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'\

Rhodes

HOSPITAL NEWS

.

Funeral
services
for
Woodrow L. Perroud , 23, a
native of Ga llia County, will be
held 11 a m. Wednesday at the
McCoy Moore Funeral Home
w1 th Rev Elmer H1ll of.
fic1allng. Burial wlil he in
Vinwn Memorial Park.
Perroud , a resident of 685
Galli-Ct., Colun1bus. was found

HQhio's

STILt CONFINED
Sammy G1bb&amp;, Rutland, who
has been a pallent al the Holze r
Medical Ce nl&lt;) r since Dec. 27.
remams hospitalized . ~Ji s roont
number is 401.

vacations for winter" ...

MEIGS THEATRE

How about those do -it .
yourself jobs you' ve been
P\•tt lng off ' t i l w i nter?
Well, winter Is here and th e

MON . Ihru THUR .
JAN. 13-16
NOT OPEN

" FRIENDLY ONES " have
everything you need lo gel
started on It I his weekend.
Come In today ... ( yoor
wife will be glad you did) ...

FRI. -SAT .. SUN .
JAN . 17·18·19
THE CHINESE
PROFESSIONALS
(Techn•color)
Sta rr ing - The masters of
Mart1a l Arts

(RI
And

SCALAWAG
(Technicolor)
Starring K1rk Doug las

Show Starts 7lOOp.m.

(G)

number

of

one

public

education in a crisis/ ' Rhodes

said. "We must make the
change necessary so we ·can
get state education more
directly into paychecks of
those who are the backbene of
our educational system - the
teachers and the school employes."
Rhodes concluded the Inaugural address with a call for cooperation, quoting John
Donne's often repeated axiom
"No man is an island unto
IN.HOSPITAL
RACfNE - The Racine
emergency squad was called to
Long Bottom Route I for Albert
Hili . Jr ., at 5 p. m. Saturday. A
medical patient 1 he was taken .
lo Veterans Memorial Hospital
where .he was adnlitted.

shot to death in Wakefield State
Park near Lucasville, Ohto,
around 3::W p. m. Saturday
According to a report in this
morning 's Colwnbus CitizenJournal , Perro ud wa.s found in
his 1969 Plymouth, dead of a
gunshot wound to the head. He
was discovered by an officer
from the Lucasville post of the

Ohio State Highway Patrol on
routme rounds.

Thurman, in 1971, in North
Carolina. She survives, along
" No weapon was found, " the with his parents and two
patrol said , so the death is sisters. Mrs. Lewis (Paula)
Marr, Colwnbus, and Mrs.
bemg considered a murder.
The patrol is not sure how David (Janice ) Kerns, Patriot
long Perroud had been dead . Star jloute, Gallipolis.
An au!opsy was performed this
Mr. Perroud was a machine
morning by the Ohw State inspector for the Jeffery
Umversity pathology depart· Mimng Machinery Co. in
Colwnbus. He was a member
ment .
The body was received at the of the Centeryille Masonic
Frankhn County morgue at Lodge, No. 371.
Friends may call at the ,
11 :45 p. m. Saturday.
Rev and Mrs Lawrence of the late President Truman
The v1ctim had moved to . McCoy-Moore Funeral Home
Glu ese nca mp Sr . hosted a and toured many interestmg Columbus about five years ago on Tuesday from 3 unlil5 p. m.
Ch ristmas d1~ner on Dec , 22 for places there and visited in the from Thurman a fri end said and from 7 until 9 p .. m.
the ar fam aly
home of Mr. and Mrs. Henery
The friend said the family Masomc services will be held
Attendm ~ were Mr. and Mrs .
1Ga rn et
Smi th I Ervine. d1d not know why Perroud was 7:30 p. m. Tuesday at the
Bud Giuesencamp of Coiwn- Bradenton Beach, and An na in the park, and estimated he fun eral home.
bus, Mr . and Mrs. Laurence Mane Island, Gulf of Mexico. had been gone two days.
Maternal gra ndmother IS
Theiss. Vinton, Mr. and Mrs
Rev . and Mrs . Ern es t
Wakefield State Park IS Mrs. Myrtie Welker and
Ga rry Martin , Newark. Mr
Deeter, Bashan , Miss Missy approximately five mlles north paternal grandmother is Mrs.
and Mrs. Ted Bailey and VanMeter, Chester, Paul Deen of Lucasville.
Hathe Saxton, beth of Thur·
children of Patnol, Mr. and Evans , Mrs Ada VanMeter of
Both the patrol and the state man .
Mrs Lawrence Gluesencamp Sl1v ersv li le , Mrs. Lucille Bureau of Crimmal In ~
Jr , Portland , Miss N1ck1 Dawn Ridenour of Tuppers Piams vestigation a1·e investigating
VanM ete r oi Stiversvillc and also visited with
the the slaying.
Denms Wolf , Ra c1ne
•
Gluesenc.:amps and Nicki Dawn
Mr. Perroud was born Aug.
Rev . and Mrs. Laure nce VanMeter.
28, 1951, in Thurman, son of
POMEROY LANES
Gluese ncamp Sr and N1cki
lndustnal League
Paul and Anna Mae Saxton
won Lost
Dawn VanMeter spent two
Perroud.
Jac k 's Pla ce
6
2
weeks vacation m Bradenton,
&lt;l
4
He married Erma J . Crisp , Steamboat Inn
Mil hone Sohio
&lt;~
4
Fia They also wen t to Key
Team 4
&lt;l
4
Wes t where they saw the home
Landma r k
4
4
K c Jewelers
2
6

McClure bas been working on the expansion after having been
Middleport VU!age CoWicil Monday night In its first stission
.cf 111'15 adopted a $312,451 budget and elected 'Mi.rvln K~lly its given an approval by council. However, it was reported that the
.president:
incorrect process was followed because the planning commission
Council also heard a request for approval of a 12 pet. rate must first study such a problem and make its recommendation,
hike from Bll1 Wilkinson of the Columbus and Southern Ohio after which it is submitted .ro COIDicil for approval. McClure will
Electric Co., tabled the request, then later In the meeting agreed attend'the next meeting of the planning commission to discuss
to write the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio to protest tlie his problems. .
proposed rate hike. A hearing on the request will be held Jan . 20.
Council gave the third reading to an ordinance which will
t.wrence Manley, one of the haulers of waste in Uie com- provide approllimate 10 pet. pay Increases for village eri.p!oyes
munity, asked council the status of a request from Scientific and adopted the ordinance for the pay increases. A recomSanitation for a permit to operate In Middleport. Serveral council mendation from the planning commission clearing any technical
members indicated their preference for local haulers, and later, problems with zoning involved in the construction of the new
wben Don Griffith of the Scientific Sanitation finn came in, he
apartment compia ori the corner of Third and Mill Sis. was
was advised by Mayor Fred Hoffman !bat Scientific Sanitation ' approved.
•..
would not be given a permit to service Middleport accounts.
Councilmen Carl Horky and James Brewer were named w
Herschel McClure asked council to approve any recom- serve for the year on the volunteer firemen's dependents board.
mendation made by the Middleport Planning Commission after it .The fire department will name two persons to the board and the
reviews the apanslon plan for hi.s dairy store operation on four appointees will appoint a fifth member. Council approved
Locust St. Several council memhers indicated that the recom- the December report of Mayor Hoffman showing receipts of
mendations of the plaming cOIIUilission are generally approved $1,682.25 in fines and fees and $113 in merchant police collections
for a total of $1,795.25.
by council, but a ftrm commitment to McClure was not made.

Stiversville News Notes

ll

challenge."
"Ail levels

Budget 'approved, electric rate hike bid tabled

Thurman native
said murdered
.

~ '!.111.,...

Con ~ mucd fr om page 1
Holz•r Medical Center
Veterans Memorial Hospil;li
SATURDAY ' ADMISS IONS
t Births I
Authonty to deal with Ohio's
Friday - Mr . and Mrs. ener gy problems.
- Angie Brunty . Minersville;
Margaret Donahue, Portland; Palrick W. Brown . son , Pt .
~'Tilts new authority wlll
Ronald Bostic. Middleport; •Pleasant Mr . and Mrs , brmg the efforts of government
Denver
Persons , Little Thomas R. Cross, daughter, and industry together in the
Hocking; Albert Hill. umg Syracuse. Mr. and Mrs . Peter develop;;;ent and use of energy
Bottom;
Anita
Lewis, Oh hnger, daughter , New resources in Ohio," said
Pomeroy ;, Patricia Brown. Haven.
Rhodes . uAn adequate energy
Saturday - Mr and Mrs supply is necessary to assure
Pomeroy .
SATURDAY DISCHARGF:S Harold Ke1 th Brown. daughter, 0111oans will have jobs.
- Alfred Robinson , Vmcent Gal hpohs; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Nothmg less than a whole new
Varney, Thomas Sarver. Sr .. Capehar t III , son, PI Pleasant concep t
in
energy
Jessie Beaver, Donna Con· Mr. and Mrs . James Holley, management w1ll assure supnolly, Jessie White, VancdLa daughter. Gallipohs Ferry,
ply
Knight , Oscar Imboden ,
Sunday - Mr and Mrs. Dean
Rhodes sa 1d h1s ad· Jose ph Hemsley, Trma H~ekman. daughl r , Jackson mmistration mtends to set up a
Bachte l. Mar th a J ohnson. Mr and Mrs John L Me· permanent housing authority
Margaret Alien , Barbara Dame!, son, Gallipolis Mr and and to invest $000 million in
Roush.
Mrs. Manon Potts, daughter , new housing construction with
SUNDAY ADM ISSIONS - Jackson
no additional cost to the state's
V~rg:l Carl , Pomeroy , Robert
taxpayers. "This w1ll create
PLEASANT VALLEY
Harmon. Ru tland: M"ry
thousands or new jobs for
Discharges Icy Bland, Wes t Ohwans," he sa1d.
Cundiff , Mason; James
Mor n son. Ru tla nd : Ralph Coiwnbia . Mrs Harl Sayre,
He promised a program w
Bre wer, Portland; Eugene Mason; John Snuth. Point re scue central busmess
Young, Pomeroy ; Kitty Metz- Pleasant ; Lorraine Fielder. distr icts in the state's cities to
ger.
Middleport ; Juha Apple Grove ; Gilbert Neal, create more jobs through an
McEwan, Pa rkersburg, Ed· I....€ on ; Dorman Sw1ck, Vmton; Ohio
Central
Di stnct
Richard
G!lmo rC, Development AutHority .
ward Willett, New Haven, Mrs
Andrew
McPomeroy;
Be tty Foley, Syracuse .
The new governor mcluded
Callis
ter
.
Po1n
t
Pleasanl
; m areas that will receive the
SUNDAY DISCHARGE
Robert Holley. Point Pleasant, backmg of hi.s administration
Emma Lyons.
Mrs. James Loomis , daughter, preparation of a public conPoint Pleasant; Mrs . Norm an struction program, creation of
Bush, Ga llipolis Ferry; Mrs an Ohio River Port Authority,
Michael
Du rfee ,
son, llllprovement of the Cleveland
SouthSid e; Cha rlotte Knuil. harber, amendment of joint
Poi nt Pleasant; Mrs. Paul filing laws in state income tax
Chadwell, Middleport; Lewis returns and aid to widows of
Schwartz. Ashton; Mrs. Ohw law enforcement officers
Ra leigh Robw , Ma son .
and firefighters.
r
Rhodes said he plans to ·begin
'
as soon as possible the largest
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
possible transportation conThe Syracuse E·R squad struction program so that the
answered a call to Rustle Hills state's unemployed construcat 11 a m. Sunday for Mrs tion workers can return w
Jack Slavin who was taken to work.
llot,er Medical Center.
He listed public educatwn as

wave
good-by to all our cl ever
friends who s aved the1r

.'

•

8,- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monda y, Jan . 13, 1975

"It's lime again to

AIRMAN COUCH
A lrman Jam es R. Coueh1
son or Mr. and Mrs. Walter
R. Couch of Pomeroy. has

been assigned to Presidio of
Monterey. Ca lif. , after
completing Air Force basic

training. He ha s bee n
as sig ned to Presidio of
Mont erey fo r spec ia li zed
training as a lan g uag e
· spedalist. Airman Couch is a
1974 graduate of Meigs High

School.

·

Reedsville
News, Notes
The Co mmumty Builders
Clu b ate ou t at the Me igs Inn in
Pomeroy recen tly. Attending
were Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Myers. Mr and Mrs Warren
P1ckens, Mr and Mrs. Ernes t
Whitehead and Mr. and Mrs .
Denver Weber
Terry
Carruthers
of
Hagers town, Md., visited w1th
Mrs Bess Larkins Friday
Tom Dye VISitetl w1th his
children recently at Akron .
. Hohday guests at the home of
Mr and Mrs. D. C. R1ebel were
Mr and Mrs. Robert Thomas
and family of Cheshire, Mr
and Mrs. Robert Mor ton and
fanuly or Belpre Rd .. and Mr.
and MI'S John Riebel and
fam1ly of Pomeroy RD.
Mrs. Er nes t Whitehead, Jane
and Juli , visited with Mrs Lou
Murray, Middleport and Mrs.
Eunice Sprague at the Arcadia
NLli'Sing Home at Coolville.
Mrs . Bess Larkms VISited
with Mrs Neil Clark at Racine
while Mrs. Marjorie Brewer
and Mrs. Hazel Curtis visited
with friends at Racine.
Mr . and Mrs Chester
Buckley and fam1 ly v1s1ted
wilh her parents , Mr . and Mrs.
Charles Neum an at Syracuse.
Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Rwbel
visited with Mr. and Mrs J ohn
Riebel an d family of Pomeroy
RD and Mr and Mrs Robert
Morton and famlly of Belpre

Carmel News,
.

Harrisonville
Society News

By the Day

.Mr . and Mrs. Raymond Eihs
have moved here from Texas
to help care for his father, Roy
Elhs, who recen tly had a
stroke.
·
Mrs . Robert Alkire and Ray
v1s1ted over the weekend with
Mr and Mrs . Robert Gibson of
Colwnbus
Earl McGrath spent a fe w
days m Florida with h1s son.
Charles
Mrs. Norm a Lee was a .
dinner guest Tuesday of Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Young .
Mr. and Mrs. Don Gibson of
Maryland were weekend
guests of Mr. and Mrs . Bud
Douglas and Mrs. Lana G1b·
son.
M1nme McGrath
wa s
weekend guest of her sister,
Mollie al Logan .
Mr. Frank Landaker of
Culwnbus died of a heart atlack on Dec. 31 at the age of 94 .
His w1fe , Bertha , 1s in a rest
home
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gi lkey
and son, Tad , spent tw o weeks
m Colorado.
Mr . and Mrs Roosevelt
Braham spent a few days
vis1hng relatives in Kentucky
recently

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hudson
and Toni of Racine, and Mr.
and Mrs. Shelby Pickens and
family of Pomeroy visited with
Mr. and Mrs. Allan Taylor on
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Multi
and fam ily of Mansfleid spent
las t weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Homer Circle, Verna and
Wavie.

Miss D1x1e Circle retW"ned on
Monday to Cleveland Heights
after spending a vacation w1th
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Circle and other
re&lt;:~lbves.

Mrs. Sam. Bartrng and
fa mily and Susan Yost visited
the1r s1ster, Mrs . Carl Circle
and family on Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr of
Cheste r visited with Mr and
Mrs. Robert Lee and fam1ly
recently.
Mr and Mrs . W1iii am
Carleton of Racme spent
Saturday eve ning with Mr. and
Mrs . Arthur Earl Johnson and
family, Betty Van Meter and
Mrs . Dean Brinker
Mr. and Mrs. James C1rcle of
)'&lt;ew Haven and Mr. and Mrs.
Melvin Circle and family of
Worthmgwn VISited w1th Mrs.
M~ry Circle over the '1\:eekend.

L. S. Williams

of Oifton dies
CLIFTON, W. Va.
Ueweliyn S. Williams. 67, a
resident of Chiton, died Sunday
in Holzer Medical Center. He
was a retired welder, having
been employed at the Marietta
Manufacturing Plant in Pl.
Pleasant.
Mr . Williams was bern at
Clifton on Aprill6, 1907, son of
the late Ueweliyn and Lila
Fowle• Williams. He was a
member of the Clifton United
Methodist Church where he
was a Sunday school teacher
for many years. He was a
veteran of World War II.
He is survived by his wife,
Helen K. McNickle Williams,
Clifton ; one daughter, Jud1lh
Withams Scites, Broad Run ;
one bro ther , Lloyd E.
Williams, Clifton.
Funeral serv1ces w1ll be held
1:30 p.m. Tuesday at Cl1fton
United Methodist Church,
under the direction of the
Foglesong Funeral Home,
Mason . Rev. John Campbell
and Rev Don Teu will of·
ficiate. Friends may call at the
funeral home after 2 p.m.
today. The body will be taken
to the church one hour prior to
services.

H1gh Team Ser ies- Jack's
Place 2600. KC Jewelers 2524 ;
Milhone So hio 2J0.4
H1gh Team Ga me - Jack 's
Place 914 , Milhone Soh10 864 ,
K&amp;C Jewelers 862
·
H 1gh lnd Se r 1es - Ed Vo ss
556, L uster 532, W a l ke r 531
H1gh lnd Game Lus te r ·
202 , Wa l ke r 195, Ken nedy and
Norman 193 .

Give us a call ...
When ever you feel we •·nn hell' you with any bank in!(
matte r and yo u can 't &lt;"o rn e in to t a lk with t'"· j1'"t giH·
us a rail! W c're h e re to serve \ 'OU and wdeomt• phon e
calls as we ll as your personal ' 'is it s . So if yo u want to
know your bank lmlatll' e. the la te,; t c h e ,·k, vou\e wril ·
ten to dear, n eed informution about a loan ~r anv bank
se rvi ce - jus ! &lt;:all u s. W e want to help.
·

Sunday dmner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Warren P1ckens were
Mr and Mrs Harold Sauer and
daughters of Middleport. Mr .
and Mrs: Ernest Whitehead
and daughters, Mr. and Mrs.
Denver Weber and sons. and
Mrs. Lyle Balderson and
daughter .
.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Dillon of
Long Bottom, Mrs Evelyn
Mundry and Mrs . Sandy
Powell attended the funeral of
Carl Brooks at Logan.

-------

VOL XXVI NO. 191

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

POMEROY, OHIO
MEMBER FDIC
MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM

I .

I .

UP : Disposable filter

By Mn;. Herbert Roush

Thursday Strikers
January '2, 1975
Won Lost
M itchell 's T no
14
2
S1 mon 's P ic k a Pair
9
7
• Meigs Satetyettes
8
B
H Frank 's G irls
6
10
Sha klee G1r 1s
6
10
Ward's Rolletles
5
11
High Team Seri es Mit ·
c hell's Tn o 1J.46 , H Frank's
Gir l s 1271 , M e1gs Sa f etyette s
1257
High Team Game· Mit·
Chel l 'S Tno 511. MitChell 'S TriO
J80 , Sim on 's Pick A Pair , 477
High Ind . Series Wanda
T eaford 557, Conn1e Chapman
.461 . Donna McFarland 451.
H•gh lnd Ga me Wanda
T eaford 18!1, Wanda Teaford
1!17 , Con n1 e Chapman 18.4
Thursday Striker s
Ja11uarv 9, 1975
Won Lo st
Mitchell 's Trio
16
s
Si mon 's P1 ck A Pa1 r
14
10
Ward 's Rollett es
13
11
H Frank's Girls
12
12
Shaklee Girls
9
15
Me1gs Satetyettes
B 16
Team H1Qh Se r i es
H.
Frank's G1rls 135 1. S1mon 's
P 1ck a Pair 1326, Mitchell's
Tno and ward's Rol lettes 1325
H 1gh Tea m Game H
Frank's Girls 484 , Mitchell's
Tno 472, War d 's Roll ettes 46 1
H1Qh In d. Se nes Donna
M cFar land 460, Del ma (sub)
457, Conn 1e Chapman 447
H1Qh lnd Ga me Connie
Chap man , 198 , Donna Me ·
Farland 175, Opal Hupp 171

&amp;

Congress ready for Wor k
WASHINGTON (UPI)- The
9tth Congress begins work
today, eager to join President
Ford in ramming through a
recesaion.flghtlng tax cut.
In keeping with tradition,
opening day was reaerved for
swearing4n ceremonies in the
ornate Senate and House
chambers.
But In advance, House
Democrats lroke tradition by
ooUinmg their ~ograms to
combat the ills of the economy.
Normally that woold wait until
after Ford's State of the Union

Housewares Department,
Fi!St Floor

address.
Not to be outdone, Ford went
9

(Replacement filten

ovo,)oble

at $~ . SO

on.•nationwide
television Monday .night to outline his
economic
and
energy
programs which he would
normally have saved for the

Slate of the Union ~peech
Wednesday.
House swearing4n ceremonies are expected to proceed
routinely - barring . unex·
peeled challenges-giving
Democrats a 291-144 majority.
But the same ceremonies in
the ·Senate were expected to
provide the first partisan fight
and possibly the first roll call of
the session.
The Senate must decide
whether to aeat Democrat John
DUrkin or Republican Louis
Wyman as New Hampshire's
new senator or ask both to step
aside untU a full investigation
of their closely contested
election can he completed.
The Senate also must decide
a second election challenge.
.Former Rep. Ed Edmondson

News•• in Bli~

for box of 100.)

11y UDited PreuiDterualiooal
WASHINGTON - DEFENSE SECRETARY James
Schlesinger says his 'post-Watergate review of domestic Central
Intelligence Agency operations disclosed a "quite small"
number of "misdemeanors" over the past 20 years.
Schlesinger, a 'former CIA director, made the surprise
disclollure to newBDien Monday after appearing for an hour
before an eight-member panel headed by Vice President Nelson
Rockefeller that Is investigating domestic apying activities of \he

Only 5 minutes from cold tap 1l'ater to a 10-cup
pot of the most delicious coffee you've tasted1

MR COFFEETM Automatic
Home &amp; Office Coffee Brewer
•

only..~3999

ELBERFELD$ .I N POMEROY·

wants the Senate to investigate
Republican Henry Belimon's
reelection in Oklahoma. The
Rules Committee recommended Bellmon take his seat
pending outcome of the
inquiry.
House Democrats and
Republicans elected their
leaders in December during

pre-session organizational
meetings.
Speaker Carl Albert was
named to a third two-year
term. Rep. Thomas P. O'Neill
will lead the Democrats and
Rep. John J. Rhodes the
Republicans.
Senate Democrats and
Continued on page 8

WASHINGTON- WIWAM T. COLEMAN JR., a- lawyer
with sperlence in city transit systema, bas been aelected as
Pruldent Ford's traMportatioo secretary. U confirmed to
m:ceect Claude S. llrlneg8'r, Coleman will be the second black
cabinet IJM"Dber In blstory. The first was Robert Weaver,
Pnlldent Jobnl!on's Secretary of Housing and Urban
Defelopmatt, from .1916 to 1916.
•
.
.
C4f1enum 5f helped write lhe NAACP's Su~eme Court brief
1n the i.IM ~cue ootlawlng sebool desegregation. He Is
president cf the NAACP Legal Oelenae Fund and a senior part.
ner of a Pliladelpbia' law finD. All a lawyer, Coleman helped
Plllladelpbla and anclnnatl acquire local ttansit syatems and
w81 inwlftd In transportation labor maten in ·Pitiladelphla.
OOWMBUS - STRIKING CITY TEACHERS returned to
lbelr c1
001111 Tuelllay, ~a CO!!rllnju.Jctilin to end their
weet.blg strike wblch began · Jan.. 6 over wages. llepresentatlvee of the ColtDDbua Educal\oo AsSociation and the city board
Continued on page 8

,,

WASHINGTON CUP]) - Scrapping much of his
go-easy economic program, President Ford will
seek tough new anti-recession measures : a 12 per
cent rebate on 1974 personal income taxes, import
barriers that will lead to higher gasoline prices and
a lid on most federal spending.
,"We are in trouble," the President told a
national television audience Monday in a speech
from the White House library that previewed
Wednesday's State of the Union message.
Ford said the country is not on the brink of a
1930-style depression . He indicated WIN buttons are
no longer enough and said the government must take
strong measures to counter unemployment and
recession as well as inflation. Among them :

-A 12 per cent reb~te on last
year's federal income taxes, up
to $1,1100 per tax return, tbat
would release $12 billion of
potential purchasing power to
conswners. An average family
of four earning $12,000 ill 1974
and paying $1,228 in taxes
would get $147.36 in two equal
payments in May and September.
-A $4 billion in investment
lax incentives for business.
- A $30 billion increase in
energy taxes and tariffs de·
signed to make Americans cut
down on the use of gasoline and
fuel oil."''his will likely mean a
sudden price hike of about 7
cents a gailon in retail gasoline
with even higher prices to
·come.
-A one-year moratorium on
new
federal
spending
programs and a clear threat to
veto any new money measures
passed by Congress.

Sixty-one farms ·iri-Jackson,
Gallia and Meigs Counties
were represented at an
organizational meeting of the
Southeastern Ohio Farmers
Co-Op Monday night in the
Jack~on Production Credit
building, Upper Rt. 7,
Gallipolis.
Membership dues were set at
$1110 per farm . A $5 fee will be
charged each month, making
the maximwn fee $160 annually.

Membership dues ar~ to be
paid on or before March~. 1975.
The newly-organized co-op
will buy and sell with a two
percent markup during the
first year of operation.
The organization expects
shortly to petition the state for
a charter.
1 A committee will meet w1th
salesmen at a conference m
Columbus Wednesday to
discuss orders to co-op
members. A special meeting

will be held following that
conference to dec1de on wlutt
items will be purchased.
Area farmers interested in
becomm g a member of the
organization are asked to attend th~ next regular meeting.
Regnlar meetings are held
every Tuesday, beginning at
7· 30 p.m. in the Jackson
Production Credit building.
Special meetings will be announced in advance.

1

THIS HAPPY GROUP WAS ONLY ONE of many in '
Meigs County enjoying sleigh riding Monday when schools
closed due ro the weaiher. Making up this groop using a hili

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0 ..

TUPfE~ PLAINS - An
Owl Hollow Road family near
here was left homeless ~nd
without clothing to&lt;,lay when
their one floor frame home was
destroyed by fire.
Homeless are Bernard Bobe
and hi.s mother, Mrs. Agnes
Widner, who cares for the three
Bobo children, while their
father works. The children are
eight-year old twins Billy and
Ann, and a four-year old boy.
Connie Jones, sitting last
night at 12:15 ~ .m. with the
twins, heard a loud noise
seeming ro come from a coal
and wood burning stove in the
adjacent living room . She
investigated and found the
room on fire. The blaze spread
quickly.
Mlas Jones, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Tony Jones of Tuppers Plains, got the children to
safety. Bobe, his mother, and
the lour-year old were not at
home when the fire broke out.
Bobo, employed with the
Atlas Boat Co. on the river, had
been a I home a few days. He
was scheduled to return to· hi.s
duties today but notified his
employer that he will be off U1e
job several daya.
The Chester and Tuppers
Plains Fire Dept. were on the
scene but the blaze was too far
advanced upon their arrival.
The home burned to the
ground.
Mrs. Widner has a small
home near Her son's property
which the family ca n move inw
if furnishings and clothing can
be secured.
Mrs. Widner can wear a 16 or
18 dress, 18 slacks and a six or
six and a hall shoe. Bobo wears ·
a 3().30 slack, fifteen and oneball shirt and a nine and a bail
shoe. The four-year old boy can
wear size four clothes and a
size six shoe; the twins - Ann
wears 8 or 10 in clothing and a
size three shoe and Billy wears
a size 8 and a shoe size of two.
Articles can be left at the
Tony Jones Home in Tuppers
Plains or anyone having any
clothing or furniture to donate
can call the Jones at 687.J4ll2
through Chester.

SQUAD CALLED
The Middleport E-R Squad
was called Monday at 9;56 a.m.
for Herman Kincaid, a medical
patient, who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center,

Ohio Power given

17.53% surcharge

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FEW MIDI;JLEPOI!T
residents probably notice the
misspelling of "Sycamore"·
3L at three of the four Intersections in town. AI the
Intersections of Park, Ash
and
Laurel Sis., the street
- A temporary 5 per cent
sign
reads " Sycomore." At
ceiling on federal .pay increases and a similar lid on the Locust St. interseolion,
automatic boosts in Social however, the sign reads,
Security benefits and govern- "Sycamore." Maintenance
ment and military retirement. . Supe•visor Harold Cbase
Ford said he would' use hi.s said that the misspelled
emergency powers to raise the signs have been at the
tariff, or Import fee, on corners for some 10 years.
petroleum by $3 a barrel within
90 days. The idea is to encourage conservation and
EXTENDED WEATHER
development of alternative
sources of energy to high- . Thursday through
priced Middle East crude oil. Saturday, chance of snow
Most of the program will Thursday and Friday, e.,.
require Congress' approval, ding Saturday. Highs will be
and early reaction showed In the upper 21Js and the
Ford's desire to give even lower 30s on Thursday,
wealthy taxpayers a slice of dropping to the 20s on Friday
the 1974 rebate was in for rough and Saturday. Overnight
lows will he in the teens.
sledding.
e.. m n
"Any credit for 1974 taxes *:.:.t. a.r .
would have to he given to the
low and moderate income
group · to be acceptable w Veterans Memorial Hospital
Congress in my judgment,"
Admitted - Patricia Roush,
said AI Ullman, D-&lt;Jre., acting Pomeroy ; Myrtle Durst,
chairman of the House Ways Syracuse; Ca rol Young,
and Means Committee, the Pomeroy i Cora E. Christy,
panel that must clear all lax Pomeroy; Billy Joe Gordon,
0
bills. .
Middleport; George Moore,
Ullman agreed with Ford on Long Bottom ; Roy See, Bid~
the amount of money needed w well;
Vincent
Gheen ,
stimulate the slwnping econo- Pomeroy .
my -$43 billion that is likely ro
Discharged - Allen Dill, St.,
leave Ford, an avowed fiscal Jason Lawson, Floyd Bush,
conaervatlve, sporting the big. Elwyn Yos t, Margaret Ran·
gest bud~et deficit since th~ dolph.
free i!pending 'New Deal ad·
ministration of Franklin D.
Roosevelt.
Most of that swn derives
from energy tax revenues that
Continued on page 8

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New Co-Op sets rules-

ciARockefeller refused to detail what went on at the meeting,
but told n~n Schlesinger also referred to a "small nwnber
oiiJiiademe8nOrs" in his testimony. The vice president added:
"'!bat's his value•judgment ... I don't think the committee ia
gotnc 10 try and jump to any concluSions until we hear from a
large ntDDber cf witnesses."

•
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•'•'•...

§

NO MESSY CLEAN-

Mrs. Heleq Simpson, Mrs.
H1lda Hart, and Mrs. Mildred
Hart of Racine v1sited Mr. and
Mrs. Herber! Sayre Sunday
afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Sayre
spent Thursday night with Mr .
and Mrs. Buck Rogers at
Cohunbus. Mr. Sayre consulted
his eye d()('IJ:&gt;r .
Mr. and Mrs Ronald
Russell, Mandy and M1ke. of
Wolfpen , Mel
Wa ldnig,
Syracuse , M1ke Rhodes were
dmner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Roush, Sunday.
Mr and Mrs. Brooks Sayre
of Syracuse spent Monday
evening with Mr. and Mrs .
Herhert Sayre .
Mr. and Mrs. M1lo Richard·
son of " Michigan spent the
hohdays a\ their home.
PFC. Rober! Lawson of Fort
Knox. Ky .. spent a leave with
hiS parents, Mr. '!J'd Mrs. Bob
Lawson . Robert will be
stationed in California on his
return to duty.
M1ss Wilda Lawson spent
Christmas vacation with her
brother, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Lawson and Chuck ·at Letart.
W.Va.
Mandy Russell of Wollpen·
spent a · weekend with her
grandparents. M~ . and Mrs.
Russell Roush.
Mrs . Mahel Sh1elds. Mrs.
Clara Sargent. and Mrs.
Bertha Robinson visited in
Pnrkershurg Friday . Mrs .
Robinson consulted p d()('tor at
St. Joseph Hospital.

·~ .

IFord taking.
tougher lin

is presently a nurse with the city of
provement of their community, and [~
Colwnbus. Maxine Price resides at
were most interested in the youth. The :*
Portland, Ohio, is a secretary to
Girl Scouts in Reedsville , whose $:
Beranrd V. Fultz, and has served
leaders are Ruth Ann Ba_lderson, ~~
several years as Meigs County Court
Marilyn Hannum and drva Jean Holter :;:,
Reporter.
hold their J;lleetings in the Stewart Hail, ~§
It will be the responsibility of the
which is part of Mr. Kibble 's residence :;:;
committee to adopt by-laws to govern
real estate. In his will he provided that ~l
the expenditure of the funds in carrying
the Girl Scouts be permitted to continue :~
out the intent or the will. Mr. Fultz,
to hold their meetings in the 1.r.l.:.
attorney for the estate, and one df the
recreational hall.
....
...•
trus~s. advised that he expected that
;:;:
Mr. Kibble's will, alter making the assets after payment for specific
Mr. Kibble is survived by tw~ ;;~
minor bequests, provided that the bulk
bequests, taxes and expenses, would be
sisters, Edith K. Milhoan, of Parkers· ~~
of the residue of his estate be
in the neighborhood of $5110,000.
burg, W. Va., and Mary A. Kibble, of ~~1
bequeathed to the Kibble Foundation,
Mr. Kibble died Oatober 30, 1974.
Aptos, Calif. He is also survived by ~:l
specifically defined to he a "public He wasberninMeigsCounty,thesonof
numerous nieces and nephews . The )!l
charitable scientific educational George and Ida Kibble. Early in his life
nearest relatives living in Meigs &lt;;:ounty
foundation."
he moved to Akron, and was elflployed
are David A. Smith, of Reedsville, who ::::
The trustees have been directed by for more !ban 40 years with the
is a son of Mr. Kibble's sister, the late ~~~;
the will to place particular emphasis on Goodyear Tire and Rubher Company .
Alice K. Branstrom, and the three :;:;
the granting of educational scholar· He retired about 1962, and shortly
children of David and Violet Smith, who ~;~;
·ships to deserving children.
thereafter returned to Meigs County
are Patricia Drake, Colwnbus, Ohio ; ;:~
Bernard V. Fultz was appointed by and resided with his sister, the late
David G. Smith, a senior at Marietta
the will as trustee for the foundation, Edna K. Stewart, at their home here
College, and Diana Smith, who is a 4th ;:;:
and the advisory committee appointed where he lived at the time of his death.
grade student at Riverview School.
:~
by the will is comprised of Bernard V.
Both Mr . Kibble and his sister,
Members of Mr. Kibble's family have ~~l
Fultz, Maxine Price and Patricia Edna K. Stewart, were vitally inexpressed their extreme pleasure at the ~;
Drake.
terested in Meigs County, and showed
concern expressed by him for the ~:;
Patricia Qrake Is a niece of the particular and contlnued interest in the
youth, as reflected in the generous ~~~
decedent. She is the daughter of David _ Reeds~ille' area . They supported
disposition of the balance of his estate ~:;
A. and Violet Smith, of Reedsville, and generously the projects for im·
in creating the Kibble Foundation.
:;t
~m!l&gt;.':lg;:&gt;!f'&gt;:'t&gt;~-m.~$t.."':«-X(.&gt;:--m.-&lt;:•·s:~•$:~:::-;-;.:::::::.~:::::::::::::)X::::~~:::r.::::::':lo~'*:::-:.~:~::~-:::::tn~w·" ==; ;;g• ~ ~~~&amp;"!8;:*-~~:.J.

through.

traps ho.&amp;d to clean
oily sed1ments .

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

REEDSVILLE - A charitable,
educational foundation valued at ap·
proximately $500,000 - the Kibble
Foundation - will be established in
Meigs County.
The foundation is authorized under
tenns of the will of the late Anderson B.
Kibble who died Oct. 30, 1974. The inventory and appraisement of Mr.
Kibble's estate has been filed with the
Meigs County Probate Court.

Nothing but nch, full
coffee fla..-or comes

News Notes

15 CENTS

TUESDAY, JANUARY 14, 1975

'

NO liTTER TASTE:

Farmers Bank &amp;Savings Co.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Kibble Foundation revealed

other coffeemaker.

Fairview

Home is
leveled ·
by fire

'· [.'$:!::::::::-;.x:-;:~~""&amp;. . :o;::·:·:·:·:·:-:.::·:·:;J
~~:...::.~:::::::~~::.~»;.:s.:~%"0i.:".!".:!:".:~:W.:".:'l:.!$..'Wko"i-.~~'*w.;.;;~:::-;~'$'$'.::0"-*~=::~"»."$."*::::::::.~~"».'%~::::x:'$'[.'

t

NO WAITING: Works
twice as fast 01 any

- Mrs. Lyle Balderson

Iasue I funds,' some $90,000, can he met !~ally. Hoffman said that
village officials will meet with the Meiga County Cornmlsl!ioners
on the matter.
COUNCIL MEMBERS were th110 offered the opportunity to
bring questions from their constituents into open meeting.
Among these were dust on South Third Ave., limestone for a
couple of alleys, uniforms for the pollee department wheh an
officer discontinues his service, and chlorine for the village
water system.
.
Maintenance Supervisor Harold Cbase said that water
coming into Middleport from Pomeroy has now been discontinued with a valve between the two towns near the A&amp;P having
heen closed. A meeting will be held by the Boards of Public Af.
lu1rs of the two towns to discuss what steps are to he taken now
that Middleport is no longer receiving water from Pomeroy
aithoilgh there is a contract between the two towns on such a
purchase.
Chase further reported that the chlorine count in water
coming from wells in Middleport supplying the town is not up to
Environmental Protection Agency requirements, but that steps
Continued on page 8

Devoted To ThP. Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
Another Big Shipment

The resignation of Don Roach from the police department
was reported since he has accepted full time emp_loyment at the
Middleport Post Office. David Ward was named to serve on the
force in Roach 's place, going onto the required six months
probation period. Councilman Allen Lee King was named w
represent council at a meeting of the Meigs County Bicentennial
Commission at the courthouse Jan . 28.
A letter was read by Mayor Hoffman from the Chesapeake
and Ohio Railroad u'l reference to erosion of the river bank near
the railroad 's tracks on First St. The matter has been studied by
the railway's engineering department and, accor:;dlng to the
latter, the situation Is not at the present time endangering train
movement. The situation will be kept under observation and
corrections made when deemed necessary, the letter stated.
Bernard Fultz was named soliciror for the new year. A letter
was read by Mayor Hoffman from the Department of Highways
indicating !bat there is only about $100,000 to be left in the State
Issue I fund for Meigs County after the relocation of the Hiland
Road. Cost of the Page St. improvement, planned with State
Issue I funds, would amount to abeut $190,000 and the department
of highways bas requested assurance that the cost over the State

en tine

Local Bowling

RD .

