio site," wrote Rhodes ,
noting that local labor unions
had apparently agreed there
will be no work stoppages or
delays during construction .
Con gressional hearings on
the selection of the site for the
plant were convened, then
recessed, because of the congressional holiday vacation.

Treasurer's
office in
good shape
A perfect rep ort has been
received here following a
seven-month audit of the
office of Meigs Count y
Treasurer by the Bureau of
Inspection and Supervision of
Public Offices , Auditor of
Slate, Colun1bus.
Holder of the offi ce for the
or
the
major
pari
examina ti on period rr om
Jtme I, 1970 to May 31 , 1975
was Howard Fronk who is
now tho Meigs Count y
Audi tor. A sum marization of
Ihe detailed ' audit sa id :
"Offi cial bond s lor the
lreasurer and his employes
me l
all
statutory
requirements, the treasurer's
daily
statement
was
co rr ec tly prepared and
forwarded to th e auditor
datly, form seven was accur a tely and currentl y
maintained, all tax charges
were properly accounted for ,
ro ll back reductions and
homes tead exemptions were
lutndled as preseribed by the
burl'au and lhr hoa rd of tax
appeals, revenue shar ing
fu nds were properly accounted for , funds on deposit ·
were adequately protected by
pl edg ed &amp;ecqring
and
F.D.I.C. and cash controls
were maintained In an approved manner •~
11

~.

'

�3 - The Daily
. Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Dec. 23,. 197~

nderson Americana at its

President vetoes his
own ·picketing bill
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - . through Con gress afte r
President Ford has vetoed a negoti ations between conbill that would have expll!1ded struction unions and the
const ru ction
workers ' building 'industry, then
picketing power - and it strongly urged Ford to sign it .
When Ford's veto carne ,
&lt;'ould eost him his secretary
of labor.
Dunlop did nothing Monday
Labor Secretary John I!! dispel reports he would
Dw1lop helped steer the bill consider resigning in protest.
The veto meant Ford
reneged on his promise
earlier this year to Dunlop
and the AFL-CIO to sign the
bill under certain conditions.
It also meant the politically
potent AFL-CIO would, as
promised, " actively work
against" Ford in the next
election .
By CRAIG A. PALMER
A spokesman said Dunlop
WASHINGTON (UP! )
would
lake a couple of weeks
1lte governmen t has accused
to
consider
his next · move.
t)le medical profession of
violating antitrust laws by Dunlop issued a statement
refusing to let doctors ad· saying the veto "comes as no
great surpri se, lor the
vertise .
The American Medical pressures on him to do so
Assoca llon said it would fight were substantial.
"[ am naturally disapthe charges and what it sa id
was the Federal Trade pointed, lor I maintain my
Co mmi ss ion's attempt to conviction that on its merits,
promote m e dical the enactment of thi s
"hucksterism ."
The FTC issued an anti trust complaint Monday
against
the
AMA ,
representin g about 17,000
doct6rs, the Conne cticut
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) State Medlcall)oclety and the With a 10-line statement,
New Haven County, Conn., Mike McCormack suffered
Medical Society.
another bitter defeat Mon"We ~auld hope, at the day.
ver.v least, the public would
One day after the Eagles
be made aware of the prices finished their season with a
doctors are charging for disappointing 4-10 record ,
speciflc services, the owner Leonard Tose fired
qualifica tions of. do ctors, McCormack as head coach .
which medical schools they
"II is with personal regret
attended, their specialties, that I armounce that Mike
the honors they have recel ved McConnack's contract wiU
... to provide the public with a not be renewed, " Tose said in
basis for seeking out one the statement .
doctor over another ," said
"This is an independent
Alfred Dougherty, deputy judgement made by me
director of the FTC Bureau of based on the facts as I know
Competition .
In a joint statement, AMA
Board of Trustees chairman
Raymond Holden and AMA
president Max Parrott said,
"The cornpla,int is directed at
NEW YORK (UPI) - Inthe AMA 's code of ethics
diana was again the
more than 100 y~ars old.
"It Is Ironic th'at the FTCI unanimous choice of the
United Press International
should allack a code devised
Board ol Coaches this week
and operated as a standard of
as the top college basketball
conduct in th e best interests
team in the country.
of the patient."
Indiana, which goes to the
They said patients should
EC
AC Holiday Festival
seek a doctor on the basis of
beginning Friday In New
need and not advertising.
York, bounced back after an
"We think there is enough
'hucksterism in this country overtime victory against
without hucksterizing Kentucky last week to
medicine and we 're going to soundly defeat Georgia Tech
fight It," the statement said. and VIrginia Tech and grab
all 40 first place votes for a
perfect 400 point tbtal.
Maryland, North Carolina
MOVE TIIREATENED
and UCLA each moved up a
SPOKANE, Wash. (UP!) - notch to second , third and
Bill Culler, owner-manager fourth as previously secondof the Pacific Co~t League 's . ranked Marquette slid down
Spokane club , Monday to filth following a 77-73
thre~tened to move the In· overtime loss to unranked
dians to another city unless Minnesota.
the co unt y commissioner
Idle Notre Dame remained
reduces fairgro und rental sixth at 5-1, while undefeated
fees by $3,000.
Alabama (6-()), Nevada-Las .

Doctors defend
old policy of
no advertising

legislation could have done
much to sta bilize this nation's
const ruction industry."
The construction industry
hailed the veto, but the
Associated Builders and Con·
tractors urged Dunlop to stay
in his job because "the industry so rely needs his
pragmatic approach to ·its
problems."
Th e veto carne after .
pressUre from Republican
politicans who warned the
President his signature on the
bill would cause many conservatives to turn to GOP
challenger Ronald Reagan in
the 1976 election. Reagan
opp(lsed the bill.
The bill would have given
labor something it had sought
for the past quarlero(:enlury,
the right to shut down an
entire construction site In a
dispute with only one subcontractor.
It also would have stream'
lined the chaotic system of
local contract bargaining in
the construction industry.

Eagles ax McCormick
them, and of course in no
small way measured on our
won~osl record," he said.
"1 will make no further
co!nments except to say without lear of contradiction !rom
any source, that in the entire
history of the NFL no coach
or general manager or
combination of both has had
the total willing and unstinting cooperation and
auwnorny granted by me in
all the pa .nree years ."
Tose read the statement at
a noon news conference and
then left.

By RICK VM&lt; SANT
CINCINNATI (UPI ) Quiet Ken Anderson has
become the :~main man " of
the Cincinnati Bengals.
And, just as it was lor much
of the regular season, the
Bengals will once again be
counting on the unassuming
quarterback to bring them
through Sunday 's playoff
game.against the Raiders in
Odkland .
Anderson is as guarded
with his predictions as be is
with his self-evaluations for
public perusal, and as usual
his outlook for the Raiders
game is shielded with "ifs."
" If we play the type of
game we're capable of and if
we don 't make too many
mistakes, then we can beat
Oakland," says the 26-yearold Anderson. "Oakland Is a
big defensive threat. They
have a good, experienced
defensive line, but if we play
well, we'll beat tbern."
It was rnainlv through
. Anderson's precision passing
that Cincinnati built its 11-3
season mark and now the
learn needs him to remain
cool and accurate in' the fire
of the playoffs.
The pride of lillie
Augustana College in Rock
Island, m. (where his football
uniform No . 14, the same he
wears willhe Bengals, has
been retired), Anderson has
grown up quickly in the NFL.
Now in his fifth year, An·
derson reflects the grooming
of head coach Paul Brown,
who
appreciates
the
"discipline, wholesomeness
and hurnllly" he finds in
Anderson. Brown says his
quarterback is "Americana
at its best."
Anderson set several club
records this season, including
most pass completions (228),
most TD passes (21) and
most passing · yards (3,169).
"But," recalls the Batavia,
Dl., native, "I had my worst
game of the season against

Hoosiers hold onto No. 1

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Vegas (8-0) and Cincirmati (7·
0) held seventh through ninth ,
respectively. Alabama and
Nevada-Las Vegas won twice
and Cincinnati once.
Louisville, with victories
over St. Louis and Manhal·
tan, jumped five places to
round out the top 10 at 5-1.

Michigan Jed the second 10,
followed by North carolina
State , Washington , Tennessee, Rutgers , San
Francisco, St. John's (N.Y.)
and Kentucky with Arizona
State, Kansas State and
Southern cal tied for 19th.

Oaklanrl J don 't want that
kind of game again."
That Oct. 19 duel here in a
steady rain was one of the lew
games that Bengals managed
to win without a major
contribution from Anderson.
Anderson completed only
four of 19 passes and threw a
career-high
four
interceptions. But the Bengal
defense also picked of! four
Oakland aerials and · rookie
defensive back Marvin Cobb
returned one of them ~2 yards
for the winning touchdown in
the 14-10 thriller.
Based on what the BenRals
did most of the season, the

Cincy offensive game plan for
Sunday figures to revolve
around Anderson's usuallyaccurate arm-a lot of short
p;1sses al'd an occasional try
for the bomb to neet. wide
receiver Isaac Curtis.
San Diego quarterback
Jesse Freitas, who suffered
through a 47-17 trouncing by
Cincinna li in the regular
season finale, compares
Anderson with Minnesota's
Fran Tarkenton.
"Tarkenton will pick you
apart piece by piece," notes
Freitas. "Anderson will do
that too, but Cincinnati al,so is
a threat to score anytime

ANTA CLAUS HAD TO RETURN TO
HIS NORTH POL.E HOME, 50 HE
GAVE THE WONDERFUL MITTEN

SO 8/G TO PETER AND PENNY AS
SOUVENIR TO REMEMBER HIM BY!

PASADENA, call!. (UP! )
- Woody Hayes refuses I!!
budge on the question of a
national college football
playoff tournament.
"I like it just the way it is
now ," the Ohio State football
coach said. "I'm not sure the
people who are advocating
such a playoff know what's
going on.
"Duffy Daugherty used to
talk about it but he used to
talk about a lot of things and
you never knew if he was
kidding or not.
"I think it would make the
season too long and it would .
create only one winner.' I'm
dead set against that. Bowls
can be overdone but I like to
see a lot of winners and not
just one,"
Hayes and his Buckeyes
visited Disneyland Monday
and fraternized for an af.
lernoon with Dick Venneil
and the UCLA Bruins, their
Rose Bowl opponents.
Quarterbacks Cornelius
Greene of Ohio State and
John Sciarra of UCLA
engaged in friendly conversation and toured parts of
the
amusement park
together.
The Buckeyes worked out
in the morning but Vermeil
gave his team the day off.
"From a coach's standpoint,'' Vermeil said, "you
don 'I like to see a break in
concentration. But we have
.been working .very hard for
the last four days. So it was
good ·to have a' release for
them."
Sciarra said U{;LA
probably would use Its option

game more on New Year's
Day than the Bruins did in
their 41-20 loss to Ohio State
in a regular season game at
U&gt;s Angeles Oct. 4.
"We also will probably put

}

DALLAS (UP!)- The Rev.
C.H . Gerald Is not yet ready
I!! call Woody Hayes a saint.
But it seems as if he thinks
Hayes at least .qualifies for
Good Old Boy status.
''There is fellowship among
the coaches at Ohio State,"
said Gerald. "Did you know
that not lllle of the coaches on
that staff smokes? And the
boys have to be in bed by 10
p.m.
"I love that."
Gerald's glowing character
reference for Hayes came In
response to published reports
in Dallas that Hayes dropped
a $100 biU in the collection
plate early this year while on
a recruiting trip- the chief
subject of which was Gerald's
son .
Roderic Gerald , who
eventually enrolled at Ohio
Slate, was a highly prlzf!)
recruit from Dallas South
Oak Cliff high school. ·
Although ~e played sparingly
in his lreslunan year, Gerald
scored
twice
against
Wisconsin and is a major
factor in the Buckeyes future
plans.

~'3 THE PENGUIN TWINS WAVED

,.n: SANTA'S

616 MlTTE:N TO BID

TI-IEIR GOOeY J:RIEND GOODBY;
· SOME.THINE&gt; DROPPED OUT OF
THE MITTEN!

beer?
hepatitis are caused by reaction to alcohol. ObDEAR READER - Part of viruses. Most of the viously, when the liver cells
the confusion results from . medicines we use in in- ;u'e already damaged and
failure to separate the many fections are antibiotics and trying I!! recover, you don't
different forms of liver are not effective against want to take a chemical thai
disease a person can have. hepatitis viruses. In many damages the liver.
Hepatitis only means in - instances about all that can · Alcohol should' be strictly
namrnation of the liver and be done is to minimize the forbidden until there is good
does not tell you the cause. damage to the liver and walt evidence that the liver has
You can have hepatitis for the di9ease to run its completely recovered. Ths is
from infectious agents, and at course. The length of time judged by various tests of
least two different fonns of a that takes depends a lot on liver function and other
virus can cause viral the in\lividual, but it is not clinical Information the
hepatitis. You can also have justa two-week affair as with doctor gets from his
hepatitis from chemical the common cold.
,exarninallon . The ,length of
llxins. And, hepatitis may be
It is possible that ·a person lime it takes lor the liver to
a complication of several infected with viral hepatitis re~over from hepatitis varies
different Infectious diseases. wilj harbor the virus for a greatly, and depends also ori
The most COIJlmon fonns of lifetime. Such an individual how much liver damage has
may not be contagious unless occurred . Obviously, it can be
PLAYING NITELY
his blood Is used for a trans- months before a person with
fusion , or in the preparation , severe viral hepntltis can
of serum . Anyone with a safely drink alcohol again.
history of infectious hepalilis And, if there has been exshould never give blood. The tenslve llver damage, any
TUESDAY THRU SATURDAY
blood is tested at the bank fo1· arnoun t of alcohol poses some
ariy evidence of such a hazard.
prevlous lnfecUon.
Readers who want in·
There Is no diirect evidence lonnallon on gall bladder
that smoking Is hannful to disease can send In 50 cents
TUES.- THURS .
FRI. &amp; SAT.
res:overy
from hepetltis, but for The . Health Letter,
8:30-1:00
, , 30·2:00
it can't be ~elpful and even in nwnber 4-9, Gall Stones and
a healthy person It causes Gall Bladder Disease with a
some harm . If I had my long,
stamped,
selfchoice,
no
one
would
smoke.
addressed
envelope
for
992-3629
There is abundant evidence mailing .. Send your !titer w
that alcohol is a toxin to liver Dr. Lamb in care o! this
Best tn
cells. This is not dependent newspaper, P. 0. Box 1551,
!,.ive Entertainment
upon 1 poor diet or anything Radio City Station , New
like ttytt. It is a direct toxic York, NY 10019.

The MEIGS INN

the ball in the air more, " he
said. "But it is a little hard to
tell. After you have played II
games, there isn't much
more you can do.'.'
Vermeil revealed he had

Rev. Gerald feels
Woody good man

Misinformation on hepatitis

GEO. HALL

City, 'the lefty hit ll of 12
passes for 134 yards.
The Bengals will practice
this week "on the same
schedule· we use throughout
the regular season," says
Brown.
That means that after Monday's day off, the players
return for fibn study, skull
sessions and a light workout
today,
Intense, full offensive and
defensive driUs are scheduled
Wednesday and ThUrsdayChristmas Day. The week
tails off with some light work
Friday and the learn flies to
Oakland Saturday.

Woody against NCAA playoffs

DR. LAMB

DEAR DR. LAMB - Would
you please answer some
questions on hepatitis? There
is so much of it around now
and also a lot of misinformation about it, too. I
would like to know what
hepatitis is. Why is it that
medication is not given for it,
just rest and good food• Is it
contagious until the patient's
blood tests are normal ? Why
does it take so long to recover
from it? Does smoking slow
down the recovery? Why is It
that even an occasional beer
is forbidden during recovery?
How soon after recovery can
a person have an occasional

because Curtis is out there. "
Although the San Diego
game was a "must win"
affair for the Bengals to
make the playoffs, Anderson
did his job so well he wasn't
even needed in the second
half. In the first ao minut~s he
completed 18 of 23 passes for
216 yards and three touchdowns. For good measure, he
ran a quarterback sneak lor
another TD.
Anderson 's counterpart at
Oakland, Ken Stabler, also
closed the regul$r season on a
high note. Playing . only the
first half in a 28-20
walkthrough over Kansas

'

A Christmas Tale b~· D. Floreck and D. Baur

illittru @In ilig

best-Bro1.v~

The reports published
Sunday said Ohio Slate ,
T&lt;!llnessee and Colorado had
'come under NCAA scrutiny
for their acllvilles In at!
tempting to recruit Gerald .
Southern Methodist
University has also had w
answer an NCAA report inw
an attempt to recruit Gerald.
The elder Gerald, pastor of
the Community Baptist
Church an'd a member of a
national Bapllst missionary
board, said 'he could not say
whether Hayes had donated
the $100 to his church other
than his own conviction that
Hayes would not do such a
thing.
"I don't like a whole lot of
publicity on that stuff,
especially when it's not
true," said Gerald.
"I don't see where a man
can come to church, worship
God and hear the gospel
preached and then have his
f11!rne hung all over the world .
· "A man of Woody Hayes'
standard could not be in the
businsss he's In these many
years if he did any\hlng
wrong.
"I'm posillve that nothing
was done and that there was
no foul play by any school."
Tennessee
was
in ·
vesligaled because of a ~
loan made to Roderic Gerald
by an alumnus of that school
(the elder Gerald said the
loan was made by a personal
friend and tjlat it was paid
back).
· Colorado rfllllrledly was a
party to the investigation
because of a job offer to the
reverend from an airlines
that would enable hbn to fly
to Boulder and see his son
play (Gerald again says the
job offer carne !rom a per·
sonal friend ).
The NCAA has already
asked SMU to respond to an
allegallon that a Mustang
assistant coach waved a
fistful of money In front of the
younger Gerald's nose and
said he could have had It if he
had come to SMU.
"That man from SMU
didn't mean anything by it,"
the reverend said. " It 's
pitiful the way people run
other people down."
Gerald was most incensed
at any attack 9n Hayes. The
Ohio State coach bas denied
putting $100 Into the church
collection plate. Hayes said
he visited the church twice
and each time contributed
$10, which he said was his
standard conlrlbullon when
he attended a church.
"I have to travel a lot on
my missionary work,"

changed his plans and
wouldn't use all 16 days
alloted to the teams for Rose
Bowl practice. Instead, he
will use 14.
Wendell Tyler, UCLA's lop
rusher with 1,216 yards, will
have a cast taken off his lett
wrist Friday . He played with
a cracked wrist this year and ·
the cast was placed on it after
the Bruins' last regular
season game.

Gerald said, "and I left the
recruiting pretty much up to
Roderic. I tried to guide him
along, though.
"Actually, my preference
was Baylor. But Roderic had
to live with the school for four
years so it was his own
choice.
"But the old man (Hayes )
carne down here and Roderic
listened to him and liked him.

NBA Standings
By Un it ed Press International

Eastern Conference
Atlantic Di vi sion

W l

Pet .

GB

Bos ton
Philadelphia
Buffalo

19 7 .731
19 9 .679
16 13 .552

41 '2

New York

11 20 .355 10•'7

I

CeAfril l Oivlsion

W l

Pet.

Atl anra
Cleveland

15 12 .556
IS 14 517

Houston

13 13 .500

Wash ing ton
13 13 500
New Orleans 11 17 393
We ste rn Con fer ence

GB
1

11 2 .
1• 2
4• 1

M idwest Di vision
W l Pet. GB
De troit r ,
11 14 .440
Milwaukee
11 15 .423
'•7
Kansas City
10 17 .370 Q
Chicago
7 20 .259 S
Pacific Divi si on
W. l Pet. GB
Golden Sti!lte 21 6 .na
Los An'geles
18 13 .581 5
Phoe ni x •
14 11 .560 6
sel! lll e
15 15 .500 111
Por !land
10 20 .333 l2 1 1

.Wittenb~rg is
·.still .unbeaten ·
lly llalted Preu In·
leroatlaul
Undefeated Wittenberg
knocked
olf
Eastern
Mlchl&amp;an for its sixth straight
win SU8 Mond8y, and Ohio
State .b~trely escaped a
illlrpl'lslng !J:vansville comeback iii the final seconds In
Ohio college basketball action.
•
Tonlght, only two games
are scheduled, led by ninth·
ranked Clnclnnat's visit to
the West Coast and for a
game with Pepperdine
(CaUf.). Steubenville entertains .Indiana. Stale of
Pennsylvania.. .
Ther~ are no games Chrisl·
maa Eve or Clrlslmas Day.
Only one Ohio college team
returns to the hardwood
Friday night (Cincinnati In
the Rainbow Clallalc), but an
abbreviated six-game slate is
llcheduled .SatiD'day.
. •, Wittenberg's Tom Dunn
.cracked Eastern Michigan's
·defen11es for 22 points, while

.:white Faloons,
dropped 82-73
MASON - Four players
scored in double figures
Monday anernoon as Win·
field defeated Waharna, 82-73
In basketball.
Winfield led by 28 points
with five minutes left In the
game, but substituted freely,
allowing Waharna to close the
gap.
Steve Ba,ley scored 23
points to lead Winfield, now 41, while Dave Sowards added
'16, Marly Chapman 14, and
Matt Toth 13.
Terry Tucker and Tim
Davis led Waharna with 15
points each.
~ The !011 drops Wahama to
~. 'J11e game was played
before the student body.
Winfield
IB 16 28 20--112
· Bailey 23, Chapman 14,
Sowards 16, Toth 13, Jividen
2, Hale 4, Matthews 6, Smith
4.
Wahama 14 12 14 33-73
, Riggs 10, Goldsby 12;
Holbrook 10, Tucker 15, Davis
i&amp;, Smith 2, R. Tucker 3, J.
Tucker~-

Rick Whiie added 16 points
and 10 rebounds as the
Tigers' easily ran away from
the Y]l8llantl, Mlch. team.
The Tigers buill a 33-20
halflbne margin · and left
their hosts with a '4-3 recor,d.
Columbus native Fred
Poole flipped In a couple of
free throws to give Ohio Slate
a seemingly safe nine-point
lead with 55 seconds to ·go
Mond~y
nlglit against
Evansville. But it took a
rnis8ed shot by the Indiana
team atllie final gun to give
the Buckeyes tlleir fourth
Oltraight win , 79-78.
Evansville players thought
a foul durmg Mike Smith's
final shot shlluld have given
them an after-the buzzer try.
at victory- but the officials
thought otherwise and left the
Purple Aces on the courtlosers of their fourth game in
six starts this year .
Buckeye · guard Larry
Bolden had 19 polilts for Ohio
State.
In other games, Toledo
burned ita hom~ID'I nets
wilh a 70 per cent accuracy
!rom the flovr for the first
haU In roiling past Butler 11&amp;56. The game wun 'l as close
88 the final 13 point margin,
88 Toledo ran out to a 46-18
halftime lead and kept a ~
point second half margin
until the starters were
benched.
The Rockets, now 3-4, were
led by 6-loot senior guard
Larry Cole with 23 points.
Deve Speicher added 15.
in Grand Rapids, Mich.,
Flv~ C&amp;lvin players got Into
double figurea and proved to
be troublesome hosts for their
own tournament in embarrassing Cedarville 104-74
In the opening round of the
Calvin &lt;llrlstrnu BasketbaU
Tournament.
The vtctol-y put Calvin iniO
tonight's finals with Dllnols
Benedictine, an 87·72 winner
over Aqulnu Monday nlgl1!.
Calvin led throughout to
booat its record to 4-1 while
~arville dropped to 11-4.
A thought fQr the day :

Arnfrlcan novellat 1b0111111
Wolfe utd, "MOll of the uioe
we think we're lid!, It's all In
the mind."

Terps win seventh in
row·' Lucas pops in 22
.

, ·

By TOM WHITFIELD
llPI Sports Writer
COLLEGE PARK, Md.
(l)PJ) - ' The second-ranked
Maryland Terps won their
seventh slr~ight game
Monday night and, for on~, it
wasn't over a team universally considered a pushover.
The Ter]ll , led by AllAmerica swingrnan John
Lucas, used a sticky man-toman defense to slop
previolisly unbeaten North
Carollna-clharlolte, 70-60. The
411ers had won six straighJ,
Including big decisions over
two Southeastern Conference
teams - Florida and Vanderbilt.
MarylAnrl tonk • ~n.. half-

,l

time lead and used UNC· man Larry Gibson )."
Lucas led Maryland with 22
Charlotte turnovers early in
the first eight minutes of the points, while guard Maurice
second half to extend that Howard added 13 and forrnilrgin to 52-38. The 49ers ward Steve !ileppard had 12.
(;enter Cedric Maxwell ,
closed the margin to seven
points with 4:10 remaining, who kepi the 49ers In the
but Lucas and his backcoiD't g~rne late with his shooting,
parlner, Brad Davis, scored had 19 points and 13
key baskets to help the Terps rebounds . Forward Lew
Massey added 18 points.
pull away.
Elsewhere In co llege
"I think we tried to break it
basketball,
South carolina
open too soon in the first haU,
roUted
Yale
10().66 and
forced some shots, and let
them get back into the Oklahoma. State dumped
ba!lgame," said Terp coach Vlrginia 72-69 In the opening
Lefty Drlesell. "We made a games of the Carolina
lot of mistakes, particularly Basketball Classic, Deiroil
our young people (sophomore edged Michigan State lllHI2,
Lawrence Boston and fresh- IDinois ripped Rice lil6-G4,
Purdue whipped california

Monday' s
Ohio College
BJ s ketball Results
United Pren lntern•tlonal
Cltveland Sta te 32 'Xavier 78
Ohio Stal e 79, ~ven!vllle 78
Toledo 69 Butler .56
·
Wittenberg
63
Eas t ern
Michigan 58

C•lvln Chr l,fmits
Tournament
Calvin M lch 104 Ce d arville 74

more than the Ali-Frazier
heavyweight chamP\onship
in Manila at the end of September .
The si1th game of the
Series, In which Carlton
Flak's horne run In the 12th
inning gave Boston a 7-0
· victory, and Cincinnati 's
come-from-behind 4-3 win ih
the deciding seventh game,
swung the vote in favor of the
baseball classic .
Ruffian had never lost
before her rna~ch race and
had the lead against Foolish
Pleasure, the Kentucky
Derby winner , when she
lroke ber right foreleg In the
backstretch . The 3-year-old
filly had to be put away
despite efforts by a team of ·
doctors to save her.
The All-Frazier bout was
the third, and decisive ,
meeting between the two
super heavyweights. The
fight proved to be a bitter
war, just as the two previous
bouts In_New York, but In tbe
end All retained hla champlolltlliip when a hallbllnded
Frazter'was not Permitted to
answer the bell for the 15111
round.
The Pittsburgh Steelers' 1&amp;6 SUper Bowl triumph last

:1

Pro

:I

:Standin~s:
By Unit ed Pre!&gt;s ln!erna tional

Tournaments
Carolina Classic
( 1st Ro und )
South Car olina 100 Yale 66
Oklahoma 51 12 Virg inia 69

No . Ill . 75 Loyola ( 111.) 69
Ohio St . 79 Evansvill e 7B
Pur due 97 Ca l ifornia 79

St . Louis 87 Mo . St. L ouis 67
To ledo 69 Bull er 56
Wittenberg 63 E!on _ Mi ch . 58

South west
Arizona 88 Old Dominion 14
H Payn e 90 Ok la Scien ce 7'2
New Mexico 81 u .s l nt' l 57
New Mexico SL 90 BY U 79
Okla . City 76 Te x. Ar l ington 65
We st

percentage, .566. He also
displayed superior defensive
abilities.
Mter I 'h years battling
todiffetent support and financial woes, the WFL gave up
the ghost , but basketball also
had its casualties. The ABA
lost the Memphis Sounds
between seasons and , when
they tried to reform as the
Baltimore Claws, folded
before the season began . The
San Diego Sails and Utah
Stars then1 dissolved in mid·
season .
Bayi , the Tanzanian Air
Force mechanic, had an unbeaten indoor season before
shattering Jim Ryun 's eightyear old mark by one-tenth of
a second when he ran a 3 : ~1.0
at Kingston, Jamaica . But
three months Ia ler In
Goteburg, SWeden, Walker, a
barrel c hested New
Zealander, ran history's first
sub-3 :51) mile when he
clocked 3:49.4.

January over the Mirmesota
Vikings was ranked fourth,
with 97 points, followed by
John Wooden's retirement as
UCLA's basketball coach and
the Bruins' subsequent
national championship in
March, which drew 82'h
points.
Rounding out the voting
were : Fred Lynn 's unique
-accomplishment of being
named American League
Rookie of the Year and MVP ;
the sagging sports economy
which resulted in the folding
of the World Football League
and four ABA teams; the
world recordbreaking mile
runs of Filbert Bayi and John
Walker; Golden State's NBA
championship; and
Philadelphia's
second
straight Stanley Cup.
Wooden 's Bruins sent their
coach Into retirement with an
ernollonal 92-85 triwnph over
Kentucky for the NCAA title,
his lOth national championship in 12 years.
Lym had a tremendous
Other stories receiving
year for the Red So• . He suppol't included the death ol
balled .331 and hit 21 home casey Stengel and Ohio State
runs and 105 RBis. The 23- University's Archie Griffin
year-old lefthanded led the becoming history 's first
AL In runs scored, 103, Heisman Trophy repeal
doubles, 47,, imd in slugging winner.

NHL Standi ng~
Bv United Press International
Ca mpbell Conference
Patrick Division
W L T Pts
Ph i la delphia
12 4 7
51
N Y . Islanders
19 10 6
44
Atlanta
17 1.4 3
37
N Y Rangers
14 17 4
32
Smyth e Division

W l T Ph .

97-79.
Detroit 's Dennis Boyd sank
East
two free throws with 30 Adelphi 80 w New England 60
Pratt 73 Domin ican ( NY 1 66
seconds left and Laval Perry Ouinnip
iac 77 Kulltown 65
hit a clinching free throw Rider 87 Sl Mary'S ( N S l 78
with eight seconds to go to Southampton 79 Slonv Brook 70
help the Titan's offset a II·
So uth
point performance by the Georgia St 84 Mor ehouse 74
L SU 93 FDU Ru th erford 70
Spartans' Terry Furlow.
Maryland 70 No. Ca r Char lot te
Rich Adams scored 19 5()
a 68 Vanderbilt 57
points, 18 in the first hall, to Nebrask
No . Ca r oli na 70 So Florida 64
pace Illinois over Rice . No. Ken tucky 75 Thomas More
68
Purdue, was paced by Walter So. Miss 87 Arkansas s r 83
Jordan's 22 points in its win T enn . Tech 8B Valdosta St 70
T ulane 90 Cornett 12
over
California .
The West Texas 64 Sam ford 49
Boilermakers, evening their
M idwes t
season record at 3-3, led only C Michigan 88 Ferr is St 55
43-39 at the half but were in Clevel and 51. 82 Xavier (Ohio )
co mmand throughout the 78
Detr oit 85 Michigan Sl. 82
Ill ino is 106 Rice 64
second half.

Reds World Series win over
Bosox top '75 sports story
By JACK SAUNDERS
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
Clnclnnati Reds' exciting
sevengame World Series
victory over the Boston Rect
Sox waa voted the lop sports
story of 107~ by a wide
margin In balloting by United
Press International sports
writers across the country.
or the l!l-man panel, 16
writers naming the series as
their first choice. Overall, the
October classic drew 184
points on a lo.N-7~-3-2-1
basis, with every writer
naming it on his ballot--the
only 1975 story so acclaimed.
A considerably sadder
event, the death or the great
lilly Ruffian following her
match race wllh t:'oolish
Pleasure in July, finished
second with 128 polpls, 13

r------------.

