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8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday, Dec. 29, 1975

IIOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital James Warner, Syracuse;
SATURDAY ADMISSIOJI!S Roger· Fullz, Apple Grove;
- Rollie Sayre, New Haven ; Conrad Berkley, Point
Sandra Stover, Charleston . Pleasa nt; J ames Bowles ,
SATURDAY
DIS- Poin t Pleasant; Mrs. James
CHARG ES - Raymond Hammack, Clifton; Albert
Hartley, Robert Deemer , Rhoutsong, Elkhart, Ind .
Jeffrey Miller ..
Births. Dec. 27, a son .to
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS - Mr. and Mrs. Teddy Cobb,
Op~l Ohlinger, Midpleport; . Glenwood, and a daughter to
Jimmy Hemsley, Syracuse; Mr . and Mrs. JameS" Page,
William Weaver, Middleport ; Point Pleasant.
Margaret Stevens, Vinton :
Anna Frank. Pomeroy:
Samuel Pickens, Syracuse:
Bobby Warden, Racin e; (Continued from page 1)
Kathleen Cain , Athens; showed the pumping out of
James llaniels, Middleport. the water, started Sunday
SUNilAY DISCHARGES - morning, was a meager
Don Myers, Edward Strauss. performance. Only two
pumps, each with a capacity
Holzer Medical Center
of throwing out 600 gallons a
(Births, Dec. 26)
mlnu te, have been pressed
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Cor- into service.
dle, son , Gallipolis; Mr. and
Mrs. William -Lahrmer, son,
Rescue officials said more
Oak Hill .
pumps
would be opera ling by
(Birth, Dec. 271
this
evening
and several
Mr. and Mrs. Michael
higher capacity pumps ,
Klerlg , son, Gallipolis.
requisitioned from Bombay
(Births, Dec. 28)
Mr.' and Mrs. Thomas and ot.her cities, would be
Gardner, son , Gallipolis; Mr. arriving in a day or two.
Sharma ·said Chasnala
and Mrs. Denver McFann,
Colliery
Is one of India's most
son, Pedro.
modern mines that have been
planned and designed under
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARG ES - Mrs. the guidance of World Bank
Robert
Durst, . Point and other international exPleasant ; Essie Gibbs, perts . The colliery has
Letart; Mrs. Albert . Grady, reserves of nearly 43 miUion
Leon; Mrs. Marvin Stewart, tons.
Brunswick, Md .; John
Wee~ley , Mason ; Stephen
Pyare La! ," a welder
Leport, Henderson ; Mrs. working on the installation of
the pwnps, said, "! don't
think any of my comrades
down there is alive. But we
are Mt giving up hope. We
TONIGHT lhru THUR .
shall do our best, to get to
DEC. 29-JAN. 1
NOT -OPEN
them."
Units of the paramilitary
FRI., JAN. 2-SUN. JAN. 4
Border Security Force, lbe
WHITE LINE FEVER
Central Reserve Police and
(Technlcolor)
armed pollee have cordoned
Show51arh al7 :00 p.m.
off the pithead area to ensure
HAPPY "NEW YEAR
unhampered rescue
opera lions.

Hundreds

'

MEIGS THEATRE

to 12, 2 to S (CLOSE
THURS.l-EAST COURT

f1UUK:.: 9;30

•

Christmas toll climbs
United Press International
The nation's Christm as
weekend death toll mounted
steadily toward the lower end
of prehollday projections as
snow-and-ice-slicked roads
ha mper ed hom ebound
Christmas motorists In
several areas Sunday night.
The National Safety
Council estimated between
~0 and 500 persons could be
killed in traffic mishaps
during the 102obour holiday
period which began at 6 pm.
local time Wednesday and
ended at midnight Sunday ..
The projection appeared to
be fairly accurate .
The w~ekend toll was approaching 400 as the holiday
period drew to a close. Late
reports could place it within
the council's projected range·.
Homeward
bound
motorists were confronted
with snow in parts of Iowa
and Illinois, freezing .drizzle
in the eastern Dakotas and
Minnesota and light fog
across much of tbe nation's
midsection Sunday.
But the weather had
nothing to do with one fatal ,
weekend
accident. A
runaway metro transit bus
hit seven cars, then smashed
a second bus Into a third one
in Seattle Saturday night,
killing a woman and injuring
30 persons.
Deaths from fires also
increased . In the northeastern Minnesota community of Island Lake, a
blaze destroyed the Breezy
Point Tavern and killed six
persons, Including four
children. Authorities said it
appeared all the victims were
trapped Inside.
Nineteen persons died in
weekend plane crashes.
The wreckage of a twinengine plane carrying nine
persons was found Sunday
near Granby, Colo. There
were
no
survivors. ·
Authorities said It would be a
difficult task to recover the
bodies from the rock-strewn
peaks.
Four persons died Sunday
when their twin-engine plane

From a Great American Bank

;N
otices,
news
in
brief
'