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COLUMBUS' (Special) The Public Utilities Commission (PUC) authorized Ohio
Power Co. of Canton M,onday to
impose a I 7.53 per cent
emergency surcharge on
cust9mer's bills.
The PUC said the surcharge,
an emergency relief measure,
would increase company
revenues at the rate of
$49,388,1100 a year.
·
Ohio Power needs !bat much,
the PUC said, to avert
disruption of service in the
months ahead .
Ohio Power, which has a
permanent rate case pending,
said it needed the increased
revenue to convert short-term
debt to long-term debt and to
proceed with cons truction.
Ohio Power must refund any
money determined later to
have been an overcharge, PUC
said. And such money would
carry an eight per cent interest
rate. Ohio Power has 570,000
customers in 53 counties.
Ohio Power applied in July,
away from any lrafftc on Middleport's gravel hln are, I tor, ,
1974,
for an $89 million revenue
Craig Peckham, John Cremeans, Ureg Busll, charlie Geary,
increase
. The PUC will have to
Max Gear)', Jeff Peckham, Nick Bush and 'l'im Wamsley.

. ...

j

•

review that application in
depth, the PUC staff file a
report and a hearmg is not
expected lor aeveral months
Monday's emergency in·
creaae is .the first in what
probably ·will be a series of
emergency boosts for electric
utilities in Ohio.
·
The 17.53 per cent surcharge
will add abeut $29 a year for a
customer who preaenUy pays
$165 per year.
Ohio
Powe r
ser ves
customers in east central ,
northwest and southern tip of
Ohio.
The PUC said that
emergency relief is granted
only when all other means have
been exhausted, and as a last
resort ro avoid injJ.ll'Y or t.~e
ability of the utility to maintain
adequate service in the im·
mediate future.
"Rather than allow a
deterioration of the service
provided by the ~tllity, the
commission bas granted the
emergency relief sought by
Ohi0o Power," PUC cha,irman
Sally W. Bloonifield said.

.

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1

3-The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, Jan 14, 1975

In admuustermg a profound shock to the romplacen t West by
wtue of tts control of the lion 's share of the world 's store of otl
the Moslem \\Orld 1s repeatmg somethmg 11 dtd twtce before m
history
The f1rst time occurred unmedliltely after the message of
Mohammed.captu red pagan Araby, recalls a thoughUul art1cle
m a recent Busmess Bulletm of the Cleveland Tl1Jllt Co
Either because of sp1ritual exh1larat1on or some mexpllcable
change m thetr genes, the formerly plactd Arabs embarked on a
senes of successful nulltary adventures In a comparatively
short tune, the) subdued most of the Mediterranean littoral,
overran the !henan Pcrunsula and scaled the P)rennes w1th the
aun of makmg what ts now France subJeCt to Islam
The dectStve Battle of Tours tn A D 732 turned the llde,
aroused the West out of the sleep of the Dark Ages and ushered m
the short-lived emptre of Charlemagne
Some seven cen!unes later, whtle !he Florenlmes and others
were absorbed 1n the cultural achtevements of the Renaissance,
the Turks captured Christian Constantmople The blockade of the
Bosporus cu t off the flow of sptces from the Far East, an mdispensable product 111 preservmg meal and making tt edtble for
aristocratic taste
Italy and France were VIrtually helpess, but Portugal and
Spam, bemg martllme powers, moved to overcome the
challenge The former courageously developed a sea route
through unknown waters around the Cape of Good Hope and
across the lndtan Ocean, unmolested by the land-bound
Moslems The return cargoes ytelded a handsome reward for the
entrepreneurs who had taken the nsks
The Sparuards chose a more 1magtnallve and much more
hazardous • ProJect Independence ' The resull w"s I he

discover) of the Western Hemisphere Desptte the rudtmentarv
means of commumcallon and lransport.alwn , unlold nche:-;
began to flow from the New World to the Old
!'he third '111vaston" by the Moslems has been accomplished
By LEE LEONARD
wtthout thetr lifting a smgle sword, and tits to he hoped that the
to 100,000 new jobs, save ceremontes in 15-degree temanother 100,0011, develop Ohio's peratures on the west steps of
stncture m the "sptce" hnes wtll be overcome wtlhout the UP! Statebouae Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!)- James energy 80ilJ'CeS and free poUu- the Sl.atehOUlle.
bloodshed tha t was the case tn the two earlier conquests
A
Rhodes, starting all over as tion control construction proFor a ume tt appeared that the maJor otkonsumbig nattons
Rhodes took the oath from
would become vtcltms of a divtde-aitd-be-eoll&lt;\uered strategy ol governor at an age when most Jects from "red tape."
Ch1ef Justice C Wilham
self-defense There ts now some promiSe Lhlit a formal or m- Amertcans are retiring, today Booed By Protelton
O'NeUI of the Ohio SUpreme
"We are gomg to get jobs for Court foUowmg the swearmg m
formal OPCC (Orgaruzallon of Petroleum j;oosummg Countrtes) "as to hold hiS first cabinet
will rome tnto betng to challenge the OPEC, the oil exporters Its meelmg and begtn plannmg his all the people of Ohio regard- of other elected state offtcials
ftrst ob]ecttve IS to negottate a common formula for sharmg assault on what he COilSiders less of race, rolor, creed or He was sworn in shortly before
Ditto's top areas of concern petrolewn supplies equt!ably
sex," said the new Republican a group of demonstrators
Jobs,
mduslrlal
development
governor in closing his 10- marched down North Htgh
For the short run, conservation of energy ts most urgent, but
the process has hardly begun Meanwhile, we modern "Por- and education
rrunute mauguration address Street onto the Statehouse
Rhodes, 65, besieged by a cheered by some 3,0011 bone- lawn
tuguese' have an Alaskan ptpellne under coiiStruction The
northern Europeans art plumbmg the depths of the North Sea bad rold and hounded by chilled spectators and booed by
Rhodes said he has already
All these and other efforts to extract energy out of the earth's protestors, promised qutck about 200 Stgll-waving and direcwct a cabinet task force to
outer shell wtll create new employment, but a riSe in llvmg actton on those fronts m his chanting demonstrators in the jrepare a public construction
standards cannot occur until such efforts are beyond the maugural address Monday back of the crowd
program to pesent to the
after he was sworn m for a
developmental stage
The new governor had legislature Within 30 days
The sudden re .. mergency of Arab power has not only record third four-year term m already been sworn in
"The purpose of this
!l'lvately last Frtday by John program ts to proVIde an addisrupwct tnduslrtal acltvtty among otl-consummg natiOns The sub-freezmg weather
The Republican mainstay M McElroy, his chief aide, but diltonal 50,0011 jobs m the
prohferatton of petrodollars threatens to crtpple eXIS!tng Ill·
stttultons and force a drasltc restructurmg of the mternatwnal pledged that some of h1s he almost didn •t make it to the private sector of Ohio's
projects would be under way lonna! ceremonies.
monetary system
economy," he said
Rhodes awakened Monday
'Constructive and mgentous measures and machrnery," by mtd-February Ollters
Another 35,0011 new jobs,
says the bulletin, "mul&gt;l be evolved to stave off world-wtde would take until AJrll or May mornmg with a temperature of Rhodes said, wUl acron\pny
to get off the groWid, he said 102 degrees. He later S81d he $350 million worth of pollution
distress of some dl\ratton and severtty "
Rhodes pledged lo create up felt better and went lo the control construchon projects
he said be wUl liberate from
"bureaucracy" wtthin 90 to 120
days
''These JrOjects mclude new
sewage treatment plants lor

Editorial comment,

many of our communities," the
governor said. "The communiUes are ready to go It's time
for the state to do tts part "
Rhodes said his admlnistraUon wUl propose a constitutional amendment setting up a
permanent housmg authonty
to sen bonds and "mvest at
least $500 million in new
boUSIDg construction at no cost
to the taxpayers of Ohio This
will create thousands of new
jolis for Ohioans," he satd
Rhodes added hts admlnlstrahon wUl seek harbor
improvements In Cleveland to
lllmtdate the steel industry
"WewUI cooperate with Mayor
(Ralph J.) Perk to save the
1011,0011 jobs in the Cuyahoga
Valley industries which depend

opinion, features
Ray Croml-ey ·

Investment is
the answer
WASHINGTON - The eronomtsts are happy Despite thetr
talk of fine tumng, they've never had a clear fix on how to handle
inflatton Talk with four economtsts wtll net you ltve theortes
But they do know what to do about a recession Spend And
keep on spending until we are out of the slwnp
Here they are in agreement
But they're wrong There's a major bug m that theory tn the
1975 econorme bogdown Government deficit spending, more
money m our pockets from tax breaks, added unemployment
benefits and public servtce jobs wtll not solve our problem
Wtthout tncreased production of bastes, these actions will merely
drtve prices skyward We'll complete more heavtly for what's
avatlable Which will increase lnflatton and put us back to where
we are now
For the new buying almost certainly wtll be senstbly centered tn the day-to-&lt;lay essentials - whtch are even now soaking
up our funds The unemployed, glven extended payments or
publlc-servtce JObs, and the employed, gtven a tax break, wtll not
rush out to buy an expensive new house or car They'll want to
see daylight ftrst
Our troubles have a deeper base Basic production capactty
over Ute years has not mcreased sufficiently to employ all U S
workers, or to supply the increase In demand as more Amertcans
moved into the mtddle class This msufftctency would exiSt even
if the eronomy were surgmg, whtch tl certainly IS not doing
today
There are many reasons for this failure to bwld production
capactty and this slower-than-desirable increase tn productiVIty
In parltl has been because of a lack of ronftdence m our future
economtc gro\1 th, m part because of senseless government
regulation, mpart because btgness has created complacency and
m part because the new breed of btg managers are bureaucrats
who are unwtlllng to lake chances
There fias been a hefty shtft of mveslment m new production
overseas by Amertcan compames, stunulaWd by a variety of tax
mcenuves Thatts, for years we have exported jobs and have
stmultaneously fatled to create them m suffictent numbers here
at home Wtthoul this contmually expanded and upgraded
capactty, an j!ICrease m demand cannot possibly be matched by
the reqws1te mcrease m the output of essentials
For curmg a receSSion, or an mflalion, there Ui no substttute
for mcreasmg mvestment m baste mdustry and for stunulating
productiVIt) and new products m order to put more men and
women mto productton
Ideas are not tn short supply. Invenhve sCientiSts and
engmeers are rommg up wtth more improvements and feasible
ne" concepts than ever before m hiStory But there's a shortage
of riSk capttal There's a reluctance to take chances
A good deal more of our thinkmg, therefore, must go mto
eradicatmg barrters
Only m thts wa) w1ll we be able to tran.form more of our

Ban held
•
aga1nst
•
,&amp;_tnpper
CHARLESTON, W Va.
(UPI) - A step toward
preserving a ban againSt strip
mming m 22 West Vtrginia
rounUes was taken Monday In
the House of Delegates
The chamber's Judtctary
Commtttee unantmously
recommended passage of
legislation conttnumg the
surface mining prohtbttion for
another two years- until
March 13, 1977
The surface mine legislation,
sure to evoke df&gt;.bate when II
reaches the House floor, was
the first major bill to come out
of romrruttee
The ban on 22 rounlies
ortglnated m 1971 as a Cllm·
promise to strip mme
abolittontSts The Legislature,
at that time, placed a two-year
moratortum on strippmg in
rounties where there had been
no previous mining
The two-year prohtbiUon was
extended in 1973 and was
headed towards a stmilar
rontinuance this session
HOuse Speaker LewiS McManus, D-Raleigh, wd he expected the chamber would "stand
pat" on the tssue thts year He
also doubted any proposal
rurned at mcreaslng taxes on
the tndustry, whtle enjoying an
energy bonanza, would wm
approval

COL RICHARD R TATTERSON, rtghl, Commander, llllh Engineer Group (CBT)
presented Sp-4 Brarry Cox, PI Pleasant, the James H. FranciS Marksmanship Trophy for
outstanding efforts for the state of West Vtrgml8 m competition held at Camp Dawson, W Va ,
recently The ceremony was held Jan. 12, tn the 36641h Maintenance Co (LOS) Armory, Pt
Pleasant
.,
,
•

David Poling, D.D.

Religious vibes
strong in Canada
By David Poling, D D
For some years, people tn the
Untied States have been
look111g to thetr netghbor to the
north for hockey players and
energy resources A smaller
group saw Canada as a haven
durmg the Vtetr\am confltcl,
making 1t thetr permanent
home wtth or w1thout hockey,
natural gas and Mounted
Pollee Today, church leaders
are study1ng carefully the
latest statistics and trends now
reported m the 'Yearbook of
Ame-ncan and Canadian

ronsumers into producers, convert more of our unemployed,
underemployed and "unemployables" mto workers
Men and women out of work through no fault of their own
need assiStance And we all deser.ve a tax break But we should
not ktd ourselves mto thinking such patchwork will end the
receSSion- though, like all recesstons, tt will probably run out of
steam eventually regardless of whatever miStakes thiS adminiStration makes

Dr. Lamb

Churches ' The news IS surprtsmg and encouragmg
Much of our present mformatlon comes from the
Canadtan 1971 census And:
here ts the secret. Canadians
are not nervous about asking
and answermg questions
concernmg retigton or religtous
preference
" Staltsltcs
Canada" mcorporates most of
the matertal compiled m the
national census relatmg to the
toptc "The ReligiOus Complexton of Canada " (We also
are mdebted to Dr Charles A
Tipp of Ontarto Btble College
for h1s htghhghts of this
matertal )
In thts country the churchstate tssue erased any question
and response from the U S
census
Of the 21 5 mtllion people m

Anglican Church members tn
Canada, yet more than 2 5
rrullion respondents favored
the church from England The
Umted Church has 993,000 on
the roils yet 3,768,000 said
"Untied Church" tn the
Canadtan
Census.
The
Lutherans offtc1ally "hst"
some 300,0011 members, while
more than 700,000 non-

attenders clatm Martm Luther
Presbytertans, Reformed and
Baphsts, every denomination
has this staggermg shadow
membershtp of those who are
aware of some preference or
connection.
The Canadian rellgtous scene
ts loaded wtth vttahty and
exctlement
Semtnary
enrollment has doubled tn the
past 10 years Gtvmg to
mtssion causes clauns a htgher
percentage of a congregatton 's
annual budget than tis
Amertcan counterpart
Soctoiogtsts pomt to the vtbrant
fronUer mood of the Canadtan
people Churchmen are proud
of the low-overhead operation
of Canadian denonnnations
the absence of rehgtous
bureaucrats Church members
were not mtereswct m Vtelnam
m1htary adventures and
congregattons did not dtvtde
over Black Power The
Chrtstian Church everywhere
has much to dtseover from tts
Canadian resource dtverstty,
vttallty and advenhues

--------------------------~
!Mien ol opbdou In! wel-.ed. They sbould be le11
I
th1111 380 words 111111 (or be oabject to redaclloa by the
editor) 1111d mul be olped wltb the olpee'• address.
Names Dilly be wilhbeld DPGD publlcalioa, However, on
request, umes wOl be dlacl01ed. LeUen sboald be in good
taste, addraolal lNua, aol penouUUes.

..B~J. ~..-

••• ~.. UU«l'L: ·--·

0

By Lawnnce E Lamb, M D.

•

DEAR DR LAMB - My outside ones cause pam. tl· the heart ts one cause of mcreased pressure It ts no
husband has JUst had hts chmg and dtscomfort
second hemorrhmdectomy m
The \\Orsl problem eomes ,aa:tdent that dilated vems are
legs, around the rectwn
20 years We know other people when a small clot forms 111 the .. ll"lhe
.,
I
"tilld,
m men, wtlhtn the
who are ,hemorrhmd sufferers dllal"!l'vem A clot IS called a
and are \\ Ondenng the thrQmqus so these are called :oorotwn (varicoele) You don't
follo\\tn g
What
are thrombosed hemorrhotds or se,e _people wtth dilated vems in
hemorrhotds ? What causes thrombosed ptles Someuffies the head because the bead ts
them • Why do they sometimes these;:need to be lanced and above the heart, and there ts
recur after surgtcal remo~al ' drairietl, but usually they go litUe or no pressure inSide the
and what can be done to away on lhetr own after thm vems m the head regton
preven t them'
caUS~~~~~o the dtSCilmfort. The Y® don 't see hemorrhoids, tp
I'm sure if you answer these srriill]i:arred tag of tissue len anunals wl!ere the rectwn ts
questtons you wtll enlighten beh~ may be a perststent above the heart, as m most
many of us as hemorrhou!S are source of tlchmg
' four-looted graZing anunals
The tnlernal hemorr.hotds Part of the problem, then. goes
qwte a problem lor so many
people
may not cause any symptoms, hack to our bemg uprtght
_
DEAR
READER
but they can bleed stlently, tn anunals
Pressure
aroWid
the
rectum
Hemorrhotdsare nothmg more small or large amounls
than dilated vems around the
Trytng to ahs\\er what distending the vems can also be
rectum They are JUSt like causes hemorrhmds ts a btt tike caused by chtldbtrth , and
var1cose vems of Ute legs ex· answermg what causes many women wtll have
cept for thetr location
vartcase vems In general hemorrhoid problems after
There are generally two anythmg that mcreases the pregnancy Abdommal tumors
types of hemorrhotds, the pressure tnstde the thin-walled and proba~ly even bemg
external type, outstde the vems may cause them to dtlate overwetght can contrtbute to
spllincter,'and the Internal type excessively and become sac- the pressure problems
Constipation and poor bowel
i'1S!de the sphmcter The bke structures Bemg b«!low

{

~

I

I

I

I

I
I

I
I

I
I

I
I
I

Canada fewer than fiVe per
cent cla1med "no religton "
I
The largest religtous group, the
Roman Catholics, have some What really happened
9,975,0011 members Catholics
Jan 13,1975
make up nearly 46 per cent of Dear Str
,
the Canadtan population and
In regard to the article (front page Sunday Times-Sentinel)
stnce 1961 have enjoyed a 20 concerning the fighting thai took place at the Kyger Creekper cent mcrease m mem- Hannan Trace baBketbell game Friday nigh!.
bership ThiS ts Slgllificant
The two juveniles taken lo the sherlfrs office were our sons
when you constder some of the We would like 1o explain the circumstances surroWidlng this
annual ligures In the Unlwct
Our fourteen year old son was Identified by a "Mr Roush" as
States, thts church had an being the boy who had hit a Hannan Trace boy. Several of the
habtts are a maJOr factor m mcrease of 69,437 members tn Hannan Trace fans started after him and he began to run.
caustng hemorrhotds The 1973 , for Canada m 1973, Deputy Sheriff Ronald Lemley came up at this time and sa1d he
pressure durmg forceful bowel almost s•,ooo
told him tO bait; the boydlm'thear him, and continued to run. At
movements
real!~
balloons
out
The
Pentecostal
Church
of
this point Lemley started to chase him and shot his gun. The !loy
_.
the elastic vetns Thts IS a ltp Canada had a 50 per cent ran through a com field, falllng several Urnes with bright lights
then on "hat you can do to gro\1 th m the past decade The beqllasbed oo him as though he were~c hardened criminal He
avotd them Mamtam good Salvation Army, wtlh tts was C8UIIhl by a man frcm Hannan Trace wllo held him against a
bowel habtts, avotdmg v1gorous urban outreach, tree by the tlroat unW Lemley got there.
laxahves and stool strammg marked up a 30 per cent mOur liC\'l!llteen year old son was Involved only because,
For more mformatton on thlli crease
The
matnline thinking hla brother was goiiltllo be shot, be ran after Lemley
aspect of hemorrhmds, write tO' denorrunal10ns were m the 5 to and tlnatened him. Bclth boys were Iaten lo the sheriff's office
mt; m care of .~~~1 • 10 per cent range
andnotallondlocallbome. We weren't notified by the school or
P •0 Box 561 ~ rOty
Perahaps the most revealing any law olflcial that this had taken place. We were called by
Stahon, · eW- f.Ork, N. V, l0019 slaltStic com&lt;!S out of the some ol the' studenta.
•
an~ aSk for Ute booklet on ' reltgtous preference category.
' While at the sherllf'a office, the boy (who was hit) from
hemorrhotds Send 50 cents to Here Canadians were asked to Hannan Trace, said our son wun't the cme who hit him The
cover costs
name the particular religious ~falls to mentim that apoJocles were made by the deputies
Never
overlook
the body to which they " belonged, andalao by us for our actions lonrd deputy Lemley
posstbiltty that pressure from a adhered or favoured " We
As for lhetwoschoolsflghtinl, we'n! sorry and ashamed that
cancer of the rectum a hove the know that every denonunation things like this would happen. We feel that everyme should take
hemorrhotds may cause them has Its fellow-travelers, people a closer look at what's going on at school functions. We certainly
to appear Everyone who "ho rarely attend, contribute mlend to do so, because the next time there could be a terrible
develops hemorrhouls or who or parhctpale Yet ~ ts a tragedy.
has rectal bleeding must have hnk. a memory, an attitude
Mr. aoo Mrs. Melvm Wheeler, Bulavllle-Porler ROad
an exanunahon If tl ts more that descrtbes a person's
senous than just hemorrhotds, le~nmg
ED NOTE. Mr. and M,s. Wheeler are right: the error and
early dta~nosts and treatment
Cons1der lhts There are subsequent apologies should haw been repcrled. They were not
can' be llfesavtng
approximately 1 mtllton becal''&lt; authootie~ did no1 reveal them
1
I

Hemorrhoids are dilated veins
•

'

Bucks roll by 17

Rhodes meets cabinet to plan
.
programs for more Ohio jobs

Third time around for Arab power

'

Ira Berkow

United Press International
Oh10 State hasketbaU roach
Fred Taylor satd his Buckeyes
played "pretty doggone well"
Monday rught as they whipped
Iowa here 94-n tn one of stx
Ohto college basketball games
Etght games are on tap
tomghl
In other Monday games,
Central State downed Tennessee State 79-66, Creighton
(Neb ) defeated Cleveland
State 64-60, Youngstown State
defeated Walsh 78-67 and
Wnght State \\hipped Wilberforce 78-69
Seruor forward Bill Andreas
SCilrtd 15 of his 19 pomts m the
second half to spark Ohto Stale
to thetr Btg Ten VIctory The &amp;-7
Andreas, the Buckeles'
leading scorer for the season,
re-entered the game when
center Cratg Taylor fouled out
wtth less than e1ghl minutes
remamtng and Ohw State
clmgmg to a 63-60 lead
After the two teams exchanged baskets, Andreas
scored the game's next rune
pomts to gtve the Buckeyes a
74-62 margm which was never
threatened
Taylor satd he was unpressed wtth Andreas' game
"It was great the way he
came to hie and the play of our
guards was !me, particularly
the way they controlled the
game," Taylor Sald
Iowa IS now 5-8 overall and 23 tn the Big Ten
Dan Frost led Iowa scorers
wtth 20 pomts, followed by
Bruce King wtth 14
Larry Bolden tallied 16 for
the Buckeyes, Taylor 16, Andy
Sttegem~ter 13 and Mark
Bayless 10 as all ftve starters
were m double figures OhiO
Slate ts now 8-6 overall and 2-2
tn the conference
Travel To Northwestern
The Buckeyes tr~vel to
Northwestern next weekend
At Cleveland Monday ntghl,
Seruor center Doug Brooktns
scored 12 pomts to lead
Cretghton to tts vtctory over
Cleveland State
Cretghton broke a 60-60 he
wtth 1 54 left m the game when
Charles Butler hit one of two
free throws Tom Anderson
added another free throw wtth
34 seconds left in the game, to
make tt 62.60, and Brookms
made a layup wtth ftve seconds
remaiiWig to wrap tt up for the
Bluejays, now 12-4
The Vikings were paced by
Wtlbur Starks' 20 pomts

By

on Cleveland's port," he satd
"And we will make the state
ready to help other Lake Erte
po(ts With sliilllar expanston "
Education Top Challenge
Rhodes referred to public
educallon as "Ohto's number

one challenge," repeatmg his
campatgn promiSe of htgher
saiartes for teachers and
school employes
' We must make the changes
necessary so we can get state
education money directly mto
the paychecks of those who are
the
backbone of our
educattonal system - the
teachers and the school employes," the governor satd
"We must also return to our
ftrst prtortttes m htgher education -paymg the faculty and
employes who serve our yoUjlg
people "
Rhodes made what seemed
to be a proposal for cooperation
wtth the Democratic-controlled
Ohto General Assembly
' We welcome and mvtle all
suggestions to add to or unprove these," the governor
satd "We, of course, expect

the creattve tnput of the Ohto
legiSlature
"John Donne srud that no
man IS an ISland unto hunself,"
he satd The governor lS not
an tsland The legislature ts not
an Island"
"I am calling for the help and
the cooperahon of every
Ohtoan, regardless of hts ._
polttical !ruth, regardless of his
station, as we seek to butld a
better Ohto," Rhodes satd
0hto's motto lS 'Wtth God,
All Thmgs Are Posstble ' We
can become the greatest state
m the Untied States of
America''
Outline Programs
Rhodes also satd he
- Has dtrected the Ohto
Department of Natural
Resources and the Ohio Environmental
Protectton
Agency to "cut the red take
whtch has blocked the
development of Ohto,s energy
11

11

resources.' '
-Will propose a new sevenmember Ohto Energy Development Authortty to combme
efforts of gov.ernment and
industry to develop and use
energy resources tn Ohio
-Wtll ask the General
Assembly to create an Ohio
C.entral Bustness Dtstnct
Development Authortty to
revtlalize ctties "at no direct
rost to the taxpayers "
-Will propose wtthin 30 days
the creatton of an Ohto Rtver
Port Authortty to butld port
facilities at East Liverpool,
Steubenville, ~ lartms FerryBrtdgeport-Bellatre, ManettaBelpre, Pomeroy, Gallipolis,
Ironton, Portsmouth, New
Rtclunond and Cincmnati
-Has ordered "the largest
possible transportation constructiOn program to be put
under way tmmediately" without wrutmg for a state transportation study to be conSidered by the General
Assembly
-Will offer legislation to
allow working marned couples
to choose whether to ftle JOtnl
or separate state mrome tax
returns, and furnish full salary
to the wtdows of Ohto law
enforcement offtcers, firemen
and prtson guards ktlled m
action
Hecklers Shout
As Rhodes took the oath, a
dozen hecklers shouted from
the rear of the audtence,
mamly agatnSt Rhodes' handling of diSturbances at Kent
Slate Untverstty tn 1970 which
left four students dead and rune
others wounded by Ohto
National Guard bullets
"Our people want state
government to ronfront thetr
problems and solve them
wtthout delay," satd Rhodes tn
his llknmute maugural address whtcl) followed the public
oathtaking ceremony "I am
determmed that thts admlnlstratton will do JUst that "
About 200 young demonstrators marched down High Street
lo the Statehouse, amvmg as
Rhodes was speakmg. They
chanted slogans and obscemties, and held aloft banners, one of whteh read
"Remember Kent State, Carry
On the Struggle Agamst War
and lmpertalisth."
After the ceremorues the
demonstrators massed on the
north stde of the Statehouse
behind about 110 Ohto highway
patrolmen
Hold Bible
Rhodes' grandchildren held
the Btble as the new governor
pronoiDlced the oallt for the
third time In public His wife,
Helen, was nearby
Also m the front row was
Dempcrattc Gov John J
Cmtinued on page a

•

Reds sign two
CINCINNATI (UPI)-The
Ctncmnatt Reds have stgned
two Cal\lorma baseball players
who were among thetr chotces
m last week's wmter free agent
draft
They are Bernard Plent, 20,
of LaHabre, Caltf, and Mark
Unsoeld, 19, of Glendora, Calif
Plenl, a rtghlhanded p1tcher,
was the Reds' lhtrd round ptck
m the regular phase of the
draft, whtle Unsoeld, a catcher, was the second selectton
m the s&lt;1eandary phase

Ry Ira Rerkow
NEA Sports Editor
NEW YORK - A number of
s1gmftcant' college and pro
coac hes have alread) been
hu ecJ or fired have retired or
res1~nerl Ara Pctrsegtuan Dun
Devme Abc G1bron and Jnn
Onery; a re among those
headhne makers

JACK LENGYEl. No regrets

West favored by 3

Tonight's game
Glouster at Southern

NOW!
AT

·CARRYOUT PRICES
MUFFLERS
TAIL PIPES

SHOCKS· BRAKE SHOES
FUEL PUMPS
STARTERS • ALL PARTS

·nno0RE'S

whose Bullets have on 29 of
thetr first 41 games this season
and sport a league-leadmg
wmnmgpercentageof 707, wtll
coach the East whtle AI Attles
of Pac1ftc DtvtstOn-leadmg
Golden State wtll coach the
West
Should Jones' and Attles'
teams sttll have the highest
wmnmg percentages m thetr
respecltve cpnferences at the
end of the regular season they
would recet ve the two newest
awards mstttuled by the NBA
as announced Monday by outgomg commtsswner Walter
Kennedy The awards, respecltvely, are tlie Ned lrtsh
Trophy and the Fred Zollner
Trophy IriSh was formerly
prestdent and owner of the New
York Kmcks while Zollner
served m the same capacity

AMERICAN HARDWARE
POMEROY

wtth the Detrott Ptstons Both
are now rettred

Roundmg out the East squad
are guards Jo Jo Wh1te of
Boston and Phil Cheruer of
Washmgton, forwards Dave
Cowens and Paul Stlas of
Boston, Rudy Tomjanovtch of
Houston and Steve MIX of
Phtladelphta and center Wes
Unseld of Washtngton
They were selected to the
team by the Eastern Conference coaches whtle the West
coaches selecwct the remrun111g
seven players on that team and
they mclude. guards Dave
Bmg of Detrmt, Charlie Srott of
Phoerux, and Jun Prtce o£
Milwaukee, forwards Bob Dandrtdge of Mtlwaukee and
Stdney Wtcks of Portland and
centers Bob Lanter of Detrotl
and Sam Lacey of Kansas City-

omaha
Prtor to the game, the NBA's
Board of Governors wtll meet
and are expected to contmue
thetr dtscusstons centertng
around the nammg of a successor to Kennedy who wtll
leave hts post June I One of the
men prommently mentioned
for the post ts current Deputy
Comm1sstoner Sunon Gourdine
who was appotnted to his
present JOb in November
Kennedy, who was named
rommtSslOner m 1963 and has
directed the NBA s growth
from a nme team league to tls
present Ill-team set-up, was
honored wtth a !timed trtbute
Monday rught at a $25-a-plate
hanquet attended by some 1,500
people
Also honored at the dtnner
wtth certificates of apprectatton for lhetr contrtbultons to the game were
former Phtladelphta owner
Eddte Goltlteb and current
Boston General Manager
Arnold ' Red" Auerbach

Bruins remain on
Hoosiers' heels
By JACK SAUNDERS
UP! Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - For
years UCLA has dorrunated the
college baaketball scene, but
when the Brwns failed to wm
the nat10nal champtonship last
year, they were picked only
second tn the preseason
ratmgs
They're still No 2 this week
tn the rankmgs of the Untied
Press Internattonal College
Basketball Ratings Board, behind Indtana-which gamed
the top spot for the ftrst tune m
last week's ratings
The Hoosiers, JWDptng Into
ftrst when North Carolina State
lost for the ftrst time in 37
games, made sure thiS past
week they would stay No 1 In
tw&lt;r13tg 10 contests, Indiana
topped Michigan, 90-76, then on
Saturday mundated Iowa, 10249, to raiSe tis record to 14-0
For thetr performance, the
Hoosters drew 32 of a posstble
42 ftrst place ballots and 409
pomts
UCLA, 1~, also diSpatched
two ronference foes, beatmg
Paciftc 8 rtvals Washmgton, 9282, and Washmgton State, 7769, to gam seven ftrst place

The

Dai~

Sentinel

votes and 381 pomts
the Woifpack, a wmner of Its
North Caroltna State and only game last week to go 10-1,
Loutsville agatn were mvolved repeatmg as the third chotce
m a close race for thtrd, wtlh
Southern Cal and Maryland
remamed fifth and stxth,
respecttvely, but the rest of the
Top 10 was reshuffled when
Oregon, prevtously ranked seventh, and former No 9
Kentucky suffered losses Oregon fell to IIUlth and Kentucky
to lOth as Alabama clunbed
one notch to seventh and
Anzona State Jumped two
postttons to etghth

Gullett
top Red
pitcher

CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
local chapter of the Baseball
Wrt ters' Assoctalton of
Amenca has voted young leflhander Don Gullett the best
Cmcmnalt Reds' p1tcher
durmg 1974
Gullett, who celebrated hts
24th btrthday a week ago, had a
17-11 record last season and led
the Reds' staff m complete
games (10), mmngs ptlched
(243 ) and str1keouts (183) He
had a 3 04 earned run average,
lowest among Reds starters
Desptte hts youth, Gul·
lett already bas p1tched
f1ve seasons m the maJOr
leagues and has a 65-37 lifetime
mark Reds manager Sparky
Anderson ftgures there ts a
good chance Gullett could
become a Hall of Farner
Gullett edged rehever Clay
Carroll (11 'h votes to 9'.2 votes
In the wrtters' ballotmg Jack
Btllmgham was the only other
ptlcher to recetve votes m the
annual poll

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER l TANNEHILL
Exec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Ctty Edttor
Pubt 1Shed da dy e:xcept
Saturday by The OhtO Va l ley
Publt s l1tng Company
111
Court St
Pomeroy , Otlto
45769 Busmess Offtce Phone
992 2l li6 Ed ilona I Phone 992
2157
Second class postage patd at
Pomeroy Oh10
Nat 1ona l advert 1s 1 ng
College Basketball Result s
repre sen tattve
Bottme l lt
By Untied Press International
Gallagher, Inc 12 East 42nd
East
Sl New York New York
Ga St 55 F DU Rthrfrd 52
Subscr1pt10n
rates
M tddlbry 83 Plttsbgl166
Del1vered by earner where
p 1ft 84 Notre Dame 77
available 75 cenfs per week
Pha PArm 92 s t Mry s Md 86
By Moler Route whel'e carrter
Morav 1an 64 Urs nus 59
ser&gt;~tce not ava il ab le
One
Sht ppensbg 69 Messtah 60
month 53 25 By mall tn OhtO
West Chester 55 Drexel 53
and W Va One Year 522 00
Stx months
Sll 50
Three
Buffalo 72 St Fran Pa 66
months
57 oo
Elsewhere
Wheeltng 94 St Pet er s 92
S26 00 year
Stx months
Waynesbg 10 3 Frosrbg 94
513 50
three months 57 50
Nyack 68 Ktng s NY 66
Subscnptton pr 1ce mcludes ...
South
Sundav Ttmes sent 1nel
Ky St 74 Geotwn Ky 71
E Ky 104 Murray St 95
Morel1ead 99 Ausltn Peay 89
Vanderbilt 102 Georgta 80
J acksonvl 75 Neb Om 60
Pembroke 63 Pfe1ffer 56
Grdn r Webb 111 S Car Akn 85
Mars Hill 79 Leno• r Rhyne 67
Atl Chrts 89 N C Wlmngtn 82
Auburn 84 F lortda 68
V1rgtnta 58 OaV tdson 56
Armstrng St 88 Columbs 7'l
Mercer 91 La Te cl1 66
A lban y St Ga 96 Ft Vtly 77
Va Sf 97 Sf Augstne 78
VM I 108 C ttadel 101
Del St 80 Va Un1on 65
Ky Ws l yn 101 Mt M~r·v 67
Alabama 74 M1SS1SS1pp1 71
Centenary 105 Lamar 83
Your Thdm MeAn Store
Kentucky 88 Tennessee 82
Mnldleport, 0
M1dwest
1
lnd1ana 79 Mtnnesota 59

Top 20
NEW YORK (UPII - The
Untied Pre s s In te rna ti onal
Board of Coaches col l ege
basketball
rattngs
wllh
number' of ftrst p lace votes and
r ecords through Saturday Jan
11 m parentheses (42 of 42
coaches votmgl ISD&lt;fh week)

Team

Pomls

1 lndtana 132 1 ( 14 OJ

409

2 UCLA {7) ( 12 0 1
J NC State ( 101 l
4 LOUtSVille(3)(110)

381
302
296

5 Southern Cal (12 1)
6 Maryland ( 11 I)

217
19 5

7 A labama (9 1 l
8 Art zona Sta te ( 13 1 l
9 O regon ( 10 l l
10 Kentu c ky (9 2)
11 La Sal le ( 12 l)

153
94
7b
so
36

12 Mi:H"quett e (9 21

13
1&lt;1
15
16
17
17
19
19

27

An zona ( 11 2)
North Ca rolina (7 JJ
Sou th Caro lma (8 31
T ennessee 18 21
{Ttel Rutgers (1 0 21
fTt el Bradley (9 3)
(Tte) New Me x St (9 JJ
(Ttel Penn (9 31