Geo . Fox 91 Wsn . Baptist 74
Gonzaga 71 Puget Sound 67
M innesota 89 St anford 84
Nev . Reno 104 Humbo ldt St. 55
Portl and 78 Hayward St n.
San Jose 51. 83 Port1111nd St. 81
So. Dakota St . 76 Val para iso 74
UC Riversid e 63 John Brown 59
Utah 90 Calif . Irvine 55
Weber St. 91 Ca r r oll (Mon l.l 59

Chicago
12 10 11
35
vancouver
11 14 . 6
28
St Louis
10 18 5
25
Kansas Ci t y
10 19 4
74
M innesota
11 20 1
23
Wa les Conference
Norris Divi si on
W. L T Pts
Mont r eal
24 5 6
54
L os Angeles
11 14 2
36
Pittsburgh
13 15 4
30
De troit
10 20 4
24
washifigton
J 27 4
10
Adam s Division

W. l T Ph

Buffalo
20 9 4
Boston
17 S 8
Toronto
IJ 12 8
Ca liforn ia
12 19 3
Monday's Result
Toronto 4 Los Ang eles 3
Tuesday · ~ Game s
Pillsburgh·at N .Y . Rlln gers
Ph il adelphia at Atlan ta
L os An geles al Boston
St. Louis at Ch icago
Buffalo at Ka nsa s City
Wednesday 's Gam es
( No games sc heduled)

44

42
34

27

WHA Siandings
By Unifed Press International
East

W. l T Pts .

Cincinnati
New En gland
Indianapolis
Clevel and

Houston
M inn esota
SM Diego
Ph oe ni x
Denver

15 16 I
14 16 3
13 16 2
11
West

19

2

31
31
28
24

W. L T . Pts .
19 12 0
38

15

II

2

32

13 13
12 14

•

30

3
1

27
25

12 16
canadian

W. l T . Pfs .
Winn ipeg
23 12 0
46
Quebec
22 13 1
45
Calga r y
16 14 2
34
Edmonton
15 19 2
32
Tor on to
10 19 3
23
Monday's Result
Ne w Eng land 4 Cleveli!nd 1
Tuesday's Games
M inneso ta at Den ver
Phoenix at Cincinnat i
Quebe&lt; at San Diego
To ron to at CaiQarv
Win n ipeg at Edmont on
Wednes day's Gam es
(N o games scheduled)

Want More
Protection For
Less Money?
This is a question Meigs County's oldest and
largest insurC~nce agency has been an swering lor your neighbors lor many years.
Ask one of them and see? Or stop in and see
us at your convenience .
" When you see us don 't think of insurance,
but when you think of insurance see us ."

DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY

-~
~
. . -, - .-

MlDDL.EPORT, OHIO
PH. 992-2342

Monday's Results
(No games scheduled)
Tuesday's Gam es
8os ton at Buffalo
Washington at Detroit
Chicago at Houston
New York at Milwaukee
New Or leans at Golden State ·•
Kansas Cily at Los Angeles
seattle at Portland
Wednesday' s Gam es
( No games scheduled)

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�3 - The Daily
. Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Dec. 23,. 197~

nderson Americana at its

President vetoes his
own ·picketing bill
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - . through Con gress afte r
President Ford has vetoed a negoti ations between conbill that would have expll!1ded struction unions and the
const ru ction
workers ' building 'industry, then
picketing power - and it strongly urged Ford to sign it .
When Ford's veto carne ,
&lt;'ould eost him his secretary
of labor.
Dunlop did nothing Monday
Labor Secretary John I!! dispel reports he would
Dw1lop helped steer the bill consider resigning in protest.
The veto meant Ford
reneged on his promise
earlier this year to Dunlop
and the AFL-CIO to sign the
bill under certain conditions.
It also meant the politically
potent AFL-CIO would, as
promised, " actively work
against" Ford in the next
election .
By CRAIG A. PALMER
A spokesman said Dunlop
WASHINGTON (UP! )
would
lake a couple of weeks
1lte governmen t has accused
to
consider
his next · move.
t)le medical profession of
violating antitrust laws by Dunlop issued a statement
refusing to let doctors ad· saying the veto "comes as no
great surpri se, lor the
vertise .
The American Medical pressures on him to do so
Assoca llon said it would fight were substantial.
"[ am naturally disapthe charges and what it sa id
was the Federal Trade pointed, lor I maintain my
Co mmi ss ion's attempt to conviction that on its merits,
promote m e dical the enactment of thi s
"hucksterism ."
The FTC issued an anti trust complaint Monday
against
the
AMA ,
representin g about 17,000
doct6rs, the Conne cticut
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) State Medlcall)oclety and the With a 10-line statement,
New Haven County, Conn., Mike McCormack suffered
Medical Society.
another bitter defeat Mon"We ~auld hope, at the day.
ver.v least, the public would
One day after the Eagles
be made aware of the prices finished their season with a
doctors are charging for disappointing 4-10 record ,
speciflc services, the owner Leonard Tose fired
qualifica tions of. do ctors, McCormack as head coach .
which medical schools they
"II is with personal regret
attended, their specialties, that I armounce that Mike
the honors they have recel ved McConnack's contract wiU
... to provide the public with a not be renewed, " Tose said in
basis for seeking out one the statement .
doctor over another ," said
"This is an independent
Alfred Dougherty, deputy judgement made by me
director of the FTC Bureau of based on the facts as I know
Competition .
In a joint statement, AMA
Board of Trustees chairman
Raymond Holden and AMA
president Max Parrott said,
"The cornpla,int is directed at
NEW YORK (UPI) - Inthe AMA 's code of ethics
diana was again the
more than 100 y~ars old.
"It Is Ironic th'at the FTCI unanimous choice of the
United Press International
should allack a code devised
Board ol Coaches this week
and operated as a standard of
as the top college basketball
conduct in th e best interests
team in the country.
of the patient."
Indiana, which goes to the
They said patients should
EC
AC Holiday Festival
seek a doctor on the basis of
beginning Friday In New
need and not advertising.
York, bounced back after an
"We think there is enough
'hucksterism in this country overtime victory against
without hucksterizing Kentucky last week to
medicine and we 're going to soundly defeat Georgia Tech
fight It," the statement said. and VIrginia Tech and grab
all 40 first place votes for a
perfect 400 point tbtal.
Maryland, North Carolina
MOVE TIIREATENED
and UCLA each moved up a
SPOKANE, Wash. (UP!) - notch to second , third and
Bill Culler, owner-manager fourth as previously secondof the Pacific Co~t League 's . ranked Marquette slid down
Spokane club , Monday to filth following a 77-73
thre~tened to move the In· overtime loss to unranked
dians to another city unless Minnesota.
the co unt y commissioner
Idle Notre Dame remained
reduces fairgro und rental sixth at 5-1, while undefeated
fees by $3,000.
Alabama (6-()), Nevada-Las .

Doctors defend
old policy of
no advertising

legislation could have done
much to sta bilize this nation's
const ruction industry."
The construction industry
hailed the veto, but the
Associated Builders and Con·
tractors urged Dunlop to stay
in his job because "the industry so rely needs his
pragmatic approach to ·its
problems."
Th e veto carne after .
pressUre from Republican
politicans who warned the
President his signature on the
bill would cause many conservatives to turn to GOP
challenger Ronald Reagan in
the 1976 election. Reagan
opp(lsed the bill.
The bill would have given
labor something it had sought
for the past quarlero(:enlury,
the right to shut down an
entire construction site In a
dispute with only one subcontractor.
It also would have stream'
lined the chaotic system of
local contract bargaining in
the construction industry.

Eagles ax McCormick
them, and of course in no
small way measured on our
won~osl record," he said.
"1 will make no further
co!nments except to say without lear of contradiction !rom
any source, that in the entire
history of the NFL no coach
or general manager or
combination of both has had
the total willing and unstinting cooperation and
auwnorny granted by me in
all the pa .nree years ."
Tose read the statement at
a noon news conference and
then left.

By RICK VM&lt; SANT
CINCINNATI (UPI ) Quiet Ken Anderson has
become the :~main man " of
the Cincinnati Bengals.
And, just as it was lor much
of the regular season, the
Bengals will once again be
counting on the unassuming
quarterback to bring them
through Sunday 's playoff
game.against the Raiders in
Odkland .
Anderson is as guarded
with his predictions as be is
with his self-evaluations for
public perusal, and as usual
his outlook for the Raiders
game is shielded with "ifs."
" If we play the type of
game we're capable of and if
we don 't make too many
mistakes, then we can beat
Oakland," says the 26-yearold Anderson. "Oakland Is a
big defensive threat. They
have a good, experienced
defensive line, but if we play
well, we'll beat tbern."
It was rnainlv through
. Anderson's precision passing
that Cincinnati built its 11-3
season mark and now the
learn needs him to remain
cool and accurate in' the fire
of the playoffs.
The pride of lillie
Augustana College in Rock
Island, m. (where his football
uniform No . 14, the same he
wears willhe Bengals, has
been retired), Anderson has
grown up quickly in the NFL.
Now in his fifth year, An·
derson reflects the grooming
of head coach Paul Brown,
who
appreciates
the
"discipline, wholesomeness
and hurnllly" he finds in
Anderson. Brown says his
quarterback is "Americana
at its best."
Anderson set several club
records this season, including
most pass completions (228),
most TD passes (21) and
most passing · yards (3,169).
"But," recalls the Batavia,
Dl., native, "I had my worst
game of the season against

Hoosiers hold onto No. 1

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Vegas (8-0) and Cincirmati (7·
0) held seventh through ninth ,
respectively. Alabama and
Nevada-Las Vegas won twice
and Cincinnati once.
Louisville, with victories
over St. Louis and Manhal·
tan, jumped five places to
round out the top 10 at 5-1.

Michigan Jed the second 10,
followed by North carolina
State , Washington , Tennessee, Rutgers , San
Francisco, St. John's (N.Y.)
and Kentucky with Arizona
State, Kansas State and
Southern cal tied for 19th.

Oaklanrl J don 't want that
kind of game again."
That Oct. 19 duel here in a
steady rain was one of the lew
games that Bengals managed
to win without a major
contribution from Anderson.
Anderson completed only
four of 19 passes and threw a
career-high
four
interceptions. But the Bengal
defense also picked of! four
Oakland aerials and · rookie
defensive back Marvin Cobb
returned one of them ~2 yards
for the winning touchdown in
the 14-10 thriller.
Based on what the BenRals
did most of the season, the

Cincy offensive game plan for
Sunday figures to revolve
around Anderson's usuallyaccurate arm-a lot of short
p;1sses al'd an occasional try
for the bomb to neet. wide
receiver Isaac Curtis.
San Diego quarterback
Jesse Freitas, who suffered
through a 47-17 trouncing by
Cincinna li in the regular
season finale, compares
Anderson with Minnesota's
Fran Tarkenton.
"Tarkenton will pick you
apart piece by piece," notes
Freitas. "Anderson will do
that too, but Cincinnati al,so is
a threat to score anytime

ANTA CLAUS HAD TO RETURN TO
HIS NORTH POL.E HOME, 50 HE
GAVE THE WONDERFUL MITTEN

SO 8/G TO PETER AND PENNY AS
SOUVENIR TO REMEMBER HIM BY!

PASADENA, call!. (UP! )
- Woody Hayes refuses I!!
budge on the question of a
national college football
playoff tournament.
"I like it just the way it is
now ," the Ohio State football
coach said. "I'm not sure the
people who are advocating
such a playoff know what's
going on.
"Duffy Daugherty used to
talk about it but he used to
talk about a lot of things and
you never knew if he was
kidding or not.
"I think it would make the
season too long and it would .
create only one winner.' I'm
dead set against that. Bowls
can be overdone but I like to
see a lot of winners and not
just one,"
Hayes and his Buckeyes
visited Disneyland Monday
and fraternized for an af.
lernoon with Dick Venneil
and the UCLA Bruins, their
Rose Bowl opponents.
Quarterbacks Cornelius
Greene of Ohio State and
John Sciarra of UCLA
engaged in friendly conversation and toured parts of
the
amusement park
together.
The Buckeyes worked out
in the morning but Vermeil
gave his team the day off.
"From a coach's standpoint,'' Vermeil said, "you
don 'I like to see a break in
concentration. But we have
.been working .very hard for
the last four days. So it was
good ·to have a' release for
them."
Sciarra said U{;LA
probably would use Its option

game more on New Year's
Day than the Bruins did in
their 41-20 loss to Ohio State
in a regular season game at
U&gt;s Angeles Oct. 4.
"We also will probably put

}

DALLAS (UP!)- The Rev.
C.H . Gerald Is not yet ready
I!! call Woody Hayes a saint.
But it seems as if he thinks
Hayes at least .qualifies for
Good Old Boy status.
''There is fellowship among
the coaches at Ohio State,"
said Gerald. "Did you know
that not lllle of the coaches on
that staff smokes? And the
boys have to be in bed by 10
p.m.
"I love that."
Gerald's glowing character
reference for Hayes came In
response to published reports
in Dallas that Hayes dropped
a $100 biU in the collection
plate early this year while on
a recruiting trip- the chief
subject of which was Gerald's
son .
Roderic Gerald , who
eventually enrolled at Ohio
Slate, was a highly prlzf!)
recruit from Dallas South
Oak Cliff high school. ·
Although ~e played sparingly
in his lreslunan year, Gerald
scored
twice
against
Wisconsin and is a major
factor in the Buckeyes future
plans.

~'3 THE PENGUIN TWINS WAVED

,.n: SANTA'S

616 MlTTE:N TO BID

TI-IEIR GOOeY J:RIEND GOODBY;
· SOME.THINE&gt; DROPPED OUT OF
THE MITTEN!

beer?
hepatitis are caused by reaction to alcohol. ObDEAR READER - Part of viruses. Most of the viously, when the liver cells
the confusion results from . medicines we use in in- ;u'e already damaged and
failure to separate the many fections are antibiotics and trying I!! recover, you don't
different forms of liver are not effective against want to take a chemical thai
disease a person can have. hepatitis viruses. In many damages the liver.
Hepatitis only means in - instances about all that can · Alcohol should' be strictly
namrnation of the liver and be done is to minimize the forbidden until there is good
does not tell you the cause. damage to the liver and walt evidence that the liver has
You can have hepatitis for the di9ease to run its completely recovered. Ths is
from infectious agents, and at course. The length of time judged by various tests of
least two different fonns of a that takes depends a lot on liver function and other
virus can cause viral the in\lividual, but it is not clinical Information the
hepatitis. You can also have justa two-week affair as with doctor gets from his
hepatitis from chemical the common cold.
,exarninallon . The ,length of
llxins. And, hepatitis may be
It is possible that ·a person lime it takes lor the liver to
a complication of several infected with viral hepatitis re~over from hepatitis varies
different Infectious diseases. wilj harbor the virus for a greatly, and depends also ori
The most COIJlmon fonns of lifetime. Such an individual how much liver damage has
may not be contagious unless occurred . Obviously, it can be
PLAYING NITELY
his blood Is used for a trans- months before a person with
fusion , or in the preparation , severe viral hepntltis can
of serum . Anyone with a safely drink alcohol again.
history of infectious hepalilis And, if there has been exshould never give blood. The tenslve llver damage, any
TUESDAY THRU SATURDAY
blood is tested at the bank fo1· arnoun t of alcohol poses some
ariy evidence of such a hazard.
prevlous lnfecUon.
Readers who want in·
There Is no diirect evidence lonnallon on gall bladder
that smoking Is hannful to disease can send In 50 cents
TUES.- THURS .
FRI. &amp; SAT.
res:overy
from hepetltis, but for The . Health Letter,
8:30-1:00
, , 30·2:00
it can't be ~elpful and even in nwnber 4-9, Gall Stones and
a healthy person It causes Gall Bladder Disease with a
some harm . If I had my long,
stamped,
selfchoice,
no
one
would
smoke.
addressed
envelope
for
992-3629
There is abundant evidence mailing .. Send your !titer w
that alcohol is a toxin to liver Dr. Lamb in care o! this
Best tn
cells. This is not dependent newspaper, P. 0. Box 1551,
!,.ive Entertainment
upon 1 poor diet or anything Radio City Station , New
like ttytt. It is a direct toxic York, NY 10019.

The MEIGS INN

the ball in the air more, " he
said. "But it is a little hard to
tell. After you have played II
games, there isn't much
more you can do.'.'
Vermeil revealed he had

Rev. Gerald feels
Woody good man

Misinformation on hepatitis

GEO. HALL

City, 'the lefty hit ll of 12
passes for 134 yards.
The Bengals will practice
this week "on the same
schedule· we use throughout
the regular season," says
Brown.
That means that after Monday's day off, the players
return for fibn study, skull
sessions and a light workout
today,
Intense, full offensive and
defensive driUs are scheduled
Wednesday and ThUrsdayChristmas Day. The week
tails off with some light work
Friday and the learn flies to
Oakland Saturday.

Woody against NCAA playoffs

DR. LAMB

DEAR DR. LAMB - Would
you please answer some
questions on hepatitis? There
is so much of it around now
and also a lot of misinformation about it, too. I
would like to know what
hepatitis is. Why is it that
medication is not given for it,
just rest and good food• Is it
contagious until the patient's
blood tests are normal ? Why
does it take so long to recover
from it? Does smoking slow
down the recovery? Why is It
that even an occasional beer
is forbidden during recovery?
How soon after recovery can
a person have an occasional

because Curtis is out there. "
Although the San Diego
game was a "must win"
affair for the Bengals to
make the playoffs, Anderson
did his job so well he wasn't
even needed in the second
half. In the first ao minut~s he
completed 18 of 23 passes for
216 yards and three touchdowns. For good measure, he
ran a quarterback sneak lor
another TD.
Anderson 's counterpart at
Oakland, Ken Stabler, also
closed the regul$r season on a
high note. Playing . only the
first half in a 28-20
walkthrough over Kansas

'

A Christmas Tale b~· D. Floreck and D. Baur

illittru @In ilig

best-Bro1.v~

The reports published
Sunday said Ohio Slate ,
T&lt;!llnessee and Colorado had
'come under NCAA scrutiny
for their acllvilles In at!
tempting to recruit Gerald .
Southern Methodist
University has also had w
answer an NCAA report inw
an attempt to recruit Gerald.
The elder Gerald, pastor of
the Community Baptist
Church an'd a member of a
national Bapllst missionary
board, said 'he could not say
whether Hayes had donated
the $100 to his church other
than his own conviction that
Hayes would not do such a
thing.
"I don't like a whole lot of
publicity on that stuff,
especially when it's not
true," said Gerald.
"I don't see where a man
can come to church, worship
God and hear the gospel
preached and then have his
f11!rne hung all over the world .
· "A man of Woody Hayes'
standard could not be in the
businsss he's In these many
years if he did any\hlng
wrong.
"I'm posillve that nothing
was done and that there was
no foul play by any school."
Tennessee
was
in ·
vesligaled because of a ~
loan made to Roderic Gerald
by an alumnus of that school
(the elder Gerald said the
loan was made by a personal
friend and tjlat it was paid
back).
· Colorado rfllllrledly was a
party to the investigation
because of a job offer to the
reverend from an airlines
that would enable hbn to fly
to Boulder and see his son
play (Gerald again says the
job offer carne !rom a per·
sonal friend ).
The NCAA has already
asked SMU to respond to an
allegallon that a Mustang
assistant coach waved a
fistful of money In front of the
younger Gerald's nose and
said he could have had It if he
had come to SMU.
"That man from SMU
didn't mean anything by it,"
the reverend said. " It 's
pitiful the way people run
other people down."
Gerald was most incensed
at any attack 9n Hayes. The
Ohio State coach bas denied
putting $100 Into the church
collection plate. Hayes said
he visited the church twice
and each time contributed
$10, which he said was his
standard conlrlbullon when
he attended a church.
"I have to travel a lot on
my missionary work,"

changed his plans and
wouldn't use all 16 days
alloted to the teams for Rose
Bowl practice. Instead, he
will use 14.
Wendell Tyler, UCLA's lop
rusher with 1,216 yards, will
have a cast taken off his lett
wrist Friday . He played with
a cracked wrist this year and ·
the cast was placed on it after
the Bruins' last regular
season game.

Gerald said, "and I left the
recruiting pretty much up to
Roderic. I tried to guide him
along, though.
"Actually, my preference
was Baylor. But Roderic had
to live with the school for four
years so it was his own
choice.
"But the old man (Hayes )
carne down here and Roderic
listened to him and liked him.

NBA Standings
By Un it ed Press International

Eastern Conference
Atlantic Di vi sion

W l

Pet .

GB

Bos ton
Philadelphia
Buffalo

19 7 .731
19 9 .679
16 13 .552

41 '2

New York

11 20 .355 10•'7

I

CeAfril l Oivlsion

W l

Pet.

Atl anra
Cleveland

15 12 .556
IS 14 517

Houston

13 13 .500

Wash ing ton
13 13 500
New Orleans 11 17 393
We ste rn Con fer ence

GB
1

11 2 .
1• 2
4• 1

M idwest Di vision
W l Pet. GB
De troit r ,
11 14 .440
Milwaukee
11 15 .423
'•7
Kansas City
10 17 .370 Q
Chicago
7 20 .259 S
Pacific Divi si on
W. l Pet. GB
Golden Sti!lte 21 6 .na
Los An'geles
18 13 .581 5
Phoe ni x •
14 11 .560 6
sel! lll e
15 15 .500 111
Por !land
10 20 .333 l2 1 1

.Wittenb~rg is
·.still .unbeaten ·
lly llalted Preu In·
leroatlaul
Undefeated Wittenberg
knocked
olf
Eastern
Mlchl&amp;an for its sixth straight
win SU8 Mond8y, and Ohio
State .b~trely escaped a
illlrpl'lslng !J:vansville comeback iii the final seconds In
Ohio college basketball action.
•
Tonlght, only two games
are scheduled, led by ninth·
ranked Clnclnnat's visit to
the West Coast and for a
game with Pepperdine
(CaUf.). Steubenville entertains .Indiana. Stale of
Pennsylvania.. .
Ther~ are no games Chrisl·
maa Eve or Clrlslmas Day.
Only one Ohio college team
returns to the hardwood
Friday night (Cincinnati In
the Rainbow Clallalc), but an
abbreviated six-game slate is
llcheduled .SatiD'day.
. •, Wittenberg's Tom Dunn
.cracked Eastern Michigan's
·defen11es for 22 points, while

.:white Faloons,
dropped 82-73
MASON - Four players
scored in double figures
Monday anernoon as Win·
field defeated Waharna, 82-73
In basketball.
Winfield led by 28 points
with five minutes left In the
game, but substituted freely,
allowing Waharna to close the
gap.
Steve Ba,ley scored 23
points to lead Winfield, now 41, while Dave Sowards added
'16, Marly Chapman 14, and
Matt Toth 13.
Terry Tucker and Tim
Davis led Waharna with 15
points each.
~ The !011 drops Wahama to
~. 'J11e game was played
before the student body.
Winfield
IB 16 28 20--112
· Bailey 23, Chapman 14,
Sowards 16, Toth 13, Jividen
2, Hale 4, Matthews 6, Smith
4.
Wahama 14 12 14 33-73
, Riggs 10, Goldsby 12;
Holbrook 10, Tucker 15, Davis
i&amp;, Smith 2, R. Tucker 3, J.
Tucker~-

Rick Whiie added 16 points
and 10 rebounds as the
Tigers' easily ran away from
the Y]l8llantl, Mlch. team.
The Tigers buill a 33-20
halflbne margin · and left
their hosts with a '4-3 recor,d.
Columbus native Fred
Poole flipped In a couple of
free throws to give Ohio Slate
a seemingly safe nine-point
lead with 55 seconds to ·go
Mond~y
nlglit against
Evansville. But it took a
rnis8ed shot by the Indiana
team atllie final gun to give
the Buckeyes tlleir fourth
Oltraight win , 79-78.
Evansville players thought
a foul durmg Mike Smith's
final shot shlluld have given
them an after-the buzzer try.
at victory- but the officials
thought otherwise and left the
Purple Aces on the courtlosers of their fourth game in
six starts this year .
Buckeye · guard Larry
Bolden had 19 polilts for Ohio
State.
In other games, Toledo
burned ita hom~ID'I nets
wilh a 70 per cent accuracy
!rom the flovr for the first
haU In roiling past Butler 11&amp;56. The game wun 'l as close
88 the final 13 point margin,
88 Toledo ran out to a 46-18
halftime lead and kept a ~
point second half margin
until the starters were
benched.
The Rockets, now 3-4, were
led by 6-loot senior guard
Larry Cole with 23 points.
Deve Speicher added 15.
in Grand Rapids, Mich.,
Flv~ C&amp;lvin players got Into
double figurea and proved to
be troublesome hosts for their
own tournament in embarrassing Cedarville 104-74
In the opening round of the
Calvin &lt;llrlstrnu BasketbaU
Tournament.
The vtctol-y put Calvin iniO
tonight's finals with Dllnols
Benedictine, an 87·72 winner
over Aqulnu Monday nlgl1!.
Calvin led throughout to
booat its record to 4-1 while
~arville dropped to 11-4.
A thought fQr the day :

Arnfrlcan novellat 1b0111111
Wolfe utd, "MOll of the uioe
we think we're lid!, It's all In
the mind."

Terps win seventh in
row·' Lucas pops in 22
.

, ·

By TOM WHITFIELD
llPI Sports Writer
COLLEGE PARK, Md.
(l)PJ) - ' The second-ranked
Maryland Terps won their
seventh slr~ight game
Monday night and, for on~, it
wasn't over a team universally considered a pushover.
The Ter]ll , led by AllAmerica swingrnan John
Lucas, used a sticky man-toman defense to slop
previolisly unbeaten North
Carollna-clharlolte, 70-60. The
411ers had won six straighJ,
Including big decisions over
two Southeastern Conference
teams - Florida and Vanderbilt.
MarylAnrl tonk • ~n.. half-

,l

time lead and used UNC· man Larry Gibson )."
Lucas led Maryland with 22
Charlotte turnovers early in
the first eight minutes of the points, while guard Maurice
second half to extend that Howard added 13 and forrnilrgin to 52-38. The 49ers ward Steve !ileppard had 12.
(;enter Cedric Maxwell ,
closed the margin to seven
points with 4:10 remaining, who kepi the 49ers In the
but Lucas and his backcoiD't g~rne late with his shooting,
parlner, Brad Davis, scored had 19 points and 13
key baskets to help the Terps rebounds . Forward Lew
Massey added 18 points.
pull away.
Elsewhere In co llege
"I think we tried to break it
basketball,
South carolina
open too soon in the first haU,
roUted
Yale
10().66 and
forced some shots, and let
them get back into the Oklahoma. State dumped
ba!lgame," said Terp coach Vlrginia 72-69 In the opening
Lefty Drlesell. "We made a games of the Carolina
lot of mistakes, particularly Basketball Classic, Deiroil
our young people (sophomore edged Michigan State lllHI2,
Lawrence Boston and fresh- IDinois ripped Rice lil6-G4,
Purdue whipped california

Monday' s
Ohio College
BJ s ketball Results
United Pren lntern•tlonal
Cltveland Sta te 32 'Xavier 78
Ohio Stal e 79, ~ven!vllle 78
Toledo 69 Butler .56
·
Wittenberg
63
Eas t ern
Michigan 58

C•lvln Chr l,fmits
Tournament
Calvin M lch 104 Ce d arville 74

more than the Ali-Frazier
heavyweight chamP\onship
in Manila at the end of September .
The si1th game of the
Series, In which Carlton
Flak's horne run In the 12th
inning gave Boston a 7-0
· victory, and Cincinnati 's
come-from-behind 4-3 win ih
the deciding seventh game,
swung the vote in favor of the
baseball classic .
Ruffian had never lost
before her rna~ch race and
had the lead against Foolish
Pleasure, the Kentucky
Derby winner , when she
lroke ber right foreleg In the
backstretch . The 3-year-old
filly had to be put away
despite efforts by a team of ·
doctors to save her.
The All-Frazier bout was
the third, and decisive ,
meeting between the two
super heavyweights. The
fight proved to be a bitter
war, just as the two previous
bouts In_New York, but In tbe
end All retained hla champlolltlliip when a hallbllnded
Frazter'was not Permitted to
answer the bell for the 15111
round.
The Pittsburgh Steelers' 1&amp;6 SUper Bowl triumph last

:1

Pro

:I

:Standin~s:
By Unit ed Pre!&gt;s ln!erna tional

Tournaments
Carolina Classic
( 1st Ro und )
South Car olina 100 Yale 66
Oklahoma 51 12 Virg inia 69

No . Ill . 75 Loyola ( 111.) 69
Ohio St . 79 Evansvill e 7B
Pur due 97 Ca l ifornia 79

St . Louis 87 Mo . St. L ouis 67
To ledo 69 Bull er 56
Wittenberg 63 E!on _ Mi ch . 58

South west
Arizona 88 Old Dominion 14
H Payn e 90 Ok la Scien ce 7'2
New Mexico 81 u .s l nt' l 57
New Mexico SL 90 BY U 79
Okla . City 76 Te x. Ar l ington 65
We st

percentage, .566. He also
displayed superior defensive
abilities.
Mter I 'h years battling
todiffetent support and financial woes, the WFL gave up
the ghost , but basketball also
had its casualties. The ABA
lost the Memphis Sounds
between seasons and , when
they tried to reform as the
Baltimore Claws, folded
before the season began . The
San Diego Sails and Utah
Stars then1 dissolved in mid·
season .
Bayi , the Tanzanian Air
Force mechanic, had an unbeaten indoor season before
shattering Jim Ryun 's eightyear old mark by one-tenth of
a second when he ran a 3 : ~1.0
at Kingston, Jamaica . But
three months Ia ler In
Goteburg, SWeden, Walker, a
barrel c hested New
Zealander, ran history's first
sub-3 :51) mile when he
clocked 3:49.4.

January over the Mirmesota
Vikings was ranked fourth,
with 97 points, followed by
John Wooden's retirement as
UCLA's basketball coach and
the Bruins' subsequent
national championship in
March, which drew 82'h
points.
Rounding out the voting
were : Fred Lynn 's unique
-accomplishment of being
named American League
Rookie of the Year and MVP ;
the sagging sports economy
which resulted in the folding
of the World Football League
and four ABA teams; the
world recordbreaking mile
runs of Filbert Bayi and John
Walker; Golden State's NBA
championship; and
Philadelphia's
second
straight Stanley Cup.
Wooden 's Bruins sent their
coach Into retirement with an
ernollonal 92-85 triwnph over
Kentucky for the NCAA title,
his lOth national championship in 12 years.
Lym had a tremendous
Other stories receiving
year for the Red So• . He suppol't included the death ol
balled .331 and hit 21 home casey Stengel and Ohio State
runs and 105 RBis. The 23- University's Archie Griffin
year-old lefthanded led the becoming history 's first
AL In runs scored, 103, Heisman Trophy repeal
doubles, 47,, imd in slugging winner.

NHL Standi ng~
Bv United Press International
Ca mpbell Conference
Patrick Division
W L T Pts
Ph i la delphia
12 4 7
51
N Y . Islanders
19 10 6
44
Atlanta
17 1.4 3
37
N Y Rangers
14 17 4
32
Smyth e Division

W l T Ph .

97-79.
Detroit 's Dennis Boyd sank
East
two free throws with 30 Adelphi 80 w New England 60
Pratt 73 Domin ican ( NY 1 66
seconds left and Laval Perry Ouinnip
iac 77 Kulltown 65
hit a clinching free throw Rider 87 Sl Mary'S ( N S l 78
with eight seconds to go to Southampton 79 Slonv Brook 70
help the Titan's offset a II·
So uth
point performance by the Georgia St 84 Mor ehouse 74
L SU 93 FDU Ru th erford 70
Spartans' Terry Furlow.
Maryland 70 No. Ca r Char lot te
Rich Adams scored 19 5()
a 68 Vanderbilt 57
points, 18 in the first hall, to Nebrask
No . Ca r oli na 70 So Florida 64
pace Illinois over Rice . No. Ken tucky 75 Thomas More
68
Purdue, was paced by Walter So. Miss 87 Arkansas s r 83
Jordan's 22 points in its win T enn . Tech 8B Valdosta St 70
T ulane 90 Cornett 12
over
California .
The West Texas 64 Sam ford 49
Boilermakers, evening their
M idwes t
season record at 3-3, led only C Michigan 88 Ferr is St 55
43-39 at the half but were in Clevel and 51. 82 Xavier (Ohio )
co mmand throughout the 78
Detr oit 85 Michigan Sl. 82
Ill ino is 106 Rice 64
second half.