.....
,

~

Junket ·

Hugh E. Bush

..l!ed on Sunday

...
~

-

News •• in Briefs

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Bright and.White .Sale

Queen

~~~::__::~..::..:. _ _ -

-

·- -_J

by permln lon of T HE Hf!rn.. tt\ NN ..\RUliV fi

1801 : The lonely rider takes his oath.
.\~ 1

John Adams had predicted it. There'd been· conflict in
his Federalist party . He knew he'd be out of office with
the election of 1800. We have a cliff-hanger of an election. A tie between Tom J efferson and Aaron Burr. But
Alexander Hamilton says Jefferson is the lesser of two
evils, and throws his vote. J efferson is a new kind of
President. Studies day and night. Speaks six languages. Knows medicine and architecture, astronomy
and even how to,playthe violin. His passionate concern
is equal rights for our citi zens. He's no snob. Drops .the
silver b_uckles from his shoes. Wears plain old pantaloons mstead of fancy knee breeches. Even rejects the
regal, horse-drawn carriage l!nd rides his own horse,
alone: to his inauguration. Years later he'll request as
an ep1taph: Author of the Decla ration of American Independence, of the Statute of Virginia for Religious
Freedom_and Father of the University of Virginia. "As
teshmomals that I ha ve lived . " ~

Farmers Bank

~

'•f •ull r

"A New Year's resolution
to help others tess for.
lunalo lhan yourself will
enrich your life,"

The " FRIENDLY" ONES"
making !his resolution;
" We resolve to try In every

. everyday, lo make
customer who walk s
llhrou,~h our dool a little
pier . "
A
PEROUS AND
JNI~t't'Y NEW YEAR TO
OUR FRIENDS ANQ
TOMERS.

'

EROY
BLOCK CO.

(Continued from page 1)
part~phernalia; Mrs. Audrey
Wood,
promoter
of
hospitality; and Mrs. June
Eichinger, director of
finance.
MillS Sisson has selected for
her colors for the six month
term royal blue and gold with
the praying hands as her
emblem.
Carnation Is her flower, the
Serenity Prayer her theme,
and her motto, "Cherish
Ye s terday, Dream
Tomorrow and Uve Today."
Her programs were marked
"In special loving memory of
Philomena Goodwin,' ' In
addilloo to triootes to the
guardian and associate
guardian, Mrs. Rose Ann
Sebo, and Tom Edwards, past
guardian . and associate
guardian, and Mr. and Mrs.
Harry P. Smith, first guardian and assocjate guardian
of the Bethel.
BLAST DELAYED
LAS VEGAS, Nevada
(UP!) - An underground
nuclear ~last set to be
touched off today was postponed for 24 boors beca111e of
" unfavorable wind conditione.''

Featuring Famous Qualty Canlldll

POMEROY, OHIO

BATH ENSEMBLES
Sheats and Pillowcases
I

On Sale Now
IN THE'
HOME FURNISHINGS
ANNEX

.

out 7

•

Death, .injury would
have
.been heavier i£
•

Bomb threats at Columbus, Cleveland and Toledo

;blast had come earlier .
NEW YO~K (UPll - A bomb which police
said packed the punch of 20 to 25 sticks of
dynamite exploded in a TWA baggage terminal at
LaGuardia Airport Monday night, killing 11
persons and injuring about 75 others.
· Human limbs were scattered across the
terminal area and a UPI reporter who was
waiting for a flight said she saw a "human head just head -;- on a window ledge."
Police said the powerful bomb was placed in a
coin-operat¢d locker close to the area where
passengers collect baggage.

),,

By United Press International .
Bomb threats were repOrted Monday night at
aeveland Hopkins airport in aeveland, Port Columbus in
Columbus aod the Air National Guard tenninal in Toledo.
The airport at Colwnbus was evacuated for about an
hour while police searched for the bomb but operations
continued"at aeveland.

e

a

PoUce said the toll of dead
and injured could have been
higher If the bomb had exploded minutes earlier. Tbe
blast ripped through the
downstairs area shortly after
'147 ·passengers aboard two
TWA flights landed and
picked up their l!lggage.
The bomb exploded at 6:33
. •p.m. EST. Flight No. 416
:carrying 76 passengers from
'·Indianapolis arrived at the
gate at 5:58 p.m. Flight No.
152 with 71 passengers from
Cincinnati was at the gate at
6:02 pm. Most of those
aboard the two flights had
picked up their baggage, but
had the bomb gone off
minutes earlier, many more
travelers might have been
killed or Injured, pollee said .
"U It had happened 15
minutes before, there would
have been a full plane of
people waiting for their
luggage," said H. Patrick
Callaghan, who had jus t
arrived from Indianapolis for
his flrst visit to New York. He
WBB cut by flying glass.
"Most of them had cleared
out and there were just us
wajli!J&amp; for the limouaine."
The FBI said bomb threats
were telephoned to at least 10
airports serosa the nation
after the New York blast, but
·.m more bombs were foun~ .
The FBI Slild bomb threats
were telephoned to at least
seven airports across the
nation after the New York
blast, but no more bombs
were found .
· Prealdent Ford, on a skiing
vacoUon in Vail, Colo., ordered a federal investigation
of "this senseless act. I am
deeply grieved at the loss of
lives and injuries ... "
An anon)1110UB male caller
told "!JPI in New York the
explosion was carried out by
the Palestine Liberation
Organization.
But
a
spokesman for tbe PLO at the
United Nations denied any
connection with the blast and
condemned "the dastardly
act against the innocent
people at LaGuardia."
The New York airport was
closed today. Hundreds of
ntgbts aurlng the busy
holiday travel season were
diverted to Kennedy and
Newark airports. A Federal
Aviation Administration
official said tbat during
'normal houra a Right lands
• every two minutes at
LaGuardia, and once a
minute during rush hours.
"Usually a bomber picks a
specllic target for a specific

reason,'' said on~ New York
City pollee detective. "But
this was just a senseleiiS
attack on innocent people."
APLO spokesman in Beirut
said the bomb appeared to be
an attempt to embarrass the
PLO prior to its participation
in the U.N. Security CouncU
Middle East debate beginning in two weeks. He said
efforts to liilk the PLO to' the
bombing were an "effort to
harm the struggle of our
people ... at the international
level, particularly at. the
United Nations and at the
Security Council.
"It can hardly be coin·
cidence that it occurred
before the Security Council
meeting on Jan. 12 to discuss
the Palestine question."
New York City Police Chief
Thol)la s Mitchelson said,
"Two people were seen
running from the scene
shortlybeforetheexploslon,"
He-declined to elaborate or to
describe the two.
Police said nine of the
dead- live men and four
women- were killed in·
stantly, one was declared
dead on arrival at a hOBpltal
and another died in surgery.
In Washington, NaUooal
Airport was closed for two
hours Monday because of a
bomb threat. Other bomb
threats were telephohed to
airports In Chicago, Los
Angeles, Phoenix,
Philadelphia, the BaltiinoreWashington International
Airport at Glen Burnie, Md .,
and Norfolk, Va. The airports
were searched but no more
bombs were found.
The LaGuardia blast blew a
10-lo-15-foot hole through the
ceiling of the "downstairs
baggage area. The ceiling
was made of six to eight inches of reinforced concrete
and steel. People were killed
and injured as far as 200 feet
from the explosion.
Police aaid the bombequivalent to 20 to 25 sticks of
dynamite-had been placed
in a locker between two
baggage carousels on the
lower level of the terminal.
By midmorning today, only
four of the dead had been
Identified. They were Edythe
Bull, 72, of Brevard, N.C.,
who had come to New York
for a round-the-world trip
with a friend; Ronald
Presslalf, 32, a drug store
manager from Long Beach,
N.Y.; Frank Musicaro, 48, of
Bayshore, N.Y.; and Bynum
Patterson, 37, of Stamford,
Conn.

By United Preu IDtematiOIUII
WASHINGTON - SEN. HENRY JACKSON, campaigning
for the Democratic presidential nomination, has repeated his
m"'sition tQ school busing and wlll seek curbs on the power of
Ieder&amp;! courts to order busing as a means of achieving racially
balanced schools. Jackson also called for a two-year, t2 blliton
e11ens1on &lt;i federal aid for voluntary school desegregalloo
PI'Olll'lllll· He said the federal government should subsidize
one-third of all school budgets, which would cost an additional
'It bUllon a year according to the National Edccatlon
Alloclallon.
"U I am elected president,! will end the years of neglect of
rlc!al progre11 which hal !!haracterlzed the Nixon and Ford
llllmlniatraUOIUI/' Jack.son aaid in a position paper. "! wlll
· foCus our attention, and our actlona, on asaurlng that aU
flluclenta, black and white, are prOVided with an educatloo
wblch IIUikea equal opportunity a reality and not simply a

THE NATION'S TRAFFIC DEAnf TOLL FOR 1976 will
drop by about 1,000 deepite Increased travel, lhe aecond
llralabt yearly decline and the lowest death total In 14 yean,
according to a UPI survey of the ~ atatea. Authorities are
(Continued on page 10) ·

£,
\

others

' •
•
a uar Ia exp OSIOD

.

cnam."

EtBERFELDS IN POMEROY

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

.

ROYAL FAMILY

Main Stott, Anna IIIII WII'IIIDule
Open ,.., lftd Wldn•IIIJ 9:30" 5

.t tdwtu'

even
•
urt m

Ml'!l. Childress
dies fu Delaware ':!

There will be a Walch lhe Guysville Community
Mrs . · Clodella (Della "'•
Service Wednesday night at C~urch with tea lured speaker
crashed in southern Colorado
A breakdown of accidental lhe Hiland Chapel Church to be Kenlucklan Jesse Flffe. Childress, 75, Delaware, died;:
beginning at e p. m. The The service will . gel un- this morning in the Marlon;
after ·taking off from the · deaths:
derway ate p. m. The public
Pagosa Springs Airport.
Traffic
382 publlc Is Invited.
General Hospital. A former•
· Is Invited .
An aerial collision of two Fire
, .•
46
TUPPER PLAINS - The
Meigs County resident, shi:
A WATCH MEETING will was born April 19, 1900, theprivate planes near Franklin, Plane
··
34 Ohio Valley Horse Show
held .al 7:30 p. m. Wed·
N.J .• claiined the lives ol two Other
52 Assn. wilt stage a public be
nesday atthe Ash St. freewill daughter of the late Wllliarii"'
square
and
round
dance
New
persons, and the bodies of Total
514 Year's Eve at the elementary Baptist Church In Mid· and Willie Ann Bradshaw:
four persons who crashed in a
Texas reported the most school here with music by !he dlepart . Several ministers Napper . She was alai!::
singleof'ngine plane Friday traffi c deaths with ~o. Pioneer Boys of Marietta. and singers will lake part In
the service. The public Is preceded in death by 1tet:
near Enumclaw, Wash. were California had 35, Florida 28, The dance will start a! 9 p. m. Invited.
and will las! until I a.m.
husband, Miles H. Childrea i ..
found Sunday with the North Carolina 18, and Admission Is S5 per couple.
FOUR DIVORCES were one daughter, one son, two~
wreckage.
Georgia, llllnois . alld New Those wlshlnd to assure !hey
~ ·
granted
and
another brothers, and a slilter.
will be ad1!11fted - although
York, 17 each.
reservations are not required dissolved In Meigs County
She Is survived by these~
Alaska, Hawaii, Nevada, - may call Homer Cole at Common Pleas Courf since children, · Mrs.
John:.
Friday.
North Dakota, Wyoming and 667-3405.
Granted divorces were rMargaret) Elias with wbom"::
(Continued from page I)
the . District of Columbia
A GOSPEL CONCERT will Susan Smith from TheOdore she lived at Delaware; Mrs••
Relations Comnuttee, Is not reported no holiday traffic be held at 7: 30 p. m. Thur. E. Smith, Willie Grimes from Noah (Gladys) Hurley, In
sday at Washington Grade Dugan Grimes, Jr. and Anna
·
taking any trips during this deaths.
School ,
Fourth
Ave .. E. Odg(n from Clarence C. California : Mrs . Lorett~
month-long congressional
Gallipolis, featuring the Ogdln, each on charges of Williams, Gauley Bridge, Yl::
LeFevres from Atlanta, Ga., gross neglect of duly and Va.; Mrs. Everett (.Ruth!;
vacation. But he has been to
lhe
Highway Trio, extreme cruelty, and Pauline
the Middle East, Southeast Congressional Travel Office, lt1e Heavenly
Gospel Messengers, the M. Cunn&lt;ngham from Clyde Trea~ay, In West Vtrglnla['
Asia , most of Europe and a which arranges much of the Shaffer Family and the w.. cunningham, on grounds sons ; Cornell William.
of gross neglect.
good share of South America. congressional travel and Jublleers.
The marriage of Joy.ce D. Childress, aeveland' Frank: ·
The
concert,
sponsored
by
"I tell everybody when I accommodations, declln~ to
·!he Southeastern Ohio Gospel Hazzard and Don P. Hazzard lin D. Childress, Ro~ky .
am going and where, and furnish information on the Music Assn. Is open to the was dissolved.
Mountain, W. Va.; Douglas'
when I get back I tell tbem trips, citing the "wishes of public. A free will offering
Childress, In California; two
THE MEIGS County
will be taken .
where I was and wbat I Congress."
sisters,
Mrs . Carl (Ella t;
·
Pioneer and Historical
learned," Ryan said. "And If
"We just do what we're
THE . MEIGS AREA Society will meet Friday, Shultz, Racine; Mrs. Julie ;
they want to check into the told," said a State Depart- Holiness Assn. will hold &gt;ts Jan. 2 at 10 a. m. at the Clark, Detroit; 100 grand-.
expenses and who paid for it, ment man. "They control our monthly meellng Wedne•day Museum on Butternut Ave., children, several great·
with a Watch Night Sorvlce Ia discuss the Bicentennial
they can."
appropriations.''
beginning at 9:30 p. rn. at the pralecl. Anyone Interested In grandchildren and greatNot many members or
:
Two major trips for this Pomeroy Church of !he the proleclls urged·to attend. great-grandchildren.
committees of Congress re cess have been an- Nazarene. The Rev. Cecil
Funeral
services
will
be·
THE ANNUAL New Year's
Wise will speak and local
operate that way. A few nounced:
Eve Dance and Sing-A-Long held Wednesday at 2 p.m. at
talent will be singing.
announce their trips but
lor members of Drew the United Brethren Church,.
- Eleven women members
GUYSVILLE - A Walch Webster Post 39, American Letart Falls with the Rev: ·
many more do not.
of the House, with assilrled
Legloo, Auxiliary members
"There's a flock of trips husbands and children and Night Service will be held at and
guests will be held a19 p.. Donald Combs officiating::
going out of here this recess," beaded by Rep. Margaret
m. Wednesday al the post Burial will be in the Letart ·
home with music by Armand Falls Cemetery. She was a :
one senior Senate staff aide Heckler, R-Mass., began
Turley et the org•n.
says. "But if I tallt about it, leaving Saturday for two
member of the Free WUI~
they 'll have my neck."
ROCK SPRINGS - The Big Baptist Church of Delaware:'
weeks in China. All 19 women
Most trips ostensibly are House members were inBend C.B. Club held Its an.
Frl~nds may call at the:
nual Christmas Party Dec. 21 Rawlings-Coats Funeral
for studying problems that vited, lilt eight declined for
W .
at the Rack Springs Grange
fall within legislative pur- various reasons.
Hall. Ham and turkey dinners Home Tuesday from 2 to 9:
view.
were served to over 60 p.m. and until noon on
- On Jan. 2, a dozen
lfugh E. Bush, 60, Letart members and guests.
Javits takes his trips senators and top Senate
Falls,
Sunday at Following dinner a gill ex- Wednesday when the bodr,;
seriously. On an 11-day trip to staffers begin an 18-day Veterans died
Memorial Hospital. change was held. Santa Claus will be taken to the church;•
,.
South America, he will meet journey to the South Pacllic
Mr. Bush was born May 26, also made an appearance.
with officials in Brazil, Peru, on a $35,000 budget. On the 1915, !he soo a! the late Lewis
and Sarah Jeffers Bush. He
•n
Panama and Venezuela.
agenda are visits with tbe was also preceded In death by Mae B. Love
"It's no fun to go anywhere U.S. commander-in.chlef of three brothers.
died on Sunday
Surviving are his wile,
with Javits,'l said a Capitol the Pacific in Hawall, an
a daughter, Mrs.
. .~
Hill staffer. "He works like investigation of possible Stella;
POINT PLEASANT - .Mae H. W. Durst will ofltclate
Rober! (Linda) Searles,
hell and then he follows up commonwealth status for the Columbus; a step-son, B. Lave, 85, of 261e Lincoln Burial will follow In the,~
Gibeau!, Letart Ave., Paint Pleasant, who Suncresl Cemetery.
when he gets back, which Marianas
on Saipan, Rodney
Friends may coil at the
Falls; lour grandchildren ; died SundaY. morning at
most of these guys don 'I."
briefings about the Trust live brothers, Lowell of Lang Holzer Medical Center, was a Crow-Hussell Funeral Home
Official trips are paid for Territories on 'Guam, and Bollom ; Ell of New Haven ; member of !he Wesleyan alter 2 p.m . today. The body
by the govemment. Spo~mes meetings with leaders of John of Harllord ; Guy of Church of Point Pleasant. will be taken to the church
Born Mar~h 9, 1890 at Letart one hQUr prior to the service.
who go along are supposed tO Australia and -New Zealand. Route 4, Pomeroy, and Floyd, Falla,
Ohio, to the late John
Letart.
W.
Va.;
two
sisters,
THE RIZZO PAD
pay their own way.
The senators will stop in Mrs. Frances Rice, Peters- and Addle Roush Wolle, she Is
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) The State Department's Mexico City on the way home. town, W. Va .. and Mrs. survived by her husband,
Margaret-Rhodes, Letart. w. · Harry Lave: · lour sons . Mayor Frank Rizzo's new
Va .. and several nieces and Harold, of Chesapeake; home has been aaaei!Sed at
Charles. of Parkersburg ;
nephews.
Funeral services will be at Lester. 01 Worthington, Ohfo, $77,200, the Phlladelphl"a
1 p.m. ,Wednesday al the and Harry. Jr .. Albany, Ohio; Bulletin reporle«l Suhday.
(Continued from page 1)
Ewing Funeral Hdme with one brother. Marshal Wolfe, The newspaper said the'
Dekalb. · Ill.; eight grandquarters later today. The cllmbera all are, Instructors or the Rev. Howard Shiveley children,
· two
stop. asseSIIIlenl consUtutea about
alllclallng.
Burial
will
be
In
graduates, of .the National Outdoor Leadershlo School that tile Letart Falls Cemetery. grandchildren. and 11 great.
half of the actual prvperly .
Fetzoldl foun&lt;!ed in LaiJI!er, Wyo.
Friends .may call at · the grandchildren.
value
and that the Rizzo
Funeral services will be
'f'etzoldt, who began climbing lbe mountain when he was lunoral home any lime alter 7
held
Tuesday at the home Ia actually worth
16, has led 10 previous winter assaults on the snow-capped _this evening.
Wesleyan Church. The Rev. U54,400. Rizzo's lax bill.
peak. Only five were succei!Sful climbs. because of fierce
. -·
winds, extreme cold, snow and ice conditioll8.

WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT FORD today accepted the
resignation of Richard 0 . Simpson as chairman of the Conswner Product Safety Conunlssion, four weeks after Simpson
criticized Ford for failing to appoint a new chairman for the
agency.
The commission announced however, that Simpeon had
agreed to stay on unUl a successor ts appointed, Instead rl
leaving Friday as he had planned.

'

~

VOL XXVII NO. 181

The FBI office in aeveland said the Air National
GU&lt;Ird terminal area in Toledo was searched but no bomb
was found. The Air National guard terminal is adjacent to
Toledo Expressway Airport.
The threat of a bomb in Port Colwnbus was relayed
from a reservation desk at Cincinnati and police were
informed. At about II p.m. the Columbus airport was

•

at y

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

evacuated while police conducted a futile search for the
bomb.
Normal operations at Port Colwnbus reswned at
about midnight. Police searched the aeveland Hopkins
International airport terminal for a bomb Monday night
following a threat made to the FBI, but found no ex•
plosives.

en tine

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1975

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Ford orders high-level probe
of 'senseless' airport bomb .
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter

VAIL, Colo. (UP!) Grieved over th~ "senseless"
bombing at LaGuardia
Airport in New York ,
President Ford has ordered a
cabinet-level investigation
and requ&lt;$1ed a complete
report on the tragedy as soon
as possible. .
The President learned of
the
bombing, . which
devastated a TWA baggage
area kUling and injuring
some 90 persons Monday
night, as he was winding up
his eight-day ski· vacation at
this Rocky Mountain resort.
He planned to head back to
Washington around midday

and was to arrive at the While
House about 6 p.m. EST.
Ford issued a statement
saying, "I am deeply grieved
at the loss of lives and injuries ... It appears this
senseless act involved the use
of a bomb."
He instructed Transportslion Secretary William
Coleman and the Federal
Aviation Administration to
begin an immediate ilivestigallon and ordered the
Justice Depratmenl and FBI
to assist local 'law enforcement agencies.
White
House
press
secretary Ron Nessen said
Ford was kept infonned on
the situation by telephone

Economic indicators show
small declines have ended

Monday evening.
Ford went to a farewell
dinner in his honor, hosted by .
his chief fund-raiser In Vall,
who invited 52 couples by
Sending"political contribution
pledge cards in tl)e same mail
with the invitahons, but in
separate envelopes.
Nessen insisted to reporters the dinner was nonpolitical but made It clear II
was a cause of some embarrassment to the White
House . .
The dinner was hosted by

Shortage
found in
weapons

WASHINGTON (UP! ) Arms shipments to Vietnam
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - A government statistical
and Israel between 1972 and
report used to point out future economic trends Increased
1974 created shortages in the
in November to end two months of small declines, the
military arsenal of the United
Conunerce Department said today.
Stales that are still being felt,
Commerce said the composite index of leading Inaccording to a classified
dicators roae 0.4 per cent last month, following a revised
government audit.
decline of 0.4 per cent in October and 0.1 per cent decline
A Gener a! Accounting
in Septl!lllber. The index was up 0.6 per cent in August
Office audit on the ~fleet of
after very strong gains exceeding 2.1 per cent in the
some $8.5 billion in U.S.
previous four months.
weapons shipments to the two
Despite lrratic up and down movement in month-tocountries concluded Monday
month reports , the average movement of the index since
that the arms atd "adversely
late sununer has been flat.
affe cted overall
U.S.
The indicator's suggestion of Utile or no growth conreadiness."
forms with the consensus opinion of government and
It said that "Actions are
private economists that the nation's production and· job
currently underway to try to
outlooks will change slightly for the next five to six
alleviate many of these shormonths.
tages," but added that "for
There was strong iinprovemenllasl fall when the nation
such items as tank s,
was recovering from its worst recession In 35 years.
production capability is
Commerce said the index stood at IQ2.5 in November, up
limited ... Thus, inventories
from 102.1 in October. The October index was revised
for several Important items
upward from last month's preliminary estimate of 102.
wlll remain depleted for a
The index measW"es 12 sectol"!l of lbe economy .
long time."
Of the 11 meBBures now available, Commerce said
The details of the classified
seven increased and four declined. "nle major Improveaudit was disclosed by synment in November was the increase In businesses starling
dicated columnist Ja ck
up, Conunerce said.
Anderson , but" a declassified
summary of the report was
released by the GAO.
The report found that:
- Because of large quantities of tanks and armored
personnel carriers shipped to
Vie tnam and Israel, the
Army as of June 30, 1974had a
CLAY, W. Va. (UP!) - dUring the weekend.
shortage of 4,943 tanks and
Dragging operations were · James Cook, 32, thil object 1,822 APDl.
continued today for a of the search, was with Larry
- The Army withdrew 368
aeveland, Ohio, man who Jarvis ol aeveland, formerly MilO tanks from equipment
reportedly feU into Elk River of, Duck, Clay County, when maintained for emergencies
they stopped their car along in Europe as wen as 500
UI1
the river late Saturday night APDl.
after a drinking spree, ac- "On -hand , available
cording to State.Pollee.
stocks" were depleted by the
. Cook fell over the bank Air Force' to supply Israel,
al
which goes about 40 feet leaving it "far short of ~he
_vJ rtually straight down.• computed war reserve
McARniUR, Ohio (UP! ) pollee aald they were told by
requirements in several
- AI "least one person was Jarvis, wbo said all he heard
Instances."
Injured Monday night in an was a splash.
- During the 1973 Middle
explosion at the Austin
Jarvie could not locate East War, 400 air.to.ground
Powder Co. plant, three miles Cook so he flagged down a missiles were withdrawn
east of here, the Ohio High- passing truck and asked the from stocks and sent t.o
way Patrol reported.
driver to call pollee, but Israel, amounting to 5 per
Mildred Hembree, 47, of apparently no call was made. cent of the missiles on hand .
Hamden, was admitted for Meanwhlle, Jarvis waited in
observation to O'Bieness his car where he fell &amp;Bleep.
DAMAGE LIGIIT
•Memorial Hoapllalln Athens .
About 5:30 a. m. Sunday
Properly
loss was set at $25
A spokeaman said she J arvls a woke and called
in a fire Monday aro1md the
suffered bruises In the ex- pollee.
flue
. at the home of Alfred
ploaloo when a aecUon of the
The lockl at Sutton Lake
White,
Route 3, Pomeroy,
IMidlnc feU oo her.
were dropped to lower the
county
road
25, Pomeroy Fire
Dynamite, powder and water 11 an aid to the Clay
' - an manufactured at
Department in sear- Chief Charles l.egar said. The
the plant. No ~etalls of the ching for the body about four departmen t answered th e
call at 10:38 a.m.
incident were. available. miles above Ivydale.

Drinking spree ended
in 49-foot fall, death ·
•
m

One h

pJant blast
McArthur

Fire

.

.

Sheika Granshammer, a
former Las Vegas showgirl,restaurant owner and longtime friend of the Fords. She
was described by an aide as
"an overenthusiastic" fund·
raiser for the President.
The aide said Mrs. Granshammer WBB told by a
member o! the President
Ford Campaign Committee
not to send out the cards with pledges of up to $1,000 until after the dinner . The
aide said "she didn't understand."
Ford's trip to Vail had been
billed as a working vacation.
Nessen said the Presi$ient
would have had trouble with
the government's financing
of his trip if it includ.ed · a
political appearance.
But the VaU vacationers
who got invitations also got
the message. Many attending
the dinner said they had
contributed to Ford's campaign, or intended to.

Utility ·
denies
•
mcrease
COLUMBUS (UP! ) Auditor
Thomas
E.
Ferguson's statement ulat
residential gas biUs would
increase "as much as $15 a
month during cold months"
because of emergency gas
purchases in the Southwest
has been labeled erroneous
and grossly misleading by the
president of Columbia Gas of
Ohio.
"When the total cost of the
gas we have purchased in the
Southwest to help meet the
needs of our customers this
winter is rolled in with all
other gas purchase costs, the
impact wiU be less ·than 5
cents per thousand cubic feet
on all gas sales," Marvin R.
White of Columbus said
Monday .
"This increase will be
reOected on bills received by
our customers about midremain in
February and
effect for only one year.
"Based on an average conswnption of 15,000 cubic feet
a month, the dollar Impact on
the average residential user
will be approximately 75
cents per month,'' said White.
The total average iinpact for
the entire year wiU be about

will

$11.

"On the coldest winter
months, the
average
residential customer uses
about 25,000 to 30,000 cubic
!eel of gas. This would mean
that the average customer's
winter gas bill would increase
approxiinately $1.50 at the
most. In the summer, the
increase would be about 25
cents per month.
"Since 1/ldustrlal and commercial customers use about
one-half the gas sold by
Columbia, they will pay about
55 per cent of the $33.7 million
Columbia paid for the
emergency gas," White said.

Teresa Buckley

Eastern High junior is
all-state bandswoman
REEDSVILLE - Teresa Buckley, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs . Paul Buckley, Route 2 Reedsville, has been selected for
the Ohio Music Education Association Bicentennial All-State
· Band for 1976.
A junior at Eastern High School, Miss Buckley was
recommended for the honor. by her band director, Charles
Wills. Her selection was based on a review of her application
and an evaluation of her audition by the Ali..State Band
Selection Committee. A total of 150 members, juniors and
seniors, were selected from the some 400 applicants who were
recommended by their respective band directors.
Conductor of the band will be Dr. Donald E. McGinnis of
Ohio State University. Music specialists will belp prepare the
band for a concert to be presented on Feb. 6 at Mershon
Auditorium with the Ali..State Chorus. Miss Buckley's instrument is the baritone horn.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursda y through
Saturday, chance ol rain
Thursday and of snow
Friday and Saturday.
Highs in the 40s and lows In
the 30s Thursday, lowering
by Saturday to highs In lbe
low 30s and .lows In the
teens.
MEETINGS CHANGED
The ·Meigs County board of
commissioners will meet
every Monday instead of ·
Tuesady beginning Jan. 5,
1976, members decided this
mornin g when routine
business was conducted .
Attending were Henry Wells
and Warden Ours, commission ers, and Martha
Chambers, clerk.

OPENS FRIDAY
Offices of the Meigs Coun ty
Cour thouse will be open for
busin ess al l day Fri day.
However, the olfices will
close at noon on Wednesday
and will re main closed
through Thursday for New
Year's, Common Pleas Judge
John C. Bacon reports.

Weigh-in time
on Wednesday
at Royal Oaks
All Meigs County 4-H and
FF A members who plan to
sell steers at the county lair
In 1976 must have their
anim als weighed-i n on
Jan uary I.
John C. Rice , County
Extension
Agen t ,
Agriculture, said the weigh-in
will be from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
at the Royal Oak Farm near
Five Points .
The Sah! Committee
decided that a member can
sell only one project at the
fair. Members can take as
many projects as they wish
and exhibit them at the fair
but they can only sell one.

Injured deer

crawled away

A buck deer, Injured when
hit by a car Monday at 5:30
p.m. in Orange Township on
SR 681 crawled away, the
Meigs Co unty sher iff's
department reported.
Ronald D. loscar, Rl. I,
Reedsville, traveling west,
hit the deer when it rari into
CLOSED JANUARY I
The Communi ty Mental the path of his car. The deer
Health Center will be closed was thrown in to a ditch where
on New Year's Day in both it stayed 20 minutes, then
crawled away.
Gallipolis and Pomeroy.

�•
3- The Daily Sent~l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tu~sday, Dec. 30, 1975
1- The Daily Sentift!!1 Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Dec. 3(), 1975

Government's airline for higshots wins award
~~-::~:::::;:;:;:;:;::::::~:;:;:;:;~::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;::~~:::::::::::;:;~:::::::::;:;:;!;:;:;::~::;!;:;:::;:;::::::::::;;:;:;:;:.;;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::
~

«
No nunnnum
. .
.
.
Q,L! :;::
pnces m mo:: :

~

~
I

.

;~:

a&gt;LUMBUS (UPI ) - Starting today, any manufac·
~~; turer who sets a minimwn price for products in Ohio will
i:i: be prosecuted for restricting competition in violation of
;:~ the state's antitrust law .
:\! The Ohio General Assembly, to promote open .com·
ili petition ammg retailers, repealed '!te fair trade law,
~1 which allowed manufacturers to set minimwn prices for
i;~ products, effective midnight Monday.
~j; "In the !93Q5, fair trade laws probably protected small
ijij retailers from price cutting by major companies, but
!iii nowadays fair trade laws mean higher, noncompetitive
;::; prices,' I said state Attorney General William J . Brown,
;i;j "and starting Tuesday that will be against the law.
ill: "The legislature clearly wants an open, competitive
ilii marketplace, and my office will carry out that intent by
i;i; protecting competition among retailers," Brown said
:·:· Mon da y.
~
1:! In Ohio, the most frequently fair-traded items were
!iii hosiery, bicycles, prescription· drugs, tools, jewelry,
ilii mattresses, appliances, televisions and stereos.

....

~

:;:;

i;i;
:::i

;:;:
;:::

;i;j

j:i;

;::;
::;
ili!

;j;j
;:;:

ili!
ii'
ilii
:;:;
:·:·
~

ili!
iiii
:j·,•,:j

By DONALD LAMBRO
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Sen. William Proxmire, )).
Wis., said today the Air Force
is running a $66 million fleet
of 23 jets to transport
govenunent officials at a cost
tv taxpayers of ·more than $6
million a year.
Proxmire, who each month
selects what he believes to tie
the most wasteful federal
program, said the Air Force's
"private airline for govern·
ment bigshots" gets his
"fleece of the year" award.
The Senator said the planes
are kept on call 24 hours a day
and are equipped to carry as
many as so passengers, with
small executive jets carrying
up to five .
He said the planes are
staffed with military aides

who serve food and drinks
and that some of the planes
have sleeping facilities.
The Deet cost taxpayers
$66.7 million to purchase.
Operational and maintenance
costs may run up tv $2,200 an
hour for the largest planes.
Proxmire said that in the
first 10 months of this year
the Air Force made 975
flights carrying government
officials
to
various
destinations, with 87 per cent
of the fllghts taken by
ranking defense officials or
those requesting Defense De·
partment flights.
The most frequent single
user of the VIP service was
Treasury Secretary William
Simon, who took 58 flights in
the first 10 months of this
year at a cost tv the govern·

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

Postage at 13c ounce tonight
~

By JAMES A. KIDNEY
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Make sure you get those
tardy Christmas cards, thank
you notes and holiday
packages to the post office
before cloalng today or you'll
be among the first to suffer
New Year's greetings !rom
the Postal Service - higher
postage rates.
The higher rates apply to
all mall, including a threecent Increase for flrst-claSII
letters to 13 cents an ounce.
They go intv effect at 12:01
a.m. local time Wednellday,
representing 1975's last b\lf8t
of Inflation.
The Increases average 26
per cent for aU mall, but first
class jwnpathe highest - 3()
per cent.

Ab

The new rates · were to
begin last Sunday but
Federal District Judge John
Slrica blocked the increases
Dec. 19 on · procedural
grounds. The U.S. Court of
Appeals lifted the order
Monday, 90 minutes after
hearing Postal Service arguments that the raise was
needed tv stem growing deficits.
Officially, the new rates
are only temporary until the
independent Postal Rate
Commission can decide what
the permanent increase
should be. Such a ruling could
come by June, although in the
past the Rate Commission
has taken nearly two years to
reach a decision.
The Increase was opposed

· uld
zk bill wo

oure

nee ·
W o u n d e''d K
I'

aY NICHOLAS

DAND.OFF
WASHINGTON (UPI) Se J
s D Abourezk )).
S ~·
the d nda of
··1:ysSiou ~n °men,
women and chlldr1lll killed In
the shootout with Army
troopa at Wounded Knee,
sD
h ld
receive
~~tary ~=pehsation even
tholllh It happened 85 years

the

arne

ts

ago.
He has introduced a bll) to
provide ..,,OOOto be shared by
the descendants of each
Indian vic:tim who fell in .the
the last bloody episode ·of the
lndi'
Dec 29 1890
Kn~ h~s stuclt
in the Indian craw for a tong
id in an
time, " Abo ll"e ...
... sa
inteview. "It's largely a symbollc act It would cost le~
than • •ooo. Sorne of the
descendants thought it would
be the right thing to do, and so
do I "
The Army says "no."
Acting Secretary Norman
Augustine has sent a 23-page
report to Sen. James
Eaatland, )).Miss ., arguing

. .;::;:e:·

by bulk mailers, the Easter
Seal Society and 17 states. All
asked the court of appeals to
leave Sirica's order in effect
at least until the appeals
court can hear arguments on
the merits of the case in
January.
The Postal Service argued
the Increase was needed
Immediately to counter
losses of$225million a month.

Without it, lawyers said, the
service would have to borrow
money or seek additional
subsidies from Congress to
meet payrolls.
Lawyers opposing the raise
said that if it were eventually
struck down, mail users
wouW have no · way of
recovering overcharges.
The last increase, from 8 to
10 cents for first-class mail,
came in March, 1974.

Net losses .up

months o[ 1975, more than $52
million .over the amount lost
during the same period of
1974.. . ,i{J !Ill'
The truStees said Monday
the net losses include a credit
allof $107.5 million In federal
compensate
grants received this year,
and $9.8 million received
.
·
during 1974, under the
s'descendentsRegionalRai!Reorganization

VI"ctrm"

PHILADELPHIA (UP!) Trustees of the Penn Central
Transportation Co. have
reported a net loss of
$172,194,651 for the first 10

·

No

j

Act.

fl't

Vitamin E has no miracles
·B)' Lawreooe E. Lamb, M.D.

harm instead of good.
Moat of the reports on the
Would you please give me value · of vitamin E are just
your thoughts on this miracle testimonials - not greaUy
different
from · the
vitamin.
DEAR READER - You testimonials you see with fad
can find slot of those articles diets or those used to promote
about how greet vitamin E is a thousand useless health
in health publications for the gimmicks to the public.
public, but not one In a
You should 11end in 50 cents
reputable scientific journal. for The Health Letter,
Recently, I · read me such numnber 4-12, VItamin E:
. lll"licle claiming vitamin E Miracle nr Myrth, with a
was good for almost every· long,
stamped,
self·
thing
- even how It improved addressed envelope for
The .D1i1J
Sentinel
. ' ,. .
the profits from stud farms. maping. Your husband would
DEVOTED TO THE
•
INTIRIST OF
The non«ientist writer went he interested In reading the
MEICU· MASQN A~A
on to observe thai Northern history of vitamin E. Just
CHESTER L. TANN HILL
- lxtt. Ed. .
Dancer's site imd dam were address your request to me In
ROIIRT HOaFLICH
both on vttamln E.
care of this newspaper, P. 0.
CIIJ ldllor
Publilhe dellt exce~t
Although such unscientific Box 1551, Radio aty Station,
soruraa~ o~ T e Oh o
Vllltr
ubi lhlng Com .
foolishness Is good for a New York, NY 10019.
~any ,
ll1
Court
St. . laugh, It also leads to some
That Issue of The Health
omeroy
01110 •5769 .
Business 611tce Phone 992 ·
poor heallll habits. Vitamin E Letter will review the dlf.
1156. Edttorlol Phone 991 ·
is very useful in animals that ferences in the need and use
1157 .
Stcond cleu gostege
need
it. Animals have en- of vitamin a in animals for
ptld at Pomerov . hlo .
NIIIOntl
ldverttslng
tirely different metabolic fertUity and even how useful
r•prtsentltlv• ward .
11)'3tems than we do. That Is It is to prevent heart
Griffith ComRany , Inc .,
80I!Intlll &amp; Go l':f,htr Dlv .•
Why we have to take vitamin problema in animals.
757 Third f.'&lt;~• . . ew Vor~ .
Cor get it in our food while a
While yollf husband may
N .Y . 1001 .
Subacrlptlon rates :
stud
cen
manufacture
his
get
little benefit from vitamin
Delivered b) ctrrler. whert
IYIIIUit 5 cents per
own vitamin C from car· E,lt is important to reaUze it
Wttk . By Motor Route
bohydrates. The shoe ~ on · won't harm him dlrecUy,
whtn carrier strvlce nor
1\llilablt, One month , ·the other hoof when It comes
either. The excess. amount
13.25. By mtll In Ohio end
w. ve .• One Yetr, 121 .00 : to vitamin E, and h«sea and may not even be absorbed
Six months, SlUO ; ThrN
cows need It in fairly large from his digestive tract.
months , 11.00. Elsewnt~t
quantities, but we only need
S26.00 ytlr ; Six mont s
The real danger of vitamin
$13.501 lhr11 mont" .. $7.50.
the
amount
commonly
E
and other vitamin fads Is
Subtcrlpflon prk e tucludn
Sundoy Tlmn -Sen!lnel .
avallsble In conunon foods in that they will replace or dela)'
a normal Ulet.
needed treatment., Your

DEAR DR. LAMB - After
reading several articles
recently on vitamin E, my
111sband, who Ia 30 years old,
·started taking two capsules,
200 t.U. each dally. He says
taking vitamin E will add 20
years to his llle. I think this Is
a bunch of garbage and am
afraid IIley might do him

~~

the killing grew out · of
Robert Utley, author of the
These funds, ·the trustees
spontaneous, uncontrol~ble "Last Days of the Sioux ~ld, we~e required to . con·
violence - not out of any Nation," said in an in· tmue rallroad operauons .
premeditated decision.
terview : " It was an Indian The net-loss for the IIJ.month
"Contrary to the popular medicine man who fired the 1974 ~riod .was $120,393,683,
conception of the Wounded first shot. He was prancing ~ccordmg tv the trustees
Knee episode, the civilian around with a Winchester. fmanclal stateme~t.
authorities and the Army There may have been some
Penn Central s losses
showed great restraint and interference with him (by before federal grants were
compassion In the 'events soldiers). But when the first $27~,694,651 ~or the IIJ.month
leading up tv the encounter. shot was fired, 8 group of penod th1s year and
Restraint and precautions other Indians dropped their $130,187,525 for the 1974
·
period
were even observed during blankets and let go at the
· .
the battle," the Army says. soldiers."
Not , 1~clud~d In the
Eastland, chairman of the
Dee Brown, author of trustet: ~ fmanclal re~rt was
Senate Judldary Committee, "Bury My Heart At Wounded an addillon~ $20 million from
is tentatively planning Knee,'' said in a telephone RR~A which was rece1ved
• hearings about Jan. 20.
interview from his home ,jh , earlier th1s year and placed
Augustine also contends an Uttle Rock, Ark.: "I ®n't· in escrow at the direction of
IndiB~~ fired tile first shot, think we'J!: ever really know ~edt~ral to~oadlist~·
thai a newspaperman killed what happened. The cla.im
ra ton
ava
e
·
for purposes designed by
three Indians, and that Indian that an Indlsn fired the first
A
claims should have been shot Is In dispute.
FR ·
settled soon after the In·
Brown said the Army had
Penn Central also received
cident. '
set up Gatling guns and some $96.9 million undet the RRRA
The figh~ erupted when of the troops were part of . for progt,!P.. malntenance
the Army tried to persuade Gen. George A. Custer's cost!!, but. uoaer.,Interstate
Chief Bft Foot and his command, the rest of which CqmiJlllJ:C7~:· Commission
wandering traves to return to was wiped out at Uttle Big accounting•ms:ructlon~ these
the SioUI reservation after Horn In 1867, "and there is a funds,are not mcluded in the
first being disarming.
suspicion, at least, that they statement either as revenues
Historians differ about might have had vengeful or expenses.
what happened next.
mo\ives."

DR. LAMB

•

'

ment of $328,794.10.
An Air Force spokesman
said the 89th Military Airlift
Wing (Special Mission),
based at Andrews Air Force
Base near Washington, was
"chartered to perform a
missioo. And it does it damn
well, too.
"We're in the business of
providing this function for the
executive and legislative
branches," the spokesman
said. 11 lt's

OW'

Proxmire said, "The
stupidity of this massive
airlift is that in almost every
case, commercial flights
were available to the same
destination .. .
"In fairness to the Air
Force, this fleece of the year
should also be shared by aU
the government bigshots who
insist on such special
treatment at the expense of
. the taxpayers,'' he said.

job."

Bengals promise
~hey'll be back
CINCINNATI (UP!) ,"It's rough to say there's
always another year, "
groans Cincinnati Bengals
defensive tackle Bob Brown.
"I thought we had a great
shot at it this year.

"But,"

adds

Brown,

seeming to sum up a
universal feeling among the
Bengals, "I'll be back."
For Brown and his teammates, there Is nothing left
now but next year after the
1975 season came to an
abrupt halt Sunday at
Oakland, where the Raiders
squeezed out a 31·28 victory to
knock the Bengals out of the
NFL· playoffs.
"We have no real regrets,"
shrugged Bengals head coach
Paul Brown. "We gave it our
best shot.
"I told the guys I was proud
of them and that they lost to a
splendid team,'' he added.
Trailing 31-14 in the last
quarter Sunday, Cincinnati
erupted for two quick touch·
downs to vault to within 3!,28
with five minutes still to go.
But, as wide 'eceiver Ike·
Curtis said, "It was just not
enough."
Although Cincinnati
linebacker Ron Carpenter
recovered Pete Banaszak's
fumble at the Oakland 38 with
4:19 remaining, the Bengals'
try for a game-winning
touchdown quickly went
awry.
Cinr.y went lor a long pass
oo its first play after the
fumble recovery, but
Oakland's big (8-foot-7) Ted
Hendricks sacked Anderson
for a six yard loss. Two pass
iricompletions and just a five
yard gain on the lone com·
pleted pass of the series
ended the Bengals' final
offensive set of 1975.
"I thought the key came
when Hendricks sacked
Kenny on that first play,''
said Brown. "Hendricks just
got off the block' (set by
Booble Clark). Boobie
sustained the block and really
did a good job, but the play
was a deep pass. Hendricl!s
just fought through and made
a great play."
Hendricks was one of
several Raiders who sacked
Anderson several times In the
game . .
"Hendricks is just tall and
big and a great player,'' said
Bengals center and offensive
captain Bob Jolmson. "He
just blows in."
carpenter had hoped his
fumble recovery would be the
final stepping stone to vic·
tory.
"Recovering that fwnble
felt pretty good .at the time,"
he said. "We just weren't
able to cash it in. Maybe It
was too much to ask. (But)
we didn't get what we .came
after."
How about a tzy for a long
field goal to tie instead of
passing on fourth and 11' at
the Oaklsnd 38 in that crucial
series?
"No,'' said Brown, thinking
olthe 55-yard effort It would
take from Dave Green. "It
was far out of his range."
Still, the Bengals had one
more slim chance after
forcing Oakland to punl .with

~

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. •

.

.

o
··
o

•,

ROAD
...... WVQ.

C.-It &amp;GK ....

.

niEVALUEOFAIJFE

;.; ·

In a Ripley's "Believe It or Not" illustration some yea!'!!:.
ago, a plain bar of iron was pictured, worth five dollars at the
going prices then. That same bar of iron, according to Ripley ,''
made into horseo6hoes then would have been worth $10.110. '
Made into needles, it would have been worth $3,285, or made •
into balances for watches, that same bar of Iron would have
been worth $250,000.
·
~
Of course, with toclay's inflation, those prices would now~
he considerably higher. But the dlfferem;e between the value :
of the raw material and the finished product was determined •
by the purpose and use of the raw material.
So it is with life. The ultimate value of your life will be
determined by what you make of your llle. The Psalmist said,
"We spend our years as a tale that Is told." (Psalm 90:9b
KJV).

.

We can fill our lives with cheapness, groveling in un·
satisfied sensuous gratifications. We can fill our livea with
iiO seconds to go. Brown in·
bitterness, consumed with prejudices, jealousies, and hatreds.
structed his defensive line to
We can fill our lives with greed, accumulating material wealth
try to block Ray Guy's kick.
without enjoying lt. We can fill our lives with aimless drifting,
"We had an all-out rush on
never attempting much, never accomplishing much. Or, we
the kicker," Broivn disclosed. can fill our lives with purpose and usefulness, striving for
"It was a calculated risk: we
worthwhile goals, serving helpful interests for ourselves and
were trying to block it."
But Guy managed to get the others.
We have come again to the threshold of a "new begin·'
punt away and Bengals
nlng," with a whole new year ahead of us. You can make this a
rookie Brad Cousino was
good year filled with happjness and accomplishment, If you
called. for roughing the
want to. Examine your talents and sharpen your skllls so that
kicker, which gave the ball
you can be and do your best.
back to Oakland.
Don't bring intv the new year the same disappointmenta,
"I hit bim, no doubt about mistakes, and anxieties of the old year. Let by-gones be by·
it, but I thought I had the
ganes, and don't fill the new year with the same frustrations
hall," recalled Cousino, from
that marred the old year.
nearby Miami (of Ohio)
Agirl, hanging a calendar on the wall on New Year's Day,
University. "I don't know
exclaimed :
how I missed the ball. His leg
."Oh, this is going to be a beautiful year!" When her
was on the upswing. We had
parents asked her how she knew It was going to be a beautiful
three guys there and any one
year, she answered with thought-provoking wisdom! "I In·
of the could have picked it up.
and run in for a tvuchdown." tend," she replied, "to put something beautiful into each day of
""
Said cornerback Lemar the year."
You can make 1976 a beautiful year for yourself if you want
Parrish, "We gave it our best
to. You can take the raw material of your life, and with proper
shot at the end, but in the first
objectives, make it a useful and valuable contribuU.on to
three quarters they overworthy Interests, bringing beauty and happiness into the new
powered us.
year. It will he just what you make it.
'
Brown agreeit.
Remember' today is the first day of the rest of your life!
"We didn't have a turnover," he noted."They just
overpowered our defensive
up-front people early.
Added Johnson, "They
really executed wen. When
they threw on first down or ·
ran, it was a seven or eight
yard pickup."
Although Cincinnati's 11-3
regular season record was
the best in its eight year
history, the Bengals' playoff
record is now 0·3, with
previous playoff losses to
Baltimore in 1970 and to
Miami in 1973.

,Berry's World

Ninth annUal

Mainstreams
event readied
MARIETTA - Twenty
thousand prospectuses lor
"Mainstreams '76,'' the ninth
annual Marietta College
international competitive
exhibition for painting and
SCQlpture, were mailed
recently by the college's art
department. ·
Mainstreams '76 will open
• II) 19150' NEA I"&lt;
• :
at the Hermann Fine Arts
,.
Center April 3 and slide el)·
" .. . And. you haven't heard the best part. Walt "'
tries lor the exhibition are
till/ tell you about gas mileage ... "
due from artists by Feb. 2.
The selection jury for this
.
year 's exhibition is Don
Stone, Rockport, Mass.;
Letten of oplalon are welcomed. Tbey should be 1
Allan Gough, Chillicothe;
Jess than 300 words long (or be subject to reduction by 1'
John Chaffee, Detroit, Mich. ;
the editor) and must be signed with lbe s.lgnee'l ad· r.
and William Gerhold ,
clfess. Names may be withheld upon publication. I'
Williamstown, W. Va.
However, on request, umes will be dilcl011ed. Lette!'!l :'
Last year 2,505 entries were
should be In good taste, addressing llsaea, not per· 1
submitted by artists from all
sonalltles.
1
50 states and six foreign
'I
countries. One hundred and
· i)~
slxty-elgllt works were
~'
selected for exhibition which I
represented entries of 128 :
artists from 30 different 1
states. Purchase price money Flower beds in streets dan aero us
totalling $5,000 was awarded
e
to artists whose work Is now a : Dear Sir :
part of the permanent
I notice in the Sentinel that one councllman beUeves the
collection of Marietta Intersection at Third and Locust Sta. is da1111erous for a north·
College.
bound car making a right hand turn off Third going toward the
Artists interested ln . river. I would like.tv know when a man in either car has as
receiving a prospectus clear a vision as they have at thl.s point, I drove \ruck 45 years
containing entry Information and I have a good driving record, and I don't
wpere U.t
should write: Director, • one certain place Ia dangerous.
Mainstreams '76, Grover M. · BUt I will say that when you, the council, let people build
Hermann Fine Arts Center,' fiowerbedaintlleroad,lhat,Isay,iadangerousl
Marietta College, Marietta,
And maybe when someone has a wreck there tile city may ·~
Ohio 45750.
have a lot of trouble.- Ben Batey, Mlddleoort, Ohio.

~~

---------------------------1 .

.... ?Jtt.~:

·--

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see

praisal." ·
"In this atmoaphere,'' the '
magazine said, ''leaden did
not so much lead u IINIJI. It
was not a period In ·which a.'.
Bingle man of the year COii1d
declalvely emerge." ·
1
Time uld a few men might' ';
have made II, had the award ·
gone to men Instead of :
women. Among them were·
Henry Klaalnger, $0Vlet ~
phy~ Andrei Slkhlrov, .
Egyptian Prelldent Anwar ;.
Sadat and Tellll lfliao.plnc, ' "
who baa emerged aa de facto
ruler of Olinl.
i .

wide receiver Kim Hoover ..
Placekicker Mike Suchko got
ihe other points with a con·
version and two field goals, a
20-yarder in the second
period and a 27-yarder in the
fourth.
Suchko also averaged 40
yards a punt in the rain.
Claiborne noted Maryland
dldn 't turn the ball over a
single time on interceptions
or fumbles .
"We had good pass
coverage, good hitting, good
pursuit, good pass rush," said

offense moved the ball when
it had to."
The Terrapins, seven-point
underdogs, intercepted three
passes, turning two of them
into scores, and 225-pound
freshman running back Steve
Atkins rushed for 127 yards
on 20 carries, giving
Maryland control of the rain·
plagued game,
The only touchdown came
with 8:45 gone in the first
period on a 19-yard pass from
quarterback Larry Dick to

Claiborne.
"The
In·
terceptions and sacks were
super plays. I think we
convinced people we can win
agab!St Southeastern Confer·
ence teams."
The Terrapins lost to SEC
teams in their two ,previous
bowl games, 17-16 to Georgia
in the 1973 Peach Bowl and 7..3
to Tennessee in the 1974
Uberty Bowl.
While Maryland's defense
played near Dawless football,
the Gator offense failed to
mount a serious drive untO

Knicks slip past Bulls
t;HICAGO (UPI) - "It's a
real accomplishment when
you can score that many
against a Chicago team and
Jerry Sloan," said guard
Earl Monroe .
The "that many" referred
to the seasonohigh ~points he
scored Monday night to paee
the New York Knlcks to a !J4.
93 victory over the Bulls In
the
only
professional
basketball game scheduled
Monday.
· MonrOjl sank 16 of 22 field
goal atlempts and was five
out of six from the free throw
line.
·"When you hold Monroe to
making 50 per cent of his

shots, you have a good chance Monroe scored the Knicks '
of winning," said Sloan, 8Ut last basket with 2:32left. The
tonight he was outstanding. Bulls could score only four
The only thing I could make more points and when the
bim do was work for his Knlcks reholll)ded the Bulls'
shots."
missed shot with one second
Sloan was assigned to left, the victory was sealed .
guard Wait Frazier, but the
"We're deveiopillll a lot
continual switching of the more poise and confidence in
Knicks' guards saw him these close games we 're
facing Monroe very often.
playing," said New York
The
"Pearl"
was coach Red Holzman. "I think
averaging 20 points, but by we played well as a team. We
halftime he already had 16 as played good
defense,
the Knlcks led 49-46.
especially tOwards the end of
Then, Monroe scored 13 · the game.
points In the third quarter.
"I wouldn't say that our
Chicago's rally fell short in backcourt beat their whole
the closing minutes alter team. After all, (Bill)
Bradley and (Spencer)
11

the final mqments when the
cl~k ran out with the ball on
Maryland's 1Q.yard line.
Florida coach Doug
Dickey, unable tv win a bowl
game since he began
coaching at Florida in 1970,
said, " It was very
frustrating. The ·harder we
tried, the worse we
played ."
Claiborne, who has called
his 1975 Terrapins "a no·
name team" because of its
lack of big stars, refused to
single out any players,
calling the win "a team ef·
fort."
It was the first time in 55
games Florida had been shut
out, that happening in 1971
when Alabama beat the
Gators, ~ .

By JJMCOUR

UPI Sports Writer
PASADENA, Calli. (UPI)
- Woody Hayes and Ohio
State haven 't won a national
championship since 1968.
That was the season the
Buckeyes, led by quar·
terback Rex Kern, beat
University of Southern
C&amp;lifornia in the Rose Bowl
27·18.
"You don't get to be 11.0
and
not
have
any
mQtlv~tion,'' he said Monday
when asked about a national
crown for his No. !-rated
Buckeyes. "We'D just con·
tinue doing the same things
we've been doing all season ."
Hayes appeared at a news
conference with his Rose
Bowl coaching rival, UCLA's
Dick Vermeil.
"I'd like to see that happen
because I think they deserve
it," said Vermeil when asked
about Ohio State's bid for a
national tiUe. "And fl you're
going to lose, I'd rather lose
to a coach like Woody Hayes.
He's very much like my own
father.
· "But 1\ 1so want UCLA to
.win on New Year's Day
becauae my obligation Is tv
my own footbaD players. We
want to leave the Rose Bowl
with our heads higt\ and I
believe we can."
Hayes was loose and
jocular at the sesalon. When
Wayne Duke was introduced
and It was noted that: Duke
was here Instead of In Miami
\fhere Michigan faces
Oklahoma on New Year's
night, Hayes quipped to the

BOWLING
POMEROY BOWLING
LANES
Early Wed. Mixed
Tum
Zlde 1S Sport Shop

Points
88
Young·rsuper Mkt.
11
Oiler Four
71
Smith Nelson Motor Co .
70
Nelson Drug Co.
56

52

High Ind . Game -

.

complacency at all," he said.
"None whatsoever. We 've got
great respect for UCLA. We
know they're quite a bit
better l1QW than they were in
October.
"Of course, I always figure
we'll win. I never think any
other way although I always
figure our games will he
close. But It won't he easy
against UCLA and there are a ·
lot of ways you can lose."
Vermeil was asked about a
so-called players' rev oiL
Bruin players complained to
their coach that they were

Haywood scored some points
and played good defense and
John Gianelli held Bob l»ve M c A d o o
weiHor a while."
!Ave had 15 points, all in
the first half.
"'Ibis wadhe best I saw a t o p a l l
Monroe," said Chicago coach
Dick Motta. "Monroe had ~
points tonight, and except for . s c o r e r s
a layup, Norm Van Uer had
his hand in Monroe's face for
NEW YORK (UP!)
each shot. Monroe has never Despite his one-game
played better against us, . suspension, &amp;ob McAdoo
never.''
remained atop the National
The victory put the KnlCks Basketball Association
at 15-20 overall and was their scoring leaders by a com·
third in "16 road games. fortabie margin in the latest
Chicago twnbled to l-23.
statistics released Monday 1
McAdoo's scoring average
was 30.7 points per game,
while Kareem Abdul.Ja bbar
was second with 28.9 points
per game. Abdul.Jabbar was
way out front In rebounds,
working too long and too hard averaging !'9.1 to Dave
Cowens' 16.4, and the Laker
for Ohio State.
"Very few people like to giant also led in blocked shots
work,'' Vermeil said . "! was with 5.37 per game to Elmore
probably wrong when I told Smith's 2.97.
Kevin Porter of the Detroit
the team in the beginning we
Pistons
was the assist leader
would enjoy the ltoaF Bowl.
with
10.2
per game, while
The only way I know how tv
Slick
Watts
of Seattle held a
enjoy something is to win and
narrow
(3.06
to 3.04) steals
you have to work like hell to
per game edge on Phoenix'
do that.
Paul
Westphal.
"! don't think the players
Among
the field goal
anticipated that. Tliey came
leaders
,
Wes
Unseid of
to me and asked me to restate
Washington
was
the narrow
what I meant by enjoying the
leader
over
Abdul"..labbar.
Rose Bowl . But all the
problems are settled now." Unseld's percentage was .538
to Abdui.Jabbar's .533.

Hoosi~rs

hang on to
.trip Redmen, 76-69
By CHRIS.SCHERF

UPI Sporll Writer
Top-ranked Indiana,
teetering on disaster with
four starters on the verge of
fouling out, grittily hung on
for a 76-ii9 victory over St.
John's and the Holiday
Festival championship.
Itt. a crowd of 19,694 in
Madison Square Garden
screamed wildly for a St.
John's upset, Indiana's Scott
May took control of the game
In the last five minutes tv
'!teak a ~ tle and lead the
Hoosiers to their ninth
straight victory of the season.
Kent Bens'on, ' Quinn
Buckner, Bob Wilkerson and
May each was playing with
four fouls when the AllAmerica forward put the
Hoosiers ahead, 87-8S, on a
short jumper. May then sank
five free throws In the final
I :24 to guarantee ll)e victory
over 11tho£anked St. John's,
nOW 9-1.
Bobby
Knight
was
qu~lmed shout keeping his
four foulplagued players In

the lin~up with eight minutes .
to go and the Indiana coach
replied, "When you get into
the last eight minutes of a
game like that, you've got to
_ play the best you got."
The best proved to be May'·
who finished with 29 points
and the tournament's Most
Valuable Player award.
May played just as aggres·
sively with four fouls as he
had earller In the game lll!a
explained, "Att!!'at time, we
had no cboice. We just had to
play that way tv win."
St. John 's, llthltanked nationally, almost pulled off the
big upaet behind brilliant
performances by 5-9 guard
Frank Aiagla and slender 6-7
center George Johnson.
Alagia kept a tlght reins on·
the pace of the St. John's
offense and finished with 16
points, while Johnson scored
23 points, grabbed 10
rebounds and was respon·
slble for Benson's foul
problema.
The second-ranked
Terrapins had_!n easl~ time

By

FUNNY BUSINESS

Oec.17,1975
Standings

Tenth Framors

Big Ten commissioner:
"In other words, you've got
to go with a winner, huh?"
To get to Pasadena for the
fourth straight year, Ohio
State beat Michigan 21-14.
"I've never been able to
outtalk Woody except when
we're talking about of·
ficiating ," replied Duke.
Although his team is a J4-.
point favorite and beat UCLA
41-20on Oct. 4at the Colisewn
in !As Angeles, Hayes denied
his players were taking the
Bruins Ughtly.
"I haven't seen any

Men :

FOI&lt; P~OTION 1 14eNROD ... O~E'­
qoo112E ~OT ExPERIENCED Eti!Oll~H
TO BECOh'lE COP4 OIEF. .. TWO"ilEREis NO Z" IN RAISE. 1

Wayland 208 ~ Willa rd Boyer

200 ;
Women:
Corolyn
Bachner 1195, Helen Phelps
Maxine Ouoan 193 .
HIGh Series - Men ; Gary

Jr ., 514;

549 ,

Ken

women :

Carolyn

s•o. A . L. Phelps.

Bechnor 559. Pat Carson 5•8.
Holen Phelps 504 .
Teem

Hlo"'

Game -

Oiler

Teem High Series -

Oiler

Four 708 .

Four 19•9.
TRI COUNTY

Pomeroy

Bowling Lanu
Early Sunday
Mhted League
Dec . 21 , lt7S
Ends First Half

Hill &amp; Mayer Barbers

57 79

Team No . 6

55 II.,

John Tyree

Dugan and
Marlene Wilson .ti9S ; Ed voss
540; Mary Voss ~92 .
Team high game - Jack 's

M•xine

Delrv Bar 783 .
Team high ser:les Dairy Bar 2115 .

-

Jack 'l

,

Roach's Gun Shop

Points
87

Phelps
76
Pomeroy Cement Block Co. 63
Sear's Catalog Merch ,
56
H&amp;R Firestone

·

voss · Don

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••

Indiana St. Classic
Idaho St BJ U. of Pa c if ic 67
Ind iana St. T Hau te 88 VM I 60

. B i9 Eight Tournam ent
Missou ri 86 Kansas St. 66
Kansas 70 Colora do 50

{ Consolation Round)
Oklahoma St . 88 Iowa St. 71
Nebraska 75 Oklahoma 53

Far West ·classi c
Wash ington 70 Northwestern 57
( Consolitlon Round)
Oreoon St . 78 Florida St . 75
Oregon 70 Colorado St. 66
Rainbow Classic
(Consolation Round)
St. Peter 's 66 Yale 61
Holy Cro5s 66 Cin cinnati 65

. ( Final Round Action I
ECAC HOliday Festtvat
(Championship )
Indiana 76 St . John's 69
.
(consolation Round)
Manhattan 87 So Carolina 73
Villanova 84 Tem pl e 75
Sugar Bowl
( Cht~mpionship)
Tennessee 97 Tu lane 73
.

(Consolation)
Penn 78 Ohio St 64

COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Sugar Bowl Tournament
Penn 78 Ohio 51 64
All- College Tournament
N Te)( St 80 Bow ling Green 76

Luthenn Brotherhood
Basketball Tournament
Cap it al 72 Wartburg 58
Ashland Holida-,:
Tournament
Witten berg 69 Oberlil\ 63
Ash land 75 Baldwin -Wall ac e
56
Mose Hole wooster
Classic
Denison 82 M il ligan 70
Wooster 77 Lock Haven 64
Muskingum · Shrine
Holiday Tournament
Muskingum 78 Wilmington 56
St Univ of NY at Al bany 96
Urbana 93
Milwaukee Class ic
Marquette 79 M iami (Ohio ).

52

Findlay Holiday Tourn .
Heid el berg 66 Malone 63
Find lay 82 Franklin 65
Colonial City Classic
Ke nyon 90 Thomas More 79
Wr ight St 83 Ohio Northern 80
Mount Union College
Holiday Tournament
Hi ram 97 Oh io Wesleyan 81
Ml Union 86 Th iel 74

This WttiC"i Sptc••l
I

USED CARS

70 vw
4·SPEED
Dark green bug . rad io,
motor overhauled.

$1295
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Way ol Doing Business.
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Pomeroy
Open Evenings ' til6 :00
Til s ~. m . Sal.

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I save them ·nmev
111 car insurance.
ItS anazklg how often
·my answer is, ~yes:"
AI State Farm we have low mileag e ra1es. low ra1 es lor

_~wning-Childs Agency

S!I vers 2f2 ,

H lgh Sorlos -. Dowty
Smtih 632, Ed Voss 573, Rlly
Rooch 552 .
Teem
High Game
Roach'S Gun Shop 989 .
Teem High series
Rooch's Gun ShOP 2751.

College Basketball
Results
By United Pren lnternitlonal
Tournaments
( l ~t Round Action )
Bru 1n Classic
Purd~e 80 St . Louis 71

Monday' s

National Basketball Asso ciation
Sta.ndings
Len Vegas Taurnament
By United Press International M• ch 1gan 86 La Sal le 71
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
Lobo Invitational
W L Pet. GB Cal iforn ia 75 Wic hita Sl 68
21 B .724
Boston
Wes t Va. 89 New Mexico 76
Philadelphia 20 11 .6-15 2
Buflalo
1B IS .545 S
. Maryland ln vi1ational
New York
15 20 .429
9
Maryland 104 Seton Hall 69
Central Division
Pr inceton 61 Alabllmt!l 59
W. L. Pet. GB
Allanla
17 13 567
. Milwaukee Classic
Cleve land
17 15 .531 1
Mar quette 79 M iami (Ohio ) 52
Houston
15 15 .500 2
Wisconsin 70 Stanford 64
Washington
15 15 .500 2
New Or leans 12 19 387 5111
. Old Domlni() n Classic
Western Conference
BY U 91 Tex as 86 (Ot)
Midw est Division
Old Domi nion 88 Corn ell 77
W. L· Pet . GB
De tro it
13 16 .&lt;148
Poinsettia Classic
1J 17 .433
lf1
Rutg er s 97 C1ladel 73
Mi lwau Kee
KansasCily
10 21 323 4
Georgia Tech 98 Furman 81
Ch 1cago
8 23 .'167
6
Pacif ic Division
Semor Bowl
Golden Stale
~· ~· j~~ GB MiSSISSi ppi 84 Pan American 74

people who 've joined car pool s, a lwo-ca• d•scounl.
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52

M&lt;lig •s Inn
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High tnl! . Game - Roy
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Ed

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Dtc. 16,1975

Team

In tile opener, Harris, a 6-6
junior forward, led all
scorers with 34 points. Don
Bissell chipped in with 15 Big
Red markers, Lee Bowman
13 and GU Spencer 12.

W. L .
89 ·11
. Tom 's (:arry Out
84 52
Putuns\EKceva t lno
62 74
Pomeroy Flower Sh op 61 75

H igh series -

••

WOOSTER, Ohio (UPI) Wooster's Fighting Scots,
with Preston Burroughs' 16
points showing the way ,
clipped Lock Haven TI-M
Mmday night In the Mose