23
22
8
7
3
3
2
2

Ohto St 94 Iowa 77
llltno s 72 Wtscon s tn 56
Purdue 73 Northw es t ern 72
Centra• 51 79 Tenn S1 66
Wr gh t St 78 Wlbrtrce 69
Cretghton 64 Cleve St 60
Young stown St 78 Walsh 69
No I ll 87 Weber St 86
W ts Grn By 94 Ogl th rpe 67 La
Crosse 83 Stevens P t 71
Supenor 91 Rtver Falls 67
Parks de 6.9 Plattev il l e 63
OshKosh 102 Wh tewat er 83
Eau Clatre 81 Stout 71
Southwest
Texas T ech 86 Hou ston 82
Oral Ro~erts 98 Ok Ctty 80
west
Utah St 102 Botse St 87
uoP ao Portland 72
E Ore 76 Ore Col\ 68
Geo Fo)C, 90 So Ore 70
Cen t wash 100 St Mrtns 13
Fllrth 61 Cal Poly Pom 54

heritage house

had sa td
Marshall lost the next game
66.{3, the next 37-6 But agamst
a powe rful Bowhng Green
learn, a 30-polnt favortte,
doughty Marshall won 12-lll at
thetr Homecommg ' ll was the
second m1rac le of the sea son~'
satd Lengyel
Problems, howe vet, pe r-

Jack Leng)el also res1gned
re cently but the tmpact
nationally was that ol a feather
falling m the Grand Canyon
Yet none had a more
dramallc tenure Lengyel 's JOb
began md1sastc1 and, desp1le a
handful of nuracles ended m
d1sappmnlment
Lengyel was htred as
Marshall Umv ers1ty s head
footb,lll COflch fou1 years ago
m the fall of 1971
fh1 s "as less than a yea t
after a DC-9 carrymg home
the Marshall team from a
game m North Carolina on "a
ramswept Saturday mght, fie\\
fo1 the mounta111top Tn.State
atrporl m Huntmglon, West
Vugoma Jut the tops of the ptne
trees mstead carlwheeled mto
a moun tams1de, exploded and
d1smtegrated
The crash k1lled all 75
aboa1d 1ncludtng players,
coaches and local townspeople
\\ho were football supporters,
such as doctors, lawyei s and
businessmen
II was the worst Amencan
sports team dtsaster m htstory
Lengyel look the JOb as coach
after 11 had bee n turned down
by a couple others, mcludmg
one man who accepted the JOb
one day and then backed out
the next It "as not the most
sought-aile• coachmg JOb m
the country at the ltme
Bestdes the crash, Marshall
had JUSt come off a maJor
recrutltng scandal m \\htch
they had been placed on
probatton by the National
Co llegtale
Athlet1c
Assoctalton , pnd mdefmttely
suspended from the Mld·
Amenca Conference
Bullhe JOb was a step up for
Lengyel He had been head
coach at tmy Wooster College
tn Ohto for the prevtous ftve
seasons Lengyel satd he look
the Marshall post because "tt
would test my abthltes tn every
phase '
As the season began,
Lengyel, a 35 year old, blondish, stouhsh, and sweet,
started a learn of freshmen and
sophomores,.playmg the same
tough schedule that had been
set the prevtous season
Opemng game was against
Xav1er, a 2().poml favortle The
largest crowd m Huntington
htstorl turned out, nearly
14 000, mciudmg the governor
of the state Arch Moore, about
half the student body of!O,OOO,
and wtdows and chtldren of the
dead
The game was unexpectedly
tough Marshall took a surprtsmg 6-0 hailltme lead
Marshall fell behmd 13-9 Wtth
a second to go tn the game,
Marshall had the ball on
Xavter's 13-yard lme Quar·
terback Reggte Ohver fltpped a
pass to Terry Gardner for a
touchdown Fans streamed
onto the held screammg
Others JUst stood thunderstruck Many cned
Il was a miracle,' Lengyel
0

ABA standings
By Umted Press International
East
w 1 pet g b
28 11 718
Kentucky
29 12 707
New York
\ 7 27 386 JJIJ~
St LOU IS
11 31 262 18 1!7
Memptlts
9 32 22 0 20
V rg.n a
West
w I pet g b
Denver
35 6 854
Sa n An toniO
25 20 556 11
lnd1ana
18 22 450 16 117
Utah
20 25 44~ 17
San D ego
18 24 429 17 111
Monday s Resulls
Indiana 105 Vtrg 1n1a 88
Tuesdays Games
Kentucky at Denver

stsled For all the jubtlalton at
the vtctot lcs there remamed
the gloomy memory of the
seemmgly unendmg funeral
pt O&lt;esstons through th e
Huntmgton streets RecrutL•
were not always easy lo come
by eve n though Lengyel tned
to persuade them that they
could play more and sooner at
Marshall because of the ctrcums!ances than they could at
any comparable school tn the
country
He was rtght, for awiule A
stra nge s otuat1on began to
plague htm' ' Some upperclassmen were bemg
replaced m the s!arlmg lineup
by more talented younger
classmcn, that ts, newer .
recrmts Every season, flve or
stx players qu1t to Lengyel s
d1smal
In hts ftrst season, the team
won those two 1mposstble
games and lost seven In 1972,
the record was the same 2-7,
wmmng thetr ftrst and last
games
In 1973, Lengyel's thtrd
season, the team Improved to
4-6 , two of those wms came on
last-seco nd fteld ~oals II
seemed now that Lengyel was
on the same track as at
Wooster when hts first
season's record was 1-6, and
hts last was Il-l
But thts season, Marshall
won only one game and lost 10
!I lost four games by a total of
mne pomts and two of !hose
games were lost by last-second
held goals
By the thtrd game (when the
team was 1·1) the first three
quarterbacks were lost lor
much of the season wtth mJurtes The best player on the
team, Iackie Jesse Smith, an
East-West gam~ seleclton, was
stdellned wtth a heart condt\ton Also, the starling
fullback and a startmg guard
were lmtshed early on by mJury
Th"" mtracle barrel had
bottomed out
One week after season's end,
Lengyel announced hts
dectston The school prestdent
and townspeople supporters
lrted to persuade htm to stay
But he had made up hts mtnd
to move on A number .of
factors were mvolved Marshall never has had much of a
football tradition and. not
counltng the scandal and the
crush, tt ts stlll tough to recrutt
for the school Also, havmg no
conference alftllatton hurts,
too And economy has cut the
nwnber of football scholarships
Lengyel understands that
few schools would be mterested
m htm as a head coach because
of hts record "Even when they
take mto account the circumstances," he said, "the
record speaks "
Perhaps, he satd, he'd try to
catch on as an asststant at a
major school Maybe he'll take
up a business offer from a
fnend m Lowsvtlle
"Whatever I do," he said, "I
have no regrets about my four

years at Marshall It taught me
somethmg Important
I used to pay ltp..service to
the saymg that on any gtven
day one football team could
beat any other
' After those two games m
my ftrst season here, wtth the
emolton so htgh the hatr on my
arms s tood on end, I
d1scovered that 1t's really
true '

BELTONE
Hearing Aid
Service Center
A Bellone Consultant
Wtll Be At
Metgs Inn
Pomeroy, Ohto
0n
Thursday, Jan 16, 1974
From
9 A.M to 12 Noon
To repatr and servtce
hearmg atds.
Battenes and supplies
for all makes for sale.
Our consultant will be
glad to g1ve you a free
hearing test with the
latest Bellone Elec;'
tromc equtpment
If hea rmg ts your

problem Bellone ts·
the answer

BELTONE
Hearing Aid Center
601 -Stxlh Ave.
Huntmgfon, W.Va.
Phone 525-7221

No matter what other serv1ces
get computenzed nowadays
you can st1ll p1c k up your phone
and ta lk to a real 11ve person
tf you should have a home or
aula msurance cia 1m
As your tndep e ndent msurance
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you contmu1ng personal ser-

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our professtonal adv1ce about
your msurance needs And to

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men! 1f a loss occurs
Try us- gtve us a call And 1f a
compu ter gnswe rs hang up

William D. Ch1lds

Downing-Childs

Agency, Inc.
Mtdd leport, Ohio

Henry Block has
17 reasons why.you
should come to us
for income tax help.
Reason 14. We're human, and once
in a great. while we make a mistake.
But if our error means you must pay
additional tax, you pay only the tax.
We pay any interest or penalty.
We stand behind our work.

Thts Week's S~cia 1

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out .at Marshall

Teammate Gale Drummer pomts early m the game but
added 14 for CSU, now 3-7 lor qUtckly caught up WUberforce, 1-15, led 38-36 at halftime
the season
Jeff Covmgton poured m 12 and the lead changed hands
fteld goals and seven free etght tunes m the second hitlf
throws, several tn the vttal The score was deadlocked at
ftnal mtnutes, to spark 67-all when the Ratders ran off
Youngstown State to tts 78-69 11 pomts m a row to dectde the
wtn over Walsh Monday ntghl, ron test
Bob Grote tallted 14 pomts
giVIng the Pengums thetr nmth
VIctory m a dozen basketball ~or Wnght State, wljjle Dan
Swam and Steve Shook both
games
Walsh, headed by Ray substitutes, added 11 and 10
Dungen wtth 20 pomts, had respecttvely Isaac Green had
pushed to a 40-37 lead at the 24 and Ken Gordon 21 for the
half m the seesaw game where losers
Harry Jackson scored the
both teams held stx and sevenpomt leads attunes Walsh now hiSt etght of his 22 pomts m the
!mal 7 33 to hoosl Central Stale
IS 4-11
from a 59-49 deftctl to a 79-66
Hard Fought Victory
Wnght State, led by Lyle wm over Tennessee State for
Falknor wtth 21 pomts, scored tts e1ghth vtctory m 10 games
The Ohtoans, leadmg 35-34 at
11 of the game's ftnal 13 pomts
mtermtSston,
returned to the
for a hard fought vtctory over
floor and went cold to fall far
Wtlberforce
The Ratders, who upped behind, l.flen found the range
thetr record to 7-3, tratled by 10 agam

PHOENIX (UPI) - The
West, thanks mamly to the
presence of Kareem AbduiJabbar and htgh..scormg Rtck
Barry, ts a threei&gt;Otnl favortte
to beat the East m tomght's
25th
annual
Natwnal
Basketball Assoctation All-Star
game
Abdui.Jabbar, the 7-foot-2
center of the Mtlwaukee Bucks,
IS rated the dommant player tn
professtonal basketball today
Desptte rrussmg the ftrst s1x
weeks of the season because of
a scratched eyeball suffered m
an exhibtlion game, he still
shows a 29 pomt average and
was the leadmg vote-getter
among the starting players
named to the West squad by the
fans
In contrast to prevtous years,
fallS were allowed to vote for
the ft ve starters on each squad
and Abdul.Jabbar led all West
players wtth 77,632 votes
Barry, of Golden State, leads
the NBA m scoring wtth a 33potnt average and recetved
60,547 votes to nad down a
startmg forward post lion tn the
game that begms at 10 p m
EST and will be nationally
teleVISed (CBS)
Buffalo's Bob McAdoo
topped all players m votes wtth
98,325 and wtll start oppostte
AbduiJabbar at the openmg
tap&lt;&gt;ff The remamder of the
East starters mclude the New
York Kmck backcourt duo of
Walt Frazter and Earl Monroe
along wtth forwards John
Havlicek of Boston and Elvm
Hayes of Washington The
game will mark Havlicek's
seventh stratght All .Star game
appearance and ntnth overall
In his 13-year career
Startmg for tha West along
wtth Abdul.Jabbar and Barry
are Nate Archibald of Kansas
Ctty.Qmaha and Gat! Goodrich
of Los Angeles at the guard
Spencer
postttons
and
Haywood of Seattle at forward
K C Jones of Wasiimgton,

Miracles run

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�J

•

1

3-The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, Jan 14, 1975

In admuustermg a profound shock to the romplacen t West by
wtue of tts control of the lion 's share of the world 's store of otl
the Moslem \\Orld 1s repeatmg somethmg 11 dtd twtce before m
history
The f1rst time occurred unmedliltely after the message of
Mohammed.captu red pagan Araby, recalls a thoughUul art1cle
m a recent Busmess Bulletm of the Cleveland Tl1Jllt Co
Either because of sp1ritual exh1larat1on or some mexpllcable
change m thetr genes, the formerly plactd Arabs embarked on a
senes of successful nulltary adventures In a comparatively
short tune, the) subdued most of the Mediterranean littoral,
overran the !henan Pcrunsula and scaled the P)rennes w1th the
aun of makmg what ts now France subJeCt to Islam
The dectStve Battle of Tours tn A D 732 turned the llde,
aroused the West out of the sleep of the Dark Ages and ushered m
the short-lived emptre of Charlemagne
Some seven cen!unes later, whtle !he Florenlmes and others
were absorbed 1n the cultural achtevements of the Renaissance,
the Turks captured Christian Constantmople The blockade of the
Bosporus cu t off the flow of sptces from the Far East, an mdispensable product 111 preservmg meal and making tt edtble for
aristocratic taste
Italy and France were VIrtually helpess, but Portugal and
Spam, bemg martllme powers, moved to overcome the
challenge The former courageously developed a sea route
through unknown waters around the Cape of Good Hope and
across the lndtan Ocean, unmolested by the land-bound
Moslems The return cargoes ytelded a handsome reward for the
entrepreneurs who had taken the nsks
The Sparuards chose a more 1magtnallve and much more
hazardous • ProJect Independence ' The resull w"s I he

discover) of the Western Hemisphere Desptte the rudtmentarv
means of commumcallon and lransport.alwn , unlold nche:-;
began to flow from the New World to the Old
!'he third '111vaston" by the Moslems has been accomplished
By LEE LEONARD
wtthout thetr lifting a smgle sword, and tits to he hoped that the
to 100,000 new jobs, save ceremontes in 15-degree temanother 100,0011, develop Ohio's peratures on the west steps of
stncture m the "sptce" hnes wtll be overcome wtlhout the UP! Statebouae Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!)- James energy 80ilJ'CeS and free poUu- the Sl.atehOUlle.
bloodshed tha t was the case tn the two earlier conquests
A
Rhodes, starting all over as tion control construction proFor a ume tt appeared that the maJor otkonsumbig nattons
Rhodes took the oath from
would become vtcltms of a divtde-aitd-be-eoll&lt;\uered strategy ol governor at an age when most Jects from "red tape."
Ch1ef Justice C Wilham
self-defense There ts now some promiSe Lhlit a formal or m- Amertcans are retiring, today Booed By Protelton
O'NeUI of the Ohio SUpreme
"We are gomg to get jobs for Court foUowmg the swearmg m
formal OPCC (Orgaruzallon of Petroleum j;oosummg Countrtes) "as to hold hiS first cabinet
will rome tnto betng to challenge the OPEC, the oil exporters Its meelmg and begtn plannmg his all the people of Ohio regard- of other elected state offtcials
ftrst ob]ecttve IS to negottate a common formula for sharmg assault on what he COilSiders less of race, rolor, creed or He was sworn in shortly before
Ditto's top areas of concern petrolewn supplies equt!ably
sex," said the new Republican a group of demonstrators
Jobs,
mduslrlal
development
governor in closing his 10- marched down North Htgh
For the short run, conservation of energy ts most urgent, but
the process has hardly begun Meanwhile, we modern "Por- and education
rrunute mauguration address Street onto the Statehouse
Rhodes, 65, besieged by a cheered by some 3,0011 bone- lawn
tuguese' have an Alaskan ptpellne under coiiStruction The
northern Europeans art plumbmg the depths of the North Sea bad rold and hounded by chilled spectators and booed by
Rhodes said he has already
All these and other efforts to extract energy out of the earth's protestors, promised qutck about 200 Stgll-waving and direcwct a cabinet task force to
outer shell wtll create new employment, but a riSe in llvmg actton on those fronts m his chanting demonstrators in the jrepare a public construction
standards cannot occur until such efforts are beyond the maugural address Monday back of the crowd
program to pesent to the
after he was sworn m for a
developmental stage
The new governor had legislature Within 30 days
The sudden re .. mergency of Arab power has not only record third four-year term m already been sworn in
"The purpose of this
!l'lvately last Frtday by John program ts to proVIde an addisrupwct tnduslrtal acltvtty among otl-consummg natiOns The sub-freezmg weather
The Republican mainstay M McElroy, his chief aide, but diltonal 50,0011 jobs m the
prohferatton of petrodollars threatens to crtpple eXIS!tng Ill·
stttultons and force a drasltc restructurmg of the mternatwnal pledged that some of h1s he almost didn •t make it to the private sector of Ohio's
projects would be under way lonna! ceremonies.
monetary system
economy," he said
Rhodes awakened Monday
'Constructive and mgentous measures and machrnery," by mtd-February Ollters
Another 35,0011 new jobs,
says the bulletin, "mul&gt;l be evolved to stave off world-wtde would take until AJrll or May mornmg with a temperature of Rhodes said, wUl acron\pny
to get off the groWid, he said 102 degrees. He later S81d he $350 million worth of pollution
distress of some dl\ratton and severtty "
Rhodes pledged lo create up felt better and went lo the control construchon projects
he said be wUl liberate from
"bureaucracy" wtthin 90 to 120
days
''These JrOjects mclude new
sewage treatment plants lor

Editorial comment,

many of our communities," the
governor said. "The communiUes are ready to go It's time
for the state to do tts part "
Rhodes said his admlnistraUon wUl propose a constitutional amendment setting up a
permanent housmg authonty
to sen bonds and "mvest at
least $500 million in new
boUSIDg construction at no cost
to the taxpayers of Ohio This
will create thousands of new
jolis for Ohioans," he satd
Rhodes added hts admlnlstrahon wUl seek harbor
improvements In Cleveland to
lllmtdate the steel industry
"WewUI cooperate with Mayor
(Ralph J.) Perk to save the
1011,0011 jobs in the Cuyahoga
Valley industries which depend

opinion, features
Ray Croml-ey ·

Investment is
the answer
WASHINGTON - The eronomtsts are happy Despite thetr
talk of fine tumng, they've never had a clear fix on how to handle
inflatton Talk with four economtsts wtll net you ltve theortes
But they do know what to do about a recession Spend And
keep on spending until we are out of the slwnp
Here they are in agreement
But they're wrong There's a major bug m that theory tn the
1975 econorme bogdown Government deficit spending, more
money m our pockets from tax breaks, added unemployment
benefits and public servtce jobs wtll not solve our problem
Wtthout tncreased production of bastes, these actions will merely
drtve prices skyward We'll complete more heavtly for what's
avatlable Which will increase lnflatton and put us back to where
we are now
For the new buying almost certainly wtll be senstbly centered tn the day-to-&lt;lay essentials - whtch are even now soaking
up our funds The unemployed, glven extended payments or
publlc-servtce JObs, and the employed, gtven a tax break, wtll not
rush out to buy an expensive new house or car They'll want to
see daylight ftrst
Our troubles have a deeper base Basic production capactty
over Ute years has not mcreased sufficiently to employ all U S
workers, or to supply the increase In demand as more Amertcans
moved into the mtddle class This msufftctency would exiSt even
if the eronomy were surgmg, whtch tl certainly IS not doing
today
There are many reasons for this failure to bwld production
capactty and this slower-than-desirable increase tn productiVIty
In parltl has been because of a lack of ronftdence m our future
economtc gro\1 th, m part because of senseless government
regulation, mpart because btgness has created complacency and
m part because the new breed of btg managers are bureaucrats
who are unwtlllng to lake chances
There fias been a hefty shtft of mveslment m new production
overseas by Amertcan compames, stunulaWd by a variety of tax
mcenuves Thatts, for years we have exported jobs and have
stmultaneously fatled to create them m suffictent numbers here
at home Wtthoul this contmually expanded and upgraded
capactty, an j!ICrease m demand cannot possibly be matched by
the reqws1te mcrease m the output of essentials
For curmg a receSSion, or an mflalion, there Ui no substttute
for mcreasmg mvestment m baste mdustry and for stunulating
productiVIt) and new products m order to put more men and
women mto productton
Ideas are not tn short supply. Invenhve sCientiSts and
engmeers are rommg up wtth more improvements and feasible
ne" concepts than ever before m hiStory But there's a shortage
of riSk capttal There's a reluctance to take chances
A good deal more of our thinkmg, therefore, must go mto
eradicatmg barrters
Only m thts wa) w1ll we be able to tran.form more of our

Ban held
•
aga1nst
•
,&amp;_tnpper
CHARLESTON, W Va.
(UPI) - A step toward
preserving a ban againSt strip
mming m 22 West Vtrginia
rounUes was taken Monday In
the House of Delegates
The chamber's Judtctary
Commtttee unantmously
recommended passage of
legislation conttnumg the
surface mining prohtbttion for
another two years- until
March 13, 1977
The surface mine legislation,
sure to evoke df&gt;.bate when II
reaches the House floor, was
the first major bill to come out
of romrruttee
The ban on 22 rounlies
ortglnated m 1971 as a Cllm·
promise to strip mme
abolittontSts The Legislature,
at that time, placed a two-year
moratortum on strippmg in
rounties where there had been
no previous mining
The two-year prohtbiUon was
extended in 1973 and was
headed towards a stmilar
rontinuance this session
HOuse Speaker LewiS McManus, D-Raleigh, wd he expected the chamber would "stand
pat" on the tssue thts year He
also doubted any proposal
rurned at mcreaslng taxes on
the tndustry, whtle enjoying an
energy bonanza, would wm
approval

COL RICHARD R TATTERSON, rtghl, Commander, llllh Engineer Group (CBT)
presented Sp-4 Brarry Cox, PI Pleasant, the James H. FranciS Marksmanship Trophy for
outstanding efforts for the state of West Vtrgml8 m competition held at Camp Dawson, W Va ,
recently The ceremony was held Jan. 12, tn the 36641h Maintenance Co (LOS) Armory, Pt
Pleasant
.,
,
•

David Poling, D.D.

Religious vibes
strong in Canada
By David Poling, D D
For some years, people tn the
Untied States have been
look111g to thetr netghbor to the
north for hockey players and
energy resources A smaller
group saw Canada as a haven
durmg the Vtetr\am confltcl,
making 1t thetr permanent
home wtth or w1thout hockey,
natural gas and Mounted
Pollee Today, church leaders
are study1ng carefully the
latest statistics and trends now
reported m the 'Yearbook of
Ame-ncan and Canadian

ronsumers into producers, convert more of our unemployed,
underemployed and "unemployables" mto workers
Men and women out of work through no fault of their own
need assiStance And we all deser.ve a tax break But we should
not ktd ourselves mto thinking such patchwork will end the
receSSion- though, like all recesstons, tt will probably run out of
steam eventually regardless of whatever miStakes thiS adminiStration makes

Dr. Lamb

Churches ' The news IS surprtsmg and encouragmg
Much of our present mformatlon comes from the
Canadtan 1971 census And:
here ts the secret. Canadians
are not nervous about asking
and answermg questions
concernmg retigton or religtous
preference
" Staltsltcs
Canada" mcorporates most of
the matertal compiled m the
national census relatmg to the
toptc "The ReligiOus Complexton of Canada " (We also
are mdebted to Dr Charles A
Tipp of Ontarto Btble College
for h1s htghhghts of this
matertal )
In thts country the churchstate tssue erased any question
and response from the U S
census
Of the 21 5 mtllion people m

Anglican Church members tn
Canada, yet more than 2 5
rrullion respondents favored
the church from England The
Umted Church has 993,000 on
the roils yet 3,768,000 said
"Untied Church" tn the
Canadtan
Census.
The
Lutherans offtc1ally "hst"
some 300,0011 members, while
more than 700,000 non-

attenders clatm Martm Luther
Presbytertans, Reformed and
Baphsts, every denomination
has this staggermg shadow
membershtp of those who are
aware of some preference or
connection.
The Canadian rellgtous scene
ts loaded wtth vttahty and
exctlement
Semtnary
enrollment has doubled tn the
past 10 years Gtvmg to
mtssion causes clauns a htgher
percentage of a congregatton 's
annual budget than tis
Amertcan counterpart
Soctoiogtsts pomt to the vtbrant
fronUer mood of the Canadtan
people Churchmen are proud
of the low-overhead operation
of Canadian denonnnations
the absence of rehgtous
bureaucrats Church members
were not mtereswct m Vtelnam
m1htary adventures and
congregattons did not dtvtde
over Black Power The
Chrtstian Church everywhere
has much to dtseover from tts
Canadian resource dtverstty,
vttallty and advenhues

--------------------------~
!Mien ol opbdou In! wel-.ed. They sbould be le11
I
th1111 380 words 111111 (or be oabject to redaclloa by the
editor) 1111d mul be olped wltb the olpee'• address.
Names Dilly be wilhbeld DPGD publlcalioa, However, on
request, umes wOl be dlacl01ed. LeUen sboald be in good
taste, addraolal lNua, aol penouUUes.

..B~J. ~..-

••• ~.. UU«l'L: ·--·

0

By Lawnnce E Lamb, M D.

•

DEAR DR LAMB - My outside ones cause pam. tl· the heart ts one cause of mcreased pressure It ts no
husband has JUst had hts chmg and dtscomfort
second hemorrhmdectomy m
The \\Orsl problem eomes ,aa:tdent that dilated vems are
legs, around the rectwn
20 years We know other people when a small clot forms 111 the .. ll"lhe
.,
I
"tilld,
m men, wtlhtn the
who are ,hemorrhmd sufferers dllal"!l'vem A clot IS called a
and are \\ Ondenng the thrQmqus so these are called :oorotwn (varicoele) You don't
follo\\tn g
What
are thrombosed hemorrhotds or se,e _people wtth dilated vems in
hemorrhotds ? What causes thrombosed ptles Someuffies the head because the bead ts
them • Why do they sometimes these;:need to be lanced and above the heart, and there ts
recur after surgtcal remo~al ' drairietl, but usually they go litUe or no pressure inSide the
and what can be done to away on lhetr own after thm vems m the head regton
preven t them'
caUS~~~~~o the dtSCilmfort. The Y® don 't see hemorrhoids, tp
I'm sure if you answer these srriill]i:arred tag of tissue len anunals wl!ere the rectwn ts
questtons you wtll enlighten beh~ may be a perststent above the heart, as m most
many of us as hemorrhou!S are source of tlchmg
' four-looted graZing anunals
The tnlernal hemorr.hotds Part of the problem, then. goes
qwte a problem lor so many
people
may not cause any symptoms, hack to our bemg uprtght
_
DEAR
READER
but they can bleed stlently, tn anunals
Pressure
aroWid
the
rectum
Hemorrhotdsare nothmg more small or large amounls
than dilated vems around the
Trytng to ahs\\er what distending the vems can also be
rectum They are JUSt like causes hemorrhmds ts a btt tike caused by chtldbtrth , and
var1cose vems of Ute legs ex· answermg what causes many women wtll have
cept for thetr location
vartcase vems In general hemorrhoid problems after
There are generally two anythmg that mcreases the pregnancy Abdommal tumors
types of hemorrhotds, the pressure tnstde the thin-walled and proba~ly even bemg
external type, outstde the vems may cause them to dtlate overwetght can contrtbute to
spllincter,'and the Internal type excessively and become sac- the pressure problems
Constipation and poor bowel
i'1S!de the sphmcter The bke structures Bemg b«!low

{

~

I

I

I

I

I
I

I
I

I
I

I
I
I

Canada fewer than fiVe per
cent cla1med "no religton "
I
The largest religtous group, the
Roman Catholics, have some What really happened
9,975,0011 members Catholics
Jan 13,1975
make up nearly 46 per cent of Dear Str
,
the Canadtan population and
In regard to the article (front page Sunday Times-Sentinel)
stnce 1961 have enjoyed a 20 concerning the fighting thai took place at the Kyger Creekper cent mcrease m mem- Hannan Trace baBketbell game Friday nigh!.
bership ThiS ts Slgllificant
The two juveniles taken lo the sherlfrs office were our sons
when you constder some of the We would like 1o explain the circumstances surroWidlng this
annual ligures In the Unlwct
Our fourteen year old son was Identified by a "Mr Roush" as
States, thts church had an being the boy who had hit a Hannan Trace boy. Several of the
habtts are a maJOr factor m mcrease of 69,437 members tn Hannan Trace fans started after him and he began to run.
caustng hemorrhotds The 1973 , for Canada m 1973, Deputy Sheriff Ronald Lemley came up at this time and sa1d he
pressure durmg forceful bowel almost s•,ooo
told him tO bait; the boydlm'thear him, and continued to run. At
movements
real!~
balloons
out
The
Pentecostal
Church
of
this point Lemley started to chase him and shot his gun. The !loy
_.
the elastic vetns Thts IS a ltp Canada had a 50 per cent ran through a com field, falllng several Urnes with bright lights
then on "hat you can do to gro\1 th m the past decade The beqllasbed oo him as though he were~c hardened criminal He
avotd them Mamtam good Salvation Army, wtlh tts was C8UIIhl by a man frcm Hannan Trace wllo held him against a
bowel habtts, avotdmg v1gorous urban outreach, tree by the tlroat unW Lemley got there.
laxahves and stool strammg marked up a 30 per cent mOur liC\'l!llteen year old son was Involved only because,
For more mformatton on thlli crease
The
matnline thinking hla brother was goiiltllo be shot, be ran after Lemley
aspect of hemorrhmds, write tO' denorrunal10ns were m the 5 to and tlnatened him. Bclth boys were Iaten lo the sheriff's office
mt; m care of .~~~1 • 10 per cent range
andnotallondlocallbome. We weren't notified by the school or
P •0 Box 561 ~ rOty
Perahaps the most revealing any law olflcial that this had taken place. We were called by
Stahon, · eW- f.Ork, N. V, l0019 slaltStic com&lt;!S out of the some ol the' studenta.
•
an~ aSk for Ute booklet on ' reltgtous preference category.
' While at the sherllf'a office, the boy (who was hit) from
hemorrhotds Send 50 cents to Here Canadians were asked to Hannan Trace, said our son wun't the cme who hit him The
cover costs
name the particular religious ~falls to mentim that apoJocles were made by the deputies
Never
overlook
the body to which they " belonged, andalao by us for our actions lonrd deputy Lemley
posstbiltty that pressure from a adhered or favoured " We
As for lhetwoschoolsflghtinl, we'n! sorry and ashamed that
cancer of the rectum a hove the know that every denonunation things like this would happen. We feel that everyme should take
hemorrhotds may cause them has Its fellow-travelers, people a closer look at what's going on at school functions. We certainly
to appear Everyone who "ho rarely attend, contribute mlend to do so, because the next time there could be a terrible
develops hemorrhouls or who or parhctpale Yet ~ ts a tragedy.
has rectal bleeding must have hnk. a memory, an attitude
Mr. aoo Mrs. Melvm Wheeler, Bulavllle-Porler ROad
an exanunahon If tl ts more that descrtbes a person's
senous than just hemorrhotds, le~nmg
ED NOTE. Mr. and M,s. Wheeler are right: the error and
early dta~nosts and treatment
Cons1der lhts There are subsequent apologies should haw been repcrled. They were not
can' be llfesavtng
approximately 1 mtllton becal''&lt; authootie~ did no1 reveal them
1
I

Hemorrhoids are dilated veins
•

'

Bucks roll by 17

Rhodes meets cabinet to plan
.
programs for more Ohio jobs

Third time around for Arab power

'

Ira Berkow

United Press International
Oh10 State hasketbaU roach
Fred Taylor satd his Buckeyes
played "pretty doggone well"
Monday rught as they whipped
Iowa here 94-n tn one of stx
Ohto college basketball games
Etght games are on tap
tomghl
In other Monday games,
Central State downed Tennessee State 79-66, Creighton
(Neb ) defeated Cleveland
State 64-60, Youngstown State
defeated Walsh 78-67 and
Wnght State \\hipped Wilberforce 78-69
Seruor forward Bill Andreas
SCilrtd 15 of his 19 pomts m the
second half to spark Ohto Stale
to thetr Btg Ten VIctory The &amp;-7
Andreas, the Buckeles'
leading scorer for the season,
re-entered the game when
center Cratg Taylor fouled out
wtth less than e1ghl minutes
remamtng and Ohw State
clmgmg to a 63-60 lead
After the two teams exchanged baskets, Andreas
scored the game's next rune
pomts to gtve the Buckeyes a
74-62 margm which was never
threatened
Taylor satd he was unpressed wtth Andreas' game
"It was great the way he
came to hie and the play of our
guards was !me, particularly
the way they controlled the
game," Taylor Sald
Iowa IS now 5-8 overall and 23 tn the Big Ten
Dan Frost led Iowa scorers
wtth 20 pomts, followed by
Bruce King wtth 14
Larry Bolden tallied 16 for
the Buckeyes, Taylor 16, Andy
Sttegem~ter 13 and Mark
Bayless 10 as all ftve starters
were m double figures OhiO
Slate ts now 8-6 overall and 2-2
tn the conference
Travel To Northwestern
The Buckeyes tr~vel to
Northwestern next weekend
At Cleveland Monday ntghl,
Seruor center Doug Brooktns
scored 12 pomts to lead
Cretghton to tts vtctory over
Cleveland State
Cretghton broke a 60-60 he
wtth 1 54 left m the game when
Charles Butler hit one of two
free throws Tom Anderson
added another free throw wtth
34 seconds left in the game, to
make tt 62.60, and Brookms
made a layup wtth ftve seconds
remaiiWig to wrap tt up for the
Bluejays, now 12-4
The Vikings were paced by
Wtlbur Starks' 20 pomts

By

on Cleveland's port," he satd
"And we will make the state
ready to help other Lake Erte
po(ts With sliilllar expanston "
Education Top Challenge
Rhodes referred to public
educallon as "Ohto's number

one challenge," repeatmg his
campatgn promiSe of htgher
saiartes for teachers and
school employes
' We must make the changes
necessary so we can get state
education money directly mto
the paychecks of those who are
the
backbone of our
educattonal system - the
teachers and the school employes," the governor satd
"We must also return to our
ftrst prtortttes m htgher education -paymg the faculty and
employes who serve our yoUjlg
people "
Rhodes made what seemed
to be a proposal for cooperation
wtth the Democratic-controlled
Ohto General Assembly
' We welcome and mvtle all
suggestions to add to or unprove these," the governor
satd "We, of course, expect

the creattve tnput of the Ohto
legiSlature
"John Donne srud that no
man IS an ISland unto hunself,"
he satd The governor lS not
an tsland The legislature ts not
an Island"
"I am calling for the help and
the cooperahon of every
Ohtoan, regardless of hts ._
polttical !ruth, regardless of his
station, as we seek to butld a
better Ohto," Rhodes satd
0hto's motto lS 'Wtth God,
All Thmgs Are Posstble ' We
can become the greatest state
m the Untied States of
America''
Outline Programs
Rhodes also satd he
- Has dtrected the Ohto
Department of Natural
Resources and the Ohio Environmental
Protectton
Agency to "cut the red take
whtch has blocked the
development of Ohto,s energy
11

11

resources.' '
-Will propose a new sevenmember Ohto Energy Development Authortty to combme
efforts of gov.ernment and
industry to develop and use
energy resources tn Ohio
-Wtll ask the General
Assembly to create an Ohio
C.entral Bustness Dtstnct
Development Authortty to
revtlalize ctties "at no direct
rost to the taxpayers "
-Will propose wtthin 30 days
the creatton of an Ohto Rtver
Port Authortty to butld port
facilities at East Liverpool,
Steubenville, ~ lartms FerryBrtdgeport-Bellatre, ManettaBelpre, Pomeroy, Gallipolis,
Ironton, Portsmouth, New
Rtclunond and Cincmnati
-Has ordered "the largest
possible transportation constructiOn program to be put
under way tmmediately" without wrutmg for a state transportation study to be conSidered by the General
Assembly
-Will offer legislation to
allow working marned couples
to choose whether to ftle JOtnl
or separate state mrome tax
returns, and furnish full salary
to the wtdows of Ohto law
enforcement offtcers, firemen
and prtson guards ktlled m
action
Hecklers Shout
As Rhodes took the oath, a
dozen hecklers shouted from
the rear of the audtence,
mamly agatnSt Rhodes' handling of diSturbances at Kent
Slate Untverstty tn 1970 which
left four students dead and rune
others wounded by Ohto
National Guard bullets
"Our people want state
government to ronfront thetr
problems and solve them
wtthout delay," satd Rhodes tn
his llknmute maugural address whtcl) followed the public
oathtaking ceremony "I am
determmed that thts admlnlstratton will do JUst that "
About 200 young demonstrators marched down High Street
lo the Statehouse, amvmg as
Rhodes was speakmg. They
chanted slogans and obscemties, and held aloft banners, one of whteh read
"Remember Kent State, Carry
On the Struggle Agamst War
and lmpertalisth."
After the ceremorues the
demonstrators massed on the
north stde of the Statehouse
behind about 110 Ohto highway
patrolmen
Hold Bible
Rhodes' grandchildren held
the Btble as the new governor
pronoiDlced the oallt for the
third time In public His wife,
Helen, was nearby
Also m the front row was
Dempcrattc Gov John J
Cmtinued on page a

•

Reds sign two
CINCINNATI (UPI)-The
Ctncmnatt Reds have stgned
two Cal\lorma baseball players
who were among thetr chotces
m last week's wmter free agent
draft
They are Bernard Plent, 20,
of LaHabre, Caltf, and Mark
Unsoeld, 19, of Glendora, Calif
Plenl, a rtghlhanded p1tcher,
was the Reds' lhtrd round ptck
m the regular phase of the
draft, whtle Unsoeld, a catcher, was the second selectton
m the s&lt;1eandary phase

Ry Ira Rerkow
NEA Sports Editor
NEW YORK - A number of
s1gmftcant' college and pro
coac hes have alread) been
hu ecJ or fired have retired or
res1~nerl Ara Pctrsegtuan Dun
Devme Abc G1bron and Jnn
Onery; a re among those
headhne makers

JACK LENGYEl. No regrets

West favored by 3

Tonight's game
Glouster at Southern

NOW!
AT

·CARRYOUT PRICES
MUFFLERS
TAIL PIPES

SHOCKS· BRAKE SHOES
FUEL PUMPS
STARTERS • ALL PARTS

·nno0RE'S

whose Bullets have on 29 of
thetr first 41 games this season
and sport a league-leadmg
wmnmgpercentageof 707, wtll
coach the East whtle AI Attles
of Pac1ftc DtvtstOn-leadmg
Golden State wtll coach the
West
Should Jones' and Attles'
teams sttll have the highest
wmnmg percentages m thetr
respecltve cpnferences at the
end of the regular season they
would recet ve the two newest
awards mstttuled by the NBA
as announced Monday by outgomg commtsswner Walter
Kennedy The awards, respecltvely, are tlie Ned lrtsh
Trophy and the Fred Zollner
Trophy IriSh was formerly
prestdent and owner of the New
York Kmcks while Zollner
served m the same capacity