Reds World Series win over
Bosox top '75 sports story
By JACK SAUNDERS
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
Clnclnnati Reds' exciting
sevengame World Series
victory over the Boston Rect
Sox waa voted the lop sports
story of 107~ by a wide
margin In balloting by United
Press International sports
writers across the country.
or the l!l-man panel, 16
writers naming the series as
their first choice. Overall, the
October classic drew 184
points on a lo.N-7~-3-2-1
basis, with every writer
naming it on his ballot--the
only 1975 story so acclaimed.
A considerably sadder
event, the death or the great
lilly Ruffian following her
match race wllh t:'oolish
Pleasure in July, finished
second with 128 polpls, 13

r------------.

Geo . Fox 91 Wsn . Baptist 74
Gonzaga 71 Puget Sound 67
M innesota 89 St anford 84
Nev . Reno 104 Humbo ldt St. 55
Portl and 78 Hayward St n.
San Jose 51. 83 Port1111nd St. 81
So. Dakota St . 76 Val para iso 74
UC Riversid e 63 John Brown 59
Utah 90 Calif . Irvine 55
Weber St. 91 Ca r r oll (Mon l.l 59

Chicago
12 10 11
35
vancouver
11 14 . 6
28
St Louis
10 18 5
25
Kansas Ci t y
10 19 4
74
M innesota
11 20 1
23
Wa les Conference
Norris Divi si on
W. L T Pts
Mont r eal
24 5 6
54
L os Angeles
11 14 2
36
Pittsburgh
13 15 4
30
De troit
10 20 4
24
washifigton
J 27 4
10
Adam s Division

W. l T Ph

Buffalo
20 9 4
Boston
17 S 8
Toronto
IJ 12 8
Ca liforn ia
12 19 3
Monday's Result
Toronto 4 Los Ang eles 3
Tuesday · ~ Game s
Pillsburgh·at N .Y . Rlln gers
Ph il adelphia at Atlan ta
L os An geles al Boston
St. Louis at Ch icago
Buffalo at Ka nsa s City
Wednesday 's Gam es
( No games sc heduled)

44

42
34

27

WHA Siandings
By Unifed Press International
East

W. l T Pts .

Cincinnati
New En gland
Indianapolis
Clevel and

Houston
M inn esota
SM Diego
Ph oe ni x
Denver

15 16 I
14 16 3
13 16 2
11
West

19

2

31
31
28
24

W. L T . Pts .
19 12 0
38

15

II

2

32

13 13
12 14

•

30

3
1

27
25

12 16
canadian

W. l T . Pfs .
Winn ipeg
23 12 0
46
Quebec
22 13 1
45
Calga r y
16 14 2
34
Edmonton
15 19 2
32
Tor on to
10 19 3
23
Monday's Result
Ne w Eng land 4 Cleveli!nd 1
Tuesday's Games
M inneso ta at Den ver
Phoenix at Cincinnat i
Quebe&lt; at San Diego
To ron to at CaiQarv
Win n ipeg at Edmont on
Wednes day's Gam es
(N o games scheduled)

Want More
Protection For
Less Money?
This is a question Meigs County's oldest and
largest insurC~nce agency has been an swering lor your neighbors lor many years.
Ask one of them and see? Or stop in and see
us at your convenience .
" When you see us don 't think of insurance,
but when you think of insurance see us ."

DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY

-~
~
. . -, - .-

MlDDL.EPORT, OHIO
PH. 992-2342

Monday's Results
(No games scheduled)
Tuesday's Gam es
8os ton at Buffalo
Washington at Detroit
Chicago at Houston
New York at Milwaukee
New Or leans at Golden State ·•
Kansas Cily at Los Angeles
seattle at Portland
Wednesday' s Gam es
( No games scheduled)

Ct:IICK THESE .
LAST MINUtE VALUISI

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power 18W :oOEL m
' 7)4 wtfta .of POWer controlled

by trM "Veri- Torque" clutch
mak11 this H' H,ft, saw 1

roo! workhor•l

181

FROM

'29!!

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1n111nt tltfttlnv

NEW 75 MONZA

ond

burning In env position
are the f11turts afftrtd

,... '"'"'· ttl

speed trans , automatic trans ., radio.

undersea!. Holiday Reloll 54270.55.

Li me green, tinlgtass. 4 speed, p. sleerlng ,
AM radi o, cust. Interior, OX bumpers. GT
equip., rally whee ls. undersea!. Retail
Price 13982.00.

Town Cpe., Landon Rool , green llnlsh, lint
glass, spt, mirrors. spl. suspe nsion, BR78whlte stripe llres, HO ballery, automalic
trans. P. steer ing , rad io, undersea!. Relall

Holiday Special •4005

ARROW NT-50S

STNU:Gm

a FREE

4door, dark red , vinyl lop, air conditioned,
tint glass. wh. opening mldg , console, 262
cu . in. v e. lurbo hydramall c, p. •leering,
FR 78 radial wh . stripe. radio, undersea!.
Retail $5231.80.

autctlment. A
ilei\'V dutv eun

tt.at eccommo·
datft 5/16, 3/8,

ti2 and 7/18
lncll tiiPift. tf71

Hollclav SDeCial •4717

$12.99
'118.95

\.

COMPL111

CCI0903-1/z ton Pickup Cust.
Deluxe 350-2, std. P . S., P. B.,
radio, foam seat, mirrors,
gauges, L.78-15, tires, t~ n .

13 drill blh
modo of llioctad
tool ,,.., In

INIUIANCIIIIVICI

1

OOflvtnilnt rttt1

wh. str ipe tires. wh . co ve r s, Am radio.

undersea !. Retail Price $5455.30.

guards, power door l ocks. power wi ndows,
air con dition ed , 400 V 8 automatic trans .• p .
ste-e r ing and brakes , confortilt, rad io and

tape , Real Lu xury . Retail Price

Hollclay Special •4665

f635UO.

Holiday Special '5370

New

(1l

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CK20906 Cust . Deluxe
Suburban 350-4, auto., P.S., P. B.,
center seat, headliner , mirrors,
radio, fuel tank , shield, gauges ,
H. D. shocks, 4 wh. drive.

(2) CCI0903-1h Ton Pickup Cust .
Deluxe 350-2, auto.m P .S .• HD •.
P. B.. radio , H.D.S. &amp; shocks , LlB·
15 tires , R.S. B.• gauges, foam
seat. Mirrors. red -tan .

6144.00

'4039.00

3129.00

1

_ ..,_. t/18
to 1/A inchu.

Dark red , wh. "inyt root, OX bumpers and

Llghl grey fin ish. automallc, p. steering
and brakes, 350 V&amp;. air condllloned, radial

75 Chevv Trucks New 75 Chevy Trucks

.

Holiday Price 13728

75 CAPRICE CPE.

NEW 75 NOVA LN

wlra

•

S«62.SS

Special •3842

au, Mwtnd get

••

NEW 75 VEGA

NEW 75 MONZA

Towne Cpe .. Landau Root, bronze finish,
lenl glass, spt. mirrors. sport suspens ion,
BR78 whlje slrlpe llres, H.D. battery, 4·

wltft thl1 qutllty pro·

.'

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POMEROY MOTORS

1

t81

Service &amp;Parts ileplrlment
Cklas Wednesday 12 Noon

'5"

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POMIROY

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POMEROY MOTOR CO.

126

·'
~

We HM The RiRirt Deal For You! Reliable Service After the Deal!

STAR SUPPLY .

.,

"QUALITY •nd
SERVICE"

Sales Dept. lhes At 4 p.m.
Regular Hours Friday &amp;Saturday

,,.

.

.

I,

C'

Your

l

rh.~vv

Dealer

II

'

�'

·
.
Polly's

Report given on civic plantings
.

Roush family

has gathering
The annual holiday
gathering of the family of Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Roush was
held Sunday at their country
home.
Attending were Mr, and
Mrs.
Larry
Flowers,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Roger
Roush,
Doug,
Pataskla; Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Roush, Sherry and David, St.
Alban11; Mrs. Garnet Herdman, Leon, W. Va.; Mrs.
Mildred Meade, Columbus;
Mrs. Bonnie Matheny and son
Doug, Leon, W. Va., and
Quist! and Kevin Smith,
Becky and Kenny Roush, aild
Mrs, Gerry Kessinger, Kim
and Lois, Pomeroy, R. D.

Social
Calendar
'llJFSDAY
LONG Bottom United
Methodist Oturch Christmas
program 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
with recltationa, special
music, a dialogue, "Who Is
the Saviour?" and Chrlstrnss
meditations by the pastor,
Dennis Creeger.
OHIO VALLEY Commandery, Knights Templer,
staled meeting Tuesday at 7
p.m. at the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple. About 8 lhe group
·Will go to the Meigs County
Infirmary for a visit with the
residents there. Those with
unilurma are asked to wear
them.
RUTLAND Community
Church, Christmas program,
7:30 Tuesday night at the
church : Keith McDaniel,
Rutland, lo give a personal
life testimony as a part of the
program. Amos Tillis, pastor,
Invites the public.
CHRISTMAS PROGRAM
Tuelday at 7 p.m. at Olester
Oturch IJf. God. The youth will
)l'ellllt a play "the Gate at
the Inn" There will be
recitations and alnglne. The
public II Invited.

rB;;;;:;;;,h;U''l
The annual Christmas
party of the Pomeroy
National Bank was held
Saturday night at the ·Meigs

Society has
gathering
Mrs. Louis Osborne was
hostess for the recent annual
Christmas parly of the
Evangeline Missionary
Society of the Pomeroy
Church of Chrlsl.
·
Members revealed !heir
secret pals with a gift exchange around a lighted tree.
Mrs . Evelyn Smith had
charge or the business
meeting wllh Mrs. Edward
Venoy giving devotions from
Luke 2, verses 1 lo 20. She
also gave a reading, "What
· Does Christmas Mean to
You." Mrs. Smith had
p(ayer.
·Mrs. Earl Cleland read a
letter from the Children's
Mission in Mexico which the
class helps lo supporl. She
also had charge of entertainment with prizes being
won by Mrs. Venoy, Mrs.
ElwOOd Bowers and Mrs.
Denver Kepple. There was
Rroup lin I!ill&amp; of carols. The
January meeting will be held
al the parsonage with Mrs.
Richard Evanson to be the
hostess. There will be election of officers then.
Attending besides those
named were Mrs. Stanley
Bass and Mrs. Eva Dessauer.

Pomeroy

Members of the Third
Friday Club enjoyed a dinner
at Crow's Steak House Friday
evening before going to the
home of Miss Sybil Ebersbach for a Cllr'istmas party
and gift exchange.
The Ebersbach home was
decorated In keeping with the
season. Mrs. Gertrude Bass
presided at the meeting with

;::;
,.

officers for 1976 elected as
follows: Mrs .. Eva DeSauer,
president; Mrs .. Edna Reibel,
vice
president;
Mrs.
Genevieve Meinhart,
secretary-treasurer.
The next meeting will be
Feb. 20 at the home of Mrs.
Dale Smith. During the social
hour games and carol singing
were enjoyed along with
punch and cake served by the
hostess.
·

FAMILY ENTERTAINS
· DANCE PLANNED
Mr. and Mrs. Harold
MIDDLEPORT - .The
Ebersbach entertained
Sunday with a pre.atriatmas Middleport Police auxiliary
family dinner party. Gifts will sponsor a square dance
were exchanged around a SaiiU'day, Dec. '!1, at Midlighted Christmas tree. dleport Elementary School
Guests were Mr. and Mrs. from 8 p.m. to II p.m. Music
James Ebershach and son will be by "Siring Dusters."
Bryon Todd, Columbus; Mr. Admission is $1 for adults and
and Mrs. Tom Siley, Matthew children under 12 admitted
,,land Richard , Marietta; free if accompanied by
Emmett Blackburn, and Mrs. parents. Callers will be Glen
Nora Mills, Middleport.
· Lan1bert and Cora Hilton.

Poinsettias
•3.50 to •5.00
100 pols left' choose from .
Churches and
organizations quantity
discount . Also Foliage
Plants &amp; Baskets.

Hubbard
Greenhouse
L.:..:
99:.,2·:.:.S1.:.7~:...__ __;s::.y:.:r•:.:&lt;•:.:s;:.Je

+++

All Year Long

+++
Dear Rap :
f'!!ople are always being urged to write their Congressmen
if they don't likewhat'sgolng on. So what if we can't afford the
stamps?
Why don't they allow franking privileges to private
citizens who address their letters to Washington, D. C.? Then
maybe our officials would hear what's going on In the country.
After all, Congressmen get free maillne privileges and they
can afford the stamps a lot more than I can. Besides, I'd
·probably write asking why my last 10 cents diaappeared down
· the Tax Chute. .
Wonder what would happen If I wrote my naine in big
black letters on the right-hand corner or my envelope and sent
it to my Senator (with no other stamp)? - CHARGED FOR
. SPEAKING OUT

AAA Membership
• Protedion
eSeturity

• Convenience
Wijh Just 1 Call
446-0699

Dear Charged :
You 'd get your letter marked "Returned for Insufficient
Postage." But, you've made a good point. Think about it,
Washington, D. C.! - SUE AND HELEN

Ott Frtt Tltktts . At All
tlclpaHng Gold Star StGres.

Second class postage pa id

Pomeroy, Ohio .

ldvtrt iSing ·

• Rap:
•
I'm a 17-year-()ld girl In love with a -guy I can 'I be with
; because he is 21and on probation. If he gets caught with me (a
: minor) he can go back to prison .
: : This Is very unfair, as he has peld his debt to society with a
: prison term. Now he can't lead a ''free" life, just because I'm
; lillderage! - MATURE, IN WVE, UNDER 18, AND COM; PLAINING

.now·JHEBEJ ffiORE InFORmATIOn
.:on YOUR ElECTRIC Bill

ltia lawl
Par-

· Delivered by carrier where
available 75 cents per week .

By Motor Route wnere
carrier
service
not
available , One mon1~ 1. S3 .25.
By mail in Ohio and w . va .•
Year. 122 .00 ; Six

monlhs , SII.SQ ;
Three
onths, $7 .00 . Elsewhere
26 .00 veer ; SLx months
13 . .50 ; thru months, $7 .50.
ubscrlptlon price Includes
unday Times -Sentinel.
~

Tbe AlmallllC

United

Pren

New Information ls being included on the electric bills of Columbus and
Southern's ·customer&amp; starting with their December bill.

ID·

lerUIIoaal

Today Is Tuesday' Dec. 23,
the 367th day of 1975 with
eight to foDow.
The moon iJ approachlng
lt.s 1ut quarter.
The morning stars are
Venus and Saturn.
The evenlnl! stars are Mercury, Man and Jupiter.
Thole born on thia date are
llld« the sign of Capricorn.
Mormon religious luunder
Joseph Smith was born Dec.

23, 1100.
On this dAy In hiatory :
In 1783, Gen. George Washington resigned his comm!Jslon with the U.S. Army
and retired to Mount Vernon,
Va.
In 1928, the National Broadcastine Cmtpany established
a permanent coast.too(.'Oast .
hoo~ .

In 1943, er-Premier Tojo of
Japan and siJ: other Japanese
war leaders were hanged in
Tokyo by the Allied War
Qimea Qlmmluion.
In 1972, former Presl!lent
Harry Trumaa was placed on
the crlttc.J lilt In a Kanaaa
· Qty, Mo., llolpilal, where he

died line dl}'l lal«.
w

.'

••••••
•
•••
••
••

•

••
•
•••
••
•••
••
•

·Police ·•.
•1nact•1on •••

••
95
$139 •••
••
••

.'

••e

'

MIDDLEPORT. •

.'
.'

==:rge

~

.

.

... it's precision-crafted
for full, rich tone quality!

.

Look for this, information In .your next bill fo~ electric service!
J

~

.')

VALUES TO 15.99 ASST.

lADIES HOLIDAY

A nnua/ program presen ted
. T~e annual Christmas
pro§ram of the Laurel Cliff
Free\ Methodist Church
prese~ted Sunday night at the ,
chiU'ch was climaxed by the
nalivitx with Brian and
Bonnie Friend in the roles of
Mary and Joseph.
Olhers having parts were.
Tammy Wrlghl , Michelle
Folmer and Gene Scarberry,
the angels; Joey Barton,
Jerry Pullins and Franklin
Martin , lhe shepherds;
Angela Martin, Margo
Martin and Franklin Martin,
the wise men .
Those participating in the
program en lered the sancluary in a processional as the
congregation sang "0 Come
All Ye Faithful." There was
prayer by lhe Rev. Floyd
Shook , and a solo by Mrs.

KNIT

Special group of Ladles' Holiday
Tops. Values to $5.99. Wide
asst . of colors and styles. Good
selection . Clean up lot from our
stock. All first quality. Shop early
for best selection .

Harry Clark. A reading and
recitalion was given by Mrs.
Harmon Fox and lhere were
songs by lhe nursery
children.
Recitations were by Anita
Smilh, Tracy Scholderer,
John Smith, Laura Gayle
Smith , Valerie Jeffers, Steve
Tracy , Sean Jeffers, Tammy
Wright, Michelle Folmer and
Gena Scarberry. There were
songs by the children, a duet
by Michelle Folmer and
Anita Smith, and a reading by
Mrs. Uoyd Wright and Mrs.
Shirley Friend.
Seleclions by the choir
included "Come Sing for
Chrislrnas," "The Children's
King," "Joy to the World "
and "Lying in a Manger."
Following lhe program the
young couple went caroling .

OUR COMPLETE STOCK OF OUR
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fancy patterns. Flare leg style. Size
10 to 20. Yes, you save money at
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COl\MI&amp;IS-~

CM0 lltCTNC COMPM'Y

'.

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· PAIR

Church potluck enjoyed
~.,~·

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Whether your new Admiral Stereo Ia a console
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SPECIAL GROUP
lADIES HOLIDAY

DRESSES
.\ND.

"

PANT SUITS
01e large group Of ladies' holiday
pant suits and dresses. Looks that
uphold a fresh fashion image season
after season . Save now at Stiffler's, .
the Christmas store.

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THANKS FOR SHOPPING
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OFF

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JAC·KETS
Ideal Christmas Gifts . Choose a
warm jackel now from our
great selecti.on in wide range of
fabri cs, styles and colors .
Zipper and button styles . 25 0
Pet . Off Regular Price, Now . m

GUARMT£ED TO BlOOM 'ALL THRU
THE HOLIDAYS

OFF

••
•

•

The new items will show customers the cost of fuel in their own electric
bill and indicate if that cost Is higher or lower than the previous month.
Since our mtU!od of reflecting fuel costs will change with the December
billing, It wilfoot be possible to make a meaningful comparison between
the fuel costi shown on the customer's previous biDs with that shown.on
the December bill.
'

••••••••
!Ytllirllirlliio'lllir•~•••'lli!'••""•I'Oiullirlllilllir~

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

n.,total coet of fuel which .. Included Ia ach cuato.er'a

' w...._on.

.
•

Ad•••lralrt

for uch ldlowatt hou
c:e betwe... tile PNHnt and prevloue month'•
per~tt hoar bu..
The'se three 1~rns replace the fuel adjustment factor which has been
shown on th~ustomer's bill for sewral years. That fuel adjustmei'!t factor
only lndicateil the cost of fuel above a basic rate.

e.

OPEN TONIGHT TIL 8

When It's stereo by

2) The
3) The'

.
•. Ingels
Furn Iture.••
ee

Since t.he CQ.it of fuel used to produce electricity has become a significant
part of the ptlce of electricity, the State of Ohio recendy passed a law
which requlills that three new items regarding fuel charges be shown on
customers' ~nthly electric bills.

. 1)

-5{(-

SPECIAL GROUP

Party held Saturday

(11 THIS BILL INCLUDES $8.68 FUEL
CHARGE, (21 AT A RATE OF $.009944 PER KWH
(3) WHICH IS $.000166 PER KWH LESS
THAN LAST MONTH.

One

By

-

.

rares :

Subscription

Memorial Hospital was in•
eluded when members of the
Youth Fellowship an&lt;! Church
School of Trinity Church
made lheir annual visits to
sick and shul-in members
and others of lhe community.
Thirly-three members
made up lhe group for the
carol singing and concluded
their tour with a serenade at
Ute Pomeroy Pastry ShoP
where they honored Roy
Mayer, Sunday school'
superintendent.
Later the group returned lo
lhe church for hot chocolate,
cookies and coffee cakes.
Members of the Youlh
Fellowship under
the
direclion of their leadtr, Mrs.
Paul Nease, also had a
rehearsal for the pageant to
be presented at lhe church on

Chrislmas Eve.
Making up lhe group of
carolers were Mrs. Nease,
Janel Burson, Lori Wood,
Keilh
Krauller,
Kim
Kraulter, Dan Thomas,
Danny Will, David Harris,
Christy Burson, Jean
Blankenship, Rick Blaettnar,
Becky Thomas, Beth Perrin,
Mary Blaettnar, Greg
Thomas, Elizabeth Blaettnar, Jim Schmoll, Jon Perrin ,
Faith Perrin, Kennelh
Harris, Genevieve Meinhart,
Pauline Mayer, Nancy Jo
Mayer, Chuck Saltg, Marie
Houck , Mr. and Mrs. John
William Blaeltnar, Patrick
Wood, Barbara Offutt, Jay
Perrin, Clarice Krautter and
Dick Nease.
AI the church to assist with
the refreshments were Edith
Lanning and Erma Smith .
Paul Nease was a guest.

The congregation of the Mrs. James Gilmore, Mr . and
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist ~rs . Olio Lohn, Mr. and Mrs.
Church mel Saturday nigh I al Clarence Curtis, Mr. and
the Rock Springs Grange hall Mrs. Richard Friend, Mark
and Belinda, Marvin Friend,
for a Chrislrnas poUuck.
&lt;
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Friend
Entertainmenl
was
·' Dear Mature :
provided by the Heavenly !and son, Mrs. Edna Faulk,
My !GAP (1'11) {lpesslng ~ain Pe~ceptiqn) (IBYS we Tri&lt;h With lhe entertainers I Mrs . Bertha Parker, Mr . and
;
: h8ven't got the complete stOry. By "be with," do you mean were the Atkins family, Mr. -Mrs. Steve Eblin, Miss Susan
: "live with?" And are your parenll dead set against thls'
and Mrs. Chesler Sexlon and :Fleshman, Mr. and Mrs .
:
We doubt your boy friend's parole officer would hassle' children, Mr. and Mrs. Toby :Randall Hawley and sons ,
; him, unless he had more reasons than you mention. Right? - Myers, Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Mr. and Mrs . Ernest Haggy
Huffman, and Mrs. Betty and daughter, Mr. and Mrs .
•• HELEN AND SUE
Uoyd Wright and grandWillis .
children
Tammy and Jason ,
Church members atlending
were Mr. end Mrs. Rober! Sherry Clark, Mr. and Mrs .
ON HONOR ROLL
Ferguson's o(fice reported
, Six Meigs Countlans at- loday $17,280,311.10 in Barton and family, Mr. and Ernesl Powell, and the Rev .
; tending Ohio State University welfare assislance money Mrs . Pearl Jacobs, Mr . and and Mrs . Floyd Shook.
: have been named to the f 3.51 being distributed to Ohio's 88
: honor roll for Ute autumn counties In November. Meigs
•'
; quarter. They are William' Counly's share of the Iota!
• David Krawsczyn, Douglas was $9,438.03.
: William Little, Christine
: Robinson, James Lee SchMEETING SET
The Christmas party for Marvin Burt, Mr . .and Mrs .
: moll , all of Middleport;
MASON - The newly
: Joseph Richard Rosenbaum, organized Mason The Farmers Bank and Carroll Norris, Mr. and Mrs .
: Pomeroy, and Karle Robin Businessmen's Association Savings Company was held Dewey Smith, Mr. and Mrs .
Saturday ~vening at The Bob Vaugh~n. Mr. and Mrs.
, Humphrey, Reedsville.
will meet at 8 p.m. on Jan. 13 Orchid Room In Pomeroy Mickey Williams, Mr. and
at the village hall In Mason . with a delicious buffet dinner Mrs. John Werry, Mr . and
Mason-Clifton businesses catered by Paul Simon, Allie Mrs. Mark Smith, Evelyn
FUNDS RECEIVED
Stale Auditor Thomas E. representatives are Invited. Simon and George Horak.
Lanning, Susan Andrews,
Following dinner the group Recka McGuire, Bruce Reed,
enjoyed dancing to the group Tom Reed, George Hicks,
of Bill Francis called The Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Swisher,
Sound Investments.
Mr. and Mrs . Richard
Attending were Mr . and Follrod, Mr. and Mrs. FerMrs. Ted Reed, Jr., Mr. and man Moore, Mr . and Mrs.
Mrs. Thereon Johnson, Mr. Fred W. Crow, Jr., Mr. and
and Mrs. Paul Kloes , Roger .; Mrs. Fred W. Crow Ill,
Hysell, Mr. and Mrs. Jon Carson Crow, Mr. and Mrs.
Karschnlk, Mr. and Mrs. Scott Wheeler, Dorothy Will,
Dick Young, Mr. and Mrs. Mary Kunzelman and Olga
John Musser, Mr. and Mrs. Pierotti.

representative
Ward .
Griffith CompanY · Inc .,
Bottlnelll &amp; Gallagher Dlv .,
157 Third Ave ,, New York ,
N.Y. 10011.

WEDNESDAY
CHRISTMAS PROGRAM,
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. at
J.etart Falls United Brethern
Oturch; public inviled.

A

POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT

'WeAre Here
'}', Seroe Yuu

+++

So lHEY
N• Travel Alone

.I

2157 .

::~

..

N&lt;Yl'E FROM HELEN : Small consolation, but your
parents are all too typical shoppers. Olecldng out the grocery
carts at our friendly supermarket, I often see an overload of
sweets, pop, "empty" cereals and crunch food - and these are
among the most,expensive (per pound) items In the store!
With all the nutritional information available, you'd think
people would know better.
Pity.. .
.

WRAPPED

Yule visits made

:~l~ Infirmary
. visit lo theandMeigsVelerans
County

Dear CBCT :
Certainly do ! And your "say" makes much more sense
than your ptirenls' "sweet-talk." Maybe if you'd go along end
'help yoll' mother sllop rou might convince her to substitute
nutritious food for some of the junk. At least you could talk her
into buyine it for YOU .. - SUE

3- 1100.00 Gift trtnicates For Groceries

Court St . Pomeroy, Ohio
4576t . Business Off ice Phone
9'/2 .2156 . Editorial Phone 992 .

By Hdt•n nnd Sue• Boud

Daugbt~ WilerThao Mom?
Dear Helen and Sue:
·
My parents are always grumbling about the high cost of
food. Who isn't, these days? But they still persist In buying
extra junk . For example, on Mon's last big shopping trip, she
boughtatmost eight dollars worth of sweets 'n' thlnes : cookies,
cakes, sodas, etc .
l'mthlnasarall(peoplehatemebecauselneverhaveto
count calories), but' others In my famUy don~ need this goop,
and my folks complain when my brothers and sisters fill up on
between-meal junk. So why do they buy it?
I try to convince them they should spend their money on
more nutritious foods like fruit, juices, vegetables, cheeses,
etc. Theyaayi'mwejrci. At 16, I think I'm old enough to have a
say on what goes Into Ute market basket at our house. Don't
you? - CONFUSED BY CONCERNED TEENAGER

GIFT

Group enjoys dinner

·

i

. ''monogram". The b .. Mr.
Bumg~rner gave an explanation of each of the
· symbols as Ute chlldren hung
them on ~he . tree . ·.
. Carol sm~mg was mcluded
m the ser.V!ce. Santa Claus
arrtved With ~reats for the
children. Cookies, punch and
coffee were served.

NEXT DRAWING SAT.. DEC. 24

Saturday by Tho OhiO valle~
PubiiShlnQ company , 111

N etlonel

gave the explanation of .the
advent wreath as the light
was placed by Mrs. Judy
Fraser, kindergarten teacher
and the children of., the
classes one throug~ fo~r. In
the group were DaVId Fisher,
Alliin Spaulding, Billy Jo
Gordon , Megan Cale, David
George, Mary Hibbs, Brent
George, Charles Devis and
Chris Burdette.
Taking part in a costumed
scene were Angie Houchins,
the speaking angel; Julie
Byer, Mary Teresa Byer,
Jon! Murray and JenniCer
Wise, angels; Randy Murray,
the Wiseman; David Horlon,
Simeon, and Bruce Fisher,
Vern Slavin and Larry Byer,
the shepherds.
An explanation of the
chriamon tree was given and
it was noted that the word is
derived from "Christ" and

1

CHRISTMAS
GIVEAWAY.

I OBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
Published dolly excepl

If

DEAR POLLY
Mter
spending an evening trying to
slretch our income to fit with
the outgo, I am ready . to
sound off a Pet Peeve. It
concerns the .volume of adverlising we receive by mail,
on top of the newspaper
supplements, and radio and
TV advertising . When •
creditor sends a bill with it
comes a clever appeal to buy
something else al a bargain
price. Why waste all that
paper in view ·of a paper
shortage? Why burden our
postal system with all this
wasled paper'1 Could our
poslal rates be favorably
affecled by a decrease in junk
mail? One or lwo media types
should be sufficient for the
adverliser as a satisfied
cuslomer will quickly pass
along the word. - ARLENE.
DEAR POLLY - I find
when basting lhe hem in a
Circular skirt or dress it is
mosl practical to thread a
needle to the end of the lhread
on lhe spool. Then continue
all the way around (without
culling lhe lhread from the
spool) until you have finished
lhis basling . This eliminates
frequent rethreading of the
needle. (Polly's note - In all
lhe years I have been sewing
I wonder why I never thought
of this and, too, the basting
could all be pulled out wilh
one jerk.)
If il shower curtain rod is
loo high for a standard ienglh
shower cur lain use two or
lhree sels of shower curtain
hooks and link lhem logetlter
chain fashion unlil the
desired length is attained.
The hooks are inexpensive,
the effect is atlractive and
better stiil a problem 1s
solved. - M. J.

Gold Star

Euc. Ed .