Hole Wooster Classic.
Todd Harris lied a tournament record with 15 field
goals in pacing Denison to an
82-70 viclnry over Mllllgan in
the first game Monday.
Donn Calloway added 10
markers for Wooster, 6-3.
The Bald Eagles, 4-4, were
led by Dave Hendershot with
22 points In the second con·

test.

I

MILWAUKEE (UPI)
Fifth -ranked
Marquette
made it look easy . Even
Coach AI McGuire admitted
the Warriors played a
"super" game.
Wisconsin, already a
victim of Marquette this
year, had a much tougher
time reaching the final of the
MJiwaukee Classic.
But, take it from McGuire
and Badgers Coach John
2
Powless, things could be Los Angeles 'J.l 14 .600 J lf2
much different tonight when Phoenill.
15 13 536 6
17 17 .500 7
the two teams meet for the 5eatlle
Portland
12 21 .364 111 l
Monday's Result
championship of the 14th
94 Chicago 93
Milwaukee basketball New York
Tuesday's Games
Milwaukee at Buffa lo
classic.
Phoenix at New York
Marquette hit at a torrid Detro
it at Ph iladelph ia
60.4 per cent clip in the Chicago at Wash ino ton
City at Cleveland
opener to drub Miami of Ohio, Kansas
Bos ton at Gol!::len St ale
Sea l tie at Los Ange les
79-52, and run its record to S.
I. Wisconsin, with a loss to
Marquette its only blemish in American Basketball Associa ·
tion Sft~ndings
seven games, ran away from
By United Press International
W. L Pel . GB
Stanford early, then had to
Denver
22 7 .759 rally for a 70-64 win In the New York
19 10 .655 3
San Anto nio
18 11 .621
4
other game.
Ind iana
19 12 .61l 4
Tonight will mark the Kentuck y
16 14 .533 6'h
15 20 .-429 10
seventh time the two stale St . Lou is
Virg ini a
5 "17 .156 18'h
teams have met in the finals,
Monday's Result
with Marquette taking five of Ken tucky 110 New York 102
Tuesday's Games
the previous games. The San Antonio at lndiaha
Denver at 51. Louis
Warriors, in fact, haven't lost
to anyone in the Classic since
c k e r Association
1967 when the Badgers scored World H oStandi
ng•
a 7~2 win in the finals.
By United Press International
Eut
Marquette beat Wisconsin,
W. L T. Pts.
78-54, two weeks ago on this New Eng land 16 16 J 35
16 19 1
33
same Milwaukee Arena Door, Cincinnati
Ind ianapolis
14 17 2
30
but both Powless and Clev eland
12 20 2
26
West
McGuire think anything can
W. l. T . Pts.
happen tonight.
Hous ton
21 12 0
42
San Di ego
16 13 4
36
"Marquette was out- Minnesota
16 13 2
34
standing the first time we Ph oenL•
15 15 J
JJ
12 20 1
25
played,'' said Powless. "They Denver Canadian
made us look bad. We'll have
W. L. T. Ph.
24 14 1
.49
to play a super game, not Quebec
Winnipeg
24 14 o
48
make any mistakes. We Calgary
19 14 2
40
15 22 2
32
made too many last time, . Edmonton
22 J
25
they got all the loose change TorontoMonday's nResults
(No games schedutedl
and we didn't get any. "
Tuesda-r's Games
Powless also said he Quebec at Mlnneso1a
planned a full scale practice San Diego at New Eng land
Ind iana a! Denver
for today, despite the game Edmonton at Toron to
Wi nn ip eg a t tJouston
tonight, to try to iron out
some mistakes that were
made against Stanford.
"Obviously this will be a
different game," McGuire
said.
"You know , our pressure is
SPILLANE SPLIT .
unique because sometimes it
LOS
ANGELES
just doesn't work. Other Detective novelist Mickey
times, it's just unbelievable." Spillane was sued for divorce
The Warriors used that Monday by his wife, Sheri, tv
pressure to spurt to a big lead end their ll-year marriage.
early in the first game M.rs .
Spillane
cited
against the Badgers and their irreconsiliable differences as
JX"essure game worked just grounds for her suit in
as well against Miami.
Superior Court. The couple
"Once we started going on separated last month . They
them, it looked like they were have no children .
tightening up," McGuire
said. "We got one or two
quick turnovers and that did
it. Once we got up to 15 then
we could determine the skins' top season scorer ,
Oluck Goodyear, was held
pattern of the game."
Miami played the Warriors without a field goal by Lee .
McGuire was asked if he
close for about i5minutes, but
then Marquette rolled off felt the Warriors played as
eight successive points to well as they could .
"I thought we played
take a 26-19 lead and the
Redskins were never in tbe super ,' ' McGuire said. ''I
thoiJiht we played 'Big D'
game after that.
Only one of Marquette's · and we complemented each
starters,/guard Uoyd Walton , other, went to where the
failed to hit the double figures opening was. This is the type
and he dldn 't take a shot aU of thing you have to have."
night. Bo Ellis and Earl
Tatwn each had 17 points,
Jerome . Whitehead 15 and
Butch Lee 14.
Archie Aldridge led Miami
with 18 points, b~t the Red·

Standlnt~s

580:

;
•

clip opponent
in tourney

By GENE W. HINTZ

Te1m
J ack ' S Dairy Bar

High Individual game John JTyree 257 ; Merler)t
W II son 198 . Ed Von 207 ;
Marlene Wilson 189 .

lU,

Wayland
McLeugnlln

BOllen

... ABOJr 40()R IIJRITT"E'N Re~esr

Ken McLaughlin 214, Garv

Wooster Scots

in their Maryland In·
vitational tournament with a
I~ rout of Selon Hall, but
in the other firstround contest
No. 7 Alabama was handed it
firSt Joss of the season by
Princeton, 61-li9.
No . 4 UCLA had to
scramble to get by the first·
round of its Bruin Classic,
coming from behind to edge
Santa Clara, 52-48 and will
meet Purdue In tonight's.UUe
.game. The Bollermlfttl
topped St. !Auls, IMI-TI.
No. 5 Marquette got 17
points each from Earl Tatum
and Bo Ellis to beat Miami of
Ohio, 79-52, in the firsl-l"ound
of the Milwaukee Classic and .
set up a title game with
Wisconsin, a 70-64 victor over
Wisconsin.
Ninth-ranked Nevada-Las
Vegas was another team
enjoying Its own holiday
tournament rolllng over
Houston, 116-92, in a first·
round game. Now they play
the final tonight against No.
15 Michigan, which topped
LaSalle, 86-71.

l

humble !Standin~s \
R eds k r"ns

Bucks have respect for UCLA

·:

Man. of Year out, 12 women come ~

"

' ~JACKSONVILLE, Fla.
(UPI)- "We knew we had to
play mistake-free football
and we did," said · jubilant
Maryland Coach Jerry
Claiborne after his "noname" Terrapins upset
F1orida,l:Hl, Mooday night ui
the Gator Bowl football
game.
"We knew we had to play
good defense and we took
time to prepare," said
Claiborne. "The team played
just super. They played a

.

)

.
great defensive game and our

B)' J. PAUL WYATI'

"-~-

husband could improve his
chances for living many more
healthy, active years by
following · the right living
patterns. Not smoking will
give him an average Increase
of nine years of healthy living
compared to a heavy
cigarette
smoker.
A
moderately low-fat, low·
cholesterol diet, with
adequate roughage and not
too many calories, will help
protect him from heart
disease and will even
promote good digestive tract
function , perhaps even
preventing cancer of the
colon.
By ~vQiding alcohol in
excess and maintaining a ·
regular fitness program, he
NEW YORK (UPI)- Time for her as a ))OSIIible can- prtest rocked ihe chl!fch.
will galit enormous health
Magazine ·did not pick a dldate for the Supreme court
benefits.
Others were Carla Hilla,
President
Ford Secretary of HoUBing and
Now such a program Is not "Man of the Year" this year seat
as easy as taking acouple of but subatltuted 12 women for ultlniately gave to Justice Urban Development: Texas
vitamin capaules a day, but It Ita annual honor.
John Paul Steve111.
Congreuwoman Barbara
Betty FOrd, wife of the
Also on tile "Women of the Jordan; Jill Ker Conway,
Is based on years of careful
studies of large populations Prealdent, waa unong the Year" roster ·were Addle president of Smith CoUege:
and . their susceptibility to dozen women which Time . Wyatt, head of the new Carol Sutton, managing
heart,
vascular,
and said "for good or ill,'' have Coalition of Labor Unim editor of the Louisville
di8estive disease~~. It would lllOit aignllicantly affected Women. Feminist author Courier Journal; Kathleen
be a ptty If he late~ m to the coune of the year's Susan BrOwnmnter, authOr of Byerly, a Navy Ueutena!lt
,
"Ajjalnlt Our Will: Men, commander: and Contile overblown promotl0111l eventa.
Susie Sharp, Chief Jl!ltlce . Women ·and Rape," also necticut Gov. Ella Gra1110.
efforts foe vitamin E and
missed the OpporllDlity to of the Norlh Carolina made the lilt, aa did tenn11
Time ezplained it did 1191
foDow a pl'08J'am that will do &amp;lpreme Court, joined Mn.. star Billie Jean King and name a man of the year
Ford on the list. The Firlt Alison Cheek, whose or- · beclluae '1t was a year of
something foe him.
Lady reportedly campaigned dlnatlon as an Episcopal retrenchment and reap·

Warriors

Terps upset Florida

· · . ·. ··.

r------------,
l
Pro :

""'" '"""

A

Uke agood neighbor,.
State Farm is.there.
STATE FARM MUTUAL
AUlOMOBILE INSURANCE COMPANY
Home Off1ce. Bloom•ng to n. ltltno1s

L-----------------.r.;?••s

'

\

\

1

�•
3- The Daily Sent~l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tu~sday, Dec. 30, 1975
1- The Daily Sentift!!1 Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Dec. 3(), 1975

Government's airline for higshots wins award
~~-::~:::::;:;:;:;:;::::::~:;:;:;:;~::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;::~~:::::::::::;:;~:::::::::;:;:;!;:;:;::~::;!;:;:::;:;::::::::::;;:;:;:;:.;;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::
~

«
No nunnnum
. .
.
.
Q,L! :;::
pnces m mo:: :

~

~
I

.

;~:

a&gt;LUMBUS (UPI ) - Starting today, any manufac·
~~; turer who sets a minimwn price for products in Ohio will
i:i: be prosecuted for restricting competition in violation of
;:~ the state's antitrust law .
:\! The Ohio General Assembly, to promote open .com·
ili petition ammg retailers, repealed '!te fair trade law,
~1 which allowed manufacturers to set minimwn prices for
i;~ products, effective midnight Monday.
~j; "In the !93Q5, fair trade laws probably protected small
ijij retailers from price cutting by major companies, but
!iii nowadays fair trade laws mean higher, noncompetitive
;::; prices,' I said state Attorney General William J . Brown,
;i;j "and starting Tuesday that will be against the law.
ill: "The legislature clearly wants an open, competitive
ilii marketplace, and my office will carry out that intent by
i;i; protecting competition among retailers," Brown said
:·:· Mon da y.
~
1:! In Ohio, the most frequently fair-traded items were
!iii hosiery, bicycles, prescription· drugs, tools, jewelry,
ilii mattresses, appliances, televisions and stereos.

....

~

:;:;

i;i;
:::i

;:;:
;:::

;i;j

j:i;

;::;
::;
ili!

;j;j
;:;:

ili!
ii'
ilii
:;:;
:·:·
~

ili!
iiii
:j·,•,:j

By DONALD LAMBRO
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Sen. William Proxmire, )).
Wis., said today the Air Force
is running a $66 million fleet
of 23 jets to transport
govenunent officials at a cost
tv taxpayers of ·more than $6
million a year.
Proxmire, who each month
selects what he believes to tie
the most wasteful federal
program, said the Air Force's
"private airline for govern·
ment bigshots" gets his
"fleece of the year" award.
The Senator said the planes
are kept on call 24 hours a day
and are equipped to carry as
many as so passengers, with
small executive jets carrying
up to five .
He said the planes are
staffed with military aides

who serve food and drinks
and that some of the planes
have sleeping facilities.
The Deet cost taxpayers
$66.7 million to purchase.
Operational and maintenance
costs may run up tv $2,200 an
hour for the largest planes.
Proxmire said that in the
first 10 months of this year
the Air Force made 975
flights carrying government
officials
to
various
destinations, with 87 per cent
of the fllghts taken by
ranking defense officials or
those requesting Defense De·
partment flights.
The most frequent single
user of the VIP service was
Treasury Secretary William
Simon, who took 58 flights in
the first 10 months of this
year at a cost tv the govern·

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

Postage at 13c ounce tonight
~

By JAMES A. KIDNEY
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Make sure you get those
tardy Christmas cards, thank
you notes and holiday
packages to the post office
before cloalng today or you'll
be among the first to suffer
New Year's greetings !rom
the Postal Service - higher
postage rates.
The higher rates apply to
all mall, including a threecent Increase for flrst-claSII
letters to 13 cents an ounce.
They go intv effect at 12:01
a.m. local time Wednellday,
representing 1975's last b\lf8t
of Inflation.
The Increases average 26
per cent for aU mall, but first
class jwnpathe highest - 3()
per cent.

Ab

The new rates · were to
begin last Sunday but
Federal District Judge John
Slrica blocked the increases
Dec. 19 on · procedural
grounds. The U.S. Court of
Appeals lifted the order
Monday, 90 minutes after
hearing Postal Service arguments that the raise was
needed tv stem growing deficits.
Officially, the new rates
are only temporary until the
independent Postal Rate
Commission can decide what
the permanent increase
should be. Such a ruling could
come by June, although in the
past the Rate Commission
has taken nearly two years to
reach a decision.
The Increase was opposed

· uld
zk bill wo

oure

nee ·
W o u n d e''d K
I'

aY NICHOLAS

DAND.OFF
WASHINGTON (UPI) Se J
s D Abourezk )).
S ~·
the d nda of
··1:ysSiou ~n °men,
women and chlldr1lll killed In
the shootout with Army
troopa at Wounded Knee,
sD
h ld
receive
~~tary ~=pehsation even
tholllh It happened 85 years

the

arne

ts

ago.
He has introduced a bll) to
provide ..,,OOOto be shared by
the descendants of each
Indian vic:tim who fell in .the
the last bloody episode ·of the
lndi'
Dec 29 1890
Kn~ h~s stuclt
in the Indian craw for a tong
id in an
time, " Abo ll"e ...
... sa
inteview. "It's largely a symbollc act It would cost le~
than • •ooo. Sorne of the
descendants thought it would
be the right thing to do, and so
do I "
The Army says "no."
Acting Secretary Norman
Augustine has sent a 23-page
report to Sen. James
Eaatland, )).Miss ., arguing

. .;::;:e:·

by bulk mailers, the Easter
Seal Society and 17 states. All
asked the court of appeals to
leave Sirica's order in effect
at least until the appeals
court can hear arguments on
the merits of the case in
January.
The Postal Service argued
the Increase was needed
Immediately to counter
losses of$225million a month.

Without it, lawyers said, the
service would have to borrow
money or seek additional
subsidies from Congress to
meet payrolls.
Lawyers opposing the raise
said that if it were eventually
struck down, mail users
wouW have no · way of
recovering overcharges.
The last increase, from 8 to
10 cents for first-class mail,
came in March, 1974.

Net losses .up

months o[ 1975, more than $52
million .over the amount lost
during the same period of
1974.. . ,i{J !Ill'
The truStees said Monday
the net losses include a credit
allof $107.5 million In federal
compensate
grants received this year,
and $9.8 million received
.
·
during 1974, under the
s'descendentsRegionalRai!Reorganization

VI"ctrm"

PHILADELPHIA (UP!) Trustees of the Penn Central
Transportation Co. have
reported a net loss of
$172,194,651 for the first 10

·

No

j

Act.

fl't

Vitamin E has no miracles
·B)' Lawreooe E. Lamb, M.D.

harm instead of good.
Moat of the reports on the
Would you please give me value · of vitamin E are just
your thoughts on this miracle testimonials - not greaUy
different
from · the
vitamin.
DEAR READER - You testimonials you see with fad
can find slot of those articles diets or those used to promote
about how greet vitamin E is a thousand useless health
in health publications for the gimmicks to the public.
public, but not one In a
You should 11end in 50 cents
reputable scientific journal. for The Health Letter,
Recently, I · read me such numnber 4-12, VItamin E:
. lll"licle claiming vitamin E Miracle nr Myrth, with a
was good for almost every· long,
stamped,
self·
thing
- even how It improved addressed envelope for
The .D1i1J
Sentinel
. ' ,. .
the profits from stud farms. maping. Your husband would
DEVOTED TO THE
•
INTIRIST OF
The non«ientist writer went he interested In reading the
MEICU· MASQN A~A
on to observe thai Northern history of vitamin E. Just
CHESTER L. TANN HILL
- lxtt. Ed. .
Dancer's site imd dam were address your request to me In
ROIIRT HOaFLICH
both on vttamln E.
care of this newspaper, P. 0.
CIIJ ldllor
Publilhe dellt exce~t
Although such unscientific Box 1551, Radio aty Station,
soruraa~ o~ T e Oh o
Vllltr
ubi lhlng Com .
foolishness Is good for a New York, NY 10019.
~any ,
ll1
Court
St. . laugh, It also leads to some
That Issue of The Health
omeroy
01110 •5769 .
Business 611tce Phone 992 ·
poor heallll habits. Vitamin E Letter will review the dlf.
1156. Edttorlol Phone 991 ·
is very useful in animals that ferences in the need and use
1157 .
Stcond cleu gostege
need
it. Animals have en- of vitamin a in animals for
ptld at Pomerov . hlo .
NIIIOntl
ldverttslng
tirely different metabolic fertUity and even how useful
r•prtsentltlv• ward .
11)'3tems than we do. That Is It is to prevent heart
Griffith ComRany , Inc .,
80I!Intlll &amp; Go l':f,htr Dlv .•
Why we have to take vitamin problema in animals.
757 Third f.'&lt;~• . . ew Vor~ .
Cor get it in our food while a
While yollf husband may
N .Y . 1001 .
Subacrlptlon rates :
stud
cen
manufacture
his
get
little benefit from vitamin
Delivered b) ctrrler. whert
IYIIIUit 5 cents per
own vitamin C from car· E,lt is important to reaUze it
Wttk . By Motor Route
bohydrates. The shoe ~ on · won't harm him dlrecUy,
whtn carrier strvlce nor
1\llilablt, One month , ·the other hoof when It comes
either. The excess. amount
13.25. By mtll In Ohio end
w. ve .• One Yetr, 121 .00 : to vitamin E, and h«sea and may not even be absorbed
Six months, SlUO ; ThrN
cows need It in fairly large from his digestive tract.
months , 11.00. Elsewnt~t
quantities, but we only need
S26.00 ytlr ; Six mont s
The real danger of vitamin
$13.501 lhr11 mont" .. $7.50.
the
amount
commonly
E
and other vitamin fads Is
Subtcrlpflon prk e tucludn
Sundoy Tlmn -Sen!lnel .
avallsble In conunon foods in that they will replace or dela)'
a normal Ulet.
needed treatment., Your

DEAR DR. LAMB - After
reading several articles
recently on vitamin E, my
111sband, who Ia 30 years old,
·started taking two capsules,
200 t.U. each dally. He says
taking vitamin E will add 20
years to his llle. I think this Is
a bunch of garbage and am
afraid IIley might do him

~~

the killing grew out · of
Robert Utley, author of the
These funds, ·the trustees
spontaneous, uncontrol~ble "Last Days of the Sioux ~ld, we~e required to . con·
violence - not out of any Nation," said in an in· tmue rallroad operauons .
premeditated decision.
terview : " It was an Indian The net-loss for the IIJ.month
"Contrary to the popular medicine man who fired the 1974 ~riod .was $120,393,683,
conception of the Wounded first shot. He was prancing ~ccordmg tv the trustees
Knee episode, the civilian around with a Winchester. fmanclal stateme~t.
authorities and the Army There may have been some
Penn Central s losses
showed great restraint and interference with him (by before federal grants were
compassion In the 'events soldiers). But when the first $27~,694,651 ~or the IIJ.month
leading up tv the encounter. shot was fired, 8 group of penod th1s year and
Restraint and precautions other Indians dropped their $130,187,525 for the 1974
·
period
were even observed during blankets and let go at the
· .
the battle," the Army says. soldiers."
Not , 1~clud~d In the
Eastland, chairman of the
Dee Brown, author of trustet: ~ fmanclal re~rt was
Senate Judldary Committee, "Bury My Heart At Wounded an addillon~ $20 million from
is tentatively planning Knee,'' said in a telephone RR~A which was rece1ved
• hearings about Jan. 20.
interview from his home ,jh , earlier th1s year and placed
Augustine also contends an Uttle Rock, Ark.: "I ®n't· in escrow at the direction of
IndiB~~ fired tile first shot, think we'J!: ever really know ~edt~ral to~oadlist~·
thai a newspaperman killed what happened. The cla.im
ra ton
ava
e
·
for purposes designed by
three Indians, and that Indian that an Indlsn fired the first
A
claims should have been shot Is In dispute.
FR ·
settled soon after the In·
Brown said the Army had
Penn Central also received
cident. '
set up Gatling guns and some $96.9 million undet the RRRA
The figh~ erupted when of the troops were part of . for progt,!P.. malntenance
the Army tried to persuade Gen. George A. Custer's cost!!, but. uoaer.,Interstate
Chief Bft Foot and his command, the rest of which CqmiJlllJ:C7~:· Commission
wandering traves to return to was wiped out at Uttle Big accounting•ms:ructlon~ these
the SioUI reservation after Horn In 1867, "and there is a funds,are not mcluded in the
first being disarming.
suspicion, at least, that they statement either as revenues
Historians differ about might have had vengeful or expenses.
what happened next.
mo\ives."

DR. LAMB

•

'

ment of $328,794.10.
An Air Force spokesman
said the 89th Military Airlift
Wing (Special Mission),
based at Andrews Air Force
Base near Washington, was
"chartered to perform a
missioo. And it does it damn
well, too.
"We're in the business of
providing this function for the
executive and legislative
branches," the spokesman
said. 11 lt's

OW'

Proxmire said, "The
stupidity of this massive
airlift is that in almost every
case, commercial flights
were available to the same
destination .. .
"In fairness to the Air
Force, this fleece of the year
should also be shared by aU
the government bigshots who
insist on such special
treatment at the expense of
. the taxpayers,'' he said.

job."

Bengals promise
~hey'll be back
CINCINNATI (UP!) ,"It's rough to say there's
always another year, "
groans Cincinnati Bengals
defensive tackle Bob Brown.
"I thought we had a great
shot at it this year.

"But,"

adds

Brown,

seeming to sum up a
universal feeling among the
Bengals, "I'll be back."
For Brown and his teammates, there Is nothing left
now but next year after the
1975 season came to an
abrupt halt Sunday at
Oakland, where the Raiders
squeezed out a 31·28 victory to
knock the Bengals out of the
NFL· playoffs.
"We have no real regrets,"
shrugged Bengals head coach
Paul Brown. "We gave it our
best shot.
"I told the guys I was proud
of them and that they lost to a
splendid team,'' he added.
Trailing 31-14 in the last
quarter Sunday, Cincinnati
erupted for two quick touch·
downs to vault to within 3!,28
with five minutes still to go.
But, as wide 'eceiver Ike·
Curtis said, "It was just not
enough."
Although Cincinnati
linebacker Ron Carpenter
recovered Pete Banaszak's
fumble at the Oakland 38 with
4:19 remaining, the Bengals'
try for a game-winning
touchdown quickly went
awry.
Cinr.y went lor a long pass
oo its first play after the
fumble recovery, but
Oakland's big (8-foot-7) Ted
Hendricks sacked Anderson
for a six yard loss. Two pass
iricompletions and just a five
yard gain on the lone com·
pleted pass of the series
ended the Bengals' final
offensive set of 1975.
"I thought the key came
when Hendricks sacked
Kenny on that first play,''
said Brown. "Hendricks just
got off the block' (set by
Booble Clark). Boobie
sustained the block and really
did a good job, but the play
was a deep pass. Hendricl!s
just fought through and made
a great play."
Hendricks was one of
several Raiders who sacked
Anderson several times In the
game . .
"Hendricks is just tall and
big and a great player,'' said
Bengals center and offensive
captain Bob Jolmson. "He
just blows in."
carpenter had hoped his
fumble recovery would be the
final stepping stone to vic·
tory.
"Recovering that fwnble
felt pretty good .at the time,"
he said. "We just weren't
able to cash it in. Maybe It
was too much to ask. (But)
we didn't get what we .came
after."
How about a tzy for a long
field goal to tie instead of
passing on fourth and 11' at
the Oaklsnd 38 in that crucial
series?
"No,'' said Brown, thinking
olthe 55-yard effort It would
take from Dave Green. "It
was far out of his range."
Still, the Bengals had one
more slim chance after
forcing Oakland to punl .with

~

.- .

.

.

. •

.

.

o
··
o

•,

ROAD
...... WVQ.

C.-It &amp;GK ....

.

niEVALUEOFAIJFE

;.; ·

In a Ripley's "Believe It or Not" illustration some yea!'!!:.
ago, a plain bar of iron was pictured, worth five dollars at the
going prices then. That same bar of iron, according to Ripley ,''
made into horseo6hoes then would have been worth $10.110. '
Made into needles, it would have been worth $3,285, or made •
into balances for watches, that same bar of Iron would have
been worth $250,000.
·
~
Of course, with toclay's inflation, those prices would now~
he considerably higher. But the dlfferem;e between the value :
of the raw material and the finished product was determined •
by the purpose and use of the raw material.
So it is with life. The ultimate value of your life will be
determined by what you make of your llle. The Psalmist said,
"We spend our years as a tale that Is told." (Psalm 90:9b
KJV).

.

We can fill our lives with cheapness, groveling in un·
satisfied sensuous gratifications. We can fill our livea with
iiO seconds to go. Brown in·
bitterness, consumed with prejudices, jealousies, and hatreds.
structed his defensive line to
We can fill our lives with greed, accumulating material wealth
try to block Ray Guy's kick.
without enjoying lt. We can fill our lives with aimless drifting,
"We had an all-out rush on
never attempting much, never accomplishing much. Or, we
the kicker," Broivn disclosed. can fill our lives with purpose and usefulness, striving for
"It was a calculated risk: we
worthwhile goals, serving helpful interests for ourselves and
were trying to block it."
But Guy managed to get the others.
We have come again to the threshold of a "new begin·'
punt away and Bengals
nlng," with a whole new year ahead of us. You can make this a
rookie Brad Cousino was
good year filled with happjness and accomplishment, If you
called. for roughing the
want to. Examine your talents and sharpen your skllls so that
kicker, which gave the ball
you can be and do your best.
back to Oakland.
Don't bring intv the new year the same disappointmenta,
"I hit bim, no doubt about mistakes, and anxieties of the old year. Let by-gones be by·
it, but I thought I had the
ganes, and don't fill the new year with the same frustrations
hall," recalled Cousino, from
that marred the old year.
nearby Miami (of Ohio)
Agirl, hanging a calendar on the wall on New Year's Day,
University. "I don't know
exclaimed :
how I missed the ball. His leg
."Oh, this is going to be a beautiful year!" When her
was on the upswing. We had
parents asked her how she knew It was going to be a beautiful
three guys there and any one
year, she answered with thought-provoking wisdom! "I In·
of the could have picked it up.
and run in for a tvuchdown." tend," she replied, "to put something beautiful into each day of
""
Said cornerback Lemar the year."
You can make 1976 a beautiful year for yourself if you want
Parrish, "We gave it our best
to. You can take the raw material of your life, and with proper
shot at the end, but in the first
objectives, make it a useful and valuable contribuU.on to
three quarters they overworthy Interests, bringing beauty and happiness into the new
powered us.
year. It will he just what you make it.
'
Brown agreeit.
Remember' today is the first day of the rest of your life!
"We didn't have a turnover," he noted."They just
overpowered our defensive
up-front people early.
Added Johnson, "They
really executed wen. When
they threw on first down or ·
ran, it was a seven or eight
yard pickup."
Although Cincinnati's 11-3
regular season record was
the best in its eight year
history, the Bengals' playoff
record is now 0·3, with
previous playoff losses to
Baltimore in 1970 and to
Miami in 1973.

,Berry's World

Ninth annUal

Mainstreams
event readied
MARIETTA - Twenty
thousand prospectuses lor
"Mainstreams '76,'' the ninth
annual Marietta College
international competitive
exhibition for painting and
SCQlpture, were mailed
recently by the college's art
department. ·
Mainstreams '76 will open
• II) 19150' NEA I"&lt;
• :
at the Hermann Fine Arts
,.
Center April 3 and slide el)·
" .. . And. you haven't heard the best part. Walt "'
tries lor the exhibition are
till/ tell you about gas mileage ... "
due from artists by Feb. 2.
The selection jury for this
.
year 's exhibition is Don
Stone, Rockport, Mass.;
Letten of oplalon are welcomed. Tbey should be 1
Allan Gough, Chillicothe;
Jess than 300 words long (or be subject to reduction by 1'
John Chaffee, Detroit, Mich. ;
the editor) and must be signed with lbe s.lgnee'l ad· r.
and William Gerhold ,
clfess. Names may be withheld upon publication. I'
Williamstown, W. Va.
However, on request, umes will be dilcl011ed. Lette!'!l :'
Last year 2,505 entries were
should be In good taste, addressing llsaea, not per· 1
submitted by artists from all
sonalltles.
1
50 states and six foreign
'I
countries. One hundred and
· i)~
slxty-elgllt works were
~'
selected for exhibition which I
represented entries of 128 :
artists from 30 different 1
states. Purchase price money Flower beds in streets dan aero us
totalling $5,000 was awarded
e
to artists whose work Is now a : Dear Sir :
part of the permanent
I notice in the Sentinel that one councllman beUeves the
collection of Marietta Intersection at Third and Locust Sta. is da1111erous for a north·
College.
bound car making a right hand turn off Third going toward the
Artists interested ln . river. I would like.tv know when a man in either car has as
receiving a prospectus clear a vision as they have at thl.s point, I drove \ruck 45 years
containing entry Information and I have a good driving record, and I don't
wpere U.t
should write: Director, • one certain place Ia dangerous.
Mainstreams '76, Grover M. · BUt I will say that when you, the council, let people build
Hermann Fine Arts Center,' fiowerbedaintlleroad,lhat,Isay,iadangerousl
Marietta College, Marietta,
And maybe when someone has a wreck there tile city may ·~
Ohio 45750.
have a lot of trouble.- Ben Batey, Mlddleoort, Ohio.

~~

---------------------------1 .

.... ?Jtt.~:

·--

••

see

praisal." ·
"In this atmoaphere,'' the '
magazine said, ''leaden did
not so much lead u IINIJI. It
was not a period In ·which a.'.
Bingle man of the year COii1d
declalvely emerge." ·
1
Time uld a few men might' ';
have made II, had the award ·
gone to men Instead of :
women. Among them were·
Henry Klaalnger, $0Vlet ~
phy~ Andrei Slkhlrov, .
Egyptian Prelldent Anwar ;.
Sadat and Tellll lfliao.plnc, ' "
who baa emerged aa de facto
ruler of Olinl.
i .

wide receiver Kim Hoover ..
Placekicker Mike Suchko got
ihe other points with a con·
version and two field goals, a
20-yarder in the second
period and a 27-yarder in the
fourth.
Suchko also averaged 40
yards a punt in the rain.
Claiborne noted Maryland
dldn 't turn the ball over a
single time on interceptions
or fumbles .
"We had good pass
coverage, good hitting, good
pursuit, good pass rush," said

offense moved the ball when
it had to."
The Terrapins, seven-point
underdogs, intercepted three
passes, turning two of them
into scores, and 225-pound
freshman running back Steve
Atkins rushed for 127 yards
on 20 carries, giving
Maryland control of the rain·
plagued game,
The only touchdown came
with 8:45 gone in the first
period on a 19-yard pass from
quarterback Larry Dick to

Claiborne.
"The
In·
terceptions and sacks were
super plays. I think we
convinced people we can win
agab!St Southeastern Confer·
ence teams."
The Terrapins lost to SEC
teams in their two ,previous
bowl games, 17-16 to Georgia
in the 1973 Peach Bowl and 7..3
to Tennessee in the 1974
Uberty Bowl.
While Maryland's defense
played near Dawless football,
the Gator offense failed to
mount a serious drive untO

Knicks slip past Bulls
t;HICAGO (UPI) - "It's a
real accomplishment when
you can score that many
against a Chicago team and
Jerry Sloan," said guard
Earl Monroe .
The "that many" referred
to the seasonohigh ~points he
scored Monday night to paee
the New York Knlcks to a !J4.
93 victory over the Bulls In
the
only
professional
basketball game scheduled
Monday.
· MonrOjl sank 16 of 22 field
goal atlempts and was five
out of six from the free throw
line.
·"When you hold Monroe to
making 50 per cent of his

shots, you have a good chance Monroe scored the Knicks '
of winning," said Sloan, 8Ut last basket with 2:32left. The
tonight he was outstanding. Bulls could score only four
The only thing I could make more points and when the
bim do was work for his Knlcks reholll)ded the Bulls'
shots."
missed shot with one second
Sloan was assigned to left, the victory was sealed .
guard Wait Frazier, but the
"We're deveiopillll a lot
continual switching of the more poise and confidence in
Knicks' guards saw him these close games we 're
facing Monroe very often.
playing," said New York
The
"Pearl"
was coach Red Holzman. "I think
averaging 20 points, but by we played well as a team. We
halftime he already had 16 as played good
defense,
the Knlcks led 49-46.
especially tOwards the end of
Then, Monroe scored 13 · the game.
points In the third quarter.
"I wouldn't say that our
Chicago's rally fell short in backcourt beat their whole
the closing minutes alter team. After all, (Bill)
Bradley and (Spencer)
11

the final mqments when the
cl~k ran out with the ball on
Maryland's 1Q.yard line.
Florida coach Doug
Dickey, unable tv win a bowl
game since he began
coaching at Florida in 1970,
said, " It was very
frustrating. The ·harder we
tried, the worse we
played ."
Claiborne, who has called
his 1975 Terrapins "a no·
name team" because of its
lack of big stars, refused to
single out any players,
calling the win "a team ef·
fort."
It was the first time in 55
games Florida had been shut
out, that happening in 1971
when Alabama beat the
Gators, ~ .

By JJMCOUR

UPI Sports Writer
PASADENA, Calli. (UPI)
- Woody Hayes and Ohio
State haven 't won a national
championship since 1968.
That was the season the
Buckeyes, led by quar·
terback Rex Kern, beat
University of Southern
C&amp;lifornia in the Rose Bowl
27·18.
"You don't get to be 11.0
and
not
have
any
mQtlv~tion,'' he said Monday
when asked about a national
crown for his No. !-rated
Buckeyes. "We'D just con·
tinue doing the same things
we've been doing all season ."
Hayes appeared at a news
conference with his Rose
Bowl coaching rival, UCLA's
Dick Vermeil.
"I'd like to see that happen
because I think they deserve
it," said Vermeil when asked
about Ohio State's bid for a
national tiUe. "And fl you're
going to lose, I'd rather lose
to a coach like Woody Hayes.
He's very much like my own
father.
· "But 1\ 1so want UCLA to
.win on New Year's Day
becauae my obligation Is tv
my own footbaD players. We
want to leave the Rose Bowl
with our heads higt\ and I
believe we can."
Hayes was loose and
jocular at the sesalon. When
Wayne Duke was introduced
and It was noted that: Duke
was here Instead of In Miami
\fhere Michigan faces
Oklahoma on New Year's
night, Hayes quipped to the

BOWLING
POMEROY BOWLING
LANES
Early Wed. Mixed
Tum
Zlde 1S Sport Shop

Points
88
Young·rsuper Mkt.
11
Oiler Four
71
Smith Nelson Motor Co .
70
Nelson Drug Co.
56

52

High Ind . Game -

.

complacency at all," he said.
"None whatsoever. We 've got
great respect for UCLA. We
know they're quite a bit
better l1QW than they were in
October.
"Of course, I always figure
we'll win. I never think any
other way although I always
figure our games will he
close. But It won't he easy
against UCLA and there are a ·
lot of ways you can lose."
Vermeil was asked about a
so-called players' rev oiL
Bruin players complained to
their coach that they were

Haywood scored some points
and played good defense and
John Gianelli held Bob l»ve M c A d o o
weiHor a while."
!Ave had 15 points, all in
the first half.
"'Ibis wadhe best I saw a t o p a l l
Monroe," said Chicago coach
Dick Motta. "Monroe had ~
points tonight, and except for . s c o r e r s
a layup, Norm Van Uer had
his hand in Monroe's face for
NEW YORK (UP!)
each shot. Monroe has never Despite his one-game
played better against us, . suspension, &amp;ob McAdoo
never.''
remained atop the National
The victory put the KnlCks Basketball Association
at 15-20 overall and was their scoring leaders by a com·
third in "16 road games. fortabie margin in the latest
Chicago twnbled to l-23.
statistics released Monday 1
McAdoo's scoring average
was 30.7 points per game,
while Kareem Abdul.Ja bbar
was second with 28.9 points
per game. Abdul.Jabbar was
way out front In rebounds,
working too long and too hard averaging !'9.1 to Dave
Cowens' 16.4, and the Laker
for Ohio State.
"Very few people like to giant also led in blocked shots
work,'' Vermeil said . "! was with 5.37 per game to Elmore
probably wrong when I told Smith's 2.97.
Kevin Porter of the Detroit
the team in the beginning we
Pistons
was the assist leader
would enjoy the ltoaF Bowl.
with
10.2
per game, while
The only way I know how tv
Slick
Watts
of Seattle held a
enjoy something is to win and
narrow
(3.06
to 3.04) steals
you have to work like hell to
per game edge on Phoenix'
do that.
Paul
Westphal.
"! don't think the players
Among
the field goal
anticipated that. Tliey came
leaders
,
Wes
Unseid of
to me and asked me to restate
Washington
was
the narrow
what I meant by enjoying the
leader
over
Abdul"..labbar.
Rose Bowl . But all the
problems are settled now." Unseld's percentage was .538
to Abdui.Jabbar's .533.

Hoosi~rs

hang on to
.trip Redmen, 76-69
By CHRIS.SCHERF

UPI Sporll Writer
Top-ranked Indiana,
teetering on disaster with
four starters on the verge of
fouling out, grittily hung on
for a 76-ii9 victory over St.
John's and the Holiday
Festival championship.
Itt. a crowd of 19,694 in
Madison Square Garden
screamed wildly for a St.
John's upset, Indiana's Scott
May took control of the game
In the last five minutes tv
'!teak a ~ tle and lead the
Hoosiers to their ninth
straight victory of the season.
Kent Bens'on, ' Quinn
Buckner, Bob Wilkerson and
May each was playing with
four fouls when the AllAmerica forward put the
Hoosiers ahead, 87-8S, on a
short jumper. May then sank
five free throws In the final
I :24 to guarantee ll)e victory
over 11tho£anked St. John's,
nOW 9-1.
Bobby
Knight
was
qu~lmed shout keeping his
four foulplagued players In

the lin~up with eight minutes .
to go and the Indiana coach
replied, "When you get into
the last eight minutes of a
game like that, you've got to
_ play the best you got."
The best proved to be May'·
who finished with 29 points
and the tournament's Most
Valuable Player award.
May played just as aggres·
sively with four fouls as he
had earller In the game lll!a
explained, "Att!!'at time, we
had no cboice. We just had to
play that way tv win."
St. John 's, llthltanked nationally, almost pulled off the
big upaet behind brilliant
performances by 5-9 guard
Frank Aiagla and slender 6-7
center George Johnson.
Alagia kept a tlght reins on·
the pace of the St. John's
offense and finished with 16
points, while Johnson scored
23 points, grabbed 10
rebounds and was respon·
slble for Benson's foul
problema.
The second-ranked
Terrapins had_!n easl~ time

By

FUNNY BUSINESS

Oec.17,1975
Standings

Tenth Framors

Big Ten commissioner:
"In other words, you've got
to go with a winner, huh?"
To get to Pasadena for the
fourth straight year, Ohio
State beat Michigan 21-14.
"I've never been able to
outtalk Woody except when
we're talking about of·
ficiating ," replied Duke.
Although his team is a J4-.
point favorite and beat UCLA
41-20on Oct. 4at the Colisewn
in !As Angeles, Hayes denied
his players were taking the
Bruins Ughtly.
"I haven't seen any

Men :

FOI&lt; P~OTION 1 14eNROD ... O~E'­
qoo112E ~OT ExPERIENCED Eti!Oll~H
TO BECOh'lE COP4 OIEF. .. TWO"ilEREis NO Z" IN RAISE. 1

Wayland 208 ~ Willa rd Boyer

200 ;
Women:
Corolyn
Bachner 1195, Helen Phelps
Maxine Ouoan 193 .
HIGh Series - Men ; Gary

Jr ., 514;

549 ,

Ken

women :

Carolyn

s•o. A . L. Phelps.

Bechnor 559. Pat Carson 5•8.
Holen Phelps 504 .
Teem

Hlo"'

Game -

Oiler

Teem High Series -

Oiler

Four 708 .

Four 19•9.
TRI COUNTY

Pomeroy

Bowling Lanu
Early Sunday
Mhted League
Dec . 21 , lt7S
Ends First Half

Hill &amp; Mayer Barbers

57 79

Team No . 6

55 II.,

John Tyree

Dugan and
Marlene Wilson .ti9S ; Ed voss
540; Mary Voss ~92 .
Team high game - Jack 's

M•xine

Delrv Bar 783 .
Team high ser:les Dairy Bar 2115 .

-

Jack 'l

,

Roach's Gun Shop

Points
87

Phelps
76
Pomeroy Cement Block Co. 63
Sear's Catalog Merch ,
56
H&amp;R Firestone

·

voss · Don

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••

Indiana St. Classic
Idaho St BJ U. of Pa c if ic 67
Ind iana St. T Hau te 88 VM I 60

. B i9 Eight Tournam ent
Missou ri 86 Kansas St. 66
Kansas 70 Colora do 50

{ Consolation Round)
Oklahoma St . 88 Iowa St. 71
Nebraska 75 Oklahoma 53

Far West ·classi c
Wash ington 70 Northwestern 57
( Consolitlon Round)
Oreoon St . 78 Florida St . 75
Oregon 70 Colorado St. 66
Rainbow Classic
(Consolation Round)
St. Peter 's 66 Yale 61
Holy Cro5s 66 Cin cinnati 65

. ( Final Round Action I
ECAC HOliday Festtvat
(Championship )
Indiana 76 St . John's 69
.
(consolation Round)
Manhattan 87 So Carolina 73
Villanova 84 Tem pl e 75
Sugar Bowl
( Cht~mpionship)
Tennessee 97 Tu lane 73
.

(Consolation)
Penn 78 Ohio St 64

COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Sugar Bowl Tournament
Penn 78 Ohio 51 64
All- College Tournament
N Te)( St 80 Bow ling Green 76

Luthenn Brotherhood
Basketball Tournament
Cap it al 72 Wartburg 58
Ashland Holida-,:
Tournament
Witten berg 69 Oberlil\ 63
Ash land 75 Baldwin -Wall ac e
56
Mose Hole wooster
Classic
Denison 82 M il ligan 70
Wooster 77 Lock Haven 64
Muskingum · Shrine
Holiday Tournament
Muskingum 78 Wilmington 56
St Univ of NY at Al bany 96
Urbana 93
Milwaukee Class ic
Marquette 79 M iami (Ohio ).

52

Findlay Holiday Tourn .
Heid el berg 66 Malone 63
Find lay 82 Franklin 65
Colonial City Classic
Ke nyon 90 Thomas More 79
Wr ight St 83 Ohio Northern 80
Mount Union College
Holiday Tournament
Hi ram 97 Oh io Wesleyan 81
Ml Union 86 Th iel 74

This WttiC"i Sptc••l
I

USED CARS

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Dark green bug . rad io,
motor overhauled.

$1295
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Way ol Doing Business.
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Pomeroy
Open Evenings ' til6 :00
Til s ~. m . Sal.

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111 car insurance.
ItS anazklg how often
·my answer is, ~yes:"
AI State Farm we have low mileag e ra1es. low ra1 es lor

_~wning-Childs Agency

S!I vers 2f2 ,

H lgh Sorlos -. Dowty
Smtih 632, Ed Voss 573, Rlly
Rooch 552 .
Teem
High Game
Roach'S Gun Shop 989 .
Teem High series
Rooch's Gun ShOP 2751.

College Basketball
Results
By United Pren lnternitlonal
Tournaments
( l ~t Round Action )
Bru 1n Classic
Purd~e 80 St . Louis 71

Monday' s

National Basketball Asso ciation
Sta.ndings
Len Vegas Taurnament
By United Press International M• ch 1gan 86 La Sal le 71
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
Lobo Invitational
W L Pet. GB Cal iforn ia 75 Wic hita Sl 68
21 B .724
Boston
Wes t Va. 89 New Mexico 76
Philadelphia 20 11 .6-15 2
Buflalo
1B IS .545 S
. Maryland ln vi1ational
New York
15 20 .429
9
Maryland 104 Seton Hall 69
Central Division
Pr inceton 61 Alabllmt!l 59
W. L. Pet. GB
Allanla
17 13 567
. Milwaukee Classic
Cleve land
17 15 .531 1
Mar quette 79 M iami (Ohio ) 52
Houston
15 15 .500 2
Wisconsin 70 Stanford 64
Washington
15 15 .500 2
New Or leans 12 19 387 5111
. Old Domlni() n Classic
Western Conference
BY U 91 Tex as 86 (Ot)
Midw est Division
Old Domi nion 88 Corn ell 77
W. L· Pet . GB
De tro it
13 16 .&lt;148
Poinsettia Classic
1J 17 .433
lf1
Rutg er s 97 C1ladel 73
Mi lwau Kee
KansasCily
10 21 323 4
Georgia Tech 98 Furman 81
Ch 1cago
8 23 .'167
6
Pacif ic Division
Semor Bowl
Golden Stale
~· ~· j~~ GB MiSSISSi ppi 84 Pan American 74

people who 've joined car pool s, a lwo-ca• d•scounl.
a sale bumpe r di scount . di scounls lor good sitJdenls
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52

M&lt;lig •s Inn
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High tnl! . Game - Roy
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Ed

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Dtc. 16,1975

Team

In tile opener, Harris, a 6-6
junior forward, led all
scorers with 34 points. Don
Bissell chipped in with 15 Big
Red markers, Lee Bowman
13 and GU Spencer 12.

W. L .
89 ·11
. Tom 's (:arry Out
84 52
Putuns\EKceva t lno
62 74
Pomeroy Flower Sh op 61 75

H igh series -

••

WOOSTER, Ohio (UPI) Wooster's Fighting Scots,
with Preston Burroughs' 16
points showing the way ,
clipped Lock Haven TI-M
Mmday night In the Mose
Hole Wooster Classic.
Todd Harris lied a tournament record with 15 field
goals in pacing Denison to an
82-70 viclnry over Mllllgan in
the first game Monday.
Donn Calloway added 10
markers for Wooster, 6-3.
The Bald Eagles, 4-4, were
led by Dave Hendershot with
22 points In the second con·

test.

I

MILWAUKEE (UPI)
Fifth -ranked
Marquette
made it look easy . Even
Coach AI McGuire admitted
the Warriors played a
"super" game.
Wisconsin, already a
victim of Marquette this
year, had a much tougher
time reaching the final of the
MJiwaukee Classic.
But, take it from McGuire
and Badgers Coach John
2
Powless, things could be Los Angeles 'J.l 14 .600 J lf2
much different tonight when Phoenill.
15 13 536 6
17 17 .500 7
the two teams meet for the 5eatlle
Portland
12 21 .364 111 l
Monday's Result
championship of the 14th
94 Chicago 93
Milwaukee basketball New York
Tuesday's Games
Milwaukee at Buffa lo
classic.
Phoenix at New York
Marquette hit at a torrid Detro
it at Ph iladelph ia
60.4 per cent clip in the Chicago at Wash ino ton
City at Cleveland
opener to drub Miami of Ohio, Kansas
Bos ton at Gol!::len St ale
Sea l tie at Los Ange les
79-52, and run its record to S.
I. Wisconsin, with a loss to
Marquette its only blemish in American Basketball Associa ·
tion Sft~ndings
seven games, ran away from
By United Press International
W. L Pel . GB
Stanford early, then had to
Denver
22 7 .759 rally for a 70-64 win In the New York
19 10 .655 3
San Anto nio
18 11 .621
4
other game.
Ind iana
19 12 .61l 4
Tonight will mark the Kentuck y
16 14 .533 6'h
15 20 .-429 10
seventh time the two stale St . Lou is
Virg ini a
5 "17 .156 18'h
teams have met in the finals,
Monday's Result
with Marquette taking five of Ken tucky 110 New York 102
Tuesday's Games
the previous games. The San Antonio at lndiaha
Denver at 51. Louis
Warriors, in fact, haven't lost
to anyone in the Classic since
c k e r Association
1967 when the Badgers scored World H oStandi
ng•
a 7~2 win in the finals.
By United Press International
Eut
Marquette beat Wisconsin,
W. L T. Pts.
78-54, two weeks ago on this New Eng land 16 16 J 35
16 19 1
33
same Milwaukee Arena Door, Cincinnati
Ind ianapolis
14 17 2
30
but both Powless and Clev eland
12 20 2
26
West
McGuire think anything can
W. l. T . Pts.
happen tonight.
Hous ton
21 12 0
42
San Di ego
16 13 4
36
"Marquette was out- Minnesota
16 13 2
34
standing the first time we Ph oenL•
15 15 J
JJ
12 20 1
25
played,'' said Powless. "They Denver Canadian
made us look bad. We'll have
W. L. T. Ph.
24 14 1
.49
to play a super game, not Quebec
Winnipeg
24 14 o
48
make any mistakes. We Calgary
19 14 2
40
15 22 2
32
made too many last time, . Edmonton
22 J
25
they got all the loose change TorontoMonday's nResults
(No games schedutedl
and we didn't get any. "
Tuesda-r's Games
Powless also said he Quebec at Mlnneso1a
planned a full scale practice San Diego at New Eng land
Ind iana a! Denver
for today, despite the game Edmonton at Toron to
Wi nn ip eg a t tJouston
tonight, to try to iron out
some mistakes that were
made against Stanford.
"Obviously this will be a
different game," McGuire
said.
"You know , our pressure is
SPILLANE SPLIT .
unique because sometimes it
LOS
ANGELES
just doesn't work. Other Detective novelist Mickey
times, it's just unbelievable." Spillane was sued for divorce
The Warriors used that Monday by his wife, Sheri, tv
pressure to spurt to a big lead end their ll-year marriage.
early in the first game M.rs .
Spillane
cited
against the Badgers and their irreconsiliable differences as
JX"essure game worked just grounds for her suit in
as well against Miami.
Superior Court. The couple
"Once we started going on separated last month . They
them, it looked like they were have no children .
tightening up," McGuire
said. "We got one or two
quick turnovers and that did
it. Once we got up to 15 then
we could determine the skins' top season scorer ,
Oluck Goodyear, was held
pattern of the game."
Miami played the Warriors without a field goal by Lee .
McGuire was asked if he
close for about i5minutes, but
then Marquette rolled off felt the Warriors played as
eight successive points to well as they could .
"I thought we played
take a 26-19 lead and the
Redskins were never in tbe super ,' ' McGuire said. ''I
thoiJiht we played 'Big D'
game after that.
Only one of Marquette's · and we complemented each
starters,/guard Uoyd Walton , other, went to where the
failed to hit the double figures opening was. This is the type
and he dldn 't take a shot aU of thing you have to have."
night. Bo Ellis and Earl
Tatwn each had 17 points,
Jerome . Whitehead 15 and
Butch Lee 14.
Archie Aldridge led Miami
with 18 points, b~t the Red·

Standlnt~s

580:

;
•

clip opponent
in tourney

By GENE W. HINTZ

Te1m
J ack ' S Dairy Bar

High Individual game John JTyree 257 ; Merler)t
W II son 198 . Ed Von 207 ;
Marlene Wilson 189 .

lU,

Wayland
McLeugnlln

BOllen

... ABOJr 40()R IIJRITT"E'N Re~esr

Ken McLaughlin 214, Garv

Wooster Scots

in their Maryland In·
vitational tournament with a
I~ rout of Selon Hall, but
in the other firstround contest
No. 7 Alabama was handed it
firSt Joss of the season by
Princeton, 61-li9.
No . 4 UCLA had to
scramble to get by the first·
round of its Bruin Classic,
coming from behind to edge
Santa Clara, 52-48 and will
meet Purdue In tonight's.UUe
.game. The Bollermlfttl
topped St. !Auls, IMI-TI.
No. 5 Marquette got 17
points each from Earl Tatum
and Bo Ellis to beat Miami of
Ohio, 79-52, in the firsl-l"ound
of the Milwaukee Classic and .
set up a title game with
Wisconsin, a 70-64 victor over
Wisconsin.
Ninth-ranked Nevada-Las
Vegas was another team
enjoying Its own holiday
tournament rolllng over
Houston, 116-92, in a first·
round game. Now they play
the final tonight against No.
15 Michigan, which topped
LaSalle, 86-71.

l

humble !Standin~s \
R eds k r"ns

Bucks have respect for UCLA

·:

Man. of Year out, 12 women come ~

"

' ~JACKSONVILLE, Fla.
(UPI)- "We knew we had to
play mistake-free football
and we did," said · jubilant
Maryland Coach Jerry
Claiborne after his "noname" Terrapins upset
F1orida,l:Hl, Mooday night ui
the Gator Bowl football
game.
"We knew we had to play
good defense and we took
time to prepare," said
Claiborne. "The team played
just super. They played a

.

)

.
great defensive game and our

B)' J. PAUL WYATI'

"-~-

husband could improve his
chances for living many more
healthy, active years by
following · the right living
patterns. Not smoking will
give him an average Increase
of nine years of healthy living
compared to a heavy
cigarette
smoker.
A
moderately low-fat, low·
cholesterol diet, with
adequate roughage and not
too many calories, will help
protect him from heart
disease and will even
promote good digestive tract
function , perhaps even
preventing cancer of the
colon.
By ~vQiding alcohol in
excess and maintaining a ·
regular fitness program, he
NEW YORK (UPI)- Time for her as a ))OSIIible can- prtest rocked ihe chl!fch.
will galit enormous health
Magazine ·did not pick a dldate for the Supreme court
benefits.
Others were Carla Hilla,
President
Ford Secretary of HoUBing and
Now such a program Is not "Man of the Year" this year seat
as easy as taking acouple of but subatltuted 12 women for ultlniately gave to Justice Urban Development: Texas
vitamin capaules a day, but It Ita annual honor.
John Paul Steve111.
Congreuwoman Barbara
Betty FOrd, wife of the
Also on tile "Women of the Jordan; Jill Ker Conway,
Is based on years of careful
studies of large populations Prealdent, waa unong the Year" roster ·were Addle president of Smith CoUege:
and . their susceptibility to dozen women which Time . Wyatt, head of the new Carol Sutton, managing
heart,
vascular,
and said "for good or ill,'' have Coalition of Labor Unim editor of the Louisville
di8estive disease~~. It would lllOit aignllicantly affected Women. Feminist author Courier Journal; Kathleen
be a ptty If he late~ m to the coune of the year's Susan BrOwnmnter, authOr of Byerly, a Navy Ueutena!lt
,
"Ajjalnlt Our Will: Men, commander: and Contile overblown promotl0111l eventa.
Susie Sharp, Chief Jl!ltlce . Women ·and Rape," also necticut Gov. Ella Gra1110.
efforts foe vitamin E and
missed the OpporllDlity to of the Norlh Carolina made the lilt, aa did tenn11
Time ezplained it did 1191
foDow a pl'08J'am that will do &amp;lpreme Court, joined Mn.. star Billie Jean King and name a man of the year
Ford on the list. The Firlt Alison Cheek, whose or- · beclluae '1t was a year of
something foe him.
Lady reportedly campaigned dlnatlon as an Episcopal retrenchment and reap·

Warriors

Terps upset Florida

· · . ·. ··.

r------------,
l
Pro :

""'" '"""

A

Uke agood neighbor,.
State Farm is.there.
STATE FARM MUTUAL
AUlOMOBILE INSURANCE COMPANY
Home Off1ce. Bloom•ng to n. ltltno1s

L-----------------.r.;?••s

'

\

\

1

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;·

r::a~l

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•

All you got to do is ask

FOR
,.•

By Murray Oldennan
'mE TIPoFF:

11te NCAA Is sure to give serious thought.to revamping
the Bowl game selection protess. This year's rush to get tbe
slates fllled, wltbout conslderatlon for some deserving
schools, was scandalous.
Q. Afew years ago, tbe N~.l quarterback and his backup

man were both Injured, and a fuUback who hadn't played
quarterback since_high school took over. He had the plays
written_on b)s wrist bands. WID you please let me know the
team, quarterback and tbe man who filled In so beautifully?
- Cathy _Jones, Redding, C&amp;IH.
Tom Matte was the man who stepped into the breach, for
the Baltimore Colts in 1965, when both Joh!Uly Unitas and his
sub, Gary Cuozzo, were knocked out for the season. Tom
almost took the Colts to a Western division title, losing to the
Packers In sudden death overtime in a championship playoff.
Actually, Tom, who was nominally a halfback, had played
quarterback in his varsity career at Ohio State. For the
playoff game against the Packers, Coach Don Shula strapped
a plaf card to Matte's left wrist.
Q. I read your column and enjoy It very much and have a
few q'Ueatfons : IJ Nolan Ryan a ilnger beSides being a great
pitcher? U so, does be sing In night clubs? Has he written any
of tbe songs be sings?- LoriSchliUnger, EUzabeth, N.J .
You must be thinking of Joh!Uly Bench of the Reds, or
.quarterback Terry Bradshaw of · the Pittsburgh Steelers,
who've both used their tonsils professionally on western
COtlntry mll'!lc. Fireballer Ryan of the Angels is just a good
ole ranch boy who goes back to his spread in Texas between

Maryland (7.()) knocked off their record to 10.(), but
lly JACK SAUNDERS
UNC Charlotte 70-60, North dropped from eighth plaee in
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - ln- Carolina (6.()) beat South las~ week's ratings.
Y ORK (UPI I - T he
&lt;jiana, winner of its first eight .Florida 70-04 and UCLA (6-1) UnNEW
ited Press lntern aliona l
games,
again
was whipped Baylor 96-75 in Boa r d ot Coa ch es 1op 20
and Jim Hannon, Shelton, Nev.
ol lege bll sketball team s w ith
unanimously
rated
No
,
I
by regular games to remain in cfirst
,My feeling is (hat the Sugar Bowl should have decided
p lace vo tes and records
the Un ited Press In- the No. 2 through 4 positions, in parenthe5es.
Ule opponent for Bryant's Tide. I don 't think Bryant voiced
• Fourth Week :
ternational Board of Coaches r es pe c tively , whil e Team
open prejudice against-the Big Eigh t ~ he merely designated
· Points
400
in the fourth week of regular Marque~ (5-I), Notre Dame 1. Indiana (40 1 (8-0)
Pe!Ul State as his preferred foe . Maybe if you 'd lost as many
2. Maryland 17 -01
316
(,5-l
)
and
Alabama
(8-())
all
season ratings, with the top
bowl ga mes as Bear, you'd be looking for a softer touch, too.
3. North Carolina ( 6 -0 )
303
seven squads remaining un- idle, stayed in the fifth 4. UCL A 16- II
256
That still leaves the matchup a charade.
186
through seventh . spots , 5. M a r q uette (5 -1)
changed.
Q. Why are astro-turf type football ·surfaces made so
6. Noire Dame 15-11
136
The Hoosiers have been respectively.
7. A laba m a 16-01
100
bard that Injuries result from lolling on them ? Do players
The first change in the B. North Caro li na Stat e ·
picked first every week since
like the surfaces as they are now? - Jo Ferguson, Ventura,
17 -01 73
the preseason ranklngs and order came at No. 8, where 9. &lt;Tiel Nev ada -La s Vegas
Calif.
72
have occupied the top spot by North Carolina State jumped 9. &lt;T i el Loui svill e (7I 10-01
To players it often seems as if they're playing on cement
-l)
72
up
four
positions,
edging
the
I I. Sl. J ohn's IN .Y . I 19 -01 42
because almost litez:ally they are. Til insure a smooth surfac'\. acclamation since the first
12. WashinQton (8 ·0)
41
week of bailotmg following next two teams by one point._ 13.
all artificial carpets are put down on pa ved surfaces (usually
Tennessee ( 5 .11
39
The
Wolfpack,
previously
No.
th eir impressive opening
14 . Cin cinnati ( 8-11
34
asphalt) . There's a padding between the phony turf an~ the
Mi chigan (5 -l l
33
victory over defending NCAA 12, tripped up Western 15.
paved area, hut it doesn't provide a soft enough cushion. The
Rutgers (7-0
29
Kentucky 11().98 and Auburn 16.
champion UCLA .
17 . San Fran cisco (9-2)
17
result is the biggest gripe on the part of almost all players
18. Iowa (8-0)
7
This past week Bobby 79-74 and are now 7.().
about their playing conditions, and their association has been
19. !Ti el Minn esota C8-0l
6
Nevada-Las Vegas and 19. (Ti el Duq~ es ne (5-ll
Knight 's cagers competed in
6
battling to get extensive studies made about the resulting
the Holiday Festival here and Louisville followed right
injuries .
won, beating St. John's in the behind, tying for ninth to
round out the top 10. The
£inals 76-69.
The Hooisers (8-() ) were Cardinals, lOth laSt week,
given aU 40 first place votes knocked off Kentucky State
PARTING SHOT:
.
this week for a perfect 400 106-93 and Texas A&amp;M 102-U
The NFL Commissioner's office should reprimand tbe
in their own Holiday Classic
points.
New York Jets for holding Joe Namath out of action for most
Behind Indiana, the next to raise their record to 7-1;
of the first half against San Diego because he missed curfew.
six clubs held position in a the Rebels had .easy wins
Suspend him; If you will, for the complete game but don't
light week of action except over UC Santa Barbara, 101short~hange the fans by dangling Joe Willie In front of them
83, an~ Utah, 107-90, upping
for tournament contests.
part-time.
.,
'

.ntoSE
.COLD.

Mr. and Mrs. Forrest
Bachtel of Phoenix, . Ariz .
,arrived Wednesday for a
.holiday visit with their
,parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
,Scott and Mrs. Juanita
,Bachtel an~ other relatives.
,On Christmas night, Forrest,
,his mother, and Mr. and Mrs.
Chester Tannehill drove tO St.
Paris for Christmas with Mr.
·and Mrs. George Dallas, Bill;
,a Junior at Bowling Green
lJniverslty, Steve, a fresh,,nan at Wittenberg, Melissa
11nd Michael. Forrest will
return to Phoenix Satw-day;
,biB wife will remain here for a
!onger vlsil with her parents.
,. Mrs. Evelyn
Lewis
returned home Sunday after
i!pefiding Christmas in
Charleston, W. Va. with her
.son and daughter-in-law, Mr. ,
~d Mrs. Charles Lewis and
Jamily. Mr. and Mrs, Lewis
re~nUy ·returned from a
week in i!ong Kong, China
. )Vhere they atten~ed a con.
venUon. Mr. Lewis works
with tl)e W. Va. Medical
AssDi:iation and this was his "
second trip to China In conjunction with · his employment.
' Mi. and Mrs . Richard
J Owen, Dick and Juw, home
for the holidays from
Marietta Coll~ge, . spent
Christmas In Columbus
vlsiUng' Mr. and Mrs. Dan
Lane, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Owen, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Owen, and Miss Betty Owen.
Mrs, Eva Hartley waS the
Christmas guest of Mr. and
Mrs.
Owen
Cantrell,
Gallipolis.
' · Mr. and Mrs. Pat O'Brien
and infant daughter, JOy, of
Ada, are here visiting their
parents, Mr. and Mrs .
Charles Bradbw-y and Mr.
and Mrs. James O'Brien and
family. The family will
·return to Ada on Jan . 5. The
. J!radburys en tertalned with a
holiday dinner party and
-~thers attending were Mr ,
and Mrs. Asa Bradbury ,
Nicole and Jeffrey, ·Circlevllle; Mr. and Mrs . Carl
Wolfe, Wendy, Megan, and
Trlcia, Racine, and Mr, and
Mrs. C. P. Bradbury .
· Spending Christmas
weekend here with Mr. and
Mrs. Everett Bachner were
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Brown,
. Ohristopher and Stacey •"
Westerville, Mrs . Ida
Jlacbner, Middleport, and
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Thompson, son, Sam, N'ew
Haven, W. Va .
Mr. and Mrs , Joe Turner
have returned from Buc)'l:us
where they spent Christmas
week with their son and
~augbter-in-law, Mr . and
Mrs. Robert Turner. Their
gr anddaugbter, Sandra
Turner, and Joe Folley came
from Bucyrus for Mr. and
Mrs, Turner, and they were
returned home Sunday by
their son and daughter-In-law
inCl children, Sandra, Gary
!llld Travis who will remain
)!ere for a week visiting
relatives.
,
Holiday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Franklin Wilson, Sr , and
Sharon, Middleport were :
Mr. and 1\Jta. George Powell,
Bill Poweil, Parkersburg , W.
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. John
Ayers, Beckley, W.Va.; Mrs.
Gay Gaul, Mr. and Mrs. Mark
•'· Hames and Nicole, Chesler;
: Mr . and Mrs . Donald
Houdasbelt, Syracuse; Mr.
and Mrs. Franklin B. Wilson,
, Jr. and Brent, Racine ; Mrs.
·- Melvin VanMeter, Michael
and Buddy, Miss Bernice Ann
Durst, Mrs. Ida Burns, Blll
Downie, Dennis Wolfe and
Dena and Q-enson Pratt,
Middleport.

·WINTER
- .-

·

FEET

WOMEN'S

BOOTS
Fleece and Tricot lined for
maximum warmih . In reg.
and extra wide sizes.

str to S2()99
heritage house
91o 5 Mon.-Fri:

9totSot.

·b ra.
'

seasons.
Q. Is It poulble for you to get the honest opinion of a
varlely of NBA officials as to why Rick Barry Is "free" to be
muhandled bytbe opposition? Also, why islt possible for an
qgretslve team such aa Warriors to get only three free
throws Ia three quarters and yet the other team had 19ln the
lint half (tbla was the case In a game against the Jazz)?Steve McQinneU, Napa, CaiH.
The championship Warriors bave Intimated recently
they haven't been getting a fair shake from the officials.
Barry particularly has been moaning and groaning about the
rough treatment. My own feeling is !bat Burry doesn't fare
any worse than any other driving forward in the NBA and
that these things tend to even out over the course of a season.
Offlcials do make mistakes_,hut they're impartial about the
victims.
·
Q. What Ia your feeling on Bear Bryant, who supposedly
picked bla own bowl opponent and stated that he didn't want
to play 1 Blc Elgbt team? Alabama was beaten once badly
already by a Big Eight team earUer this year! - Ed Lowe

Hayes named top
coach by scribes
OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla.
(UP!) - Ohio State head
·football coach. Woody Hayes,
whose Buckeyes are only a
'Rose Bowl victory away from
the national championship,
bas been named Coach of the
Year by the Football Writers
Association of America.
Balloting by the approximately 600 mombers of
the association pr.oduced
strong supp()rt for a record
number of coaches, but
Hayes won out by an 110-00
margin Monday over first year Kansas coach Bud
Moore,.wbose Jaybawks bad .
been picked to finish near the
bottom of tbe Big Eight but
won seven games and pinned
the only lOBS of the past three
seasons on Oklahoma, 23-.'1.
Gil Krueger, who guided
Northern Michigan from ~10
in 1974 to the NCAA Division
II title in 1975, was third with

32.
Oklahoma's Barry Switzer,
runnerup to Johnny Majors of
Pittsburgh and Grant Teaff of
Baylor In 1973 and 1974,
received 13 votes this time
and was lith, trailing Miami
of Ohio 's Dick Crum (17) and
Arkansas - State's Blll
Davidson (15) .
. ,
A total of 50 coaches were
mentioned by voters.
Receiving 10 votes each were
Dave Maurer of Wittenberg,
Tom Osborne of Nebraska
and 'Ken Cooper of
Mississippi.
In Wi!Uling, Hayes became
the first three-time recipient
of the FWAA award. He won
the writers' first Coach of the
Year honor in 1957· and
repeated In 1968.
Two-time winners include
Darrell Royal of Texas, in
1961 and 1963, and John
McKay
of
Southern
~votes .
CAlifornis, In .1962 and 1972.
California's Mike White
The award was announced
bad 47, Arkansas ' Frank by Volney Meece sporis
Broyles 39, Navy's Geroge columnist for the Oklahoma
Welsh 37, Texas A&amp;M's City Times and secretary of
Emory Bellard 36 and the
Football
Writers
Arizona State's Frank Kush Association ,

Socl'af ~
r
CaIen da
.,

~tW:!~~~~~~
~'$.~,:,: :

•

TUESDAY
ANNUAL INSTALJ,ATION
of officers of Racine Masonic
Lodge 461 Tuesday 7:30 p.m.
Installing officers will be
right worshipful, Ben
Philson, worshipful brothers,
Thomas Edwards and
Maurice !..ott.
· PAST
MATRONS ,
Pomeroy Chapter, OES, 7:30
Tuesday a,t the home of Mrs.
Lucille Swackhammer,
Mason.
. 'lfEDNESDAY
DAN HAYMAN and the
Country Hymntimers will be
at the Eagle Ridge Church at
8 p.m. on New Year's Eve.
The public is invited,
WATCH MEETING, 7: 30
' New Year 's Eve at Ash Street
Free Will Baptist Church,
Middleport. Public invited.
Singers welcome . Several
preachers to speak'
WATCH NIGIIT Services
Wednesday at Pomeroy
Wesleyan Holiness Church
located on SR 143 at 7:30p.m.
The public Is invited.
MEIGS AREA Holiness
As8n., monthly meeUng, in
form of a watch night service
'

,, _ _ __ _ _ _ __

beginning 9:30 p.m. Wednesday at Pomeroy Church of
the Nazarene, with Rev. Cecil'
Wise speaking and VDi:al
~~~t~t local talent. Public
WATCH NIGHT service at
Guysville Community Church
Wednesday beginning at 8
p.m. with Jesse Flffe , Kentucky , speaking. Everyone
welcome.
SEVERAL · MINISTERS
and' singers will take part in a
watch meeting, Wednesday,
beginning at 7:30 p.m. at
Freewill Baptist Church, Ash
St ., Middleport. Open to