AMERICAN HARDWARE
POMEROY

wtth the Detrott Ptstons Both
are now rettred

Roundmg out the East squad
are guards Jo Jo Wh1te of
Boston and Phil Cheruer of
Washmgton, forwards Dave
Cowens and Paul Stlas of
Boston, Rudy Tomjanovtch of
Houston and Steve MIX of
Phtladelphta and center Wes
Unseld of Washtngton
They were selected to the
team by the Eastern Conference coaches whtle the West
coaches selecwct the remrun111g
seven players on that team and
they mclude. guards Dave
Bmg of Detrmt, Charlie Srott of
Phoerux, and Jun Prtce o£
Milwaukee, forwards Bob Dandrtdge of Mtlwaukee and
Stdney Wtcks of Portland and
centers Bob Lanter of Detrotl
and Sam Lacey of Kansas City-

omaha
Prtor to the game, the NBA's
Board of Governors wtll meet
and are expected to contmue
thetr dtscusstons centertng
around the nammg of a successor to Kennedy who wtll
leave hts post June I One of the
men prommently mentioned
for the post ts current Deputy
Comm1sstoner Sunon Gourdine
who was appotnted to his
present JOb in November
Kennedy, who was named
rommtSslOner m 1963 and has
directed the NBA s growth
from a nme team league to tls
present Ill-team set-up, was
honored wtth a !timed trtbute
Monday rught at a $25-a-plate
hanquet attended by some 1,500
people
Also honored at the dtnner
wtth certificates of apprectatton for lhetr contrtbultons to the game were
former Phtladelphta owner
Eddte Goltlteb and current
Boston General Manager
Arnold ' Red" Auerbach

Bruins remain on
Hoosiers' heels
By JACK SAUNDERS
UP! Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - For
years UCLA has dorrunated the
college baaketball scene, but
when the Brwns failed to wm
the nat10nal champtonship last
year, they were picked only
second tn the preseason
ratmgs
They're still No 2 this week
tn the rankmgs of the Untied
Press Internattonal College
Basketball Ratings Board, behind Indtana-which gamed
the top spot for the ftrst tune m
last week's ratings
The Hoosiers, JWDptng Into
ftrst when North Carolina State
lost for the ftrst time in 37
games, made sure thiS past
week they would stay No 1 In
tw&lt;r13tg 10 contests, Indiana
topped Michigan, 90-76, then on
Saturday mundated Iowa, 10249, to raiSe tis record to 14-0
For thetr performance, the
Hoosters drew 32 of a posstble
42 ftrst place ballots and 409
pomts
UCLA, 1~, also diSpatched
two ronference foes, beatmg
Paciftc 8 rtvals Washmgton, 9282, and Washmgton State, 7769, to gam seven ftrst place

The

Dai~

Sentinel

votes and 381 pomts
the Woifpack, a wmner of Its
North Caroltna State and only game last week to go 10-1,
Loutsville agatn were mvolved repeatmg as the third chotce
m a close race for thtrd, wtlh
Southern Cal and Maryland
remamed fifth and stxth,
respecttvely, but the rest of the
Top 10 was reshuffled when
Oregon, prevtously ranked seventh, and former No 9
Kentucky suffered losses Oregon fell to IIUlth and Kentucky
to lOth as Alabama clunbed
one notch to seventh and
Anzona State Jumped two
postttons to etghth

Gullett
top Red
pitcher

CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
local chapter of the Baseball
Wrt ters' Assoctalton of
Amenca has voted young leflhander Don Gullett the best
Cmcmnalt Reds' p1tcher
durmg 1974
Gullett, who celebrated hts
24th btrthday a week ago, had a
17-11 record last season and led
the Reds' staff m complete
games (10), mmngs ptlched
(243 ) and str1keouts (183) He
had a 3 04 earned run average,
lowest among Reds starters
Desptte hts youth, Gul·
lett already bas p1tched
f1ve seasons m the maJOr
leagues and has a 65-37 lifetime
mark Reds manager Sparky
Anderson ftgures there ts a
good chance Gullett could
become a Hall of Farner
Gullett edged rehever Clay
Carroll (11 'h votes to 9'.2 votes
In the wrtters' ballotmg Jack
Btllmgham was the only other
ptlcher to recetve votes m the
annual poll

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER l TANNEHILL
Exec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Ctty Edttor
Pubt 1Shed da dy e:xcept
Saturday by The OhtO Va l ley
Publt s l1tng Company
111
Court St
Pomeroy , Otlto
45769 Busmess Offtce Phone
992 2l li6 Ed ilona I Phone 992
2157
Second class postage patd at
Pomeroy Oh10
Nat 1ona l advert 1s 1 ng
College Basketball Result s
repre sen tattve
Bottme l lt
By Untied Press International
Gallagher, Inc 12 East 42nd
East
Sl New York New York
Ga St 55 F DU Rthrfrd 52
Subscr1pt10n
rates
M tddlbry 83 Plttsbgl166
Del1vered by earner where
p 1ft 84 Notre Dame 77
available 75 cenfs per week
Pha PArm 92 s t Mry s Md 86
By Moler Route whel'e carrter
Morav 1an 64 Urs nus 59
ser&gt;~tce not ava il ab le
One
Sht ppensbg 69 Messtah 60
month 53 25 By mall tn OhtO
West Chester 55 Drexel 53
and W Va One Year 522 00
Stx months
Sll 50
Three
Buffalo 72 St Fran Pa 66
months
57 oo
Elsewhere
Wheeltng 94 St Pet er s 92
S26 00 year
Stx months
Waynesbg 10 3 Frosrbg 94
513 50
three months 57 50
Nyack 68 Ktng s NY 66
Subscnptton pr 1ce mcludes ...
South
Sundav Ttmes sent 1nel
Ky St 74 Geotwn Ky 71
E Ky 104 Murray St 95
Morel1ead 99 Ausltn Peay 89
Vanderbilt 102 Georgta 80
J acksonvl 75 Neb Om 60
Pembroke 63 Pfe1ffer 56
Grdn r Webb 111 S Car Akn 85
Mars Hill 79 Leno• r Rhyne 67
Atl Chrts 89 N C Wlmngtn 82
Auburn 84 F lortda 68
V1rgtnta 58 OaV tdson 56
Armstrng St 88 Columbs 7'l
Mercer 91 La Te cl1 66
A lban y St Ga 96 Ft Vtly 77
Va Sf 97 Sf Augstne 78
VM I 108 C ttadel 101
Del St 80 Va Un1on 65
Ky Ws l yn 101 Mt M~r·v 67
Alabama 74 M1SS1SS1pp1 71
Centenary 105 Lamar 83
Your Thdm MeAn Store
Kentucky 88 Tennessee 82
Mnldleport, 0
M1dwest
1
lnd1ana 79 Mtnnesota 59

Top 20
NEW YORK (UPII - The
Untied Pre s s In te rna ti onal
Board of Coaches col l ege
basketball
rattngs
wllh
number' of ftrst p lace votes and
r ecords through Saturday Jan
11 m parentheses (42 of 42
coaches votmgl ISD&lt;fh week)

Team

Pomls

1 lndtana 132 1 ( 14 OJ

409

2 UCLA {7) ( 12 0 1
J NC State ( 101 l
4 LOUtSVille(3)(110)

381
302
296

5 Southern Cal (12 1)
6 Maryland ( 11 I)

217
19 5

7 A labama (9 1 l
8 Art zona Sta te ( 13 1 l
9 O regon ( 10 l l
10 Kentu c ky (9 2)
11 La Sal le ( 12 l)

153
94
7b
so
36

12 Mi:H"quett e (9 21

13
1&lt;1
15
16
17
17
19
19

27

An zona ( 11 2)
North Ca rolina (7 JJ
Sou th Caro lma (8 31
T ennessee 18 21
{Ttel Rutgers (1 0 21
fTt el Bradley (9 3)
(Tte) New Me x St (9 JJ
(Ttel Penn (9 31

23
22
8
7
3
3
2
2

Ohto St 94 Iowa 77
llltno s 72 Wtscon s tn 56
Purdue 73 Northw es t ern 72
Centra• 51 79 Tenn S1 66
Wr gh t St 78 Wlbrtrce 69
Cretghton 64 Cleve St 60
Young stown St 78 Walsh 69
No I ll 87 Weber St 86
W ts Grn By 94 Ogl th rpe 67 La
Crosse 83 Stevens P t 71
Supenor 91 Rtver Falls 67
Parks de 6.9 Plattev il l e 63
OshKosh 102 Wh tewat er 83
Eau Clatre 81 Stout 71
Southwest
Texas T ech 86 Hou ston 82
Oral Ro~erts 98 Ok Ctty 80
west
Utah St 102 Botse St 87
uoP ao Portland 72
E Ore 76 Ore Col\ 68
Geo Fo)C, 90 So Ore 70
Cen t wash 100 St Mrtns 13
Fllrth 61 Cal Poly Pom 54

heritage house

had sa td
Marshall lost the next game
66.{3, the next 37-6 But agamst
a powe rful Bowhng Green
learn, a 30-polnt favortte,
doughty Marshall won 12-lll at
thetr Homecommg ' ll was the
second m1rac le of the sea son~'
satd Lengyel
Problems, howe vet, pe r-

Jack Leng)el also res1gned
re cently but the tmpact
nationally was that ol a feather
falling m the Grand Canyon
Yet none had a more
dramallc tenure Lengyel 's JOb
began md1sastc1 and, desp1le a
handful of nuracles ended m
d1sappmnlment
Lengyel was htred as
Marshall Umv ers1ty s head
footb,lll COflch fou1 years ago
m the fall of 1971
fh1 s "as less than a yea t
after a DC-9 carrymg home
the Marshall team from a
game m North Carolina on "a
ramswept Saturday mght, fie\\
fo1 the mounta111top Tn.State
atrporl m Huntmglon, West
Vugoma Jut the tops of the ptne
trees mstead carlwheeled mto
a moun tams1de, exploded and
d1smtegrated
The crash k1lled all 75
aboa1d 1ncludtng players,
coaches and local townspeople
\\ho were football supporters,
such as doctors, lawyei s and
businessmen
II was the worst Amencan
sports team dtsaster m htstory
Lengyel look the JOb as coach
after 11 had bee n turned down
by a couple others, mcludmg
one man who accepted the JOb
one day and then backed out
the next It "as not the most
sought-aile• coachmg JOb m
the country at the ltme
Bestdes the crash, Marshall
had JUSt come off a maJor
recrutltng scandal m \\htch
they had been placed on
probatton by the National
Co llegtale
Athlet1c
Assoctalton , pnd mdefmttely
suspended from the Mld·
Amenca Conference
Bullhe JOb was a step up for
Lengyel He had been head
coach at tmy Wooster College
tn Ohto for the prevtous ftve
seasons Lengyel satd he look
the Marshall post because "tt
would test my abthltes tn every
phase '
As the season began,
Lengyel, a 35 year old, blondish, stouhsh, and sweet,
started a learn of freshmen and
sophomores,.playmg the same
tough schedule that had been
set the prevtous season
Opemng game was against
Xav1er, a 2().poml favortle The
largest crowd m Huntington
htstorl turned out, nearly
14 000, mciudmg the governor
of the state Arch Moore, about
half the student body of!O,OOO,
and wtdows and chtldren of the
dead
The game was unexpectedly
tough Marshall took a surprtsmg 6-0 hailltme lead
Marshall fell behmd 13-9 Wtth
a second to go tn the game,
Marshall had the ball on
Xavter's 13-yard lme Quar·
terback Reggte Ohver fltpped a
pass to Terry Gardner for a
touchdown Fans streamed
onto the held screammg
Others JUst stood thunderstruck Many cned
Il was a miracle,' Lengyel
0

ABA standings
By Umted Press International
East
w 1 pet g b
28 11 718
Kentucky
29 12 707
New York
\ 7 27 386 JJIJ~
St LOU IS
11 31 262 18 1!7
Memptlts
9 32 22 0 20
V rg.n a
West
w I pet g b
Denver
35 6 854
Sa n An toniO
25 20 556 11
lnd1ana
18 22 450 16 117
Utah
20 25 44~ 17
San D ego
18 24 429 17 111
Monday s Resulls
Indiana 105 Vtrg 1n1a 88
Tuesdays Games
Kentucky at Denver

stsled For all the jubtlalton at
the vtctot lcs there remamed
the gloomy memory of the
seemmgly unendmg funeral
pt O&lt;esstons through th e
Huntmgton streets RecrutL•
were not always easy lo come
by eve n though Lengyel tned
to persuade them that they
could play more and sooner at
Marshall because of the ctrcums!ances than they could at
any comparable school tn the
country
He was rtght, for awiule A
stra nge s otuat1on began to
plague htm' ' Some upperclassmen were bemg
replaced m the s!arlmg lineup
by more talented younger
classmcn, that ts, newer .
recrmts Every season, flve or
stx players qu1t to Lengyel s
d1smal
In hts ftrst season, the team
won those two 1mposstble
games and lost seven In 1972,
the record was the same 2-7,
wmmng thetr ftrst and last
games
In 1973, Lengyel's thtrd
season, the team Improved to
4-6 , two of those wms came on
last-seco nd fteld ~oals II
seemed now that Lengyel was
on the same track as at
Wooster when hts first
season's record was 1-6, and
hts last was Il-l
But thts season, Marshall
won only one game and lost 10
!I lost four games by a total of
mne pomts and two of !hose
games were lost by last-second
held goals
By the thtrd game (when the
team was 1·1) the first three
quarterbacks were lost lor
much of the season wtth mJurtes The best player on the
team, Iackie Jesse Smith, an
East-West gam~ seleclton, was
stdellned wtth a heart condt\ton Also, the starling
fullback and a startmg guard
were lmtshed early on by mJury
Th"" mtracle barrel had
bottomed out
One week after season's end,
Lengyel announced hts
dectston The school prestdent
and townspeople supporters
lrted to persuade htm to stay
But he had made up hts mtnd
to move on A number .of
factors were mvolved Marshall never has had much of a
football tradition and. not
counltng the scandal and the
crush, tt ts stlll tough to recrutt
for the school Also, havmg no
conference alftllatton hurts,
too And economy has cut the
nwnber of football scholarships
Lengyel understands that
few schools would be mterested
m htm as a head coach because
of hts record "Even when they
take mto account the circumstances," he said, "the
record speaks "
Perhaps, he satd, he'd try to
catch on as an asststant at a
major school Maybe he'll take
up a business offer from a
fnend m Lowsvtlle
"Whatever I do," he said, "I
have no regrets about my four

years at Marshall It taught me
somethmg Important
I used to pay ltp..service to
the saymg that on any gtven
day one football team could
beat any other
' After those two games m
my ftrst season here, wtth the
emolton so htgh the hatr on my
arms s tood on end, I
d1scovered that 1t's really
true '

BELTONE
Hearing Aid
Service Center
A Bellone Consultant
Wtll Be At
Metgs Inn
Pomeroy, Ohto
0n
Thursday, Jan 16, 1974
From
9 A.M to 12 Noon
To repatr and servtce
hearmg atds.
Battenes and supplies
for all makes for sale.
Our consultant will be
glad to g1ve you a free
hearing test with the
latest Bellone Elec;'
tromc equtpment
If hea rmg ts your

problem Bellone ts·
the answer

BELTONE
Hearing Aid Center
601 -Stxlh Ave.
Huntmgfon, W.Va.
Phone 525-7221

No matter what other serv1ces
get computenzed nowadays
you can st1ll p1c k up your phone
and ta lk to a real 11ve person
tf you should have a home or
aula msurance cia 1m
As your tndep e ndent msurance
agent we are l !edged 10 g1ve
you contmu1ng personal ser-

vice- day or n1ghl To give you
our professtonal adv1ce about
your msurance needs And to

help you get a fast

la ~r

settle·

men! 1f a loss occurs
Try us- gtve us a call And 1f a
compu ter gnswe rs hang up

William D. Ch1lds

Downing-Childs

Agency, Inc.
Mtdd leport, Ohio

Henry Block has
17 reasons why.you
should come to us
for income tax help.
Reason 14. We're human, and once
in a great. while we make a mistake.
But if our error means you must pay
additional tax, you pay only the tax.
We pay any interest or penalty.
We stand behind our work.

Thts Week's S~cia 1

USED CARS

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out .at Marshall

Teammate Gale Drummer pomts early m the game but
added 14 for CSU, now 3-7 lor qUtckly caught up WUberforce, 1-15, led 38-36 at halftime
the season
Jeff Covmgton poured m 12 and the lead changed hands
fteld goals and seven free etght tunes m the second hitlf
throws, several tn the vttal The score was deadlocked at
ftnal mtnutes, to spark 67-all when the Ratders ran off
Youngstown State to tts 78-69 11 pomts m a row to dectde the
wtn over Walsh Monday ntghl, ron test
Bob Grote tallted 14 pomts
giVIng the Pengums thetr nmth
VIctory m a dozen basketball ~or Wnght State, wljjle Dan
Swam and Steve Shook both
games
Walsh, headed by Ray substitutes, added 11 and 10
Dungen wtth 20 pomts, had respecttvely Isaac Green had
pushed to a 40-37 lead at the 24 and Ken Gordon 21 for the
half m the seesaw game where losers
Harry Jackson scored the
both teams held stx and sevenpomt leads attunes Walsh now hiSt etght of his 22 pomts m the
!mal 7 33 to hoosl Central Stale
IS 4-11
from a 59-49 deftctl to a 79-66
Hard Fought Victory
Wnght State, led by Lyle wm over Tennessee State for
Falknor wtth 21 pomts, scored tts e1ghth vtctory m 10 games
The Ohtoans, leadmg 35-34 at
11 of the game's ftnal 13 pomts
mtermtSston,
returned to the
for a hard fought vtctory over
floor and went cold to fall far
Wtlberforce
The Ratders, who upped behind, l.flen found the range
thetr record to 7-3, tratled by 10 agam

PHOENIX (UPI) - The
West, thanks mamly to the
presence of Kareem AbduiJabbar and htgh..scormg Rtck
Barry, ts a threei&gt;Otnl favortte
to beat the East m tomght's
25th
annual
Natwnal
Basketball Assoctation All-Star
game
Abdui.Jabbar, the 7-foot-2
center of the Mtlwaukee Bucks,
IS rated the dommant player tn
professtonal basketball today
Desptte rrussmg the ftrst s1x
weeks of the season because of
a scratched eyeball suffered m
an exhibtlion game, he still
shows a 29 pomt average and
was the leadmg vote-getter
among the starting players
named to the West squad by the
fans
In contrast to prevtous years,
fallS were allowed to vote for
the ft ve starters on each squad
and Abdul.Jabbar led all West
players wtth 77,632 votes
Barry, of Golden State, leads
the NBA m scoring wtth a 33potnt average and recetved
60,547 votes to nad down a
startmg forward post lion tn the
game that begms at 10 p m
EST and will be nationally
teleVISed (CBS)
Buffalo's Bob McAdoo
topped all players m votes wtth
98,325 and wtll start oppostte
AbduiJabbar at the openmg
tap&lt;&gt;ff The remamder of the
East starters mclude the New
York Kmck backcourt duo of
Walt Frazter and Earl Monroe
along wtth forwards John
Havlicek of Boston and Elvm
Hayes of Washington The
game will mark Havlicek's
seventh stratght All .Star game
appearance and ntnth overall
In his 13-year career
Startmg for tha West along
wtth Abdul.Jabbar and Barry
are Nate Archibald of Kansas
Ctty.Qmaha and Gat! Goodrich
of Los Angeles at the guard
Spencer
postttons
and
Haywood of Seattle at forward
K C Jones of Wasiimgton,

Miracles run

trans

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Way of Domg Bu~ ness

GMAC FINANCING '
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Open Evenmg!!. 'T1I6 00

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Open 9 A.M to 5 P ~ Mon -Sat
Ph 992-3795
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

'

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J....,, ,,. '

,! •

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...
r

4- T~ Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Jan. H, 1975

.

~~~l~~~~~~l~11~;

~~

.

-

•

~

·~

'Painted: wal/j)aper

m
~

is real challenge

~

Wl

IHI

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POU. Y- Could you please tell me how({) remove old
wallpaper that has been painted over? - MRS. A. W.
DEAR MRS. A. W. - You bave a real job ahead of you. Try
peeling off any paper that lB loose so water can seep behind it.
The paint Itself Is not too amiable to warm water used to remove
unpainted paper. I have added vinegar to the warm water (alter
protectlng the floor with newspapers and a plastic drop cloth~
and appUed this with a sponRe palnl roller until the paper Is
saturated. Do one panel at a lime. When paper lB wet. II can be
scraped off wllh a pul1y knlfe. Where paint has been applied you
will be delighted U It eomes ollln blta and pieces.
To get a really clean job you probably will have to rent a
wallpaper steamer. Wash and rob off any scraps of paper or glue
left wltb steel wool and an all-purpose cleaner, rinse, dry and
then apply slzfnK before applying new paper. -POLLY.

&lt;lifferent function, but all
remainin~ a part uf the body of
Christ.
Using Dr . Jones' material for
reference, the program leader
noted that everyone who -a c·
cepts the New Test.ment as
the Word of God, must accept
the reality that men spoke in
tongues in the ea rly church. It
was pointed out tha t in Mark 17
through 20, tongues is men·
tioned as a sign not a gift and it
is one of the five signs -

r ev iew Biblical fact s co n.
cernin g the speaking of

cas ting out demons, speaking
with new tongues, picking up

•
•

!""'

we have the Word of God . He
de sc ribed th e purpose .of
tongues as being twO-pronged,

/

the fi r s t of a mi ss ionary

.

to

Or.

Jones'

statements concerning Paul 's
charge that in Corinth tongues
were misused and abused.

News Notes

..

REV. JAYMES

Revival
set at

.

'

Wi! Accept

Fed~&gt;ral

'

than Just .the .Price

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At its peak of Aavor, hamburger needs some fat - a little,

addresses OEA

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News, Notes

8-Track Tapes

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SYR~

Social !~!

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Meat Mgr.
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Church society meets

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Asbury UM women meet

Valentine project planned

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Mason IAlunty

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•

To conelude the program,
Mrs. Kuhn presented several of
tongues, and not to condemn or serpent s, dnnking deadly the beliefs of the Baptist leader
criticize those who do spea k in poison and healing the sick .
regarding tongues : that they
tong ues, She s tressed the
In the material, Dr. Jones are not to be sought after,
ACHIEVEMENT RECOGNIZED - Ohio Director of
importance of remembering proposed that tongues were a prayed for or any thing else,
Agriculture
Gene R. Abercrombie presented the Meigs
that all Christians are a part of sign concerning the Word of that tongues as mentioned in
Coun ty Agricultural Society with a Certificate of
the body of Chri st. each with a God, one now unneeded since the Bible in Acts and I Cor. is
Achievement at the 5oth Annual Ohio Fair Managers Connot the same phenomenon as it
DEAR POU.Y -My Pet Peeve is witll car manufacturers
vention in Columbus last week commending the 95 county
is
presented today , that today's
SYRACUSE - A revival,
and mobile home builders who put dark interiors in their :!:::;:.:;:::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::!':::::::::::::::~~::::::::::::::::~~-=::::::::x:::::::~:=~=
and independent fair societies for the outstanding work,
type of tongues is not a Biblica l featuring special· singing each
creations. These colors allo!orb an exceptional mount of heat in
planning and dedication which made the 1974 fair season so
gift but rather a spiritual ut- ni ght by visitin g chu r ch
the sun. Black car interiors tend to make the inside seem smaller
successful. Accepting the award above for the Meigs County
terance between some peop le groups , a morning Bible study,
as does the dark brown paneling usually used in mobile homes.
Ag ricultural Society was Mrs. Lucille Leifheit, Rt. 2,
and
God. He cautioned tl1at and the preaching of Rev .
Darlyn wanted to remove oily spots and odor from work
Pomeroy, board member and convention delegate of the
Christians must be ready to Ri chard
Jaymes,
corn.
clothes. I suggest that she treat each spot with a pine oil liquid ~
Society.
g1ve
an
account
of
what
they
mis
s
ioned
Nazarene
product and then add a hall cup of this product to U1e wash water m
By Alma Marshall
( believe and why they believe it, eva nge list, is scheduled to
to eliminate the odor. Aliquid cold water wash product also could
and that there should be no start Wedn esday night, Jan. 15,
be tried on the oily spots as I have had great success with it in
PI'.
PLEASANT
The
National
Extension
Homemakers
criticism between lhose who and continue through Sunday
pretreating various spots on knits and permanent press items.
Convention
in
Morgantown
in
1976
will
be
hosted
by
Mllson
believe and do not believe in nigh t, Jan. 26, with evening
Also, I find it most convenient to keep one set of measuring
County
and
other
homemakers
in
the
state.
Already
Mason
the
spea king with ton gues as services starting each night at
SYRACUSE - The call to "Turning on the Power," using
spoons that have been separated by removing the metal ring in a
·
e
ounty
Extension
Homemakers
have
a
project
of
making
90
practiced
today.
and
se lf-denial scripture from Psalms 32. Mrs.
7:30 at the Church of the prayer
small baby food jar in my cabinet near dry ingredients such as
polyester
patch
work
pillow
covers
for
the
event.
Each
club
in
the
Mrs. J. Edward Foster Nazarene, Syracuse.
salt, baking powder, etc. - CAROL.
program was presented at the Winebrenner read the Korean
coun
ty
is
to
ass~me
responsibility
of
Julfilllng
this
need.
These
presided
at
the
meeting
which
recent
meeting of the United Kit Philosophy.
DEAR POU. Y- My recycling Pointer is to use the red mesh
The morning Bible study will
pillows
will
be
given
({)
state
presidents
and
committee
chair·
opened
with
scripture
taken
Officers reports were give~
plastic wrapper that comes aroimd turkeys, fruit, hams, etc., as
be held at 10 Monday through Methodi st Women of the
women.
from Isaiah 12. Mrs. Oliver Friday.
Asbury Uni ted Methodist and it was noted that 43 shut-in
pot scrubbers after removing any metal clips. I am a senior
Michael read a letter from
citizen and have been saving and recycling things for years. I
Rev. Jaymes, a native of Church at the home of Mrs. calls were made. The birth.
VICKI KEI':FER, MASON County Extension Homemakers
Paula
Sarver,
Baptist Shirleysburg, Pa., has been an Linda Ferreil.
days of Mrs. Ferrell and Mrs.
save all rubber bands, gift wrapping, bags and so on. Also I
Agent,
announced
that
a
work
shop
to
make
beade&lt;l
flowers
will
sc holarship student at Judson evange list in the Church of the
Mrs.
Hele n
welcome "junk" mail since I use any blank pages and envelopes
Teaford Jarvis were observed.
be held on January 23 at 10 a.m. at the Courtho.,se Annex, Pt. College, thanking the society Naza rene 15 yea r s , after presented the topic, "Transstapled together as scratch pads. Enclosed envelopes are used to
Pleasant. Mrs. Ollie Browning, Letart, will instruct this class. On for a gift of money at Christ- having served Nazarene formation of Self and the
store seeds, coupons, etc. -MRS. E.K.M.
the same day at t p.m. at the Courthouse Annex, Miss Hattie mas.
pastorates nine years. Rev. World " assisted by Mrs .
Jordan will teach how to make jewelry from egg shells.
Plans were made for the and Mrs. Jaymes now mak.e , Margaret Eichinger, Mrs .
annual Val entine's Day party their home in Bell efontaine, Anna Hilldore, Miss Marcia
What you
BEFORE AU. THIS SNOW FELL, the birds which I feed in at the Meigs Community Ohio.
Karr, Mrs. Opal Kloes, Mrs .
our back yard really filled up on small seeds for the small birds School. It wa s noted tha t Mrs.
should know
Having earned his BTh Ann Sa uvage, Mrs. Dorothy
and ears of corn for others. The woodpecker ltlok the grains of Arthur Skinner will present the degree from Olivet Naza rene Ja rv is and Mrs . . Bernice
.about diamonds:
corn and planted them behind the bark of the aspen tree and peck Advocacy Program at the Feb. College, Kankakee, Ill., Rev. Winebrenner. The prayer and
NEW HAVEN, W. Va .- The was led by Becky Reed .
away . Pretty smart, I'd say. He was sure looking out for a snowy 13 meeting ·of the society, Jaymes is expository Bible sel!~enial offering was taken
Woman 's Missionary Society of
Iva Capehart was in charge day. One of the most beautiful birds to visit was an oriole; at
the New Haven First Church of of games concerning missions least I think it was. It had a black head and sor t of an orange hosted by Mrs. Albert Smith preacher, with emphasis on and the program concluded
and Mrs. Ellen Couch. The love scriptural holiness and per- with prayer.
God held the ir January in the Mediterranean area .
colored breast. I have seen only one the past several years. They gi ft offerin g of $11 was sonal evangelism. As well as
Mrs . Kloes opened the
meeting in the Missionary
Birdie Roush was surprised · m_ust be very scarce in this area.
dedtcated by Mrs. Couch. , . preaching in the revival ser- meeting with the ca ll to worBuilding wi!h Iva Capehart and with a birthday cake and a gift
Mrs. Joseph Cook had the vi ces eac h even in g, Rev. ship a meditation titled
Sarah Gibbs the hostesses. !~om the· society for his great
MANY PERSONS BRAVED the snow and ice and attended closing prayer and dessert Jaymes will also be conducting
MAR SEILLES
President Orpha F:lelds concern for the society .
the opening of the revival at Mason United Brethren Church on refreshments were served by
the morning Bible study at the
presided and prayer was l.id by
Attending were Bonnie Sunday evening. The Reverend Clarence McCloud, pastor of the
Mrs
.
George
Skinner
and
Mrs.
church.
Sue Erwin . Roll call was an- Fields, Grace Cunnin gham, church brought the message. The Chancel choir under the
Area Nazarene churches and
swered by naming, •·a Sue Erwi n, Iva Cape hart, direction of Mrs. Nolan Swackhamer provided the music. Mrs. Foster to those named and
Mrs,
William
Barnhart,
Mrs.
I.
chu rches
of
sister
resolution I sho uld have Roberta Maynard, Fay Car· Ray Proffitt served as organist. The revival will co ntinue ail this
B. Walker. Mrs . Lorain denominations have been in·
made.'' Bonnie Fields reported · pcnter, Orpha Fields, Sarah week.
Sterrett and Mrs . Harry vited as specia l guests on
A flawless diamond is
fl owers were taken to shut-in Gibbs, ~ena J ohn son, an d
Bailey.
ext remely rare, Most di- ·
different nights during the
member~ for Christmas .
Becky Reed.
amonds
co nlain natural
revival, and will be bringing
It was repor ted that the goal
The
Syracuse
1mperle clions or " mclu·
:;::',.~::~::.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::»:::::::::~~ special music from their
for Christ's Birthday offering
Vo
lun
teer
Fire
Department
sions"-tiny
c rystals of
group,
in
addition
to
the
local
had been reached. A report
carbon
or
bubbles
of
an
d
Emergency
squad
has
music. Also, the Gospel Tones
was also given concerning
The annual valentine project Mary Rinehart gave a prayer
gas
from
millions
of ·
I
named
officers
for
\he
new
quartet will be featured one
Christmas gifts taken to Lakin
of taking trays of candles and and Mrs. Moore commented on ©
years ago
year.
night of the revival.
State Hospital.
cookies to shu t-ins of the the outlook for 1975. She spoke
Emergency squad officials
ArtCa rve d diamonds are
Rev. Howard C. Blac k,
It was decided to have a bean
commun ity -:as se t for Feb. 14 of the need to strive to become
are
Ra
lph
Lavender,
chief;
selected lo r their clarity
pastor of the Syracuse
dinner on Friday, Feb. 7,
Miss Sandy Johnson was at 1 p.m. during a meeting of a better person and· walk in a
and brillia nce. Any slight
Nazarene Church has stated Howard Black, assistant chief;
beginning at 5:30p.m. in the speaker for a meeting of the the Afternoon Circle of Heath newness of life, and read a list
.. ,ncluSions " that mal/ be
Mary
Pickens
,
captain;
Oris
that the public is invited to
Missionary Building . Becky OEA (Office Education United Methodist Chur ch of resolutions which included
TUESDAY
present
are disc ernible
Hubbard
,
lieutenant;
Black,
Reed and Bonnie Fields were Association ! Club at Meig;; Thursday.
MIDDLEPORT Masoni c attend .
taking each day at a time,
on ly under ten power
reporter.
appointed to the committee. High Sc hool recently .
'"'-1 With Mrs . Nan Moore trying to improve the mind , Lodge 363, F and AM, special
magnif ica tion .
Fire department officials are
The nominating committee
In her ta lk on secret.riai presiding, a sizable check from exercise the soul, t.ke an meeting, 7:30 p.m. at the
Eber Pickens, fire chief;
presented the ballot for the work, Miss Johnson spoke 011 Mrs. C. M. Hennessy for organ optimistic view , and learning Masonic Temple . Work in the
Clarence
Hill ; assistant chief;
election of Group II offi cers. the duties and responsibilities repai' was ac know ledged. to adjust to whatever the fellowcraft degree .
Robert Gibbs, c;apt.in, and
Elected were vice president. Involved as well as some of the Mrs . Hennessy, long-time situation is.
DISABLED
American
Rollie
Stewart, lieutenant.
Roberta Maynard; secretary, new eq uipment being in- organist of Heath Church, now
The lesson by Mrs. Beulah Veterans , Meigs Chapter 53,
Business
president is
Eleanor Davis; treasurer, Fay tr od uced into the business resides in Coiumbns with her Hayes was titled "The New 7:30 p.ni., at chapter home,
Howard
Black;
vice president,
Ca rpenter; spiritual life office. She commented on her son-in-law and daughter .
Book of Jonah'' by Piccard. Butternut Ave. Refreshments .
Susie Hill ; Mary Pickens,
director and Delores Taylor: duties which include making
Mrs. Beulah Hayes reported The author described Jonah as All members urged to attend.
secretary; Oris Hubbard ,
missionary education director, appointments, arra ngi ng on her trip to the Wellston arrogant and sell-willed, but
EASTERN Band Boosters,
treasurer, and Nancy NeutIva Capehart.
business trips, as well as Nursi ng Home to take a Christ- sa id that it was Jonah who 7:30p.m. in the band room at
zling, ass ista nt treasurer .
Hostesses for the February routine office work. Questions mas tray from the circle to inspired and chailenged him to high sc hool. All parents of band
Court St., PomeJ'!)y
Willie Cundiff has been made
PT.
PLEASANT
'Walden
meeting will be Pansy Fry and from the students were an- Mrs. E. M. Wood. The birthday become a missionary on the members urged to attend .
an
honorary
member
of
the
Roush,
former
superin
tendent
Rena Johnson.
swered by Miss J ohnson at the an niversaries of Mrs. Nelle island of Mineola .
RACINE Masonic Lodge 7:30 of Mason County Schools, has department.
The program was presented conclusion of her talk .
Davis. Mrs. Freda Mitch, Mrs .
Refreshments were served p.m. at Temple . All members
been named vice president in
by Orpha Fields assisted by
Ga rn et Entsmi nger, .Mrs , followin g the meeting by Mrs. urged to attend and visitors are
charge
of Region V (West
Bonnie Fields. It was the first
Mary Rinehart, Mrs. Hayes Mildred Zeigler and Mrs.
welcome
.
Virginia , Kentucky a nd Tenstudy on the Church of God in
and Mrs . Beulah Jones were Moore.
nessee) of the Eas tern
the Mediterranean . The
observed during the meeting.
THURSDAY
SERVICES SET
ZENITH
of Lapidary and
Federation
program began with singing of,
TWIN CITY Shrine Club,
To open the meeting Mrs.
NEW HAVEN - A series of
Minerai Societies.
"I'll Go Where You Want Me to nondenominational Gospel
Thursday at the Racine Shrine
COlOR TV
He was also one of five
Go," and devotions taki'" from Services will be held at the Jr .
Park, 7:30p.m. Refreshments.
persons named to the
Matthew, Mark and Romans. A O.U.A.M . Hall , 201 Fourth St. ,
All Nobles invited to attend.
nominating
commit tee for the
casse tte tape was played New Haven, beginning this
CLASS
12,
Heath
United
Eastern Federation whi ch
giving the Church of God evening at 7:30. Services will
•BlACK &amp;
Methodis
t
Church,
7:30p.m.
at
consists
of 26 states, Puerto
beginnings in Syria a.nd be held each Tuesday, Wed·
the church. New officer s will Rico and Ni caragua. The
Lebanon, narrated by Dr . John nesday, Friday and Sunday at
LETART. W. Va. - The
be
hostesses.
WHITE TV
annual meeting will be ·held at
D. Grose who with his wife 7:30p.m. The services will be
Leiart Homemakers met Jan . 8
EPISCOPAL
.
Chur
c
h
Portland , Maine the latter part
spent many years in th e conducted by L. Skilbred and
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Anderson at UJe E\•ergreen Hills Com- Women , luncheon 12:30 p.m. at
of
June. Mr. and Mrs. Roush
Mediterranean
area
as R. Stipp : The public is cordially
have returned £rom a \'acati on muni ty Building with .the the home of Mrs . Patrick "plan to attend.
.
eSTER EO
missionaries . .Circle prayer invited.
to Mexico City where they president, Mrs. Lois Hoffman. Lochary . Co-hos tesses will be
Mr. and Mrs. Roush, Mr . and
visited their daughter and so~­ presid ing and devotions being Mrs. Dorothy Amberger , Mrs.
Mrs.
Howard Nolan, Syracuse,
in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Dean ied by Audrey Hoffman .
Wilma Ro ush, Mrs . Lorna Ohio and Mr. and Mrs . J .
Betty Fisher presented the
Bumgardner
and
two
Seth. and Mrs. Annie Chap· Marsliall, New Haven, are all
lesson. "Simple Electrical
daughters.
MEETING SET
Easy Terms!
man .
local members of the Ohio
Mrs. Elmer . VanMeter of Repairs." Committee reports
A county-wide prayer
Free
Delivery!
HERMAN GRATE
Nondenominational Gospel Valley Gem and Mineral Club ,
were
given
and
plans
for
the
Clifton,
Mrs.
Don·
a
ld
Gabrit773·55?2
MASON, W.VA.
meeting will be held at 2 p.in.
se rvices being held today , or Eastern Federation .
.
new
year
concerning
each
sch,
Pt.
Pleasant,
visited
over
Sunday at the Wesleyan
Wednesday, Friday and
Holiness Church in Pomeroy the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. committ ee werea discussed . Sunday 7:30 nighUy at Jr.
with. Glen Bissell as class George Sillljlwns at Shinnston , Arrangements also were made O.U.A.M. Hall, 201 Fourth St .,
IV. Va. The ladies attended the to have the club's regular
leader .
Grand Visitation of the Eastern mon.thly meetings at the Letart- New Haven. Public invited.
MEIGS County Better Beef
Elementary School. starting in
Star there.
Uvestock Club , 7: 30 p.m., at
. Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Jenks February.
County
Extension Office. All
The dub voted to adopt a
visi.ted· recently with their
members
are asked to attend.
daughter and son-in-law, Mr. second patient at Lakin State
and Mrs. · Howard Huck and Hos pi tal. EJt.ch month the
lllembers donate money to use
family at Moundsville.
SAY
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. for different needs of the
As the years pan b~, J)!t
Bruce Staats and fam ily on patient and is visi ted by club
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
value of ,_f prope~ds
Sunday were his parents, Mr. members each monUl.
;'0 Increase .. .- but one
The club will sponsor a
With A Beautiful
and Mrs. Harry Staats, Mr.
mlslake-IN!ny - t o ""'~ · I
skating
party
at
New
Haven
and
Mrs
.
,
J
oy
Smithson
,
Mr.
Is tailing to keep their
. :nsurance up to date. How
·and Mrs. Donald Meadows and Feb. 17 for members and their
tong has II been since you've
Lori, Mr. and Mrs. Rich Broad- farniiies.
had an • - ' ovaluallan ol
Door prizes were won by
water.
Florsheim
Values
Joyce
••
Values
yovr lnou...,.- coverage?
Audrei• Hoffman , Maxine
Morrison, and Lois Hoffman.
lo 39.95
Puppies
lo 24.00
Attending were Dorthy Click,
Lois Durst. Betty Fisher, Opal
Acme
PI'A WIU. MEET
Friend, Pal Friend, Linda
Cash
&amp; Carry
MASON, W. Va. - Mason Grinm1, Audrey Hoffnian . Lois
Grade School PI'A meeti~g this HM!man. Judy Hunt. Sharon
'
evening at .. 7:30 wi)l hear McCielt.n. Mildred Morgan. '
Speech Pathologist Barbara Mt:tXirt~ MorriSon. Sue 'Sayre
Open Friday Til&amp;
PH. 99Z-513\I
Rood. A cQuestion and answer and Barbara Winter. Hostesses
All Day Thursdays
59 N. Second St.
'Niw HAYIN, W.VA.
POMEROY
101 Sycamore
period
will
foll
ow.
All
.
are
Pomeroy
II:J:-:ZS2S
Wl're Linda Crimm and Betty
Midt;lleport, 0 .
welcome.
FisheL - Sue S!arre.
. ·."- ''

I

"

Ground

'•

,,

nature, (Ma rk 16-20 ) confirming the Word, not the
believer; and the second as
given in I Cor. 14, a sign to .the
unbeliever, not the believer .
In her commen ts, Mrs. Kuhn
referred

'

There's More to

.

The pros and cons of the
chari sma tic move ment as
outlined by Dr. Russell A.
Jon es at !h e recent · Ohio
Baptist Women 's Convention .
were discussed in a program
presented .by Mrs . Robert ,
·Kuhn at tbe Thursday night
meeting of the Women 's
Mi ss ionary Society of the
Pomeroy First Baptist Church.
In her opening remark , Mrs .
Kuhn emphasized that the
inten tion of the study wa s to

.

0., Tuesday, Jan. 14,1975 .

PoLLY's PoiNTERs @ii l Conven.tzon talk discussed
~d
BY POU.Y CRAMER

,

\

¥"

fawrite
16 ounce

p.m.-

..

'4~- for

.

•1

GROUND COFFEE
FILTER RINGS

·MAX-PAX
24

bag

$219 Wll!l .

OL

.•can
GoOd
'

3 lb.

_j

DUPON

COUPON
On~ At Mark V
•·
Super Market
iJFFER UPIRES: H·75 . .. .

'!If~··

·•

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'

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o

0

•

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o

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0

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•

0

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•

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.

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4- T~ Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Jan. H, 1975

.