1

"To All People" was the
theme of the Sunday . night
lillristmas program at Heath
United Methodist Church .
Emphasis of the service was
Utat the ang~ls' message was
to all people everjwhere.
·Marly Krawsczyn was
pianist for the program which
opened.with "0 Holy Night".
Candle lighters were
Stephanie Houchins . and
Susanna Wise. In the choir
processional were Ruth Ann
Blake, Jean Horton, Kathy
Blake
Helen
Slack,
Stepha'nle Houchins, Paula
Horton,Susanna
Wise,
Melissa Cale and Brian
George.
.
. The congregation sang .
"Hark the Herald Angels
Sing", and the Invocation was
given by the Rev. Robert
Bumgarner.
Andrew Hoover was
narrator for the service ·and

Adhesive paper
subs nicely for paint

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I hav e
recently ~cquired a used
small metal table with drop
leaves. Since I am allergic lo
painl, I cannot repaint it, but
lhoughl of covering it with
adhesiv·e backed paper. Does
anyone have any other ideas?
- DOROTHY.
DEAR DOROTHY
Perhaps some family
member or even a neighbor.
would paint your table in the
garage or some place out of
the house. They need not
bring it in until It is completely dry and rid of any
paint odor. However your
idea of using the paper to
complelely cover II could be
mosl attractive. A lot
Inn.
depends on tbe usc It Is going
Invocation was given by to be put to. - POLLY.
Mrs. David Spencer. Gifts
were presented to all of \he
DEAR POLLY - My
guests, and George S. Hob- Pointer should be useful for
stetter, vice president , those who have never before
presented a gift to Edison cared for lhe elderly. My
Hobstetter, president, from aged mother has lillie conlrol
the directors, officers and over her bodily funclions and
employes. Dinner music was
therefore has to wear a
provided by George Hal!.
proleclive covering at all
'At the party were Mr. and times. The problem was how
Mrs. Edison Hobstetter, Mr.
to keep this on wilhout iIs
and Mrs. Horace Karr, Roger slipping out of place. I found
Morgan, Dr. and Mrs. R. 'E.
lhe answer lo be discarded
Boice, Warren Pickens,
panlyhose. Rubber panty
Manning Webster, Bernard
lin ers do not hold this
Fultz, Mr. and Mrs. Hilton
Wolfe, Jr., Mr. and Mr. J. K. proleclive covering in place
bul lhe pantyhose do. Those
Nelson, Mr . and Mrs .
caring for lhe aged who need
Richard Poulin, Mr. and Mrs.
such help should lry ihis. George S. Hobstetter, Mr.
ELEANOR E.
and Mrs. William H. Jones,
Mr. and Mrs. John T. Wolfe,
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Midkiff,
REVIVAL PLANNED
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Keney,
RUTLAND - Arevival will
Mr. and M"· David Spencer, be held at the Rutland
Mr. and ~us. Danny A~bott, Community Church Jan. I
Ronda Dempaey, B. J . Miller, through Jan. 11 at 7:30 p.m.
Doris Snowden, Arthur each evening. The Rev. Cecil
Beegle, Mr. and Mrs. William Wise will be the speaker and
Hobstetter, Mr. and Mrs. there will be special music.
Samuel B. May, Ruth The Rev. Amos Tillis, pastor,
Graham, Mr. and Mrs . Invites the public.
Charles Corder, Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Barr, Mr. and Mrs.
NAMED TO LIST
Don Nelson, Mr. and Mrs.
Jeanie Schneider, a freshWilbur Robinson, Mary Ann man al Rio Grande College,
Grover, Mr. and Mrs. Homer has been named lo lhe Dean's
· Baxter and Mr. and Mrs. Usl with a grade average of
Charles Weber.
3.6.

DEVOTID TO THE
INTEIISTOF
' MEIGS· MASON AREA
CHISTER L. TANNEHILL

JUNIOR AMERICAN
LEGION AUXILIARY,
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
potluck supper 8 p.m .
Tuesday at Ute home of
Becky Roush and Christi
Smith. Meat, bread and
beverage will be fW'nlahed.
.1.50 gift erchange.

had attended since moving lo
West Lafayelte . Mem bers
exchanged gifts. Punch and
cookies were served during a
social hour by Mrs. Miller.
Games were conducted by
Mrs. Terrell with Mrs. Hayes
winning the prize. The travel
prize donated by Mrs. Ruth
Moore was won by Mrs.
Nancy Collins . The Miller
home was attractively
decorated for the occasion.
Members congratulated Mrs.
Addalou Lewis on winning
both best of show ·and lthe
horticulture · sweepstakes
award at lhe Christmas
flower show.
Others attending were Mrs.
Faye Pratt and Mrs. Dora
Heaton.

ir~,?~G;::;;;·i~';''''ii';~,, ,.,.,.,., t~

:-Theme concerns message

Pol nters

.

was reported .thai some
construction going on there
has resulted in damage to the
site and the club decided that
they will llllk the Meigs
County Commissioners and
the contractors aboul
restoring the site to Its
original condition.
Mrs. Dolly Hayes presided ·
at the meeting, and gave
grace preceding the dinner.
Mrs. Alice Thompson was
elected to finish the term of
treasurer due to the
reSignation of Mrs. Cora
Beegle. Mrs . Thompson and
Mrs. Terrell were awarded
blue ribbons for Ghristmas
corsages.
Mrs. Iris Kelton reported
on a garden club meet.in~ •he

A reP&lt;&gt;rt on civic plantings
· was given at the holiday
meetlne of the Winding Trail
Garden Club held at the home
of Mrs. Susie Miller.
A potluck dinner preceded
the meeting . It was noted that
Elberfelds had donated a
bushel of bulbs whlch were
planted on Dec. 13 at the new
mini-park, the Pomeroy fire
station, and the Meigs County
Infirmary.
Problems
at
the
beautification. site at the
Infirmary were discussed. It

..

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepori-Pom&lt;ruy, 0., Tuesday, Dec. 23, 1975

4- The Datly Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tu esd~y , Ocr. 2.1. 1~75

REG.
PRICi

.I

�'

·
.
Polly's

Report given on civic plantings
.

Roush family

has gathering
The annual holiday
gathering of the family of Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Roush was
held Sunday at their country
home.
Attending were Mr, and
Mrs.
Larry
Flowers,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Roger
Roush,
Doug,
Pataskla; Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Roush, Sherry and David, St.
Alban11; Mrs. Garnet Herdman, Leon, W. Va.; Mrs.
Mildred Meade, Columbus;
Mrs. Bonnie Matheny and son
Doug, Leon, W. Va., and
Quist! and Kevin Smith,
Becky and Kenny Roush, aild
Mrs, Gerry Kessinger, Kim
and Lois, Pomeroy, R. D.

Social
Calendar
'llJFSDAY
LONG Bottom United
Methodist Oturch Christmas
program 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
with recltationa, special
music, a dialogue, "Who Is
the Saviour?" and Chrlstrnss
meditations by the pastor,
Dennis Creeger.
OHIO VALLEY Commandery, Knights Templer,
staled meeting Tuesday at 7
p.m. at the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple. About 8 lhe group
·Will go to the Meigs County
Infirmary for a visit with the
residents there. Those with
unilurma are asked to wear
them.
RUTLAND Community
Church, Christmas program,
7:30 Tuesday night at the
church : Keith McDaniel,
Rutland, lo give a personal
life testimony as a part of the
program. Amos Tillis, pastor,
Invites the public.
CHRISTMAS PROGRAM
Tuelday at 7 p.m. at Olester
Oturch IJf. God. The youth will
)l'ellllt a play "the Gate at
the Inn" There will be
recitations and alnglne. The
public II Invited.

rB;;;;:;;;,h;U''l
The annual Christmas
party of the Pomeroy
National Bank was held
Saturday night at the ·Meigs

Society has
gathering
Mrs. Louis Osborne was
hostess for the recent annual
Christmas parly of the
Evangeline Missionary
Society of the Pomeroy
Church of Chrlsl.
·
Members revealed !heir
secret pals with a gift exchange around a lighted tree.
Mrs . Evelyn Smith had
charge or the business
meeting wllh Mrs. Edward
Venoy giving devotions from
Luke 2, verses 1 lo 20. She
also gave a reading, "What
· Does Christmas Mean to
You." Mrs. Smith had
p(ayer.
·Mrs. Earl Cleland read a
letter from the Children's
Mission in Mexico which the
class helps lo supporl. She
also had charge of entertainment with prizes being
won by Mrs. Venoy, Mrs.
ElwOOd Bowers and Mrs.
Denver Kepple. There was
Rroup lin I!ill&amp; of carols. The
January meeting will be held
al the parsonage with Mrs.
Richard Evanson to be the
hostess. There will be election of officers then.
Attending besides those
named were Mrs. Stanley
Bass and Mrs. Eva Dessauer.

Pomeroy

Members of the Third
Friday Club enjoyed a dinner
at Crow's Steak House Friday
evening before going to the
home of Miss Sybil Ebersbach for a Cllr'istmas party
and gift exchange.
The Ebersbach home was
decorated In keeping with the
season. Mrs. Gertrude Bass
presided at the meeting with

;::;
,.

officers for 1976 elected as
follows: Mrs .. Eva DeSauer,
president; Mrs .. Edna Reibel,
vice
president;
Mrs.
Genevieve Meinhart,
secretary-treasurer.
The next meeting will be
Feb. 20 at the home of Mrs.
Dale Smith. During the social
hour games and carol singing
were enjoyed along with
punch and cake served by the
hostess.
·

FAMILY ENTERTAINS
· DANCE PLANNED
Mr. and Mrs. Harold
MIDDLEPORT - .The
Ebersbach entertained
Sunday with a pre.atriatmas Middleport Police auxiliary
family dinner party. Gifts will sponsor a square dance
were exchanged around a SaiiU'day, Dec. '!1, at Midlighted Christmas tree. dleport Elementary School
Guests were Mr. and Mrs. from 8 p.m. to II p.m. Music
James Ebershach and son will be by "Siring Dusters."
Bryon Todd, Columbus; Mr. Admission is $1 for adults and
and Mrs. Tom Siley, Matthew children under 12 admitted
,,land Richard , Marietta; free if accompanied by
Emmett Blackburn, and Mrs. parents. Callers will be Glen
Nora Mills, Middleport.
· Lan1bert and Cora Hilton.

Poinsettias
•3.50 to •5.00
100 pols left' choose from .
Churches and
organizations quantity
discount . Also Foliage
Plants &amp; Baskets.

Hubbard
Greenhouse
L.:..:
99:.,2·:.:.S1.:.7~:...__ __;s::.y:.:r•:.:&lt;•:.:s;:.Je

+++

All Year Long

+++
Dear Rap :
f'!!ople are always being urged to write their Congressmen
if they don't likewhat'sgolng on. So what if we can't afford the
stamps?
Why don't they allow franking privileges to private
citizens who address their letters to Washington, D. C.? Then
maybe our officials would hear what's going on In the country.
After all, Congressmen get free maillne privileges and they
can afford the stamps a lot more than I can. Besides, I'd
·probably write asking why my last 10 cents diaappeared down
· the Tax Chute. .
Wonder what would happen If I wrote my naine in big
black letters on the right-hand corner or my envelope and sent
it to my Senator (with no other stamp)? - CHARGED FOR
. SPEAKING OUT

AAA Membership
• Protedion
eSeturity

• Convenience
Wijh Just 1 Call
446-0699

Dear Charged :
You 'd get your letter marked "Returned for Insufficient
Postage." But, you've made a good point. Think about it,
Washington, D. C.! - SUE AND HELEN

Ott Frtt Tltktts . At All
tlclpaHng Gold Star StGres.

Second class postage pa id

Pomeroy, Ohio .

ldvtrt iSing ·

• Rap:
•
I'm a 17-year-()ld girl In love with a -guy I can 'I be with
; because he is 21and on probation. If he gets caught with me (a
: minor) he can go back to prison .
: : This Is very unfair, as he has peld his debt to society with a
: prison term. Now he can't lead a ''free" life, just because I'm
; lillderage! - MATURE, IN WVE, UNDER 18, AND COM; PLAINING

.now·JHEBEJ ffiORE InFORmATIOn
.:on YOUR ElECTRIC Bill

ltia lawl
Par-

· Delivered by carrier where
available 75 cents per week .

By Motor Route wnere
carrier
service
not
available , One mon1~ 1. S3 .25.
By mail in Ohio and w . va .•
Year. 122 .00 ; Six

monlhs , SII.SQ ;
Three
onths, $7 .00 . Elsewhere
26 .00 veer ; SLx months
13 . .50 ; thru months, $7 .50.
ubscrlptlon price Includes
unday Times -Sentinel.
~

Tbe AlmallllC

United

Pren

New Information ls being included on the electric bills of Columbus and
Southern's ·customer&amp; starting with their December bill.

ID·

lerUIIoaal

Today Is Tuesday' Dec. 23,
the 367th day of 1975 with
eight to foDow.
The moon iJ approachlng
lt.s 1ut quarter.
The morning stars are
Venus and Saturn.
The evenlnl! stars are Mercury, Man and Jupiter.
Thole born on thia date are
llld« the sign of Capricorn.
Mormon religious luunder
Joseph Smith was born Dec.

23, 1100.
On this dAy In hiatory :
In 1783, Gen. George Washington resigned his comm!Jslon with the U.S. Army
and retired to Mount Vernon,
Va.
In 1928, the National Broadcastine Cmtpany established
a permanent coast.too(.'Oast .
hoo~ .

In 1943, er-Premier Tojo of
Japan and siJ: other Japanese
war leaders were hanged in
Tokyo by the Allied War
Qimea Qlmmluion.
In 1972, former Presl!lent
Harry Trumaa was placed on
the crlttc.J lilt In a Kanaaa
· Qty, Mo., llolpilal, where he

died line dl}'l lal«.
w

.'

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••
•

·Police ·•.
•1nact•1on •••

••
95
$139 •••
••
••

.'

••e

'

MIDDLEPORT. •

.'
.'

==:rge

~

.

.

... it's precision-crafted
for full, rich tone quality!

.

Look for this, information In .your next bill fo~ electric service!
J

~

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VALUES TO 15.99 ASST.

lADIES HOLIDAY

A nnua/ program presen ted
. T~e annual Christmas
pro§ram of the Laurel Cliff
Free\ Methodist Church
prese~ted Sunday night at the ,
chiU'ch was climaxed by the
nalivitx with Brian and
Bonnie Friend in the roles of
Mary and Joseph.
Olhers having parts were.
Tammy Wrlghl , Michelle
Folmer and Gene Scarberry,
the angels; Joey Barton,
Jerry Pullins and Franklin
Martin , lhe shepherds;
Angela Martin, Margo
Martin and Franklin Martin,
the wise men .
Those participating in the
program en lered the sancluary in a processional as the
congregation sang "0 Come
All Ye Faithful." There was
prayer by lhe Rev. Floyd
Shook , and a solo by Mrs.

KNIT

Special group of Ladles' Holiday
Tops. Values to $5.99. Wide
asst . of colors and styles. Good
selection . Clean up lot from our
stock. All first quality. Shop early
for best selection .

Harry Clark. A reading and
recitalion was given by Mrs.
Harmon Fox and lhere were
songs by lhe nursery
children.
Recitations were by Anita
Smilh, Tracy Scholderer,
John Smith, Laura Gayle
Smith , Valerie Jeffers, Steve
Tracy , Sean Jeffers, Tammy
Wright, Michelle Folmer and
Gena Scarberry. There were
songs by the children, a duet
by Michelle Folmer and
Anita Smith, and a reading by
Mrs. Uoyd Wright and Mrs.
Shirley Friend.
Seleclions by the choir
included "Come Sing for
Chrislrnas," "The Children's
King," "Joy to the World "
and "Lying in a Manger."
Following lhe program the
young couple went caroling .

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88

Special Si!le Group of Lad ies' 100
Pet. Polyester double knit fl.are
slacks in fashion colors in plain and
fancy patterns. Flare leg style. Size
10 to 20. Yes, you save money at
Stiffler's.

COl\MI&amp;IS-~

CM0 lltCTNC COMPM'Y

'.

I
I

· PAIR

Church potluck enjoyed
~.,~·

•

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or component sy1tem, you are assured of truly
breathtaking atereo performance. That'a
becaul8 each and every Admiral Ia skillfully
engineered and carelully manulactured to
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Our complete stock of ladies' dress and
casual coats in new fall and winter fabrics .
Be warm and beautiful in the latest fashion
coals at tags that melt frozen budget s. You
save at Stiffler's.

II
%oFF

REG.
PRICE
SPECIAL GROUP
lADIES HOLIDAY

DRESSES
.\ND.

"

PANT SUITS
01e large group Of ladies' holiday
pant suits and dresses. Looks that
uphold a fresh fashion image season
after season . Save now at Stiffler's, .
the Christmas store.

t

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1

SECOND FLOOR

Shop
StiHiers

Save

c...:
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OUR COMPLETE 'STOCI(' OF
LADIES FAll AND WINTER

And

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THANKS FOR SHOPPING
AT STIFFLER'S IN 1975

OFF

3

REG•
PRICE

SPECIAL SALE GROUP
MENS AND BOYS HOLIDAY DRESS

JAC·KETS
Ideal Christmas Gifts . Choose a
warm jackel now from our
great selecti.on in wide range of
fabri cs, styles and colors .
Zipper and button styles . 25 0
Pet . Off Regular Price, Now . m

GUARMT£ED TO BlOOM 'ALL THRU
THE HOLIDAYS

OFF

••
•

•

The new items will show customers the cost of fuel in their own electric
bill and indicate if that cost Is higher or lower than the previous month.
Since our mtU!od of reflecting fuel costs will change with the December
billing, It wilfoot be possible to make a meaningful comparison between
the fuel costi shown on the customer's previous biDs with that shown.on
the December bill.
'

••••••••
!Ytllirllirlliio'lllir•~•••'lli!'••""•I'Oiullirlllilllir~

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

n.,total coet of fuel which .. Included Ia ach cuato.er'a

' w...._on.

.
•

Ad•••lralrt

for uch ldlowatt hou
c:e betwe... tile PNHnt and prevloue month'•
per~tt hoar bu..
The'se three 1~rns replace the fuel adjustment factor which has been
shown on th~ustomer's bill for sewral years. That fuel adjustmei'!t factor
only lndicateil the cost of fuel above a basic rate.

e.

OPEN TONIGHT TIL 8

When It's stereo by

2) The
3) The'

.
•. Ingels
Furn Iture.••
ee

Since t.he CQ.it of fuel used to produce electricity has become a significant
part of the ptlce of electricity, the State of Ohio recendy passed a law
which requlills that three new items regarding fuel charges be shown on
customers' ~nthly electric bills.

. 1)

-5{(-

SPECIAL GROUP

Party held Saturday

(11 THIS BILL INCLUDES $8.68 FUEL
CHARGE, (21 AT A RATE OF $.009944 PER KWH
(3) WHICH IS $.000166 PER KWH LESS
THAN LAST MONTH.

One

By

-

.

rares :

Subscription

Memorial Hospital was in•
eluded when members of the
Youth Fellowship an&lt;! Church
School of Trinity Church
made lheir annual visits to
sick and shul-in members
and others of lhe community.
Thirly-three members
made up lhe group for the
carol singing and concluded
their tour with a serenade at
Ute Pomeroy Pastry ShoP
where they honored Roy
Mayer, Sunday school'
superintendent.
Later the group returned lo
lhe church for hot chocolate,
cookies and coffee cakes.
Members of the Youlh
Fellowship under
the
direclion of their leadtr, Mrs.
Paul Nease, also had a
rehearsal for the pageant to
be presented at lhe church on

Chrislmas Eve.
Making up lhe group of
carolers were Mrs. Nease,
Janel Burson, Lori Wood,
Keilh
Krauller,
Kim
Kraulter, Dan Thomas,
Danny Will, David Harris,
Christy Burson, Jean
Blankenship, Rick Blaettnar,
Becky Thomas, Beth Perrin,
Mary Blaettnar, Greg
Thomas, Elizabeth Blaettnar, Jim Schmoll, Jon Perrin ,
Faith Perrin, Kennelh
Harris, Genevieve Meinhart,
Pauline Mayer, Nancy Jo
Mayer, Chuck Saltg, Marie
Houck , Mr. and Mrs. John
William Blaeltnar, Patrick
Wood, Barbara Offutt, Jay
Perrin, Clarice Krautter and
Dick Nease.
AI the church to assist with
the refreshments were Edith
Lanning and Erma Smith .
Paul Nease was a guest.

The congregation of the Mrs. James Gilmore, Mr . and
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist ~rs . Olio Lohn, Mr. and Mrs.
Church mel Saturday nigh I al Clarence Curtis, Mr. and
the Rock Springs Grange hall Mrs. Richard Friend, Mark
and Belinda, Marvin Friend,
for a Chrislrnas poUuck.
&lt;
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Friend
Entertainmenl
was
·' Dear Mature :
provided by the Heavenly !and son, Mrs. Edna Faulk,
My !GAP (1'11) {lpesslng ~ain Pe~ceptiqn) (IBYS we Tri&lt;h With lhe entertainers I Mrs . Bertha Parker, Mr . and
;
: h8ven't got the complete stOry. By "be with," do you mean were the Atkins family, Mr. -Mrs. Steve Eblin, Miss Susan
: "live with?" And are your parenll dead set against thls'
and Mrs. Chesler Sexlon and :Fleshman, Mr. and Mrs .
:
We doubt your boy friend's parole officer would hassle' children, Mr. and Mrs. Toby :Randall Hawley and sons ,
; him, unless he had more reasons than you mention. Right? - Myers, Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Mr. and Mrs . Ernest Haggy
Huffman, and Mrs. Betty and daughter, Mr. and Mrs .
•• HELEN AND SUE
Uoyd Wright and grandWillis .
children
Tammy and Jason ,
Church members atlending
were Mr. end Mrs. Rober! Sherry Clark, Mr. and Mrs .
ON HONOR ROLL
Ferguson's o(fice reported
, Six Meigs Countlans at- loday $17,280,311.10 in Barton and family, Mr. and Ernesl Powell, and the Rev .
; tending Ohio State University welfare assislance money Mrs . Pearl Jacobs, Mr . and and Mrs . Floyd Shook.
: have been named to the f 3.51 being distributed to Ohio's 88
: honor roll for Ute autumn counties In November. Meigs
•'
; quarter. They are William' Counly's share of the Iota!
• David Krawsczyn, Douglas was $9,438.03.
: William Little, Christine
: Robinson, James Lee SchMEETING SET
The Christmas party for Marvin Burt, Mr . .and Mrs .
: moll , all of Middleport;
MASON - The newly
: Joseph Richard Rosenbaum, organized Mason The Farmers Bank and Carroll Norris, Mr. and Mrs .
: Pomeroy, and Karle Robin Businessmen's Association Savings Company was held Dewey Smith, Mr. and Mrs .
Saturday ~vening at The Bob Vaugh~n. Mr. and Mrs.
, Humphrey, Reedsville.
will meet at 8 p.m. on Jan. 13 Orchid Room In Pomeroy Mickey Williams, Mr. and
at the village hall In Mason . with a delicious buffet dinner Mrs. John Werry, Mr . and
Mason-Clifton businesses catered by Paul Simon, Allie Mrs. Mark Smith, Evelyn
FUNDS RECEIVED
Stale Auditor Thomas E. representatives are Invited. Simon and George Horak.
Lanning, Susan Andrews,
Following dinner the group Recka McGuire, Bruce Reed,
enjoyed dancing to the group Tom Reed, George Hicks,
of Bill Francis called The Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Swisher,
Sound Investments.
Mr. and Mrs . Richard
Attending were Mr . and Follrod, Mr. and Mrs. FerMrs. Ted Reed, Jr., Mr. and man Moore, Mr . and Mrs.
Mrs. Thereon Johnson, Mr. Fred W. Crow, Jr., Mr. and
and Mrs. Paul Kloes , Roger .; Mrs. Fred W. Crow Ill,
Hysell, Mr. and Mrs. Jon Carson Crow, Mr. and Mrs.
Karschnlk, Mr. and Mrs. Scott Wheeler, Dorothy Will,
Dick Young, Mr. and Mrs. Mary Kunzelman and Olga
John Musser, Mr. and Mrs. Pierotti.

representative
Ward .
Griffith CompanY · Inc .,
Bottlnelll &amp; Gallagher Dlv .,
157 Third Ave ,, New York ,
N.Y. 10011.

WEDNESDAY
CHRISTMAS PROGRAM,
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. at
J.etart Falls United Brethern
Oturch; public inviled.

A

POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT

'WeAre Here
'}', Seroe Yuu

+++

So lHEY
N• Travel Alone

.I

2157 .

::~

..

N&lt;Yl'E FROM HELEN : Small consolation, but your
parents are all too typical shoppers. Olecldng out the grocery
carts at our friendly supermarket, I often see an overload of
sweets, pop, "empty" cereals and crunch food - and these are
among the most,expensive (per pound) items In the store!
With all the nutritional information available, you'd think
people would know better.
Pity.. .
.

WRAPPED

Yule visits made

:~l~ Infirmary
. visit lo theandMeigsVelerans
County

Dear CBCT :
Certainly do ! And your "say" makes much more sense
than your ptirenls' "sweet-talk." Maybe if you'd go along end
'help yoll' mother sllop rou might convince her to substitute
nutritious food for some of the junk. At least you could talk her
into buyine it for YOU .. - SUE

3- 1100.00 Gift trtnicates For Groceries

Court St . Pomeroy, Ohio
4576t . Business Off ice Phone
9'/2 .2156 . Editorial Phone 992 .

By Hdt•n nnd Sue• Boud

Daugbt~ WilerThao Mom?
Dear Helen and Sue:
·
My parents are always grumbling about the high cost of
food. Who isn't, these days? But they still persist In buying
extra junk . For example, on Mon's last big shopping trip, she
boughtatmost eight dollars worth of sweets 'n' thlnes : cookies,
cakes, sodas, etc .
l'mthlnasarall(peoplehatemebecauselneverhaveto
count calories), but' others In my famUy don~ need this goop,
and my folks complain when my brothers and sisters fill up on
between-meal junk. So why do they buy it?
I try to convince them they should spend their money on
more nutritious foods like fruit, juices, vegetables, cheeses,
etc. Theyaayi'mwejrci. At 16, I think I'm old enough to have a
say on what goes Into Ute market basket at our house. Don't
you? - CONFUSED BY CONCERNED TEENAGER

GIFT

Group enjoys dinner

·

i

. ''monogram". The b .. Mr.
Bumg~rner gave an explanation of each of the
· symbols as Ute chlldren hung
them on ~he . tree . ·.
. Carol sm~mg was mcluded
m the ser.V!ce. Santa Claus
arrtved With ~reats for the
children. Cookies, punch and
coffee were served.

NEXT DRAWING SAT.. DEC. 24

Saturday by Tho OhiO valle~
PubiiShlnQ company , 111

N etlonel

gave the explanation of .the
advent wreath as the light
was placed by Mrs. Judy
Fraser, kindergarten teacher
and the children of., the
classes one throug~ fo~r. In
the group were DaVId Fisher,
Alliin Spaulding, Billy Jo
Gordon , Megan Cale, David
George, Mary Hibbs, Brent
George, Charles Devis and
Chris Burdette.
Taking part in a costumed
scene were Angie Houchins,
the speaking angel; Julie
Byer, Mary Teresa Byer,
Jon! Murray and JenniCer
Wise, angels; Randy Murray,
the Wiseman; David Horlon,
Simeon, and Bruce Fisher,
Vern Slavin and Larry Byer,
the shepherds.
An explanation of the
chriamon tree was given and
it was noted that the word is
derived from "Christ" and

1

CHRISTMAS
GIVEAWAY.

I OBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
Published dolly excepl

If

DEAR POLLY
Mter
spending an evening trying to
slretch our income to fit with
the outgo, I am ready . to
sound off a Pet Peeve. It
concerns the .volume of adverlising we receive by mail,
on top of the newspaper
supplements, and radio and
TV advertising . When •
creditor sends a bill with it
comes a clever appeal to buy
something else al a bargain
price. Why waste all that
paper in view ·of a paper
shortage? Why burden our
postal system with all this
wasled paper'1 Could our
poslal rates be favorably
affecled by a decrease in junk
mail? One or lwo media types
should be sufficient for the
adverliser as a satisfied
cuslomer will quickly pass
along the word. - ARLENE.
DEAR POLLY - I find
when basting lhe hem in a
Circular skirt or dress it is
mosl practical to thread a
needle to the end of the lhread
on lhe spool. Then continue
all the way around (without
culling lhe lhread from the
spool) until you have finished
lhis basling . This eliminates
frequent rethreading of the
needle. (Polly's note - In all
lhe years I have been sewing
I wonder why I never thought
of this and, too, the basting
could all be pulled out wilh
one jerk.)
If il shower curtain rod is
loo high for a standard ienglh
shower cur lain use two or
lhree sels of shower curtain
hooks and link lhem logetlter
chain fashion unlil the
desired length is attained.
The hooks are inexpensive,
the effect is atlractive and
better stiil a problem 1s
solved. - M. J.

Gold Star

Euc. Ed .

1

"To All People" was the
theme of the Sunday . night
lillristmas program at Heath
United Methodist Church .
Emphasis of the service was
Utat the ang~ls' message was
to all people everjwhere.
·Marly Krawsczyn was
pianist for the program which
opened.with "0 Holy Night".
Candle lighters were
Stephanie Houchins . and
Susanna Wise. In the choir
processional were Ruth Ann
Blake, Jean Horton, Kathy
Blake
Helen
Slack,
Stepha'nle Houchins, Paula
Horton,Susanna
Wise,
Melissa Cale and Brian
George.
.
. The congregation sang .
"Hark the Herald Angels
Sing", and the Invocation was
given by the Rev. Robert
Bumgarner.
Andrew Hoover was
narrator for the service ·and

Adhesive paper
subs nicely for paint

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I hav e
recently ~cquired a used
small metal table with drop
leaves. Since I am allergic lo
painl, I cannot repaint it, but
lhoughl of covering it with
adhesiv·e backed paper. Does
anyone have any other ideas?
- DOROTHY.
DEAR DOROTHY
Perhaps some family
member or even a neighbor.
would paint your table in the
garage or some place out of
the house. They need not
bring it in until It is completely dry and rid of any
paint odor. However your
idea of using the paper to
complelely cover II could be
mosl attractive. A lot
Inn.
depends on tbe usc It Is going
Invocation was given by to be put to. - POLLY.
Mrs. David Spencer. Gifts
were presented to all of \he
DEAR POLLY - My
guests, and George S. Hob- Pointer should be useful for
stetter, vice president , those who have never before
presented a gift to Edison cared for lhe elderly. My
Hobstetter, president, from aged mother has lillie conlrol
the directors, officers and over her bodily funclions and
employes. Dinner music was
therefore has to wear a
provided by George Hal!.
proleclive covering at all
'At the party were Mr. and times. The problem was how
Mrs. Edison Hobstetter, Mr.
to keep this on wilhout iIs
and Mrs. Horace Karr, Roger slipping out of place. I found
Morgan, Dr. and Mrs. R. 'E.
lhe answer lo be discarded
Boice, Warren Pickens,
panlyhose. Rubber panty
Manning Webster, Bernard
lin ers do not hold this
Fultz, Mr. and Mrs. Hilton
Wolfe, Jr., Mr. and Mr. J. K. proleclive covering in place
bul lhe pantyhose do. Those
Nelson, Mr . and Mrs .
caring for lhe aged who need
Richard Poulin, Mr. and Mrs.
such help should lry ihis. George S. Hobstetter, Mr.
ELEANOR E.
and Mrs. William H. Jones,
Mr. and Mrs. John T. Wolfe,
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Midkiff,
REVIVAL PLANNED
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Keney,
RUTLAND - Arevival will
Mr. and M"· David Spencer, be held at the Rutland
Mr. and ~us. Danny A~bott, Community Church Jan. I
Ronda Dempaey, B. J . Miller, through Jan. 11 at 7:30 p.m.
Doris Snowden, Arthur each evening. The Rev. Cecil
Beegle, Mr. and Mrs. William Wise will be the speaker and
Hobstetter, Mr. and Mrs. there will be special music.
Samuel B. May, Ruth The Rev. Amos Tillis, pastor,
Graham, Mr. and Mrs . Invites the public.
Charles Corder, Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Barr, Mr. and Mrs.
NAMED TO LIST
Don Nelson, Mr. and Mrs.
Jeanie Schneider, a freshWilbur Robinson, Mary Ann man al Rio Grande College,
Grover, Mr. and Mrs. Homer has been named lo lhe Dean's
· Baxter and Mr. and Mrs. Usl with a grade average of
Charles Weber.
3.6.