'Cats lose second straight tilt
Ohio College Basketball
Round- up
By United Press International
Four of Ohio 's major
college basketball teams
were involved in tournament
play around the country
Monday night and none of
them were able to come up
with a win.
Fourteenth-ranked Cincinnati, unbeaten going into
play at the Rainbow Classic
in H~ waii during. the
weekend, absorbeditssecond
straight loss of the season at
the bands of Holy Cross.
Mike Vicens sank two free
throws with I : II remaining
and grabbed an offensive
rebound with 19 seconds l~fl
to give the Crusaders a
thrilling 66-65 upset win over
the Bearcats In a consolation
game at Honolulu.

public.
: ANN UAL New Year's
dance and sing-a-long for
members, amdllary mem'bers and guests at Drew
Webster 39 , American
Legion, post home, 9 p.m.
Wednesday, with Armand
Turley at the organ.
WEDNESDAY NIGHT
~atch service, at Hiland
Chapel Church. Public Invited.
NEW YEAR watch service,
7p,m. at Silver Run Free Will
Baptist Church Wednesday;
preaching , singin g, public
invited.
REVIVAL , Rutland
. Community Church, Thurs·
day through Jan . II , 7:30
each evening. Rev. Cecil
Wise, evangelist, the Rev.
Amos Tillis, pastor. Special
music, public invited.
1' SQUARE
AND round
dance, Thursday, 9 p.m. to 1
a.m. at Tuppers Plains
Elementary School , sponsored by Ohio Valley Horse
Show Assn. Music by Pioneer
Boys at Marietta . Reservations not required, may be
made with Homer Cole, 6673405.
GOSPEL CONCERT, 7:30
p.m. Thursday at Washington
Grade School, Fourth Ave.,
Galllpolis, featuring the
Lefevres, Heavenly Highway
Trio, Gospel Messengers,
Shaffer
Family
and
Jubilaires, sponsored by
Southeastern Ohio Gospel
Music Assn. Open to public,
free will offering.
RACINE American Legion ,
Post 602 special meeting
Thursday at 8 p.m. to appoint
finance officer.

Cincinnati is 8-2 and Holy field goal and scored only one
Elsewhere in first round
Cross upped its slate to 6-3. free throw as 6-foot-1 Warrior tourney contests, Capital de,
. The teams were tied 31-31 guard Butch Lee tied up the 6- feated Wartburg 72-58 in the
at the half. The Crusaders 5 Goodyear with man-to-man Lutheran
Brotherhood
then successfully worked for coverage most of the night. Basketball Tournament at
the open shot against the
Archie Aldridge had 18 Minneapolis, Minn.; Wit taller Cincinnati squad.
points to lead Miami which is tenberg edged Oberlin 6!1-ro
The Bearcats threatened to now 3-4.
and Ashland beat Baldwinmake the game a runaway in
Marquette took the lead for Wallace 75-56 in the Ashland
the middle of the final half good with 6:45left in the first Holiday Tournament;
when they ran off 15 straight half when they ran off.eight
Denison stopped Milligan
points to lead ·55-49. But two straight points for a 26-19lead 82-70 and Wooster upended
lay-upi; by O!ris Potter and after being behind 19-18 Lock Haven 77-&amp;1 in the Mose
one by Marty Halsey before the splurge. Ellis had 6 Hole Wooster Classic ;
returned the lead to Holy of the 8 points to lead the Muskingum overwhelmed
Cross. it was SUI with 4:19 - charge.
Wilmington 78-.16 and ' State
remaining.
In an afternoon game at University of New York
Meanwhile at NewOrleans, Oklahoma aty, Carl Jones edged Urbana in the
Sophomore forward Keven and Terry Bailey combined Muskingum.Shrine Holiday
McDonald scored 32 points as for 43 points to lead North Tournament; Heidelberg got
Pennsylvania rallied in the Texas State to an 811-76 vic- · by Malone 61).63 and Findlay
second half to defeat Ohio tory over Bowling Green in stomped Franklin 8Uii ih the
State, 78-94, in the consoiation the consolation round of the Findlay Holiday Tourgame of the Sugar Bowl 40th annuCi All-College n~~fient ; Kenyon beat
basketball toilrnament.
Basketball Tournament.
~ Tholl\aS More 90-79 and
McDonald also led his team
Jones hit 11 of 20 from the Wright State squeezed by
on the boards with 18 field for 22 points and Bailey Ohio Northern 113-$ in the
rebounds.
canned nine of 10 from out- Colonial City Classic at Mt.
Craig Taylor was the Buck- · side and hit three of eight free Vernon; and finally Hiram
eyes' high scorer with 27 throws for his 21 points.
thumped Ohio Wesleyan 97-111
points. Ohio State took a 35-32
Bowling Green 's Tom and Mt. Union defeated Thiel
lead at the half,- but Peim Harris was high f(jf the 00:.74 in the Mount Union
steadily overcame the deficit Falcons with 22 and team- College Holiday Tournament.
and moved ahead in the mate Andree Richardson
second half.
added 15,
It was the seventh win in
Pennsylvania's record now
eight
starts for North Texas,
stands at 2-4, while Ohio State
its only loss coming to Utah
slipped to 4-4.
At Milwaukee, Earl Tatum State Sunday in the , first
and Bo Ellis scored 17 points round of the tournament.
The game remained fairly
apiece to lead the fifthranked Marquette Warriors close most of the way, but the
to _an easy 79-52 win over Texans were able to hold a 54Miami of Ohio in the first 49 margin on rebounds and
round of the Milwaukee preserved the victory, The
Mean Green led 42-36 at
Classic.
Miaini will me_et Stanford halftime.
tonlgh~ in the consolation .
game.
'
---------~
Mar~uette, 6-1, led at the
balf 31-28 and stretched its
lead to as many as 27 in the '
last minutes of the game.
Jerome Whitehead scored
15 points and Butch Lee 14 as
the Warriors top four scorers
dropped in Marquette's first
63 points. Chuck Goodyear,
Miami's leading scorer with
an 18.7 average, didn't get a

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FOR
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By Murray Oldennan
'mE TIPoFF:

11te NCAA Is sure to give serious thought.to revamping
the Bowl game selection protess. This year's rush to get tbe
slates fllled, wltbout conslderatlon for some deserving
schools, was scandalous.
Q. Afew years ago, tbe N~.l quarterback and his backup

man were both Injured, and a fuUback who hadn't played
quarterback since_high school took over. He had the plays
written_on b)s wrist bands. WID you please let me know the
team, quarterback and tbe man who filled In so beautifully?
- Cathy _Jones, Redding, C&amp;IH.
Tom Matte was the man who stepped into the breach, for
the Baltimore Colts in 1965, when both Joh!Uly Unitas and his
sub, Gary Cuozzo, were knocked out for the season. Tom
almost took the Colts to a Western division title, losing to the
Packers In sudden death overtime in a championship playoff.
Actually, Tom, who was nominally a halfback, had played
quarterback in his varsity career at Ohio State. For the
playoff game against the Packers, Coach Don Shula strapped
a plaf card to Matte's left wrist.
Q. I read your column and enjoy It very much and have a
few q'Ueatfons : IJ Nolan Ryan a ilnger beSides being a great
pitcher? U so, does be sing In night clubs? Has he written any
of tbe songs be sings?- LoriSchliUnger, EUzabeth, N.J .
You must be thinking of Joh!Uly Bench of the Reds, or
.quarterback Terry Bradshaw of · the Pittsburgh Steelers,
who've both used their tonsils professionally on western
COtlntry mll'!lc. Fireballer Ryan of the Angels is just a good
ole ranch boy who goes back to his spread in Texas between

Maryland (7.()) knocked off their record to 10.(), but
lly JACK SAUNDERS
UNC Charlotte 70-60, North dropped from eighth plaee in
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - ln- Carolina (6.()) beat South las~ week's ratings.
Y ORK (UPI I - T he
&lt;jiana, winner of its first eight .Florida 70-04 and UCLA (6-1) UnNEW
ited Press lntern aliona l
games,
again
was whipped Baylor 96-75 in Boa r d ot Coa ch es 1op 20
and Jim Hannon, Shelton, Nev.
ol lege bll sketball team s w ith
unanimously
rated
No
,
I
by regular games to remain in cfirst
,My feeling is (hat the Sugar Bowl should have decided
p lace vo tes and records
the Un ited Press In- the No. 2 through 4 positions, in parenthe5es.
Ule opponent for Bryant's Tide. I don 't think Bryant voiced
• Fourth Week :
ternational Board of Coaches r es pe c tively , whil e Team
open prejudice against-the Big Eigh t ~ he merely designated
· Points
400
in the fourth week of regular Marque~ (5-I), Notre Dame 1. Indiana (40 1 (8-0)
Pe!Ul State as his preferred foe . Maybe if you 'd lost as many
2. Maryland 17 -01
316
(,5-l
)
and
Alabama
(8-())
all
season ratings, with the top
bowl ga mes as Bear, you'd be looking for a softer touch, too.
3. North Carolina ( 6 -0 )
303
seven squads remaining un- idle, stayed in the fifth 4. UCL A 16- II
256
That still leaves the matchup a charade.
186
through seventh . spots , 5. M a r q uette (5 -1)
changed.
Q. Why are astro-turf type football ·surfaces made so
6. Noire Dame 15-11
136
The Hoosiers have been respectively.
7. A laba m a 16-01
100
bard that Injuries result from lolling on them ? Do players
The first change in the B. North Caro li na Stat e ·
picked first every week since
like the surfaces as they are now? - Jo Ferguson, Ventura,
17 -01 73
the preseason ranklngs and order came at No. 8, where 9. &lt;Tiel Nev ada -La s Vegas
Calif.
72
have occupied the top spot by North Carolina State jumped 9. &lt;T i el Loui svill e (7I 10-01
To players it often seems as if they're playing on cement
-l)
72
up
four
positions,
edging
the
I I. Sl. J ohn's IN .Y . I 19 -01 42
because almost litez:ally they are. Til insure a smooth surfac'\. acclamation since the first
12. WashinQton (8 ·0)
41
week of bailotmg following next two teams by one point._ 13.
all artificial carpets are put down on pa ved surfaces (usually
Tennessee ( 5 .11
39
The
Wolfpack,
previously
No.
th eir impressive opening
14 . Cin cinnati ( 8-11
34
asphalt) . There's a padding between the phony turf an~ the
Mi chigan (5 -l l
33
victory over defending NCAA 12, tripped up Western 15.
paved area, hut it doesn't provide a soft enough cushion. The
Rutgers (7-0
29
Kentucky 11().98 and Auburn 16.
champion UCLA .
17 . San Fran cisco (9-2)
17
result is the biggest gripe on the part of almost all players
18. Iowa (8-0)
7
This past week Bobby 79-74 and are now 7.().
about their playing conditions, and their association has been
19. !Ti el Minn esota C8-0l
6
Nevada-Las Vegas and 19. (Ti el Duq~ es ne (5-ll
Knight 's cagers competed in
6
battling to get extensive studies made about the resulting
the Holiday Festival here and Louisville followed right
injuries .
won, beating St. John's in the behind, tying for ninth to
round out the top 10. The
£inals 76-69.
The Hooisers (8-() ) were Cardinals, lOth laSt week,
given aU 40 first place votes knocked off Kentucky State
PARTING SHOT:
.
this week for a perfect 400 106-93 and Texas A&amp;M 102-U
The NFL Commissioner's office should reprimand tbe
in their own Holiday Classic
points.
New York Jets for holding Joe Namath out of action for most
Behind Indiana, the next to raise their record to 7-1;
of the first half against San Diego because he missed curfew.
six clubs held position in a the Rebels had .easy wins
Suspend him; If you will, for the complete game but don't
light week of action except over UC Santa Barbara, 101short~hange the fans by dangling Joe Willie In front of them
83, an~ Utah, 107-90, upping
for tournament contests.
part-time.
.,
'

.ntoSE
.COLD.

Mr. and Mrs. Forrest
Bachtel of Phoenix, . Ariz .
,arrived Wednesday for a
.holiday visit with their
,parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
,Scott and Mrs. Juanita
,Bachtel an~ other relatives.
,On Christmas night, Forrest,
,his mother, and Mr. and Mrs.
Chester Tannehill drove tO St.
Paris for Christmas with Mr.
·and Mrs. George Dallas, Bill;
,a Junior at Bowling Green
lJniverslty, Steve, a fresh,,nan at Wittenberg, Melissa
11nd Michael. Forrest will
return to Phoenix Satw-day;
,biB wife will remain here for a
!onger vlsil with her parents.
,. Mrs. Evelyn
Lewis
returned home Sunday after
i!pefiding Christmas in
Charleston, W. Va. with her
.son and daughter-in-law, Mr. ,
~d Mrs. Charles Lewis and
Jamily. Mr. and Mrs, Lewis
re~nUy ·returned from a
week in i!ong Kong, China
. )Vhere they atten~ed a con.
venUon. Mr. Lewis works
with tl)e W. Va. Medical
AssDi:iation and this was his "
second trip to China In conjunction with · his employment.
' Mi. and Mrs . Richard
J Owen, Dick and Juw, home
for the holidays from
Marietta Coll~ge, . spent
Christmas In Columbus
vlsiUng' Mr. and Mrs. Dan
Lane, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Owen, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Owen, and Miss Betty Owen.
Mrs, Eva Hartley waS the
Christmas guest of Mr. and
Mrs.
Owen
Cantrell,
Gallipolis.
' · Mr. and Mrs. Pat O'Brien
and infant daughter, JOy, of
Ada, are here visiting their
parents, Mr. and Mrs .
Charles Bradbw-y and Mr.
and Mrs. James O'Brien and
family. The family will
·return to Ada on Jan . 5. The
. J!radburys en tertalned with a
holiday dinner party and
-~thers attending were Mr ,
and Mrs. Asa Bradbury ,
Nicole and Jeffrey, ·Circlevllle; Mr. and Mrs . Carl
Wolfe, Wendy, Megan, and
Trlcia, Racine, and Mr, and
Mrs. C. P. Bradbury .
· Spending Christmas
weekend here with Mr. and
Mrs. Everett Bachner were
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Brown,
. Ohristopher and Stacey •"
Westerville, Mrs . Ida
Jlacbner, Middleport, and
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Thompson, son, Sam, N'ew
Haven, W. Va .
Mr. and Mrs , Joe Turner
have returned from Buc)'l:us
where they spent Christmas
week with their son and
~augbter-in-law, Mr . and
Mrs. Robert Turner. Their
gr anddaugbter, Sandra
Turner, and Joe Folley came
from Bucyrus for Mr. and
Mrs, Turner, and they were
returned home Sunday by
their son and daughter-In-law
inCl children, Sandra, Gary
!llld Travis who will remain
)!ere for a week visiting
relatives.
,
Holiday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Franklin Wilson, Sr , and
Sharon, Middleport were :
Mr. and 1\Jta. George Powell,
Bill Poweil, Parkersburg , W.
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. John
Ayers, Beckley, W.Va.; Mrs.
Gay Gaul, Mr. and Mrs. Mark
•'· Hames and Nicole, Chesler;
: Mr . and Mrs . Donald
Houdasbelt, Syracuse; Mr.
and Mrs. Franklin B. Wilson,
, Jr. and Brent, Racine ; Mrs.
·- Melvin VanMeter, Michael
and Buddy, Miss Bernice Ann
Durst, Mrs. Ida Burns, Blll
Downie, Dennis Wolfe and
Dena and Q-enson Pratt,
Middleport.

·WINTER
- .-

·

FEET

WOMEN'S

BOOTS
Fleece and Tricot lined for
maximum warmih . In reg.
and extra wide sizes.

str to S2()99
heritage house
91o 5 Mon.-Fri:

9totSot.

·b ra.
'

seasons.
Q. Is It poulble for you to get the honest opinion of a
varlely of NBA officials as to why Rick Barry Is "free" to be
muhandled bytbe opposition? Also, why islt possible for an
qgretslve team such aa Warriors to get only three free
throws Ia three quarters and yet the other team had 19ln the
lint half (tbla was the case In a game against the Jazz)?Steve McQinneU, Napa, CaiH.
The championship Warriors bave Intimated recently
they haven't been getting a fair shake from the officials.
Barry particularly has been moaning and groaning about the
rough treatment. My own feeling is !bat Burry doesn't fare
any worse than any other driving forward in the NBA and
that these things tend to even out over the course of a season.
Offlcials do make mistakes_,hut they're impartial about the
victims.
·
Q. What Ia your feeling on Bear Bryant, who supposedly
picked bla own bowl opponent and stated that he didn't want
to play 1 Blc Elgbt team? Alabama was beaten once badly
already by a Big Eight team earUer this year! - Ed Lowe

Hayes named top
coach by scribes
OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla.
(UP!) - Ohio State head
·football coach. Woody Hayes,
whose Buckeyes are only a
'Rose Bowl victory away from
the national championship,
bas been named Coach of the
Year by the Football Writers
Association of America.
Balloting by the approximately 600 mombers of
the association pr.oduced
strong supp()rt for a record
number of coaches, but
Hayes won out by an 110-00
margin Monday over first year Kansas coach Bud
Moore,.wbose Jaybawks bad .
been picked to finish near the
bottom of tbe Big Eight but
won seven games and pinned
the only lOBS of the past three
seasons on Oklahoma, 23-.'1.
Gil Krueger, who guided
Northern Michigan from ~10
in 1974 to the NCAA Division
II title in 1975, was third with

32.
Oklahoma's Barry Switzer,
runnerup to Johnny Majors of
Pittsburgh and Grant Teaff of
Baylor In 1973 and 1974,
received 13 votes this time
and was lith, trailing Miami
of Ohio 's Dick Crum (17) and
Arkansas - State's Blll
Davidson (15) .
. ,
A total of 50 coaches were
mentioned by voters.
Receiving 10 votes each were
Dave Maurer of Wittenberg,
Tom Osborne of Nebraska
and 'Ken Cooper of
Mississippi.
In Wi!Uling, Hayes became
the first three-time recipient
of the FWAA award. He won
the writers' first Coach of the
Year honor in 1957· and
repeated In 1968.
Two-time winners include
Darrell Royal of Texas, in
1961 and 1963, and John
McKay
of
Southern
~votes .
CAlifornis, In .1962 and 1972.
California's Mike White
The award was announced
bad 47, Arkansas ' Frank by Volney Meece sporis
Broyles 39, Navy's Geroge columnist for the Oklahoma
Welsh 37, Texas A&amp;M's City Times and secretary of
Emory Bellard 36 and the
Football
Writers
Arizona State's Frank Kush Association ,

Socl'af ~
r
CaIen da
.,

~tW:!~~~~~~
~'$.~,:,: :

•

TUESDAY
ANNUAL INSTALJ,ATION
of officers of Racine Masonic
Lodge 461 Tuesday 7:30 p.m.
Installing officers will be
right worshipful, Ben
Philson, worshipful brothers,
Thomas Edwards and
Maurice !..ott.
· PAST
MATRONS ,
Pomeroy Chapter, OES, 7:30
Tuesday a,t the home of Mrs.
Lucille Swackhammer,
Mason.
. 'lfEDNESDAY
DAN HAYMAN and the
Country Hymntimers will be
at the Eagle Ridge Church at
8 p.m. on New Year's Eve.
The public is invited,
WATCH MEETING, 7: 30
' New Year 's Eve at Ash Street
Free Will Baptist Church,
Middleport. Public invited.
Singers welcome . Several
preachers to speak'
WATCH NIGIIT Services
Wednesday at Pomeroy
Wesleyan Holiness Church
located on SR 143 at 7:30p.m.
The public Is invited.
MEIGS AREA Holiness
As8n., monthly meeUng, in
form of a watch night service
'