~~~l~~~~~~l~11~;

~~

.

-

•

~

·~

'Painted: wal/j)aper

m
~

is real challenge

~

Wl

IHI

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POU. Y- Could you please tell me how({) remove old
wallpaper that has been painted over? - MRS. A. W.
DEAR MRS. A. W. - You bave a real job ahead of you. Try
peeling off any paper that lB loose so water can seep behind it.
The paint Itself Is not too amiable to warm water used to remove
unpainted paper. I have added vinegar to the warm water (alter
protectlng the floor with newspapers and a plastic drop cloth~
and appUed this with a sponRe palnl roller until the paper Is
saturated. Do one panel at a lime. When paper lB wet. II can be
scraped off wllh a pul1y knlfe. Where paint has been applied you
will be delighted U It eomes ollln blta and pieces.
To get a really clean job you probably will have to rent a
wallpaper steamer. Wash and rob off any scraps of paper or glue
left wltb steel wool and an all-purpose cleaner, rinse, dry and
then apply slzfnK before applying new paper. -POLLY.

&lt;lifferent function, but all
remainin~ a part uf the body of
Christ.
Using Dr . Jones' material for
reference, the program leader
noted that everyone who -a c·
cepts the New Test.ment as
the Word of God, must accept
the reality that men spoke in
tongues in the ea rly church. It
was pointed out tha t in Mark 17
through 20, tongues is men·
tioned as a sign not a gift and it
is one of the five signs -

r ev iew Biblical fact s co n.
cernin g the speaking of

cas ting out demons, speaking
with new tongues, picking up

•
•

!""'

we have the Word of God . He
de sc ribed th e purpose .of
tongues as being twO-pronged,

/

the fi r s t of a mi ss ionary

.

to

Or.

Jones'

statements concerning Paul 's
charge that in Corinth tongues
were misused and abused.

News Notes

..

REV. JAYMES

Revival
set at

.

'

Wi! Accept

Fed~&gt;ral

'

than Just .the .Price

~~-P~H~:~~E:~g~gz~~~~-·~-·t;;~·~·~· ....M~I~D~DLiEP~O:R~T,~O'

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SWIFT'S ALL MEAT

WIENERS

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At its peak of freshness, hamburger looks pleasingly pink
- not bright red, not dingy gray. To be sure the hamburger

lb.
••••••••••••••••••

you buy here is always fresh , we grind only small quantities
- grind more as needed.
At its peak of Aavor, hamburger needs some fat - a little,

addresses OEA

Aavor, freshness - and fine value, too.

•

MODERN DAIRY

HOMO MILK

Clarity

CARNATION

Mason Area

News, Notes

8-Track Tapes

PRICES

$

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FOR

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REUTER·
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SYR~

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Asbury UM women meet

Valentine project planned

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Mason IAlunty

'

•

To conelude the program,
Mrs. Kuhn presented several of
tongues, and not to condemn or serpent s, dnnking deadly the beliefs of the Baptist leader
criticize those who do spea k in poison and healing the sick .
regarding tongues : that they
tong ues, She s tressed the
In the material, Dr. Jones are not to be sought after,
ACHIEVEMENT RECOGNIZED - Ohio Director of
importance of remembering proposed that tongues were a prayed for or any thing else,
Agriculture
Gene R. Abercrombie presented the Meigs
that all Christians are a part of sign concerning the Word of that tongues as mentioned in
Coun ty Agricultural Society with a Certificate of
the body of Chri st. each with a God, one now unneeded since the Bible in Acts and I Cor. is
Achievement at the 5oth Annual Ohio Fair Managers Connot the same phenomenon as it
DEAR POU.Y -My Pet Peeve is witll car manufacturers
vention in Columbus last week commending the 95 county
is
presented today , that today's
SYRACUSE - A revival,
and mobile home builders who put dark interiors in their :!:::;:.:;:::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::!':::::::::::::::~~::::::::::::::::~~-=::::::::x:::::::~:=~=
and independent fair societies for the outstanding work,
type of tongues is not a Biblica l featuring special· singing each
creations. These colors allo!orb an exceptional mount of heat in
planning and dedication which made the 1974 fair season so
gift but rather a spiritual ut- ni ght by visitin g chu r ch
the sun. Black car interiors tend to make the inside seem smaller
successful. Accepting the award above for the Meigs County
terance between some peop le groups , a morning Bible study,
as does the dark brown paneling usually used in mobile homes.
Ag ricultural Society was Mrs. Lucille Leifheit, Rt. 2,
and
God. He cautioned tl1at and the preaching of Rev .
Darlyn wanted to remove oily spots and odor from work
Pomeroy, board member and convention delegate of the
Christians must be ready to Ri chard
Jaymes,
corn.
clothes. I suggest that she treat each spot with a pine oil liquid ~
Society.
g1ve
an
account
of
what
they
mis
s
ioned
Nazarene
product and then add a hall cup of this product to U1e wash water m
By Alma Marshall
( believe and why they believe it, eva nge list, is scheduled to
to eliminate the odor. Aliquid cold water wash product also could
and that there should be no start Wedn esday night, Jan. 15,
be tried on the oily spots as I have had great success with it in
PI'.
PLEASANT
The
National
Extension
Homemakers
criticism between lhose who and continue through Sunday
pretreating various spots on knits and permanent press items.
Convention
in
Morgantown
in
1976
will
be
hosted
by
Mllson
believe and do not believe in nigh t, Jan. 26, with evening
Also, I find it most convenient to keep one set of measuring
County
and
other
homemakers
in
the
state.
Already
Mason
the
spea king with ton gues as services starting each night at
SYRACUSE - The call to "Turning on the Power," using
spoons that have been separated by removing the metal ring in a
·
e
ounty
Extension
Homemakers
have
a
project
of
making
90
practiced
today.
and
se lf-denial scripture from Psalms 32. Mrs.
7:30 at the Church of the prayer
small baby food jar in my cabinet near dry ingredients such as
polyester
patch
work
pillow
covers
for
the
event.
Each
club
in
the
Mrs. J. Edward Foster Nazarene, Syracuse.
salt, baking powder, etc. - CAROL.
program was presented at the Winebrenner read the Korean
coun
ty
is
to
ass~me
responsibility
of
Julfilllng
this
need.
These
presided
at
the
meeting
which
recent
meeting of the United Kit Philosophy.
DEAR POU. Y- My recycling Pointer is to use the red mesh
The morning Bible study will
pillows
will
be
given
({)
state
presidents
and
committee
chair·
opened
with
scripture
taken
Officers reports were give~
plastic wrapper that comes aroimd turkeys, fruit, hams, etc., as
be held at 10 Monday through Methodi st Women of the
women.
from Isaiah 12. Mrs. Oliver Friday.
Asbury Uni ted Methodist and it was noted that 43 shut-in
pot scrubbers after removing any metal clips. I am a senior
Michael read a letter from
citizen and have been saving and recycling things for years. I
Rev. Jaymes, a native of Church at the home of Mrs. calls were made. The birth.
VICKI KEI':FER, MASON County Extension Homemakers
Paula
Sarver,
Baptist Shirleysburg, Pa., has been an Linda Ferreil.
days of Mrs. Ferrell and Mrs.
save all rubber bands, gift wrapping, bags and so on. Also I
Agent,
announced
that
a
work
shop
to
make
beade&lt;l
flowers
will
sc holarship student at Judson evange list in the Church of the
Mrs.
Hele n
welcome "junk" mail since I use any blank pages and envelopes
Teaford Jarvis were observed.
be held on January 23 at 10 a.m. at the Courtho.,se Annex, Pt. College, thanking the society Naza rene 15 yea r s , after presented the topic, "Transstapled together as scratch pads. Enclosed envelopes are used to
Pleasant. Mrs. Ollie Browning, Letart, will instruct this class. On for a gift of money at Christ- having served Nazarene formation of Self and the
store seeds, coupons, etc. -MRS. E.K.M.
the same day at t p.m. at the Courthouse Annex, Miss Hattie mas.
pastorates nine years. Rev. World " assisted by Mrs .
Jordan will teach how to make jewelry from egg shells.
Plans were made for the and Mrs. Jaymes now mak.e , Margaret Eichinger, Mrs .
annual Val entine's Day party their home in Bell efontaine, Anna Hilldore, Miss Marcia
What you
BEFORE AU. THIS SNOW FELL, the birds which I feed in at the Meigs Community Ohio.
Karr, Mrs. Opal Kloes, Mrs .
our back yard really filled up on small seeds for the small birds School. It wa s noted tha t Mrs.
should know
Having earned his BTh Ann Sa uvage, Mrs. Dorothy
and ears of corn for others. The woodpecker ltlok the grains of Arthur Skinner will present the degree from Olivet Naza rene Ja rv is and Mrs . . Bernice
.about diamonds:
corn and planted them behind the bark of the aspen tree and peck Advocacy Program at the Feb. College, Kankakee, Ill., Rev. Winebrenner. The prayer and
NEW HAVEN, W. Va .- The was led by Becky Reed .
away . Pretty smart, I'd say. He was sure looking out for a snowy 13 meeting ·of the society, Jaymes is expository Bible sel!~enial offering was taken
Woman 's Missionary Society of
Iva Capehart was in charge day. One of the most beautiful birds to visit was an oriole; at
the New Haven First Church of of games concerning missions least I think it was. It had a black head and sor t of an orange hosted by Mrs. Albert Smith preacher, with emphasis on and the program concluded
and Mrs. Ellen Couch. The love scriptural holiness and per- with prayer.
God held the ir January in the Mediterranean area .
colored breast. I have seen only one the past several years. They gi ft offerin g of $11 was sonal evangelism. As well as
Mrs . Kloes opened the
meeting in the Missionary
Birdie Roush was surprised · m_ust be very scarce in this area.
dedtcated by Mrs. Couch. , . preaching in the revival ser- meeting with the ca ll to worBuilding wi!h Iva Capehart and with a birthday cake and a gift
Mrs. Joseph Cook had the vi ces eac h even in g, Rev. ship a meditation titled
Sarah Gibbs the hostesses. !~om the· society for his great
MANY PERSONS BRAVED the snow and ice and attended closing prayer and dessert Jaymes will also be conducting
MAR SEILLES
President Orpha F:lelds concern for the society .
the opening of the revival at Mason United Brethren Church on refreshments were served by
the morning Bible study at the
presided and prayer was l.id by
Attending were Bonnie Sunday evening. The Reverend Clarence McCloud, pastor of the
Mrs
.
George
Skinner
and
Mrs.
church.
Sue Erwin . Roll call was an- Fields, Grace Cunnin gham, church brought the message. The Chancel choir under the
Area Nazarene churches and
swered by naming, •·a Sue Erwi n, Iva Cape hart, direction of Mrs. Nolan Swackhamer provided the music. Mrs. Foster to those named and
Mrs,
William
Barnhart,
Mrs.
I.
chu rches
of
sister
resolution I sho uld have Roberta Maynard, Fay Car· Ray Proffitt served as organist. The revival will co ntinue ail this
B. Walker. Mrs . Lorain denominations have been in·
made.'' Bonnie Fields reported · pcnter, Orpha Fields, Sarah week.
Sterrett and Mrs . Harry vited as specia l guests on
A flawless diamond is
fl owers were taken to shut-in Gibbs, ~ena J ohn son, an d
Bailey.
ext remely rare, Most di- ·
different nights during the
member~ for Christmas .
Becky Reed.
amonds
co nlain natural
revival, and will be bringing
It was repor ted that the goal
The
Syracuse
1mperle clions or " mclu·
:;::',.~::~::.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::»:::::::::~~ special music from their
for Christ's Birthday offering
Vo
lun
teer
Fire
Department
sions"-tiny
c rystals of
group,
in
addition
to
the
local
had been reached. A report
carbon
or
bubbles
of
an
d
Emergency
squad
has
music. Also, the Gospel Tones
was also given concerning
The annual valentine project Mary Rinehart gave a prayer
gas
from
millions
of ·
I
named
officers
for
\he
new
quartet will be featured one
Christmas gifts taken to Lakin
of taking trays of candles and and Mrs. Moore commented on ©
years ago
year.
night of the revival.
State Hospital.
cookies to shu t-ins of the the outlook for 1975. She spoke
Emergency squad officials
ArtCa rve d diamonds are
Rev. Howard C. Blac k,
It was decided to have a bean
commun ity -:as se t for Feb. 14 of the need to strive to become
are
Ra
lph
Lavender,
chief;
selected lo r their clarity
pastor of the Syracuse
dinner on Friday, Feb. 7,
Miss Sandy Johnson was at 1 p.m. during a meeting of a better person and· walk in a
and brillia nce. Any slight
Nazarene Church has stated Howard Black, assistant chief;
beginning at 5:30p.m. in the speaker for a meeting of the the Afternoon Circle of Heath newness of life, and read a list
.. ,ncluSions " that mal/ be
Mary
Pickens
,
captain;
Oris
that the public is invited to
Missionary Building . Becky OEA (Office Education United Methodist Chur ch of resolutions which included
TUESDAY
present
are disc ernible
Hubbard
,
lieutenant;
Black,
Reed and Bonnie Fields were Association ! Club at Meig;; Thursday.
MIDDLEPORT Masoni c attend .
taking each day at a time,
on ly under ten power
reporter.
appointed to the committee. High Sc hool recently .
'"'-1 With Mrs . Nan Moore trying to improve the mind , Lodge 363, F and AM, special
magnif ica tion .
Fire department officials are
The nominating committee
In her ta lk on secret.riai presiding, a sizable check from exercise the soul, t.ke an meeting, 7:30 p.m. at the
Eber Pickens, fire chief;
presented the ballot for the work, Miss Johnson spoke 011 Mrs. C. M. Hennessy for organ optimistic view , and learning Masonic Temple . Work in the
Clarence
Hill ; assistant chief;
election of Group II offi cers. the duties and responsibilities repai' was ac know ledged. to adjust to whatever the fellowcraft degree .
Robert Gibbs, c;apt.in, and
Elected were vice president. Involved as well as some of the Mrs . Hennessy, long-time situation is.
DISABLED
American
Rollie
Stewart, lieutenant.
Roberta Maynard; secretary, new eq uipment being in- organist of Heath Church, now
The lesson by Mrs. Beulah Veterans , Meigs Chapter 53,
Business
president is
Eleanor Davis; treasurer, Fay tr od uced into the business resides in Coiumbns with her Hayes was titled "The New 7:30 p.ni., at chapter home,
Howard
Black;
vice president,
Ca rpenter; spiritual life office. She commented on her son-in-law and daughter .
Book of Jonah'' by Piccard. Butternut Ave. Refreshments .
Susie Hill ; Mary Pickens,
director and Delores Taylor: duties which include making
Mrs. Beulah Hayes reported The author described Jonah as All members urged to attend.
secretary; Oris Hubbard ,
missionary education director, appointments, arra ngi ng on her trip to the Wellston arrogant and sell-willed, but
EASTERN Band Boosters,
treasurer, and Nancy NeutIva Capehart.
business trips, as well as Nursi ng Home to take a Christ- sa id that it was Jonah who 7:30p.m. in the band room at
zling, ass ista nt treasurer .
Hostesses for the February routine office work. Questions mas tray from the circle to inspired and chailenged him to high sc hool. All parents of band
Court St., PomeJ'!)y
Willie Cundiff has been made
PT.
PLEASANT
'Walden
meeting will be Pansy Fry and from the students were an- Mrs. E. M. Wood. The birthday become a missionary on the members urged to attend .
an
honorary
member
of
the
Roush,
former
superin
tendent
Rena Johnson.
swered by Miss J ohnson at the an niversaries of Mrs. Nelle island of Mineola .
RACINE Masonic Lodge 7:30 of Mason County Schools, has department.
The program was presented conclusion of her talk .
Davis. Mrs. Freda Mitch, Mrs .
Refreshments were served p.m. at Temple . All members
been named vice president in
by Orpha Fields assisted by
Ga rn et Entsmi nger, .Mrs , followin g the meeting by Mrs. urged to attend and visitors are
charge
of Region V (West
Bonnie Fields. It was the first
Mary Rinehart, Mrs. Hayes Mildred Zeigler and Mrs.
welcome
.
Virginia , Kentucky a nd Tenstudy on the Church of God in
and Mrs . Beulah Jones were Moore.
nessee) of the Eas tern
the Mediterranean . The
observed during the meeting.
THURSDAY
SERVICES SET
ZENITH
of Lapidary and
Federation
program began with singing of,
TWIN CITY Shrine Club,
To open the meeting Mrs.
NEW HAVEN - A series of
Minerai Societies.
"I'll Go Where You Want Me to nondenominational Gospel
Thursday at the Racine Shrine
COlOR TV
He was also one of five
Go," and devotions taki'" from Services will be held at the Jr .
Park, 7:30p.m. Refreshments.
persons named to the
Matthew, Mark and Romans. A O.U.A.M . Hall , 201 Fourth St. ,
All Nobles invited to attend.
nominating
commit tee for the
casse tte tape was played New Haven, beginning this
CLASS
12,
Heath
United
Eastern Federation whi ch
giving the Church of God evening at 7:30. Services will
•BlACK &amp;
Methodis
t
Church,
7:30p.m.
at
consists
of 26 states, Puerto
beginnings in Syria a.nd be held each Tuesday, Wed·
the church. New officer s will Rico and Ni caragua. The
Lebanon, narrated by Dr . John nesday, Friday and Sunday at
LETART. W. Va. - The
be
hostesses.
WHITE TV
annual meeting will be ·held at
D. Grose who with his wife 7:30p.m. The services will be
Leiart Homemakers met Jan . 8
EPISCOPAL
.
Chur
c
h
Portland , Maine the latter part
spent many years in th e conducted by L. Skilbred and
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Anderson at UJe E\•ergreen Hills Com- Women , luncheon 12:30 p.m. at
of
June. Mr. and Mrs. Roush
Mediterranean
area
as R. Stipp : The public is cordially
have returned £rom a \'acati on muni ty Building with .the the home of Mrs . Patrick "plan to attend.
.
eSTER EO
missionaries . .Circle prayer invited.
to Mexico City where they president, Mrs. Lois Hoffman. Lochary . Co-hos tesses will be
Mr. and Mrs. Roush, Mr . and
visited their daughter and so~­ presid ing and devotions being Mrs. Dorothy Amberger , Mrs.
Mrs.
Howard Nolan, Syracuse,
in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Dean ied by Audrey Hoffman .
Wilma Ro ush, Mrs . Lorna Ohio and Mr. and Mrs . J .
Betty Fisher presented the
Bumgardner
and
two
Seth. and Mrs. Annie Chap· Marsliall, New Haven, are all
lesson. "Simple Electrical
daughters.
MEETING SET
Easy Terms!
man .
local members of the Ohio
Mrs. Elmer . VanMeter of Repairs." Committee reports
A county-wide prayer
Free
Delivery!
HERMAN GRATE
Nondenominational Gospel Valley Gem and Mineral Club ,
were
given
and
plans
for
the
Clifton,
Mrs.
Don·
a
ld
Gabrit773·55?2
MASON, W.VA.
meeting will be held at 2 p.in.
se rvices being held today , or Eastern Federation .
.
new
year
concerning
each
sch,
Pt.
Pleasant,
visited
over
Sunday at the Wesleyan
Wednesday, Friday and
Holiness Church in Pomeroy the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. committ ee werea discussed . Sunday 7:30 nighUy at Jr.
with. Glen Bissell as class George Sillljlwns at Shinnston , Arrangements also were made O.U.A.M. Hall, 201 Fourth St .,
IV. Va. The ladies attended the to have the club's regular
leader .
Grand Visitation of the Eastern mon.thly meetings at the Letart- New Haven. Public invited.
MEIGS County Better Beef
Elementary School. starting in
Star there.
Uvestock Club , 7: 30 p.m., at
. Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Jenks February.
County
Extension Office. All
The dub voted to adopt a
visi.ted· recently with their
members
are asked to attend.
daughter and son-in-law, Mr. second patient at Lakin State
and Mrs. · Howard Huck and Hos pi tal. EJt.ch month the
lllembers donate money to use
family at Moundsville.
SAY
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. for different needs of the
As the years pan b~, J)!t
Bruce Staats and fam ily on patient and is visi ted by club
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
value of ,_f prope~ds
Sunday were his parents, Mr. members each monUl.
;'0 Increase .. .- but one
The club will sponsor a
With A Beautiful
and Mrs. Harry Staats, Mr.
mlslake-IN!ny - t o ""'~ · I
skating
party
at
New
Haven
and
Mrs
.
,
J
oy
Smithson
,
Mr.
Is tailing to keep their
. :nsurance up to date. How
·and Mrs. Donald Meadows and Feb. 17 for members and their
tong has II been since you've
Lori, Mr. and Mrs. Rich Broad- farniiies.
had an • - ' ovaluallan ol
Door prizes were won by
water.
Florsheim
Values
Joyce
••
Values
yovr lnou...,.- coverage?
Audrei• Hoffman , Maxine
Morrison, and Lois Hoffman.
lo 39.95
Puppies
lo 24.00
Attending were Dorthy Click,
Lois Durst. Betty Fisher, Opal
Acme
PI'A WIU. MEET
Friend, Pal Friend, Linda
Cash
&amp; Carry
MASON, W. Va. - Mason Grinm1, Audrey Hoffnian . Lois
Grade School PI'A meeti~g this HM!man. Judy Hunt. Sharon
'
evening at .. 7:30 wi)l hear McCielt.n. Mildred Morgan. '
Speech Pathologist Barbara Mt:tXirt~ MorriSon. Sue 'Sayre
Open Friday Til&amp;
PH. 99Z-513\I
Rood. A cQuestion and answer and Barbara Winter. Hostesses
All Day Thursdays
59 N. Second St.
'Niw HAYIN, W.VA.
POMEROY
101 Sycamore
period
will
foll
ow.
All
.
are
Pomeroy
II:J:-:ZS2S
Wl're Linda Crimm and Betty
Midt;lleport, 0 .
welcome.
FisheL - Sue S!arre.
. ·."- ''

I

"

Ground

'•

,,

nature, (Ma rk 16-20 ) confirming the Word, not the
believer; and the second as
given in I Cor. 14, a sign to .the
unbeliever, not the believer .
In her commen ts, Mrs. Kuhn
referred

'

There's More to

.

The pros and cons of the
chari sma tic move ment as
outlined by Dr. Russell A.
Jon es at !h e recent · Ohio
Baptist Women 's Convention .
were discussed in a program
presented .by Mrs . Robert ,
·Kuhn at tbe Thursday night
meeting of the Women 's
Mi ss ionary Society of the
Pomeroy First Baptist Church.
In her opening remark , Mrs .
Kuhn emphasized that the
inten tion of the study wa s to

.

0., Tuesday, Jan. 14,1975 .

PoLLY's PoiNTERs @ii l Conven.tzon talk discussed
~d
BY POU.Y CRAMER

,

\

¥"

fawrite
16 ounce

p.m.-

..

'4~- for

.

•1

GROUND COFFEE
FILTER RINGS

·MAX-PAX
24

bag

$219 Wll!l .

OL

.•can
GoOd
'

3 lb.

_j

DUPON

COUPON
On~ At Mark V
•·
Super Market
iJFFER UPIRES: H·75 . .. .

'!If~··

·•

.
'

. .
o

0

•

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o

o

o

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0

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0

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•

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.

QUALITY

.

.

.

a

larry Lavender

POf1~~~E~E~a~I9~ CO. @)

'''I

I

""lt"·iooks to me a~ though you have the ·postSuper Bowl blahs"/"'

D&amp;D

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

COLUMBUS (U P!) - An one or more income brackets.
Ohio
State
Univ ersity He sa id it would counter the
economist says it may be tendency of mflated wages to
swnmer before the Umled place workers in higher tax
States "may be able to begin brackets, and would be felt
stumbling
from
the unmediately by the public m
stranglehold of mflalion " the form of a "ra ise" on the
unless certain strong fiscal next paycheck because of less
policy changes are started now money withheld.
to hasten the nation's recovery.
Cra ig also proposed to
"Even with strong policy reduce 011 unports by applying
changes, it will be well into 1976 a gross tax on ali oil at the
before the unique combination source, whether foreign or
of virulent inflation a nd domestic, to discourage its
stagnant output known as excessive use.
stagflation completely loosens
''However. in order to pre·
its grip on the country," said serve fiscal stimulus m the
Dr. Paul G. Craig, professor of total budget, any reverrue
public administration and derived from an oil tax should
economics.
be offse t by a further reduction
He said if recovery does not of the mcome tax
start before this summer, 1t
"Although gasoline is the
would be the na lion's worst largest single oil user in the
post-World War II economic economy- the one we point our
crisis.
fingers at in anger as being
Craig proposed increasing wasteful- there's no question
the money supply and granting that ali other uses are
a substantial t.ax reduction as wasteful .. Industry, synthetic
ways to hasten the economic matenais - ali of them."
recovery.
"We need to allow the supply
of money to grow more rapidly
than it has recently to allow
Now faith 1s the assurance of
lower interest rates sooner,'' things hoped for, the convlctlon
O'aig said. "By doing that, we of things not seen. For by it tbe
would also stimulate housing m en of old rne1vcd divine apand other business investment. proval . - Hebrews II 1,2
"We also need a tax cut m the
$15-20 billlon range in order to
give the consuming public an
increase in spending power.
The fear that has kept
(President ) Ford from doing 1t
quickly is a result of inflation uy ARNOW 8 . SAWISLAK
and the feeling that lf you
WASHINGTON (UPI ) stimulate the economy, infla- "He violates the rul~ , he
tion will become worse instead treats members unfau-ly and
of going away."
he abuses his power as chairThe economist contends tha t man. " With these charges, the
view is wrong because there is citizen action group Common
"a lot of slack in the economy Cause gives Rep. F. Edward
right now."
Hebert, D·La_, the lowest
"We need an increase in marks on its newly issued
spending just to use the ' 1scorecard' ' of House commit·
economy we have, to enable tee chairmen.
consumers to pull industcy,Pt\[~
The
315,000-member,
of its slack back tow8rd ap:· organization, which lobbies
preaching full use of the extensively m Congress, used
machine," he srud.
these standards -adherence to
He propos~ dropping the rules, use of power and fairpr-esent mcome tax schedule ness to colleagues - m rating

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

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

oROQM;;;der~furn~hed 'f•'~Q.!'!i:;E~LAN-~0~
! ~~P.!":
REALJY"

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

206 BEECH STREET ,
OL E PORT , OHIO

ROUSH JOINS UP
RACINE - Glenn K. Roush,
son of Mr. and Mrs. James
Rou sh, Vine St , Ractne,
enlisted m the United Stales
Air Force Delayed Enlistment
Program Dec 27 . Roush , a
graduate . of Southern H1gh
School, will go on active duty
June 9. taking his Air Force
traming at Lackiand Air Force
Base, San Antonio. Texas.

transmtSSton , $25
3108 after 5 p m

M ID

Cal l

1 10 6tc

In the Common P l eas Court of

Me .gs counry . Ohro. Pomecoy .

Help Wanted

On to, Case No 15,708 , Wil l 1e
Har rts Ptalnf1ff , vs James N
Harrts , Defendant , a Comp ta 1n t WANTED , 4 women , 4 hours a
for dtvorce. exc l uS1\'e custody
day, S4 per hour . 4 days a
of m 1nor child and o th er ret 1ef
week Call for tnter vlew,. 992
7789
has been fi led against you You
1 13 31c
are required to answer the
Comp lamt Wllht n twen t y etght - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - days after tile last pub l tc ation L ARGE comp an y 1n need of full
lime personne l No layoffs ,
poss1ble earntng up to S2SO
Larry Spencer
weekly
Good
futur e
Cl erk of Courts
Ava ilable for ng ht person
Me1gs Coun ty , Oh1o
Call 675 3490 for appo tntment
(1 2l 10, 17 , 24 , 31 ( 1)7, 14 , 6t c
I 9 6tC

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

WA I T RESSES needed , app l y tn
person Crow 's Stea k House ,
Pomero y
l 1 tfc

-------------Mobile Homes For Sale

atr heat, storm
wmdows,
basement ,
drtveway ,
ava tl ab te after January IS
Ca ll 992 3381 or 99 3 3453
1 9 6tp

-------------For Sale

rear $26,000.
TUPPERS PLAINS -

2 11 ttc

-EXCELSIOR
-------------Salt Works, Ea st

Pacer gets

level ac re. ranch type home.
&amp;
dining, hardwood floors,

2 BR. bath, mce kitchen

6: oo-Sunrise Seminar 4.
6 · 25-Farm Report 13,

6: 30--Five Minutes to L1ve By 4; News 6; Brble Answers 8,
School Scene 10; The Story 13.
6:35-Columbus Today 4
6 45- Morning Report 3; Farmtlme 10.
, 7:1l0-Today 3,4,15; AM A"merlca 6; CBS News 8,10; A M.
'

America 13.

1

·8:011-Captaln Kangaroo 8, Lassie 6; Popeye 10 , Sesame Streel
13.
a 25-Captain Kangaroo 10.
. 8:3Q-Big Valley 6.
: 9·1l0-A.M. 3; To Be Announced 4; Phil Donahue 15 ; Bullwinkle
8, Morning with OJ 13.
9·25-Chuck Wh 1te Reports 10.
9· 30--Not For Women Only 3; Dinah! 6; Haze lS; Tattletales 10 ,
New Zoo Revue 13.