DEVOTID TO THE
INTEIISTOF
' MEIGS· MASON AREA
CHISTER L. TANNEHILL

JUNIOR AMERICAN
LEGION AUXILIARY,
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
potluck supper 8 p.m .
Tuesday at Ute home of
Becky Roush and Christi
Smith. Meat, bread and
beverage will be fW'nlahed.
.1.50 gift erchange.

had attended since moving lo
West Lafayelte . Mem bers
exchanged gifts. Punch and
cookies were served during a
social hour by Mrs. Miller.
Games were conducted by
Mrs. Terrell with Mrs. Hayes
winning the prize. The travel
prize donated by Mrs. Ruth
Moore was won by Mrs.
Nancy Collins . The Miller
home was attractively
decorated for the occasion.
Members congratulated Mrs.
Addalou Lewis on winning
both best of show ·and lthe
horticulture · sweepstakes
award at lhe Christmas
flower show.
Others attending were Mrs.
Faye Pratt and Mrs. Dora
Heaton.

ir~,?~G;::;;;·i~';''''ii';~,, ,.,.,.,., t~

:-Theme concerns message

Pol nters

.

was reported .thai some
construction going on there
has resulted in damage to the
site and the club decided that
they will llllk the Meigs
County Commissioners and
the contractors aboul
restoring the site to Its
original condition.
Mrs. Dolly Hayes presided ·
at the meeting, and gave
grace preceding the dinner.
Mrs. Alice Thompson was
elected to finish the term of
treasurer due to the
reSignation of Mrs. Cora
Beegle. Mrs . Thompson and
Mrs. Terrell were awarded
blue ribbons for Ghristmas
corsages.
Mrs. Iris Kelton reported
on a garden club meet.in~ •he

A reP&lt;&gt;rt on civic plantings
· was given at the holiday
meetlne of the Winding Trail
Garden Club held at the home
of Mrs. Susie Miller.
A potluck dinner preceded
the meeting . It was noted that
Elberfelds had donated a
bushel of bulbs whlch were
planted on Dec. 13 at the new
mini-park, the Pomeroy fire
station, and the Meigs County
Infirmary.
Problems
at
the
beautification. site at the
Infirmary were discussed. It

..

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepori-Pom&lt;ruy, 0., Tuesday, Dec. 23, 1975

4- The Datly Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tu esd~y , Ocr. 2.1. 1~75

REG.
PRICi

.I

�.

8- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Dec. 2.1, 1975

Way q\~ared to For 1'_~~ Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds:
pay. candidates
By CI..AY F. RICHARDS
WASHINGTON (UP!) The Federal Election
Comlallon, wltb the threat of
a Supreme Court Injunction
removed, Is prepared to
approve the first $2 million in
federal campaign funds .
The court refused Monday
to grant an Injunction
blocking the funds until a
ruling Is banded down on a
oonstltutlonal challenge to
the 197t campaign reform
act.
The action cleared the way
for the FEC today to ask the
Treasury to make payments
ollboutS1.5milllon to nine or
10 presidential contenders
and $700,000 to the
Republican and Democratic
National Committees to
ftnllil.'e their political COO•

ventloos.
The money represents the
tnltill payments to the candidate• and parties from the
pool collected by $1 individual
checkoffs oo federal Income

tu returns.
Sen. James Buckley, RIndependent
N . Y .,
presidential candidate
Eugene McCarthy and others
10ught the Supreme Court
InjUnction, They said . the
money llllould he held up until
the court decided on their suit
conchallenging
the
lil!utlonaUty of the law .
They aald the law is unconstitutional because the
llmlll on campaign ooniributloos and spendlng prohibit
the First Amendment rights
ollree eipresalon. The court
has ldjolll'lli!d its regular
Work seaalons untU Jan . 12
and wu not expected to rule
111W then on the overall
queatlon.
Ql the Injunction request,
the court spUt f-4. Because
!bert wa1 no majority, the
lnjlllctlon was denied.

While the expected FEC
action clears payments
REGULATIONS
The Publisher r eserv es the
Immediately to the two
tCI cdll or rP.i ecr any ads .
parties, the candidates dright
eemed objectional
The 1
caMol receive money until publisher wi ll no t be
respons ible fo r more !han one ·
the first of the year. The incorrect insertion .
RATES
Republicans will receive
For Want Ad Serv i ce
$250,000 and the Democrats Scents
per word one inse rllon ~
M in imum Charge $1.00
$460,000, hoth down payments
14 ce nt s p e r word thr e e
on the $2 million for each consecu
tive Insert ions
26 cents per wor d six con
party provided In the caminser l ioM
paign law to finance the scc15utivc
Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10
national conventions.
Three presidential can- days .CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OB-ITUARY
didates will receive subS1 .00 for 50 word minimum
stantial payments in the first
Ea c h additio nal word J
round ol FEC action . ce.nt s .
BLIND ADS
President Ford will receive
Addit ion a l 25c Charge p er
$374,000, Sen . lloyd Bentsen, !\dver ti $ement .
OFFICE HOURS
D-Tex., t-492,000 and former
8:30 a . m . to S: OO p . m.
Gov, Terry Sanford of North Daily , 8 :30am . to 12:00 Noon
Sa tu rday .
Carolina, $214,000.
The remaining candidates
will receive $100,000, the In Memory
minimum matching fund
IN MEMORY ot Greg M iddl e
swa r t
·
payment under the law .
Larger payments will come Chr istmas wil l not be the
same .
when the FEC completes With
out Gr eg running about ,
detailed audits of their He dressed in Sa ntll '5 suit ,
And went around 10 sing and
campaigns.
shout .
·
In the $100,000 category are
Republican Ronald Reagan Th e ch il dr en a r o und the
cou n tr y si de
and Democrat' Sen, Henry looked for Greg in hi s Sa nta's
su it ,
Jackaon ol Washington, Gov.
He was alwa ys so fun ny ,
George Wallace of Alabama, And th ey a ll thought it cu te.
Rep. Morris Udall of Ari2ona
Merry Chr is tmas t o you,
and former Sen . Fred Harris
Gr eg
I know you ar e wi th th e l ord
of Oklahoma .
So just l is ten to th e ange ls
Former Georgia Gov .
si ng ,
Jimmy Carter met all but one fi nd I know you won ' I be
bored . '
of the technical requirements
Wr lllen by grandm oth er ,
Viol et Bre w er .
for the $100,000 and was
t2 'll He
expected to qualify. Sen.
Birch Bayh was on the verge IN MEMORY of Mrs . Charl es
Reu ter of Tuc son , Arix . who
of qualifying and could
pass ed away Oct. 23 , 191S .
Sadly m issed by mother ,
become the loth candidate on
Mr s . Mae Pear sons .
the list.
12 23 He
To qualify lor the '100,000,
I N MEMORY of our mo th er ,
a candidate must raise $5,000
Ella Ph illips , l"' ho pas sed
away 4 years ago , D ec . 20,
In each of 20 states in con1971.
.
iributlons of
or less. Two
other Democrats , Gov. Dece mber com es wi th sad
regrets ,
Mil ton Shapp of Penn- Th is month w e shall not
forget .
sylvania and Sargent
in our h ear ts you will
Shriver, were still short of For
always stay ,
Loved and remembered every
that goal. ·

'250

day .

Energy hill "'just
first step--Ford
ly WllUAM E. CLAY'f()N
WASHINGTON (WI) Prellident Ford and Congress
blltled nearly a year on a
compnhtlllive energy bW,
10 when the Pmldent algned
the Jeclllatloo he emphasized
the polliUve.
In a ..ternent after he
Biped tt Monday, Fotd called
the bill "ooly a beginning"
111d asked Congress to work
on · other energy provlslons
''ellllltial to achieve energy
Independence," Including
deregulating natural gas
prlcea.

"We cannot aHord continued delay. We cannot
afford
prolonged
,nlnerablllty to foreign
IJI'Oducera. We must act," he
Mid. "II is In that spirit that I
have decided to sign the
energy bW."
The bW would force oil
pricel down at the start of a
4Cknonth period. But to the
IVerlle COilSIUller - the
motorist wanting gasoline,
tile, horne owner buying
heating oil, the businessman
puttlne up new lights
~ prices may not go
down at all.
ford, who wanted to enc,ourage conservation
through higher prices, settled
fw a compromise pricing
policy and several of
OJnaress' Ideas on how to

'Q6 \·

2 SIGNS_.

QUAliTY

out, good new tires, custom wheels, dark green vl~yl .

root . green fini sh, AM radio and Jape. factory a1r,
pow er steering and brakes, automatic .

your deer trophi es
mounted
B i r c: hflelds
..TaxldertT. y, St. Rl. ll-4 , ea st
of Rut land . Phone (6 14] 742
2178 .
11 .28 1fc

HI\~E

52095

4·door. one local owner , new radia l white-wall tires, v.
8 automatic , power steer ina. radio, save on a nice .~~n,e.

Notice
ROOM and board for Sr .
Citi ze ns with low incc.me ,
ve ry n ic: e. Phon e 992 3509 .
11 30 ifc
HEf oRE: you buy a Stihf
Chain Saw . See a fri end , 1
bought. Oh e . Al ber! Kee lan
Mi n ersv ill e, Ohio . PhonC
992 6154 .
12 23 6tp
TO OUR relatives an d fr iends ,
we are taking this op
portunity to w ish you a
toyous Christmas and a
happy and prosp erous New
Year .
Howard and Bet! y Roush .
12 21 Jtc

®(
.

J

1963 CHEVY r e.buill engine,
new tires , body in fair
con dition . Ca ll 992 .22 06.
12· 19·41p
1969 FORO Ranger , " ton
pi ckup , standard , P .S . 6 cyl .
300 cu . in . 5745 . Phone 949 .

Help Wanted
SERV I CE Manage r for new
car dealership . Write Box
74 3, Pom er oy , Ohio , 457 69 .
12 -7 12tc

Employment Wanted
CARPE: NTRY .
floor ing ,
ce iling and panel ing . Phon e
992 2759.
12 · 14 IOtc

Pets
BEAGLE puppi es . Al so ,
Reg . Basse ll houn d. male ,
housebroke . Phone 742 2521 .
122J 6tp

For Sale or Trade
DOZER . 1958 Internationa l
T .D. 14 ·A , 12 ft . hydra ulic
blade, In good condition .

2801.

12· 11 ·6tc

A.1RCO we l di ng ma ~ hine ,
n ew , elec . a ll access or ies
includ ed. Phone 992 .341 0.
~
10·2B·Ifc

Wanted
,SH pil id tor all makes ana
models of mobile homes •.
Phone area code 614 ·423 ·

-- - ' ·

Wanted To Buy

OL D furn iture. ice boxe s,
ONE corn fed hog ready to
bra ss beds , stone ia r s, or
bu lc her. wa nt to give awey 4
complete households . Write
k itt ens, 1 •• Sia m ese . Phon e
M . 0 . Mill er, Rl.
-4 ,
~9 2 720 1 a ft er 4 p .m .
Pomeroy , Oh io. Call 992 12 -23 4tC
1760 .
7
7
10 · -4 NE W Zealand white rabbit s .
Ca ll 992 3018
HAL L' S Salvage . All autos
12 - 23 - 3t~
w ith fram es and bodies with -·
.. -- -- - · --- - -~
or without motors , 51 hund AL LI S Chalmers round bal er ,
red . Tin .SO ·hundred . Will
Heavy du t y tandem wheel,
fertili ze r sprea d er , 100 bu .
buy metals and sc rap. iron .
On old Rl. 33 . ju st acro ss
corn , 500 bales straw . 949 fro m Gr ues er ' s Ch ipper .
2770.
12.21 .6t c
Monday th rough Fr i day 9
til t 4 p .m ., Saturday , 9 Ii i ·· - - - -~ ---· - · - - - - - noon .
1 REGUL A TIONslze8ft.pool
12 · H ·26tc tab le complete wit h ails and
Que st icks, S65 . See Kenn y
Hysell. Main St.. Rutland .
Phon e I 742 -2184. ·
11.21 .3tc
1971 CHAMP I ON
mob ile
home . t2 '-- 60 completel v S E A R S elect r ic stove . good
furn i shed , excellent co n
conditio n . Ph one 992 5478 or
dition , S4 ,SOO . Phone 99 2 3189. 992 51 33 .
12 ·21 -41 C -~
~~

-- - - --- - ~

---·-

DLEPORT! W e are so sur e
that you will love our apart .

----

La Salle

HOTEL.

Rollns, '5.00 up

'1

...

·~-

-

-~

--

L AR GE
Poin settias
at
Cleland 'S Gr een Hous e,
Rac i ne , Ohi o . Ge r ald in e
Cl eland .
12 16.'7tc

lty w..

....

--

1 mile on Slate Route 124
Toward Rutland

ROOFING an d gutt er Of al l
kin d, hoi asphalt . We llx the
flat ooes . Phon e 367 ·0591.
Ches hire . Paul Wa lk er .

11 ·1S-261p
awcio-~(;ow E• s ii'EiPAI~~

Swee per s, to as ter s. iron s,
all small applianc es . lawn ,
mower , nex t to Stat e High
Way Ga rag e on Ro ut e 1·
Ph one 98 5 3825 .
4 16·tfC ·

'i&lt;EAOY MITo. CONtRETE
de l iVered right to
project 1 Fas t and easy .
estim ates . Phone 992
Goegl ein Reaoy MiK
Midd l eport , Ohio+

'99.99

Real Estate For Sale

.
3 BR HOME . lusl lln iShed

remodeling . h le m St. ,
Rutland . Phone H2 -2l06
after .t p . m . or see M i lo B .
Hut c hinson .

10 .. 9-lfc

--------------3 Bi::DR.M . home , (ust'
f ini shed , remodeling , Salem

Sl ., Rullond . Phone uniOA

after._. p .m . or see M il o B.
Hut ch ison .

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

HOU SE for sale in Portland ,
take over paym ents, must
se ll. S rooms and ba th , good
well and 2 acres of ground .

Phone 843-2292.

YEIIR~!

Business' Phone; 991-5180

I

Residence : 992-3313

1.:..

, IT~~CtD

DI~'I~HA

Ill\~
U~llfa&lt;.M,

E:veRim

•'

yo ur
F r ee
3284,
Co.,

6 30 " '

'Ye•terdiiJ••

I..~A~~·

~ucl i oneer .

LIITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-A lOFT ANSWER
~----~~~~T·
~
--E~--­

SHE THI~I\'5

IT
WM 1M HfR BAG

~

MICiH1 GUARD

THAT SECRET f'Of
HER Til L SHI'
lfADGI!OWJj
$11lOH&lt;i fMoueiH
l&lt;'f£P 11 HERSELF·

All l"IS llMf··
9UT IF tT HAD

or 742 -3167.

SffH I 1'0 AAVE
FOUMD IT -

Stl-'ti C TA·N-KS clee n ed .
MOdern san itatio n. 99 2 39'54
or 991 7349 .
• 4
9 18.tk; 1

' EW ING
M 1&gt;, C H•l N E •
Repai r s, servic e, al l makes . EX (AV A TING , ao~r , 1uaaer
?9 2 2'284 . The Fa br ic Shop ,
and bclckhoe wofk , !ep tlc
Pomeroy . Au th or ized Singer
ta n ks installed ; dum·p
t, al cs a nd se rvice.. we
tru cks and to boy s for hi rtf.
sharpen Scissor s
wi ll haul f ill d irt ; top so 11 1
3291fc , l im estone and graveL; Call
Bob or Roger Jette r~. d i!IV
WOULD YOU BELIEVEl
phone i/9 2 7089, ni ght phon t
'Bu lid an all steel bu i lding a'
992 3525 or 992 .5232 .
Pol e Ba rn Pri ces? Golden
1 l l . lf(
Giant All Steel Build ing s,
·- -- l
R~ 4. Box 148 . waverly ,
t:XCAVA
IINU
,
d
Oter
,
Oh io. Phone 94 7.2196 .
backhoe
and
ditcher ,
7. 24·1fC
Char les R . Hatfield Back
- -· --- -·---- ·- --·- -·
Hoe Service. Rulland, Ohio ,
Phone 742 ·2008 .

Real Estate F~ Sale

Pass

Pass

.....,U..l-.L....d..;..e.'--'