,, _ _ __ _ _ _ __

beginning 9:30 p.m. Wednesday at Pomeroy Church of
the Nazarene, with Rev. Cecil'
Wise speaking and VDi:al
~~~t~t local talent. Public
WATCH NIGHT service at
Guysville Community Church
Wednesday beginning at 8
p.m. with Jesse Flffe , Kentucky , speaking. Everyone
welcome.
SEVERAL · MINISTERS
and' singers will take part in a
watch meeting, Wednesday,
beginning at 7:30 p.m. at
Freewill Baptist Church, Ash
St ., Middleport. Open to

'Cats lose second straight tilt
Ohio College Basketball
Round- up
By United Press International
Four of Ohio 's major
college basketball teams
were involved in tournament
play around the country
Monday night and none of
them were able to come up
with a win.
Fourteenth-ranked Cincinnati, unbeaten going into
play at the Rainbow Classic
in H~ waii during. the
weekend, absorbeditssecond
straight loss of the season at
the bands of Holy Cross.
Mike Vicens sank two free
throws with I : II remaining
and grabbed an offensive
rebound with 19 seconds l~fl
to give the Crusaders a
thrilling 66-65 upset win over
the Bearcats In a consolation
game at Honolulu.

public.
: ANN UAL New Year's
dance and sing-a-long for
members, amdllary mem'bers and guests at Drew
Webster 39 , American
Legion, post home, 9 p.m.
Wednesday, with Armand
Turley at the organ.
WEDNESDAY NIGHT
~atch service, at Hiland
Chapel Church. Public Invited.
NEW YEAR watch service,
7p,m. at Silver Run Free Will
Baptist Church Wednesday;
preaching , singin g, public
invited.
REVIVAL , Rutland
. Community Church, Thurs·
day through Jan . II , 7:30
each evening. Rev. Cecil
Wise, evangelist, the Rev.
Amos Tillis, pastor. Special
music, public invited.
1' SQUARE
AND round
dance, Thursday, 9 p.m. to 1
a.m. at Tuppers Plains
Elementary School , sponsored by Ohio Valley Horse
Show Assn. Music by Pioneer
Boys at Marietta . Reservations not required, may be
made with Homer Cole, 6673405.
GOSPEL CONCERT, 7:30
p.m. Thursday at Washington
Grade School, Fourth Ave.,
Galllpolis, featuring the
Lefevres, Heavenly Highway
Trio, Gospel Messengers,
Shaffer
Family
and
Jubilaires, sponsored by
Southeastern Ohio Gospel
Music Assn. Open to public,
free will offering.
RACINE American Legion ,
Post 602 special meeting
Thursday at 8 p.m. to appoint
finance officer.

Cincinnati is 8-2 and Holy field goal and scored only one
Elsewhere in first round
Cross upped its slate to 6-3. free throw as 6-foot-1 Warrior tourney contests, Capital de,
. The teams were tied 31-31 guard Butch Lee tied up the 6- feated Wartburg 72-58 in the
at the half. The Crusaders 5 Goodyear with man-to-man Lutheran
Brotherhood
then successfully worked for coverage most of the night. Basketball Tournament at
the open shot against the
Archie Aldridge had 18 Minneapolis, Minn.; Wit taller Cincinnati squad.
points to lead Miami which is tenberg edged Oberlin 6!1-ro
The Bearcats threatened to now 3-4.
and Ashland beat Baldwinmake the game a runaway in
Marquette took the lead for Wallace 75-56 in the Ashland
the middle of the final half good with 6:45left in the first Holiday Tournament;
when they ran off 15 straight half when they ran off.eight
Denison stopped Milligan
points to lead ·55-49. But two straight points for a 26-19lead 82-70 and Wooster upended
lay-upi; by O!ris Potter and after being behind 19-18 Lock Haven 77-&amp;1 in the Mose
one by Marty Halsey before the splurge. Ellis had 6 Hole Wooster Classic ;
returned the lead to Holy of the 8 points to lead the Muskingum overwhelmed
Cross. it was SUI with 4:19 - charge.
Wilmington 78-.16 and ' State
remaining.
In an afternoon game at University of New York
Meanwhile at NewOrleans, Oklahoma aty, Carl Jones edged Urbana in the
Sophomore forward Keven and Terry Bailey combined Muskingum.Shrine Holiday
McDonald scored 32 points as for 43 points to lead North Tournament; Heidelberg got
Pennsylvania rallied in the Texas State to an 811-76 vic- · by Malone 61).63 and Findlay
second half to defeat Ohio tory over Bowling Green in stomped Franklin 8Uii ih the
State, 78-94, in the consoiation the consolation round of the Findlay Holiday Tourgame of the Sugar Bowl 40th annuCi All-College n~~fient ; Kenyon beat
basketball toilrnament.
Basketball Tournament.
~ Tholl\aS More 90-79 and
McDonald also led his team
Jones hit 11 of 20 from the Wright State squeezed by
on the boards with 18 field for 22 points and Bailey Ohio Northern 113-$ in the
rebounds.
canned nine of 10 from out- Colonial City Classic at Mt.
Craig Taylor was the Buck- · side and hit three of eight free Vernon; and finally Hiram
eyes' high scorer with 27 throws for his 21 points.
thumped Ohio Wesleyan 97-111
points. Ohio State took a 35-32
Bowling Green 's Tom and Mt. Union defeated Thiel
lead at the half,- but Peim Harris was high f(jf the 00:.74 in the Mount Union
steadily overcame the deficit Falcons with 22 and team- College Holiday Tournament.
and moved ahead in the mate Andree Richardson
second half.
added 15,
It was the seventh win in
Pennsylvania's record now
eight
starts for North Texas,
stands at 2-4, while Ohio State
its only loss coming to Utah
slipped to 4-4.
At Milwaukee, Earl Tatum State Sunday in the , first
and Bo Ellis scored 17 points round of the tournament.
The game remained fairly
apiece to lead the fifthranked Marquette Warriors close most of the way, but the
to _an easy 79-52 win over Texans were able to hold a 54Miami of Ohio in the first 49 margin on rebounds and
round of the Milwaukee preserved the victory, The
Mean Green led 42-36 at
Classic.
Miaini will me_et Stanford halftime.
tonlgh~ in the consolation .
game.
'
---------~
Mar~uette, 6-1, led at the
balf 31-28 and stretched its
lead to as many as 27 in the '
last minutes of the game.
Jerome Whitehead scored
15 points and Butch Lee 14 as
the Warriors top four scorers
dropped in Marquette's first
63 points. Chuck Goodyear,
Miami's leading scorer with
an 18.7 average, didn't get a

/

COBRA-21

.
9S
159
only

• Dyna Mike Gain Control
• Illuminated Meter
• Swrtchable Noise Limrter

$

COBRA-19
• Built-in Noise lim rting

• All 23 Channels
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only

$.1.2995

SAYRE' HARDWARE

1---- ----_.J

NEW
ENERGY SAVER

•

WILL BE

DATE CHANGED
Regular meeting of
Evangeline Chapter 172,
;O.E.S. will be held Jan. aat
~7 : 30 p.m. at the Middleport
~sonic Hall rather than
Jan. I due to the holiday.

CLOSED
F~R

SURGERY SCHEDULED
, Mrs . C. P. Ilradbury,
Middleport, was scheduled to
undergo surgery at the
Holzer Medical Center today.

INVENTORY

- ..-, Glide-out erltptr with •

OPEN

NEW YEAR'S DAy

= ==r:

12 NOON TO 8

fo1a l amily-sjze sup·
p ivot fuJttsand ... egolabl tt.:
w ith proper lemptJature lor • ;

· keeping !hem crisp

lk==== lreoh.

NO DEFROSTING DUPLEX

I

~M

lb.•1.09

SUPER MARKET • Open .Daily 9·to 10
, Sun. 10 to 10

• '

·.•

•'

.•. '
• II'

LIMITEQ TIME

.• '

lb.

TOILET
TISSUE
39~

2 pak

NESTLE'S

CRUNCH
BARS
59~

Gpak

NESTLE'S

CHOCOLATE

• .

Middleport, Ohio

••
••

I

r-

POLISH SAUSAGE.~.......... ~~:.. 89

SUPERIORS

BARS

6 pak

DAIRY FOODS

BROUGHTON'S
2% LOW FAT

15 oz.
can

MILK
. PLASTIC GALLON
BROUGHTON'S

HAMBURG SLICED

BUnERMILK

PICKLES
59

%gallon 69~

~

t
·&gt;

••
•

29

DUTCH LOAF.......-............... !~: ......1
·1·09
SAUSAGE·.....................................
I

HOMEMADE PURE PORK

HEAD
LETTUCE

FOR

25 lb. bag • 2 . 9 9

Morton's TV

THURSDAY ONLY

R. C.

DINNERS
.ea.

'

DOG FOOD

49~

COLA
16 oz.

.8

RICH'S

'WHIPPED
TOPPING

bots.
pak

16 oz. btls.

49~

8 PAK

_ _ON SALE ALL WEEI&lt;

DIET RITE
COLA
GRADE 'B'
.

EGGS
''
r

"

f

CASH SAVER

•

FROZEN FOODS

8Ith

~

ICEBERG

DURKEE

jar

•

SUPERIORS {STORE SLICED)

MACKEREL

quart

, _

BOLOGNA............................!~:.. 8 9 ~

GEISHA

"

·. .

SUPERIORS ALL MEAT

59~

bag

'

PICNIC HAMS

VOGUE

20 oz.

I

SUPERIORS FRESH

Values Like These
_Every Day In '76

CORN or PEAS

an1: •

·•

"g· ·~'=·,'\'_,

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
PHONE 992-3480
Corner Mill and Second Sis. We reserve the right to Umit quantities. MIDDLEPORT, 0.

w

SAVE '90

POMEROY

I

PORK ROAST

BN4QUET FROZEN

•-..t roorn

'
THURSDAY,
JANUARY 1

Reutlr-Bnlpnl--. .

SUPERIORS BONELESS

luMt... .CONTINUOUS SAVINGS
cfly lfur dlv. IVtom•ricllly

DECEMBER 31

INSUIANa SIIYICI

U. S. Government lnsoected

DESIGN

ALL DAY WEDNESDAY

COMPLm

OPEN THURS., JAN. 1

'

16 oz.
PAK

$}19

�-

6--: Tho Daily Sentine l. Middlepol'l -~omeroy, 0 , Tuesday ,!lee. :10, 1975

.

Jl'ayer.
Attendin g besides tho se
named were Brenda Pickens
and the chaperones. the Rev .
and Mrs. William Knittel, the
Hev. and Mrs. Roy Burnside,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Shaffer,
Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Sauters,
and Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Zirkle.
HALLS ENTERTAIN
MASON , W. Va . - Mr . and
Mrs. F.. 0. Rail entertained
with a buffet supper Sunday
evening at their home here.

Guests in cluded Mr. and Mrs.
John All enswor th, Mt .
Gilead: Mr s. Jim Ki ehl,
Saratoga Springs, N. Y.: Mr.
and Mrs. Chester Tannehill ,
Mrs. Juanita Bachtel, all of
Midd leport : Mr. and Mrs .
Fo rrest I Butc h) Bachtel,
Phoenix, Ariz.: Tom Rail ,
Sust Dantelsen, Strasburg ,
Va .

:;:;
}
The Sins of th e Molhers ...
Rap:
My dad is impossible allthe time, but twi ce as impossible
when we've.been at Grandma's house. Whenever we're there
it'sllke last week : After insulting )- yelling and cursing at my
brother, he and his mother ganged up on me. Then they started
on my mother (who never tal~s back) .
Dad told Grandma I'm a lazy bum (never mentioning that
I get A's at school , babysit a lot, and help Mom around the
house) . He said all I do Is play with my two cats, and Grandma
screamed that cats stink and how shameful l was to own them.
Next they raved about how our cousins always do all of
Grandma's chores when they visit, but "Dear Dad" forgo t that
I asked him if I could chop wood or scrape paint and he told me
!wasn't capable, he'djust have to do it over.
Finally I "e~caped " while he and his rna were still yelling

at my mom.

·•

Grandma loves to brag how she whacked her kids, and her
mother "gave it to her" even at 15. What she forgets is that at
age 15she ran away to America. Never saw her parents again.
Then she brags she worked In a textile mill at IS, and how soft
ldds are today..
When·we got home that night, I picked up my cat 1 hadn't
seen in twll. days, and Dad hollered, "Put that damn cat

down!" )

After he's visited his rna, he 's just like her, and that 's
worse than usual ! Yet he 's always complainipg about how his
mother bosses htm and carries on . Thank goodness my mother
is real nice.·Her parents dijln't yell at her or beat her up and
she turned outjustflne. She hates aU this too.
What ~n we do? - BEEN CRYING ALOT LATELY

BCA]..L:
Sometimes a mother is too nice for her own (and her ·
children's) good.
If your mother could show this growling bear that he's
exactly like HIS mother (who I'm sure led him a rough early
Ufe he stlll resents) , perhaps he'd change his tune. But so long
aa.your mother lets him browbeat you all , he may never see
the l'e18111blance.
'
·
'WhBt,she needs is a double dose of courage. Maybe some
adult-type mother and daughter talks might give II to her . DUE
~" 1
.,
.

+++

NOO'E FROM HELEN : Your letter shows again how easy
It Ia io ''follow your parents' footsteps" even though the foot
his g\ven.you a lot of very resented kicks.
M people grow older they often revert to the way they
- 'were ralaed, whether their early life was good or bad. Your
mother, for example, had quiet parents. Therefore she is sweet
and gentle. And your father has become a screamercomplainer, like his "Ma."
Afimily conference might make him aware of this. Let 's
hope your mother Isn 't too "gentle" tocall one!

++ +

Rap :
Mom is a "leftover" freak . Shelixes a big roast , and then
we hav~ casseroles or stews or some other dumb thing for the
next three days. She says they're "creations," but I say hash
by another name is TRASH. Please write sometlling about
recycled food. - AGAINST IT
•
A.l .:

l

Sorry, "recycled" roasts are my specialty. With meat
nearly $2 a potuld average , you'd better appreciate leftover
creations. They k~p red ink from the budget. - HELEN

+++

A.I.:
F,unny ... 1 used to gripe about leftovers too - until I got
married and started buying groceries. My advice : learn to
cook those casseroles. You 'll need 'em, later on. - SUE

LONG BOri'OM
The
Colden Rule Sunday School
:::?·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:;:.:~:~:~:i!~~&amp;~:~:::!:::::!:i:i~!!:i:~1~

::

Pomerov
Personal Notes

:-:·

J

1::

~

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i

class of the Long Bottom
churches me t at the
Methodist church basement
for its Christmas meeting.
Mary
Pierce,
vice
president, was in charge. The
seC"Ond chapter of St. Luke
was read by Leona Hensley'
and prayer was . by Rev.
Dennis Creeger. Readings
were by Leona Hensley,
Ernestine Hayman, Marjorie
Brewer and Ada Bissell .
Aller grace by Rev . Creeger
a turkey dinner was enjoyed
by Mr . and Mrs. John
Brewer, Mr . and Mrs. Elza
Larkins, Mr. and Mrs. ·s. A.
Rairden, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Bissell, Ella Hannwn, Leona
Hensley , Bess Larkins, Dora
Crispin , Eth el Larkins,
Ernestine Hayman, Bill
Hoselton, Mary Pierce, Rev .
Creeger, Timothy Curtis and
Mae McPeek.
Following a gift exchange
and review of the year's
ac tiviti es, Mr . Hoselton
played music on his harp and
the group joined in sin ging
hymns.

Try ttl/fUm on
"ned uede

Dixie Eblin and Jay Evans.
· Mrs. Robert Sloan and
Stat
S
children
Ttm and Angie sang
By Polly Cramer
"You're Something Special"
and Mrs. Sloan was joined by
POLLY'S PROBLEM
in some new fabrics . Your
Connie Radford to sing "Star
DEAR POLLY - I ac· comment
was
the
of the East."
cidenl&gt;llly got butter on a manufactUrers reported they
In song and pantomime -the
genuine leather suede hand- had not been able to correct
play, "Christmas - Jesus'.
bag . I have tried using a this to date. I recently bought
Birthday" was presented
degreaser on it, but it did not some 6~0 pet. polyester
with Angie Sloan and Tim
work. How can I remove this cotton to make a blouse.
Jeffers as Mary and Joseph
stain ? - DOTTIE.
While sewing on it, I noticed
in the nativity scene ; Jay
DEAR DOTI!E - The the unpleasant odor, bJJt since
Humphreys and Neal Rich·
longer a stain Is on anything the windows were open I first
mond as Joseph arld Jesus in
the harder it Is to remove. thought it was from the
thecarpentershop scene, ilnd
Grease spots on suede can outside . Later I fo und it
Lisa Darst, Deeanna Hepoften be removed with a impossible to wear the blouse
derson, Marsha King, Tamml
mi.ture of fine sawdust, a because of the bad odor. So, I
Eblin and Michl King in thC,
few drops of water and a dry sprayed it well with . that
temple scene.
~
cleaning solvent. Rub the room spray used . for
Singing in the choir wer-~
mixture on the spot and brush eliminating cooking odors
Lisa and Scott Pullins, Sallr.- •
off. Talcum powder wlll and then hung it outside in a
Radford, April Clark, Miclil: .'
sometimes remove !Uch strohg wind for several
King , Tim Sloan, Rhonda and"~
stains wlien they are fresh. hours. I repeated this and the
Sue Zirkle, Tracey Jeffers;:,.
Brush off with a suede brushc odor was gone. I can now.
Tim and Dixie Eblin, Chrilltl ! ·~
- POLLY.
wear my blouse. - MAUDE.
and Jay Evans, Tamml an¢'· :
DEAR POLLY - I am
Terry Atkins and Linda Part· .:
DEAR POLLY - My Pet retir~d from the army and
low. Jim Jeffers was the '
Peeve is with the makers of have removed many stickers
reader, and also lighted the
electric stove burner bibs. from chrome plated car
candles preceding the
They only put two large ones bumpers without the slightest
program.
,
with four small ones in a damage. I use the water
The Junior girls' skit, ''The
package. I use more larger soluble type of paint stripper,
Night Before Christmas,"
than smaller ones, so I build carefully following the
was presented with Judy
up quite a supply of small directions on the can and find
Radford as narrator, Pam
bibs. - VIRGINIA.
this an effortless job. This
Evans as the mother, Sue
DEAR POLLY ~ In your will not harm the bumper but
Zirkle, the father , Linda
colwnn I read a reader 's
Partlow and Tammi Atkins,
ROCK SPRINGS - Of. complaint about the bad odor BE SURE not to let any get on
any
painted
surface
of
the
the
children, Olristi Evans,
ficers for the. next two years
car.
PAUL
J.
the
mouse, and Tracey
were elected when the Big
DEAR POLLY - One night
Jeffers,
Mrs. Santa Claus.
Bend C. B. Club met bee. 27
my little girl fell asleep with
Santa visited at the conwith 21 members present.
'(l
clusion
· of the program to
gwn
in
her
mouth
and
what
a
Elected were Guy Hysell, ·
YULE VISITORS
mess in 'tbe moriling. A.
distribute treats to the
president; Clarence Jor_dan, SOn
11
Christmas Eve guests of children.
big glob of it was stuck to- her
v1ce prestdent ; Cmdy Ae1ker,
'J
Mrs
. Margaret Parsons,
eyebrow as well as being
secretary ;
Etta Will,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry E.
Rutland, were Mrs. Robert - - - - - - - - - - - ,
treasurer; Bi,ll Schultz , Clark entertained Sunday mixed in with hPr beautiful Btu1ce, Gallipolis, and her
Ronnie Robin son, Jim with a party in celebration of long hair. I did not have the son, Dr. William Bunce, a
Warner and \Gary I Hysell to the , birthday of their son, heart to cut the gwn out of professor at the University of
her waist long hair. I needed
the board of trustees.
Terry Ray Clark.
something
safe to clean the Cincinnati.
The meeting was opened by
A Smoky Bear theme was
president Guy Hysell. The carried out in the decorations · gwn from around her eye, so
pledge of allegiance was with cake, ice cream and I tried my oil base eye
MATRONS TO MEET
given and Etta Will led punch being served. Gifts makeup remover. It really
MASON .:.. Past Matrons of ·
members in prayer.
were presented. to . him . ~or ked, and painlessly. Then Pomeroy Chapter will meet
The club donated $2&amp; to the Guests were Mr. and Mrs. a generous application of this this evening at 7:30 p.m. at
senior citizens and $25 to a Kenneth ~ickles, B~cky, was put on her hair with a the home of Lucille
member who· has been ill .
Teresa, and Connie, Athens, cotton ball and the gwn Swackhamer here.
Mr . and Mrs. Harold Hanson, combed right out. -JILL.
Miss Nancy Large, Mrs .
.•
Etoilla CaSBell; Mrs. Evelyn
Silencer and Ricky Clark.

Mr . · and Mrs. Willia m
Matla ck returned Monday
from St. Paris where they
spent Christmas visiting Mr.
and Mrs. George Da llas and
children, Bill , Steve, Melissa
and Michael.
Christmas Eve guests of
Mr. and Mrs. James Walker,
Route 3, Pomeroy, were Mrs.
Myrtle Long, Miss Dorothy
Long, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Walker, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Sloan , Tim; Angie and 'Chri s.
Mrs . Way ne Sloan enterl&gt;lined Christmas Day for
Steve Jeffers, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth
Grover, Joy and
.
1
Jen nifer, Mr . and Mrs .
Robert Sloan, Tim, Angie and
Chris.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hammer, Columbus, were
weekend visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Hoeflich and Jayne.
Meg Lochary has arrived
from Chicago, !II. for a
holid ay vi sit ~ith heJ&gt;.
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Leo Story and Mr. and Mrs.
Patrick Lochary.
Christmas ,guests of Mrs.
W. A. Morgan were Mr. and·
Mrs. Roger Morgan, Mid·
dleport ; Mr. and Mrs. R. L.
Gotthard t and son, Bruce,
Colum bus, Mr . and Mrs .
Keit~ Morgan, Middleburg
Heights, and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Moore, Pataskala.
Mr . and Mrs. Chester
Knight returned Monday
from visits with their sons.
They spent Christmas with
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Knight
and son, Stevie, Caledonia,
and then on Friday to Win- .
le rsville to visit Mr. and Mrs.
Dick Knight .
Visiting Mr . and Mrs.
Dewey Hudson and Charles of
Minersville on Chri s tm as
Day were Mr.' and Mrs.
.Francis Hudson and family,
Pomeroy; Denver Hudson
and Charlotte Jones, Akron;
Margaret and Bud Williams,
East Liverpool ; Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth E blin and family,
f!utland ; John Ord, Akron ;
ONE- CALL CLOSER
"'
Mr . and Mrs. Bernatd
EXOE RIENCED ONLY
Hudson and family , West
MINIMUM GUARAN ·
TEED WEEKLY DRAW
Coiwnb us; Mr. and Mrs.
••
AGAINST COMMIS'SIONS.
Roger Hysell and family, Mr. Plans are being made for
Nationillly
ildvertisecl
company
looking
for
LAFF
.
ADAY
and Mrs. Guy Bush, Mr. and · the 52nd annual meeting of
..,
spec1attv sale sman such as
District
25,
Order
of
the
Mrs. Junior Autherson and
home
improvements ,
mutual
funds ,
l'and ,
Mr. and Mrs. Ge orge Hudson Eastern Star to be. held on
franchlset .
vending ,
VVednesday,
Jan
.
21
at
the
and family, Pomeroy. Other
freeze r' plan , ! ducation ,
Middleport
Masonic
.Temple.
paint franchises , etc.
holiday guests were Mr. and
Our top produ cers earn
172
Evangeline
Chapter
Mrs. ·Lewis Hudson, Miners$2S,OOO lo llO,OOO com will host the district meeting
missions per year . Must be
ville.
able to travel exteuivetv
which
will
open
with
and have a good car . Must
Mrs. Kenne th Wilt and son,
drive to Ch icago fo r one
Kenn y, Minersville, and registration at 3 p.m. The
week se mina r In ho"'e
'
business
meeting
will
begin
office and one week In the
daughter , Mrs. Linda Hubld training. Call Mr.
bard and daughter, Donna, at 4 p.m. with dinner at 5:30
,,
" fie
Willson,
toll lree for ad· i
Syracuse , visite d the and the evening session at 7 " I was merely lrying to be a ditional Information and
personal interview ar (100)
weekend before Christmas in p.m. The dinnl!r will be $3 and li ttl e creat1ve with hamburger. 621
-1016 , on Monday , be·
reservations
are
to
be
mailed
Charl
ey!''
tween 9 a . m . and S p.m .
Sycamore with Mr. and Mrs.
Illinois . resident s call
Ernie Burke and son, Chris, no later than Jan . 12 lo Mrs.
collect : (312) 784-17U .
Robert
King,
Rt.
I,
Mid·
and Mr1 and Mrs. Rick Wilt
•
dnd daughter Ali cia. On dleport. Ove ~ nig~t ac·
Christmas Day Mr. and Mrs . commodations can be
MASON·FURNITURE
Kenneth Wilt and son visited arranged with Mrs. Naomi
.,
Mr. and Mrs. James Pierce King, RL I, Middl eport.
and family, Route I, Mid- Instruction will be by the 1976
STORE HOURS
dleport; Mr. and Mrs. Don grand officers.
I
·Hubbard and daughter,
Syracuse, and Mr. and Mrs.
Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat.-8:30ti15:00
Larry Will and family ,
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON
Rodney .
RECIPES WANTED
Guests of Mr. and Mrs.
District 25, Order of the
Mark Tannehill, Mulberry Eastern Star, is requesting
Ave., Pomeroy, (or Christ- members of Meigs CoWl ty
mas dinner were his brother Chapters to submit recipes
and wife, Mr. and Mrs. John for a recipe file box to be
Tannehill, and his sister, compiled and sold. Recipes
Mrs. Janice Peterson, her are to be sent to Mrs. Bernice
Herman Grate Mason, W.Va.
773-5592
husba nd, Carl, and their Hoffman , Rt. 1, Rutland,
daughter, Crystal.
45775 immediately.

Officers
elected

Plans are
underway

2PORK lOINS

\~~

CENTER CUT

PORK
·LOINS

PORK
CHOPS
s 39

lb.

lb.

PORK

RIBS

s

.19

lb.

U. S. D.A. CHOICE

FAMILY PACK
FRESH LEAN

CHUCK

GROUND
BEEF lb. '
PLANTERS

ROAST

1% LB.
PKG.

COCKTAIL
PEANUTS
1!not

DECEMBER 31

OPEN
THURSDAY, JANUARY 1

..........

$ 19-

79 .,~t

-·

44$4 UV¥LV41U U 4\U.

DESSERT

NEW

.

LB.

I

loe

I .

COOL WHif!_!OPPIN~ -- 9_~- sge
CORONEt

d

u u u "' ¥44$

STUDIO

~~:~s3 49c
1

99$

...,...,..

~,··----

,·~-

46 OZ. CAN

••

.

Open
9 til7

•

Sun. 10 to 5
Prices Effective
•

Thursday thru Suncflr
We ReHI've Right to

LlmU

.JUMI)

$4$

I
'·

COIJPflN

'

MAXWELL HOUSE

Reg.

lb. can

With Coupon

Twin Cities Gateway
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PAPER

fROZEN fOODS

JENO'S PIZZA

2/89~

89~

2

. ....

POST GRAPENUT

NO. 105
12 qz.

39~

With
Coupon
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box

..

l [JlJPllN

I
~

GLAD WRAP
· NO. 105
100 ft.
roll

29~
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GLAD FOOD

STORAGE MGS
NO. 105
:is cnt.

39~

DOVE BEAUTY BAR_ ].
NO. 115
While or Pink
Bath Size

2/59~&lt;
With Coupon

pkg.

j

.....__,.~

~VE FOR Dl;;lj
COUPON

'

•

0

•

FABRIC SOffiNER

• • • •

j .

'

.

COUPON

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TIDE DETERGENT .
. ( 10c off)

POTATO CHIPS
4lh oz.
tan

39~
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49

oz.

box

99~

.

NO. 705

.·

oz.

32

.

. . . . ................ ... .

• • ;1

. . . ...

PRINGLES

. 6.9~ .
With Coupon . ·

NO. 135 .
33 oz.
bottle

bottle

With Coupon - ~

~ateway

o

0

. . . . . ..
o

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o

0

0

I

0

0

COUPON

0

0

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IMPERIAL
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49

4

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••
'

.

••

..li

••

.••

WU&lt;tnlllv

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.. .·

With Coupon
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:]

89~

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Twin Cities Gateway
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Twin Cities Gateway
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With Coupon

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OR
PEPPERONI

FINAL TOUCH

couPO N

CllUPUN

13 oz.

1!11!' PON

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QtEESE, SAUSAGE

,.

.... .. ..
I '"""""'-

COUPON

~-

FLAKES

$139

NO. 105
Elec. Perk. Drip,

QJ,
JAR

I

BROUGHTON
QT.
SHERBET ALL FLAVORS ••

KRAUT

ORIN~ '·.

COFFEE

¥4 bi4

CABBAGE
2LL 29~
VLASIC

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·BROUGHTON
soz. crNl·.
FRENCH ONION DIP.~.:~·

/$100

...

~

•

(NEW FANGLED POTATO CHIPS)

BAG

8 CNT• . ')
PKG. -~

46 oz.
CAN

MIX or
MATCH

PRINGLES TRIPLE PAK
POTATOES

NEW CROP
SANDWICH
BUNS

HI·C ORANGE OR
GRAPE

NEW YEAR'S DAY
12 NOON TO 8. PM

ctwp u u

MAINE

-COTTAGE CHEESE ••~~ ••

GATEWAY

JUICE

FOR INVENTORY

24 oz.

:#:G¥2 ~· • . , . ,

TOMATO

ALL DAY WEDNESDAY

MASON FURNITURE

LB.

10 LB. BAG

DEL MONTE

CLOSED

9 BROUGHTON

IDAHO
·POTATOES

PlANTERS

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

BIRDS EY.E

I

U. S. N0.1

WILL BE

:I

COCA-COLA

TROPICANA
64 oz.
ORANGE JUICE •••~f!l!..

1!not ·,$109

'

THIS 'WEEK'S SPECIALS

79~

MIXED
NUTS

..J

CABBAGE

'
----

COUNTRY
STYLE

QUARTER

$ .19

....

JENO'S FROZEN PIZZA .
WITH CHEESE 13 oz.
---

QUANTITIES RIGHTS RESERVED

~

10 LB.
LB.

.

',-------·

BOSTON BUTT STYLE

SLICED

FROM TWIN. CITIES
. GATEWAY SUPERMARKET

's birthcJa

rt/BIH/1-H/Hl
1

The traditional carols along
with recitations and skits
were includect in the annual
Chrisimas Eve program at
the Rock Springs United
Methodist Olurch.
The nursery class sang
"Away in a Manger," and
"Jingle Bells" and then gave
the recitations, "Greetings"
by
Tamm.i
Eblin;
"Welcome" by Angie Sloan;
"For Jesus" by Tim Jeffers;
"Full of Joy" by Jay
Humphreys; ''Christmas
Wishes" by Deeanna Hen·
derson ; "A Tiny Baby," 'by
Neal Richmond; "My Little
Prayer" by Lisa DarSt; ''The
Whole World" by Marsha
King; "Merry Christmas" by
Tracy Eblin and "A Kiss" by
Tara Humphreys . Brooke
Radford joined the group in
singing.
Recitations by the primary
department children included
"A Christmas Hymn" by Tim
Sloari; "Jesus Loves Them
All" by Rhonda llrkle; "A
Prayer for our Son" by April
· Clark; "AThought" by Michl
King; "Welcome" 'by Usa
Pullins; "Our Christmas
Prayer" by Sally Radford ;
"The Happiest Birthday'' by
Scott Pullins; "Merry Christmas Day" by Kim Eblin; "A
Special Night" by Lisa Clark,
and a duet, "Christmas" by

R rtry honors

liMITED RJDD BUDfi(TS

PORK
ROAST

.

Traditional program
Polly's
.. at Rock. S·n
.
· Pointers
· ·
gzven
r nngs

Youth entertained Class has yule meet
The Youth Deparbnent of
the United Pent ecos tal
OnJrch of Middleport was
entertained to a Chri stBanquet at the Holiday Inn in
Gallipolis recently .
The Otristmas dlnner was
served in the private dining
room , and was followed by an
awards program . RI'Ceiving
achievement awards earned
during the past year were
Oleri Sauters, Joy Sauters.
Tim Sauters, Mark Sauters,
Trent Knitt el, Tamm y
Knittel, Danny Richard s,
Stephen Richard s, Kathy
Pickens, Paul Jones and Mrs.
Robert Shaffer . Mike Zirkle,
youth dlrector, made the
presentations.
The Rev . Roy Burnside ,
pastor of the Glouster United
Pentecostal Church gave ·a
challenge to the youth and
others present . The meeting
was opened and closed with

'

•'

�-

6--: Tho Daily Sentine l. Middlepol'l -~omeroy, 0 , Tuesday ,!lee. :10, 1975

.

Jl'ayer.
Attendin g besides tho se
named were Brenda Pickens
and the chaperones. the Rev .
and Mrs. William Knittel, the
Hev. and Mrs. Roy Burnside,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Shaffer,
Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Sauters,
and Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Zirkle.
HALLS ENTERTAIN
MASON , W. Va . - Mr . and
Mrs. F.. 0. Rail entertained
with a buffet supper Sunday
evening at their home here.

Guests in cluded Mr. and Mrs.
John All enswor th, Mt .
Gilead: Mr s. Jim Ki ehl,
Saratoga Springs, N. Y.: Mr.
and Mrs. Chester Tannehill ,
Mrs. Juanita Bachtel, all of
Midd leport : Mr. and Mrs .
Fo rrest I Butc h) Bachtel,
Phoenix, Ariz.: Tom Rail ,
Sust Dantelsen, Strasburg ,
Va .

:;:;
}
The Sins of th e Molhers ...
Rap:
My dad is impossible allthe time, but twi ce as impossible
when we've.been at Grandma's house. Whenever we're there
it'sllke last week : After insulting )- yelling and cursing at my
brother, he and his mother ganged up on me. Then they started
on my mother (who never tal~s back) .
Dad told Grandma I'm a lazy bum (never mentioning that
I get A's at school , babysit a lot, and help Mom around the
house) . He said all I do Is play with my two cats, and Grandma
screamed that cats stink and how shameful l was to own them.
Next they raved about how our cousins always do all of
Grandma's chores when they visit, but "Dear Dad" forgo t that
I asked him if I could chop wood or scrape paint and he told me
!wasn't capable, he'djust have to do it over.
Finally I "e~caped " while he and his rna were still yelling

at my mom.

·•

Grandma loves to brag how she whacked her kids, and her
mother "gave it to her" even at 15. What she forgets is that at
age 15she ran away to America. Never saw her parents again.
Then she brags she worked In a textile mill at IS, and how soft
ldds are today..
When·we got home that night, I picked up my cat 1 hadn't
seen in twll. days, and Dad hollered, "Put that damn cat

down!" )

After he's visited his rna, he 's just like her, and that 's
worse than usual ! Yet he 's always complainipg about how his
mother bosses htm and carries on . Thank goodness my mother
is real nice.·Her parents dijln't yell at her or beat her up and
she turned outjustflne. She hates aU this too.
What ~n we do? - BEEN CRYING ALOT LATELY

BCA]..L:
Sometimes a mother is too nice for her own (and her ·
children's) good.
If your mother could show this growling bear that he's
exactly like HIS mother (who I'm sure led him a rough early
Ufe he stlll resents) , perhaps he'd change his tune. But so long
aa.your mother lets him browbeat you all , he may never see
the l'e18111blance.
'
·
'WhBt,she needs is a double dose of courage. Maybe some
adult-type mother and daughter talks might give II to her . DUE
~" 1
.,
.

+++

NOO'E FROM HELEN : Your letter shows again how easy
It Ia io ''follow your parents' footsteps" even though the foot
his g\ven.you a lot of very resented kicks.
M people grow older they often revert to the way they
- 'were ralaed, whether their early life was good or bad. Your
mother, for example, had quiet parents. Therefore she is sweet
and gentle. And your father has become a screamercomplainer, like his "Ma."
Afimily conference might make him aware of this. Let 's
hope your mother Isn 't too "gentle" tocall one!

++ +

Rap :
Mom is a "leftover" freak . Shelixes a big roast , and then
we hav~ casseroles or stews or some other dumb thing for the
next three days. She says they're "creations," but I say hash
by another name is TRASH. Please write sometlling about
recycled food. - AGAINST IT
•
A.l .:

l

Sorry, "recycled" roasts are my specialty. With meat
nearly $2 a potuld average , you'd better appreciate leftover
creations. They k~p red ink from the budget. - HELEN

+++

A.I.:
F,unny ... 1 used to gripe about leftovers too - until I got
married and started buying groceries. My advice : learn to
cook those casseroles. You 'll need 'em, later on. - SUE

LONG BOri'OM
The
Colden Rule Sunday School
:::?·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:;:.:~:~:~:i!~~&amp;~:~:::!:::::!:i:i~!!:i:~1~

::

Pomerov
Personal Notes

:-:·

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class of the Long Bottom
churches me t at the
Methodist church basement
for its Christmas meeting.
Mary
Pierce,
vice
president, was in charge. The
seC"Ond chapter of St. Luke
was read by Leona Hensley'
and prayer was . by Rev.
Dennis Creeger. Readings
were by Leona Hensley,
Ernestine Hayman, Marjorie
Brewer and Ada Bissell .
Aller grace by Rev . Creeger
a turkey dinner was enjoyed
by Mr . and Mrs. John
Brewer, Mr . and Mrs. Elza
Larkins, Mr. and Mrs. ·s. A.
Rairden, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Bissell, Ella Hannwn, Leona
Hensley , Bess Larkins, Dora
Crispin , Eth el Larkins,
Ernestine Hayman, Bill
Hoselton, Mary Pierce, Rev .
Creeger, Timothy Curtis and
Mae McPeek.
Following a gift exchange
and review of the year's
ac tiviti es, Mr . Hoselton
played music on his harp and
the group joined in sin ging
hymns.

Try ttl/fUm on
"ned uede

Dixie Eblin and Jay Evans.
· Mrs. Robert Sloan and
Stat
S
children
Ttm and Angie sang
By Polly Cramer
"You're Something Special"
and Mrs. Sloan was joined by
POLLY'S PROBLEM
in some new fabrics . Your
Connie Radford to sing "Star
DEAR POLLY - I ac· comment
was
the
of the East."
cidenl&gt;llly got butter on a manufactUrers reported they
In song and pantomime -the
genuine leather suede hand- had not been able to correct
play, "Christmas - Jesus'.
bag . I have tried using a this to date. I recently bought
Birthday" was presented
degreaser on it, but it did not some 6~0 pet. polyester
with Angie Sloan and Tim
work. How can I remove this cotton to make a blouse.
Jeffers as Mary and Joseph
stain ? - DOTTIE.
While sewing on it, I noticed
in the nativity scene ; Jay
DEAR DOTI!E - The the unpleasant odor, bJJt since
Humphreys and Neal Rich·
longer a stain Is on anything the windows were open I first
mond as Joseph arld Jesus in
the harder it Is to remove. thought it was from the
thecarpentershop scene, ilnd
Grease spots on suede can outside . Later I fo und it
Lisa Darst, Deeanna Hepoften be removed with a impossible to wear the blouse
derson, Marsha King, Tamml
mi.ture of fine sawdust, a because of the bad odor. So, I
Eblin and Michl King in thC,
few drops of water and a dry sprayed it well with . that
temple scene.
~
cleaning solvent. Rub the room spray used . for
Singing in the choir wer-~
mixture on the spot and brush eliminating cooking odors
Lisa and Scott Pullins, Sallr.- •
off. Talcum powder wlll and then hung it outside in a
Radford, April Clark, Miclil: .'
sometimes remove !Uch strohg wind for several
King , Tim Sloan, Rhonda and"~
stains wlien they are fresh. hours. I repeated this and the
Sue Zirkle, Tracey Jeffers;:,.
Brush off with a suede brushc odor was gone. I can now.
Tim and Dixie Eblin, Chrilltl ! ·~
- POLLY.
wear my blouse. - MAUDE.
and Jay Evans, Tamml an¢'· :
DEAR POLLY - I am
Terry Atkins and Linda Part· .:
DEAR POLLY - My Pet retir~d from the army and
low. Jim Jeffers was the '
Peeve is with the makers of have removed many stickers
reader, and also lighted the
electric stove burner bibs. from chrome plated car
candles preceding the
They only put two large ones bumpers without the slightest
program.
,
with four small ones in a damage. I use the water
The Junior girls' skit, ''The
package. I use more larger soluble type of paint stripper,
Night Before Christmas,"
than smaller ones, so I build carefully following the
was presented with Judy
up quite a supply of small directions on the can and find
Radford as narrator, Pam
bibs. - VIRGINIA.
this an effortless job. This
Evans as the mother, Sue
DEAR POLLY ~ In your will not harm the bumper but
Zirkle, the father , Linda
colwnn I read a reader 's
Partlow and Tammi Atkins,
ROCK SPRINGS - Of. complaint about the bad odor BE SURE not to let any get on
any
painted
surface
of
the
the
children, Olristi Evans,
ficers for the. next two years
car.
PAUL
J.
the
mouse, and Tracey
were elected when the Big
DEAR POLLY - One night
Jeffers,
Mrs. Santa Claus.
Bend C. B. Club met bee. 27
my little girl fell asleep with
Santa visited at the conwith 21 members present.
'(l
clusion
· of the program to
gwn
in
her
mouth
and
what
a
Elected were Guy Hysell, ·
YULE VISITORS
mess in 'tbe moriling. A.
distribute treats to the
president; Clarence Jor_dan, SOn
11
Christmas Eve guests of children.
big glob of it was stuck to- her
v1ce prestdent ; Cmdy Ae1ker,
'J
Mrs
. Margaret Parsons,
eyebrow as well as being
secretary ;
Etta Will,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry E.
Rutland, were Mrs. Robert - - - - - - - - - - - ,
treasurer; Bi,ll Schultz , Clark entertained Sunday mixed in with hPr beautiful Btu1ce, Gallipolis, and her
Ronnie Robin son, Jim with a party in celebration of long hair. I did not have the son, Dr. William Bunce, a
Warner and \Gary I Hysell to the , birthday of their son, heart to cut the gwn out of professor at the University of
her waist long hair. I needed
the board of trustees.
Terry Ray Clark.
something
safe to clean the Cincinnati.
The meeting was opened by
A Smoky Bear theme was
president Guy Hysell. The carried out in the decorations · gwn from around her eye, so
pledge of allegiance was with cake, ice cream and I tried my oil base eye
MATRONS TO MEET
given and Etta Will led punch being served. Gifts makeup remover. It really
MASON .:.. Past Matrons of ·
members in prayer.
were presented. to . him . ~or ked, and painlessly. Then Pomeroy Chapter will meet
The club donated $2&amp; to the Guests were Mr. and Mrs. a generous application of this this evening at 7:30 p.m. at
senior citizens and $25 to a Kenneth ~ickles, B~cky, was put on her hair with a the home of Lucille
member who· has been ill .
Teresa, and Connie, Athens, cotton ball and the gwn Swackhamer here.
Mr . and Mrs. Harold Hanson, combed right out. -JILL.
Miss Nancy Large, Mrs .
.•
Etoilla CaSBell; Mrs. Evelyn
Silencer and Ricky Clark.

Mr . · and Mrs. Willia m
Matla ck returned Monday
from St. Paris where they
spent Christmas visiting Mr.
and Mrs. George Da llas and
children, Bill , Steve, Melissa
and Michael.
Christmas Eve guests of
Mr. and Mrs. James Walker,
Route 3, Pomeroy, were Mrs.
Myrtle Long, Miss Dorothy
Long, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Walker, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Sloan , Tim; Angie and 'Chri s.
Mrs . Way ne Sloan enterl&gt;lined Christmas Day for
Steve Jeffers, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth
Grover, Joy and
.
1
Jen nifer, Mr . and Mrs .
Robert Sloan, Tim, Angie and
Chris.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hammer, Columbus, were
weekend visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Hoeflich and Jayne.
Meg Lochary has arrived
from Chicago, !II. for a
holid ay vi sit ~ith heJ&gt;.
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Leo Story and Mr. and Mrs.
Patrick Lochary.
Christmas ,guests of Mrs.
W. A. Morgan were Mr. and·
Mrs. Roger Morgan, Mid·
dleport ; Mr. and Mrs. R. L.
Gotthard t and son, Bruce,
Colum bus, Mr . and Mrs .
Keit~ Morgan, Middleburg
Heights, and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Moore, Pataskala.
Mr . and Mrs. Chester
Knight returned Monday
from visits with their sons.
They spent Christmas with
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Knight
and son, Stevie, Caledonia,
and then on Friday to Win- .
le rsville to visit Mr. and Mrs.
Dick Knight .
Visiting Mr . and Mrs.
Dewey Hudson and Charles of
Minersville on Chri s tm as
Day were Mr.' and Mrs.
.Francis Hudson and family,
Pomeroy; Denver Hudson
and Charlotte Jones, Akron;
Margaret and Bud Williams,
East Liverpool ; Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth E blin and family,
f!utland ; John Ord, Akron ;