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

REFRIGERATOR , dinette set,
range , stud10 couch, bedroo m
SUit , p latf or m ro cke r , a ll l i ke
new A nt tqu e chairs, an ti ~ue
bedroom suit and many other
items Phone 992 3457
1 9-6tc

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

GROCERY business for sale
Butldtng for sale or lea se
Phone 773 -561 8from 8 30p m
to 10 p . m for appointment
3 10 tfc

heat, ulil1ly R. A REAL
BARGAIN $13,500
PORTLAND - 4 nrce level
lots, (good ground) close to
river, good drilled well and
block garage, storage bldg .,
large house, 4 BR . ONLY
$4,700
ALL CA SH FOR YOUR
HOME, LET US SELL FOR
YOU.
992-2259 or 992-2568
HOUSE , $5,000

Phon e 992 -5871
1 12 18t c

-------------SEPT IC - TA NKS
cl eaned

Modern Sa n ilation , 99 2-3954 or
992 7349
9 18 -tfc

green light

RA C I NE, OHIO PHONE 949
3604
12 19 26tc

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

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

~~~i~~i':i£

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

FUEL OIL·

HEATERS

''

;

I ' ,•,

I

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

eent.

Listen to Great

Country Stereo

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

WMPO-FM
92.1 .

____________

1

'

Aging 20.

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

7:30--Pollce Surgeon 3; Name That Tune 4; Let's Make A Deal
6; Wilburn Brothers 8; The Judge 10. To Tell The Truth 13 ;
Book Beat 20; Episode Action 33.
B:Oil-LIItle House on the Prairie 3,4,15; That's My Mama 6,13;
Tony Orlando and Dawn 8, 10; Feeling Good 20;; Sinners 33.
8: 3Q-Movle "The Hatflelds and the McCoys.'' 13; Movie "Love
Hate Love 6.
9: 00-Lucas Tanner 3,4, 15; Cannon B, 10;What Makes A Good

Father :W; Masterpiece Theatre 33.
10· DO- Petrocelli 3,4, 15; Gel Christie love 6, 13; Manhvnter 8, 10;
News 20; Family At War ·33.

. 14

UTTLE

do well today In dealings with
Individuals who come from
places distant from where you
were born

the next few days you should
be able to figure ways to derive
more profits and benefits from
worl( or career.

'
"
SCORPIO (Oct. 24--Now. 22)
Th" manner In which you con.

duct yourself Is being favorably
observed , especially when you
use your originality

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23- Doc.

2-t) You will be offered
something lor your home by a
frlen~ 1 He no longer has a need

for
It. 'tou wilt.
'

C~~RICORN (Dec. 22-Jao,

11) If you have some time to·
day, l:let In touc h with a friend
who has been on your mind
She may have aome Interesting

t.est. ,,

It's hearing your friend tell you that he's gomg through a
stage, but she doesn't look you in the eye when she says, "Don't
worry, he'll be back."
lt'sseeing less and less of him, and realizing that he's trying
to taper off so you won 't be TOO upset when he finally ends it.
· It's realizing you can't stick a rambling man to one specific
girl when it's his nature to play the field.
And It's wishing you could change all that ... but you can't.ANNIE

~(!]IM[;l~;"'-J ==-~ -.J c:
Unoc:ramble !hue rwr Jumbteo,

one letter to ll!!ar:h square, to

""-"'

form four ordinary worda.

01 1

(J

tTINEKil
\SUFSO

You're likelY to do more travelIng this year than you have tof
some time Though the trips
won't be long ones, they'll be
fun and quite unusual.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Food
1 Actor,
fish
Robert5 Emhar2 Fi~ish
rassment
lake
10 Single
3 Paid a
II Dull
hurried
teacher
visit
13 Deplane
(2 wds.)
14 11 A
4 Rembrandt,
Clockw!ll"k
e.g.
(2 wds.)
IS Ape or
S Intermittent
gorilla
6 Present
17 Mineral
7 Ohio college
18 Legislate
town
19 SqU)IBb
8 Horse
zo Timorous
known as
21 Brandish
"Big Red"
22 Social
9 Etch

..

class

Yestenlay's,Auwer
12 Seesaw
11 Yearn
19 Errol
Flynn
often played
one
22 Wyoming
city
23 City in
Oregon

z-++--+-

...
HOW "TH!: CAP"TAti'J
5L.EPi AFiE~
I
ON 1--115 FI:ECQ1l:l75.

!

Now arranp the dreled !etten
to lorm the o111'1lriae ONWet, u
ouneot.ed b)' the abcrf• cartoon.

(A.-wen

t.-ot1'0w)

J...W..• CABLE FAINT HAIRDO PANTRY
.

,

.

AXYDLIIAAXII
LONGJ'BLLOW

II

One letter almply atandl lor another. In lhla aample A II
und lor the threo L'a, X lor tho two O'a, ete. Slnrle lellera,
apootrophea, the leneth and lorrnatlon ot the word• are aU
hints. Each day the code !ellen are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE
USRGFSI!F
KLP

L

CIEMDREMC

CMUIWF

ORCRD

WMOMY . - LWWL

AMwen Th.111 kmd ollllan m1qlat IJe upaell1ng - BANANA

ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE

EAST

:&gt;8
'10 5
•AQJ862
tA10752
• 96 3
.10 9 8 7
.Kl3
SOUTH
· : : ,7K/ 106 2

'.

.52
North-South vulnerable

North East

South

INT
Pass

4.

Pass

Openmg lead - 10 •
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Four spades by North would
be an ironclad contract, but
North and South were not using
transfer bids and South wound
up as the spade declarer
Wesl opened the 10 of hearts.
South could have insured his
contract by playing dummy's
kiqg but instead played small.
East played the deuce of
hearts, whereupon West shifted
to 'the 10 of clubs Dummy's
Jack lost to East's king. East
cash!'d the ace of hearts and
then made the mistake of
lea ding a trump
!' Chucked and possibly
rechucked," murmured South.
"I should have put up the kmg
or" hearts at trick one."
Then South won the spade;
ruffed h1s last heart and ran off
all h1s trumps .
:!'be last trump lead squee•ed
\'(l!st. He had to discard a club
ir. order to retam his ace of
d[llmonds Now South discarded
t he last diamond from d~y
aDd made the last three tr~cks
with dummy's ace.queen and SIX
oCciubs

-

BORN LOSER

•

ABNER

• WHILe TH&amp;: DOGAO.TCH&amp;:RS SWIE.I&lt;T" A&gt;JD smAI'-l TO CAI&gt;\Ie A N~
our CF TH!i WCRT'HC!ESS SID&lt;' OF "11-E f'OUNrAI '-l - -

GIWIPEI&gt; DOGPA1CH
~

TH6 CITY o.;VELOPi51Q6 NtG
CREATI'-l6 A SPI.IiNDICJ. f(
~W

WXLIRY HOTli'l--

_,...._"

~fo!EWSPAI't::~ ENTERPRISE ASSN l

~:en

;1•!rf";,;ey r1

~ The bidding has been: 14
Nortb Ease .South

w!st

•

Pass

I.

I•

Pass

I•

Pass 3 •
Pass '
You South. hold :
.-K/643 ¥ A2 t9. A K 7 3 2
What do you do now "
A - Bid foar butts. For••• lluot
y011 ban five spades.

TODAY'S QUESTION

Instead of rebidding three hearts
your partner bas jumped to three
notrpmp over your one spade. Whit
do yor do now'
Send ,
, JACOBY MOqERN
book )0 vVm af Bridge.' lclo
this newspaper}. P.O Box -/Bg,
Radio City Station. N~w York ,
NY 10019
v

I

2.
Pass

'·

I
'

'l
-.

ELW;

YLEMCIW

SUPPORT A MAN THROUGH GREAT FATIGUE.- JAMES

MONROE

.

01

F I MC

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: A LITI'LE FLATrERY WIU.

• 43

West

24 The Lady
of 25 Curse
27 Encircle
3G Custom
31 J ewlsh
feast
33 Trai!B8ction
34 Make anew
3t Couple

2S Shipworm
28 Court
star
27 Civil War
vets' org.
Z8 Sheriff's
badge
Z9 Pertaining
to
commerce
(abbr.)
32 N01ghbor of 1
Czech.
r.
33 Piece of
furniture
35 Gnawed
37 Constructed
38 Ceremony hr-t-+39 Elderly
40 Mexican
mush
41 Actor,
Franco -

•K4
t K Q8
.AQJ6
WEST

11, 1171

~~,rl

PIJDS

I

...ft.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

YAUG

Yeltent.y••

12: 3Q-Wlde World Special 6.
1: oo-Tomorrow 3,4,; News 1~ ~

You'll do you r best thinking to- ,
day under pressure, Or If you're
on the spot and have tO come
\JP with an answer.

It's hearing what "good friends" he and Linda are.
It's telling htm, "I love you," andgettingno answer.
It's thinking the best times you ever bad were spent with
him.
It's being happy that you have to work so that you won't
worry about him so much.
It's not getting upset in front of him, because you know he's
too nice to break up with you when he knows you will be unhappy.
It's him asking you to share him with other girls, "just as a

10 .3D-Yoor Future Is Now :W.
11 :011-News 3.4,6 ; News 8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
11.30--Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Wide World Special 13; FBI 6;
Hec Ramsey 8; Movie " Tiger By The Tall ; 10; Janakl 33.

Watch South at work

will unexpectedly pop up.
PISCES(Feb.20-MniiZOl You

LIBRA (Sop!. 2S·Oct. U) Over

Lucy Show 6, Match Game 8, 10;

WIN AT BRIDGE

.'

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

·---------------

.'3:JO-One Life to Live 13;

the Lmes 20 ;. Know Your Schools 33.

bugging you
VIRGO (AUf. 23-Sopt. 22)

tJ4

NEIGLER BUILDING SUP
F'LY FOR REMODELING
AND KITC HEN CABINETS.
CALL GUY NE IGHLE R.

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

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

Tomorrow 8,10; To Be Announced 33.

· 12:45-Eiectrlc Company 33.
12:55- NBC News 3,15.
. J; Oil-News 3; All My Children 6. 13; Phil Donahue 8; Young and
~ · the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 13
1:Jo-How To Survive A Marriage 3,4,15; Let's Make A Deal
· 6, 13; As The World Turns 8, 10.
2:1l0-Days Of Our Lives 3,4,15; $10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Gu iding
" Light 8, 10.
2 30--Doctors 3,15,4; Big Showdown 6,13; Edge of Night 8,10.
). 30--Another World 3.4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13; Price Is
Right 8,10; RFD 20.

5.1l0-FBI 3; Merv Griffin 4; Andy Griffith 8; Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood 21!.33; Raymond Burr 13.
5•30--News 6, Beverly Hl11blllles 8; Hodgepodge Lodge :Wk ;
Trails West 15; Electric Company 33.
6:1l0-News 3,4; ABC News 6; News 8,10,13,15; Electric Company :W, lTV Utilization 33.
6 30--NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Bew1tched 6; CBS Newo
8,10; Zoom 21!; Your Future Is Now 33.
7:011-Truth or Conseqvences 3,4; Bowling for Dollars 6; What's
My Line? 8; News 10; Jerry Lee. lewis 13 ; I Spy 15; Behind

change something t hat's been

..

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

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

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

ll:Jo-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Brady Bunch 6; love Of Life
B.10; Sesame Street 33.
n :55- Take Kerr with Graham K&lt;rr 8; Dan Imel's World 10;
, News 13. ·
~2: 011-Ja c kpot! 3,15; Password All Stars 6,13 , Bob Brdaun's 5050 Club 4; News 8, 10.
12:30-- Blank Check 3, 15; Split Second 6, 13 ; Search For

E XC -AVA T I N G •

water system , good concre te

Bonznza 15.

8,10.

• Q9 75

"' ... : e r ,
backhoe,
and
d ttcher,
waterline , footers, dra1n s.
roads , and brush c leant ng , no
rob too small, no weather too
bad Char l es R Hatfield , Rt I
Ru tl an d , 0
Phone 742 6092
I 7 26tc

Dear Helen and Sue :
·
I've collected all yo11r "What Is A" columns. Now here's a
personal one: What Is the End of a Fantastic Relationship?"
It's realizing that his comforting face will soon comfort some
other girl.
It's being told "We 're too serious," and "I'm tired of being
tied down," when you were just begirmlng to like it.
.
It's rememberlng all the times you weren't too sure, because
YOU liked freedom too - but you didn't tell him, not wanting to
hurt him.
,
.
Too bad those feelings couldn't have come at the same time
for you both.
It's his forgetting to kiss you good-bye, and tht telephone call
that doesn't come, and the sports practice used as an excuse.
4:1l0-Mr. Cartoon 3; I Dream Of Jea~nle 4; Somerset 15;
Gill igan's Island 6 ; Tattletales 8; Sesame Street 20,33;
Movie "'Teenage Rebel" '10; Mike Douglas 13.
4: Jo-Bewltched 3; Jackpot! 4; IW&gt;d Sqvad 6; Lucy Show 8;

10·DO-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3.15; Joker's Wild 8, 10, Movie
" " My Friend Irma" 13
:10·30--Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Phil Donahue 4; GambitS,10.
" 1l :ll0-High Rollers 3,15, One Life to Live 6; Now You See It

NORTH (DI

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

• I

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY ll, 1975

Ma1n St. , Pomeroy All k1nds
of salt, wa te r p el l ets, water
nuggets, bloc k sa lt and own
OhiO R t'Jer Salt . F'hone 99 2
] 891.
6-S-Ifc

1

basement w1th f orced a1r

1971 F M C Astro Wtth wet I m e,
1974 tra i l mob1le f lat tra1 1er
F'hone (304l 882 2829
I 12 6tc

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

acre, nice workshop In the

x 55' M O BI LE ho me, new
ca rpet diShwasher, 52 gal JE R SEY Guernsey mil k cow t o
hot water h ea t e r , $3,500 .
fre shen so on Also, Heref ord BUILO IN
b y 165ft
Phone 985 3373
mlx:e d ca l\' eS, 3 weeks old
on Riverv
Phone 843 2353
I 12 3tp
H 111, Pom
1 12 5tc
tere s ted c al!
TRAILER for rent or sale, 3
m
bedrooms , uo lurn 1she d , FIREWOOD for sale
Phone
ut!11!res paid , l ocated at n ew
7112 5387
Mob1le
Home
Pa rk
1n
1- 12-Jtp
Bu r l tng ha m Ph one 992 775 1
12 31 ttc ELECTRIC togs With h~ater ,
never used , S40 , 8 gallon
automa tt c humtdtf l e r , $3 0
Phon e 9t.l 2 7291 afte r 4 p m .
1 12 trc
OLD furn1ture , tee boxes. brass
beds, or complete households
1970 Z 28 CA MARO and 2
Wrtte M D Miller , Rt ' I C ,
hor se tr aile r Phone 992 -733 8.
Pom er oy , Oh1o Ca ll 99 2 7760
1 12 6tc
1() 7-74
SINGER
tr ead le
sewmg
J UNK autos , comp lete ,and
mac hin e, S20 , Two good 0 11
del 1v ered t o our yard We PICk
heaters W1lh therm os ta ts and
up auto bod1es and buy all
b lowers, both for S100 F'h one breez
ay,
ag
ost
k+nds of scr ap met als and
367 7729
an
acre.
$18,500.00.
1r on R1der ' s Sa l ... age , St Rt
1- 12 31 p
124, R 1 4, P a m ero y, Ohio .
Call 992 5468
CLOSE IN - 6 room frame
KENMORE 36 1n push button
10 17 ftc
elect r. c range , excellen t home. bath . electric heat,
cond1tron Phone 992 5385
garage and level lot
CASH patd for all makes and
1 13 3t c
' mode ls of mob il e homes
NEAR STORES - 3 bedrooms
F'hone area code 614 423 953 1
4-l3tfc ELECTROLUX Sweeper deluxe w 1th r;:tosets, bath, nat. gas
model. Complete w1 th all
c lean 1ng attachments and F.A. furnace, porches , wall to
uses paper bags . Slightly used wall carpeting, good paneling
but c leans and looks like new
and large foyer . $17.500.00.
W tll sell for $37 25 cas ll or
AU...:TlON ,
T hursday
and
terms available Phone 992
Saturday n1ght , 7 p m at
LOOK AT THIS- 49 acres tust
7755
Mason Auct10n , Hort on St 10
ott
124. Water tap and lots of
!2·1Brtc
Mason , w va Con signme nts
frontage on water line . Nice
we lcome Pllon e (304) 77J
Site for houses, or sma ll farms.
547 1
s1~ . oon no
SIEGLER and
1o 3 ttc
10'

15 senior Democrats who seek
re-election this week.
Common Cause said Hebert,
chairman of the key Armed
Services Committee,
"flagranUy violates" ail three.
It said six other chalnnen
engaged in "se rious" or
';.significant" violations and
seven others had shortcomings
not as serious.
Only Chairman Peter W.
Rodino , 0-N.J., of the
Jud1ciary Committee was not

992

cnlicized.
The
report,
-------~---- --· published Monday, did not
touch on five new chairmen
P IANO
tunm g and repair,
Charles Scott. 992 37 1S..
who inherited co mmittees
12 -13 32tp
from last session.
C BRADFORD, Aucttoneer
C&lt;lmmon Cause said there
Comp lete Servt ce
were specific mstances of
Phone 949 -382 1 or 949 -3 161
Ra c in e, Oh 10
violating rules or standards of --------------Cntt Bradford
fairness. Sll11llll8li!lng Hebert,
5 1-tfc
Wanted To Buy
----------~ -- -it said: "he has denied subSEP.TIC tank s, excava t.ng
conunittee chairmen the right
dump truck Phone 742 374 2 ' 1
12 20-26tc
to hire their own staff; he
harasses and discriminates
F'&amp;J
Hom e
Matntenance , ,.
heat1ng , coo11ng, re frig ., ~
against members who disagree
p!~mblng,
elec t rical ap ~
with hlm ; he creates 'special'
p l 1ances . we se r vtce and
r epatr an y tmg 1n the home or •
subcommittees to evade
bUSin ess
215 N
Secon d , ,
ca ucus rules regarding subMtddleport . P hon e 992 3509 . ,.
1 9 JOt c
committee jurisdiction; he
' '
used his chairmanship to op; u RNIT u 'RE-u--;;ho!sfe~ing ,
Reaso nabl e
rates,
free
pose the caucus policy against
est1mates ,
picku p
and
further funding of the Indeltvery , prompt ser\'tceMowrey ' s Upho lster y, Point
dochina war ; and he fails to
Pl easant , w va Phon e 675
carry out his responsibility to
41 54
KENOSHA, Wis. (UP!) insure that the Armed Services
12 J1 26tp'
Full scale production began C&lt;lnunittee conducts effective Notice
Monday on the· American oversight of the Pentagon. "
AKRON, Ohio (UllW - family worth betweetrQtte-I!Aif Motors C&lt;lrp. Pacer, a four- , Hebert called the report "so
Nationally syOIU)~te d 1 ,~to)JL5 billion and ~rd . L. passenger ''wide small" car ridiculous , misleading and dis·
colutnnist Jack AAlitQ,n, ~ellon paid no federal' lncome described as the first all-new torted as not to justify a
delivering what he terme!Ffili!- -tmres for three years," he said. development in car design in 25 comment." He said he got his
own State of the · Union
"J. Paul Getty frequently years.
power "by unanimous vote of
MONOGRAM
DO YOU HAVE A NICE
message at Akron University has paid no fede ral income
AMC sa1d il scheduled the conunittee" and always CONSIGNMENTS wet'Come at
LARGE OLDER HOME THAT
P&amp;J Auction , 215 NOrth
YOU WANT TO SELL
here Monday night said he has taxes at all. We are paying production of more than 500 of acted on the basis of a majority
Second , Middleport
no confidence in PreSldentlal~"4axes for hin1. My lax t;eturnoiiil:tlfe new' cars daily to ljssure VIlle . . •
,
1 9 30tc
We N~ed A BUnch of Small ·
economic !Ullership.
"~i-..' ~~e to 50 per cent, but NelsOn;...;!!!~ dealers would have ~n
"lf41:'Ybody can show where AUCTION SAL E , startinc;i"
1(((
Fnd ay , Jan 17 at 7 p m 215
"I don 't mow much ahou!lfeller pa~d no taxes·at all : ~uate supply of Pacers by i haft · violated the majority
Second , M i ddlepor t
At
N
-said Apso
70."
•
. _:f'iflirch 1, when it W!lf.'iie m- • Vllte of my conunittee, I'll step
Pr.i ced for Quick Sale
..1))
P&amp;J Odds and E·nds .
"but I
disturbed that · ' '
erson
sa id ' the ·-~ced to the public.
down," Hebert told UP!.
1-9-Btc
1 N'ew Wood Burning
know
than the ~ ,;_.
Corp. had a $6.5 billion
The car features rack and
"Three chairmen, (George)
SAYRE HARDWARE
HEATER-139.95
H UMAN E Societv Thnft Shop
:=:net:lli-o!it in 1973, boil paid a pinion steering, unusually wide Mahon of Appropriations,
across from Pomerov Pos t 1
~ !POMEROY LANDMARI( 1
882-2525 New Haven, W. Va. -.r
Offtce, c l earance on winter
otW~ter;,'\_corporate tax. of 5.5 per cent wheel t read , independent (W.R.) l'oal!e of ~lure
~~·.: Jack W. Carsey, Mgr .
clot hing , ha ndm ade fur
..,
doll!! kruM'~hile · the national
rage frontcoll and rear leaf 811\\. (W~)..illa)!S tlf .~e
..at
Phone 9t2-2111
n tture ,
open
Fr1day
Saturday
he sail!:"1lJillt,;
~ate tax was!'a"
~~pension system and a 22:. ~sh~,~:-[11
. '
I 14 4tc
slirpaSSed.by~~".W~'ve been pa~ •- their gallon !rank
. .
-of
....
~llliRS'•(and )
1957 CHEVY parts
NEW
-T-;;-p~pa~;d-b;;rri Lakewood t ract ion bars , hi the
situation ltds ~taxes and giving ll'iii'i wttfare,
Design ·features mclilde a three c a1~metl ,- . (Ray ) INCOME
•
Federal
and State Taxes W11!
jacker air s,ocks, hooker
year."
he said."
fast-sloping bood;"'liflgate rear Madden of Rules, (Wright)
be done by appointments ~ hea der:s, with 3" collectors for
only Please phone 992 -2272 or
Anderson predicted unemsmall b lock
Call 992 3496
Anderson also said historv is window, expansive windshield Patman of Banking and
see Mrs Wanda Ebl i n , Laurel
after 6 P. m BEST OFFER .
' plol'Jilent will reach 8 per cent going to report the entire and side viewing areas and a CUrrency and HouSing and
Cl +ff Rd , Pomeroy , Oh +o
10 17tfc
!bing 1975, saying that figure Watergate scandal had a . cur_bside door that is four ll1- (Harley ) Staggers of CoolJ. J JOtc --------------.
could go to 10 per cent if tough wholesome affect upon our ches lqnger than the door on merce and Health, show
KENMORE 36 inch Push Button
El ec tr tc Range , Exce llent
economic policies are not government.
the fit:iver's side to provide Significant shortcOIIUOgs," the For Rent
condit1on . Phone 992 5385 .
"
passed by .CongrfS$.
_
I ,, "The presidency was weakeeasy rear seat access.
repQrt said.
1 13 3tc
4 RM apt . turn 1Siled, ut rl tlies
,. ,
td , one cll1ld accepted Joh n
He charged every program ·1 ~;Jthe congress made stronAMC said head room, leg
David Cohen, a Copunon. pa
Sheets,
3
m
ties
soutt1
of
CLOSE OUT on new Z ig Zag
and policy President Ford has ' gor,'1 ~e said. "NIXon is in room and width of the split Cause vice president, said the Middleport
sewi ng machtrtes F!or sewing
I 14 6tp
set up seems slanted toward clear emotional distress , front seat equal or exceed moot judgments in the study were
stretch fabrics , buttonholes ,
- Consumer line, 7:50a.m., 1:20 p.m. , 8:50 p.m
tlie rich.
filncv de signs. etc . Pa tnf
- Social Security, 9:SO a.m., 2:50p.m ., 8:,50 p.rn.'
unable to remember Leon Intermediate apd larger cars. made by hitnself and by the 5 ROOM unfu rn1sheCf house ,
slightly tr&gt;lemtstied Cho•ce of
- Job Opportunities, 2:'00 p.m., 10:00 p.m .
"The ' wealtliiest family in Jaworski's nam~ and Richard
basement and vard . J2S
Gov. Patrick J . IAlcer drove 'organization staff on the b3Sls
carrying c ase or sewing
.'"
Sprmg Ave.nue References .
stand S49 so cash or terms
- Th£ Ra lph Emery Show, 4:15p.m.
America is the Melons "with Nixon is a president m exile." the ceremonial first Pacer off of personal knowledge, int.er.,
Pllone 991 7660
ova noble Po one 992 7755
GREAT COUNTRY STEREO PR_OM' AM T012 M!D
..
individual member$ of that
1 8-tfc
...._
__
the final assembly line.
views and r~arch .
1'2-18-tfc
1
-

Columnist wary
o_f Ford leading

Her Gently" 10. 10 , News 13 ..

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

Hebert down on scoreboard
"

-----&lt;..::::: ______ _'_.'_'

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

Someone Is willing to do

l :DO-Tomorrow3,4; Mov ie " Venge!nce Valley 11 8; Movie "K ill

1

For Wodnoodor, Jjln. 15, 1t75
ARIES (Morell 21-April 11)

~

AQUARIUS (...... 20-Pell. 11)
You're In another one of your
short cycles where sudden OP·
portu nltles for personal gain

you've ' b een looking for to

their mothers, I think:
. .
- e lhlng for you she wouldn't
I wish I had a ruckle for every tune I hurt my mother by an do for others 11 could be
uncalled for remark or fresh retOrt when all she was dolnjl: was. awkward for her It others wore
lrying to help. So many times, I'd ask her advice; then, when she 10 learn of it.
gave an honest answer, I'd resent it, being absolutely sure she TAURUII c;f;Prit 2D-Mi1J 201 A
was wrong. And when I found out differenUy, I hardly ever told friend will mal&lt;e o quick decl·
her so ... thoughshe probably knewlwassorry .
slon bn ~~·r behalf, ,.tthoul
your knowledge . You 'll be
She was often that which I did not want her to be .a t that
ple~sed IQ learn why she made
pr-ecise moment - and I was quick to show my embarrassment lhli move.
or tlispleasure. Looking back, I discover she was right far more BIMINI (Mar 21-Juna 20)
often than not.
Something unexpected and
How many times I took out my frustration on my mother,
unusual will occur of benetll to
saw the hurt on her face , and didn't care, because it made me you. It concerns your personal
ambitions.
feel better to lash out at someone.
Why do 1wish 1had a nicltle for each hurt I gave her? So that CANCER (1- 21-.lutr 22)
f
Keep your plana fo r todll)' as
I could put all those nickles together and get enou gh money or flexible 1 ., po11 tble. Be free 10
plane fare back to see her again! - LOOKING BACK
do so mething "fun " and
P.S. Too often we must become wives and mothers ourselves different when you gar !he
before we realize just how much we needed and need our parents.

9: Jo-Woman 21! ; Witness to Yesterday 33.
• 10 llO-PollceStory3,4,15; Marcuo Welby, M.D. 4,6,13; NBAAII Star Game 8, 10 ; News 20; Sounds tag• 33 .
10 3Q-Your Future Is Now 20.
11 :DO-News 3.4,6, 13, 15, ABC News 33
' 11 30--Johnny Ca rson 3,4,15; Wide World Mystery 13. FBI 6;
Janakl 33.
c 12: 30--Wide World Mystery o. News 8,10.

CONSTRUCTION

---------

Fiscal changes
needed now says
OSU economist

News 8.10, Zoom 20; Your Future 15 Now 33

7 OO'o-Trvth or Cons. 3,4; Bowling for Dollars 6; What's My Line
8; News 10; Name That Tune 13 ; High School TV Honor
Society 15; Antique~ :W; L1llas Yoga &amp; You 33 .
7 3D-Hpllywood Squares 3; 4; Wild Wild World of Animals 6 ;
Buck Owens 8; New Pr ice Is Right 10; To Tell The Truth 13,
To Be Announced 15 ; RFD:W; Marco Sporptte 33.
8·011-Adam 12 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13; ·Good Times 8,1 0;
America 20,33.
s· Jo-Mbvie "The Dead Don't Die" 3,4,15.; Movie "Satan's
Triangie" 6.13; Mash 8,10; Ascent of Man 20,33.
9·1l0-Hawaii F1ve-O a:10.

Fire Retardant
Insulation

HE I,I.
RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

The Voice of j!:xperleoce
J
Dear Rap :
·
.
As 1 read the many letters from young people who fight With

' 6·3ll-&lt;1·3Q-NBC News3,4.15; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6; CBS

..

BRUSSELS (UP! I - Pre·
1974 CHEVROLET IMPALA
·
$4295
s1denl Ford's plan to realign
1
4 door , 1 owner car, and only 10,400mJ ies, V 8 engme. w1th
the inflation-ridden U.S.
autorrat1c, ppwer s teering , power "brakes. factory a1r ,
economy outweighed low
100 Kerr Street
lin ted gt.asS; ,de,lu xe body and wtreel opening moldings.
Amencan Interest ru"les and
Pomeroy, Ohio
sanQ!5tone' vtny l seats, beaut• ful dark red f1n1sh TRULY A
CRE'AM PUFF
Phone (614) 992-2798
nudged the dollar upward
Blown Into Walls
Complete plumbing &amp;
today on foreign exchange
and Attics
STRIPPING - FINISHES
1974 0PEL MANTA. Was $2895 NOW
heating service and
$2695
markets
FURNITURE-METALS-ETC.
Free Estimates
2 Door , 4 speed transmiSSIOn , bucket sea ts, rad10, 5.000
general sheet metal
MODERN &amp; ANTIQUE
In Paris, the dollar bounced
a~ tual mdes, or ange finish , v1nyl mtermr
works.
Free
Refmtshing - Repairing
back from" 16--month low. .
Burnishtng
Estimates.
Caning
The price of gold fell back
1973 DATSUN 12002 DR. CPE.
$2250
Upholstering.
Phone 949-5961
'
below the $180 an ounce level.
Local I owner ca r &amp; only 20,000 mil es, automatic trans ,
We Also Buy Antiques
Phone 992-3993
rad
to,
whl
te.walt
t1res,
vmy
l
1
nten
or,
sharp
as
a
tack
Emergency 992-3995
The American cu rr ency
Pick -up Service Availabl e
Daily After 5:00
Orange fmtsh:
or 992-5700
opened at 4.41 French francs ,
up from Monday's closing
'
HOME
Improvement
and
pnce of 4.3875, the lowest rate
Repatr Servtce Anything
For
Rent
f•)(ed around the home, from
for the dollar sislce the Sept.ll,
root to basement You will
CO
UNTRY
Mobile
Hom
e
Park
,
1973 low of 4.365.
POME-ROY, OHI 0
ltke our work and rates
Rt 33 ten miles north of
Phone 742 508 1
"We had expected the dollar ·--------------------------------------------~ Pomeroy Large lots w tth
·I
12 29 tfc
PHONE
concrete
paltos
sidewalks,
·
to strengthen much rriore, " a
949-3832 or 843-2667
Notice
Auto Sales
r unners
afld
o ff
street CARPE T 1nstallalton , $1 25 per
spokesman for a leadmg ~UR your
parking Pr,one 992 747 9
yard
Phone
Rtcllard
West,
All Types of
Cosmetics "O il of Mtnk " 1972 SUPER Beetle Volks
12 31 ti C
French bank said.
843 2667
Phone BROWN' S
wag en Phone 992 3981
99'} 5113
BUILDING
12 24 26t p'
"In fact, 111 France the gain
1 8 I Otc l BEDROOM house 1n Rutland
I 7 lfc
and
REMODELING
------------Ca
l
l
even1ngs
,
992
77
45
IS not too large. We wonder
match Rac1ne Gun 1966 COR VA I R , good bOdy, good
1 12 Jlp
whether the improvement w1ll SHOOTING
From a shelf to a house.
ttres runs fatr , uses Otl. $200, ----Employment Wanted
Cl ub , Sunday 1 p m Assorted
or
trade
for
someth1
ng
of
Painting,
siding/ rooling,
meats dnd factory choke guns
be lasting and will halt the slow
only
equal va tue Call evenings , 3 ROOMS and bath, f urniShed, REMODELING,
plumbing ,
paper hangtng , kitchen
ntce
and
c
l
ean
Phone
992
decline of the dollar."
98 5 3545
heatmg
and ~ types of
12 22 tfc
2937
cabinets, expert carpeting,
general
repatr
WorK
1 8 Si p
Gold opened 1n Zunch at
etc.
1 12 6tp
- - - -----------guaran t eed
20 years ex
$179, down from Monday's Found
1965 PLYMOUTH tn need o r - ------------ - penence Ph one 992 '409
some mechan tc a l work , body J and 4 ROOM furn1slled and
1 J 12tc REA D Y MIX CO NCREfE de
close of $180.75, and in London
l tvered righ t to your pro1ec1
and tn f erwr 1n great shape
- - - -----------.
unfu rn iShed
apartments
ONE
BOX
and
sack
of
clothes
at $178, down $2.25 overrught.
Fast
an d
easy
Free
SI
SO
Call
992
31
46
Phone
992
5434
and reltg1ous pamph l ets tn
esttmares Phone 992 3284
t
14
1tp
By mid-morning, London
ou r ca r Owner 1den t 1fy and
4 12 tfc
Goegle 1n Ready Mtx Co .
pay tor ad Phon e 991 2969
Reai' Estate For Sale
bullion dealers marked the
M tddleport Oh1o
4 sp
PRIVA TE meetrng room for
1 12 Jtc 1968 CHEVE L L E 327
6 30 tf c
OLD 4 rm house on 2 lot s tn
POSIItve t r act1on. rea r end .
an y organ1zaflon , pl'1one 992
price down to $176.50.
Sy r acuse Best o ff er Phone
3975
good body and tnlertor $650
In Frankfurt, the dollar
992 5898
SEWING MACHINE, Repair S,
Phone 992 7489
3 11 ti c
all ma kes, 992 2284
NOTICE
OF
1 14 ltp
gained less than one pfenning,
_l' c servtce.
The Fabric Shop, F'omeroy ,
PU Bl! C SALE
FURNISHED ap t Adu l ts on l y
-------------opening at 2.39 German marks TO WHOM I T MAY . CO N 1973 OLDSMOB IL E Cu tl ass S,
Aut horized Singer Sales 8nd
Mtddleport Phone 992 3874
3 BED~OOM h ouse, $500 down,
Se rvi ce. we sharpen Sc+ ssors
p s , p b , and factory atr
compared with Monday's close CER N
$90 mon th Phon e 992 3975 or
lll41fc
3 29 lfc
Not1ce 1S her eby given that on
25 500 mt les
Ca ll 992 3914
992 257 1
of 2.3825. In Zurich, it opened January 21st, 197 5, at 10 00 AM
afler Sp m
1 3 ttc
space , 1 miles from
1 111 6tp TRAILER
only fractionally h1gher at a pub l ic sa t e Wtll be he ld at
Pomeroy
,
Rt
143,
Phone
992
DOZER work, la nd ct eanng by
1h.
;-;QoMho~s-;,-~lh-a~d
Pomeroy Motor Company,
5858
2.5625 SwiSS francs.
the acre, hourly or contract
Pomeroy , Oh10 to sell for c ash 1969CHEvR0LErl;pa~~ dr
exce llen t neighborhood, wall
F arm ponds, roads, etc
10 27 -tfc
sedan Call 992 7240
to wall carpe t tng , large to t.
In Amsterdam, the dollar the foll owing collateral , to Wt f
--------------Large
dozer and operator
1967 Po 1nt tac . 252697P310785,
ga
ra
ge
,
reasonable
\Jfll
1
11eS
I 14 3tp
with over 20 years ex
advanced JUS! over one cent to sa1d collateral bemg held to
F URNISHED
apa rtm ent.
Ca ll 992 3877
penence Putlms Excavating.
ut ilit1es turntshed , su ttabl e
1 9 tfc
open at 2.4825 guilders . In secure an obltgat1on a ris1ng 1960 CHEVROLET , 6 cy l
Pomeroy , Oh1o Phone 99 1
for two worKtng men or
under a ret all tnstalm ent
standard Call 992 7869 after 4
London, the dollar opened 32.5 secur ity agreemen t held by pm
2478
r e ttred co up l e L 1v in g room ,
12- 19 ti c
kitchen , shower a nd bath On
tradmg points higher, the General Motors Accpetance
1 12 3t c
matn h1ghway , Mason , W Va
Corporatton as secured party
peund retreating from $2.35375 Sa1d publt c sale 1s to be con RARE
Phon e 773 5147
19 69
P ly moutll
Vii L L tr im or c ut tr ees or
10 27 tf c
dueled accordtng to the laws of
to $2.3505.
Barracuda fastba ck, f actory ,
shrubb ery ,
clea n
ou t
the State of O.hto
General
a c , and fact 4 speed P D B ,
Brussels bankers put the Motors Acceptance Co rporatton
basements , att tcs, etc 949
P S , small V 8 Conta ct 992 ;-B E
322 1 or 742 -4441
7605
dollar back ab'(Ve the 36 franc reserves the rt ght to btd at thiS
apt , no pets Phone Robert 1
12 1526tc
Hill Ractne . 949 381 1
' 6OB E .1
sale
1
12
6tp
level quoting it at 36.08 at the
The col l at eral IS prese nt ly --- -----------______
______
2_~:_6_' P
MAIN,
CREMEANS CONCRETE de
opening, up from 35.975. In stored and may be see n a t 1969 BU I.CK L a Sabra, 4 dr , h t ,
li ve red Monday
through
Pom eroy Motor Company ,
p s, a1r , good runntng co n
ROY..('
.
.
•
t'OM.E
2 BEDROOM traile r Phone 992
Milan, dealers marked the U.S. Pomeroy , OhiO
Sa turday
a nd
eve ning s
d i tt on lntertor l tke new saso
3975 or 992 257 1
Phon e 446 11 42
currency up from 648.60 to
Pllone 843 21 11
RUTLAND - 1 story frame ,
1 3 tfc
6 13 lfc
GENERAL
MOTORS
1
12
4fc
649.12lire. In Tokyo, the dollar
5 room s &amp; bath, liv1ng R ha s
ACCEPTANCE
firepl ace,
recent l y
clo.ed at 300.98 yen, down 0.01
CORPORAT ION 1973 COMET , 19 , 00() mt les 2 BEDROOM trader , adults
EXCAVATING , dozer, load~
( 1 l 14 , lt c
only Phone 992 Jl24
automaltc transm tSStOn. l tke
renovated.
c a r peted ,
yen.
and ba c kh oe work ; sept1c
new Cal l any t1me , 667 34 42
1 9 tf c
paneled. tiled·. porches, NG
tanks installed , dump t r ucks
Sterling advanced wlth the
1 5 12tp
heat. garage, lot 51x125.
and 10 boys for hire , wd l haul
1 HOUSE , unt urn1slled, 7 rooms
-------------dollar, opening in Zurich at 6.04
JUST $9,500 00.
f1 ll dtrl, top so i l , l i m es tone &amp;
1966 FORD 352 v 8 eng me , 4
an d batll , ntce Phone 992 2780
PUBLIC NOTICE
g r avel , Ca ll Bob or Roger
barrel. rebuilt. new gas k ets,
or 99 2 3432
FAIRVIEW HTS. - Lovely
Swiss francs, up from 6.026,
Jeffers, day phone 992 7089,
t1m 1ng cham, pts fons , rings,
1 9 tfc
bnck &amp; f rame, 4 bedrooms, 2
and in Frankfurt at 5.62 Ger- TO JAMES N HARRI S AD
ntght phone 992 3525 or 992
5150 New c lut ch plate , throw
baths , love ly kitchen &amp;
DRESS U NKNOWN , W HO SE
5232
out barrmgs , S25 , 3 speed
man marks, up from 5.608.
LAST KNOWN ADDRESS WAS
dmmg, uttl ity R , about 1
T WO BEDROOM house Forced

Modem Chemicals

•

- -

LEO (July 23·A... 22) You're
going to have the Opportunity.

By Helea ... s. Bottel

TUESDAY, JANUARY 14, 1975
6:0Q-·NEiWS :J,4; ABC News 6; News 8, 10,13, 15; Elec Co. 20; TV.
utilization 33.

news.

urge.

Generallo~ Rap·

Television Log

Dollar For- Fast Results Use Sentinel Classifieds
nudged
2 SIGNS
Pomeroy .j
Business
Services
OF
upward
Motor Co. ~~~~~~~~~·~~~----~~~- -

\

,,

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Jan. 14,197'5~•-•••••••••••••••

6 -The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesda;. Jan. 14, 1975

Berrys World

'

.'

I

•

'

l

�I . ,

..
'

l

'

.

.

QUALITY

.

.

.

a

larry Lavender

POf1~~~E~E~a~I9~ CO. @)

'''I

I

""lt"·iooks to me a~ though you have the ·postSuper Bowl blahs"/"'

D&amp;D

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

COLUMBUS (U P!) - An one or more income brackets.
Ohio
State
Univ ersity He sa id it would counter the
economist says it may be tendency of mflated wages to
swnmer before the Umled place workers in higher tax
States "may be able to begin brackets, and would be felt
stumbling
from
the unmediately by the public m
stranglehold of mflalion " the form of a "ra ise" on the
unless certain strong fiscal next paycheck because of less
policy changes are started now money withheld.
to hasten the nation's recovery.
Cra ig also proposed to
"Even with strong policy reduce 011 unports by applying
changes, it will be well into 1976 a gross tax on ali oil at the
before the unique combination source, whether foreign or
of virulent inflation a nd domestic, to discourage its
stagnant output known as excessive use.
stagflation completely loosens
''However. in order to pre·
its grip on the country," said serve fiscal stimulus m the
Dr. Paul G. Craig, professor of total budget, any reverrue
public administration and derived from an oil tax should
economics.
be offse t by a further reduction
He said if recovery does not of the mcome tax
start before this summer, 1t
"Although gasoline is the
would be the na lion's worst largest single oil user in the
post-World War II economic economy- the one we point our
crisis.
fingers at in anger as being
Craig proposed increasing wasteful- there's no question
the money supply and granting that ali other uses are
a substantial t.ax reduction as wasteful .. Industry, synthetic
ways to hasten the economic matenais - ali of them."
recovery.
"We need to allow the supply
of money to grow more rapidly
than it has recently to allow
Now faith 1s the assurance of
lower interest rates sooner,'' things hoped for, the convlctlon
O'aig said. "By doing that, we of things not seen. For by it tbe
would also stimulate housing m en of old rne1vcd divine apand other business investment. proval . - Hebrews II 1,2
"We also need a tax cut m the
$15-20 billlon range in order to
give the consuming public an
increase in spending power.
The fear that has kept
(President ) Ford from doing 1t
quickly is a result of inflation uy ARNOW 8 . SAWISLAK
and the feeling that lf you
WASHINGTON (UPI ) stimulate the economy, infla- "He violates the rul~ , he
tion will become worse instead treats members unfau-ly and
of going away."
he abuses his power as chairThe economist contends tha t man. " With these charges, the
view is wrong because there is citizen action group Common
"a lot of slack in the economy Cause gives Rep. F. Edward
right now."
Hebert, D·La_, the lowest
"We need an increase in marks on its newly issued
spending just to use the ' 1scorecard' ' of House commit·
economy we have, to enable tee chairmen.
consumers to pull industcy,Pt\[~
The
315,000-member,
of its slack back tow8rd ap:· organization, which lobbies
preaching full use of the extensively m Congress, used
machine," he srud.
these standards -adherence to
He propos~ dropping the rules, use of power and fairpr-esent mcome tax schedule ness to colleagues - m rating

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

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

oROQM;;;der~furn~hed 'f•'~Q.!'!i:;E~LAN-~0~
! ~~P.!":
REALJY"

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

206 BEECH STREET ,
OL E PORT , OHIO

ROUSH JOINS UP
RACINE - Glenn K. Roush,
son of Mr. and Mrs. James
Rou sh, Vine St , Ractne,
enlisted m the United Stales
Air Force Delayed Enlistment
Program Dec 27 . Roush , a
graduate . of Southern H1gh
School, will go on active duty
June 9. taking his Air Force
traming at Lackiand Air Force
Base, San Antonio. Texas.

transmtSSton , $25
3108 after 5 p m

M ID

Cal l

1 10 6tc

In the Common P l eas Court of

Me .gs counry . Ohro. Pomecoy .

Help Wanted

On to, Case No 15,708 , Wil l 1e
Har rts Ptalnf1ff , vs James N
Harrts , Defendant , a Comp ta 1n t WANTED , 4 women , 4 hours a
for dtvorce. exc l uS1\'e custody
day, S4 per hour . 4 days a
of m 1nor child and o th er ret 1ef
week Call for tnter vlew,. 992
7789
has been fi led against you You
1 13 31c
are required to answer the
Comp lamt Wllht n twen t y etght - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - days after tile last pub l tc ation L ARGE comp an y 1n need of full
lime personne l No layoffs ,
poss1ble earntng up to S2SO
Larry Spencer
weekly
Good
futur e
Cl erk of Courts
Ava ilable for ng ht person
Me1gs Coun ty , Oh1o
Call 675 3490 for appo tntment
(1 2l 10, 17 , 24 , 31 ( 1)7, 14 , 6t c
I 9 6tC

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

WA I T RESSES needed , app l y tn
person Crow 's Stea k House ,
Pomero y
l 1 tfc

-------------Mobile Homes For Sale

atr heat, storm
wmdows,
basement ,
drtveway ,
ava tl ab te after January IS
Ca ll 992 3381 or 99 3 3453
1 9 6tp

-------------For Sale

rear $26,000.
TUPPERS PLAINS -

2 11 ttc

-EXCELSIOR
-------------Salt Works, Ea st

Pacer gets

level ac re. ranch type home.
&amp;
dining, hardwood floors,

2 BR. bath, mce kitchen

6: oo-Sunrise Seminar 4.
6 · 25-Farm Report 13,

6: 30--Five Minutes to L1ve By 4; News 6; Brble Answers 8,
School Scene 10; The Story 13.
6:35-Columbus Today 4
6 45- Morning Report 3; Farmtlme 10.
, 7:1l0-Today 3,4,15; AM A"merlca 6; CBS News 8,10; A M.
'

America 13.

1

·8:011-Captaln Kangaroo 8, Lassie 6; Popeye 10 , Sesame Streel
13.
a 25-Captain Kangaroo 10.
. 8:3Q-Big Valley 6.
: 9·1l0-A.M. 3; To Be Announced 4; Phil Donahue 15 ; Bullwinkle
8, Morning with OJ 13.
9·25-Chuck Wh 1te Reports 10.
9· 30--Not For Women Only 3; Dinah! 6; Haze lS; Tattletales 10 ,
New Zoo Revue 13.

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

REFRIGERATOR , dinette set,
range , stud10 couch, bedroo m
SUit , p latf or m ro cke r , a ll l i ke
new A nt tqu e chairs, an ti ~ue
bedroom suit and many other
items Phone 992 3457
1 9-6tc

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

GROCERY business for sale
Butldtng for sale or lea se
Phone 773 -561 8from 8 30p m
to 10 p . m for appointment
3 10 tfc

heat, ulil1ly R. A REAL
BARGAIN $13,500
PORTLAND - 4 nrce level
lots, (good ground) close to
river, good drilled well and
block garage, storage bldg .,
large house, 4 BR . ONLY
$4,700
ALL CA SH FOR YOUR
HOME, LET US SELL FOR
YOU.
992-2259 or 992-2568
HOUSE , $5,000

Phon e 992 -5871
1 12 18t c

-------------SEPT IC - TA NKS
cl eaned

Modern Sa n ilation , 99 2-3954 or
992 7349
9 18 -tfc

green light

RA C I NE, OHIO PHONE 949
3604
12 19 26tc

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

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

~~~i~~i':i£

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

FUEL OIL·

HEATERS

''

;

I ' ,•,

I

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

eent.