WELL , MONA , 'THIS IS MOO!
WH,.,-'CI-IA 'THIN I&lt; OF rT T

e

-- - - --~,.-- -----,::~!,(j

20 ACRES -

This Week'i Speclll ,
'

~~~~·

In the

country . 2 houses , one

-----~

:

She d'v1de th' six
hun'red she find

1 b'e~inn in'
t' like'er'

Wait a

minute!

three wo~s!

How we know that
l4in' li'l minx didn't
find more'n six
'red

73 Monte Carlo :
I

V-8 aulo., V-roof, !l.s., air 1
AM-FM stereo, fill whe•t.
sporf wheels. 21 ,000 miles.

acres In town and reno

$3695

•••
•

•

Karr &amp; Van landt

l'ftn.,., '"

991-534l

Open Eveninp'IIJ••oo·.
Tit 5 tJ.m. Sal.

(For a copy ol JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 to: " Win
at Bridge , " c l o lhis
newspaper, P. 0. Box 489,
Radio City Station, Naw York,
N.Y. 10019)

Olio
ACROSS
1 Dally
4 Vestment

8 Ewe·s
ollspr lng
12 Wh ichever
13 •broad
14 BombyK
15 Mother (cell .)

42 Bomba y
seaport
45 Coat with
OKICie
49 Objected
51 Over (poet.)

52 Glad eye

53 At 1hls ptace
5,. Swiss canton
55 Pipe joints
i6 Taking
56 Seth's son
umbrege
(Bib .)
18 Group• of nine
2D Book of m1ps 57 Distress signal
DOWN
21 App ropriate
1 Crippled
22 Small lizards
2 Presently
2• Foundation
3 Place tor
26 On the briny
athletics
27 Cartograph
o4 Gem we1ght
3Q Fore igners
s Was Indebted
32 l ass' name
lor
~ wa~en s
6 "Annie
.Js Pilfered
Q akla~s "
36 Seminary (ab .)
7 Needle part
37 Heroic teat
8 Llvonians
39 Flower
9 Seed vessel
40 Hurled
10 Starling
4 1 Conducted

• LIL ABNER
You' ll Like Our Quality
Way of Doing Busln111.
GMAC FlNANCIJIIG

A Milwaukee reader asks
what it means when a
partnership announces that
they lead third best or fifth
best instead ol the standard
fourth best. ·
It means exactly what they
say. When leading low from a
long suit, the fourth be•t lead
is traditional , but if you want
to lead third best you may do
so. As for fifth best, you don 't
always have a five-card suit.

Answer to Previous Puuie

?

vated 3 BR home. All clfy
conveniences. $39,500. Or
will fake offer.
13.85 ACRES - Near town.
4 BR brick, 8 rooms, mefal
enclosed . porch . SJO,OOO.
Offer welcomed.
ON RT. 124 - In Ruffand, 4
BR clfy water, bafh and
garden. $12,000.
MIDDLEPORT - 7 rms. 3
BRs, bofh, full basemen!,
mod. kitchen and fenced
garden. $17,000.

Opening lead - 2 •

, GASOUNE ALLEY

USED CARS

modern , and ali minera ls.
$31.000.
3.95 ACRES - On hard
road . Leading Creek
walef·and two septic tanks .
LOCATION - On at ·
tractive lot. 3 BR well bull!
home. Hot water heat.
$29,500.
PO!oiY PASTURE - 12

••

Pass Pass

The trump promotion play
is similar 'to the uppercut. In
this play the defense promotes
a trump to a wiMer by forcing
declarer to ruff with a high
trump.
South really should double
East's lour-spade ' bid. He
could expect to make a sure,
but small, profit. Actually ,
East would be down two, but
South has nine apparent
winners and we can 't really
blame him for trying five

~~6~ -;:j'~;;;-Pt;;,;:-bihu:1
15 AC RE S of ground lev el to
( oiling wooded area . Has · heating and all types 0~
Water and electricity and
general
re pair .
Wor~
septic tank already in . 5600
guaranteed . 20 years e
an ac re , on -blacktop road , 6
p cr ience . Phone 992 ·2,.01
miles fro m town . Ph one 99 2.
5535 .
12·'21 31 c

·:--

2•

23

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

11 ·30-7Bic

1;

THE BUGLE

hearts.
West opens his partner's
• J4
suit. East takes two high
• 10 8 7 2
spades and notes that West
t A QJ 10
has discarded the deuce ol
• 8 54
clubs
. This tells East tha\
WEST
EAST
West
doesn 't want a .club lead.
• 2
• AKQ\08765
A look at dummy's diamonds
¥ J53
· -makes a lead of that suit inadt985
t7 32
visable, so East simply leads
• QJ 1 6 3 2
• 10 9
a third spade.
SOUTH CD)
This third spade lead upsets
.93
South's
applecart. II he rulfs
¥AKQ964
high , West will score his jack
t K61
of trumps later on . If he
•AK
doesn 't rulf high, West gets hi s
North-South vulnerable
jack right then and there.
West Nonb E111 · Soutb
NORTH

Cqm pl ete· service . Phone
94 9.2487 or 9H -2000 . Rec ine ,
Ohio. Critt Bradford .
1Q .9.tf e&gt;

-·

Anlwen W'-at lli~W wtrt blow" up bll -

Jack gets trump promotion

10 -IS -Ifc

-WILL
--

I

WIN AT BRipGE

--------- - ~

bt&lt;.L~Ut-ORD.

Now ........,. the cin:lodletten
to form tbe 1urpriH aNwer, u
ounnted by the obon cartoon.

(A.Iwen to..orrowl

D &amp; 0- ~ 1REE Trlmmtng , 1U
years experience . Insured ,
fr ee es tima tes . Call 992·3057
or (1 ) 667 .J041, Coolv ille .

c

WERE A5KEc:&gt; 10 DO.

J•alft• BRAVO ELEGY FUTURE BOTHER

'o$HOR6

IIIAT'~

EX CA VATII&gt;IG , BACK HOES'
AND DOZER . LA RGE AND
SMALL . SE PTI C TANKS
I NSTA LLED
BILL
PULLIN S, PHONE 992-2478,
DAY OR NI GHT.
II -II -7Bip

tiJ

TOAPIE

BORN LOSER

'

WHAT THE

AI&lt;TII.L.ERYMEN

I I I I [IJ

PAST 2.0

'.

f RIM or cut trees and
shrubber y . Ph one U9 ·2S.5

HOMELITE XL

Wifh 10" bior 1nd choin.
POMEROY LANDMARK
.. .4" Jock W. Corsey, Mgr.
;Ail Phone 9t2-l11t

Cli':ATE FOR THE

11-18-1 mo.

11.16.tfc

I I

ilJG STORAGE
CHAIUiEf ON THAT

..
••

11 Ca ptures
17 Floating
19 Fencing
weapons
23 Banquet
24 Bistros
25 Medicin al
plant
26 Onagers
27 Tuneful
28 Pub orders
29 Window
glass
31 Nullify
33 Pierced with
horns

...~....~............~............................
11 -5-121&lt; ' .

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

MASON FURNITURE·

NI CE country home In M-eT95
County , 10 minute drive
fro m No . l r:n lnes . 21:1 4c res ,
2 ·bed r oo m s. basemen t.
c ellar , 2 o utbuildings ,

Mon. , Tues., Wed. &amp; 5at.-8:30ti15:00

euT 11'5 CHRI51MA&amp; 11ME!
OORELY WHATE 11ER
DIFFERENCES YDU HAVE ·
CAN 13E RESOLVED !

THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

J191 .

~

~

'- 2~

33.

1 :llO--Trulh or Cons. 3;;

To Telllhe Truth ; Bowling fer
Dollars 6; Pop Goes the Country 8; News 10: Clfy
Tl\_a\f or!l!ll AJl out Chrl\lllias·\3; Fomlly Altair 15;
Book Beat 20; Know Your SchOOl :D.
~ 7,3()--lasloffhewlldJ : Name Thai Tune 4;; Plxanne
(c) 5; Wild Wild World of Animals 6: Wild Kingdom
15; Match Game PM 8; Evening Edition wlfh
. Marlin Agronsky 20; Wild K lngdom 10; To Tell the
Trufh 13: Episode Action 33.
8:01&gt;--Liflle House on fhe Prairie 3,15: When Things
Were Rolfen 6,13; Presence of t:hrls11118S 4; Tony
Orlando &amp; Dawn 8,10; Christmas at Pops 33, Ju&lt;l;
Garland Christmas Show 20.
8:31&gt;--Thars My Mama 6.13 ; Music Comectlon (c)_ l .
9 :Oo--Ooclors Hospital 3,4,15; laurel a. Hartt(
Festival: " Flying Deuces" 5; Borella 6.13; Camon
8,10; Great Performances 20.33
lO:IlO--Pelrocelll 3.4 ,15; Sfarsky &amp; Hutch 6,13; Oral
Robertss' Christmas Is Love 8; Blue Knight 10;
News 20; Plof to Overthrow Chr islmas 33.
II :Oo-News 3,4,6.8,10,13,15; Chrislmas Candlelight
Carol ing Ceremony 33.
11 :3()--Movle " Rosie" 3; Wide World Special 13;
Chrlslmas-1975 Rome 4,15; FBI 6; Nation of
Nallons 8,10; FBI 6; Janaki 33.
12:1l0--Handful of Souls 8, 10.
12, 3o--Wide World Special 6.
1:oo---News 13.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. :13) The
day may start out with you be·
lng Very irritable. Later you'll
mellow. There may even. be an
early gift to cheer you.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Hov. 22)
Plan someth ing "lun" for lMII
For Wodnoodoy, Dec. 24, 1t75

'SIIEMJN'T.SEEME!
SHE SAID SHE NEVER
WANTS ID SEE ME
AGAIN I

773-5592

Herman Grate

CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Spare yourself a heap of
frustration today . Rely on
dellvery services rather than
your own wheels. You'H be

too lavish In gUts to casual ac·
qua lnta n ces . It's em ·
barr using. Go all the way with
loved ones and close friends .

Mason, W. v•.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22) You

LISTEN TO

WITH

m a~

have some c areer
trustrauons ear ly ln the day ,
but hang In there . Good news ,

.

•

•

MIKE STEVENS
..

good leltowshl p_end good

.

wee• 6:00 A.M. til 10:00 A.M.
ON

WMPO FM SJEREO 92

''
'

I

'

•'
•'·

'

I RECKON
IT 'S HIGH T IME
I FIXED SOME

FRIED CHICKEN
FER SUPPER

INtWSPAPEft F.NTEftPRISf.: ASSN, I

evening . You 're going to be In 1
good mood you'll want to stlere
with dear friends .

ARIES (Morch 21·Ap&lt;lt 11) . SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.
This Is going to be a busy day 21) There· ~ a strong posstblllly
tor you. with a lot ollast~minute
of a surprise bonus In store for
delails. However, you'll lind you from the boss. He'll enjoy
!hal special Item lor lhe one givi ng it as mucn as you 'll like
vou love.
gelling.
TAURUS (AprH 20·MOJ 20) CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Joft,
Today will prove to be e•pen18) A lrlend whose Interests
slve. but your tiard · eaned you've looked out for is not unmoney will serve a good cause.
mindful of all you 've done.
The evening will be rather plea·
She's likely 10 snow her sp-

perkier for party lime lonlgnt.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Don't be

s "Great Country Stereo"

- -~~

N.Y.
40 Delicacies
41 Mineral
veins
42 Blemish
43 Prod
44 Part in a
drama
46 Roman
emperor
47 Nothing
• .48 Goddess of
discord
50 Pronoun

33.

12 :55--r'!BC News 3.15.
1:01&gt;--Ryan's Hope 6.13; Phil Donahue 8; Young &amp;fhe
Restless 10; Not For Worren Only 15; Come to the
Slable 33.
1,31&gt;--Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15; Lef' s Make a Deal6,13;
As fhe World Turns 8,10.
2:1l0-S10,000 Pyram id 6,13.
2:31&gt;--Doctors 3,15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13 ; Gu iding
Light 8.10; Movie " A Chrlslmas Carol" 33.
3:01&gt;--Anofher World 3,41.5; General Hospital 6,13; All
In lhe Family 8,10; Kup's ShDN 20.
·
J : 3~e Life to Live 13; Bewitched 6; Match G8f11t
8, 10.
4:01&gt;--Misfer Cartoon 3; Merv Griff in 4; Somerset 15;
Mi ckey Mouse Club 6.8; Mister Rogers 20,33;
Dinah 13.
4:31&gt;--Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Santa's Wori&lt;shop 15.
5:01&gt;--Bonanla 3; Fam ily Affair B; Star Trek 15.
5:31&gt;--Adam-12 4; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec.
Co. 20,33; Vlslf with Santa Clau~ 13.
6,0()--News 3A,II.I0,13,1 5; ABC News 6; Hodgepodge
Lodge 20; Beverly Hills sings Chrls1mas 33.
6:31&gt;--NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Mrt( Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Alfack Hearl Affack 20; Book Beat

You'll be busy as a beaver to~
day preparing for the family
and guests who'll be d ropping
in. They'll repoy you by having
a good time.

MASON FURNITURE

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

~ ~

38 - - Island,

33 .

B:JD- Big Valley 6.
9:0o-A.M. J; Phil Donahue 4,15; Lucy Show 8; Mike
Douglas 10; Morning with D.J. 13; Navy Christmas
33.
9,3Q-Nol For Women Only J; One Life to Live 6; .
Talllefa~s 8; New Zoo Revue 13; From Ail Of Us
~:
.
10 :oo-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4, 1l ; Edge of Nlghf 6;
Pr ice Is Righi 8,10; Mike Douglas 13; Smffhsonlan
Puppets 33 .
10:3D-Wheel of Fortune 3,6,lS; t Dream d Jeannie~ ;
Dinah 6; Mantovan l Plays Christmas 33.
1LOD-Holtywood Squares 4; Gam btl 8,10; My Kind of
Christmas 33 .
11 :31&gt;--Hollywood Squares 3,15; Happy Days 13;
Midday 4; Loveof life B,10; Sesame St. 20 ,33 .
11:55---Take Kerr 8; Dan lmers World 10.
12:01&gt;--High Rotters 3.15; Showoffs 13; Bob Braun's 5050 C tub~ ; News 6,8,10.
12 :31&gt;--Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3.15 ; All Mv
Chlidren6,1 3; Search for Tomer row 8,10 ; Elec. Co .

GEMINI (Moy 21 -Juno 20)

S44,lOO. Phone 1419 1 86S-

A
M £RR'(

3,4; News 13.

s8nt.

STORE HOURS

garage , phone 698·3361 .
11-18 Si p

FA RM for sale by owner, •
m il's west of Ruttand on
New lima Road , 1-4 1 acres ,
large barn , house , ol her
bu il d i ngs , All , m i neral
r l gh ts, 60 acres ti lla ble, rest
in pasture . also pond .

:oo- Tomorrow

6:0D-Columbus Today 4 ; Sunrise Semeste r 10.
6:15---Folk Literature J.
6'25---Farm Reporl13 .
6,3Q-New Zoo REvue 4; News 6; Bible Answers 8;
Farmtime 10; The Story 13.
1:4D-Ounce of Prevention 10.
1:45-Mornlng Reporl 3.
S·55---Chuck White Reports 10; Good Morning, Trl
Slate 13.
7:01&gt;--Today 3,4,15: Good Morning, Amer ica 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Fr iends 10.
.
7:Jo-Schoolles 10.
8:01&gt;--Lucy Show 6: Capt. Kangaroo S,IO; Sesame St.

~D~(Jr--11

CLOAJE

APPAREioJTLV

I 'VE ~EE'-1 PAV-

~

U'DELL A lin em ent located
Rutland
Grade
behin d
School. Tuneup , br.ake-s ,
wheel balan ci ng, alinem en t

I

I

WEDNESDAY , D~CEMBER 24, 1975

SIGUEJ

EXPED17JON!

Ca 11 today for
Service Tomorrow

PH. 992-5682

PHONE 9'11-3315 - .
10Mechanlc
~meroy , 0 .

ONLY

EXPEDITIO!o.l ~

Sales and Senice

All Mechanical Work

Ph one 741 -2004 .

r7Tu&lt;,.;D7i'imi'm:7H!JM.,JHE O~ E MAl!
WHO CA!o.l AN~WE~
t HAT WOULD ~E­
PROFE550R JUKES
OF PILTPOWN
UNIVERSITY...
WHO LED THE

YES, Alo.l EBV PT IA ~ "D IG"
I 5P0t.J$0 RED TO UN COVER
OL D TOMS? AND TEMPLE? ~

19SS Mok EE
ARCHEOLOGICAL

lnlersection of Rl. 33 &amp; 7
Pomeroy

f f

four ordinary words.

form

D&amp;M Apj)liance

ROGER HYSELl'S
GARAGE

,EAFORD REALTYj

-~::~:~~-::~-~~~~~~ . HAPPY
: NiW VIi~
-

Pomeroy

Pt'l . 992 -2174

I.

Unacramble these foor Jumble~
one letter to each square, to

Phone 742-2Jjl
Roger Wimsley , Rutland
11-28-75

·, - - - - - - - - - -,
A SPECIAL GIFT
For Someone Specio t

CHAIN SAW

~lYdM ; ik.t ~·-"-~ -4 ,_.

R&amp;J COINS

SMtTH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

·-

f; -· - · ~ - - --- ~·- - --------

Sale

Pro Standings

-

Mobile Homes For Sale

NILAND HONORED
men ts lhlll we give you two 1964 JOHN 'oeere 1010 dozer , 6
weeks RENT FR EE . JuSI
II . blad e, canopy and win ch ,
BOSTON (UPI) - lienior
p ay you r security deposit
good con d iti on . s.a ,ooo.
linebacker George Niland of
and stay siK monlhs and the
Phon e 98S .J594 .
first 2 weeks Is fre e. You wil l
Trinity College Monday was
12-17-121p
enjoy mon thly l eases , !!i ll
named the 27th annual
elec tr ic living , carpet ing , HYDRAULIC crane . capacity
·IIVt file!.
range ru1d re lr igeralor , free
recipient of the Swede Nelson
7.000 lb., e~tend$0UI Io 30 fl .
trash pickup , cable TV
Will f it on 1 or 1' 1 ton truck,
He emphasized four parts Award for sportsmanship by
(op tio na l ) and la undry
Sl,lOO . Phone 985·359•.
ot the bW he liked : It opens the Gridiron Oub of Boston.
f acilities . co nv en ien t to
12-17 -12lp
shop pi ng on Third and M i ll -------- ------·the way to eventual (reedorn
NUand, 21, who came back
in M iddleport. VILLAGE 1910 - 350 JOHN Deere dozer ,
from
price
controls, from a serious leg Injury to
MANOR Is yours for one
6 fl . blade , canopy , new
bedroom
apartments
. engi ne. New pe lnf . 55, 000.
establllhes a domestic start at linebacker In his
s ta rting at S104 mof1lhly plus
Phone 985 -3l94.
elec . We pay for everyt hin g
senior year, was recom'
11-17-12tp
e lse. See the Manager at
mended to the Nelson comR lvers lde Apartments or 1975 CHEVROLET lion dump
c all 992 -3213 . This offer w 111
mittee by Hartlwd, Conn.,
Iruck VB, • sp ., P.S., P.B.
end soon . so move In now
16,000 acluat miles. s ~, ooo .
'NEW VORK 'UPI - The Mayor George Athanson
and save SUS.
Phone 985·359.4 ,
VnlrtCI Press lntert1atlona l after he helped carry an
Menn ing 0 . Webster
12-17-121p
8o1rd of Co1ches top 20
Judg e ancr e)l( .offlcio
~- -~----·-- --elderly woman from a burCOli Ill bnkttblll teams With
Clerk of So!lid Court
'3 AND -1 rm . furnished .and
first plac• wotes and record s ning apartment house ,
unfur n ished apt s. Phone 99 2· CH~ I Sl M J\S trees . Phone H2
tn P•tnf"'tstl .
By An n B . Watson
2~ 35, Main St .• Rut land .
543 4.
Third Week '
Deputy Clerk
1t.9.1fc
12-9·111c
Ttl"'
Poin1l
FEW TICKETS LEFr
1111.16. 13 , 2tc
l · lqdlono 1401 16-0I
•oo
HOUSTON ( UPI ) - Fewer
·· , , Maryland 16-01
319
.,.~~·~~.....~. . LOC UST posiS .. PhOne 742·
ll
2359.
3, N. Corollno l s.oI
283 than 2,000 tickets remain for
' · UCLA fl ·ll
W
----------- !:~~~p
S. Morquehe tS -11
177 the Astra-Bluebonnet Bowl
ABA Standings
6. Notre Dom t I5·1I
Ill game matching Colorado and By United
NO\h St-lli n" Fu ller Brush
Pr ess l"ttrnltional
7. Alobomo 16-01
109
W. L Pet. GB
Texas Saturday aft~oon, a
8. 'N !'vldl ·liS Vegas
Denver
20 6 ' 769
18-0 )
.
65 bowl official said Monday. New York
11 I .680 21 1
9. Clnclnnolltl -01
Mlddloport,o. 1"ft , ,l2-l771
TR UCK lopper, ollolumfnum
~:
"We expect to sell those San Antonio 17 10 .630 31 1
10. Louisvlllt (.5· 1)
Indiana
17 11 .607 •
for 8 fl . bed . $90 . Phon e 992 11 . Michigan IS-II
s; final seats pretty quickly. As Ken lucky
15 13 .S36 6
7513 Ofler 5 p.m.
12. N. Corollno St . (S-Ol
LOU IS
13 19 .• 06 10
l~ !lOOn as those are sold they Sl,
13 . Woshlnglon 11•01
V irgin ia
5 2• .172 16' ~
1.4 . Ttnnentt U · l)
----~- -· ·-- --··36 will begin putting up aome . . Monday's Result
21 SHEETS Celolex building
IS. Rulgers (7 .01
Kentucky
126
St
.
Louis
101
I
l~ I temporary bleacher type
ma lerlal. Phone 142-1880.
_Special Rates
16. Son FronciSco 17·11
Tutsday ' s Gamts
f 1
11-19-61 (
1seats," sald Weldon Humble. New York
17. SI, Johfl's l N'r' I 17-0l
at KentuckY
11. Kentucky 101
~
St . Louts IJt Virginia
CORN , Dalles Hill , phone 1H
lt. lllthlrlzono Sl . (6-IJ
6 "Standing room only tlckets indiana
at San Antonio
266· .
lf. lilt I KonusSI . I6·2)
or
Month
6 will also
be sold If
Wednesday's Games
12-19 61c
19, Itie l Southern Cal (7 11 6
.(No games scheduled)
necessary."
.li

College ratings

COAL, I i m es 1une ana all types
of sa lt and ro ck salt for ice
an d snow re moval . Ex .
ce l sior Sa lt Works, East
Main St. , Pomeroy , Ohio .
Ph one 992.J891 .
12·7 ttc

KEN T UCK Y long ri fl e. Ca ll
. .
even ings 592 -297J or write H.' IN D AS H 23 chc;m nel c1t 1zens
N . Starkey , Rt. SOE Box 12, ~ band tr~nscetver , am -fm
Athens Ohi o
mp x radt o, 8 track stereo .
'
·
Call 9q2 3965 .
12 _18.61 P
12·23 -1fC

- ..

Nat.han Biggs
Radiator Specialist

4 10 · 1 mo .

For Sale

Wrighl Brolhers 20; Berkeley Christmas 33.
toy 11£Nf1 1 Af1NOLO ,mel UOn

Oay at a Times ,10; Carolina Country (c) 5.
IO:OD-Joe Forrester 3.~. 15; Marcus Wlby, M.D. 6,13;
Switch 8,10; Woman Alive 33.
10:3D-F iylng Circus
10 :3D-News 20; Woman 33.
11 :llO--News 3,4,6,8, 10,13, 15; ABC News 33.
11 :Jo-Johnny Carson 3,4.15; Wide World Mystery 13;
FBI 6 ; Movie "Secrel World " 8; Movie " Desk Sf"
10: Janak! 33 .
11 ,3Q-Wide Wor ld Mystery 6.
9 : J~ne

9 , ~Pollce Woman 3,4,15; Rookies 6,13; Mash 8,1 0;

.·

'•'

Appraisal service on"
estales and .colleclions.

Ph. 992 -3993

IY73 TRUCK , I IOn Ford . F
J50, Heavy du ty lWB . ex .
ce llen t condit ion . Call 30•
773 5308 after 5 p .m .
' 11 16·11

{

Buy, Sell or Trade
F r om lhe largest Tr uC·k or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
smallest Heat er Core .

Svracuse, Ohio

11.400. Phone 985 -3594 .
Now
strategic storage for oil , PiANO - LESSO-N5
12x70 MOBILE Home , car .
12·17·12tp
acce pting n ew students .
peted , natural gas f urna ce,
allows federal officials to
Beginn er s . Int erm ediat es,
23,,000 B. T .U., a ! r con
a dvan ce d .
June
(M r s.
force Industries to switch
dll toned 70K2 0 awn 1ng . h6
For
Rent
H ervev l Van Vrank en . 414
por ch , u nderp inned . Phone
fuels and boosts production
Spr i ng Ave ., Pomeroy . I - - BEDROOM furnished
992-6162.
F'hone 992 ·2270.
apartment
ar
Village
and conservation with
11-18 121C
Ml!nor . Phon e 99 2.3273 .
- -· - - ----- - ----federal-6\ate Initiatives.
11·19-261c
"While this bill is only a 1 will be gl..,. ing ~plano l essons
for
in my h om e sta rlin g Feb . 1.
FU
RNi
SHED
apartment
4
beginning, It does achieve·
For informallon c tJ II 99 2·
r ooms and bath , adult s onlv . 1963 HONDA 300 motorcyc le,
2278.
several major objectives,"
run s good . S200 . Rog er
Phone 992-5908 .
12·18·38tc
Nelson , 655 Syu'more St. ,
11· 18 .tfc
Ford said.
M idd leport. Ohio .
"I now ask the Congress to
11 22 Jlp
HOUSE 1662 Lincoln HilL 3
NOTICE OF
work with me to put into
bedroom s, ba sement , S125
APPOINTMENT
th . Phone 1.304 768 ·-4041 9 AN TIQUE Hom e Co mfo r t
place additional programs
ca se No. 21693 mon
cook stove . model C 8 , good
ti
I
l.
condi ti on , Phone 949 ·2770.
essential to achieve energy Estate of Luth er V. Caldwell ,
l 221 6tp
o eceue d.
12-18-61 c
Independence, Including
Not ice is h ere by g iven that HOUSE , fr ee gas , 742 ·2577 or - ----------- ~-- Immediate congressional . Tressle Hendri cks of R . D . -4 , 742 mo .
NOW selling C. 8 . Radios ,
Pomeroy . Ohio . has been d ul y
'12 21·61c
antennas and accessories ,
action to deregulate natural appoinl ed Execut r ix of lh e
sca nners . Can fepair what
Estate
of
Lul
h
er
V
.
Cal
dwelL
gas, to stimulate far greater
we sell . Erw in's Gu ll Ser.
deceased , late o f M e igs 6 RM . HOU SE and balh lor
vice , N . Second and Rutland
production."
r en t in Pom eroy . Ca li 992
Cou • 'f • Oh io.
Sl .• M iddl eport. Phon e 99 2·
57 41.
C' ~ d lto r s are r eq ui r ed to
Democrats who drew up
2438 .
til
thei r cla imS w ith said
the bill contended Its price fl Jc iary with in fo ur months .
12·11-6tc
Dated this 121h da y of
HOUSE S rm s . and ba th. iii
oontrols would mean gasoline
EAR corn . Call 3889991 .
Decem ber 1975 .
Ra cine . Phone 992 .5 858 .
would be 1.5 to 3.5 cents
12 .11.12tc
12·4-llc
Mann ing D . Webs ter
cheaper by the gallon at thi!
FOR SAL E - White Roller
Judg e
start of the program and by
Derby , girl ' s shoe skates,
aPartmtM L
Court of Common Plea s ~ VRNISHED'
si ze 2. like new SIO. Wh i te
adults only in Middleport.
Probate Division
late 1977 would reach the
. Phone 991 -3874.
sh oe Ice skates. I pa i r size 1;
( 12) 16, 23, 30 , 3tc
current level again.
1 pa ir si ze 3, g irl 's, like new ,
3-25 -!Jj
ian F lyers , S7 .50 each .
. . . --:--- --=--~---~ ~ Canad
Federal Energy Ad·
Red \le lveteen bl azer , sia
NOTICE
ON
FILING
f!bUNTRY . Mobilc ... H0 m c
ministration officials said the
10, purple velvet jumper .
OF INVENTORY
, Par k , Rt . 33. ten'·miles north
site 10, both worn on ly
AND APPRAISEMENT
real effect may be nothing
of Pomerov . Lllrgc lots with
twice, like new , iust right
The State of Ohio. Meigs
because retailers have some County
concr ete patios , si dewal kS .
for holidays. ss each . Black
. Probate Court.
runn er s an d off st re et
paten t Stride Rit e girl's
backed-up costs. they can
To the Co ·Executri ces of the
'pa r'king . 'Phone 992 7H9 .'
dres s s i ppers , 51 2 8 , Sl .
estate ; to such of th e fol lo wing
pass on to customers and thus as are re si dents of th e Sta te of
11.31 tfc
Whlt't acrylic pile coa t ,
washable , S75 . Both shoes
cancel the Initial rollback of Ohio . viz : - · th e su rv iv ing
'VILLAGE and coat like new . Charlene
spou se , th e n eK I of kin , the
FREE
RE
NT
AT
prices.
beneficiaries under th e will ;
MANOR
IN
MID - Hoeflich , 992-5292.
an d to the attorney or at
torneys represen t ing any of
the aforementioned pe'rsons:
Dorset Sm l lh , De cease d.
Hemlock Grove , Oh io, Bed
tord Townsh ip , No . 216 70.
You are hereby nolifled that
the
I nventory
and
Ap ·
praisement of the estate of the
dece as ed,
a foremen tioned .
tate of ~ aid County , was til ed
in this Court . Said Inv entory
and Appra isement wi H be for
hear ing befor e this Cour t on
lh e 26 th day of December ,
19 75 , i!ll 10 :00 o 'clock A .M .
Any person ctesiring to tile
exc~ pti o n s t hereto must fil e
them at l east five days prior to
the date se t to r hearing .
. Given und er mv hand and
seal of said CourL this 'llth
da y of December 1975 . ,

Blown
Insulation Services

lARRY lAVENDER

4 13 tfC'

BLfiCK , BROWN , and Wh it e
fema l e Beag le dog in back
or around Phillip Sporn
m ine .
Contact
Homer
Jeffers , phone ( 3041 773 ·5292
or (304 1 773 5490 .
12 22 6tc

FREE ESTIMATES ·

Blown inlo Wa lis &amp;AHles
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDlloiG-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

9531.

Lost

992 -3345

Formerly we ed Wholesale.
Feat\lri ng :
.
Del ux Zerox Copy Serv tce,
Office
S u ppl ies ,
Suppl ies.
.Mimeograph
larges t se lec tion of wed
d ing su ppl ies in So uth ·
east~ rn Oh lo.
The Print Shop Complete
(Still in busin es s in Mid·
dleport )
12-8 2 mo .

mJ.BUtCK
, 53095 .
La Sabre Custom HT Coupe, loca l car. sharp inside and

POMEROY~ OHIO

Pom er oy Office

los Butter nut

control, AM radio &amp;Iape. it 's loaded and It's nice.

POMo~~~-1ve¥.~!9.~. CO.

Coins, Currency ··
and Supplies

Quality Print Shop
.

.

'

)

brakes, factory air , fint glass, comfortt11, cruts~

1971 FORD GRAN TORINO

TUE~DAY , DECEMBER 23,1975
8:1l0--Movln' On J; Happy Days 6, 13; Oral Roberts's
Chr lslmas is Love 4,15·;; Good Times 8. 10;
Chr istmas Can dle -light Caroling Ceremony 20,33.
8:31&gt;--Welcome Back, Kotter 6,13; Joe and Sons 8;
Cons~mer Survival Kif 20,33 ; Christmas Garland

Business Services

,Pomeroy_
Co•.

1975 CHEVROLEllHEVELLto
54995
Classic 4 door, co. demo with low mileage. light green '
with green vinyl roof , power door locks. _windows,

Sa dly m issed by ch i ldren ,
grandchildr en and husband .
12 23 l ip 4

Notice

JF

.Television log for easy viewing

WAS IN THE HOSPITAl.
FROM AN OVERDOSE
OF SLEEPING PILLS·

Auto Sales

WANT ADS
INFORMATION

OF.ADlltJ ... 'i
Before
S
P .M .
Day
Publication :
Monda'y Deadline 9 d . m .
Cancella tion • Corr ections
w ill be acfep tecJ un t II 9 a. m .
lo r Day o Publi cation

I JUST I.EARN;EEDDSM~~

cheer come l n abundance
later.

i'M 6LAD I{QIJ
A6REf THAT THE

~EISA

iiOOD IDEA

preclation today.

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 11)
You should benefit much more
lhan usual from the generosity

of business associates. Be
gracious in your accepta nce.

PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20)
Your better nature gains ttle
upper ha nd as the dl'f

progresses. By evening you'll
be the sparkllng ce nter of at·
traction.
'

-~
Dec. 24, 1175

You're going to meet someone
th is co m!ng year who will con·
sl derably expand your circle of
fr ie nds. Through th is parson
you' ll mak e some val uable
contacts.
•
! Nt:WSPA.Pt: R ENTERPRISto: ASSN I

Tfl EORANGE wM A
6REAT IDEA ... EXCEPT
I ATE I T~

�.

8- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Dec. 2.1, 1975

Way q\~ared to For 1'_~~ Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds:
pay. candidates
By CI..AY F. RICHARDS
WASHINGTON (UP!) The Federal Election
Comlallon, wltb the threat of
a Supreme Court Injunction
removed, Is prepared to
approve the first $2 million in
federal campaign funds .
The court refused Monday
to grant an Injunction
blocking the funds until a
ruling Is banded down on a
oonstltutlonal challenge to
the 197t campaign reform
act.
The action cleared the way
for the FEC today to ask the
Treasury to make payments
ollboutS1.5milllon to nine or
10 presidential contenders
and $700,000 to the
Republican and Democratic
National Committees to
ftnllil.'e their political COO•

ventloos.
The money represents the
tnltill payments to the candidate• and parties from the
pool collected by $1 individual
checkoffs oo federal Income

tu returns.
Sen. James Buckley, RIndependent
N . Y .,
presidential candidate
Eugene McCarthy and others
10ught the Supreme Court
InjUnction, They said . the
money llllould he held up until
the court decided on their suit
conchallenging
the
lil!utlonaUty of the law .
They aald the law is unconstitutional because the
llmlll on campaign ooniributloos and spendlng prohibit
the First Amendment rights
ollree eipresalon. The court
has ldjolll'lli!d its regular
Work seaalons untU Jan . 12
and wu not expected to rule
111W then on the overall
queatlon.
Ql the Injunction request,
the court spUt f-4. Because
!bert wa1 no majority, the
lnjlllctlon was denied.

While the expected FEC
action clears payments
REGULATIONS
The Publisher r eserv es the
Immediately to the two
tCI cdll or rP.i ecr any ads .
parties, the candidates dright
eemed objectional
The 1
caMol receive money until publisher wi ll no t be
respons ible fo r more !han one ·
the first of the year. The incorrect insertion .
RATES
Republicans will receive
For Want Ad Serv i ce
$250,000 and the Democrats Scents
per word one inse rllon ~
M in imum Charge $1.00
$460,000, hoth down payments
14 ce nt s p e r word thr e e
on the $2 million for each consecu
tive Insert ions
26 cents per wor d six con
party provided In the caminser l ioM
paign law to finance the scc15utivc
Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10
national conventions.
Three presidential can- days .CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OB-ITUARY
didates will receive subS1 .00 for 50 word minimum
stantial payments in the first
Ea c h additio nal word J
round ol FEC action . ce.nt s .
BLIND ADS
President Ford will receive
Addit ion a l 25c Charge p er
$374,000, Sen . lloyd Bentsen, !\dver ti $ement .
OFFICE HOURS
D-Tex., t-492,000 and former
8:30 a . m . to S: OO p . m.
Gov, Terry Sanford of North Daily , 8 :30am . to 12:00 Noon
Sa tu rday .
Carolina, $214,000.
The remaining candidates
will receive $100,000, the In Memory
minimum matching fund
IN MEMORY ot Greg M iddl e
swa r t
·
payment under the law .
Larger payments will come Chr istmas wil l not be the
same .
when the FEC completes With
out Gr eg running about ,
detailed audits of their He dressed in Sa ntll '5 suit ,
And went around 10 sing and
campaigns.
shout .
·
In the $100,000 category are
Republican Ronald Reagan Th e ch il dr en a r o und the
cou n tr y si de
and Democrat' Sen, Henry looked for Greg in hi s Sa nta's
su it ,
Jackaon ol Washington, Gov.
He was alwa ys so fun ny ,
George Wallace of Alabama, And th ey a ll thought it cu te.
Rep. Morris Udall of Ari2ona
Merry Chr is tmas t o you,
and former Sen . Fred Harris
Gr eg
I know you ar e wi th th e l ord
of Oklahoma .
So just l is ten to th e ange ls
Former Georgia Gov .
si ng ,
Jimmy Carter met all but one fi nd I know you won ' I be
bored . '
of the technical requirements
Wr lllen by grandm oth er ,
Viol et Bre w er .
for the $100,000 and was
t2 'll He
expected to qualify. Sen.
Birch Bayh was on the verge IN MEMORY of Mrs . Charl es
Reu ter of Tuc son , Arix . who
of qualifying and could
pass ed away Oct. 23 , 191S .
Sadly m issed by mother ,
become the loth candidate on
Mr s . Mae Pear sons .
the list.
12 23 He
To qualify lor the '100,000,
I N MEMORY of our mo th er ,
a candidate must raise $5,000
Ella Ph illips , l"' ho pas sed
away 4 years ago , D ec . 20,
In each of 20 states in con1971.
.
iributlons of
or less. Two
other Democrats , Gov. Dece mber com es wi th sad
regrets ,
Mil ton Shapp of Penn- Th is month w e shall not
forget .
sylvania and Sargent
in our h ear ts you will
Shriver, were still short of For
always stay ,
Loved and remembered every
that goal. ·

'250

day .

Energy hill "'just
first step--Ford
ly WllUAM E. CLAY'f()N
WASHINGTON (WI) Prellident Ford and Congress
blltled nearly a year on a
compnhtlllive energy bW,
10 when the Pmldent algned
the Jeclllatloo he emphasized
the polliUve.
In a ..ternent after he
Biped tt Monday, Fotd called
the bill "ooly a beginning"
111d asked Congress to work
on · other energy provlslons
''ellllltial to achieve energy
Independence," Including
deregulating natural gas
prlcea.

"We cannot aHord continued delay. We cannot
afford
prolonged
,nlnerablllty to foreign
IJI'Oducera. We must act," he
Mid. "II is In that spirit that I
have decided to sign the
energy bW."
The bW would force oil
pricel down at the start of a
4Cknonth period. But to the
IVerlle COilSIUller - the
motorist wanting gasoline,
tile, horne owner buying
heating oil, the businessman
puttlne up new lights
~ prices may not go
down at all.
ford, who wanted to enc,ourage conservation
through higher prices, settled
fw a compromise pricing
policy and several of
OJnaress' Ideas on how to

'Q6 \·

2 SIGNS_.

QUAliTY

out, good new tires, custom wheels, dark green vl~yl .

root . green fini sh, AM radio and Jape. factory a1r,
pow er steering and brakes, automatic .

your deer trophi es
mounted
B i r c: hflelds
..TaxldertT. y, St. Rl. ll-4 , ea st
of Rut land . Phone (6 14] 742
2178 .
11 .28 1fc

HI\~E

52095

4·door. one local owner , new radia l white-wall tires, v.
8 automatic , power steer ina. radio, save on a nice .~~n,e.

Notice
ROOM and board for Sr .
Citi ze ns with low incc.me ,
ve ry n ic: e. Phon e 992 3509 .
11 30 ifc
HEf oRE: you buy a Stihf
Chain Saw . See a fri end , 1
bought. Oh e . Al ber! Kee lan
Mi n ersv ill e, Ohio . PhonC
992 6154 .
12 23 6tp
TO OUR relatives an d fr iends ,
we are taking this op
portunity to w ish you a
toyous Christmas and a
happy and prosp erous New
Year .
Howard and Bet! y Roush .
12 21 Jtc

®(
.

J

1963 CHEVY r e.buill engine,
new tires , body in fair
con dition . Ca ll 992 .22 06.
12· 19·41p
1969 FORO Ranger , " ton
pi ckup , standard , P .S . 6 cyl .
300 cu . in . 5745 . Phone 949 .

Help Wanted
SERV I CE Manage r for new
car dealership . Write Box
74 3, Pom er oy , Ohio , 457 69 .
12 -7 12tc

Employment Wanted
CARPE: NTRY .
floor ing ,
ce iling and panel ing . Phon e
992 2759.
12 · 14 IOtc

Pets
BEAGLE puppi es . Al so ,
Reg . Basse ll houn d. male ,
housebroke . Phone 742 2521 .
122J 6tp

For Sale or Trade
DOZER . 1958 Internationa l
T .D. 14 ·A , 12 ft . hydra ulic
blade, In good condition .

2801.

12· 11 ·6tc

A.1RCO we l di ng ma ~ hine ,
n ew , elec . a ll access or ies
includ ed. Phone 992 .341 0.
~
10·2B·Ifc

Wanted
,SH pil id tor all makes ana
models of mobile homes •.
Phone area code 614 ·423 ·

-- - ' ·

Wanted To Buy

OL D furn iture. ice boxe s,
ONE corn fed hog ready to
bra ss beds , stone ia r s, or
bu lc her. wa nt to give awey 4
complete households . Write
k itt ens, 1 •• Sia m ese . Phon e
M . 0 . Mill er, Rl.
-4 ,
~9 2 720 1 a ft er 4 p .m .
Pomeroy , Oh io. Call 992 12 -23 4tC
1760 .
7
7
10 · -4 NE W Zealand white rabbit s .
Ca ll 992 3018
HAL L' S Salvage . All autos
12 - 23 - 3t~
w ith fram es and bodies with -·
.. -- -- - · --- - -~
or without motors , 51 hund AL LI S Chalmers round bal er ,
red . Tin .SO ·hundred . Will
Heavy du t y tandem wheel,
fertili ze r sprea d er , 100 bu .
buy metals and sc rap. iron .
On old Rl. 33 . ju st acro ss
corn , 500 bales straw . 949 fro m Gr ues er ' s Ch ipper .
2770.
12.21 .6t c
Monday th rough Fr i day 9
til t 4 p .m ., Saturday , 9 Ii i ·· - - - -~ ---· - · - - - - - noon .
1 REGUL A TIONslze8ft.pool
12 · H ·26tc tab le complete wit h ails and
Que st icks, S65 . See Kenn y
Hysell. Main St.. Rutland .
Phon e I 742 -2184. ·
11.21 .3tc
1971 CHAMP I ON
mob ile
home . t2 '-- 60 completel v S E A R S elect r ic stove . good
furn i shed , excellent co n
conditio n . Ph one 992 5478 or
dition , S4 ,SOO . Phone 99 2 3189. 992 51 33 .
12 ·21 -41 C -~
~~

-- - - --- - ~

---·-

DLEPORT! W e are so sur e
that you will love our apart .

----

La Salle

HOTEL.

Rollns, '5.00 up

'1

...

·~-

-

-~

--

L AR GE
Poin settias
at
Cleland 'S Gr een Hous e,
Rac i ne , Ohi o . Ge r ald in e
Cl eland .
12 16.'7tc

lty w..

....

--

1 mile on Slate Route 124
Toward Rutland

ROOFING an d gutt er Of al l
kin d, hoi asphalt . We llx the
flat ooes . Phon e 367 ·0591.
Ches hire . Paul Wa lk er .

11 ·1S-261p
awcio-~(;ow E• s ii'EiPAI~~

Swee per s, to as ter s. iron s,
all small applianc es . lawn ,
mower , nex t to Stat e High
Way Ga rag e on Ro ut e 1·
Ph one 98 5 3825 .
4 16·tfC ·

'i&lt;EAOY MITo. CONtRETE
de l iVered right to
project 1 Fas t and easy .
estim ates . Phone 992
Goegl ein Reaoy MiK
Midd l eport , Ohio+

'99.99

Real Estate For Sale

.
3 BR HOME . lusl lln iShed

remodeling . h le m St. ,
Rutland . Phone H2 -2l06
after .t p . m . or see M i lo B .
Hut c hinson .

10 .. 9-lfc

--------------3 Bi::DR.M . home , (ust'
f ini shed , remodeling , Salem

Sl ., Rullond . Phone uniOA

after._. p .m . or see M il o B.
Hut ch ison .

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

HOU SE for sale in Portland ,
take over paym ents, must
se ll. S rooms and ba th , good
well and 2 acres of ground .

Phone 843-2292.

YEIIR~!

Business' Phone; 991-5180

I

Residence : 992-3313

1.:..

, IT~~CtD

DI~'I~HA

Ill\~
U~llfa&lt;.M,

E:veRim

•'

yo ur
F r ee
3284,
Co.,

6 30 " '

'Ye•terdiiJ••

I..~A~~·

~ucl i oneer .

LIITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-A lOFT ANSWER
~----~~~~T·
~
--E~--­

SHE THI~I\'5

IT
WM 1M HfR BAG

~

MICiH1 GUARD

THAT SECRET f'Of
HER Til L SHI'
lfADGI!OWJj
$11lOH&lt;i fMoueiH
l&lt;'f£P 11 HERSELF·

All l"IS llMf··
9UT IF tT HAD

or 742 -3167.

SffH I 1'0 AAVE
FOUMD IT -

Stl-'ti C TA·N-KS clee n ed .
MOdern san itatio n. 99 2 39'54
or 991 7349 .
• 4
9 18.tk; 1

' EW ING
M 1&gt;, C H•l N E •
Repai r s, servic e, al l makes . EX (AV A TING , ao~r , 1uaaer
?9 2 2'284 . The Fa br ic Shop ,
and bclckhoe wofk , !ep tlc
Pomeroy . Au th or ized Singer
ta n ks installed ; dum·p
t, al cs a nd se rvice.. we
tru cks and to boy s for hi rtf.
sharpen Scissor s
wi ll haul f ill d irt ; top so 11 1
3291fc , l im estone and graveL; Call
Bob or Roger Jette r~. d i!IV
WOULD YOU BELIEVEl
phone i/9 2 7089, ni ght phon t
'Bu lid an all steel bu i lding a'
992 3525 or 992 .5232 .
Pol e Ba rn Pri ces? Golden
1 l l . lf(
Giant All Steel Build ing s,
·- -- l
R~ 4. Box 148 . waverly ,
t:XCAVA
IINU
,
d
Oter
,
Oh io. Phone 94 7.2196 .
backhoe
and
ditcher ,
7. 24·1fC
Char les R . Hatfield Back
- -· --- -·---- ·- --·- -·
Hoe Service. Rulland, Ohio ,
Phone 742 ·2008 .

Real Estate F~ Sale

Pass

Pass

.....,U..l-.L....d..;..e.'--'

WELL , MONA , 'THIS IS MOO!
WH,.,-'CI-IA 'THIN I&lt; OF rT T

e

-- - - --~,.-- -----,::~!,(j

20 ACRES -

This Week'i Speclll ,
'

~~~~·

In the

country . 2 houses , one

-----~

:

She d'v1de th' six
hun'red she find

1 b'e~inn in'
t' like'er'

Wait a

minute!

three wo~s!