ONE- CALL CLOSER
"'
Mr . and Mrs. Bernatd
EXOE RIENCED ONLY
Hudson and family , West
MINIMUM GUARAN ·
TEED WEEKLY DRAW
Coiwnb us; Mr. and Mrs.
••
AGAINST COMMIS'SIONS.
Roger Hysell and family, Mr. Plans are being made for
Nationillly
ildvertisecl
company
looking
for
LAFF
.
ADAY
and Mrs. Guy Bush, Mr. and · the 52nd annual meeting of
..,
spec1attv sale sman such as
District
25,
Order
of
the
Mrs. Junior Autherson and
home
improvements ,
mutual
funds ,
l'and ,
Mr. and Mrs. Ge orge Hudson Eastern Star to be. held on
franchlset .
vending ,
VVednesday,
Jan
.
21
at
the
and family, Pomeroy. Other
freeze r' plan , ! ducation ,
Middleport
Masonic
.Temple.
paint franchises , etc.
holiday guests were Mr. and
Our top produ cers earn
172
Evangeline
Chapter
Mrs. ·Lewis Hudson, Miners$2S,OOO lo llO,OOO com will host the district meeting
missions per year . Must be
ville.
able to travel exteuivetv
which
will
open
with
and have a good car . Must
Mrs. Kenne th Wilt and son,
drive to Ch icago fo r one
Kenn y, Minersville, and registration at 3 p.m. The
week se mina r In ho"'e
'
business
meeting
will
begin
office and one week In the
daughter , Mrs. Linda Hubld training. Call Mr.
bard and daughter, Donna, at 4 p.m. with dinner at 5:30
,,
" fie
Willson,
toll lree for ad· i
Syracuse , visite d the and the evening session at 7 " I was merely lrying to be a ditional Information and
personal interview ar (100)
weekend before Christmas in p.m. The dinnl!r will be $3 and li ttl e creat1ve with hamburger. 621
-1016 , on Monday , be·
reservations
are
to
be
mailed
Charl
ey!''
tween 9 a . m . and S p.m .
Sycamore with Mr. and Mrs.
Illinois . resident s call
Ernie Burke and son, Chris, no later than Jan . 12 lo Mrs.
collect : (312) 784-17U .
Robert
King,
Rt.
I,
Mid·
and Mr1 and Mrs. Rick Wilt
•
dnd daughter Ali cia. On dleport. Ove ~ nig~t ac·
Christmas Day Mr. and Mrs . commodations can be
MASON·FURNITURE
Kenneth Wilt and son visited arranged with Mrs. Naomi
.,
Mr. and Mrs. James Pierce King, RL I, Middl eport.
and family, Route I, Mid- Instruction will be by the 1976
STORE HOURS
dleport; Mr. and Mrs. Don grand officers.
I
·Hubbard and daughter,
Syracuse, and Mr. and Mrs.
Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat.-8:30ti15:00
Larry Will and family ,
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON
Rodney .
RECIPES WANTED
Guests of Mr. and Mrs.
District 25, Order of the
Mark Tannehill, Mulberry Eastern Star, is requesting
Ave., Pomeroy, (or Christ- members of Meigs CoWl ty
mas dinner were his brother Chapters to submit recipes
and wife, Mr. and Mrs. John for a recipe file box to be
Tannehill, and his sister, compiled and sold. Recipes
Mrs. Janice Peterson, her are to be sent to Mrs. Bernice
Herman Grate Mason, W.Va.
773-5592
husba nd, Carl, and their Hoffman , Rt. 1, Rutland,
daughter, Crystal.
45775 immediately.

Officers
elected

Plans are
underway

2PORK lOINS

\~~

CENTER CUT

PORK
·LOINS

PORK
CHOPS
s 39

lb.

lb.

PORK

RIBS

s

.19

lb.

U. S. D.A. CHOICE

FAMILY PACK
FRESH LEAN

CHUCK

GROUND
BEEF lb. '
PLANTERS

ROAST

1% LB.
PKG.

COCKTAIL
PEANUTS
1!not

DECEMBER 31

OPEN
THURSDAY, JANUARY 1

..........

$ 19-

79 .,~t

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44$4 UV¥LV41U U 4\U.

DESSERT

NEW

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COOL WHif!_!OPPIN~ -- 9_~- sge
CORONEt

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STUDIO

~~:~s3 49c
1

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Open
9 til7

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Sun. 10 to 5
Prices Effective
•

Thursday thru Suncflr
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$4$

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'·

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lb. can

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Twin Cities Gateway
Expires 1-3-76

PAPER

fROZEN fOODS

JENO'S PIZZA

2/89~

89~

2

. ....

POST GRAPENUT

NO. 105
12 qz.

39~

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Coupon
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box

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I
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GLAD WRAP
· NO. 105
100 ft.
roll

29~
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GLAD FOOD

STORAGE MGS
NO. 105
:is cnt.

39~

DOVE BEAUTY BAR_ ].
NO. 115
While or Pink
Bath Size

2/59~&lt;
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COUPON

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POTATO CHIPS
4lh oz.
tan

39~
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49

oz.

box

99~

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NO. 705

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32

.

. . . . ................ ... .

• • ;1

. . . ...

PRINGLES

. 6.9~ .
With Coupon . ·

NO. 135 .
33 oz.
bottle

bottle

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OR
PEPPERONI

FINAL TOUCH

couPO N

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13 oz.

1!11!' PON

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$139

NO. 105
Elec. Perk. Drip,

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/$100

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(NEW FANGLED POTATO CHIPS)

BAG

8 CNT• . ')
PKG. -~

46 oz.
CAN

MIX or
MATCH

PRINGLES TRIPLE PAK
POTATOES

NEW CROP
SANDWICH
BUNS

HI·C ORANGE OR
GRAPE

NEW YEAR'S DAY
12 NOON TO 8. PM

ctwp u u

MAINE

-COTTAGE CHEESE ••~~ ••

GATEWAY

JUICE

FOR INVENTORY

24 oz.

:#:G¥2 ~· • . , . ,

TOMATO

ALL DAY WEDNESDAY

MASON FURNITURE

LB.

10 LB. BAG

DEL MONTE

CLOSED

9 BROUGHTON

IDAHO
·POTATOES

PlANTERS

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

BIRDS EY.E

I

U. S. N0.1

WILL BE

:I

COCA-COLA

TROPICANA
64 oz.
ORANGE JUICE •••~f!l!..

1!not ·,$109

'

THIS 'WEEK'S SPECIALS

79~

MIXED
NUTS

..J

CABBAGE

'
----

COUNTRY
STYLE

QUARTER

$ .19

....

JENO'S FROZEN PIZZA .
WITH CHEESE 13 oz.
---

QUANTITIES RIGHTS RESERVED

~

10 LB.
LB.

.

',-------·

BOSTON BUTT STYLE

SLICED

FROM TWIN. CITIES
. GATEWAY SUPERMARKET

's birthcJa

rt/BIH/1-H/Hl
1

The traditional carols along
with recitations and skits
were includect in the annual
Chrisimas Eve program at
the Rock Springs United
Methodist Olurch.
The nursery class sang
"Away in a Manger," and
"Jingle Bells" and then gave
the recitations, "Greetings"
by
Tamm.i
Eblin;
"Welcome" by Angie Sloan;
"For Jesus" by Tim Jeffers;
"Full of Joy" by Jay
Humphreys; ''Christmas
Wishes" by Deeanna Hen·
derson ; "A Tiny Baby," 'by
Neal Richmond; "My Little
Prayer" by Lisa DarSt; ''The
Whole World" by Marsha
King; "Merry Christmas" by
Tracy Eblin and "A Kiss" by
Tara Humphreys . Brooke
Radford joined the group in
singing.
Recitations by the primary
department children included
"A Christmas Hymn" by Tim
Sloari; "Jesus Loves Them
All" by Rhonda llrkle; "A
Prayer for our Son" by April
· Clark; "AThought" by Michl
King; "Welcome" 'by Usa
Pullins; "Our Christmas
Prayer" by Sally Radford ;
"The Happiest Birthday'' by
Scott Pullins; "Merry Christmas Day" by Kim Eblin; "A
Special Night" by Lisa Clark,
and a duet, "Christmas" by

R rtry honors

liMITED RJDD BUDfi(TS

PORK
ROAST

.

Traditional program
Polly's
.. at Rock. S·n
.
· Pointers
· ·
gzven
r nngs

Youth entertained Class has yule meet
The Youth Deparbnent of
the United Pent ecos tal
OnJrch of Middleport was
entertained to a Chri stBanquet at the Holiday Inn in
Gallipolis recently .
The Otristmas dlnner was
served in the private dining
room , and was followed by an
awards program . RI'Ceiving
achievement awards earned
during the past year were
Oleri Sauters, Joy Sauters.
Tim Sauters, Mark Sauters,
Trent Knitt el, Tamm y
Knittel, Danny Richard s,
Stephen Richard s, Kathy
Pickens, Paul Jones and Mrs.
Robert Shaffer . Mike Zirkle,
youth dlrector, made the
presentations.
The Rev . Roy Burnside ,
pastor of the Glouster United
Pentecostal Church gave ·a
challenge to the youth and
others present . The meeting
was opened and closed with

'

•'

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Dec. 30, 19~5

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INFORMATION

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DEADLIN~ ~

.S
P .M , · Day
Pub ll c.atlon .
t~~ep t e d

w ill be

·. '

·.2SIGH Pomeroy

'Before

Corrections

un til 9

lo r Devol Publication .

ROHTl'
1

REQULATIONS

rj

The Pu blisher r eserves the
r iQhl to edit or re!E' &lt;. t an v ads
deemed objec t ional. The .
pub li sher
w i ll
not be
re!pon sl ble for more than one
incorrec t Insertion .

II

FREJHE±

Now arranre .the circled letters
v~
I
I
to .rormthe•urprt•ean•wer...
I~;;!·:;;;;~~;;-~~J~;;:·;:~·
I
:.•~u;n~e;•t::ed~ by the above corloon.
1MO.=.-:- 1THE r xI I I Jr r r I I J
(hlwli'J n lomurrow}

l unobiH&gt;TRULY FACET DECENT OBLIGE

l

'
, · ,
,\n 1 wrrl lrltat tltf' 11nob Rllld tu h111 rllldor-

1FEEL"BETTER"

wng Bottom
NeUJt Notes
BY RUTH LARKINS
Mr. and Mrs . Fred Larkins
and family all came to help
!hem celebrate Christmas on
Christmas Eve. Many nice
gifis were presen led to them .
Those attending were Mr .
and Mrs . Virgil Bogard and
John, Mr. and Mrs . Howard
Larkins, Brent and Cheryl,
Mrs. Norman Weber and
Vida, Mr . Keith Weber and
son Mike, Mr . and Mrs .
Charles Weber and Jim , Mr.
and Mrs. DOuglas Hauber,
Kim and Tim, Mr . and Mrs.
Elza Larkins. Sending gifts
· were Mr. and Mrs. David
Dailey and Ray Lynn, Mr .
and Mrs . Larkins' son
Raymond and family are
spending their Chri stmas
holidays In Texas.
Mrs . Ernestine Hayman
enjoyed a Christmas Eve
supper at the home of her
daughter , Mr. and Mrs. Keith
Ridenour and family :
Mr.
RlcharJ (Di ck ) .
Hayman has been a patient In
St. Joseph Hogpital for a few
weeks . He is recovering
slowly and may get to come
home soon,
Several folks here have had
!he flu .
Mrs. GuSsie Dailey has
been Christmas guest of her
son, Mr. and Mrs. David
Dailey and Rae Lynn.
Several from here enjoyed
a turkey supper and all the
trimmings at the .home of
Rev. and Mrs. Edsel Hart,
Coolville . The evening was
spent playing games . and
socializing.
Miss Melinda Evans and
Kevin Styer were united . in .
marriage at the local U. M.
Church.
Mr. and Mrs . Clinton
McPeek of Belpre, Ohio and
Mi. and Mrs. John Harrow of
Warren, Ohio called on Mr .
and Mrs . L. E. Me Peek.
Mr . and Mrs. Joe Bissell
and Ken and Mr . and Mrs. L.
E. McPeek enjoyect a fi sh
dinner at the J..cona Hensley
home. '
Mrs . Ruth Stethem consulted her doctor at Parkersburg recenUy.
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Holter

LatP'd Oiff
News Notes
Sabbath .School attendance

Dec. 26 at the ~'ree Mell)odlst
Church was 93.
The Christmas program
which was held at the local
church was well attended.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Jacobs
and family of · Shou!hshore,
Ky., visited recently with his
.parents, Mr . ~d Mrs. Pearl
Jacobs.
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Karr
spent the past week with Mr.
and Mrs. Ted Mathew and
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Bauer and
Mrs. Polly Ann a nd Kelly Sue
DeConnick near Cleveland.
Mrs. Bertha Parker visited
last week with Mr. and Mrs.
Hugh Ferguson and son,
Jimmy, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Alkire and family and Miss
Cleo Parker, Columbus.
Mrs. Ruth Douglas, Nancy
Howa rd , Darlen·e Dougla~
visited rece ntly with Mr. and
Mrs . Harmon Fox.
,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell
visited recently with Mr. and
Mrs. Vernon Howell and Mr.
and Mrs . Ross Poulton,
Canton .
Mr. and Mrs. Harmon Fox,
Mr. and Mrs . l..cnny Lyons
and l..cslie of Rock Springs,
Dick Roush of Pomeroy and
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Walker
had Christmas dinner with
Mr. and Mrs . Roy Howell.
Mr. and Mrs . Jerry
Whitaker of Newark visited
recently 'with Rev. and Mrs.
Floyd Shook.

TWO HOSPIT(\LIZ ED
SYRACUSE
The
Syracuse ER · squad was
called Saturday at 10:35 a.m.
for Ella Quillen who had
sustained a cut on her head
when she fell. She was taken
to Veterans Memorial·
Hospital and admitted .
, Sunday at 2:05p.m. the squad
transported Eber Pickens lo
Velllrans Memorial Hospital
where he was admitted .
and Stacey Ann of.Colwnbus,
Ohio visited the weekend with
Mr . and Mrs. Harold Holter
and fam ily.

Time
1--"-J!""',-(''1-1 1-lllii.W.,

·Business Services

OF
QUALITT lll!llo•_
,_o_r_c-o~·~

m

popular model &amp; priced to go .
1974 CHEVROLET 'i l TON
$309S
8' Fleet$ ide, 6 cyl., standard transm ission, dark blue,
real sharp.

·

1972 CHEVROLET
$1995
8' body C-20 ·~Jon, 4Speed transm ission, p.s .. p.b., 350·
8 cyl., radio, new heavv steel flonr I n ~- ..

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

S2. 00 for 50 word minimum
Each add it io nal wof'd 3

Advertisemen t .

Blown
Insulation Services .

··
·
OFFICE HOURS
'
'~0 ,o:
I
'
•
.
:
8:30 a. m. to 5:oo p. m. ' _ _ _. _
PG&gt;_
_....__~-~----=c...::=~=-"='=&lt;d
EROV_· mun . _ - ···· . ....:....··..•I
Dally , 8: 30a . m . to 12:00 Noon '1.1'_M

Saturday .

-

··-·

-

·-

For Sale

delivered right to your
proJect. Fast and easy . Fr ee
estimates. Phone 992 -3284 ,
Goegleln Ready M ix Co .,
Middleport, Ohio.

Blown into Walls &amp; AHles'
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDINGcSOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

6-30-lfc
ELWOOD BOWER S REP AIR

LARRY LAVENDIR·

sE'P rlc1'iiN'K"s"Ciea.ieii

Notice

For Sale

.Rea_
l

• 54

992 -3525 or 992·5232.

2-11 -lfc
Plumbing ,

REMODELIN G,

3594 .

lost

WI LL ca r e fo r elderl y persons GRAY" andbla ckp oodl ein the
in m y home . Tr ained and
Grav el Hi l l area, Mid ·
e)l.'per i en ced . Pho ne 992 dlepor t Ch i ld's p et. Ca ll 992 ·

73 14.

12-30-78tc

Mobile Homes lor Sale
2 BEDRM . mobil e home , 12 x
65, Holly Pa r k , like new wilh
8 &gt;l 32 awning and porch .
Washer and dryer included ..

Pho ne , W.1304)
Mason
Va .

773
17.c
12 -58
30·6t

5867 .

BLACK cat Wllh While sp ot
und er chin , short hai r ed .
Los r in ._. icinity of Grant St .1
Middlepor t . Phon e 992 -5640,
Reward .
12·26 -6tc
- ----------- --

For Sale or Trade

12·17·121p

1970 - 350 JOHN Deere dozer .
6 ft . blade, canopy , new
engine . New pa int. $5,000 .
Ph on e 985 ·359.4 .

12-17-121p
1975 CHEVROLE T 1 ton dum p
truck V8 , A sp .• P .S.• P.B.
16,009 actual miles . $4,000.
Phone 985·3594 .

12·17·121p
----...:....---------1974 HONDA 750, Ford 2000

tr actor . p . s .• di fferent i al'
lock , fr ont end weig hts, and
other extras : Phon e 992 ·

DOZER . 1958 Internati onal
T.D . 14·A. 12 ft. hydraulic
3658 :
blade, in good cond it ion .
$2,400 . Phone 985 .3594 .
HA LL'S Salvage . All autos
12-17-12tp · ELEC . gui tar. ·amplifle~ . a n d
with frames and bOdies with
microphone .
Will
sell
(lr withou t motor s, $1 hund separate . Baby bed com .
red . Tin .50 hundred . Will
plete . Girl 's bike , Phone 742·
b uy m etal s and sc rap iron .
2078.
On ol d Rt. 33 . just across o1 BE AGLE puppies . Also ,
12·30.Jtc
from Grueser's Chippe r .
_Reg . Basse tt hound , male,
Mon day through Friday 9
housebroke . Phone 742 -2521. YEAR OLD Guern sey bul'l
ti ll 4 p.m .• S atur d r~y , 9 t i l
12·2J.61p c alf , Whirlpool w~sher .
noon..
-·- · -· -·----- - - - Phone 949 .2411 .
12-1d.26tc

Wanted To Buy

Pets

12-30-3tp

For Rent

OLD furnilure . ice boxes •.
brass beds , stone jars, or 3 RM . and bath fur nished apt . ONE Purebred · Ham psh i re
male hog . 10 nice pigs for
comp lete househ old s. Writ e
in Mlddleporl. Inqu ir e at
sa le. Phone ( 614 l 698·8896 .
M . 0 . . Miller , Rt.
2,
Kay 's Beau ty Sa lon , 169 N.
12 -J0:6tc
Pomeroy , Oh lo, Ca ll 992·
Second , Middleport .
7760.

10-7-7&lt;

WA NTE'D old upr ight pianos
in any condition . Wi ll pay
$10 eac h. F lrs t floor onlv .
Write giVing di r ections to
Witten Piano Co .• Box 188 ,
Sardis , Ohio 4J946.

12-30-6tp

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

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

.

1 -

1.2-30-41( 1971 VW CAMPMOBILE , full
ui pm ent , refrigerator,
BEDROOM furn ished eq
water , bed, popup fop and

apa rtm ent
at
Village
Manor . Phon e 99 2-3273.

·

12-19-26tc

FUR NI SH ED apartmen t 4
room s and bath , adults only .

Pbone 992-5908.

Case No. ~1 6'3
Estate of luther V. C' ldw elt,
Deceased.
Notice Is hereby give n that HOUSE 5 rm s. and bat h in
Ra cine . Phon e 992 -5858 . ,
Tr essie Hendr ic ks of R. 0 . 4,
Pomeroy , Ohio , ha&amp; been duly
12·4-lfc
appoin l ed ExecutriM of th e
Estate of Luther V . Caldwe ll , ONE S rm . newly remodeled
deceased, l a i e o f Me i gs
unfurn is hed
apt.
in
Count y , Oh io.
Pomer oy . Phone 992·2288
Cre d itors are reQ uired to
before 9 a .m . or 992 -2270.
fi l e their c laims with said
12-28-lfc
fid uciary with in fou r months .
Dated this 12th day or FU RNI SHED
apartment
December 1975.
adults on ly In Middleport.

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

Phon e 992-3874.

Manning D. Webster
3-25 -lfc
Judge
Court of Common Pleas lA ND 4 RM . furnished and
Proba te Div ision
unfurn ished apts . Phone 992 ·
16, 23, Jo; Jtc
l434.

Mobile

parking. Phone 992-7479.
12-31 -lfC·

4 RM . and bath unfurnished .

SNOW
TIRES

12-28-6tc

TRAILER , &amp;dUll S only . Phon e
992 -3181.

. All sizes In stock at
our Low Prices!

La SlUe
HOTEL

Mlelltport, c.o . l'h. tn-1771

leans, '5.00 up

POMI!ItOY LANDMARK
.... JtickW. C.I'Hy,Mgr.

llil

PhoM m-2111

A IR CO weld ing m•ch ine , new
elec . all accessories In ·

eluded. Phone 992-3410.
I0 -28-Ifc

citizens
em .fm .
mP»&lt; rad lo, 8 track stereo .

Ca ll 992-3965.

12-23 -lfc

LOCU ST po sts . Phone 7.42 .

2359.

EAR corn . Ca ll 388-9991.
12-17-12tc
NOW selling Fuller Bru sh
Products. Phone 992 -3410.

Special lotes

by we.~ ·

or Month

.

CLOSE tN - 1'h acres, 2
BR,"bath, utility R., large
patio garage. In excellent
condition. $8,300.
REEDSVILLE
135
acres, minerals, wooded,
close to recreation, city
water available. $16.600.
POMEROY - Large 2
story frame , 3 BR, 1lf&gt;
baths, recently renovated,
2 car garage. $18,700.
TUPPERS PLAINS - 5 yr.
old 1 floor plan, 3 BR, bath.dlnlng R., full bssement,
aboot :v, acre. $19,500.
POMEROY - Ranch type,
4 BR, 2 baths, enclosed
patio, recreation R. .Hot
water heat . $30,000.
THIS IS THE BEST TIME
OF THE YEAR TO BUY CALL NOW.
"2·2259 or m-2541

MID ·

DL E POR. T I We are so sure
lha t you will love ou r
apartments th•t we gtve you
two weeks RENT F REE .
Just pay your security
deposit end stay six months
and tHe first 2 weeks Is ,free .
You will enjoy monthly
leases , r~ ll electric lfving,
carpeting ,
range
and
r efrigerator , free trash
pickup , cable TV roptionall
a.nd laundry fac ilit ies .
Conveni ent to shopping on

Third and Mill In Mid ·
dleport . VILLAGE MANOR
is yours for one bedroom
aparrments starting at $104
monthl~

NEAR STORES - $7500.00
view of river . .Will make 2
apts. Large lot.
40 ACRES - Get some
privacy. Buy before spri ng
and build your A-FR AME
now. $10,000.
SPACIOUS - Inside &amp; out.
10 rooms, new k lichen wllh
di shwashe r, disposal &amp;
bar . Wood - burn i ng
fireplace, foyer , 2 car
garage. and 1h acre.
NO BETTE R SEC URITY
THAN GOOD PROPERTY.

$11,300.

10·6-lfc

IN

$47,500.

MIDDLEPORT - 2. story
frame, 3 BR, 2 baths,
dining R., storage bldg ..
close to all shopping.

1650 Lin col n Hgts . Phon e

· MANOR

Great Bend. Farm pond,
drilled well and 2 BR
res idence. $15,500.
5 BEDROOMS - Mod. new
home, central air II. heat.
Large family room II. 2 car
garage. Dining &amp; large lot . .

DO YOU NEED

DA SH 23 channel
Hom e INband
transcei ver,

Park , Rt . 33 , ten mil es nort h
of Pomeroy. L ar ge tot s wllh
concrete patios, sidewalks,
r unn ers an d off street

992 -3874.

furnace . L evel lot.
5 ACRES - On Rt. 124 af

12 -18-tfc.

6 RM . HOU SE and balh for
rent in Pomeroy . Ca ll 992 ·
5741.
12-2-261c

COU NTRY

sto r age spa c e . Exce llent
con dition insi de and out ,
make an offer . Phone 992 ·
7277.

LARGE - 4 Brs .. 2 living
1112 bath s, steam
heat. Basement with
garage. Ask lng $20,000.
157 ACRES - Large farm
home with ' bath, 2 ponds
and ba rn . Mineral s.
$60.000.
RACINE - 3 BRs., nice
bath, new kit., nat. gas
rms.,

plus eltc . We pay

tor everything else . See the
Manager at ,River ai d e
Apartments or call 992 -3273.
This offer Wilt end soon , so
move In now and save sus.

10-23-lfc

WMPO • WM.PO-FM
WISH YOU THE BEST IN THE NEW YEAR
WE'LL SEE YOl/ IN '76

t A K Q J 10 8 2
olo K QJ
Both vulnerabl e

u;u, 'OJ,

ERJ[H~,

.

•

.,

11 -30-18tc
D TREE Tri mming. 20

lH~T~
~TCtO

/lJ MV

West

0

'•

0

!-Iron:!

years experience . Insured,
fr ee estimates . Call 992 -3057

North East

South

14

I
I

5y

Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass

~~ ill%~

6.

A reader from Pompano
Beach wani.s' lo know how we
play the three-spade overca ll
of an opening bid of one in a
lower suit .
We play it JUSt the sa me as
an opening three-spade bid.
Not much in high cards, but
seven tricks if vulnerable and
six if not vulnerable. Thus. we
wou ld overcall three spades
with seven to the king-queen·
j ac k, if not vu lne rabl e.
However , vou don 't have to
play it thai weak if you don't
want to .

Opening lead - K •

10-15-lfc

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
In the ordinary good bridge
game
South would have no
LI'ITLE OmsiDiN ANNIE
trouble making his diamond
slam . West would start for the
LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-DOUBLE TALK
defense by leading two high
r;::::::~~Rl r/~~==~~T~H~ff~SA~Y~A~--uH ·HlJfi": ' hearts . South would run off a
HEY! WlfAT
CHIIMP NEVER
few trumps, enter dummy
15 THIS?
COMES BACK ..
with the ace of clubs, lead and
BUT I GUESS
ruff a third heart and play oul
HEVER WAS
so
lhe rest of the clubs and
trumps. On the last lead West
would be squeezed and forced
to unguard his king of spades
:}J~;;;;:;;;;J j;~~~,~~;::;:-=::-:;;;:.-o:;.:;p;;; to protect against dummy's
eight of hearts. South would
chuck that eight of hearts and
make the last two tricks with

SEW IN G MACHINE Repair s,
service , all makes . 992 -2284 .
The Fabric Shop , Pomeroy .
Auth or i zed Si nger Sales and
Serv i ce.
We
sha r pe n
Scissors .
3·29 .tf c
WILL TR IM or cut trees and
sh r ubber y. Phone 949 -2545
or 742 ·3167 .

12-18 -261c

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
1 Ancient
Asian
5 Like a
WJunded
torero
10 Maintain
11 Power or
Guthrie
12 Sunder
13 Penny 14 Outcome
IS "Murders
in the -

The Officers: Fire Fighters Squadmen

Morgue

I elwa4s carry
fu'st aid in ml.l
purse 1. lhis'll
stin' a "I!

At

and

Buqsy's
Grill

·Pomeroy Emergency Squad

ev·r~­

"Volunteers Serving You"

thin'

is .

~ric'kl

cash!

YEAR END CLEARANCE
INVENTORY REDUCTION
SALE

24 Kind of
holiday
26 Old Deep
South title
2B Preminger
film classic
29 Boring tool
30 Prepare
35 Wow, it's
cold!
36 Rome's Veneto

~'"""I':"""'T::-T.:"""1

0

locale

~-THEM

LI'L.

PLA6tJE

LOaJ57?;

VARMINTS iG OCJWiN'

WILL 51!-.16
LlfM IN!b

lb YC:V ~WHAT '1"7""'~

,.,,

IFOR1!

/JUT-!'SST. -

, zl Stephen

LOOK rNOTHING

AXYOLBAAXR
~ WINNIE ,

GOI NGlD

CRY!

I, 0 N G F E I, L 0 W

One lctt('r simp!)' stands for nnother. In this sample A is
U.'•Cd '•' r t h ~ three 1.'1', X rnr the two O's. rtr. Sinp:ll" lett r n .
:1 postrophes, the length nn£1 formiltinn of the words are :~11
hints. E:lrh clay tlu.•. r(ldr lcllr r!'l iiTt' different.

C'R\'PTOQllOTES
FCYQ

LSL&gt;U

G·NFPY
OP

N CE
QN

SFMKSDP

UCQSPY

CY.

''

I
I

' I

""'

'"'I'

DNQ

FSKAQ

SD
SD

AMRP

GEMINI (Mer 2t-Junt 20)

II
you 're going out .this evening
and plan to share expenses,
have a c lea r advance understa ndtng as to who pays lor
what.

CANCER (Junt 21-July 22)
Don'! be 100 o p l~lonaled lh is
evening. Be prepared to make
concessions. especia lly to your
mate.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Tne way
a situation works out today
may stick you with some la·n mlnute chores. Plan ahrad.
You can handle things and still
have fu n.

You'll have a better time with
pals at home tonig ht. If you
must go ou t. make it an early
n1g ht and then bring the gang
home.

SCORPIO (Ocl. 2•·Nov. 22)1f
there's someone ol der you'd
like to visit to w1sh "Happy New
Yea r," m ake sur e yo u do It
be fore you get ca ught up in the
swtrl of activities.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-D&lt;OC.
21) Don' t feel that a high price

tag guara'ltees you'll excel In
the pursuit ot pleasure tonight.
You'll lust fl anen tn e wall et.

CAPRICORN (Dtc. 22-Jtn.
19) You lend 10 gel peppier as
the day wears on. Don 't alter or
cancel tonight' s pl ans just
because the early part of the
day has a fe w lumps in 11.

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Ftb. 19)
The novelty ot the fu nny hats.
the con f e tl l a nd the
nOISemakers Will soon wear olf
tonight. Celebrate quietly with
the one you love.

PISCES (Feb. 20-Merch 20)
By ta te aft ernoon you 'll wan t to
take a brie f respite and let yo ur
ha1r down . No re ason wh y you
shouldn't

~~

~D&lt;IC.brth:'JoJ
31, 1975

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22) Go New ar."tbit1ons
where the bright ligh ts are
tonight, but avo id crowds
You 'll be belt er oil with a small
grou p of friends .

· ~~

'

IO:oo-Blue Knight B.
t0:31l-Billy Graham 3,4,!5 ; Wild Kingdom 13; Say
Brotlier 33.
ll :llO-News 3,4,8,10,13,15,20; Year of Crisis 6; New
Year 's Eve at Pops 33.
11 :30-Movle "Fear No Evil" 3; Wide W?rld Special .
6,t3 ; Johnny Carson 4,15 ; New Years Eve wtth
Guy Lombardo B,to.
12: ts-Joyce Chen's China 33.
12:450anaki 33.
I s· I , IO
1:oo-Tomorrow 4: Movie " Par!~ When I IZZ es
:
Movie "Godzilla 's Revenge t3 .
1:Is-Movie 11 Games 11 3.
2:20-News 13.
· 3:0f)-Movie "Nightmare in Chicago" 3.
4:15-" The Jokers" 3.

TAURUS (April 20·Moy 20)

Is

10.

4:30-Bewitched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8;
Sesame St. 20,33.
s:oo-Bonanza 3; Family Affair B.;
5:30-Adam-12 4; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec.
Co. 20,33 ; To Be Announced 15 ; Adam-12 13.
6:oo-News 3,4,8,10,13,15 ; ABC News 6; Hodgepodge
Lodge 20; Unto the Hills 33.
6:31l-NBC News 3,4,15 ; ABC News 13 ; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Attack Heart A!!ack 20; Book Beat
33.
.
.
•
7:oo-Truth or Cons.-3; Pop Goes the Country 8; To
Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for Dollars 6; Good News
for Today 5; News 10 ; Look Back-A Look Ahead U;
Family Affair 15 ; Book Beat 20 ; Know Your Sehool
33.
7:3lf'-Liist of the Wild 3; Sugar Bowl6,!3 ; Name That
Tune 4· Match Game PM 8: Evenin~ Edition with
Martin,Agronsky 20; The Judge '20 ; Wild !(ingdom
15; Episode Action 33.
B:oo-King Orange Jamboree Parade 3,4,15 ; Tony
Orlando &amp; Dawn 8,10; Memories for a Centennial
'76 20; Sarah 33.
9:oo-Cannon 8; Great Performances 33 ; Movie
"Ziegfeld Follies" tO ;; Weather Machine 20.
9:30-Petrocelli 3,4,15; 3,4,15.

Conclude yo ur bus1ness belore
early alternoon. By then yo u'll
be In a more fes tive mood and
won't be wo rr ied about tying up
loose ends.

•WINNIE
SEEM 'THE 5AME.
WITHOUT YOJ. YOU'LL
&amp;: IJE'IIRLY Mltl&amp;ED.

Fire• ~

the day wears on. yo u tend to
become a bit more se rious. Let
yourself go if you can. or you
cou ld spoi l the good limes of
tnose arou nd you.

I

I. tHI NK I 'M

20,33 ; Movie "Man on

4:30-Bewitched 3

For Wodnesdor, Doc. 31, 1975
ARIES (March 2t-Aprll 19) As

~--------------------DAILY CRYPTO(}UOTE - Here's how to work it :

o JANIE,BONNAZ 'MJN 1T

12 :311-Magnificenl Marble Machine 3,15 ; All My
Children 6,13 ; Search for Tomorrow 8,10 ; Elec. Co.
33.
12:55- NBC News 3,15.
J:oo-News 3; Ryan 's Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15;
Food Preserving 33.
·
1:30-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15 ; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13;
As the World Turns 8; ,10; Ourstory 33.
2:()()-$10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Turbulent Ocean 33.
2:31l-Doctors 3,4; Peach Bowl 12,13,15; Neighbors 6;
Guldin~ Lieht 8.10.
3:oo-Anoiher World 3,4; General Hospltal6,13; All In
The Family 8,10; Kup's Show 20.
3:30-Bewitched 6; Match Game 8,10.
4:oo-Mister Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Mickey Mouse
Club 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers

• Bernice Bede Osol

Vincent _,/25 Abstract
IG 2. being
_ 26 - War
Lawyer
(abbr.)
'-"'lf"f&gt;-~S Type of
combat
( 2 wds.)
31 Neighbor
of Swed.
Seek
33 Coloration

.

'

'

i

~

8:30-Big Valley 6.
· .
9:oo-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,15 ; Lucy Show 8; M1ke
Douglas 10 ; Morning with D.J . 13 ; Consumers
Survival Kit 33.
9:30-Not For Women Only 3; One Life to Live 6;
Tattletales 8; New Zoo Revue t3 ; Food Preserving
33.
JO :oo-Celebrity Sweepstakes 3,4,15 ; Edge of Night 6;
Price is Right 8,10; Mike Douglas 13; Wild Wila
World of Animals 33.
10:30-Wheel of Fortune 3,15 ; I Dream of Jeannie 4;
Dinah 6; Walsh's Animals 33.
11 :oo-Hollywood Squares 4; Gam bit 8,10; Outs tory
33.11 :30-Hollywood Squares 3,15; Happy Days 13 ;
Midday 4; Love of Life 8,10 ; Sasame St. 20,33 .
11 :55-Take Kerr 8; Dan lmel's World 10.
l2:oo-High Rollers 3,15'; Let's Make a Deal 13; Bob
Braun's 50·50 Club 4; News 6,8,10.

AstraGraph

"Treasure"

.,.

Mideport

7 See 3 Down
(3 wds.)
8 Guarantee
9 Most
profound
11 Ridicule
15 Acclivity
18 Trim
21 Repair
22 l..cast
kind
23 Oregon city

Across,

MIRJ men

DAN THOMPSON
·FORD 461 s. 3rd

'

34 Path to
Hades
36 Star in
Lyra
37 See 22
Across
38 Infuriated
39 Czech
mountains
40 Eagle's
nest
DOWN
I Boatswain's
and first
2 Happening
3 Impasse
( 3 wds.)
1 Go astray
5 Circular
motions
(Poetic)
6 KIUer whale

Bogart's

1975 Ford LTD 4 dr. Sedan ••••••••••••••'4195
1974 Pinto 3 dr Runabout ••••••••••••••'2995
1974 Pinto 2 dr Sedan •••••••••••••••• '2695
1973 Ford V8 Torino 4 dr Sedan •••••••••'2495
.'
1973 Ford V8 LTD Sta. Wagon •. •·..... }3095 ...,:
1973 Pontiac Gran Am 4 dr Sedan••••••• '3295 :·:
,,,
1973 Pontile Catalina 4 dr Sedan~........'2995 ·.:
1971 Oldsmobile Delta 8 Cpe••••••••••• :1795
1971 Ford V8 Torino Cpe. ••••••• •••••••11295 ::
1971 Vollswqen "But; ••••••••••••••• '1695 · ~ :
1970 Torino GT 2 dr Sedan•••••••••••••'1595 "'
1974 Chevrolet
¥8 PickuP............ ~.'3695
.
. . :'
· 1974 GMC Custom Dlx Pickup V8 Air, AT.:3995 .~:
1973 Chew. Pickup, PSf Pt, 'AT ••••••• ••• 12995 .~
I fi'S tllrd V8 Chfteau 8 pass.
.
!:"
Van Club Sedan •••••• • • .. • •·• • •• • '3795 .' ..:
1969 Ford F6QO 16 ft. Sem·Van
,;:
'"'
Power ~••••••••••••••••••••'2995 :u
See: Fred Btaettner, Pat Hi II
Melvin Uttle or Dan Thompson
Open Evenings Til6:00
Except Thurs. and S.t. Til5:00 .

1

16 Gem cutter's cup
17 Underwear
purchase
(hyph. wd.)
19 Three, in
ltalia
ZO Tammany
tiger
cartoonist
21 Playwright
Hart
22 With 37

GASOLINE ALLEY

Pomeroy Fire Departm en I

(For a cop y of JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 to: "Win
at Bridge ," c l o I his
newspaper. P. 0 . Box 489.
Radio City Station, New Yo rk.
N Y. 10019)

~

ALLEYOOP

Signed:

Pltane 992·2196

Pass

Pass

t
N.T

or Ill 667 -304 1, Coolvil le.

Due to Limited Building Space and
for Safety Reasons we are Limited
to _the number of .people .who can
attend the annual New Year's Ball.
No general admission will be offered
at the door this year. We apologize
fot this inconvenience. We hope to
improve the building . space
available in the future. We wish
everyone a safe, prosperous, Happy
New Year and Salute to our Nation's
200th birthday . .

AT

1 93
... 9 6 4 3

.,

~.t.erMFi

~·?~18 'C'
. I

backhoe
and
dltcher .
Char les R. Hatfield Bac k
Hoe Service, Rutland , Oh io.
Phone 742 -2008.

• J 95

4Q .6

~·sus,

S-l,llc

1

THE STAFF AND MANAGEMENT

EAST

•9 713

SOUTI1 IDI

' ~'?. us,

-------------EXCAVATING r do zer,

D&amp;

WEST

• KJ 5
• A K Q 10 7
t 76
... 10 52

BORN LOSER

heatin g Md all types of
general
re pa i r .
Work
guaranteed. 20 years ex perience . · Phone 992;2409 .

'·

dummy 's ace and his queen of
spades.
Now let 's see what happens
in the extraordinary very good
bridge gam e.
West cashes one heart and
stops to think . it is obvious
that South sl&lt;lrted with just
one heart. lt is also obv ious
lhal his trumps wi ll be solid so
West shi fts to a trump . South
still uses that ace of clu bs to
get to dummy to lead a second
heart and runs off all his cl ub
and diamond winners but the
squeeze fails to operate. East
hangs on to his jack of hearts
and West to his king-jack of
spades.

311

o1o A 87

NOTICE

11 ·30-lfc

Good play vs. superior play
NORTI1
4 A 10 8 2
• 8632

Help Wanted

TEAFORD

l'&gt;UT GET TillS-

EXCAVA TING . dozer, loacter
and back hoe work ; sept lc
ta nk s insta lled ; dump
tr ucks and IO ·boys for hire;
wil l ha ul fi ll dirt. top soil ,
limeston e and gravel. Call
e·ob or R:oger Jeffers , day
ph on e 99 2-7089 , nigh t phone

-J-------------

Wanted

WIN AT BRIDGE

A&amp;OUT S FEET TALL AND

I MADE OF ?U~·DRIED 8RICK5!

Phone 742-2331
Roger Wamsley, Rutland
11 -28-75

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

MINI4rtt~•'

.

~VN~R~1 ' E

19.70 PON TI AC Sountivllle , 197 1 VEGA , radial tires, re al
__. Sweepers , toasters , irons ,
blue wi lh blac k vinyl to p,
all smatl appliances . Lawn
,
S950
.
Phone
992
-3259.
nice
atr , · fu ll power , runs good ,
mower ,. ne)Cf to State High·
exce ll ent co ndition inside -·- -· ..- - ----- - - 12·24-0tc
wa.v Garage on Route 7.
WE WO ULD lik e to expr ess
and out . Make an offer .
Phone 985 -382l ..
our tha nks and appreciation
Phon e 99 2-7277
4-16-lfc
during th e Illn ess and death
of our
mother . E ffi e -· -·-· ---!.....- - - - - - - ·De n iso n . Everyone w ho 1970 MAVERICK , new motor
Modern sanitat ion. 992 -3954
·. S-,kac~se·, Ohio
broug ht food and sen t
and good con dition . $750.
or 992 -7349 .
flo wer s. Spec ial thanks to
Phone ( 614) 985 ·3806.
Ph. 9fH!n . . .
GOOD quality ha~ . Phon e 992 the staff or Holzer Medical
12-30-31p
4·10 -lmo. i
3658.
Center . Also , Barbara Va n
'"OULD YOU BE LIEVE ?
12·28·61C
Meter , Rev . Lloyd Gr i m m , 1973 T~UCK , 1 t011 Ford , F ·
Build an all steel building at
·-·-C
.
BRADFORD,
Auc
tion
eer
.
Walker Fun eri!l Hom e and
35 0, H eavy duty LWB ., WE STING HOU SE
Pol
e Barn prices? Go lden
Laundry
Complete Servi ce . Phon e
all who he lped In anv way .
e&gt;&lt;ce llent c.o nd itlon . Ca ll 304
. Giant All ·Steel Buil d ing s,
pai r , c l earance . Price $488
949·2&lt;87
or
949·2000.
Racine.
Joe and Ji m Den iso n .
773 ·5308 after 5 p .m .
Rt. .4, Bo x 148 , Waverly .
pai r. Phone { 614 ) 985 ·3307.
Ohio, Critt Bra-dford .
·
12 30-ltc
11 -16-1f
Oh io . Phone 947 ·2296.
· 12·2B ·71c
10-9-.tfc
.
7-24 ·1fC
--- --- -- ,....._
FOR SALE or trade 1973 19
I N CH
Zenith
Early
Pinto, one owner. 34.000
O' DELL Allnement locat ed
A merican
Conso l e
~te
mil es , AC auto , se ll or trade
behind Rutland Grade
Tel evi sion . Sal e S428 . Also .
just
on lat e model pic kup . Phone
Sc hool. Tuneup . bra kes,
TO G I VE away , Beagle
fl oor sam ple mod e ls at 3 BE ORM . home ,
fin ished , r emodeling, Sa lem
949 -2086.
wheel balanc ing, alinement .
Houn d, 3 monfhs old . Pnon e
Speci al clearan ce prices .
Sl ., Rutland . Phone 7&lt;2-2306
992 -2773.
Phone 742-2004 .
Ph one (614) 985-3307.
aft
er
4
p
.m
.
or
see
Milo
B.
J1 -16·tfc
12·28.7tc
Hutchison .
-·---- ------ - - ·-9-23 -lfc EXCAVATING , BACKHO ES
HAVE vour deer trophi es
REVCO Freezers . 15 -20 ·25 cu .
AND DOZ ER, LARGE AND
mouhted .
B ir chf ie ld ' S CASH paid for all ma kes and
ft. , Sp ec ial clear an ce pr ices .
3 BR HOME , just fini shed
SMALL . SE PTI C TANKS
Ta xidermy , St . R t . 124 , East
Ph one (6 14) 985-J307.
m!)d els of mobil e homes .
remodeling . Sale m St .,
IN STAL L ED . BILL
of Rutland . Phone (614) 742 ·
12-28 ·7tc
Pt\one area co de 614 423 ·
Rutland . Pho n e 742 -2306
PULLIN S, PHONE 992 -2478.
2178 .
9l31.
after 4 p .m or see Milo B.
DAY
OR NIGHT . ·
. 11 -28-lfc
4·1l ·lfc COAL . limestone and all types
Hutchinson .
11 -11-781p
sa
lt
and
rock
salt
for
Ice
of
10
-9-lf
c
I WILL be giv ing piano lesson s
and
snow·
removal
.
E
x
in my hom e starting Feb. 1.
celsior Sal t Works , East 6 RM . HOU SE , bath , 1 2 acre ,
For informa t ion ca ll 992 · AN OHIO OIL CO . otters
Main St.. Pomeroy , Ohio .
full baseme n ~ . utility room ,
2278.
PLENTY OF MONE Y plus . Phone 992·3891.
bu ill ·in porc h . garage .
12-18-38tc cas
h
bonuses ,
fringe
12 -7.tfc
Ph one 992 ·7733 .
benefits to mature /n . .
12-30 -tfc
BE FORE yo u buy a Stih l
di vi dual in Meigs County 1964 JO HN Deere 1010dozer , 6
Cha in Saw . See a rrien d, I
area . Regardless of ex
ft. blade , ca nopy and winch,
bought one . A lb er t Keeton ,
perience , airmail B . G. 1.
good condition . $4 ,000 .
M i n er svil l e, Ohio . Phone
Read , Pres .. Ame ri can
Phon e 985 -359.4
992 -6154.
Lubr icants Co ., Box · 696,
12-17-121p
Day ton , Ohio 45401 .
Virgil B.. Sr .. Broker
~---- - - --- -- -12 25 -6tp HYDRAULIC crane, capacity
RO OM and board lor Sr . -- ~~---- - ----- - 110
Mechanic . Pomeroy, 0.
7,000 lb ., extended out to 30
Citizens. with low Income ,
Phone 992-3325
ft
.
Will
fit
on
1
or
1'
1 ton
very nice . Ph one 99 2.3509 .
truck , Sl ,SOO. Phone 985·

Card of Thanks

CAPTAIN EASY

on ·

R&amp;J COINS

·SMITH NELSON
. MQTO"S, IN~._ .
KE AOY Mi X

service

estates and collections.

Nathan Bigg :.
Radiator Specia!.l_st ~

~ ·....__

FREE ESTIMATES -~

Appraisal

..

Pomeroyj

Switch 8.10; Focu s on Women 13; News 20; Woman

Al ive 33.
10:30-Woman Alive 20; Woman 33.
11 :00-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Wide World Mystery 6;

Buy, Sell or Trade

...=rom the largest Truck or 1
Bulldozer · Radiator -to t he '
smallest Heater Core .

Ph ..992 .. 2174

POMEROY·
MOTOJtto ®'' .'
OP.EN EV'"'S "'00

c•::s~it;o~!}~~c Ag~arge per

.

6:00- Columbus Today 4; Sunrise Semester 10.
6:15-Folk Literature 3.
6:25-Farm Report 13.
6:31l-New Zoo Revue 4; News 6; Bible Answers B;
Farmtime 10; The Story 13.
6 : ~0unce of Prevention 10.
6:45-Morning Report 3.
6:55-Ch uck White Reports 10 ; . Good Morning, Tri
State t3 .
7:0D-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS
News B; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7:30-Schoolies 10.
8:0lff.Lucy Show 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St . .

9:3o-&lt;lne Day at A Time 8,10.; Country &amp; Western
USA (c) 5.
10:00-Joe Forrester 3,4,15; Marcus Welby, M.D. 6;

'r-oins, Currenc:y
and Supplies

Quality Pririt Shop
Pomeroy Office
105 Butternut
992 -3345
1
Formerly Weed Wholesal e.
·Featuring:
Delux Zerox Copy Service,
Offi c e
Su pplies ,
Mim eograph
Su pplies ,
lar gest seleCtion of wed ·
ding supplies In South ·
. eastern Ohio .
The Print Shop Complete
(Still if\ business In Mid·
dleport) ·

automatic tran smission, R. step bumper, r adio. A

For Want Ad Service
S CE'nls per wor d one Insertion
Min im um Charge S1.00
14 cents p er word th ree
conse cutive insertions .
26 cent s per wor: d six con .
sec ullv e insertions
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ad$ an d ads pai d within 10
days .

Movie " The Abominable Dr. Ph lbes"· 8; Movie
" Because Th ey ' re Young " 10 ; CoII ege Bas kelb a II
IJ; Ja nak! JJ.
: : ~t~~~~r~;w 3. 4.
·
·
WEDNESDAY , DECEMBER31 , 197S

Tr ibe Tha1 Hides from Man 33

.

1974 CHEVROLET 4-W.D.
$3895
8' l:lody, ''• ton. 350 V-8. power steering and brakes,

RATES

tHERTAG±

l'f!tterd•f•

~.

TUESDAY, DEC EMB ER 30, 1975
··
8 ·00-M · · o J t•· H v Days 613 · Good News
· A ovtn
· "·Times
app8 10 · Beauty
' ' &amp; Ihe Beast'
·,c·a 4 · nGood
mer
'
• '
33
8:30-Welcome Back, Kotter 6,13 ; Joe &amp; Sons 8,10;
Consumer Survival Kit 33.
9 :oo-Police Woman 3,&lt;,15; Rookies 6,.13; Mash ij,10;

Auto Sales

M ond!!Jy Deadline 9 a . m . "

Cancellat ion -

Television log for easy viewing

r:::======~s;;t~L-;-;.Ls~o· FIRE!! HE'LL
LOOKY, 'MAW -TATER'S GOIN '
UP TO JlJGHAID'S
TREE
HOUSE
\

BREAK HIS TOM·FOOL NeCK
TRVIN' TO CLIMB THAT BIG
Ot: CHINABERRV TREE!!

LIBRA (Sepl. 23 -0cl. 23)
f©

197!i Kin« Ftar.tur~s Syndl ca~e , fnc ,)

wilt be awaken ·
ed m you th is comi ng yea r.
Begin now by laying firm foun dations that co uld advance
you r work or ca reer .

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Dec. 30, 19~5

Fast Results .Use The Sentinel Classifieds

~lYlOOIDM;""""''··'w.-~,_ . For

Unscramble th~•• rour Jumblo~
one letter to each squa~. to

WANT ADS
INFORMATION

form (o ur . ord-i nary words.

DEADLIN~ ~

.S
P .M , · Day
Pub ll c.atlon .
t~~ep t e d

w ill be

·. '

·.2SIGH Pomeroy

'Before

Corrections

un til 9

lo r Devol Publication .

ROHTl'
1

REQULATIONS

rj

The Pu blisher r eserves the
r iQhl to edit or re!E' &lt;. t an v ads
deemed objec t ional. The .
pub li sher
w i ll
not be
re!pon sl ble for more than one
incorrec t Insertion .

II

FREJHE±

Now arranre .the circled letters
v~
I
I
to .rormthe•urprt•ean•wer...
I~;;!·:;;;;~~;;-~~J~;;:·;:~·
I