Listen to Great

Country Stereo

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

WMPO-FM
92.1 .

____________

1

'

Aging 20.

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

7:30--Pollce Surgeon 3; Name That Tune 4; Let's Make A Deal
6; Wilburn Brothers 8; The Judge 10. To Tell The Truth 13 ;
Book Beat 20; Episode Action 33.
B:Oil-LIItle House on the Prairie 3,4,15; That's My Mama 6,13;
Tony Orlando and Dawn 8, 10; Feeling Good 20;; Sinners 33.
8: 3Q-Movle "The Hatflelds and the McCoys.'' 13; Movie "Love
Hate Love 6.
9: 00-Lucas Tanner 3,4, 15; Cannon B, 10;What Makes A Good

Father :W; Masterpiece Theatre 33.
10· DO- Petrocelli 3,4, 15; Gel Christie love 6, 13; Manhvnter 8, 10;
News 20; Family At War ·33.

. 14

UTTLE

do well today In dealings with
Individuals who come from
places distant from where you
were born

the next few days you should
be able to figure ways to derive
more profits and benefits from
worl( or career.

'
"
SCORPIO (Oct. 24--Now. 22)
Th" manner In which you con.

duct yourself Is being favorably
observed , especially when you
use your originality

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23- Doc.

2-t) You will be offered
something lor your home by a
frlen~ 1 He no longer has a need

for
It. 'tou wilt.
'

C~~RICORN (Dec. 22-Jao,

11) If you have some time to·
day, l:let In touc h with a friend
who has been on your mind
She may have aome Interesting

t.est. ,,

It's hearing your friend tell you that he's gomg through a
stage, but she doesn't look you in the eye when she says, "Don't
worry, he'll be back."
lt'sseeing less and less of him, and realizing that he's trying
to taper off so you won 't be TOO upset when he finally ends it.
· It's realizing you can't stick a rambling man to one specific
girl when it's his nature to play the field.
And It's wishing you could change all that ... but you can't.ANNIE

~(!]IM[;l~;"'-J ==-~ -.J c:
Unoc:ramble !hue rwr Jumbteo,

one letter to ll!!ar:h square, to

""-"'

form four ordinary worda.

01 1

(J

tTINEKil
\SUFSO

You're likelY to do more travelIng this year than you have tof
some time Though the trips
won't be long ones, they'll be
fun and quite unusual.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Food
1 Actor,
fish
Robert5 Emhar2 Fi~ish
rassment
lake
10 Single
3 Paid a
II Dull
hurried
teacher
visit
13 Deplane
(2 wds.)
14 11 A
4 Rembrandt,
Clockw!ll"k
e.g.
(2 wds.)
IS Ape or
S Intermittent
gorilla
6 Present
17 Mineral
7 Ohio college
18 Legislate
town
19 SqU)IBb
8 Horse
zo Timorous
known as
21 Brandish
"Big Red"
22 Social
9 Etch

..

class

Yestenlay's,Auwer
12 Seesaw
11 Yearn
19 Errol
Flynn
often played
one
22 Wyoming
city
23 City in
Oregon

z-++--+-

...
HOW "TH!: CAP"TAti'J
5L.EPi AFiE~
I
ON 1--115 FI:ECQ1l:l75.

!

Now arranp the dreled !etten
to lorm the o111'1lriae ONWet, u
ouneot.ed b)' the abcrf• cartoon.

(A.-wen

t.-ot1'0w)

J...W..• CABLE FAINT HAIRDO PANTRY
.

,

.

AXYDLIIAAXII
LONGJ'BLLOW

II

One letter almply atandl lor another. In lhla aample A II
und lor the threo L'a, X lor tho two O'a, ete. Slnrle lellera,
apootrophea, the leneth and lorrnatlon ot the word• are aU
hints. Each day the code !ellen are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE
USRGFSI!F
KLP

L

CIEMDREMC

CMUIWF

ORCRD

WMOMY . - LWWL

AMwen Th.111 kmd ollllan m1qlat IJe upaell1ng - BANANA

ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE

EAST

:&gt;8
'10 5
•AQJ862
tA10752
• 96 3
.10 9 8 7
.Kl3
SOUTH
· : : ,7K/ 106 2

'.

.52
North-South vulnerable

North East

South

INT
Pass

4.

Pass

Openmg lead - 10 •
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Four spades by North would
be an ironclad contract, but
North and South were not using
transfer bids and South wound
up as the spade declarer
Wesl opened the 10 of hearts.
South could have insured his
contract by playing dummy's
kiqg but instead played small.
East played the deuce of
hearts, whereupon West shifted
to 'the 10 of clubs Dummy's
Jack lost to East's king. East
cash!'d the ace of hearts and
then made the mistake of
lea ding a trump
!' Chucked and possibly
rechucked," murmured South.
"I should have put up the kmg
or" hearts at trick one."
Then South won the spade;
ruffed h1s last heart and ran off
all h1s trumps .
:!'be last trump lead squee•ed
\'(l!st. He had to discard a club
ir. order to retam his ace of
d[llmonds Now South discarded
t he last diamond from d~y
aDd made the last three tr~cks
with dummy's ace.queen and SIX
oCciubs

-

BORN LOSER

•

ABNER

• WHILe TH&amp;: DOGAO.TCH&amp;:RS SWIE.I&lt;T" A&gt;JD smAI'-l TO CAI&gt;\Ie A N~
our CF TH!i WCRT'HC!ESS SID&lt;' OF "11-E f'OUNrAI '-l - -

GIWIPEI&gt; DOGPA1CH
~

TH6 CITY o.;VELOPi51Q6 NtG
CREATI'-l6 A SPI.IiNDICJ. f(
~W

WXLIRY HOTli'l--

_,...._"

~fo!EWSPAI't::~ ENTERPRISE ASSN l

~:en

;1•!rf";,;ey r1

~ The bidding has been: 14
Nortb Ease .South

w!st

•

Pass

I.

I•

Pass

I•

Pass 3 •
Pass '
You South. hold :
.-K/643 ¥ A2 t9. A K 7 3 2
What do you do now "
A - Bid foar butts. For••• lluot
y011 ban five spades.

TODAY'S QUESTION

Instead of rebidding three hearts
your partner bas jumped to three
notrpmp over your one spade. Whit
do yor do now'
Send ,
, JACOBY MOqERN
book )0 vVm af Bridge.' lclo
this newspaper}. P.O Box -/Bg,
Radio City Station. N~w York ,
NY 10019
v

I

2.
Pass

'·

I
'

'l
-.

ELW;

YLEMCIW

SUPPORT A MAN THROUGH GREAT FATIGUE.- JAMES

MONROE

.

01

F I MC

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: A LITI'LE FLATrERY WIU.

• 43

West

24 The Lady
of 25 Curse
27 Encircle
3G Custom
31 J ewlsh
feast
33 Trai!B8ction
34 Make anew
3t Couple

2S Shipworm
28 Court
star
27 Civil War
vets' org.
Z8 Sheriff's
badge
Z9 Pertaining
to
commerce
(abbr.)
32 N01ghbor of 1
Czech.
r.
33 Piece of
furniture
35 Gnawed
37 Constructed
38 Ceremony hr-t-+39 Elderly
40 Mexican
mush
41 Actor,
Franco -

•K4
t K Q8
.AQJ6
WEST

11, 1171

~~,rl

PIJDS

I

...ft.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

YAUG

Yeltent.y••

12: 3Q-Wlde World Special 6.
1: oo-Tomorrow 3,4,; News 1~ ~

You'll do you r best thinking to- ,
day under pressure, Or If you're
on the spot and have tO come
\JP with an answer.

It's hearing what "good friends" he and Linda are.
It's telling htm, "I love you," andgettingno answer.
It's thinking the best times you ever bad were spent with
him.
It's being happy that you have to work so that you won't
worry about him so much.
It's not getting upset in front of him, because you know he's
too nice to break up with you when he knows you will be unhappy.
It's him asking you to share him with other girls, "just as a

10 .3D-Yoor Future Is Now :W.
11 :011-News 3.4,6 ; News 8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
11.30--Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Wide World Special 13; FBI 6;
Hec Ramsey 8; Movie " Tiger By The Tall ; 10; Janakl 33.

Watch South at work

will unexpectedly pop up.
PISCES(Feb.20-MniiZOl You

LIBRA (Sop!. 2S·Oct. U) Over

Lucy Show 6, Match Game 8, 10;

WIN AT BRIDGE

.'

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

·---------------

.'3:JO-One Life to Live 13;

the Lmes 20 ;. Know Your Schools 33.

bugging you
VIRGO (AUf. 23-Sopt. 22)

tJ4

NEIGLER BUILDING SUP
F'LY FOR REMODELING
AND KITC HEN CABINETS.
CALL GUY NE IGHLE R.

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

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

Tomorrow 8,10; To Be Announced 33.

· 12:45-Eiectrlc Company 33.
12:55- NBC News 3,15.
. J; Oil-News 3; All My Children 6. 13; Phil Donahue 8; Young and
~ · the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 13
1:Jo-How To Survive A Marriage 3,4,15; Let's Make A Deal
· 6, 13; As The World Turns 8, 10.
2:1l0-Days Of Our Lives 3,4,15; $10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Gu iding
" Light 8, 10.
2 30--Doctors 3,15,4; Big Showdown 6,13; Edge of Night 8,10.
). 30--Another World 3.4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13; Price Is
Right 8,10; RFD 20.

5.1l0-FBI 3; Merv Griffin 4; Andy Griffith 8; Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood 21!.33; Raymond Burr 13.
5•30--News 6, Beverly Hl11blllles 8; Hodgepodge Lodge :Wk ;
Trails West 15; Electric Company 33.
6:1l0-News 3,4; ABC News 6; News 8,10,13,15; Electric Company :W, lTV Utilization 33.
6 30--NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Bew1tched 6; CBS Newo
8,10; Zoom 21!; Your Future Is Now 33.
7:011-Truth or Conseqvences 3,4; Bowling for Dollars 6; What's
My Line? 8; News 10; Jerry Lee. lewis 13 ; I Spy 15; Behind

change something t hat's been

..

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

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

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

ll:Jo-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Brady Bunch 6; love Of Life
B.10; Sesame Street 33.
n :55- Take Kerr with Graham K&lt;rr 8; Dan Imel's World 10;
, News 13. ·
~2: 011-Ja c kpot! 3,15; Password All Stars 6,13 , Bob Brdaun's 5050 Club 4; News 8, 10.
12:30-- Blank Check 3, 15; Split Second 6, 13 ; Search For

E XC -AVA T I N G •

water system , good concre te

Bonznza 15.

8,10.

• Q9 75

"' ... : e r ,
backhoe,
and
d ttcher,
waterline , footers, dra1n s.
roads , and brush c leant ng , no
rob too small, no weather too
bad Char l es R Hatfield , Rt I
Ru tl an d , 0
Phone 742 6092
I 7 26tc

Dear Helen and Sue :
·
I've collected all yo11r "What Is A" columns. Now here's a
personal one: What Is the End of a Fantastic Relationship?"
It's realizing that his comforting face will soon comfort some
other girl.
It's being told "We 're too serious," and "I'm tired of being
tied down," when you were just begirmlng to like it.
.
It's rememberlng all the times you weren't too sure, because
YOU liked freedom too - but you didn't tell him, not wanting to
hurt him.
,
.
Too bad those feelings couldn't have come at the same time
for you both.
It's his forgetting to kiss you good-bye, and tht telephone call
that doesn't come, and the sports practice used as an excuse.
4:1l0-Mr. Cartoon 3; I Dream Of Jea~nle 4; Somerset 15;
Gill igan's Island 6 ; Tattletales 8; Sesame Street 20,33;
Movie "'Teenage Rebel" '10; Mike Douglas 13.
4: Jo-Bewltched 3; Jackpot! 4; IW&gt;d Sqvad 6; Lucy Show 8;

10·DO-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3.15; Joker's Wild 8, 10, Movie
" " My Friend Irma" 13
:10·30--Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Phil Donahue 4; GambitS,10.
" 1l :ll0-High Rollers 3,15, One Life to Live 6; Now You See It

NORTH (DI

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

• I

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY ll, 1975

Ma1n St. , Pomeroy All k1nds
of salt, wa te r p el l ets, water
nuggets, bloc k sa lt and own
OhiO R t'Jer Salt . F'hone 99 2
] 891.
6-S-Ifc

1

basement w1th f orced a1r

1971 F M C Astro Wtth wet I m e,
1974 tra i l mob1le f lat tra1 1er
F'hone (304l 882 2829
I 12 6tc

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

acre, nice workshop In the

x 55' M O BI LE ho me, new
ca rpet diShwasher, 52 gal JE R SEY Guernsey mil k cow t o
hot water h ea t e r , $3,500 .
fre shen so on Also, Heref ord BUILO IN
b y 165ft
Phone 985 3373
mlx:e d ca l\' eS, 3 weeks old
on Riverv
Phone 843 2353
I 12 3tp
H 111, Pom
1 12 5tc
tere s ted c al!
TRAILER for rent or sale, 3
m
bedrooms , uo lurn 1she d , FIREWOOD for sale
Phone
ut!11!res paid , l ocated at n ew
7112 5387
Mob1le
Home
Pa rk
1n
1- 12-Jtp
Bu r l tng ha m Ph one 992 775 1
12 31 ttc ELECTRIC togs With h~ater ,
never used , S40 , 8 gallon
automa tt c humtdtf l e r , $3 0
Phon e 9t.l 2 7291 afte r 4 p m .
1 12 trc
OLD furn1ture , tee boxes. brass
beds, or complete households
1970 Z 28 CA MARO and 2
Wrtte M D Miller , Rt ' I C ,
hor se tr aile r Phone 992 -733 8.
Pom er oy , Oh1o Ca ll 99 2 7760
1 12 6tc
1() 7-74
SINGER
tr ead le
sewmg
J UNK autos , comp lete ,and
mac hin e, S20 , Two good 0 11
del 1v ered t o our yard We PICk
heaters W1lh therm os ta ts and
up auto bod1es and buy all
b lowers, both for S100 F'h one breez
ay,
ag
ost
k+nds of scr ap met als and
367 7729
an
acre.
$18,500.00.
1r on R1der ' s Sa l ... age , St Rt
1- 12 31 p
124, R 1 4, P a m ero y, Ohio .
Call 992 5468
CLOSE IN - 6 room frame
KENMORE 36 1n push button
10 17 ftc
elect r. c range , excellen t home. bath . electric heat,
cond1tron Phone 992 5385
garage and level lot
CASH patd for all makes and
1 13 3t c
' mode ls of mob il e homes
NEAR STORES - 3 bedrooms
F'hone area code 614 423 953 1
4-l3tfc ELECTROLUX Sweeper deluxe w 1th r;:tosets, bath, nat. gas
model. Complete w1 th all
c lean 1ng attachments and F.A. furnace, porches , wall to
uses paper bags . Slightly used wall carpeting, good paneling
but c leans and looks like new
and large foyer . $17.500.00.
W tll sell for $37 25 cas ll or
AU...:TlON ,
T hursday
and
terms available Phone 992
Saturday n1ght , 7 p m at
LOOK AT THIS- 49 acres tust
7755
Mason Auct10n , Hort on St 10
ott
124. Water tap and lots of
!2·1Brtc
Mason , w va Con signme nts
frontage on water line . Nice
we lcome Pllon e (304) 77J
Site for houses, or sma ll farms.
547 1
s1~ . oon no
SIEGLER and
1o 3 ttc
10'

15 senior Democrats who seek
re-election this week.
Common Cause said Hebert,
chairman of the key Armed
Services Committee,
"flagranUy violates" ail three.
It said six other chalnnen
engaged in "se rious" or
';.significant" violations and
seven others had shortcomings
not as serious.
Only Chairman Peter W.
Rodino , 0-N.J., of the
Jud1ciary Committee was not

992

cnlicized.
The
report,
-------~---- --· published Monday, did not
touch on five new chairmen
P IANO
tunm g and repair,
Charles Scott. 992 37 1S..
who inherited co mmittees
12 -13 32tp
from last session.
C BRADFORD, Aucttoneer
C&lt;lmmon Cause said there
Comp lete Servt ce
were specific mstances of
Phone 949 -382 1 or 949 -3 161
Ra c in e, Oh 10
violating rules or standards of --------------Cntt Bradford
fairness. Sll11llll8li!lng Hebert,
5 1-tfc
Wanted To Buy
----------~ -- -it said: "he has denied subSEP.TIC tank s, excava t.ng
conunittee chairmen the right
dump truck Phone 742 374 2 ' 1
12 20-26tc
to hire their own staff; he
harasses and discriminates
F'&amp;J
Hom e
Matntenance , ,.
heat1ng , coo11ng, re frig ., ~
against members who disagree
p!~mblng,
elec t rical ap ~
with hlm ; he creates 'special'
p l 1ances . we se r vtce and
r epatr an y tmg 1n the home or •
subcommittees to evade
bUSin ess
215 N
Secon d , ,
ca ucus rules regarding subMtddleport . P hon e 992 3509 . ,.
1 9 JOt c
committee jurisdiction; he
' '
used his chairmanship to op; u RNIT u 'RE-u--;;ho!sfe~ing ,
Reaso nabl e
rates,
free
pose the caucus policy against
est1mates ,
picku p
and
further funding of the Indeltvery , prompt ser\'tceMowrey ' s Upho lster y, Point
dochina war ; and he fails to
Pl easant , w va Phon e 675
carry out his responsibility to
41 54
KENOSHA, Wis. (UP!) insure that the Armed Services
12 J1 26tp'
Full scale production began C&lt;lnunittee conducts effective Notice
Monday on the· American oversight of the Pentagon. "
AKRON, Ohio (UllW - family worth betweetrQtte-I!Aif Motors C&lt;lrp. Pacer, a four- , Hebert called the report "so
Nationally syOIU)~te d 1 ,~to)JL5 billion and ~rd . L. passenger ''wide small" car ridiculous , misleading and dis·
colutnnist Jack AAlitQ,n, ~ellon paid no federal' lncome described as the first all-new torted as not to justify a
delivering what he terme!Ffili!- -tmres for three years," he said. development in car design in 25 comment." He said he got his
own State of the · Union
"J. Paul Getty frequently years.
power "by unanimous vote of
MONOGRAM
DO YOU HAVE A NICE
message at Akron University has paid no fede ral income
AMC sa1d il scheduled the conunittee" and always CONSIGNMENTS wet'Come at
LARGE OLDER HOME THAT
P&amp;J Auction , 215 NOrth
YOU WANT TO SELL
here Monday night said he has taxes at all. We are paying production of more than 500 of acted on the basis of a majority
Second , Middleport
no confidence in PreSldentlal~"4axes for hin1. My lax t;eturnoiiil:tlfe new' cars daily to ljssure VIlle . . •
,
1 9 30tc
We N~ed A BUnch of Small ·
economic !Ullership.
"~i-..' ~~e to 50 per cent, but NelsOn;...;!!!~ dealers would have ~n
"lf41:'Ybody can show where AUCTION SAL E , startinc;i"
1(((
Fnd ay , Jan 17 at 7 p m 215
"I don 't mow much ahou!lfeller pa~d no taxes·at all : ~uate supply of Pacers by i haft · violated the majority
Second , M i ddlepor t
At
N
-said Apso
70."
•
. _:f'iflirch 1, when it W!lf.'iie m- • Vllte of my conunittee, I'll step
Pr.i ced for Quick Sale
..1))
P&amp;J Odds and E·nds .
"but I
disturbed that · ' '
erson
sa id ' the ·-~ced to the public.
down," Hebert told UP!.
1-9-Btc
1 N'ew Wood Burning
know
than the ~ ,;_.
Corp. had a $6.5 billion
The car features rack and
"Three chairmen, (George)
SAYRE HARDWARE
HEATER-139.95
H UMAN E Societv Thnft Shop
:=:net:lli-o!it in 1973, boil paid a pinion steering, unusually wide Mahon of Appropriations,
across from Pomerov Pos t 1
~ !POMEROY LANDMARI( 1
882-2525 New Haven, W. Va. -.r
Offtce, c l earance on winter
otW~ter;,'\_corporate tax. of 5.5 per cent wheel t read , independent (W.R.) l'oal!e of ~lure
~~·.: Jack W. Carsey, Mgr .
clot hing , ha ndm ade fur
..,
doll!! kruM'~hile · the national
rage frontcoll and rear leaf 811\\. (W~)..illa)!S tlf .~e
..at
Phone 9t2-2111
n tture ,
open
Fr1day
Saturday
he sail!:"1lJillt,;
~ate tax was!'a"
~~pension system and a 22:. ~sh~,~:-[11
. '
I 14 4tc
slirpaSSed.by~~".W~'ve been pa~ •- their gallon !rank
. .
-of
....
~llliRS'•(and )
1957 CHEVY parts
NEW
-T-;;-p~pa~;d-b;;rri Lakewood t ract ion bars , hi the
situation ltds ~taxes and giving ll'iii'i wttfare,
Design ·features mclilde a three c a1~metl ,- . (Ray ) INCOME
•
Federal
and State Taxes W11!
jacker air s,ocks, hooker
year."
he said."
fast-sloping bood;"'liflgate rear Madden of Rules, (Wright)
be done by appointments ~ hea der:s, with 3" collectors for
only Please phone 992 -2272 or
Anderson predicted unemsmall b lock
Call 992 3496
Anderson also said historv is window, expansive windshield Patman of Banking and
see Mrs Wanda Ebl i n , Laurel
after 6 P. m BEST OFFER .
' plol'Jilent will reach 8 per cent going to report the entire and side viewing areas and a CUrrency and HouSing and
Cl +ff Rd , Pomeroy , Oh +o
10 17tfc
!bing 1975, saying that figure Watergate scandal had a . cur_bside door that is four ll1- (Harley ) Staggers of CoolJ. J JOtc --------------.
could go to 10 per cent if tough wholesome affect upon our ches lqnger than the door on merce and Health, show
KENMORE 36 inch Push Button
El ec tr tc Range , Exce llent
economic policies are not government.
the fit:iver's side to provide Significant shortcOIIUOgs," the For Rent
condit1on . Phone 992 5385 .
"
passed by .CongrfS$.
_
I ,, "The presidency was weakeeasy rear seat access.
repQrt said.
1 13 3tc
4 RM apt . turn 1Siled, ut rl tlies
,. ,
td , one cll1ld accepted Joh n
He charged every program ·1 ~;Jthe congress made stronAMC said head room, leg
David Cohen, a Copunon. pa
Sheets,
3
m
ties
soutt1
of
CLOSE OUT on new Z ig Zag
and policy President Ford has ' gor,'1 ~e said. "NIXon is in room and width of the split Cause vice president, said the Middleport
sewi ng machtrtes F!or sewing
I 14 6tp
set up seems slanted toward clear emotional distress , front seat equal or exceed moot judgments in the study were
stretch fabrics , buttonholes ,
- Consumer line, 7:50a.m., 1:20 p.m. , 8:50 p.m
tlie rich.
filncv de signs. etc . Pa tnf
- Social Security, 9:SO a.m., 2:50p.m ., 8:,50 p.rn.'
unable to remember Leon Intermediate apd larger cars. made by hitnself and by the 5 ROOM unfu rn1sheCf house ,
slightly tr&gt;lemtstied Cho•ce of
- Job Opportunities, 2:'00 p.m., 10:00 p.m .
"The ' wealtliiest family in Jaworski's nam~ and Richard
basement and vard . J2S
Gov. Patrick J . IAlcer drove 'organization staff on the b3Sls
carrying c ase or sewing
.'"
Sprmg Ave.nue References .
stand S49 so cash or terms
- Th£ Ra lph Emery Show, 4:15p.m.
America is the Melons "with Nixon is a president m exile." the ceremonial first Pacer off of personal knowledge, int.er.,
Pllone 991 7660
ova noble Po one 992 7755
GREAT COUNTRY STEREO PR_OM' AM T012 M!D
..
individual member$ of that
1 8-tfc
...._
__
the final assembly line.
views and r~arch .
1'2-18-tfc
1
-

Columnist wary
o_f Ford leading

Her Gently" 10. 10 , News 13 ..

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

Hebert down on scoreboard
"

-----&lt;..::::: ______ _'_.'_'

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

Someone Is willing to do

l :DO-Tomorrow3,4; Mov ie " Venge!nce Valley 11 8; Movie "K ill

1

For Wodnoodor, Jjln. 15, 1t75
ARIES (Morell 21-April 11)

~

AQUARIUS (...... 20-Pell. 11)
You're In another one of your
short cycles where sudden OP·
portu nltles for personal gain

you've ' b een looking for to

their mothers, I think:
. .
- e lhlng for you she wouldn't
I wish I had a ruckle for every tune I hurt my mother by an do for others 11 could be
uncalled for remark or fresh retOrt when all she was dolnjl: was. awkward for her It others wore
lrying to help. So many times, I'd ask her advice; then, when she 10 learn of it.
gave an honest answer, I'd resent it, being absolutely sure she TAURUII c;f;Prit 2D-Mi1J 201 A
was wrong. And when I found out differenUy, I hardly ever told friend will mal&lt;e o quick decl·
her so ... thoughshe probably knewlwassorry .
slon bn ~~·r behalf, ,.tthoul
your knowledge . You 'll be
She was often that which I did not want her to be .a t that
ple~sed IQ learn why she made
pr-ecise moment - and I was quick to show my embarrassment lhli move.
or tlispleasure. Looking back, I discover she was right far more BIMINI (Mar 21-Juna 20)
often than not.
Something unexpected and
How many times I took out my frustration on my mother,
unusual will occur of benetll to
saw the hurt on her face , and didn't care, because it made me you. It concerns your personal
ambitions.
feel better to lash out at someone.
Why do 1wish 1had a nicltle for each hurt I gave her? So that CANCER (1- 21-.lutr 22)
f
Keep your plana fo r todll)' as
I could put all those nickles together and get enou gh money or flexible 1 ., po11 tble. Be free 10
plane fare back to see her again! - LOOKING BACK
do so mething "fun " and
P.S. Too often we must become wives and mothers ourselves different when you gar !he
before we realize just how much we needed and need our parents.

9: Jo-Woman 21! ; Witness to Yesterday 33.
• 10 llO-PollceStory3,4,15; Marcuo Welby, M.D. 4,6,13; NBAAII Star Game 8, 10 ; News 20; Sounds tag• 33 .
10 3Q-Your Future Is Now 20.
11 :DO-News 3.4,6, 13, 15, ABC News 33
' 11 30--Johnny Ca rson 3,4,15; Wide World Mystery 13. FBI 6;
Janakl 33.
c 12: 30--Wide World Mystery o. News 8,10.

CONSTRUCTION

---------

Fiscal changes
needed now says
OSU economist

News 8.10, Zoom 20; Your Future 15 Now 33

7 OO'o-Trvth or Cons. 3,4; Bowling for Dollars 6; What's My Line
8; News 10; Name That Tune 13 ; High School TV Honor
Society 15; Antique~ :W; L1llas Yoga &amp; You 33 .
7 3D-Hpllywood Squares 3; 4; Wild Wild World of Animals 6 ;
Buck Owens 8; New Pr ice Is Right 10; To Tell The Truth 13,
To Be Announced 15 ; RFD:W; Marco Sporptte 33.
8·011-Adam 12 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13; ·Good Times 8,1 0;
America 20,33.
s· Jo-Mbvie "The Dead Don't Die" 3,4,15.; Movie "Satan's
Triangie" 6.13; Mash 8,10; Ascent of Man 20,33.
9·1l0-Hawaii F1ve-O a:10.

Fire Retardant
Insulation

HE I,I.
RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

The Voice of j!:xperleoce
J
Dear Rap :
·
.
As 1 read the many letters from young people who fight With

' 6·3ll-&lt;1·3Q-NBC News3,4.15; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6; CBS

..