How we know that
l4in' li'l minx didn't
find more'n six
'red

73 Monte Carlo :
I

V-8 aulo., V-roof, !l.s., air 1
AM-FM stereo, fill whe•t.
sporf wheels. 21 ,000 miles.

acres In town and reno

$3695

•••
•

•

Karr &amp; Van landt

l'ftn.,., '"

991-534l

Open Eveninp'IIJ••oo·.
Tit 5 tJ.m. Sal.

(For a copy ol JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 to: " Win
at Bridge , " c l o lhis
newspaper, P. 0. Box 489,
Radio City Station, Naw York,
N.Y. 10019)

Olio
ACROSS
1 Dally
4 Vestment

8 Ewe·s
ollspr lng
12 Wh ichever
13 •broad
14 BombyK
15 Mother (cell .)

42 Bomba y
seaport
45 Coat with
OKICie
49 Objected
51 Over (poet.)

52 Glad eye

53 At 1hls ptace
5,. Swiss canton
55 Pipe joints
i6 Taking
56 Seth's son
umbrege
(Bib .)
18 Group• of nine
2D Book of m1ps 57 Distress signal
DOWN
21 App ropriate
1 Crippled
22 Small lizards
2 Presently
2• Foundation
3 Place tor
26 On the briny
athletics
27 Cartograph
o4 Gem we1ght
3Q Fore igners
s Was Indebted
32 l ass' name
lor
~ wa~en s
6 "Annie
.Js Pilfered
Q akla~s "
36 Seminary (ab .)
7 Needle part
37 Heroic teat
8 Llvonians
39 Flower
9 Seed vessel
40 Hurled
10 Starling
4 1 Conducted

• LIL ABNER
You' ll Like Our Quality
Way of Doing Busln111.
GMAC FlNANCIJIIG

A Milwaukee reader asks
what it means when a
partnership announces that
they lead third best or fifth
best instead ol the standard
fourth best. ·
It means exactly what they
say. When leading low from a
long suit, the fourth be•t lead
is traditional , but if you want
to lead third best you may do
so. As for fifth best, you don 't
always have a five-card suit.

Answer to Previous Puuie

?

vated 3 BR home. All clfy
conveniences. $39,500. Or
will fake offer.
13.85 ACRES - Near town.
4 BR brick, 8 rooms, mefal
enclosed . porch . SJO,OOO.
Offer welcomed.
ON RT. 124 - In Ruffand, 4
BR clfy water, bafh and
garden. $12,000.
MIDDLEPORT - 7 rms. 3
BRs, bofh, full basemen!,
mod. kitchen and fenced
garden. $17,000.

Opening lead - 2 •

, GASOUNE ALLEY

USED CARS

modern , and ali minera ls.
$31.000.
3.95 ACRES - On hard
road . Leading Creek
walef·and two septic tanks .
LOCATION - On at ·
tractive lot. 3 BR well bull!
home. Hot water heat.
$29,500.
PO!oiY PASTURE - 12

••

Pass Pass

The trump promotion play
is similar 'to the uppercut. In
this play the defense promotes
a trump to a wiMer by forcing
declarer to ruff with a high
trump.
South really should double
East's lour-spade ' bid. He
could expect to make a sure,
but small, profit. Actually ,
East would be down two, but
South has nine apparent
winners and we can 't really
blame him for trying five

~~6~ -;:j'~;;;-Pt;;,;:-bihu:1
15 AC RE S of ground lev el to
( oiling wooded area . Has · heating and all types 0~
Water and electricity and
general
re pair .
Wor~
septic tank already in . 5600
guaranteed . 20 years e
an ac re , on -blacktop road , 6
p cr ience . Phone 992 ·2,.01
miles fro m town . Ph one 99 2.
5535 .
12·'21 31 c

·:--

2•

23

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

11 ·30-7Bic

1;

THE BUGLE

hearts.
West opens his partner's
• J4
suit. East takes two high
• 10 8 7 2
spades and notes that West
t A QJ 10
has discarded the deuce ol
• 8 54
clubs
. This tells East tha\
WEST
EAST
West
doesn 't want a .club lead.
• 2
• AKQ\08765
A look at dummy's diamonds
¥ J53
· -makes a lead of that suit inadt985
t7 32
visable, so East simply leads
• QJ 1 6 3 2
• 10 9
a third spade.
SOUTH CD)
This third spade lead upsets
.93
South's
applecart. II he rulfs
¥AKQ964
high , West will score his jack
t K61
of trumps later on . If he
•AK
doesn 't rulf high, West gets hi s
North-South vulnerable
jack right then and there.
West Nonb E111 · Soutb
NORTH

Cqm pl ete· service . Phone
94 9.2487 or 9H -2000 . Rec ine ,
Ohio. Critt Bradford .
1Q .9.tf e&gt;

-·

Anlwen W'-at lli~W wtrt blow" up bll -

Jack gets trump promotion

10 -IS -Ifc

-WILL
--

I

WIN AT BRipGE

--------- - ~

bt&lt;.L~Ut-ORD.

Now ........,. the cin:lodletten
to form tbe 1urpriH aNwer, u
ounnted by the obon cartoon.

(A.Iwen to..orrowl

D &amp; 0- ~ 1REE Trlmmtng , 1U
years experience . Insured ,
fr ee es tima tes . Call 992·3057
or (1 ) 667 .J041, Coolv ille .

c

WERE A5KEc:&gt; 10 DO.

J•alft• BRAVO ELEGY FUTURE BOTHER

'o$HOR6

IIIAT'~

EX CA VATII&gt;IG , BACK HOES'
AND DOZER . LA RGE AND
SMALL . SE PTI C TANKS
I NSTA LLED
BILL
PULLIN S, PHONE 992-2478,
DAY OR NI GHT.
II -II -7Bip

tiJ

TOAPIE

BORN LOSER

'

WHAT THE

AI&lt;TII.L.ERYMEN

I I I I [IJ

PAST 2.0

'.

f RIM or cut trees and
shrubber y . Ph one U9 ·2S.5

HOMELITE XL

Wifh 10" bior 1nd choin.
POMEROY LANDMARK
.. .4" Jock W. Corsey, Mgr.
;Ail Phone 9t2-l11t

Cli':ATE FOR THE

11-18-1 mo.

11.16.tfc

I I

ilJG STORAGE
CHAIUiEf ON THAT

..
••

11 Ca ptures
17 Floating
19 Fencing
weapons
23 Banquet
24 Bistros
25 Medicin al
plant
26 Onagers
27 Tuneful
28 Pub orders
29 Window
glass
31 Nullify
33 Pierced with
horns

...~....~............~............................
11 -5-121&lt; ' .

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

MASON FURNITURE·

NI CE country home In M-eT95
County , 10 minute drive
fro m No . l r:n lnes . 21:1 4c res ,
2 ·bed r oo m s. basemen t.
c ellar , 2 o utbuildings ,

Mon. , Tues., Wed. &amp; 5at.-8:30ti15:00

euT 11'5 CHRI51MA&amp; 11ME!
OORELY WHATE 11ER
DIFFERENCES YDU HAVE ·
CAN 13E RESOLVED !

THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

J191 .

~

~

'- 2~

33.

1 :llO--Trulh or Cons. 3;;

To Telllhe Truth ; Bowling fer
Dollars 6; Pop Goes the Country 8; News 10: Clfy
Tl\_a\f or!l!ll AJl out Chrl\lllias·\3; Fomlly Altair 15;
Book Beat 20; Know Your SchOOl :D.
~ 7,3()--lasloffhewlldJ : Name Thai Tune 4;; Plxanne
(c) 5; Wild Wild World of Animals 6: Wild Kingdom
15; Match Game PM 8; Evening Edition wlfh
. Marlin Agronsky 20; Wild K lngdom 10; To Tell the
Trufh 13: Episode Action 33.
8:01&gt;--Liflle House on fhe Prairie 3,15: When Things
Were Rolfen 6,13; Presence of t:hrls11118S 4; Tony
Orlando &amp; Dawn 8,10; Christmas at Pops 33, Ju&lt;l;
Garland Christmas Show 20.
8:31&gt;--Thars My Mama 6.13 ; Music Comectlon (c)_ l .
9 :Oo--Ooclors Hospital 3,4,15; laurel a. Hartt(
Festival: " Flying Deuces" 5; Borella 6.13; Camon
8,10; Great Performances 20.33
lO:IlO--Pelrocelll 3.4 ,15; Sfarsky &amp; Hutch 6,13; Oral
Robertss' Christmas Is Love 8; Blue Knight 10;
News 20; Plof to Overthrow Chr islmas 33.
II :Oo-News 3,4,6.8,10,13,15; Chrislmas Candlelight
Carol ing Ceremony 33.
11 :3()--Movle " Rosie" 3; Wide World Special 13;
Chrlslmas-1975 Rome 4,15; FBI 6; Nation of
Nallons 8,10; FBI 6; Janaki 33.
12:1l0--Handful of Souls 8, 10.
12, 3o--Wide World Special 6.
1:oo---News 13.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. :13) The
day may start out with you be·
lng Very irritable. Later you'll
mellow. There may even. be an
early gift to cheer you.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Hov. 22)
Plan someth ing "lun" for lMII
For Wodnoodoy, Dec. 24, 1t75

'SIIEMJN'T.SEEME!
SHE SAID SHE NEVER
WANTS ID SEE ME
AGAIN I

773-5592

Herman Grate

CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Spare yourself a heap of
frustration today . Rely on
dellvery services rather than
your own wheels. You'H be

too lavish In gUts to casual ac·
qua lnta n ces . It's em ·
barr using. Go all the way with
loved ones and close friends .

Mason, W. v•.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22) You

LISTEN TO

WITH

m a~

have some c areer
trustrauons ear ly ln the day ,
but hang In there . Good news ,

.

•

•

MIKE STEVENS
..

good leltowshl p_end good

.

wee• 6:00 A.M. til 10:00 A.M.
ON

WMPO FM SJEREO 92

''
'

I

'

•'
•'·

'

I RECKON
IT 'S HIGH T IME
I FIXED SOME

FRIED CHICKEN
FER SUPPER

INtWSPAPEft F.NTEftPRISf.: ASSN, I

evening . You 're going to be In 1
good mood you'll want to stlere
with dear friends .

ARIES (Morch 21·Ap&lt;lt 11) . SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.
This Is going to be a busy day 21) There· ~ a strong posstblllly
tor you. with a lot ollast~minute
of a surprise bonus In store for
delails. However, you'll lind you from the boss. He'll enjoy
!hal special Item lor lhe one givi ng it as mucn as you 'll like
vou love.
gelling.
TAURUS (AprH 20·MOJ 20) CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Joft,
Today will prove to be e•pen18) A lrlend whose Interests
slve. but your tiard · eaned you've looked out for is not unmoney will serve a good cause.
mindful of all you 've done.
The evening will be rather plea·
She's likely 10 snow her sp-

perkier for party lime lonlgnt.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Don't be

s "Great Country Stereo"

- -~~

N.Y.
40 Delicacies
41 Mineral
veins
42 Blemish
43 Prod
44 Part in a
drama
46 Roman
emperor
47 Nothing
• .48 Goddess of
discord
50 Pronoun

33.

12 :55--r'!BC News 3.15.
1:01&gt;--Ryan's Hope 6.13; Phil Donahue 8; Young &amp;fhe
Restless 10; Not For Worren Only 15; Come to the
Slable 33.
1,31&gt;--Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15; Lef' s Make a Deal6,13;
As fhe World Turns 8,10.
2:1l0-S10,000 Pyram id 6,13.
2:31&gt;--Doctors 3,15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13 ; Gu iding
Light 8.10; Movie " A Chrlslmas Carol" 33.
3:01&gt;--Anofher World 3,41.5; General Hospital 6,13; All
In lhe Family 8,10; Kup's ShDN 20.
·
J : 3~e Life to Live 13; Bewitched 6; Match G8f11t
8, 10.
4:01&gt;--Misfer Cartoon 3; Merv Griff in 4; Somerset 15;
Mi ckey Mouse Club 6.8; Mister Rogers 20,33;
Dinah 13.
4:31&gt;--Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Santa's Wori&lt;shop 15.
5:01&gt;--Bonanla 3; Fam ily Affair B; Star Trek 15.
5:31&gt;--Adam-12 4; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec.
Co. 20,33; Vlslf with Santa Clau~ 13.
6,0()--News 3A,II.I0,13,1 5; ABC News 6; Hodgepodge
Lodge 20; Beverly Hills sings Chrls1mas 33.
6:31&gt;--NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Mrt( Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Alfack Hearl Affack 20; Book Beat

You'll be busy as a beaver to~
day preparing for the family
and guests who'll be d ropping
in. They'll repoy you by having
a good time.

MASON FURNITURE

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

~ ~

38 - - Island,

33 .

B:JD- Big Valley 6.
9:0o-A.M. J; Phil Donahue 4,15; Lucy Show 8; Mike
Douglas 10; Morning with D.J. 13; Navy Christmas
33.
9,3Q-Nol For Women Only J; One Life to Live 6; .
Talllefa~s 8; New Zoo Revue 13; From Ail Of Us
~:
.
10 :oo-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4, 1l ; Edge of Nlghf 6;
Pr ice Is Righi 8,10; Mike Douglas 13; Smffhsonlan
Puppets 33 .
10:3D-Wheel of Fortune 3,6,lS; t Dream d Jeannie~ ;
Dinah 6; Mantovan l Plays Christmas 33.
1LOD-Holtywood Squares 4; Gam btl 8,10; My Kind of
Christmas 33 .
11 :31&gt;--Hollywood Squares 3,15; Happy Days 13;
Midday 4; Loveof life B,10; Sesame St. 20 ,33 .
11:55---Take Kerr 8; Dan lmers World 10.
12:01&gt;--High Rotters 3.15; Showoffs 13; Bob Braun's 5050 C tub~ ; News 6,8,10.
12 :31&gt;--Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3.15 ; All Mv
Chlidren6,1 3; Search for Tomer row 8,10 ; Elec. Co .

GEMINI (Moy 21 -Juno 20)

S44,lOO. Phone 1419 1 86S-

A
M £RR'(

3,4; News 13.

s8nt.

STORE HOURS

garage , phone 698·3361 .
11-18 Si p

FA RM for sale by owner, •
m il's west of Ruttand on
New lima Road , 1-4 1 acres ,
large barn , house , ol her
bu il d i ngs , All , m i neral
r l gh ts, 60 acres ti lla ble, rest
in pasture . also pond .

:oo- Tomorrow

6:0D-Columbus Today 4 ; Sunrise Semeste r 10.
6:15---Folk Literature J.
6'25---Farm Reporl13 .
6,3Q-New Zoo REvue 4; News 6; Bible Answers 8;
Farmtime 10; The Story 13.
1:4D-Ounce of Prevention 10.
1:45-Mornlng Reporl 3.
S·55---Chuck White Reports 10; Good Morning, Trl
Slate 13.
7:01&gt;--Today 3,4,15: Good Morning, Amer ica 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Fr iends 10.
.
7:Jo-Schoolles 10.
8:01&gt;--Lucy Show 6: Capt. Kangaroo S,IO; Sesame St.

~D~(Jr--11

CLOAJE

APPAREioJTLV

I 'VE ~EE'-1 PAV-

~

U'DELL A lin em ent located
Rutland
Grade
behin d
School. Tuneup , br.ake-s ,
wheel balan ci ng, alinem en t

I

I

WEDNESDAY , D~CEMBER 24, 1975

SIGUEJ

EXPED17JON!

Ca 11 today for
Service Tomorrow

PH. 992-5682

PHONE 9'11-3315 - .
10Mechanlc
~meroy , 0 .

ONLY

EXPEDITIO!o.l ~

Sales and Senice

All Mechanical Work

Ph one 741 -2004 .

r7Tu&lt;,.;D7i'imi'm:7H!JM.,JHE O~ E MAl!
WHO CA!o.l AN~WE~
t HAT WOULD ~E­
PROFE550R JUKES
OF PILTPOWN
UNIVERSITY...
WHO LED THE

YES, Alo.l EBV PT IA ~ "D IG"
I 5P0t.J$0 RED TO UN COVER
OL D TOMS? AND TEMPLE? ~

19SS Mok EE
ARCHEOLOGICAL

lnlersection of Rl. 33 &amp; 7
Pomeroy

f f

four ordinary words.

form

D&amp;M Apj)liance

ROGER HYSELl'S
GARAGE

,EAFORD REALTYj

-~::~:~~-::~-~~~~~~ . HAPPY
: NiW VIi~
-

Pomeroy

Pt'l . 992 -2174

I.

Unacramble these foor Jumble~
one letter to each square, to

Phone 742-2Jjl
Roger Wimsley , Rutland
11-28-75

·, - - - - - - - - - -,
A SPECIAL GIFT
For Someone Specio t

CHAIN SAW

~lYdM ; ik.t ~·-"-~ -4 ,_.

R&amp;J COINS

SMtTH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

·-

f; -· - · ~ - - --- ~·- - --------

Sale

Pro Standings

-

Mobile Homes For Sale

NILAND HONORED
men ts lhlll we give you two 1964 JOHN 'oeere 1010 dozer , 6
weeks RENT FR EE . JuSI
II . blad e, canopy and win ch ,
BOSTON (UPI) - lienior
p ay you r security deposit
good con d iti on . s.a ,ooo.
linebacker George Niland of
and stay siK monlhs and the
Phon e 98S .J594 .
first 2 weeks Is fre e. You wil l
Trinity College Monday was
12-17-121p
enjoy mon thly l eases , !!i ll
named the 27th annual
elec tr ic living , carpet ing , HYDRAULIC crane . capacity
·IIVt file!.
range ru1d re lr igeralor , free
recipient of the Swede Nelson
7.000 lb., e~tend$0UI Io 30 fl .
trash pickup , cable TV
Will f it on 1 or 1' 1 ton truck,
He emphasized four parts Award for sportsmanship by
(op tio na l ) and la undry
Sl,lOO . Phone 985·359•.
ot the bW he liked : It opens the Gridiron Oub of Boston.
f acilities . co nv en ien t to
12-17 -12lp
shop pi ng on Third and M i ll -------- ------·the way to eventual (reedorn
NUand, 21, who came back
in M iddleport. VILLAGE 1910 - 350 JOHN Deere dozer ,
from
price
controls, from a serious leg Injury to
MANOR Is yours for one
6 fl . blade , canopy , new
bedroom
apartments
. engi ne. New pe lnf . 55, 000.
establllhes a domestic start at linebacker In his
s ta rting at S104 mof1lhly plus
Phone 985 -3l94.
elec . We pay for everyt hin g
senior year, was recom'
11-17-12tp
e lse. See the Manager at
mended to the Nelson comR lvers lde Apartments or 1975 CHEVROLET lion dump
c all 992 -3213 . This offer w 111
mittee by Hartlwd, Conn.,
Iruck VB, • sp ., P.S., P.B.
end soon . so move In now
16,000 acluat miles. s ~, ooo .
'NEW VORK 'UPI - The Mayor George Athanson
and save SUS.
Phone 985·359.4 ,
VnlrtCI Press lntert1atlona l after he helped carry an
Menn ing 0 . Webster
12-17-121p
8o1rd of Co1ches top 20
Judg e ancr e)l( .offlcio
~- -~----·-- --elderly woman from a burCOli Ill bnkttblll teams With
Clerk of So!lid Court
'3 AND -1 rm . furnished .and
first plac• wotes and record s ning apartment house ,
unfur n ished apt s. Phone 99 2· CH~ I Sl M J\S trees . Phone H2
tn P•tnf"'tstl .
By An n B . Watson
2~ 35, Main St .• Rut land .
543 4.
Third Week '
Deputy Clerk
1t.9.1fc
12-9·111c
Ttl"'
Poin1l
FEW TICKETS LEFr
1111.16. 13 , 2tc
l · lqdlono 1401 16-0I
•oo
HOUSTON ( UPI ) - Fewer
·· , , Maryland 16-01
319
.,.~~·~~.....~. . LOC UST posiS .. PhOne 742·
ll
2359.
3, N. Corollno l s.oI
283 than 2,000 tickets remain for
' · UCLA fl ·ll
W
----------- !:~~~p
S. Morquehe tS -11
177 the Astra-Bluebonnet Bowl
ABA Standings
6. Notre Dom t I5·1I
Ill game matching Colorado and By United
NO\h St-lli n" Fu ller Brush
Pr ess l"ttrnltional
7. Alobomo 16-01
109
W. L Pet. GB
Texas Saturday aft~oon, a
8. 'N !'vldl ·liS Vegas
Denver
20 6 ' 769
18-0 )
.
65 bowl official said Monday. New York
11 I .680 21 1
9. Clnclnnolltl -01
Mlddloport,o. 1"ft , ,l2-l771
TR UCK lopper, ollolumfnum
~:
"We expect to sell those San Antonio 17 10 .630 31 1
10. Louisvlllt (.5· 1)
Indiana
17 11 .607 •
for 8 fl . bed . $90 . Phon e 992 11 . Michigan IS-II
s; final seats pretty quickly. As Ken lucky
15 13 .S36 6
7513 Ofler 5 p.m.
12. N. Corollno St . (S-Ol
LOU IS
13 19 .• 06 10
l~ !lOOn as those are sold they Sl,
13 . Woshlnglon 11•01
V irgin ia
5 2• .172 16' ~
1.4 . Ttnnentt U · l)
----~- -· ·-- --··36 will begin putting up aome . . Monday's Result
21 SHEETS Celolex building
IS. Rulgers (7 .01
Kentucky
126
St
.
Louis
101
I
l~ I temporary bleacher type
ma lerlal. Phone 142-1880.
_Special Rates
16. Son FronciSco 17·11
Tutsday ' s Gamts
f 1
11-19-61 (
1seats," sald Weldon Humble. New York
17. SI, Johfl's l N'r' I 17-0l
at KentuckY
11. Kentucky 101
~
St . Louts IJt Virginia
CORN , Dalles Hill , phone 1H
lt. lllthlrlzono Sl . (6-IJ
6 "Standing room only tlckets indiana
at San Antonio
266· .
lf. lilt I KonusSI . I6·2)
or
Month
6 will also
be sold If
Wednesday's Games
12-19 61c
19, Itie l Southern Cal (7 11 6
.(No games scheduled)
necessary."
.li

College ratings

COAL, I i m es 1une ana all types
of sa lt and ro ck salt for ice
an d snow re moval . Ex .
ce l sior Sa lt Works, East
Main St. , Pomeroy , Ohio .
Ph one 992.J891 .
12·7 ttc

KEN T UCK Y long ri fl e. Ca ll
. .
even ings 592 -297J or write H.' IN D AS H 23 chc;m nel c1t 1zens
N . Starkey , Rt. SOE Box 12, ~ band tr~nscetver , am -fm
Athens Ohi o
mp x radt o, 8 track stereo .
'
·
Call 9q2 3965 .
12 _18.61 P
12·23 -1fC

- ..

Nat.han Biggs
Radiator Specialist

4 10 · 1 mo .

For Sale

Wrighl Brolhers 20; Berkeley Christmas 33.
toy 11£Nf1 1 Af1NOLO ,mel UOn

Oay at a Times ,10; Carolina Country (c) 5.
IO:OD-Joe Forrester 3.~. 15; Marcus Wlby, M.D. 6,13;
Switch 8,10; Woman Alive 33.
10:3D-F iylng Circus
10 :3D-News 20; Woman 33.
11 :llO--News 3,4,6,8, 10,13, 15; ABC News 33.
11 :Jo-Johnny Carson 3,4.15; Wide World Mystery 13;
FBI 6 ; Movie "Secrel World " 8; Movie " Desk Sf"
10: Janak! 33 .
11 ,3Q-Wide Wor ld Mystery 6.
9 : J~ne

9 , ~Pollce Woman 3,4,15; Rookies 6,13; Mash 8,1 0;

.·

'•'

Appraisal service on"
estales and .colleclions.

Ph. 992 -3993

IY73 TRUCK , I IOn Ford . F
J50, Heavy du ty lWB . ex .
ce llen t condit ion . Call 30•
773 5308 after 5 p .m .
' 11 16·11

{

Buy, Sell or Trade
F r om lhe largest Tr uC·k or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
smallest Heat er Core .

Svracuse, Ohio

11.400. Phone 985 -3594 .
Now
strategic storage for oil , PiANO - LESSO-N5
12x70 MOBILE Home , car .
12·17·12tp
acce pting n ew students .
peted , natural gas f urna ce,
allows federal officials to
Beginn er s . Int erm ediat es,
23,,000 B. T .U., a ! r con
a dvan ce d .
June
(M r s.
force Industries to switch
dll toned 70K2 0 awn 1ng . h6
For
Rent
H ervev l Van Vrank en . 414
por ch , u nderp inned . Phone
fuels and boosts production
Spr i ng Ave ., Pomeroy . I - - BEDROOM furnished
992-6162.
F'hone 992 ·2270.
apartment
ar
Village
and conservation with
11-18 121C
Ml!nor . Phon e 99 2.3273 .
- -· - - ----- - ----federal-6\ate Initiatives.
11·19-261c
"While this bill is only a 1 will be gl..,. ing ~plano l essons
for
in my h om e sta rlin g Feb . 1.
FU
RNi
SHED
apartment
4
beginning, It does achieve·
For informallon c tJ II 99 2·
r ooms and bath , adult s onlv . 1963 HONDA 300 motorcyc le,
2278.
several major objectives,"
run s good . S200 . Rog er
Phone 992-5908 .
12·18·38tc
Nelson , 655 Syu'more St. ,
11· 18 .tfc
Ford said.
M idd leport. Ohio .
"I now ask the Congress to
11 22 Jlp
HOUSE 1662 Lincoln HilL 3
NOTICE OF
work with me to put into
bedroom s, ba sement , S125
APPOINTMENT
th . Phone 1.304 768 ·-4041 9 AN TIQUE Hom e Co mfo r t
place additional programs
ca se No. 21693 mon
cook stove . model C 8 , good
ti
I
l.
condi ti on , Phone 949 ·2770.
essential to achieve energy Estate of Luth er V. Caldwell ,
l 221 6tp
o eceue d.
12-18-61 c
Independence, Including
Not ice is h ere by g iven that HOUSE , fr ee gas , 742 ·2577 or - ----------- ~-- Immediate congressional . Tressle Hendri cks of R . D . -4 , 742 mo .
NOW selling C. 8 . Radios ,
Pomeroy . Ohio . has been d ul y
'12 21·61c
antennas and accessories ,
action to deregulate natural appoinl ed Execut r ix of lh e
sca nners . Can fepair what
Estate
of
Lul
h
er
V
.
Cal
dwelL
gas, to stimulate far greater
we sell . Erw in's Gu ll Ser.
deceased , late o f M e igs 6 RM . HOU SE and balh lor
vice , N . Second and Rutland
production."
r en t in Pom eroy . Ca li 992
Cou • 'f • Oh io.
Sl .• M iddl eport. Phon e 99 2·
57 41.
C' ~ d lto r s are r eq ui r ed to
Democrats who drew up
2438 .
til
thei r cla imS w ith said
the bill contended Its price fl Jc iary with in fo ur months .
12·11-6tc
Dated this 121h da y of
HOUSE S rm s . and ba th. iii
oontrols would mean gasoline
EAR corn . Call 3889991 .
Decem ber 1975 .
Ra cine . Phone 992 .5 858 .
would be 1.5 to 3.5 cents
12 .11.12tc
12·4-llc
Mann ing D . Webs ter
cheaper by the gallon at thi!
FOR SAL E - White Roller
Judg e
start of the program and by
Derby , girl ' s shoe skates,
aPartmtM L
Court of Common Plea s ~ VRNISHED'
si ze 2. like new SIO. Wh i te
adults only in Middleport.
Probate Division
late 1977 would reach the
. Phone 991 -3874.
sh oe Ice skates. I pa i r size 1;
( 12) 16, 23, 30 , 3tc
current level again.
1 pa ir si ze 3, g irl 's, like new ,
3-25 -!Jj
ian F lyers , S7 .50 each .
. . . --:--- --=--~---~ ~ Canad
Federal Energy Ad·
Red \le lveteen bl azer , sia
NOTICE
ON
FILING
f!bUNTRY . Mobilc ... H0 m c
ministration officials said the
10, purple velvet jumper .
OF INVENTORY
, Par k , Rt . 33. ten'·miles north
site 10, both worn on ly
AND APPRAISEMENT
real effect may be nothing
of Pomerov . Lllrgc lots with
twice, like new , iust right
The State of Ohio. Meigs
because retailers have some County
concr ete patios , si dewal kS .
for holidays. ss each . Black
. Probate Court.
runn er s an d off st re et
paten t Stride Rit e girl's
backed-up costs. they can
To the Co ·Executri ces of the
'pa r'king . 'Phone 992 7H9 .'
dres s s i ppers , 51 2 8 , Sl .
estate ; to such of th e fol lo wing
pass on to customers and thus as are re si dents of th e Sta te of
11.31 tfc
Whlt't acrylic pile coa t ,
washable , S75 . Both shoes
cancel the Initial rollback of Ohio . viz : - · th e su rv iv ing
'VILLAGE and coat like new . Charlene
spou se , th e n eK I of kin , the
FREE
RE
NT
AT
prices.
beneficiaries under th e will ;
MANOR
IN
MID - Hoeflich , 992-5292.
an d to the attorney or at
torneys represen t ing any of
the aforementioned pe'rsons:
Dorset Sm l lh , De cease d.
Hemlock Grove , Oh io, Bed
tord Townsh ip , No . 216 70.
You are hereby nolifled that
the
I nventory
and
Ap ·
praisement of the estate of the
dece as ed,
a foremen tioned .
tate of ~ aid County , was til ed
in this Court . Said Inv entory
and Appra isement wi H be for
hear ing befor e this Cour t on
lh e 26 th day of December ,
19 75 , i!ll 10 :00 o 'clock A .M .
Any person ctesiring to tile
exc~ pti o n s t hereto must fil e
them at l east five days prior to
the date se t to r hearing .
. Given und er mv hand and
seal of said CourL this 'llth
da y of December 1975 . ,

Blown
Insulation Services

lARRY lAVENDER

4 13 tfC'

BLfiCK , BROWN , and Wh it e
fema l e Beag le dog in back
or around Phillip Sporn
m ine .
Contact
Homer
Jeffers , phone ( 3041 773 ·5292
or (304 1 773 5490 .
12 22 6tc

FREE ESTIMATES ·

Blown inlo Wa lis &amp;AHles
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDlloiG-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

9531.

Lost

992 -3345

Formerly we ed Wholesale.
Feat\lri ng :
.
Del ux Zerox Copy Serv tce,
Office
S u ppl ies ,
Suppl ies.
.Mimeograph
larges t se lec tion of wed
d ing su ppl ies in So uth ·
east~ rn Oh lo.
The Print Shop Complete
(Still in busin es s in Mid·
dleport )
12-8 2 mo .

mJ.BUtCK
, 53095 .
La Sabre Custom HT Coupe, loca l car. sharp inside and

POMEROY~ OHIO

Pom er oy Office

los Butter nut

control, AM radio &amp;Iape. it 's loaded and It's nice.

POMo~~~-1ve¥.~!9.~. CO.

Coins, Currency ··
and Supplies

Quality Print Shop
.

.

'

)

brakes, factory air , fint glass, comfortt11, cruts~

1971 FORD GRAN TORINO

TUE~DAY , DECEMBER 23,1975
8:1l0--Movln' On J; Happy Days 6, 13; Oral Roberts's
Chr lslmas is Love 4,15·;; Good Times 8. 10;
Chr istmas Can dle -light Caroling Ceremony 20,33.
8:31&gt;--Welcome Back, Kotter 6,13; Joe and Sons 8;
Cons~mer Survival Kif 20,33 ; Christmas Garland

Business Services

,Pomeroy_
Co•.