:.•~u;n~e;•t::ed~ by the above corloon.
1MO.=.-:- 1THE r xI I I Jr r r I I J
(hlwli'J n lomurrow}

l unobiH&gt;TRULY FACET DECENT OBLIGE

l

'
, · ,
,\n 1 wrrl lrltat tltf' 11nob Rllld tu h111 rllldor-

1FEEL"BETTER"

wng Bottom
NeUJt Notes
BY RUTH LARKINS
Mr. and Mrs . Fred Larkins
and family all came to help
!hem celebrate Christmas on
Christmas Eve. Many nice
gifis were presen led to them .
Those attending were Mr .
and Mrs . Virgil Bogard and
John, Mr. and Mrs . Howard
Larkins, Brent and Cheryl,
Mrs. Norman Weber and
Vida, Mr . Keith Weber and
son Mike, Mr . and Mrs .
Charles Weber and Jim , Mr.
and Mrs. DOuglas Hauber,
Kim and Tim, Mr . and Mrs.
Elza Larkins. Sending gifts
· were Mr. and Mrs. David
Dailey and Ray Lynn, Mr .
and Mrs . Larkins' son
Raymond and family are
spending their Chri stmas
holidays In Texas.
Mrs . Ernestine Hayman
enjoyed a Christmas Eve
supper at the home of her
daughter , Mr. and Mrs. Keith
Ridenour and family :
Mr.
RlcharJ (Di ck ) .
Hayman has been a patient In
St. Joseph Hogpital for a few
weeks . He is recovering
slowly and may get to come
home soon,
Several folks here have had
!he flu .
Mrs. GuSsie Dailey has
been Christmas guest of her
son, Mr. and Mrs. David
Dailey and Rae Lynn.
Several from here enjoyed
a turkey supper and all the
trimmings at the .home of
Rev. and Mrs. Edsel Hart,
Coolville . The evening was
spent playing games . and
socializing.
Miss Melinda Evans and
Kevin Styer were united . in .
marriage at the local U. M.
Church.
Mr. and Mrs . Clinton
McPeek of Belpre, Ohio and
Mi. and Mrs. John Harrow of
Warren, Ohio called on Mr .
and Mrs . L. E. Me Peek.
Mr . and Mrs. Joe Bissell
and Ken and Mr . and Mrs. L.
E. McPeek enjoyect a fi sh
dinner at the J..cona Hensley
home. '
Mrs . Ruth Stethem consulted her doctor at Parkersburg recenUy.
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Holter

LatP'd Oiff
News Notes
Sabbath .School attendance

Dec. 26 at the ~'ree Mell)odlst
Church was 93.
The Christmas program
which was held at the local
church was well attended.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Jacobs
and family of · Shou!hshore,
Ky., visited recently with his
.parents, Mr . ~d Mrs. Pearl
Jacobs.
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Karr
spent the past week with Mr.
and Mrs. Ted Mathew and
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Bauer and
Mrs. Polly Ann a nd Kelly Sue
DeConnick near Cleveland.
Mrs. Bertha Parker visited
last week with Mr. and Mrs.
Hugh Ferguson and son,
Jimmy, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Alkire and family and Miss
Cleo Parker, Columbus.
Mrs. Ruth Douglas, Nancy
Howa rd , Darlen·e Dougla~
visited rece ntly with Mr. and
Mrs . Harmon Fox.
,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell
visited recently with Mr. and
Mrs. Vernon Howell and Mr.
and Mrs . Ross Poulton,
Canton .
Mr. and Mrs. Harmon Fox,
Mr. and Mrs . l..cnny Lyons
and l..cslie of Rock Springs,
Dick Roush of Pomeroy and
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Walker
had Christmas dinner with
Mr. and Mrs . Roy Howell.
Mr. and Mrs . Jerry
Whitaker of Newark visited
recently 'with Rev. and Mrs.
Floyd Shook.

TWO HOSPIT(\LIZ ED
SYRACUSE
The
Syracuse ER · squad was
called Saturday at 10:35 a.m.
for Ella Quillen who had
sustained a cut on her head
when she fell. She was taken
to Veterans Memorial·
Hospital and admitted .
, Sunday at 2:05p.m. the squad
transported Eber Pickens lo
Velllrans Memorial Hospital
where he was admitted .
and Stacey Ann of.Colwnbus,
Ohio visited the weekend with
Mr . and Mrs. Harold Holter
and fam ily.

Time
1--"-J!""',-(''1-1 1-lllii.W.,

·Business Services

OF
QUALITT lll!llo•_
,_o_r_c-o~·~

m

popular model &amp; priced to go .
1974 CHEVROLET 'i l TON
$309S
8' Fleet$ ide, 6 cyl., standard transm ission, dark blue,
real sharp.

·

1972 CHEVROLET
$1995
8' body C-20 ·~Jon, 4Speed transm ission, p.s .. p.b., 350·
8 cyl., radio, new heavv steel flonr I n ~- ..

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

S2. 00 for 50 word minimum
Each add it io nal wof'd 3

Advertisemen t .

Blown
Insulation Services .

··
·
OFFICE HOURS
'
'~0 ,o:
I
'
•
.
:
8:30 a. m. to 5:oo p. m. ' _ _ _. _
PG&gt;_
_....__~-~----=c...::=~=-"='=&lt;d
EROV_· mun . _ - ···· . ....:....··..•I
Dally , 8: 30a . m . to 12:00 Noon '1.1'_M

Saturday .

-

··-·

-

·-

For Sale

delivered right to your
proJect. Fast and easy . Fr ee
estimates. Phone 992 -3284 ,
Goegleln Ready M ix Co .,
Middleport, Ohio.

Blown into Walls &amp; AHles'
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDINGcSOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

6-30-lfc
ELWOOD BOWER S REP AIR

LARRY LAVENDIR·

sE'P rlc1'iiN'K"s"Ciea.ieii

Notice

For Sale

.Rea_
l

• 54

992 -3525 or 992·5232.

2-11 -lfc
Plumbing ,

REMODELIN G,

3594 .

lost

WI LL ca r e fo r elderl y persons GRAY" andbla ckp oodl ein the
in m y home . Tr ained and
Grav el Hi l l area, Mid ·
e)l.'per i en ced . Pho ne 992 dlepor t Ch i ld's p et. Ca ll 992 ·

73 14.

12-30-78tc

Mobile Homes lor Sale
2 BEDRM . mobil e home , 12 x
65, Holly Pa r k , like new wilh
8 &gt;l 32 awning and porch .
Washer and dryer included ..

Pho ne , W.1304)
Mason
Va .

773
17.c
12 -58
30·6t

5867 .

BLACK cat Wllh While sp ot
und er chin , short hai r ed .
Los r in ._. icinity of Grant St .1
Middlepor t . Phon e 992 -5640,
Reward .
12·26 -6tc
- ----------- --

For Sale or Trade

12·17·121p

1970 - 350 JOHN Deere dozer .
6 ft . blade, canopy , new
engine . New pa int. $5,000 .
Ph on e 985 ·359.4 .

12-17-121p
1975 CHEVROLE T 1 ton dum p
truck V8 , A sp .• P .S.• P.B.
16,009 actual miles . $4,000.
Phone 985·3594 .

12·17·121p
----...:....---------1974 HONDA 750, Ford 2000

tr actor . p . s .• di fferent i al'
lock , fr ont end weig hts, and
other extras : Phon e 992 ·

DOZER . 1958 Internati onal
T.D . 14·A. 12 ft. hydraulic
3658 :
blade, in good cond it ion .
$2,400 . Phone 985 .3594 .
HA LL'S Salvage . All autos
12-17-12tp · ELEC . gui tar. ·amplifle~ . a n d
with frames and bOdies with
microphone .
Will
sell
(lr withou t motor s, $1 hund separate . Baby bed com .
red . Tin .50 hundred . Will
plete . Girl 's bike , Phone 742·
b uy m etal s and sc rap iron .
2078.
On ol d Rt. 33 . just across o1 BE AGLE puppies . Also ,
12·30.Jtc
from Grueser's Chippe r .
_Reg . Basse tt hound , male,
Mon day through Friday 9
housebroke . Phone 742 -2521. YEAR OLD Guern sey bul'l
ti ll 4 p.m .• S atur d r~y , 9 t i l
12·2J.61p c alf , Whirlpool w~sher .
noon..
-·- · -· -·----- - - - Phone 949 .2411 .
12-1d.26tc

Wanted To Buy

Pets

12-30-3tp

For Rent

OLD furnilure . ice boxes •.
brass beds , stone jars, or 3 RM . and bath fur nished apt . ONE Purebred · Ham psh i re
male hog . 10 nice pigs for
comp lete househ old s. Writ e
in Mlddleporl. Inqu ir e at
sa le. Phone ( 614 l 698·8896 .
M . 0 . . Miller , Rt.
2,
Kay 's Beau ty Sa lon , 169 N.
12 -J0:6tc
Pomeroy , Oh lo, Ca ll 992·
Second , Middleport .
7760.

10-7-7&lt;

WA NTE'D old upr ight pianos
in any condition . Wi ll pay
$10 eac h. F lrs t floor onlv .
Write giVing di r ections to
Witten Piano Co .• Box 188 ,
Sardis , Ohio 4J946.

12-30-6tp

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

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

.

1 -

1.2-30-41( 1971 VW CAMPMOBILE , full
ui pm ent , refrigerator,
BEDROOM furn ished eq
water , bed, popup fop and

apa rtm ent
at
Village
Manor . Phon e 99 2-3273.

·

12-19-26tc

FUR NI SH ED apartmen t 4
room s and bath , adults only .

Pbone 992-5908.

Case No. ~1 6'3
Estate of luther V. C' ldw elt,
Deceased.
Notice Is hereby give n that HOUSE 5 rm s. and bat h in
Ra cine . Phon e 992 -5858 . ,
Tr essie Hendr ic ks of R. 0 . 4,
Pomeroy , Ohio , ha&amp; been duly
12·4-lfc
appoin l ed ExecutriM of th e
Estate of Luther V . Caldwe ll , ONE S rm . newly remodeled
deceased, l a i e o f Me i gs
unfurn is hed
apt.
in
Count y , Oh io.
Pomer oy . Phone 992·2288
Cre d itors are reQ uired to
before 9 a .m . or 992 -2270.
fi l e their c laims with said
12-28-lfc
fid uciary with in fou r months .
Dated this 12th day or FU RNI SHED
apartment
December 1975.
adults on ly In Middleport.

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

Phon e 992-3874.

Manning D. Webster
3-25 -lfc
Judge
Court of Common Pleas lA ND 4 RM . furnished and
Proba te Div ision
unfurn ished apts . Phone 992 ·
16, 23, Jo; Jtc
l434.

Mobile

parking. Phone 992-7479.
12-31 -lfC·

4 RM . and bath unfurnished .

SNOW
TIRES

12-28-6tc

TRAILER , &amp;dUll S only . Phon e
992 -3181.

. All sizes In stock at
our Low Prices!

La SlUe
HOTEL

Mlelltport, c.o . l'h. tn-1771

leans, '5.00 up

POMI!ItOY LANDMARK
.... JtickW. C.I'Hy,Mgr.

llil

PhoM m-2111

A IR CO weld ing m•ch ine , new
elec . all accessories In ·

eluded. Phone 992-3410.
I0 -28-Ifc

citizens
em .fm .
mP»&lt; rad lo, 8 track stereo .

Ca ll 992-3965.

12-23 -lfc

LOCU ST po sts . Phone 7.42 .

2359.

EAR corn . Ca ll 388-9991.
12-17-12tc
NOW selling Fuller Bru sh
Products. Phone 992 -3410.

Special lotes

by we.~ ·

or Month

.

CLOSE tN - 1'h acres, 2
BR,"bath, utility R., large
patio garage. In excellent
condition. $8,300.
REEDSVILLE
135
acres, minerals, wooded,
close to recreation, city
water available. $16.600.
POMEROY - Large 2
story frame , 3 BR, 1lf&gt;
baths, recently renovated,
2 car garage. $18,700.
TUPPERS PLAINS - 5 yr.
old 1 floor plan, 3 BR, bath.dlnlng R., full bssement,
aboot :v, acre. $19,500.
POMEROY - Ranch type,
4 BR, 2 baths, enclosed
patio, recreation R. .Hot
water heat . $30,000.
THIS IS THE BEST TIME
OF THE YEAR TO BUY CALL NOW.
"2·2259 or m-2541

MID ·

DL E POR. T I We are so sure
lha t you will love ou r
apartments th•t we gtve you
two weeks RENT F REE .
Just pay your security
deposit end stay six months
and tHe first 2 weeks Is ,free .
You will enjoy monthly
leases , r~ ll electric lfving,
carpeting ,
range
and
r efrigerator , free trash
pickup , cable TV roptionall
a.nd laundry fac ilit ies .
Conveni ent to shopping on

Third and Mill In Mid ·
dleport . VILLAGE MANOR
is yours for one bedroom
aparrments starting at $104
monthl~

NEAR STORES - $7500.00
view of river . .Will make 2
apts. Large lot.
40 ACRES - Get some
privacy. Buy before spri ng
and build your A-FR AME
now. $10,000.
SPACIOUS - Inside &amp; out.
10 rooms, new k lichen wllh
di shwashe r, disposal &amp;
bar . Wood - burn i ng
fireplace, foyer , 2 car
garage. and 1h acre.
NO BETTE R SEC URITY
THAN GOOD PROPERTY.

$11,300.

10·6-lfc

IN

$47,500.

MIDDLEPORT - 2. story
frame, 3 BR, 2 baths,
dining R., storage bldg ..
close to all shopping.

1650 Lin col n Hgts . Phon e

· MANOR

Great Bend. Farm pond,
drilled well and 2 BR
res idence. $15,500.
5 BEDROOMS - Mod. new
home, central air II. heat.
Large family room II. 2 car
garage. Dining &amp; large lot . .

DO YOU NEED

DA SH 23 channel
Hom e INband
transcei ver,

Park , Rt . 33 , ten mil es nort h
of Pomeroy. L ar ge tot s wllh
concrete patios, sidewalks,
r unn ers an d off street

992 -3874.

furnace . L evel lot.
5 ACRES - On Rt. 124 af

12 -18-tfc.

6 RM . HOU SE and balh for
rent in Pomeroy . Ca ll 992 ·
5741.
12-2-261c

COU NTRY

sto r age spa c e . Exce llent
con dition insi de and out ,
make an offer . Phone 992 ·
7277.

LARGE - 4 Brs .. 2 living
1112 bath s, steam
heat. Basement with
garage. Ask lng $20,000.
157 ACRES - Large farm
home with ' bath, 2 ponds
and ba rn . Mineral s.
$60.000.
RACINE - 3 BRs., nice
bath, new kit., nat. gas
rms.,

plus eltc . We pay

tor everything else . See the
Manager at ,River ai d e
Apartments or call 992 -3273.
This offer Wilt end soon , so
move In now and save sus.

10-23-lfc

WMPO • WM.PO-FM
WISH YOU THE BEST IN THE NEW YEAR
WE'LL SEE YOl/ IN '76

t A K Q J 10 8 2
olo K QJ
Both vulnerabl e

u;u, 'OJ,

ERJ[H~,

.

•

.,

11 -30-18tc
D TREE Tri mming. 20

lH~T~
~TCtO

/lJ MV

West

0

'•

0

!-Iron:!

years experience . Insured,
fr ee estimates . Call 992 -3057

North East

South

14

I
I

5y

Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass

~~ ill%~

6.

A reader from Pompano
Beach wani.s' lo know how we
play the three-spade overca ll
of an opening bid of one in a
lower suit .
We play it JUSt the sa me as
an opening three-spade bid.
Not much in high cards, but
seven tricks if vulnerable and
six if not vulnerable. Thus. we
wou ld overcall three spades
with seven to the king-queen·
j ac k, if not vu lne rabl e.
However , vou don 't have to
play it thai weak if you don't
want to .

Opening lead - K •

10-15-lfc

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
In the ordinary good bridge
game
South would have no
LI'ITLE OmsiDiN ANNIE
trouble making his diamond
slam . West would start for the
LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-DOUBLE TALK
defense by leading two high
r;::::::~~Rl r/~~==~~T~H~ff~SA~Y~A~--uH ·HlJfi": ' hearts . South would run off a
HEY! WlfAT
CHIIMP NEVER
few trumps, enter dummy
15 THIS?
COMES BACK ..
with the ace of clubs, lead and
BUT I GUESS
ruff a third heart and play oul
HEVER WAS
so
lhe rest of the clubs and
trumps. On the last lead West
would be squeezed and forced
to unguard his king of spades
:}J~;;;;:;;;;J j;~~~,~~;::;:-=::-:;;;:.-o:;.:;p;;; to protect against dummy's
eight of hearts. South would
chuck that eight of hearts and
make the last two tricks with

SEW IN G MACHINE Repair s,
service , all makes . 992 -2284 .
The Fabric Shop , Pomeroy .
Auth or i zed Si nger Sales and
Serv i ce.
We
sha r pe n
Scissors .
3·29 .tf c
WILL TR IM or cut trees and
sh r ubber y. Phone 949 -2545
or 742 ·3167 .

12-18 -261c

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
1 Ancient
Asian
5 Like a
WJunded
torero
10 Maintain
11 Power or
Guthrie
12 Sunder
13 Penny 14 Outcome
IS "Murders
in the -

The Officers: Fire Fighters Squadmen

Morgue

I elwa4s carry
fu'st aid in ml.l
purse 1. lhis'll
stin' a "I!

At

and

Buqsy's
Grill

·Pomeroy Emergency Squad

ev·r~­

"Volunteers Serving You"

thin'

is .

~ric'kl

cash!

YEAR END CLEARANCE
INVENTORY REDUCTION
SALE

24 Kind of
holiday
26 Old Deep
South title
2B Preminger
film classic
29 Boring tool
30 Prepare
35 Wow, it's
cold!
36 Rome's Veneto

~'"""I':"""'T::-T.:"""1

0

locale

~-THEM

LI'L.

PLA6tJE

LOaJ57?;

VARMINTS iG OCJWiN'

WILL 51!-.16
LlfM IN!b

lb YC:V ~WHAT '1"7""'~

,.,,

IFOR1!

/JUT-!'SST. -

, zl Stephen

LOOK rNOTHING

AXYOLBAAXR
~ WINNIE ,

GOI NGlD

CRY!

I, 0 N G F E I, L 0 W

One lctt('r simp!)' stands for nnother. In this sample A is
U.'•Cd '•' r t h ~ three 1.'1', X rnr the two O's. rtr. Sinp:ll" lett r n .
:1 postrophes, the length nn£1 formiltinn of the words are :~11
hints. E:lrh clay tlu.•. r(ldr lcllr r!'l iiTt' different.

C'R\'PTOQllOTES
FCYQ

LSL&gt;U

G·NFPY
OP

N CE
QN

SFMKSDP

UCQSPY

CY.

''

I
I

' I

""'

'"'I'

DNQ

FSKAQ

SD
SD

AMRP

GEMINI (Mer 2t-Junt 20)

II
you 're going out .this evening
and plan to share expenses,
have a c lea r advance understa ndtng as to who pays lor
what.

CANCER (Junt 21-July 22)
Don'! be 100 o p l~lonaled lh is
evening. Be prepared to make
concessions. especia lly to your
mate.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Tne way
a situation works out today
may stick you with some la·n mlnute chores. Plan ahrad.
You can handle things and still
have fu n.

You'll have a better time with
pals at home tonig ht. If you
must go ou t. make it an early
n1g ht and then bring the gang
home.

SCORPIO (Ocl. 2•·Nov. 22)1f
there's someone ol der you'd
like to visit to w1sh "Happy New
Yea r," m ake sur e yo u do It
be fore you get ca ught up in the
swtrl of activities.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-D&lt;OC.
21) Don' t feel that a high price

tag guara'ltees you'll excel In
the pursuit ot pleasure tonight.
You'll lust fl anen tn e wall et.

CAPRICORN (Dtc. 22-Jtn.
19) You lend 10 gel peppier as
the day wears on. Don 't alter or
cancel tonight' s pl ans just
because the early part of the
day has a fe w lumps in 11.

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Ftb. 19)
The novelty ot the fu nny hats.
the con f e tl l a nd the
nOISemakers Will soon wear olf
tonight. Celebrate quietly with
the one you love.

PISCES (Feb. 20-Merch 20)
By ta te aft ernoon you 'll wan t to
take a brie f respite and let yo ur
ha1r down . No re ason wh y you
shouldn't

~~

~D&lt;IC.brth:'JoJ
31, 1975

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22) Go New ar."tbit1ons
where the bright ligh ts are
tonight, but avo id crowds
You 'll be belt er oil with a small
grou p of friends .

· ~~

'

IO:oo-Blue Knight B.
t0:31l-Billy Graham 3,4,!5 ; Wild Kingdom 13; Say
Brotlier 33.
ll :llO-News 3,4,8,10,13,15,20; Year of Crisis 6; New
Year 's Eve at Pops 33.
11 :30-Movle "Fear No Evil" 3; Wide W?rld Special .
6,t3 ; Johnny Carson 4,15 ; New Years Eve wtth
Guy Lombardo B,to.
12: ts-Joyce Chen's China 33.
12:450anaki 33.
I s· I , IO
1:oo-Tomorrow 4: Movie " Par!~ When I IZZ es
:
Movie "Godzilla 's Revenge t3 .
1:Is-Movie 11 Games 11 3.
2:20-News 13.
· 3:0f)-Movie "Nightmare in Chicago" 3.
4:15-" The Jokers" 3.

TAURUS (April 20·Moy 20)

Is

10.

4:30-Bewitched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8;
Sesame St. 20,33.
s:oo-Bonanza 3; Family Affair B.;
5:30-Adam-12 4; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec.
Co. 20,33 ; To Be Announced 15 ; Adam-12 13.
6:oo-News 3,4,8,10,13,15 ; ABC News 6; Hodgepodge
Lodge 20; Unto the Hills 33.
6:31l-NBC News 3,4,15 ; ABC News 13 ; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Attack Heart A!!ack 20; Book Beat
33.
.
.
•
7:oo-Truth or Cons.-3; Pop Goes the Country 8; To
Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for Dollars 6; Good News
for Today 5; News 10 ; Look Back-A Look Ahead U;
Family Affair 15 ; Book Beat 20 ; Know Your Sehool
33.
7:3lf'-Liist of the Wild 3; Sugar Bowl6,!3 ; Name That
Tune 4· Match Game PM 8: Evenin~ Edition with
Martin,Agronsky 20; The Judge '20 ; Wild !(ingdom
15; Episode Action 33.
B:oo-King Orange Jamboree Parade 3,4,15 ; Tony
Orlando &amp; Dawn 8,10; Memories for a Centennial
'76 20; Sarah 33.
9:oo-Cannon 8; Great Performances 33 ; Movie
"Ziegfeld Follies" tO ;; Weather Machine 20.
9:30-Petrocelli 3,4,15; 3,4,15.

Conclude yo ur bus1ness belore
early alternoon. By then yo u'll
be In a more fes tive mood and
won't be wo rr ied about tying up
loose ends.

•WINNIE
SEEM 'THE 5AME.
WITHOUT YOJ. YOU'LL
&amp;: IJE'IIRLY Mltl&amp;ED.

Fire• ~

the day wears on. yo u tend to
become a bit more se rious. Let
yourself go if you can. or you
cou ld spoi l the good limes of
tnose arou nd you.

I

I. tHI NK I 'M

20,33 ; Movie "Man on

4:30-Bewitched 3

For Wodnesdor, Doc. 31, 1975
ARIES (March 2t-Aprll 19) As

~--------------------DAILY CRYPTO(}UOTE - Here's how to work it :

o JANIE,BONNAZ 'MJN 1T

12 :311-Magnificenl Marble Machine 3,15 ; All My
Children 6,13 ; Search for Tomorrow 8,10 ; Elec. Co.
33.
12:55- NBC News 3,15.
J:oo-News 3; Ryan 's Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15;
Food Preserving 33.
·
1:30-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15 ; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13;
As the World Turns 8; ,10; Ourstory 33.
2:()()-$10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Turbulent Ocean 33.
2:31l-Doctors 3,4; Peach Bowl 12,13,15; Neighbors 6;
Guldin~ Lieht 8.10.
3:oo-Anoiher World 3,4; General Hospltal6,13; All In
The Family 8,10; Kup's Show 20.
3:30-Bewitched 6; Match Game 8,10.
4:oo-Mister Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Mickey Mouse
Club 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers

• Bernice Bede Osol

Vincent _,/25 Abstract
IG 2. being
_ 26 - War
Lawyer
(abbr.)
'-"'lf"f&gt;-~S Type of
combat
( 2 wds.)
31 Neighbor
of Swed.
Seek
33 Coloration

.

'

'

i

~

8:30-Big Valley 6.
· .
9:oo-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,15 ; Lucy Show 8; M1ke
Douglas 10 ; Morning with D.J . 13 ; Consumers
Survival Kit 33.
9:30-Not For Women Only 3; One Life to Live 6;
Tattletales 8; New Zoo Revue t3 ; Food Preserving
33.
JO :oo-Celebrity Sweepstakes 3,4,15 ; Edge of Night 6;
Price is Right 8,10; Mike Douglas 13; Wild Wila
World of Animals 33.
10:30-Wheel of Fortune 3,15 ; I Dream of Jeannie 4;
Dinah 6; Walsh's Animals 33.
11 :oo-Hollywood Squares 4; Gam bit 8,10; Outs tory
33.11 :30-Hollywood Squares 3,15; Happy Days 13 ;
Midday 4; Love of Life 8,10 ; Sasame St. 20,33 .
11 :55-Take Kerr 8; Dan lmel's World 10.
l2:oo-High Rollers 3,15'; Let's Make a Deal 13; Bob
Braun's 50·50 Club 4; News 6,8,10.

AstraGraph

"Treasure"

.,.

Mideport

7 See 3 Down
(3 wds.)
8 Guarantee
9 Most
profound
11 Ridicule
15 Acclivity
18 Trim
21 Repair
22 l..cast
kind
23 Oregon city

Across,

MIRJ men

DAN THOMPSON
·FORD 461 s. 3rd

'

34 Path to
Hades
36 Star in
Lyra
37 See 22
Across
38 Infuriated
39 Czech
mountains
40 Eagle's
nest
DOWN
I Boatswain's
and first
2 Happening
3 Impasse
( 3 wds.)
1 Go astray
5 Circular
motions
(Poetic)
6 KIUer whale

Bogart's

1975 Ford LTD 4 dr. Sedan ••••••••••••••'4195
1974 Pinto 3 dr Runabout ••••••••••••••'2995
1974 Pinto 2 dr Sedan •••••••••••••••• '2695
1973 Ford V8 Torino 4 dr Sedan •••••••••'2495
.'
1973 Ford V8 LTD Sta. Wagon •. •·..... }3095 ...,:
1973 Pontiac Gran Am 4 dr Sedan••••••• '3295 :·:
,,,
1973 Pontile Catalina 4 dr Sedan~........'2995 ·.:
1971 Oldsmobile Delta 8 Cpe••••••••••• :1795
1971 Ford V8 Torino Cpe. ••••••• •••••••11295 ::
1971 Vollswqen "But; ••••••••••••••• '1695 · ~ :
1970 Torino GT 2 dr Sedan•••••••••••••'1595 "'
1974 Chevrolet
¥8 PickuP............ ~.'3695
.
. . :'
· 1974 GMC Custom Dlx Pickup V8 Air, AT.:3995 .~:
1973 Chew. Pickup, PSf Pt, 'AT ••••••• ••• 12995 .~
I fi'S tllrd V8 Chfteau 8 pass.
.
!:"
Van Club Sedan •••••• • • .. • •·• • •• • '3795 .' ..:
1969 Ford F6QO 16 ft. Sem·Van
,;:
'"'
Power ~••••••••••••••••••••'2995 :u
See: Fred Btaettner, Pat Hi II
Melvin Uttle or Dan Thompson
Open Evenings Til6:00
Except Thurs. and S.t. Til5:00 .

1

16 Gem cutter's cup
17 Underwear
purchase
(hyph. wd.)
19 Three, in
ltalia
ZO Tammany
tiger
cartoonist
21 Playwright
Hart
22 With 37

GASOLINE ALLEY

Pomeroy Fire Departm en I

(For a cop y of JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 to: "Win
at Bridge ," c l o I his
newspaper. P. 0 . Box 489.
Radio City Station, New Yo rk.
N Y. 10019)

~

ALLEYOOP

Signed:

Pltane 992·2196

Pass

Pass

t
N.T

or Ill 667 -304 1, Coolvil le.

Due to Limited Building Space and
for Safety Reasons we are Limited
to _the number of .people .who can
attend the annual New Year's Ball.
No general admission will be offered
at the door this year. We apologize
fot this inconvenience. We hope to
improve the building . space
available in the future. We wish
everyone a safe, prosperous, Happy
New Year and Salute to our Nation's
200th birthday . .

AT

1 93
... 9 6 4 3

.,

~.t.erMFi

~·?~18 'C'
. I

backhoe
and
dltcher .
Char les R. Hatfield Bac k
Hoe Service, Rutland , Oh io.
Phone 742 -2008.

• J 95

4Q .6

~·sus,

S-l,llc

1

THE STAFF AND MANAGEMENT

EAST

•9 713

SOUTI1 IDI

' ~'?. us,

-------------EXCAVATING r do zer,

D&amp;

WEST

• KJ 5
• A K Q 10 7
t 76
... 10 52

BORN LOSER

heatin g Md all types of
general
re pa i r .
Work
guaranteed. 20 years ex perience . · Phone 992;2409 .

'·

dummy 's ace and his queen of
spades.
Now let 's see what happens
in the extraordinary very good
bridge gam e.
West cashes one heart and
stops to think . it is obvious
that South sl&lt;lrted with just
one heart. lt is also obv ious
lhal his trumps wi ll be solid so
West shi fts to a trump . South
still uses that ace of clu bs to
get to dummy to lead a second
heart and runs off all his cl ub
and diamond winners but the
squeeze fails to operate. East
hangs on to his jack of hearts
and West to his king-jack of
spades.

311

o1o A 87

NOTICE

11 ·30-lfc

Good play vs. superior play
NORTI1
4 A 10 8 2
• 8632

Help Wanted

TEAFORD

l'&gt;UT GET TillS-

EXCAVA TING . dozer, loacter
and back hoe work ; sept lc
ta nk s insta lled ; dump
tr ucks and IO ·boys for hire;
wil l ha ul fi ll dirt. top soil ,
limeston e and gravel. Call
e·ob or R:oger Jeffers , day
ph on e 99 2-7089 , nigh t phone

-J-------------

Wanted

WIN AT BRIDGE

A&amp;OUT S FEET TALL AND

I MADE OF ?U~·DRIED 8RICK5!

Phone 742-2331
Roger Wamsley, Rutland
11 -28-75

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

MINI4rtt~•'

.

~VN~R~1 ' E

19.70 PON TI AC Sountivllle , 197 1 VEGA , radial tires, re al
__. Sweepers , toasters , irons ,
blue wi lh blac k vinyl to p,
all smatl appliances . Lawn
,
S950
.
Phone
992
-3259.
nice
atr , · fu ll power , runs good ,
mower ,. ne)Cf to State High·
exce ll ent co ndition inside -·- -· ..- - ----- - - 12·24-0tc
wa.v Garage on Route 7.
WE WO ULD lik e to expr ess
and out . Make an offer .
Phone 985 -382l ..
our tha nks and appreciation
Phon e 99 2-7277
4-16-lfc
during th e Illn ess and death
of our
mother . E ffi e -· -·-· ---!.....- - - - - - - ·De n iso n . Everyone w ho 1970 MAVERICK , new motor
Modern sanitat ion. 992 -3954
·. S-,kac~se·, Ohio
broug ht food and sen t
and good con dition . $750.
or 992 -7349 .
flo wer s. Spec ial thanks to
Phone ( 614) 985 ·3806.
Ph. 9fH!n . . .
GOOD quality ha~ . Phon e 992 the staff or Holzer Medical
12-30-31p
4·10 -lmo. i
3658.
Center . Also , Barbara Va n
'"OULD YOU BE LIEVE ?
12·28·61C
Meter , Rev . Lloyd Gr i m m , 1973 T~UCK , 1 t011 Ford , F ·
Build an all steel building at
·-·-C
.
BRADFORD,
Auc
tion
eer
.
Walker Fun eri!l Hom e and
35 0, H eavy duty LWB ., WE STING HOU SE
Pol
e Barn prices? Go lden
Laundry
Complete Servi ce . Phon e
all who he lped In anv way .
e&gt;&lt;ce llent c.o nd itlon . Ca ll 304
. Giant All ·Steel Buil d ing s,
pai r , c l earance . Price $488
949·2&lt;87
or
949·2000.
Racine.
Joe and Ji m Den iso n .
773 ·5308 after 5 p .m .
Rt. .4, Bo x 148 , Waverly .
pai r. Phone { 614 ) 985 ·3307.
Ohio, Critt Bra-dford .
·
12 30-ltc
11 -16-1f
Oh io . Phone 947 ·2296.
· 12·2B ·71c
10-9-.tfc
.
7-24 ·1fC
--- --- -- ,....._
FOR SALE or trade 1973 19
I N CH
Zenith
Early
Pinto, one owner. 34.000
O' DELL Allnement locat ed
A merican
Conso l e
~te
mil es , AC auto , se ll or trade
behind Rutland Grade
Tel evi sion . Sal e S428 . Also .
just
on lat e model pic kup . Phone
Sc hool. Tuneup . bra kes,
TO G I VE away , Beagle
fl oor sam ple mod e ls at 3 BE ORM . home ,
fin ished , r emodeling, Sa lem
949 -2086.
wheel balanc ing, alinement .
Houn d, 3 monfhs old . Pnon e
Speci al clearan ce prices .
Sl ., Rutland . Phone 7&lt;2-2306
992 -2773.
Phone 742-2004 .
Ph one (614) 985-3307.
aft
er
4
p
.m
.
or
see
Milo
B.
J1 -16·tfc
12·28.7tc
Hutchison .
-·---- ------ - - ·-9-23 -lfc EXCAVATING , BACKHO ES
HAVE vour deer trophi es
REVCO Freezers . 15 -20 ·25 cu .
AND DOZ ER, LARGE AND
mouhted .
B ir chf ie ld ' S CASH paid for all ma kes and
ft. , Sp ec ial clear an ce pr ices .
3 BR HOME , just fini shed
SMALL . SE PTI C TANKS
Ta xidermy , St . R t . 124 , East
Ph one (6 14) 985-J307.
m!)d els of mobil e homes .
remodeling . Sale m St .,
IN STAL L ED . BILL
of Rutland . Phone (614) 742 ·
12-28 ·7tc
Pt\one area co de 614 423 ·
Rutland . Pho n e 742 -2306
PULLIN S, PHONE 992 -2478.
2178 .
9l31.
after 4 p .m or see Milo B.
DAY
OR NIGHT . ·
. 11 -28-lfc
4·1l ·lfc COAL . limestone and all types
Hutchinson .
11 -11-781p
sa
lt
and
rock
salt
for
Ice
of
10
-9-lf
c
I WILL be giv ing piano lesson s
and
snow·
removal
.
E
x
in my hom e starting Feb. 1.
celsior Sal t Works , East 6 RM . HOU SE , bath , 1 2 acre ,
For informa t ion ca ll 992 · AN OHIO OIL CO . otters
Main St.. Pomeroy , Ohio .
full baseme n ~ . utility room ,
2278.
PLENTY OF MONE Y plus . Phone 992·3891.
bu ill ·in porc h . garage .
12-18-38tc cas
h
bonuses ,
fringe
12 -7.tfc
Ph one 992 ·7733 .
benefits to mature /n . .
12-30 -tfc
BE FORE yo u buy a Stih l
di vi dual in Meigs County 1964 JO HN Deere 1010dozer , 6
Cha in Saw . See a rrien d, I
area . Regardless of ex
ft. blade , ca nopy and winch,
bought one . A lb er t Keeton ,
perience , airmail B . G. 1.
good condition . $4 ,000 .
M i n er svil l e, Ohio . Phone
Read , Pres .. Ame ri can
Phon e 985 -359.4
992 -6154.
Lubr icants Co ., Box · 696,
12-17-121p
Day ton , Ohio 45401 .
Virgil B.. Sr .. Broker
~---- - - --- -- -12 25 -6tp HYDRAULIC crane, capacity
RO OM and board lor Sr . -- ~~---- - ----- - 110
Mechanic . Pomeroy, 0.
7,000 lb ., extended out to 30
Citizens. with low Income ,
Phone 992-3325
ft
.
Will
fit
on
1
or
1'
1 ton
very nice . Ph one 99 2.3509 .
truck , Sl ,SOO. Phone 985·

Card of Thanks

CAPTAIN EASY

on ·

R&amp;J COINS

·SMITH NELSON
. MQTO"S, IN~._ .
KE AOY Mi X

service

estates and collections.

Nathan Bigg :.
Radiator Specia!.l_st ~

~ ·....__

FREE ESTIMATES -~

Appraisal

..

Pomeroyj

Switch 8.10; Focu s on Women 13; News 20; Woman

Al ive 33.
10:30-Woman Alive 20; Woman 33.
11 :00-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Wide World Mystery 6;

Buy, Sell or Trade

...=rom the largest Truck or 1
Bulldozer · Radiator -to t he '
smallest Heater Core .

Ph ..992 .. 2174

POMEROY·
MOTOJtto ®'' .'
OP.EN EV'"'S "'00

c•::s~it;o~!}~~c Ag~arge per

.

6:00- Columbus Today 4; Sunrise Semester 10.
6:15-Folk Literature 3.
6:25-Farm Report 13.
6:31l-New Zoo Revue 4; News 6; Bible Answers B;
Farmtime 10; The Story 13.
6 : ~0unce of Prevention 10.
6:45-Morning Report 3.
6:55-Ch uck White Reports 10 ; . Good Morning, Tri
State t3 .
7:0D-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS
News B; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7:30-Schoolies 10.
8:0lff.Lucy Show 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St . .

9:3o-&lt;lne Day at A Time 8,10.; Country &amp; Western
USA (c) 5.
10:00-Joe Forrester 3,4,15; Marcus Welby, M.D. 6;

'r-oins, Currenc:y
and Supplies

Quality Pririt Shop
Pomeroy Office
105 Butternut
992 -3345
1
Formerly Weed Wholesal e.
·Featuring:
Delux Zerox Copy Service,
Offi c e
Su pplies ,
Mim eograph
Su pplies ,
lar gest seleCtion of wed ·
ding supplies In South ·
. eastern Ohio .
The Print Shop Complete
(Still if\ business In Mid·
dleport) ·

automatic tran smission, R. step bumper, r adio. A

For Want Ad Service
S CE'nls per wor d one Insertion
Min im um Charge S1.00
14 cents p er word th ree
conse cutive insertions .
26 cent s per wor: d six con .
sec ullv e insertions
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ad$ an d ads pai d within 10
days .

Movie " The Abominable Dr. Ph lbes"· 8; Movie
" Because Th ey ' re Young " 10 ; CoII ege Bas kelb a II
IJ; Ja nak! JJ.
: : ~t~~~~r~;w 3. 4.
·
·
WEDNESDAY , DECEMBER31 , 197S

Tr ibe Tha1 Hides from Man 33

.

1974 CHEVROLET 4-W.D.
$3895
8' l:lody, ''• ton. 350 V-8. power steering and brakes,

RATES

tHERTAG±

l'f!tterd•f•

~.

TUESDAY, DEC EMB ER 30, 1975
··
8 ·00-M · · o J t•· H v Days 613 · Good News
· A ovtn
· "·Times
app8 10 · Beauty
' ' &amp; Ihe Beast'
·,c·a 4 · nGood
mer
'
• '
33
8:30-Welcome Back, Kotter 6,13 ; Joe &amp; Sons 8,10;
Consumer Survival Kit 33.
9 :oo-Police Woman 3,&lt;,15; Rookies 6,.13; Mash ij,10;

Auto Sales

M ond!!Jy Deadline 9 a . m . "

Cancellat ion -

Television log for easy viewing

r:::======~s;;t~L-;-;.Ls~o· FIRE!! HE'LL
LOOKY, 'MAW -TATER'S GOIN '
UP TO JlJGHAID'S
TREE
HOUSE
\

BREAK HIS TOM·FOOL NeCK
TRVIN' TO CLIMB THAT BIG
Ot: CHINABERRV TREE!!

LIBRA (Sepl. 23 -0cl. 23)
f©

197!i Kin« Ftar.tur~s Syndl ca~e , fnc ,)

wilt be awaken ·
ed m you th is comi ng yea r.
Begin now by laying firm foun dations that co uld advance
you r work or ca reer .

�10 - Till' Dally Sentinel, MiddlepOrt-Pomeroy, 0 ., TueSday, DEc. 30, 1975

d Seven cases coming to grand jury

'

l.

!'OINT PLEASANT -Seven criminal cases will be
presented lo tiJP Mason
&lt;'.oun ty Grand Jury when it
conve nes Januilry 5, according lo Ihe office of Mason
Counly Prose¢ulo r Don
Kin gery.
,
The cases involve grand
lar~cny, breaking and entering, possession of a controlled sul&gt;slan ce , ar med
robb~ry, conlrihuling to the
delinquency of a min or,
embezzlement and larceny
by tr·ick.
,Making up the grand jury
· -arc 1ll1rbara A, McKinley,
Arbuckle District: Lois L.
Austin ·and Margarel L.
Blaine, · Clendenin Dislricl ;
Anna P. Shinn , Co logne
Dl~lricl: Garnet! T. Alen,
Cooper District ; DElma S.
Arnold and Carroll M. Adams

MEIGS lHEATRE
TONIG HTthru THURS.
BE C. 30-JAN . 1
NOT OPEN
FR I., JAN . 2-SUN, JAN . q .
WHITE LINE FEVER
(Technico lor )

Show starts at 7:00p.m.
HAPPY NEW YEAR

Jr., Graham District; Arley

Blake, Waggener· District.
·Alternate jurors are Bet!!y
Walden, Hannan Dis tri c.t ; T. Crank, Clendenin District;
Gwyn A, Bibbee, Charles E. James L. Oliver, Cologne
Clnrke Jr. and Rosalie A. District; · Hazel L. Friend,
Hanna. Lewis 'District ; Cooper District; Leon s.
Clifford D. Carder, Robinson Thompson,
Robinson
Dislrict; Carl F. Bailes, pistrict; . and Latha - r'.
Union District; and Charles Bennett, Union District.
1.. Cartwright and Oenver D.
1.. Wray and • 'i'hmnas

F.

Helen Roberts died Tuesday
ATHENS - Mrs. Helen A.
Roberts, 81, Alhens, formerly
of the Pomeroy-Middlepor t
area, was dead on arrival at
O'Bleness Hospital iri Athens
Tuesday morning.
Mrs. Roberts was born at
Moxahala, Ohio, a daughter
of Ihe late Charles anct Addie
McHaffie Keller.
Sur viv in g
are
two
daughters, Mrs. Ja ck
( LaGuardia ) Anas tas,
Athens, and Mrs. Roland
!Thelma ) Kincaid , of
New~rk; two sons, Paul
York, Ballimore, Md., and
Dou glas York oi Chico,
Calif. ; a sister, Mrs. Oliver
1Veva I Beck, Ashland, Ohio :
three brothers, Paul Keller,
Middle por t; Guy Keller,
Albany, and Forrest Keller of
_Ashland, Ohio; 18 grand-

1\hildren and nine great.
grandchildren.
Preceding her in death
besides her parents were her
husbands, Rolland York, In
1930, and Floyd Roberts in
1963 ; a son, Rudy York ; an
infant sister, and a brother,
Charles Keller.
Funeral services will be
held at 1 p.m. Friday at the
Jagers and Spns Funeral
Home, Athens, with the Rev.
Philip· McNairy . officiating.
Burial wlll be in the Town
House Cemetery. Friends
may call at the fun~ral horne
from 2 to 9 p.m. on Wednesday and Thursday.

Asa M. Graves
News
•• in ·Briefs .
:
'
· · (Continued from page I)
died on Monday hard-pressOO to explain the drop but suspect It Is _partially

Alice Davis of
Pomeroy dies

Alice Alma Epple I;ll!vis,
AU!ANY - ABa Melvin
14, Jll. 3, Pomeroy, died this
Graves,
65, Route 3, Albany,
. morning at her residence,
was
dead.
upon arrival at the
Mrs. Davis was born Sept.
O'Bieness
Hospital In Athens
2, 1901 a daughter of the late
Monday
a(ternoon
.
Joseph and· Dena · Wolfe
Mr. G~aves was born Sept.
Epple.Shewasalsopreceded
19,
1910 in Vinton County, the ·
in death by her husband,
son
of the . late Clinton
Andrew Davis, In 1951 and
Graves.
His mother, Mrs.
one sister, and two brothers.
Mina
B(ooks
Doles,
She is survived by a steJ&gt;Chillicothe,
survives,
as.
does
son, Harry G. Davis,
his wife, Anna M. Baird
Phoenix, Ariz.; one sister,
.Graves, whom he married on
Florence Baer, Minersville;
· Jan. 20, 1950,
a brother, Michael Epple,
Other survivors are a son,
Harrisonville, and several
Roger,
Route 3, Albany;
nieces and nephews.
three
daughters,
Oonnie,
Mrs. Davis attended the
Judith and Carolyn, ali at
Pomeroy Church of the
home; two grandchildren; a
Nazarene. brother, Robert, Route 2,
Funeral services will be
GRAVE MARKED
WeUston; six sisters, Mrs.
held Wednesday at 3·p.m. at
THIS
r'ALL Mabel Millikin, Dayton; Mrs.
Ewing Chapel with the Rev.
MONUMENT In the
Uoyd D. Grimm officiating. . Mlddlepert HW Cemetery Cloyd (Goldie) Timmons,
Ray, Ohio; Mrs. Opal FitzBurial will be in Beech Grove
marks the grave of PbDip patrlck, Route 3, Albany;
Cemetery. Friends may call Jones who died Oct. 6, 1810
at the funeral home after 7 at the age of 82 yean and Mrs. Clarence (l{uth) Brown,
Chllllc~the ; Mrs. Don (Betty)
this evening.
six montha. He served In Stewart, Columbus; Mrs.
the war of 1812 and Is James (June) . Genso~,
LOCAL TEMPS
credited
with being a Cleveland, Tenn. ·
Temperature in downtown
founder
of
Middleport.
Pomeroy Tuesday at 11 a.m.
Mr. Graves was a retired
was 43 degrees under rainy
employe of the Athens City
skies.
Schools and the Galloway
Implement Co. Besides his
father he was preceded in
death by a sister.
Funeral services will be
•
held at 2 p.m. Friday at the
WilkesviUe Chapel of the
Walker Funeral Horne with
thi! 8ev. Cloyd Graves of-

TOM TIEDE

A cnme to even
know a Communist?

acquainted with, perhaps agencies. All told, more than ·
even surrounded by, men a dozen of King's close
whose
histories
and associates are in the msc
predictions
were
not documents.
Yet what of it, so far as
altogether
one
with
King's
right to domestic
capitalisn'). , ,.
·
tranquiUty
was concerned?
This ~ not lll!~rUy
Where
does
all of this
mean~ w~ ~n associate .
of Co\iJ~,Jl!a~Lwho ad- suspicion lead? Only to
circular debate on the
1VQCa(ed, ti}ii.P,YFr1111;0lf of the
WASHINGTON _ Was United ', States., Rather, 11 potential influence of his
Martin Luther King Jr. a rnea'\B he had friends and co- friends; certainly not to any
Communist? various weU. workers wbose names were justification of the exmeaning Jaw enforcement' ·recorded on numeroUIIllsts as travagant measures used to
officers an&lt;! millions of oChers having espoused a Com- eavesdrop in Dr. King 's
concerned ·loith the security muni~, ~ughl', or .belonged bedroom. Knowing Comof the nation belleve• the to groups of which 'some of munists is not illegal, being
answer Is at the core ·of· the 'the men\llers ·· were Com- Communist is not 'Illegal.
ongoing Investigations Into rnunists, or;' in a couPle of Ideally, the Jaw looks on
the extraordinary federal cases, conducted their Jefferson Democrats and
interferehce with the late private lives in such a way as Marxist sympathizers as
leader's civil rights. u . he to r~ questiOns as to their deserving of equal protection,
this tenet of lnllependence
was, they say, interference politics.
was justified; if he wasn't, It
These nam~ Usts, as the having time and again been
wasn't.
argument has 11, Wfl'e reason ruled indivisible in court.
It csn 't In a demoeracy be
And if this thinking has enough for a large number of
validity that Is if It is true high ranking government otherwise. u the Fourth
that co~plex q'uestions can . authorities to allow the Amendment was truly the
be reduced with shnpllstlc policing of Dr. King's ac- . occasion w~ere, as John
Adams insisted, "American
answers, It does not In all tlvlties.
honesty look good for Dr. · The record Is undeniably .Jndfllendence was then and
King.
damaging concernq at least there born," It must continue
Though there is little save one of the suspected King to apply to all Americans or It
low suspicion to suggest that associates, a one-time New does not with certainly IIPPIY
he personally subscribed ito 8· Otleans waUII!' .. named to any. Communist or no, as
Marxist doctrine at odds with Hunter Pitta O'Dell. He, a retired Justice William
the welfare of America It 1s Close Kirig confidant ih the Douglas wrote in one of his
quite true that he 'was lll501( was. idenWJed· then In decisions, "The right to be let
alone Is indeed the beginning
special Senate hearings as
district organizer of the of all liberty."
~111'ist
PBrl?' hear-In
Louisi8na.
The
. '"r ~ 'l.l.! ' n~• l in
~~~o~t~'IJ'
;:. uig- to " .
There are jobs to be had ·In
' P.!\1'~,"'"'
.a
the Meigs County Senior srnoot,1J)l,
Qo~dlna ted"
Citizens Programs .
Comrnun!f.t lll)derground was Vetera M ri 1
' lice In an aban·
ns emu a Hospital
Persons interested In full or foond by' po
ADMITTED - Raymond
part-t(me employment are ·doned O'Dell .apartment. JusUs, Mlddleport; Daniel
invited to submit resumes When asked about O'Dell, ,Davidson, Pomeroy ; Sherrie
stating all qualifications, King said in 1963 that he Lawson, Racine - Linda
' Wanda
including education, ex- "may have had some Bissell , Long Bottorn;
perience and Involvement in (Communist) connections in Gordon, Middleport; Delmar
community acUviUes.
the past." Eventually, O'DEll Grady, Racine; · WilHam
Requirements
Include was dr~ from King's · Chafin, Pomeroy; Deloris
leadership capabiliUes, the payroll,
GaiU,Rulland; Robert Fetty,
The records of other Langsville.
use of the applicant's personal car, and being susplcloned King asaoclates
DISCHARGED _ David
available to start work Im- are not 110 obvious, not enoll8h . Roach, Marvin Darst Ber'
mediately. Resumes should for their names to be included nice Darst
here
fairly,
Yet
allegations
·
be submit~ to, the Meigs
County Council on Aging, Box against them have the ""'llolzer Medical Center
(DIIcbrge~, Dec. 29)
722, Pomeroy, by Jan. 5, 1976. cumulative effect of at least
caslilig doubts on Dr. King's
Amy Broihers, William
ByTomTlede
"The right of the people to
be secure in their persons,
houses, pape~s, and effects,
against unreasonable
searches and seizures, shall
not be viola ted ... "
- The Fourth Amendment
to the Constitution

u

488URI:D
... of peace of mind when you heve
a checking ai:count. Whether 'it be
personal or busin'"· the records a
checking account gives you can help
make tax time or any time easier to
know where you •tend financially.

Walk-Up Teller Window and
Auto Teller Window
Open Friday Evenings 5 to 7 P.M.

"1'RE FRIENDLY BANK"

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
DEPOSITS INSURED TO •40,000

a

· Full, parttime

HOSPITAL

jobs available

NEW HOURS

FOR THE NEW YEAR

THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

PLAYING NmLY

Open Fridays til 8
lUESDAY THRU SATUIIIMY

GEO. HALL
TUES.-THURS.
1:30-1:00

c

FRI.&amp;SA·T.

992-3629

RUTLAND FURNITURE CO.
r

,.

Cloudy, chance of rain
. tonight, lows in the upper 30s.
Cloudy Wednesday, highs in
the low 40s. Probability of
precipitation near 100 per
cent today, 50 per cent
tonight, 20 per cent Wednesday.

Hartford native
died on Sunday
HARTFORD, W. Va.
Laura Rhodes, a native of
Hartford, and a retired
Mason County school
teacher, died Sunday in her
sleep in a nursing home in
Pi'tsburgh. The body was
transferred
to
the
Beiswenger Funeral Horne at
3828 JacOb St., Wheeling, W.
V/A., from where funeral rites
will be conducted Friday with
burial to follow in a Wheeling
cemetery.
.
!lhe was a daughter of the
late Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Rhodes. Among the survivors
Is a cousin, Carrie -Judson, of
Hartford.

RUTlAND, 0.

,. .

.PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - James
Nelson, Bidwell ; Preston
Davis, Lakin; Hattie Roush,
New Haven~ Mrs. Eldilderlo
Roque, Lakin: John H.
McCoy, Gallipolis Ferry;
Mrs. Teddy Cobb, son,
Glenwood.

w

CHASN ALA COWERY, INDIA -'- PUMPS supplled by
foreign countries were rushf9 to India ~y to hel)l draiJI
millions of gallons of water from a coal p1t wher~ relatives
stand a death watch for hundreds of trapped miners.
Government officials held out almost no hope for any of tiie
more than 350 men 1,000 feet below the surfate !l&amp;turday 6\
India's worst mine tragedy. But they pledged to continue
pumping as loug as there was tbe slinunesl chance. India rad!D
;mnounced Monday the United Slates, France and Switzeri81Jd
were flying In modern pumps capable of draining 2,500 gaUOflS
of water per minute In response to an urgent plea for help bf
Prhne Minister Indira Gandhi.
•JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA-The Soviet-backed
facuon battling for supremacy in Angola plans a new rnllltaljr
offensive to upstage Mrica peacemaking efforts, diplomatic
sources said. A stockpile of sophistica~d Russian military
equipment will be used to widen the faction's control of the
former Poituguese coiqny, the lloUrces said Monday.
;
The arms include a squadron .of MIG21 fighters recently
assembled at the Marxist-held capital of Luanda, amphibious
T34 tanks and mobile Russian-made surface-ta,ur!ace
missiles that the sources said already have 1riflicted heavy
losses on the two anti..SOvlet groups. The Marxist Po)IU)aT
Movement for the Liberation of Angola Is confined to it,s
Atlantic port capital and a narrow central strip running Into
the resource-rich West Mrican territOry.
·
COLUMBUS - RESULTS OF STUDIES DONE at' Ohlo
State University reveal that any national pollcy that would
better health, such as national hesltli Insurance, could contribute greatly to Am~dc~'s industrial output.
:
Qealthy • middle-aged men work more hours and get
higher-paying jobs than comparable coworkers with health
problems, Dr. Herbert S. Parnes said Monday. "This finding
indicates that any national policy that would further better
health, such as national health insurance, wuld contribute to
greater national output from industry," said the Ohio State
research associate.
CINCINNATI - UNLESS LAST-MINUTE negotiations
produce new agreements, Cincinnati's policemen, firemen and
nonuniforrned city employes will be ·without contracts at
midnight New Year's Eve. City officials have been bargaining
separately with three unionrs re!H'esenting the' nearly 6,000
workers for more than a month.
Talks with firemen reached an hnpasse last weekend, the
pollee continued to bargain Monday and nonuniforrned employes are to tallt: again Wednesday. Forrest Buckley,
president of the Cincinnati Firefighters Asaociation, which
represents 975 firemen, said the city and union are I per cent
apart on a wage hike and "a whole builch apart" on cost-ofliving Increases.
CLEVELAND - FORMER ISRAEU PRIME Minister
Golda Meir Monday night said she Is pessimistic about the
future of the United Nations, because of Its resolution equating
Zionism with racism, but not about the future of Israel. "IT [
am pessimistic It Is not for the future of Israel but for the
future of the United Nations," abe said In a fund-!'lllstng aJ&gt;pearance before the cream of Cleveland's Jewish community~
She called the U. N. reaolullon on Zionism "an
abomination, ridiculous, tragic for the United Nations." Mrs.
Meir said the reaolution has made anUsernltlsm seem
legitimate and Israel's enemies are thus encouraged to try to
erase the Jewish state from the face of the earth. "Should this
give us any trace of a thought of giving up·?" abe asked. "God
lorbld!"

LOCAL TO MEET
Bricklayers a11d Cement
Maaoils Union, Local 32, will
meet In regular session on the
second Thur8day of January,
Jan. a, rather than on the first
ThurSday due to the holiday.
HOMENOW
SYRACUSE
Allee
Freeland, who has been a
patient at Camden Clark
Hospital, has returned to her
home here.

SERVICES NOTED
Officiating at funeral
services for Mrs. ClOdella'
Childress to be held at 2 p.rn:
Wednesday at the Lelarl
Falls United Brethren
Church will be the Rev.
Freeland Norris. The body II
at the Rawlings-Costs
Funeral Home where friends
may call unW 9 this evening
and unW noon on Wednellday
when the body will be taken to ,
· the church.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
SHOP WED"ESDAY 9:30 to 5.PM
SAVE NOW
DU~ING OUR
BRIGHl AND WHITE SALE
.
IN THE
HOME FURNISHINGS ANNEX'
TOYLAND CLEARANCE
$AVE ON SELECTED TOYS

FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK
SALE Y2 PRICE

, , 30-2:00

The MEIGS INN
ARNOLD GRATE

Weather

NEWS

. - - - - -...--------~-------------· company.
wisdom InAccording
selectingto his
Cargo, Amy Donnally, Mrs.
the Samuel . Loomis
and.
now hnpounded lllea ol the daughter, Lois Osbourne,
disbanded House Internal Crystal Roush, Mn. Donald
Security Committee, one top Saxon
and
daughter,
fteld secretary for King's Florence Trainer, Denver
Southern Christian Waugh, Mrs. WilHam
Leaderslllp Conference was WOOdard ind son.
an "entbuslastic" member ol
(Birth,, Dec.%9) .
a Communist operational
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
committee. Another aide, a lundsey, son, Albany; Mr . .
minister, Is ldentlfted In the ·and Mrs. Dennis Staley,
MON, TUES., WED.,. SAT-8:30 to 5:00
HISC records as an ''ad- daughter, Jackaon,
vlser" to alle~ed Red

742-2121

flclallng. Burial will be in the ·
A!hens County Memorial
Garden. Friends may call at ·
the chapter any lime after 10
a.m. on Thursday. The family
will receive friends from 2 to
4 and from 7 to 9 p.m. Thursd·
ay ·

becauSe of stricter enforcement of the 55 rnlle per hOur apeed
[4nit. .
.
.
.. '
The latest traffic death figures from ·each slate abow ·a
total of 42,599 fatalities compared wi,th 43,492 for conoils[l(llldlng period$ a year ago. When the energy crisis bit in late IJI3,
authorities had ready reasons for the decUne In traffic
fatalities from 55,5001n 1973 to 46,200 In 1974. They attributed Jt .
to a drastic curtailment in travel ·and the newly Imposed
nationwide 55 mile per hour speed llmil to save gas.
•
But this year travel is up aboul3 per cent frOIII' 1974, equal
to the record year of 1973, and ·sidNoad speed llmita, lowered
at the height of the energy crisis, are rising again. Still, the
death total will be close to 45,000, assuring the lowest fatallty
rate per hundred million rnlles traveled since World War II.

Best In
Live Entertainment

flEE CUSTOMER PARKING

ON SECOND STREET
AND AT THE MEQWUC STREET WAREHOUSE

ELBERFELDS IN ·POMEROY

MANNING KLOES

MICK CHILDS

EMERSON HEIGHTON

Hopes for 1976
are expressed

FERMAN MOORE

e

fiALPH WEBB

•

at y

LINDA BURNEM

BESSIE PULLINS

en tine

Seven Meigs
Countians
wereNew
invited
Tuesday _
VOL.
XXVII
NO.
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 31 , 1975 _ _ _ _ _ _ _.:_::_::~~::::_~~
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS
to express
their hopes
for the
Year.
__
...:...,_
_182
_ _ __ _
_ _ _ _ _ ___:__
_ ___ ____.:.:_:..:..:.:.:..:::.::.:.:~::.:..::::.::.:.::~:.::_..:_::..::_
Hope for good health, peace, spiritual

~lf;~~~=~~?::::::::.~:~:
,.......,.. -~.." ......, .•"....m.. $50,000
.

Agency, "wants peace and
prosperity throughou t the
world.. Locally, I'd like to see
more business come to Meigs
County, to create more jobs
anhed help keep young people
re. "
MANNING KLOES, vice
president and cashier of the
Citizens National Bank,
Middleport: "My hopes are
for good health, an upturn in
the economy ·of our country
and a spiritual awakening
among all people which
would bring peace and good
will to the world."

of."
FERMAN MOORE, owner
of the Royal Crown Bottling
·co., Middleport: "I would
like to see prosperity for the
world. In these times- of
abundance and surplus, it
seems a great shaine that
there is so much suffering
and unhappiness. I do see
stability for these United
States as we emerge from the
economic crisis of lhe last
year . It does seem that most
people realize that the' future
is once again brightening."

LINDA BURNEM - of Rt.
2, ~cine, has as her biggest
,f EMERSON HEIGHTON, wish in 1976 is for more
owner of Cross Hardware employment for men of the
Store , • Middleport : " My Meigs area.
hopes are that mankind will
develop
the
wisdom
BESSIE PULLINS - The
necessary to attain true most hoped for wish for 1976
peace and tranquility for Bessie Pullin's of Midthroughout the world. Since dleport Is lo have good health .
this is also the year of our
bicentennial celebration, I
RALPH WEBB, Racine,
hope that the people of Meigs Utinks lhe best thing to have
County enjoy the freedom in 1976 is good health .

By United Press IntertlaUonal
CINCINNATI - HOPING FOR THE ,BEST, but preparing
for the worst, city officials have drawn up contingency plans
that could Include calling in the National Guard In case a fullscale strike by policemen and firemen develops after contracts
expire at midnight tonight - New Year's Eve.
_Authorities maintain they do not "antlclp~e " a ma,or
strike. However, Richard A. Castelini, city Slfety director,
says should there be such a strike, the Hamilton County
Sheriff's Patrol would not be abl~ to handle aU the city's needs.
''The procedure would be then that the mayor is authorized
to ask the governor to call out the National Guard," Said
Castelllnl. "It is only logical that If aU pallce and firemen go
out, we would turn to the governor. And the only real tool th~
governor has Is the National Guard.
CLEVELAND - AN AGREEMENT to repay ·4 cents on
the dollar for money lent to Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, DMiM., wiping out nearly $900,000 In debts left over from his
unsuccessful 1972 presidential primary campaign, hss been
reached with former Democratic National Finance Chairman
Joseph Cole of Cleveland and 18 others.
Hwnphrey 's Minnesota office confirmed to the Cleveland
,Preu Tuesday that Cole, chairman of Cole National Corp.,
loaned Humphrey $175,000 in 1972 and has received and accepted a check for f/,000 and signed a release that cancels the

debt.

I

.

NASHVILLE, TENN. - A WOMAN WHO SUED a Nash, ville restaurant for $5 million after her 8-year-old son received
a severe shock from an electrical sign and lapsed into a coma.,
has been awarded a settlement of $325,0tlll. Mrs. earole Powell,
mother of Gregory Warren Powell, filed a circuit court suit In
September against O'Charley's restaurant asking $5 million in
compensatory and punitive damages.
The restaurant has also agreed to.pay the mother $150 a
month for five. years to help defray the cost of caring for her
son, who baa beep at home in a coma since the incident last
Jwte. The boy was walking to a playground with his older
brotlief when he slopped to .look at the sign in front of the
restaurant. He received a massive electric abock when he
iouched the slgp and was knocked unconscious. He was given
ftrst aid by passersby and was rushed.to the hospital.
BOULDER, COLO. _: NEW YEAR 1976 will be one second
tate. Thouaands of atomic clocks u~ around the world as the
official standard&amp; of time will be staggered one second tonight
10 make up for a slowdown in the earth's rotation.
"Unfortunately the earth Is a Jouay clock," said Dr. James
Barnes of the National Bureau ol Standarda. "Atomic clocks
11'1! 1111ybe IIMI,ooo or a milllcJn t1me1 more accurate than the
llpinnlnc 1811b." Barnes said the extra second will guarantee
the thne on commercial clocks will coincide with the atomic
clocb used by 9!!ientlsts, navigators and tel.vision networl!:s.

on heads "~~;;;:r,:,;~;·
,~
............. ~· Bah y derby
0 1 bom b k l•11e
on ton1ght
-...~

•

NEW YORK (UPI) - A
massive manhunt was under
way today for whoe ver
planted a time bomb in a
locker at I.aGuardia Airport
Monday, kiUing 11 persons
and injuring 75 others.
President Ford ordered 300
FBI agents to join scores of
city detectives in the search,
and a $50,000 price was put on
the heads of the killers.
"We don'tlmow the reason
for the bombing ," · Chief of
Detectives Louis Cotten said
the day after the bornblng.
"Because of that, the invesligation at this thne will

have to explore many, many
avenues."
The ai rport reopened
Tuesday night, more than 24
hours after It was closed ,by
the blast. Airlines operating
the I,100 flights a day at the
airport had canceled some
flights and rescheduled
others into nearby KeMedy
and Newark airports.
Disclosure of the manhunt
aame from a White House
meeting President Ford held
Tuesday evening moments
after returning from a skiing
vacation in Colorado. Ford
met with transportation and

Campaign office
alarm is tripped
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - A
burglar alarm went off early
today at a suite occupied by
President Ford's campaign
oornmitlee, but police said
the 'intruders apparently did
not take anything from the
office.
A pollee spokesman said
investigators found several
screws removed from the
front door hinges of a suite
housing the advertising
section of the President Ford
Committee. The spokesman
said the alarm sounded at
2:51 a.m.
"A thorough search of the
building and premises was
conducted with negative results," the spokesman said.
Skip Watts, prhnary states
coordinator for the committee, He said the office

Thieves
are busy

contains mailing hsts, the
comm itt ee ' s national
newsletter operation and
campaign articles such as
poslers and bumper stickers.
"The only thing I oould
think of is somebody thought
there was something there
beyond the list themselves,"
he said.
He said a strip across the
double door was removed
along with the screws. He
said once those were
removed, a knife could open
the door, which would trip the
alarm that "sounds like a
destroyer In battle ."
"The only way the alarm
goes off is when the door is
open," he said.
He said there was no indication of entry "beyond the
door itself being damaged in
a minor fashion. There's
nothlng that seems to be
missing."
The
door
closes
automatically with a suctiontype hinge, and was closed
when police arrived, he said .

h l ah
bnngtng
• • •·
WStS

The Meigs County Sheriff's
DEpt. is investigating two
~brealdng an enterings that
occurred somellme Monday
night and Tuesday morning.
ill
The Lassie Justice Carry
Out located on Story's Run
Road on the Meigs-Gallia line
was entered through Its fron t
door. Missing are a TV, six
By H. J. HELLER
fifths of wine, six li ghters, United Press International '
, one car ton of gum, cigars and ·It can cost a lot to bring in
several cartons of cigarettes. the new year - unless you
AI Letarl Falls Cemetery are among the many
lhe _garage located there was Americans who stay at horne
entered by breaking out glass . 'at watch Guy Lombardo's
In the door. Taken were two band play "Auld Lang Syne"
cases of· oil and an un- on television .
del~rmined amount of gas,
A UP! survey shows prices
At 11 :30 p.m, Tuesday iti for an ' ev.ening's · enColumbia Township Jean - tertainment range from more
netle J . Tucker, 22, Wellston, than $250 per couple to the
was backing out of a private cost of a few drinks at the
drive when her car's backup neighborhood tavern.
lights went.oul and she went Millions will shout "Happy
over an embankment and New Year" and kiss their
struck lwo fence posls, There spouses, love rs and friends was slighl damage.
ICuntinll" l"" page 2)

flew year

a

FBJ·officials to back up his
call for tighter security at
U.S. airports "as quickly as
possible. "
While Ford was conferring
in washington and setting up
a meeting on Friday, FBI
agents and city police
combed the - debris at
LaGuardia for clues.
The Air Transport Associalion, an organization of the
· lin ~. oIfered a $50,000
au-,
reward for information
leading to the arrest and
conviction of the bombers.
Police pleaded with travelers
who may have seen
something suspicious at the
airport to come forward.
Al his night conference,
Ford was told it has been
established the bomb was
planted in a locker and was
not in a piece of luggage from
a plane which had just
arrived.
"We are going to maximize
our efforts at the federal level
to make sure this doesn't
happen aga in," said Ford
before leaving Vail, Colo.
"We must do something in
the area of terrorist
prevention ."
"Someone must have seen
something." said a top city
police official.
;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:·

EXTENOED OUTLOOK
Friday through Sunday,
a chance of rain Friday and
a chance of snow Saturday
and Sunday. Highs Friday
will be In the upper 30s
north and in lhe upper 40s
In the south, but lowering
Into the 30s by Sunday.
Lows will be In the upper
20s to the lower 30s.
:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::

no paper being published,
Regular publication will be
r es umed Friday·
Richard S. Owen,
president of the Ohio
Valley Publishing Co., the
news staff, production
perso nnel and carri ers
extend to every reader best
wishes lor a happy and
prosperous New Year.

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

Wealht&gt;t'
Cloudy, chance of rain
lonighl ; lows in the upper 30s
to the low 40s . Partly cloudy
Thursday, highs in upper 40s.
Probability of precipilallon
80 per cent loday, 40 per cent
lonight, 20per cent Thursday.
JONES FINED
Herman A. Jones , 26,
Middleport, was fined $10 and
costs by Middleport Mayor
Fred Hoffman Tuesday night
on a conviclion of a disorderly manner charge.

Thirly-lwo Big Bend
merc hants are offering prizes
in the 1976 Daily Sentinel
Baby DErby .
Parents of the first baby of
the New Year in Meigs
County will receive a number
of gifls contributed by the '32
business houses as a part of
the derby.
According to the contest
rules, parents of the first
arrival of 1976 inusl be legal
residents of Meigs County,
although the father may be in
the Armed Forces, and the
family stationed at a distant
point.
The eKactlirne of birth must
be specified in a written
statement from the attending
physician. The statement of
the birth must be received at
The Daily Sentinel office, l1J
Court Street, Pomeroy, no

later than 'Jan . 10, 1976.
Contributing the prizes are
Waid Cross &amp;Sons, Heritage
House, Royal Crown Bottling,
Krogers, Stiffiers, Western
Auto, Racine Department
Store, The Meigs Inn, H &amp; R
Firestone, Landmark, K&amp;C
Jewelers, Ra cine Home
National Bank, Rulland
Furniture , The Fabric Shop,
Racine Food Market,
Pomeroy Flower Shop,
Powell's Super Valu ,
Gateway, L &amp; Z Dress Shop,
Swisher &amp; Lohse , Kiddie
Shoppe, Mark' V, Pomeroy
National Bank, Dudley
Florist, Welker's Ashland,
Citizens National Bank ,
Sears, Crow's Steak House,
·Hartley 's Shoes, Villaee
Pharmacy, Moore 's and
Goessler's Jewelry.

This Christmas best
What appeared to be an
approaching bleak Christmas
al lhe Meigs County lnrtrmary lurned out lo be the
"best yet," thanks to many
individuals, organizations
and businesses:
Mrs. Mildred Ja cobs,
superintendent of th e infirmary, said that the 14
residents had a "wonderful"
Chri stmas. She listed the
followi ng who made gestures
for th e infirmary for the
holiday :
Charles Blakeslee, Reeds ville Methodist Church.
Am erican Legion (Feeney ·

Bennett Post], First Baptist
Church. Pomeroy; Rosemary
Young , Minersv ille; Rutland

Co~seling
Jim Cleland, president of
the Ohio Valley Fellowship,
Inc., ha s offered free counseling and referral services
to residenls of this area.
The offer, it was revealed
today, came in a certified
letler directed to the Meigs
Counly board of county
com missioners. The commissioners have made no
appare nt, response to
Cleland's offer.
The voluneer group of
cilizens has been trai ned by
Cleland, Ohio University and
lhe Ohio Bureau of Drug
Abuse to furnish a complete
alcohol and drug abuse
, program.
Cleland explained members make up a non -profil
pr ivately finan ced
coproralion registered by the
Ohio Secretary of St1le for
the be nell t of all individuals
and groups in thi s area who
need information and
trealmenl for alcohol and
drug «busc rclaled problems.

•

Church of Christ, Barbara
Sargent, Dorcas Circle of
Sanbor n Missionary Society ,
Midd le port First Bapllst
Church; Meigs County Avon
Ladles, Mrs. Maxi ne Gaskill,
Pomeroy Jr. Girl Scouts,
Dorothy Davis, Dale Dutton ,
Middleport Baptist Church,
Love Joy Circle, Middleport
Baptist Chur&lt;h; Mr. and Mrs .
Vernon Milchell, Slory's Run
Church, Shuler's Market, The
R.C. Bottling Co., La rry
Hendricks, Pomeroy Chapter
186 Eastern Star, Jr . O.E.A.
Club, Me igs . High Sc hool
Band, Women's Auxiliary ot
the Big Bend C. B. Club, Mrs .
Alma White, Mr. and Mrs .
Char les Karr, Mr. and Mrs .
Ted Malthews, John Lisle,
Danville Wesl eyan Church,
Jaymar Coal Co., Margaret
Douglas, Donald Dye, Dena
Houck , Eagles Club, Church

service offered

The group has been
operating in Racine and the
southern pari of the county
for abou t two yea rs. Some
r.emarkablc recoveries have
been wi lnesse\i, Cleland said
Clela nd told The Daily
Se ntinel he believes welllrain ed volunteer cilizens
who "really care ab&lt;lut their
community" are lhe best
answer to lhe frustra tions of
those who need alcohol or
drugs to cop"e;f~ilP,~s of
modern socie
Although lhe Ohio Valley
Fellowship is not an enforcing agency, it has the
latesl information on Ohio's
new dru g laws and is
qualified
Io
conduct
workshops for police, juslice
officials, and Interested
service organizations ,
Cleland said .
The two most Important
points of emphasis of the new
law are to put the pushers out
of business and to offer
treatment Instead of prison to
lhose who have never been

convicted for drug related
crimes, Cleland indicated.
Cleland also has se nt a
letter lo all police officials in
Meigs Cou nty info rming
lhem o! lhe service by the ·
Bureau of Drug Abuse
through the Ohio Valley
Fellowship.
The 1975' directory of drug
abuse agencies lists the Ohio
Valley Fellowship, Inc., as
the only drug abuse agency in
Meigs County, and since the
community mental health
ceniA!r Is soon to be disbanded
in Meigs Coun ty, the
fellowship feels a responslbilily to offer and advertise
its services lo all the people of
Ihe county. The fellowship
thereby, hopes to take up
some o! the void crea ted by
the departure of the communily health center, he said.
Anyone in need of help or
Information can write to
Box 325. Racine, 45nJ, and
eac h will receive a prornpl
response, Cleland said .

The Latter Day Saints,
Grace Episcopal Church
(Women), Laurel Cliff
W.M.S.. Mr . and Mrs. Robert
Barton . Teenager Class ,
Church of Christ, Middleport ;
·Esther Miss ionary Circle ,
Racine Baptlsl Church ;
Elizabeth Cutler, Sew Rite
Sewing Club, Senior Citizens,
Shade River Belles and
Beaus, Nazarene Church,
Rutland ; Carolyn Salser ,
of

Vinas Lee, Kenneth Wilcox,

(Continued on page 2)

Unbelievable!
tax cut coming
on phone calls
MARION - In an -era of
inOalion and rising taxes,
G~neral Telephone Co. of
Ohio announces a lax cut that
will save its nearly 480,000
customers ab&lt;lut $1.7 miUioii.
in 1976. Effective Jan. 1, the
excise tax on local and long
distance telephone service
drops from seven per cent to
six.
Rob ert
M.
Wopat ,
president, said telephone
companies have collected
this tu for the !ederal
government since it first was
inslituted as a temporary
measure during World War I.
Although the original tax
was repealed in 1924, it was
reinsta.led during the
depression in 1932 and Increased and broadened In
1942 to meet needs of World
War II . In the 1950s the tax
was repealed for all uliUtles
except telephone . ·
As part of lhe Federal
EKclse, Estate and Gift Tax
Adjusimen t Act of 1970, the
excise tax on te lephone
service will become history In
DEcember 1982. It is bi!lng
reduced at the rate of one per
cent per year.
-l

,,

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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="54192">
            <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="54191">
              <text>December 30, 1975</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="299">
      <name>davis</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2876">
      <name>graves</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="94">
      <name>rhodes</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="775">
      <name>roberts</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