1975 CHEVROLEllHEVELLto
54995
Classic 4 door, co. demo with low mileage. light green '
with green vinyl roof , power door locks. _windows,

Sa dly m issed by ch i ldren ,
grandchildr en and husband .
12 23 l ip 4

Notice

JF

.Television log for easy viewing

WAS IN THE HOSPITAl.
FROM AN OVERDOSE
OF SLEEPING PILLS·

Auto Sales

WANT ADS
INFORMATION

OF.ADlltJ ... 'i
Before
S
P .M .
Day
Publication :
Monda'y Deadline 9 d . m .
Cancella tion • Corr ections
w ill be acfep tecJ un t II 9 a. m .
lo r Day o Publi cation

I JUST I.EARN;EEDDSM~~

cheer come l n abundance
later.

i'M 6LAD I{QIJ
A6REf THAT THE

~EISA

iiOOD IDEA

preclation today.

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 11)
You should benefit much more
lhan usual from the generosity

of business associates. Be
gracious in your accepta nce.

PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20)
Your better nature gains ttle
upper ha nd as the dl'f

progresses. By evening you'll
be the sparkllng ce nter of at·
traction.
'

-~
Dec. 24, 1175

You're going to meet someone
th is co m!ng year who will con·
sl derably expand your circle of
fr ie nds. Through th is parson
you' ll mak e some val uable
contacts.
•
! Nt:WSPA.Pt: R ENTERPRISto: ASSN I

Tfl EORANGE wM A
6REAT IDEA ... EXCEPT
I ATE I T~

�-

-

••

~

• The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Tuesduy, Dec. 2:1, 1975

Earl H. Dill

Revolutionists surrender
.By GEORGE SIBERA
ALGIERS, Algeria t UP!)
- Pro-Palestinian terrorists
'l'ho kidnaped the world 's top
oil ministers in a bloody
lihootout In Vienna surrendered quietly todJ!y, freeing
t)leir hostages unharme&lt;l at
Qle end of a :!Mlour hopscotch
flight around North Africa .
The guerrillas-five men
and a woman calling
themselves the "Arm of the
Arab Revolution" -lllepped
slowly from the Austrian
Airlines OC9 and handed over
t~elr
machineguns to
Algerian pollee.
The terrorists decided to
end the siege after airline
crcwmembers, exhausted
from criss-crossing the Arab
world, said they were too
tlted to fly any further.
· Algerian and Austrian offiC\!It is at Algiers Airport then
~gotlated the surrender.
-After the gang gave up ,
Algerian officials whisked the
oemmandos to
pollee
lieadquarters In an official
Algerian government car.
: some Algerian officials
slUd the commandos might be
Ill)I on trial. Others aaid !hey
might be handed over to the
Palestine Liberation
'
Organization,
which has
oondemned their ~otion .
:l:lther officials reoalled !hat
. In !he paat, other terrorist
gjlngs simply have ''disapJlllared"-apparently allowed
j.o return to their g"errill~
P&amp;ses .
Among those released

MEIGS lHEAlJE
TONITE

-:. .-----'fHR\.1

D~C . iS
NOT OPEN

FR 1.• DEC. 26-28

"fU!iNY LADY"
ITechnlcolor l

, Show sta rtsat7 : ~o p.m.

to day were two pri;e
prisoners: Sheikh Ahmed
Zaki Yamani, the oil minister
of Saudi Arabia, and Jamshi
Amouzegar, the oil ljlinister
and interior minister of Iran.
Both are powerful figures
with internatior)lll clout.
The guerrillas originally
selzoo 11 oil chiefs and a
numpor of their aides in a
daring raid Sunday on the
Vierma headguarters of the
Orgapization of Petrpleum
Exporting Countries. Three
persons were killed in the
takeover.
The terroris~ i!ell)llnded
an end to Arab cooper~tion
with Israel and called on oilrich Arab lands to contribute
money to the Palestinian
cause .
'!'he Austrian government
met their 4emands lor a
plane to fly t11e guerrillas anct
almost three dozen llastages
out of t~e country.
The p~nd unl!lllded seven
oil ministers ap4 a number of
their ~ Ides Monday during
stops In Algiers and Tripoli,
!Jbya.
At Tripoli, the terrorists
trie&lt;l to get along distAnce jet
to take them across the
Mediterranean and much of
llle Middle East to ~~e Iraqi
capital of JlaghQad, wllere
Lhey 11Ad hoped to find a

School

1Continued from p!lge ))
•~ .s million would e~ble It to
continue ~I !he prpsent levels

through Feb. ! . !f tile IJlQney
hrld pot been receive&lt;! some
~ pf the departm~qt 's 3,QOO
employes woulp hrlve to of
been laid off, Penl!ln sai~ Tl]~ b0llr4 Alag Approved
hiring pf Johl1 Mcli1lroy @S ~
consultAnt to Gov. JAmes A.
Rhodas In the area of federal
lOoneY. He will II!! ll!ll4 fll,QOO
A moilt~. MpfillroY w~s
Rhodes ' firs~ ~ssiatanLjn his
previous two terms.

•

dies

welcome.
But Libyan authorities
refused to provide the new
plane and the weary crew
refused to continue the flight
lifter it returned to Algiers in
the early hours.
Facing a stalem~te, \he
guornen
freed · their
romail]ing 15 hostages ami
surrendered.
The identities of the gunmen were not known, but a
hostage tola an Al gerian
reporter they were four
Palestinians and one German. A sixth gunman was
seriously wounded in the
Vierma shootout an4 was
hospitalized in Algiers when
the plane first landed Monday.

HI\CINE -- P.arl H. Dill, 70,
Ill . I, llacine, di ed lilts
morning at his reside~ce .
Born Oct. 7, 1905, he was
preceded in death by h!s
father, Hobert Dill, and a
brother, Glen Dill
Mr. Dill was ~mployed by
the State Highway Department 33 years.
,
He is survived by his wife,
Goldie C'ross Dill; a son, Gary
R Dill, Long Bottom ; his
moth er. Nancy Walker ,
Pomeroy; four grandone
grea tchildren,
grandchild, a prather, Frank
Dill, Pomeroy; one sister,
Edna Howell, Columbus, and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be
held Friday at 1 p.m. at
!':wing Cahpel with the Rev.
Freeland Norris officiaHng.
Burial will be in Gilmore
$900 RAISED
Cemetery
. Friends may call
M ID D L E P 0 ll T
at
the
funeral
home anytime.
American Leg ion Feeney
Bennett Post 128 of Middleport ha s raised $!JOO in the
"Gifts for !he Yanks "
program and Henry Clatworthy , chairman. He was
assisted by Biil Hendricks.
Mrs. Lelia Gwinn, 91, of
Post members will hold a
· Christmas party Wednesday Middleport died Tuesday
at 5:30p.m. Sanlil Claus will morqins in !lolzer Medical
Center. She had been in
be present.
failing health several years.
She was born June 16, 1884
in Montgornery, W. Va. to the
late Seth and Mary Lykens
Payne, She married ' John
Twino, who precede&lt;l her in
death in 1943, in 1902.
VCteransl\1emorlal HospitQI
She is survived by a sister,
ADMITTED - Edward
l.;~ura
Tench, Ashville, N.C.;
Strauss, MiqersviJie ; Jodi
nieces
amj nephews, Dr. an~
Jmbopen, pomeroy; Robert
Mrs.
Clyde
Ing els, MidTheiss , Bidwell; Everett
Hutton , Albany; Raymond dleport, and MarY F. Tench
Hartley, ~ucine; Ronal&lt;! ,Jones , Enka,' N. C.; a stepgrandson , Dr . Joh~ L. Gwinn,
Bostic, point Pleasant.
DISCHARGED - Ruth Glend~le , C~lif ., an&lt;l fol!l'
LtutherAn , · Loretta Bush, ~ Jep great-grandchildren.
jhomas Gibbs, Raymond ~he was also preceded in
death by a step-son, Harry
Justis, Opal Cremea~s.
Gwinn and ij sister, Hallie
Poyne. ·
,
rJ,EAS&lt;\NTVALLEY '
[;he was a memher of_Grace
DISCHARGES - Ric~ard United Methodist Church and
FrileY, John Withers, Sr., !he Order of Eastern Star.
Mrs: Jijc~ Oliver, Harley
Services will be held at
Bl)l'n&amp;. all Point Pleasant; 10 :30 a.m . Saturday at
Franklin Collins, Ashton; Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral
Mrs . Robert flhodes, lylonroe , home in Gallipolis with !lev.
Va .; Donald Thompson, Paul ·Hawks ' officiating .
l"etart ; Grace Thevln , !Jlll'ial will be iq Mound Hill
Qallipolis. Births, Dec. 22, a Cemetery. Frienqs may call
son to Mr . and Mrs. !i:rnest ~ ~ the funeral home 7 to 9
Hjgginljotl]am, !le&lt;! ijouse, p.m. Friday.
anct a ~on to Mr. a~~ '4fs.
James Pl~nts, Pliny.
SEJtVICES'f:T
The Christmas Eve service
llol~er 1\te!Ucal Cepter
of C&amp;rols and Holy ComrDiiohar~~~. Dec. 22)
munion will be held at Grace
Arminta llall, Russell J'piscopal
Church
in
Boggs , Leonar!! Calvin, pomeroy at 9 p.m.
Jl~verly Chil4ers, Verpa
Oiro!e, ~adine Clark, ,P:r.flllll
Creljleans, lloqald
Cremeaps,
~r .,
Carol
Jjljsn@qg)e, !lreq!la El~lps,
Kevin Gpr~ner, KiiP P.erly
HArris, !ll!PY Heller, Qary
Hunt, Mayme l&lt;iP!I 1 J811les
L!!clteY, Myrta I\111lone,
Willla.P Mayes, Carrie
MunYan, YiviPP Nance,
Lillian Pettery, Mrs. Tllol!las
Ri!;e and son, Phyllis RowleY,

Lelia Gwinn
died Tuesday

HOSPITAL
NEWS

IG!IDSklYI, Sl!~lla Tim!Jlons,
)o!ln '!'iPIDn. l,lrs. ·Wilbur
Walker, Jr. ap~ ~ugnror,
Francis Waugh, Wortman.
(Rh1~, Qec. 22)
Mr . ~nd l\1rs. Larry
Ciar!csRn. ~P. Pa~ till!; Mr.
Mil Mr~ . WI'Y Qreenlee,
(la4gh~r. PldweQ ; Mr. and
Mrs . Tommy Lane, son,
Pomeroy.

'

Santa Says: There's
Still Time to Open

DlVPR(:~ 1\SK~D

AChristmas Club!
It pays to plan aht~ad . Open ~ Chri&amp;ll1)il~
Club now, and yoy'll be gujlr~rt!eed t ltdV
sum for holiday shopping "'xl y,~r . Pily
prpmpt, weeki.Y payments a11d we milk&amp; lf1e
50th payment FREEl

*'

'

Walk-IJp Teller
Window and ftuto
Teller Window
Open Friday . Evenina
: 5 to 1 P.M
.
'

••
••
•

••

•••
•

•••

• Sue Uttle, Middlepprl, filed '
suit for divorce ag~ip~t
Donald Lillie, Pomeroy, In
Meigs County Com(Jion Plea~
Court charging grgS§ n~slecl
of duty ~nd extrem' cruelty.

~..,.CIMCtNHnl

THOS~

LAST

MINUTE
GIFTSI
• Slippers
'5hol!5

Member flde'-1 Deposit IIISIIriiiCt ~lion
-DEPOSITS INSliRID TO 140,000'

··" - - ··--....-l!lfl!lllllll____,

Konrad &amp;!noll, formerly uf Meigs teaching aqd playing, several
County and a talented musician, wa&amp; gener~tioqs trod the steps up to that
recently in Middleport due to the winding porch and into the big whlte
death of his mother-in-law, Mrs. R. hnuse on South 3rd St. in Middleport.
There they absorbed more or less
W. Saxton ,
music,
~~cordiqg to their individual
&amp;noll, who ta ~g ht m4sip in Boone,
fap~ci
Ur.s
. She treatrd all her
Iowa , for mfi ny years, nowoppppl~s
stuqents
l"ith
the same cheery op~ violin repair ~ !lop al his ho(Jie al
timism
regardless
of th_eir abilities.
&amp;17 South Clinton St. in !lopne.
The
~enelits
of
her leaching
During his recent visit here he
volunteered to write a tribute to the have been proliferated through
late Norma Lewis Hecox of Mid- many of her students who became
dleport who lor many Yeilrs taught teachers themselves. Also, a wellworn path was made bx various
young musicians in Middleport,
singers,
violinists, and sundry mFoilowing is Scholl 's tribute to the
strumeni.J!Iists,
who carpe to her
'
late Mrs. Hecox :
home
to
be
aCCOIJlpanied
on the big
LEST WE FORGET
grand pi!fllo that stood at the far end
BY KONRAD SCHOLL
Not so very long ago the of the living room. No! OQly did !hey
physical being of Norma Lewis receive an expert accompaniment,
Hecox slipped qqietly into eternity . but it was done on an instrument of a
But her influence on the art of quality seldom found in small
music, ip general, anq piano playing communities. Many times the piano
in p&amp;rticular ' goes on in (he lives of a was moved across the stre~t to the
multitude. In her loqg life of Heatn M. E. CHurcn, lar~ely at her

®~~fm
ROAD
·~

lEV. t\QW.UD C. "-A!;K

CHRISTMAS EXPRESSIONS AND f)XPECT ATI()N~
EverYWhere you gp, Cbrislrna~ j~ in t~ air! 'llle stores,
city streets, and houses are gaily ~tcorRied wjth ljght&amp; and
tinsel CIU'istwas carols deluge radio anq TV programs,
shopping centers, and offices with songs of joy. Children are
visiting Senta Claus at various stations, and people are busy
doing !heir Christmas shopping, crow&lt;ling and pushing their
way through the s1ores.
Christmas is an exciting tim~ of the year with all of its
expressions anll expectations. Although we m~f often ~imace
with inward repugnance at IK)rne of the gaudine!IS, h~sl!e and
CLEVELAND - AMERICANS ARE BEING ljilked by the
bpstle, ~ll'l shaiiQ¥', superficial exprei!Bions of r!lristm~s. none comprfhensive energy bill signed b'y President Ford, .!or,mer
of us wowd want to ban or boycott this holldar season. Bpi we Sen. Howard M. Metzenbaul!l, (}{)hlo, charged today. Its no
are all glad when it's over, and so llltiiiY p!!Ople, so busy doing wonder people are losing confidence In tlleir government,"
so much, aild expecting sq rn~oh oul 'of Chrl&amp;l!nas every yeaF, Me~nl!aiiiTl said. "It is nothing more than sheer poUt!Clll
never reali~e t.h• true rnBRning an&lt;! valqe of Chrjst10aa.
· hypocrisy to roll back the price of oil a few cents at \111&amp; lin)e
After it's all over, many people are disegpojn!e&lt;l with and tllen let It skyrocket inunediately after the election of
Christmas every year, depressed, ~nd in debt_. C!rristmas, 1976."
which seems to inviting every year; to many becomes only a
He said Congress ha's failed iq ita responsibility Ia the
nauseating memory until the next Christm@s.
Arntrican p~ple In passing the law, adding that tile !'resident
This is a tragedy, l&gt;ecapse Chr.i~trnas dQ!!s hAVe a lot to "deserves no credit for affixing his signature· to 11. "The
offer to everyone. If we wotild just lock beyon~ the trappings of political process.has once again given In to ~e olllndps!J'Y Who
t!lll outward expressions and self-expectations of Christmas are'crying their eyes out over passage of thts legislation while
and sense tile inner be~uty ~nd excellence of the season, ho~ they tole iheir bloated bags of money to the ban~,'' Metdifferent il coul&lt;l be!
zenllaum seid.
Shopping, mpsic, decQrations, , visiting, company, partying , and presents do pqt make Christmas. Olristmas is an
attitude. CllristJljBs is a Olr~tiijn ~lij!iqw; pelellrallon, ll4t i!
Cllrjst, wnqse ~iflh we COJ!lJllelJIOfijte at Phfjstmi!S, !a left qqt
of Olris!mas, a11 of olW feslivitj~s anQ merry111ald!1g are
ASK TOWED
pagan! 0\ristmas is a lime of reQeotlng on God's love and
Marriage
licenses were
P!oMqy tonight, lows to the
re&lt;!e!Jlptlve purpose for mankind. II is also a lil!le of "newlltg
issued
to
Melvin
DeAn fells,
20s. '
lncre~sing
our efforts of upderstancling, frlenq$1p, !lllcl humaqi\y lowarct low
22,
Ha;el
park,
lylich., and
cloudiness Wednesday, highs
pur lellpWJnen.
'
Mary Lou King, 22, flQ,
Christmas is not to be just a once-a-year gala jqbjlee, but in the upper 30s . Probability Pomeroy , and Charles
of precipitation is 20 per cent
ljl1 every day practipe of ''peace on ~arth and gQQd ivUI tow~rd
Willi!ll!l Legar, 21, Pomeroy,
~ay, jO.per cent tonight and
men ." Someone once s~iq, "He wno nas no &lt;lJristmas in llis
and
Amy Beth ijllll)rn, 20,
Wednesday.
heart will ~ever fin~ Cllristmas under a. tree."
Middleport.

·Weather

Certifkates

Will .Bt CloHd
fridty, Ole, 26

hem. house

Yqur Thof!l Mc~n 51ero

en tine
shot down
By )OliN RIGOS

:World's Christians to
~ oliserve -JesU:s' 6irtli
'

'

to feast.
A United Air Unes strike
bad threatened to keep many
Americans at horne, but the
strike was settled and full
service was restored for
Olrlstmas Eve travel.
Much of llle nation will
have a hoped-lor white
Christmas. 'The National
Weather Service said snow
wllllall for Olrlatmas from
the central Great Lakes to the
Ohio River Valley ana west to
central Missouri, and also in
southwest Wyoming.
Snow is already on the
ground from southern New
York state to Lake Erie past
Milwaukee and Minnesota
Into the Rocky Mountains.
In Bethlehem, in Israelioccupied Jordan, the hilltop
Judean- village where
tradition says Jesus Christ
was born, the spirit of
By United Preuloternational
Christmas
was hardly
., BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINA - SCORES OF heavily
recognizable
.
There were
ed leftists have launched their bloodiest offensive in five
Christmas
wreaths
and
·~ars, attacking army and police targets in a series of coorcarved
olive
wood
likenesses
"-dlnated raids that left more than 50 dead . The assawt came
only one day after the goverOJ)'lent of President Isabel Peron of Ute Christ child and the
three wise men. And a gail~
· crushed an attempted coup by rebellious air force officers.
decors
ted Christmas tree
Hundreds of army, na~ and poUce units rushed into a
sparkles
outside the Israeli
!Vide area of grassy plains south of the capital today to search
pollee
sta
lion on manger
li:Jr remnants of Ute guerrilla band that attacked an army
square.
• arsenal and other facilities Tuesday night. An army corn·
But you also find a lot of
-munique said at least 56 persons died In the fighting - 50
Israeli security guards
; 1!1/errlllas, four ~Idlers and two policemen.
carrying submachlne gWlS on
,: VAIL, COLO . - IN JAUNTY SPffiiTS, President Ford their rounds.
: lieaded back to the ski slopes at llliB ·mow-starved Rocky
In Los Angeles, a lawyer
• Mountain resort today after signing a batch of bills. In tlie contendeq lighting of the city
evening, Ford and his family planned to·gather for a ChriBt· hall 'tower In the .form of a
mas Eve celebratiori and - if they follow tradition -- a mid, cross is Illegal because it
itighl mass.
violates constitutional provi, · Ford had 28 more bills to act on after signing 20 measures slons for separa lion ·of church
Tuesday, including a six-month extension of the 1975 tax cut , ~nd sUite. Ajud~e rejected an
· and a bill to move the United States toward conversion to the unmedlate petltton, but SC\ a
metric measurement system. Aides say Ford is in Vall to take bearing for J~n. 16 - well
; i\ easy and to rela~ with his family.
after ~e Chrtstrnas season.
Within a couple of hours after his arrival Tuesday, Ford
In Cmclnnatl, Chrlstrna~
•dOnned ski garb - a blue outfit with cherry red hoots and a returned to the Wendling
, white cap with "76" inscribed in yeUow and red letters on It _ family. Last week,_Mr. and
·:.and headed for the slopes.
Mrs. John Wendling, both
.1
•
·
physically disabled,
discovered
all the Chrlsimas
COLUMBUS - UNEMPLOYMENT IN OHIO In .
November represented1.6 per cent of the civilian labor force, presents they had purchased
about the same as in October, but a two per cent Increase over for their four children had
Ute 5.6 per cent recorded In November, 1974, it was announced been stolen from too storage
room In their apartment
• today.
·
·• The Ohio Bureau of Employment Services seid total building.
When the story got out,
ilinployment for the November-to-November peri¢ declined
by 1.6 per cent due to cutbacks In ponfann payroll jobs. gifts from around town , and
Declines were greatest In the manufacture ill durable goods across the country - llianr, of
pertieularly primer¥ metals, noneiectrlcal machinery and them anonymous - began
pouring Into the family's
· motor vehicles.
·
home.
'
Manu(aclurlng productloo workers In Ohio averaged a
The Wendllngs received so
, record $235.58 per week In November, up S4 Irom October.
many gifts they decided to
BOSTON - VETERAN JOHN HAVLI&lt;'F.K of the Boston give some to charities for ll"'
(Continued on p•ge 24)
ne!'t h',
· Unlted Pre1181Dtei1Uitional
• · Christians around the
world observe the birth of
Jesus Christ Thursday In the
most · ' popular
com. m~mora lion of the church
year - Christmas.
First suppressed in the
~United States by the Puritans
• because of their pagan
Qrigins, Christmas
·celebrations have become
'increasingly popular - and
, commercialized.
' Dec. 25 was the date of a
"pagan festival in Rome,
~ chosen in A.D. 274 to
":celebrate the winter solstice.
~Christmas on Dec. 25 is first

known to have bee n
celebrated in Rome in the
second quarter of the 41ll
Century.·
In Jerome, Idaho, a Bible
reader offered $1,000 to
anyone who can show her a
Bible verse substantiating
the birth of Christ on Dec. 25.
Marian Slape said she has the
money but is sure she will not
have to pay it. She said she
has read the Bible from cover
to cover but has found no
reference to the eKact date of
Christ's birth.
Christmas Is a traditional
time to visit with family and
friends, to exchange gifts and

ATHENS, Greece (UPI ) RiChltd Welch, identified as
the chief of CIA operations in
Greece, was returning from a
Oli'lltrnasparty withhiswife
When three masked gunmen
In a black car drove up to his
home and opened fire.
The 46-year-oid embassy
officer was. :caught in the
spray of bullets as he stepped
from the chauffeur-driven
limousine . He crumpled to
the treeJined sidewalk before
his horrified wife as the
gunmen sped off into the
night.
Welch 's death Tuesday
came jll!t one month after the
Athens News, an English
language dally , published a
list of alleged CIA agents In
·Greece that included his
name, address and telephone
IUirnber.
In Washington, intelligence
sources said Welch, assigned
to the U.S. embassy as first
secretary, was chief of all
CIA activities In Greece.
The sources aald Welch had
been mentioned as an intelligence agent in recent
publications by former
American colleagues in the
. _m...flld · 11118 may ,tlulw
marked him for execution .
In Vall, Colo., vacationing
President Ford said he was
"shocked and horrified by the

*
BRING YOUR CHILDREN TO SEE SANTA CLAUS
IN THE THIRD FLOOR TOYLAND.
TONIGHT 6:30 TO 7:30 PM
I

I

*

MAIN STORE, ANNEX AND WAREHOUSE

OPEN WEDNESQAY,
QiRISTMAS EVE, 9:30 TO 5
'

,,

I

terrorist murder" and said
Welch "has long been a
dedica ted official of the
United States government."
The government of Greek
Premier Con s tantine
Cararnanlis vowed to "do
everythittg for the discovery
of the hideous criminals."
The tall, mustachioed
Welch spent Tuesday evening
at a Olristmas cocktail party
at the home of U.S. Ambassador to Greece Ja ck
Kubisch.
He le!t about 10:3() with his
wife lor the four-mile trip to
his wrllled home in the plush
suburb ·of Psychiko.
His wife told police a small
black automobile ca rrying
three masked men drove
close to the embassy ca r.
When Welch stepped out they
began shooting.
Neither Welch's wife nor
the chauffeur were injured in
the barrage of bullets.
Police said Welch's son ran
outside when he heard the
shots and lifted his father
back Into the embassy car.
They raced to a nearby
hospital where Welch was
prounounced dead on arrival.
· A native of Col)neclicut and
gnldaate ~ Harvard, Welch
served on the Mediterranean
island of Cyprus from 1960 to
1964 before taking up posts in
Peru and Guatamala.

~

'
... i

'I

·"'

.,.,

'

~

if

....

~.

... •
t

"

.,
.. .

' ·"""

WAITING FOR SANTA - Lori Ann Crow, two-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert W. Crow, Middleport, like thousands of yoW)gsters all over the United States this
evening , waits patiently while eating a candy cane for the arrival of Santa Claus. Lori will
celebrate her birthday the day after Christmas.

·Detente teeters
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Havana - left to speculation
Secretary of State Henry what he meant by resistance
Kissinger Is warning Russia and the future of detente.
and Cuba to get out of Angola
"Unless the Soviet Union
or face U.S. resistance and shows restraint In its foreign
maybe the end of detente.
policy actions, the situation in
But at a news conference our relationship is bound to
Tuesday, Kissinger - who become more tense," he said .
was largely responsible for ''And there is no question the
creating better U.S. relations United States will not accept
with both Moscow and
rrontinued on page 21)

extended 60 days

Otristmas Holiday

ATHENS - The Ohio
Va lley Health Services
Foundation learned today in
Washington from
the
Department of Health ,
Education and Welfare that
the federal contract under
which the Southeast Ohio
Emergency Medi cal Services, Inc. , has been
operating since June 1972 had
been extended for another
two months.

l·:mployes of the Ohio Valley Publishing
t 'o. - The Ilolily ·Sentinel, Gallipolis Tribune
- will be on holiday Thursday. Dec . 25.
t 'hl'istmas Ha y with no papers being printed.
ltegular publication will be resumed
Frida.v.
The Newspaper staffs join in wishing all
n•aders a tVIcrry Christmas and Happy New
\'cilr.

Rev. O'Dell Manley, right, pastor of the Pomeroy
Wesleyan Holiness Church, presented the keys to this
vehicle, a gift from the congregation along with personal
gifts to Mr. and Mrs. Charley Jones Monday ni~t.

SEOEMS' life

::::::::::::::::;:::::::::;:::;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:::::;:::::::;:::;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:

·-

OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 9 PM

Fifteen Cents
Vol 27, No. 178

CIA chief

resumption of U.S. -Cuban relations are nil, says "We don't
need anything from the United states."
"What Ford should do is apologize to the Cubans lor the
series of assassipation attempts and crimes conunitted by the
CIA.in Cuba," Castro told a workers rally at Havana's !'Ialii
de Ia Revolucion Monday after the adjournment of the first
Cuban Communist Party Congress.
The ~arcte&lt;! leader vowed hi~ government w_ould continue
to support Puert.Q Rican and Angolan liberation s(fuggles
ctespil!! Ford's s4Jtements at a press conf.erence Bl!turd~f that
tjle Angolan intervention had killed c11ances fo~ a thaw!J)g of
relations IJetween Havana and Washmgt~n .
"The Pnited States has nothing to cancel with respect to
Cqba be~use they have already cancelC!I all," Castro told the
cheering crowd, which radio reports estimated at about I
mtlllon.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
I

e

Pomeroy·Middleport, Ohio
' Wednesday, December 24, 1!175

(Continued from page I )

CJhe

ELBERFELDS
Gift

expense, so a musical event cowd
have a high-quality supporting Instrument.
This writer, while still in his
teens, had the good fortune to have
this highly-trained musiciflll as hjs
accompanist for concerts that
ranged lhrough parts of Ohio, We~!
Virgiqia, and r&amp;dio station WP&lt;\R in
Parkersburg, W.Va. It w~s an ex,
perience that helped provide a solid
basis for what later developed into a
life-long career as a violinist ~d
teach er. Her mature judgment
helped prevent many youthful
exaggerations.
The big white house on South 3rd
St.' is still there and that great porcn
still entwines it. The piano no longer
solJ!lds in that huge living room and
no more students and soloists climb
its steps, but the influence of the
diminutive woman who lived there
goes on and on .

News •. in Briefs

'

Free Gift Wri!pping

.MIDIUPORT, OHIO

Influence of Mrs. Hecox goes on, and on

FOR

uTifE FRil!:NDLY BANK"

lllbens ~ational

Tue~day

Good deed marks
Otristmas time
Christmas is - good
deeds!
And one of the nicest good
deeds of this holiday season
was performed by members
of the Pomeroy Wesleyan
Holiness Church.
On Saturday, a 1967 Dodge
was purchased from White's
Garage In Athens by some of
the men of the church. It was
taken then to Jeffers Garage
in Pomeroy where (he men
worked until about rnidnlghl
giving the vehicle a complete
overhauling. After extensive
repairs were made, the men

filled the tank with gasoline.
Monday evening at the
Christmas party of the
church held at Kyger Creek
the car, the backseat of which
had been filled with gifts, was
presen ted to Mr. and Mrs .
Charley
Jones .
The
!lev. O'Dell Manley, pastor,
was in cha rge of presenting
the keys to the vehicle while
some 80 members and guests
observed.
It was a happy night for Mr.
·and Mrs . Jones He was
without a car to get to his
employment at the R. C.
Bottling Co. and Mrs. Jones is
ill . The entire gesture was
made possible by members of
the church which is located
on Route
143. The
congregation knew of the
personal problems the Jones
family had been encountering
and through the donations of
time and money did
All Meigs Coun ty 4-H and somethit1g about it to make a
very merry Christmas for
~'FA members who plan on
seiling steers at the fair in Mr. and Mrs. Charley Jones .
1976 must have the ir steer
weighed In on Jan. I, according to John C. Rice ,
County Extension Agent,
TRUCKS COLLIDE
Agricul ture .
The
sheriff's Dept. in The weigh -in will take
place on New Year's Day, vestigated a two-truck acJanuary I, fr om 9 a.m. to I 'cident Tuesday at I :50 p.m. in
p.m. a! the Royal Oak Farm Ches ter township on SR 7.
near Five Point.s. Members Robert D. Ashley, 54, Rt. 2,
and parent s are also Racine, north bound on 7 was
reminded that there will be a being passed by Howard R.
meet ing of the Sale Com- Kinsey, Alliance, when
mit tee on friday evening, Ashley turned left. There
Dece mber 26 at 7:30p.m. at were no injuries or arrests,
the Coun ly Extension Oflice and moderate damage.
1

Weigh-ins on

New Year's
Day in Meigs

.-~

I

BEST. BIGGEST YET - Thanks to the generosity of Meigs Countians, the biggest
Otrlstmas yeL will take place 111 the Meigs Cowrty Infirmary. Mrs. Mildred Jacobs,
superintendent, sorts packages under the tree lor the 14 county home residents. Each will be
receiving a~ least 10 packages. The infirmary has also been the scene of a number of parties
staged by various groups. The parti~s concluded Tuesday ni ght with a pizza party - and
Gifts - by the Meigs Jaycees.

•

~

I

'

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          <elementText elementTextId="54177">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="54176">
              <text>December 23, 1975</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1252">
      <name>dill</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4522">
      <name>gwinn</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