BRUSSELS (UP! I - Pre·
1974 CHEVROLET IMPALA
·
$4295
s1denl Ford's plan to realign
1
4 door , 1 owner car, and only 10,400mJ ies, V 8 engme. w1th
the inflation-ridden U.S.
autorrat1c, ppwer s teering , power "brakes. factory a1r ,
economy outweighed low
100 Kerr Street
lin ted gt.asS; ,de,lu xe body and wtreel opening moldings.
Amencan Interest ru"les and
Pomeroy, Ohio
sanQ!5tone' vtny l seats, beaut• ful dark red f1n1sh TRULY A
CRE'AM PUFF
Phone (614) 992-2798
nudged the dollar upward
Blown Into Walls
Complete plumbing &amp;
today on foreign exchange
and Attics
STRIPPING - FINISHES
1974 0PEL MANTA. Was $2895 NOW
heating service and
$2695
markets
FURNITURE-METALS-ETC.
Free Estimates
2 Door , 4 speed transmiSSIOn , bucket sea ts, rad10, 5.000
general sheet metal
MODERN &amp; ANTIQUE
In Paris, the dollar bounced
a~ tual mdes, or ange finish , v1nyl mtermr
works.
Free
Refmtshing - Repairing
back from" 16--month low. .
Burnishtng
Estimates.
Caning
The price of gold fell back
1973 DATSUN 12002 DR. CPE.
$2250
Upholstering.
Phone 949-5961
'
below the $180 an ounce level.
Local I owner ca r &amp; only 20,000 mil es, automatic trans ,
We Also Buy Antiques
Phone 992-3993
rad
to,
whl
te.walt
t1res,
vmy
l
1
nten
or,
sharp
as
a
tack
Emergency 992-3995
The American cu rr ency
Pick -up Service Availabl e
Daily After 5:00
Orange fmtsh:
or 992-5700
opened at 4.41 French francs ,
up from Monday's closing
'
HOME
Improvement
and
pnce of 4.3875, the lowest rate
Repatr Servtce Anything
For
Rent
f•)(ed around the home, from
for the dollar sislce the Sept.ll,
root to basement You will
CO
UNTRY
Mobile
Hom
e
Park
,
1973 low of 4.365.
POME-ROY, OHI 0
ltke our work and rates
Rt 33 ten miles north of
Phone 742 508 1
"We had expected the dollar ·--------------------------------------------~ Pomeroy Large lots w tth
·I
12 29 tfc
PHONE
concrete
paltos
sidewalks,
·
to strengthen much rriore, " a
949-3832 or 843-2667
Notice
Auto Sales
r unners
afld
o ff
street CARPE T 1nstallalton , $1 25 per
spokesman for a leadmg ~UR your
parking Pr,one 992 747 9
yard
Phone
Rtcllard
West,
All Types of
Cosmetics "O il of Mtnk " 1972 SUPER Beetle Volks
12 31 ti C
French bank said.
843 2667
Phone BROWN' S
wag en Phone 992 3981
99'} 5113
BUILDING
12 24 26t p'
"In fact, 111 France the gain
1 8 I Otc l BEDROOM house 1n Rutland
I 7 lfc
and
REMODELING
------------Ca
l
l
even1ngs
,
992
77
45
IS not too large. We wonder
match Rac1ne Gun 1966 COR VA I R , good bOdy, good
1 12 Jlp
whether the improvement w1ll SHOOTING
From a shelf to a house.
ttres runs fatr , uses Otl. $200, ----Employment Wanted
Cl ub , Sunday 1 p m Assorted
or
trade
for
someth1
ng
of
Painting,
siding/ rooling,
meats dnd factory choke guns
be lasting and will halt the slow
only
equal va tue Call evenings , 3 ROOMS and bath, f urniShed, REMODELING,
plumbing ,
paper hangtng , kitchen
ntce
and
c
l
ean
Phone
992
decline of the dollar."
98 5 3545
heatmg
and ~ types of
12 22 tfc
2937
cabinets, expert carpeting,
general
repatr
WorK
1 8 Si p
Gold opened 1n Zunch at
etc.
1 12 6tp
- - - -----------guaran t eed
20 years ex
$179, down from Monday's Found
1965 PLYMOUTH tn need o r - ------------ - penence Ph one 992 '409
some mechan tc a l work , body J and 4 ROOM furn1slled and
1 J 12tc REA D Y MIX CO NCREfE de
close of $180.75, and in London
l tvered righ t to your pro1ec1
and tn f erwr 1n great shape
- - - -----------.
unfu rn iShed
apartments
ONE
BOX
and
sack
of
clothes
at $178, down $2.25 overrught.
Fast
an d
easy
Free
SI
SO
Call
992
31
46
Phone
992
5434
and reltg1ous pamph l ets tn
esttmares Phone 992 3284
t
14
1tp
By mid-morning, London
ou r ca r Owner 1den t 1fy and
4 12 tfc
Goegle 1n Ready Mtx Co .
pay tor ad Phon e 991 2969
Reai' Estate For Sale
bullion dealers marked the
M tddleport Oh1o
4 sp
PRIVA TE meetrng room for
1 12 Jtc 1968 CHEVE L L E 327
6 30 tf c
OLD 4 rm house on 2 lot s tn
POSIItve t r act1on. rea r end .
an y organ1zaflon , pl'1one 992
price down to $176.50.
Sy r acuse Best o ff er Phone
3975
good body and tnlertor $650
In Frankfurt, the dollar
992 5898
SEWING MACHINE, Repair S,
Phone 992 7489
3 11 ti c
all ma kes, 992 2284
NOTICE
OF
1 14 ltp
gained less than one pfenning,
_l' c servtce.
The Fabric Shop, F'omeroy ,
PU Bl! C SALE
FURNISHED ap t Adu l ts on l y
-------------opening at 2.39 German marks TO WHOM I T MAY . CO N 1973 OLDSMOB IL E Cu tl ass S,
Aut horized Singer Sales 8nd
Mtddleport Phone 992 3874
3 BED~OOM h ouse, $500 down,
Se rvi ce. we sharpen Sc+ ssors
p s , p b , and factory atr
compared with Monday's close CER N
$90 mon th Phon e 992 3975 or
lll41fc
3 29 lfc
Not1ce 1S her eby given that on
25 500 mt les
Ca ll 992 3914
992 257 1
of 2.3825. In Zurich, it opened January 21st, 197 5, at 10 00 AM
afler Sp m
1 3 ttc
space , 1 miles from
1 111 6tp TRAILER
only fractionally h1gher at a pub l ic sa t e Wtll be he ld at
Pomeroy
,
Rt
143,
Phone
992
DOZER work, la nd ct eanng by
1h.
;-;QoMho~s-;,-~lh-a~d
Pomeroy Motor Company,
5858
2.5625 SwiSS francs.
the acre, hourly or contract
Pomeroy , Oh10 to sell for c ash 1969CHEvR0LErl;pa~~ dr
exce llen t neighborhood, wall
F arm ponds, roads, etc
10 27 -tfc
sedan Call 992 7240
to wall carpe t tng , large to t.
In Amsterdam, the dollar the foll owing collateral , to Wt f
--------------Large
dozer and operator
1967 Po 1nt tac . 252697P310785,
ga
ra
ge
,
reasonable
\Jfll
1
11eS
I 14 3tp
with over 20 years ex
advanced JUS! over one cent to sa1d collateral bemg held to
F URNISHED
apa rtm ent.
Ca ll 992 3877
penence Putlms Excavating.
ut ilit1es turntshed , su ttabl e
1 9 tfc
open at 2.4825 guilders . In secure an obltgat1on a ris1ng 1960 CHEVROLET , 6 cy l
Pomeroy , Oh1o Phone 99 1
for two worKtng men or
under a ret all tnstalm ent
standard Call 992 7869 after 4
London, the dollar opened 32.5 secur ity agreemen t held by pm
2478
r e ttred co up l e L 1v in g room ,
12- 19 ti c
kitchen , shower a nd bath On
tradmg points higher, the General Motors Accpetance
1 12 3t c
matn h1ghway , Mason , W Va
Corporatton as secured party
peund retreating from $2.35375 Sa1d publt c sale 1s to be con RARE
Phon e 773 5147
19 69
P ly moutll
Vii L L tr im or c ut tr ees or
10 27 tf c
dueled accordtng to the laws of
to $2.3505.
Barracuda fastba ck, f actory ,
shrubb ery ,
clea n
ou t
the State of O.hto
General
a c , and fact 4 speed P D B ,
Brussels bankers put the Motors Acceptance Co rporatton
basements , att tcs, etc 949
P S , small V 8 Conta ct 992 ;-B E
322 1 or 742 -4441
7605
dollar back ab'(Ve the 36 franc reserves the rt ght to btd at thiS
apt , no pets Phone Robert 1
12 1526tc
Hill Ractne . 949 381 1
' 6OB E .1
sale
1
12
6tp
level quoting it at 36.08 at the
The col l at eral IS prese nt ly --- -----------______
______
2_~:_6_' P
MAIN,
CREMEANS CONCRETE de
opening, up from 35.975. In stored and may be see n a t 1969 BU I.CK L a Sabra, 4 dr , h t ,
li ve red Monday
through
Pom eroy Motor Company ,
p s, a1r , good runntng co n
ROY..('
.
.
•
t'OM.E
2 BEDROOM traile r Phone 992
Milan, dealers marked the U.S. Pomeroy , OhiO
Sa turday
a nd
eve ning s
d i tt on lntertor l tke new saso
3975 or 992 257 1
Phon e 446 11 42
currency up from 648.60 to
Pllone 843 21 11
RUTLAND - 1 story frame ,
1 3 tfc
6 13 lfc
GENERAL
MOTORS
1
12
4fc
649.12lire. In Tokyo, the dollar
5 room s &amp; bath, liv1ng R ha s
ACCEPTANCE
firepl ace,
recent l y
clo.ed at 300.98 yen, down 0.01
CORPORAT ION 1973 COMET , 19 , 00() mt les 2 BEDROOM trader , adults
EXCAVATING , dozer, load~
( 1 l 14 , lt c
only Phone 992 Jl24
automaltc transm tSStOn. l tke
renovated.
c a r peted ,
yen.
and ba c kh oe work ; sept1c
new Cal l any t1me , 667 34 42
1 9 tf c
paneled. tiled·. porches, NG
tanks installed , dump t r ucks
Sterling advanced wlth the
1 5 12tp
heat. garage, lot 51x125.
and 10 boys for hire , wd l haul
1 HOUSE , unt urn1slled, 7 rooms
-------------dollar, opening in Zurich at 6.04
JUST $9,500 00.
f1 ll dtrl, top so i l , l i m es tone &amp;
1966 FORD 352 v 8 eng me , 4
an d batll , ntce Phone 992 2780
PUBLIC NOTICE
g r avel , Ca ll Bob or Roger
barrel. rebuilt. new gas k ets,
or 99 2 3432
FAIRVIEW HTS. - Lovely
Swiss francs, up from 6.026,
Jeffers, day phone 992 7089,
t1m 1ng cham, pts fons , rings,
1 9 tfc
bnck &amp; f rame, 4 bedrooms, 2
and in Frankfurt at 5.62 Ger- TO JAMES N HARRI S AD
ntght phone 992 3525 or 992
5150 New c lut ch plate , throw
baths , love ly kitchen &amp;
DRESS U NKNOWN , W HO SE
5232
out barrmgs , S25 , 3 speed
man marks, up from 5.608.
LAST KNOWN ADDRESS WAS
dmmg, uttl ity R , about 1
T WO BEDROOM house Forced

Modem Chemicals

•

- -

LEO (July 23·A... 22) You're
going to have the Opportunity.

By Helea ... s. Bottel

TUESDAY, JANUARY 14, 1975
6:0Q-·NEiWS :J,4; ABC News 6; News 8, 10,13, 15; Elec Co. 20; TV.
utilization 33.

news.

urge.

Generallo~ Rap·

Television Log

Dollar For- Fast Results Use Sentinel Classifieds
nudged
2 SIGNS
Pomeroy .j
Business
Services
OF
upward
Motor Co. ~~~~~~~~~·~~~----~~~- -

\

,,

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Jan. 14,197'5~•-•••••••••••••••

6 -The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesda;. Jan. 14, 1975

Berrys World

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,.

) Budget appr~ved

~~~~: f~~g~des

Contmued from page 1
will be taken to correct that situatiOn EPA representa l!ves
recogntze that cor~tlllg tbe problem wtll not be an overmght
accomplishment, Chase stated.
•
Attending the meeting were counctl members, Mrs Jean
Cratg, Brewer, King , Kelly, Wtlham Walters and Horkey , Ma) or
Hoffman, Chase, clerk-treasurer Gene Grate and pollee ch1ef J
J . Cremeans Prayer to open the meetmg was by Rev. Don Cole,
pastor of the Middleport Church of the Nazarene

G1llt~an,

on the way out after a
stuMtng defea t at Rhodes'
hands m the November election followtng a bttter cam.
pa1gn .
Lt Gov Richard F Celeste,
a Democrat, was sworn m by
Ohio Supreme Court Justice
Frank D Celebrezze as his
w1fe, Dagmar, held the Bible.
Sreakdown on fhe budget fo r
equi pment marntenan ce SJ20 ,
1975 m clues
He had taken the oath from
tolal , $4, 25b
General fund Counc tl
hts
father, fanner Lakewood
Pl ann rng Comm rssron Fund
S576 ma ror, per sona l ser v1 ce
$1500 o her $4 ,500, cler k - M rsce llaneous $200 , labor Mayor Frank Celeste, m an
pers ona l serv1ces Sl 500, other S300 lotal, $500
ea rlier ceremony m the Ohio
Swrmm tng Pool Fund $2,500 solici tor SSS . bu11d1ngs,
Se
nate chamber attended by
Employes , $4 400 rncr denta ls
Sli. OOO,
mi scel l a n eous ,
about
300 peroons, mcludmg
$1 ,5 00 ,
c hemi cal s,
SSO O
$ 14, 000 , conting ency
Sl 500
electn crty S750 pool marn
tran sfers, $6,500 . stree t l1gh ts
Gtlhgan and Chester Bowles,
tenance S500 rnsuran ce $350 ,
$2,500 , h yd r an ts , s~ 040
former U S ambassador to
total 58,000
safety , $39,070 , for a to tal of
India
$87,686
Bond Retire ment Fund Bonds sa 000 rn ter est, $2,565.
Safety Ch1ef o f pol1 ce
Democratic State Auditor
SB 500 , other p ol 1ce, $20,000 ,
mrscel lan eo us $450 t ota l
Thomas E Ferguson, was
publ ic employm en t re t ire m en t s11 01 5
sworn m by his fa !her, 82-year
, Sanitar y Se wer Fund sys te m , SJ 135 , gaso l1ne
Cl er k , $6 700
empl oyes, old outgolllg Auditor Joseph T
$4 000 . m iscel la n eous $1,685.
r ad 10. $750 cru 1ser , S1 000 for $6 100 sup er v rsron. S3, 27 4
Ferguson, who admmtstered
r e trr e ment.
$1 , 7 7 0
a total ot S39.070
an
lDlpromptu oath and then
Cem ete r y Empl oyes , mi sce llaneous, $2, 500 , plant
ma rn tenan ce and equipment. embraced hts son and kissed
$6,500 , clerk . 5981 84 Ae1d on
$889 20. publr c r et trement ss. ooo sewer rmprovement. him on the cheek.
system . S920 mamtenance and $1 2,296 , offi ce expense, $1 000
Democratic Attorney
total 538,640
suppl ies, $500 ma rntena nce of
General W1llwm J Brown,
Federal Revenue Shanng equi pment Sl OO , off ice ex
General government $3 989
pen ses, S1 00 , tools
and
beglnmng his second tenn, was
swtmmrng pool, 1973, Sl J66 55
e qurpm e nt ,
SSOO .
also
sworn m by hts father,
swrmmtng pooL 1975, $2 000
m rscell aneous $209 96 , total
Joseph
Brown . Also renewmg
$10,700
pol tce depa rt m ent , S56q 05
tran sportation $75 40 total
Fr re Equrpment - Salar ies
their oaths were Democratic
S558 , r etrremen t. $22 , equip ' $8 000
state
Treasurer Gertrude W
Wat er
Fund Off ic e
ment. burld ing and uttld res.
Donahey
and
veteran
SJ. 200 , conventr on, $150 : salar ie s. S5, 140 employes
$14 JSO , retirem ent. 52, 15 0. Repubhcan Secretary of State
off rc e
e xpense
SI.OOO
Ted W Brown.
matn tenan ce, suppl ies. rm
Dignitaries Present
pro v ements
sa.ooo
on the platform
Dlgnttarles
miscellaneous.
$5.000
.
water
Tonrght thru Thursday
purchases
,
$12
000
equipment
mcluded
Sen,
Robert Taft Jr ,
Jan 14 ts 16
$1 ,590 , lotal , 549,230
NOT OPEN
legislahve
Water Mortgage Revenue R-Oh1o, state
leaders and party offtClals, and
Bonds - Interest payments
FRI SAT SUN
$36,570, lotal $36 ,570
Mayor Tom Moody of
JAN 17·18·19
Sewer Mortage Rev enu e Colwnbus,
Bonds - Interest Payments
THE CHINESE
A small group of demonstraS2A,J60 . total , $24,360
PROFESSIONALS
Streel Maintenance Fund (Technrcolor)
tors held aloft a black flag a
Supervi sion, S5 ,865 84 , em
Starring- The ma sters of
jeered Rhodes and the Oh1o
ployes , $7 ,000 , retirement ,
Martial Arts
Nat10nal
Guard during the
S1 ,415 , equipment , SJ, l19 16 ,
t RI
miscellaneous,
$400
gasol
ine,
ceremonies.
One wore a whtte
And
se,ooo.
materral
s.
$4
,
000
,
T-shirt over hts outer clothmg
SCALAWAG
buildings, 5800, traffic llghls,
( Te(hntcolor)
On
It was a target, with four
s.oo , total, SJl ,OOO
Starring Kirk Douglas
stmulated bullet holes near the
Meter Deposit Fund {Gi
Middleport, $2, 400 , Pomeroy , hull's eye,
Show Starts 7:00pm
SlOO . total, $2,500
Rhodes' return to ofhce
marked the fourth decade in
which he has been a public
servant He was mayor of
Columbus m 1943, tbe youngest
head of a major city in the
country at that lime.
pay
He served as state auditor
for 10 years and was lwtce
elected governor, leavmg
office when barred by the Ohto
Constitution from a third
straight term.
Rhodes lost to Taft 1n the
prlDlary race for the U.S
Senate nommation in 1970 and
went mto the real estate
development business
He oought a court order to
run for a thl!'d term, and woa It
in 1973. He then defeatett
Gtlligan in a hard -fought
campaign, capttaUzmg on the
apparent unpopularity of the
'
governor with tbe voters m an
Checkmg Accounts really make life
otherwllle
Democratic year.
eas1er W1th checks you can pay all

MEIGS THEATRE

It's so simple
to
those
bills by mail

of those bills from the comfort of
vour home Open an .A:ccount

Farmers have ·
to Jun.

Your Friendly B11nk

MID DLEPORT1 OHIO

L~M~=embe!:r2f!ed~e~ra~l!=~l~nsu~ra~n~ce;,£2!e2!2!~-J

:n

to file

Farmers who have a feed
gram base and have low yteld
or a crop affected by dlS8sler
must !1le an appUcat10n for
rehef "'th the Metgs ASCS
Offtce by Jan . 31
The nohce must be !tied
whtle there ts evtdence of a
crop havmg been produced,
such as crop restdue To thts
date 47 farmers have ftled for
disaster or low yiela claims
Produclton evtdence must be
available to determme the
amount of bushels haf\ ested or
made mto enstlage

Property

Transfms
N1esel A Wetherman to F
Way Clark, Audrey M Clark,
Lot, Orange
Eugene Srm\1', Maf]Orte L
Sm1th to Edward LeMaster ,
Bonme
F ' LeMaster ,
Corrective Deed, Bedford
Raymond Musser, Florence
Musser to Andrew E Batey,
Betty Jo Batey, one-th1rd A ,
Chester
Ray W Pickens, dec , to
Mary H Ptckens, Rankin Ray
Ptckens, Kenneth Hoffman ,
Mary Ann Hoffman, Johnny
Ra) Hoffman , All Trans ,
Racme
Mary H Pickens to Rankm
Ray Pickens, Kenneth Hoffman , Mary Ann Hoffman,
Johnny Ray Hoffman, Lot,
Racme

June Wickersham, Comm ,
Leota Lynch, dec., to Arthur
Lynch, Parcels, Sahsbury
Ida Eastman, dec , to
Samuel A Eastman, Velma
Stout , Elma Epple, Elste
Phtlhps, George A Eastman ,
Etta Gale, Fred A Eastman,
Charles A Eastman, Frank A
Eastman , Wtlbur Eastman,
Homer Eastman, All for
Trans , Beford
Charley A Eastman, Stella
Eastman, Homer A Eastman ,
Frank A. Eastman, Elsie
Phtllips, Harold Phtlhps, Elma
M. Epple, Velma Stout,
Theresa Eastman to James
Meredtth, Sherwood Meredtth,
Mlldred L Meredtth, 40, 40,
35 41 &amp; '1:1 3 Acres

Driver injured
in collision
on Jericho road

Ford takes
Contmued from page 1
Ford satd should be passed
through to consumers, bllSlnesses and local governments
m the fonn of payments and
credtts Thts mcludes a cash
payment tn the poorest Amencans who pay no income tax at
all.
Ford chose the informal
settmg of the basement
library, at times standing near
a blazmg ftreplace , to convey
hts ster)l message to the
country.
"Americans are at their very
best when the gomg Ill rough,"
he satd at the outset "Right
now the gomg IS rough and tl
may get rougber. But if we do
what,must be done, we will be
well on our way to better
days."

A few hours earlier, House
Democrattc leaders latd down
thetr remedies for the nation's
ills mcludmg limited l)'ageprtce controls on the btggest
industries, allocation of credtl
to housmg and small busmess,
more public service JObs and
tax cuts of more than $10
billion.
Ford, on the other hand,
contmued to shun wage-price
controls. He asked labor and
management to show voluntary restramt. "No one will be
allowed to prosper from the
temporary hardshtps most of
us bear willingly," he addea
But tbe emphasis on volunteerism and tnflation as
"public enemy No. 1" -so
much a theme of Ford's earlier
-was
economic policy
rmsstng "The reason ts that
the sttuation has changed," he
S8ld "You know tt and I know
tt
"What we need most
urgently today IS more spending money m your pockets
rather than m the Treasury m
Washmgton "

PT, PLEASANT - A Pomt
Pleasant
man,
Wtllard
Luckeydoo, 53, of Jericho
Conhnued from page I
Road, was senously InJured
Monday tn a two veh1cle Republicans were scheduled to
roadway acctdent blamed on meet prior tn the opening to
select thetr leaders and discuss
snow and 1ce
Luckeydoo ts a patient m the ooine reforms Among those
mlenstve care umt of Pleasant not mtending to attend was
Valley Hospital where he was freshman Sen Richard Slone,
taken after the mtshap at 12 15 0-Fla., who refuses to participate
w
closed-door
p m on Jencho Road.
Hospttal attendants said he meellllgs.
Democrats were expected to
suffered mternal and chest
mjurtes and that he 1s tm- re-elect Senate Democratic
Leader Mike Mansfield and his
provmg.
Sgt George Plants of 1\!_e deputy, Robert C. Byrd, while
Mason County Shertff's the Republicans planned to go
Department said the accident another sesston wtth GOP
Hugh Scott and
IS sUU under mvestigation. The leader
other dnve was 1denU!Ied as Assistant Leader Robert
Harold Edward Hager, 30, Griffin
Racme, who was drtving a C Senate Democrats also were
and P Telephone Co truck expected to dlllcuss creation of
Apparently he was not InJured. a special committee to mvesllgate the Central Intelligence
Agency and some internal
Couples divorced reforms
-one of them making
tt
easier
to break flli6U~ters.
Two dtvorces were granted
House
Democrats .!Monday
m Metgs County Common
continued
!hell' refonn efforts,
Pleas Court
Denms L Colhns, from voting to abolish the House
Mildred Colhns on. charges of Internal Securtty Committee
gross neglect of duty, and and opening Senate-House conFreda Watson from Stanley ference meetings to press and
Watson on charges of gross public
neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty.
Training pl1111ned
In the case of Arthur Orr et
a!, v~rsus Mtlchell Holley, Sr., RACINE - The Racme E-R
the defendant, Holley, havmg Squad wtll sponsor an
placed obstructions across TR emergency medtcal trammg
380 In Chester Township, the and rescue class. Those mcourt ruled that Holley be and terested should be at the
hereby enJoined from m- Racme Ftre Statton Jan. 22 at 7
terfermg with the pubhc use of P m
the township road and from
Latest contrtbutors to the
placmg obstructions across the emergency fund are Kenneth
road
McLeod, Ada S!tghano,
Clarence Wtckhne, Emmett
and Ruth Stethem, Elva
Oatley, Sam Rall'den, Gretta
SUllpson, Mrs Archie Donahue
MEET THURSDAY
The Rock Spnngs Better and Elmer Norvell
Health Club wtll meet at 1·15
p m Thursday at the home of
Mrs Lowse Folmer

Congress

Wea"vr

WCD/DCD

WASHER: $319.95
DRYER: 224.95

PAIR 5499
WCD To.prOVIde plenty of washday tlex1
billty and capacity, Fr1g1darre angmaered thiS
washer lo handle an 18·1b lood or ganlly
wash a srngte ptece of dehcate 1tnge11e wrth
out wksltng water and detergent For total
fabnc care• .there are both automatic Kn its
and Pennanent Press cycles Team tt up
wi1h a m1tchtng_ : Fngrdalra Dryer t01 more

DC'o electric,

FUNERAL SET
DOVER, 01\to (UP! I
Funeral servtces wtll be held
here Wednesday for former
Ohio Supreme Court Justice
John H. Larnneck, 83, who dted
Saturday at his home in nearby
New Philadelphia.

Sele~Jor chooces

Include a Tomed (heat) eyota

and a No Heat cycle laundry wrmkles are
m11umrzed by a coo/down penOd at the end
ft8Ch

1-'or \ our Dining 1111d Listening
Pleasure••.

GEO. HALL
AND THE HALLMARKS

TONIGHT 8:00 TO 12:30
-

The MEIGS INN
Ph. 99'2-3629
'

~

(

I

COLUMBUS tuPIJ- Feder

al state

summary

of

Otlto

Glenn on the job"

livestock auctions Monday
Cattle Compared · to last

WASHINGTON (UP!) Monday slaughter steers steady John Glenn was formally Into 1 hrgher, slaughfer herfers 1
3 hrgher, slaughter cows I ducted into omce 811 Ohio's
higher m Creston, steady to 1 75 newest Senator today after the
lower tn Marysville, slaughter new Congress coovened.
bulls 1 h1gher, vealers 4 higher.
The pioneer aatronaut, who
feeder cattle 2 J lower
was
elected on hla third bid for
Slaughter Steers Choice 85¢·
1260 lb y1eld grade 2 4 39·40 60, .a Senate seat, actually was
lew yreld grade 3 4 37 60·39 SO, sworn in and aSllWIII!d hla
good 33 SO 36 85, standard
office prior to CluiBimllll to
27 7534 75
Slaughter heifers Choice 7S0 gain semorlty after Incumbent
1200 lb y1eld grade 2 4 J7 39, Sen. Howard M. MetienbalDD,
yield grade 3 4 35 37 25, good 2'1 DOhio, agreed In resign
34 10
Slaughter cows Utility and early,
commerctal 900 1895 lb 12 75
The 5$-year-&lt;Jld Glem drew
20 75, hrgh dressing 21 2A 25, ootice as poosible Democratic
cutter 14.SO 17 75
Slaughter bulls Yreld grade 1 ttmber when he defeated
1460 1900 lb 26·29 75
Metzenbaum In the Ohio
Vealers Choice 190·260 lb 59 prunary and then scored a
69
Feeder cattle Choke steers landslide vielory in November
300 600 lb 27 28 so. good 300·600 over Republican Cleveland
lb 21 50 26 50, choice he1fers 300· Mayor Ralph Perk.
The pt(IHIIlol!ing Glem said
400 Ib 23 26, good 300 600 Ib 20·
in his rather barren Senate
25
Hogs
Barrows and grits offtce that his major goal as a
steady to 35 hrgher, U 5 1 3 freshman senator will be to
192 253 lb 40" 30
Sows 40 higher in Creston, belp develop sound energy
.65 I 40 lower 10 Marysville, policies and halt what be called
U 5 med1um and 1 J 300 620 lb "the Russian roulette" of drift
33 50·35 90
Feeder prgs steady, U 5 2 3 and wastefulness that could
30 40 lb 8 SO·l6.SO per head.
brmg about wBl'.
Sheep · Salughter lambs
Glenn has been swamped
steady to 1 higher, choice and
with
work and problems prior
prime shorn ?3·101 lb 41 70
to the st8l't of the session, and
41 90, full wool 38 41 75
has been studymg issues
GALLIPOLIS,OIDO
coming up. He has been hanJan. 11, 1975
dicaped by a short staff. His
Sales Report of
advtsors are still wading
Ohio Valley Uvestock Co.
through a pile of about 1,300
STOCKER CATTLE
applications for about 30 staff
STEERS - 250 to 300 lbs 18 to posiuons.
23; 300to400lbs. 16 tn 22; 4011 to Mentloaed As Darkhone
500 lbs. 18.50 to 21; 5011 In 600
Although mentioned by some
Ills 20 to 23,50; 600 to 700 lbs. 18 persons as a Democratic
to 21.75; 7011 lbs and Over 241o darkhorse, the Ohio Democrat
32.50.
S8ld he has no Intention of
HEIFER CALVES- 250 to
300 lbs 16.50 to 22,25; 300 to 400
CORRECI'ION
Ills, 19 to 20; 400 to 500 lbs. 17.50
RACINE - The Racine
fD 20 75; 500 to 600 Ills. 19 to F1remen's Auxtllary will hold a
22.50; 600 to 700 Ills. 20 to 25.50; soup supper at the !lrt!house
700 lbs and Over 23 to 28.75.
Feb. 15 rather than Jan. 15 as
STOCK COWS- BULLS (By er;roneously announced earlier.
The Head) -Stock Cows 105 to
150; Stock Cows and Calves 145
Pleasant Valley Hospital
In 200; Stock Bulls 110 to 165;
Dtscharges
, Wilham
Baby Calves 10 to 28; (By The
Cromhsh, Gallipolts; Robert
Po~md) .,... Canners &amp; Cutters
Cows 9 to 15; Holstem Cows Stewart, Letart; Audrey Lee,
12.50 to 18, Commercial Bulls Point Pleasant; Glenn Hammack, Btdwell; Willa Purkey,
(1,0011 lbs. and Over) 19 to 24
CALVES -Tops 220 lbs. to Mason; Mrs. Garrett Circle,
250 40 to 50,75; Medtum 200 lbs. Racme; Marvtn Cox, Cheshire,
to 300 '1:1 to 37; Culls '1:1 Down.
SHOATS - Chotce 12 to 24 50

News.

Bookings made

• •

tlal politics.
"I'm oot planning any entry
Intn any primaries," heoilllld.
"I didn't come In bere to Ju11
use this as a platform for
!IOIIletling else."
Glenn said be wants tD apply
his scientific and technoioclcal
expertise tn the problem of
meeting the nation's energy
demands. He said failure to
meet that problem rapidly
could cause severe economic
crisis, and added that such
criSes have led to war in the
past and could do so again,
"If it goes on for 10118, be e
said, ''we're going In have an
awful lot of people mad in the
world. We're literally playing
Russian roulette with the
future of the country ana-the
whole world."
,
He disagreed with Secretary
of State Henry A. KllJslnier's
statement that the United
States might resort to ftr~ tD
end a future oil emb&amp;fgo.
"That kind of talk frlgbtellB
me," he said.
Requested Seatl
He said he had requested
seats on the two committees he
feels have the greatest h]fluence on energy-nlated legislation. They are Interior and
Insular Affairs and Government Operations, CllllllllUtee
assignments won't be ' -announced untW!ater this
but Glenn ssld he will focuS: his
efforts on energy and (ood
tr.Wctlrn In any case, :
"It's just critical we make
the right choices In these
matters," he said. ''We've had
few ,If any, people In the Serillte
with any background In sclehce
;
or technology."

Two professwnal bookings
for the annual Metgs County
Fatr were made at the state
convention tn Columbus late
last week, Wallace Bradford,
!atr board prestdent, reported.
Thursday evemng's grandstand entertatnment at the fall'
wtll be Crystal Gayle and band,
the Colhns Sisters and Pee Wee
King and hts band.
Booked for Saturday 'light's
grandstand performance, tbe
fmal mght of the fatr, was the
Blue Ridge Quartette. The fair
wtll be held m August

Used clothing
needed urgently
CHESHIRE - The GalliaMeigs Commumty Aclton
Agency ts m need of good used
clothmg, especially children's
clothing.
Anyone wishing to donate
clothmg should brmg it to the
Agency office m the Ga!Ua or
Metgs County Court House or
the Cheshtre Community
Center. If clothing needs to be
ptcked up by the agency,
please call 446-1760, 367-76'1:1, or
992-MOG

VOL XXVI

r---------------------------~
ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Men's and Boys' Belts
Sizes 20 to 38 boys and mons verslbte belts . popular wldllt.
Reverses black to brown brown to while . navy. 10 white, e!c

1.

t•omeroy

2. Mens and boys wide sport belts, slzes 20 to A2- while and.a
bog selection of solid colors.

3 Mens genuine leather work belts- solid colors brown or
black. 51 zes 20 to so

•· Mens sizes 30 to SO black Garrioon Bells - wide wl&lt;ft~
genuine leaather.
'

ELBERFELDS

1

iN .POMEROY

\\l th

I

I

~

•

enttne

NO. 192

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDN ESDAY, JANUARY 15, 1975

)

15 CENTS

Ford finds Union's state had
By HELEN THOMAS.
UP! White House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Concedmg that the "state of the umon
ts not good," President Ford today formally asked Congress fD
ease the recesston wtth a $16 btlhon one-year rebate for 1974
taxpayers and a $16.5 btllion permanent mcome tax cut funded
by mcreased otl tariffs.
Dehvermg his ftrst State of the Uruon address before a
nat10nally televtsed JQUll sess10n of Congress, Ford reported the
"bad news" that ctltzens are upset wtth the economy He
predicted a federal deftctt of about $30 btllion thts year and $45
bilhon next year pushtng the national debt to more than $600
btllion
Most of Ford's eneri(Y conservatiOn and economtc orooosals
were wtvetled m hts radt"'televis10n speech Monday mght and
subsequently by atdes. He called on Congress to enact them by
Aprtl I.
Among hts new tdeas were deregulaUon of new natural gas,
opemng the oiJ.nch Navy proper\tes at Elk Hills, Calif. , to
cornrnerctal prnduction, tappmg the outer continentia! shelf and
naval oil reserves m Alaska, extending the 12 per cent Investment tax credtts for public utilities from one tn two years, a
tax credtl of up to $150 for home owners who mstalllnsulahon and
storm wmdows,
He also said his !{)-year program to make Amenca "m-

. TORNADO FAN - Artie Rutter, ftve year old son of Mr
and Mrs Bob Sayre, Racine, Rt 2, was m there pitchmg for
Southern High School's basketball team Tuesday rught
Wben the band played at half-tUlle Arlie was on his feet
clappmg hts hands m lime wtth the mustc. See game ptctures, all by Katie Crow , on Page 2.
.._.......»:.....w, ............~ : : : c• : • •, .........................~..........:.,...-.....:.,.....·-:w., . .w&gt;. ,,..,.,.,w:VJ« . •• w.w.w».&lt; ·"~''·'-'hi

"''''tllllll!::&amp;'t'l::&amp;'t'l~

-

ews.. in

Briefs~

By United Press International

'

WASHINGTON -THE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT says tt
gave the names of more than IO,OOO'Amerl(!an dtsstdents to the
Central Intelligence Agency, although a former CIA director
insiSts that charges of domeshc spymg were exaggerated.
Deputy Attorney General Laurence H Silbennan disclosed
Tuesday the CIA was gtven a computerized Ust of 10,000 to 12,000
names of Amertcan radtcals m 1970. He satd he had been advised
that the CIA never used that list, comptled at the hetght of antiVietnam War activities. Defense Secretary J~m~s R
SCtUesmgei; ' who dnce helded the CIA, told newsmen that
charges the agency engaged m widespread domestic spymg were
"overblown", but he smd there had been some "mappropnate"
actions.

1 cited on
DWI charge
Decemh er

vulnerable " to foretgn energy boycotts envtsJOned 200 US
nuclear power plants, 250 new coal rmnes, 150 coal-f~:· ed power
plants, 30 new 011 refmertes, 20 new synthetic fuel plants, dnlhng
"many thousands of new oil wells," msulatton of 18 million
homes and constructtng mtllions of new fuekonserving vehtcles
In an obVIous appeal to bipartisan support, Ford recalled
Democrahc Prestdent Harry S Truman's appearance before the
81st Congress m 1949 when Ford was a freshman congressman
and Truman reported that the state of the umon was good
"Today," Ford said, "that freshman member from Michtga n
stands where Mr Truman stood and I must say to you U1at the
state of the umon ts not good
"Mtlhons of Amencans are out of work Recesswn and In·
flation are eroding the money of mtllions more Prtces are too
high and sales are too slow
"Now, I want to speak very blwttly I' ve got bad news and I
don 't expect any applause The American people want action and
tl wtll take both the Congress and the President to gtve them
what they want Progress and solutiOns can be achteved and they
wtll be achteved
"The emphasts of our economic efforts must now shift from
inflatiOn to (Obs "
Ford asked Congress for a one-shotl&lt;lx reductwn of $16 btlhon
in the form of cash rebates to indiVIduals up to $1,000 per return
and to busmess He satd that if Congress acts by Aprtll, the first

checks lor half the rebate could be malled m May and the second
m September
Of that amount, he smd, $12 btlhon would go to mdtVIduals nnd
$4 btlhon to busmesses, mcluding' fa rmers, to promote expanston
and crea te J O~
"Cuttmg taxes now ts essenUal 1f we are to turn the economy
arowtd," Ford sa id "A tax cut offers the best hope of creating
more jobs''

f'ord proposed reducmg futu1 e mdJVIdual mcome taxes by
$16 5 b1lhor. through ra1smg the low income allowance and
reducing tax rates-primarily for low and mtddle mcome wage
earners

The plnn would ra1se from $4,300 to $5,600 the amount a person
could earn wtthout payrng mcome taxes
hullal reactwn mdi cated Ford's across the board 1ebate on
1974 taxes faced tough sleddmg m the Democratic-&lt;:ontrolled
Cong1ess Rep AI Ullman, D.{)re, actmg chmrman of U1e House
Ways and Means Committee, vtrtuall y ruled out any tax rehcf
th1 s yea r fo r upper mcome wage earners
Ford conceded hts plan was mflatlonary but 1t was "more
lDlportant than ever" to control federal spending. Wtthout such
actiOn, he said government expendttures wtthm 15 years "could
eas1ly comprise half of our Gross National Product,;' compared
w1th less t)lan a th1rd now ,
(ConUnued on page 16l

Caldwell heading hoard

A POWERFUL WINTER Sl'ORM stacked up nearly two feet
of snow along the eastern shores of Lake Ontarto Tuesday mght
on the beels of another storm that had spread Crtpplmg snowfalls
EASTERN
Howard It also comphmcntcd the
from the Mtdwest to New England The National Weather Ser·
Caldweil, Jr , was reelected people of the district for
VIce at Albany, N Y , satd drmng snow and howhng wmds o
ffi
prestdentof
Eastern's Board of passmg the bond issue which
produced near blizzard condtttons m the area
Education
at
tis orgamzatwnal made tt possjble 111 have the
The storm dumped up to 22 mches of snow near Oswego,
Twenty-three arrests were meetmg Tuesday mght John ne" and addlttonal facJhtles.
N.Y., and 40 mile per hour winds ktcked up clouds of snow near
made
by the Mtddleport Pohce Riebel,
s upermtendent,
Rtebel observed that the
Syracuse, reducmg vtstbtlity to a few yards. Earlier Tuesday, a
Departmentdurmg
December,
reported
school
m11Iage ts 4'1, nulls less
killer storm whtch spread heavy snows from the Mtdwest to New
In other achon, the board than a year ago
England and left 59 persons dead, dwnped up to a foot of snow on Pollee Chtef J J Cremeans
reported
to
counctl
Monday
elected
Oris Smtth, v1ce
The board lmed Hoger
Southwestern New York, forcing two school dtstrtcts to cancel
mght
prestdent
and
agreed
to
set
the
Gnfftn
as custodian of
classes.
The offense for whtch the regular meeting for the second Rtvervtew School and IS ac·
most
arrests occurred was Tuesday of each month at 7 30 ceptwg apphcatwn s for a
DAYTON, OHIO-THE REYNOLDS AND REYNOLDS CO
drtvmg
while mtoxtcated wtth p m m the cafe ten a at the htgh mamtenan ce man for the
of Dayton, Oh10, satd Tuesday it would gtve bonuses of $100 to
seven
arrested
on that charge school.
enhre dJs tr~ c t, Riebel smd
$150 to any employe who purchased a new 1975 automobtle The
The salary of each board Persons have unttl Feb. ll to
firm, ~ maJor producer of business forms and electromc data There were three arrested for
not
havmg
an
operator's
member
was set at $20 per submtl apphcahons
processing services, has about 2,5110 employes m 108 cthes m 42
hcense;
-three
for
disorderly
month
The
board also agreed
Several teachers met w1th
states
The bonus program, scheduled to begm today and Feb 28, manner and three for dtstur- to JOin the Ohw School Board the board as represen tahves of
all teachers '" the dtslnct
would apply only to cars manufactured by General Motnrs Corp., bmgthe peace There were two Ass 'n
arrests
for
falling
fD
underpm
a
Durmg
the
regular
sessiOn
They will have addJltonal
Ford Motor Co., and Amencan Motors Corp "Qmte frankly we
hope our action wtll encourage other firms to take slmtlar steps, tratler and one each for assault foilowmg the orgamzahonal meehngs wtth the board '" the ,
battery,
reckless meeltng tt was reported that future Jl was reported
par\icularly in those cornrnuntttes such as Dayton where much of and
excesstve
speed, the state mspectton report had
The bo ard am ended th e
operatiOn,
the auto industry IS related," satd Robert H. Meyer, prestdent of
leaving
the
scene
of
an
ac·
been
recetved
and
was
attendanee
pohcy and charge
the company
lun ch pohcy for high sc hool
ctdent and assured clear "saltsfactory"
dtstance
A
portion
of
the
letter
GREENVILLE, OHIO - MEMBERS OF THE Greenvtlle
Parking meter collecbons
stated, "School status: It is students
Education .\sooctation (GEA I voted overwbelmmgly Tuesday to
recommended the Eastern
end an etght-day walkout desptle the failure of the local school for the month totaled $776 50
High School, Meigs County
boa:d to meet the teachers' wage increase demands. The and the pohce crmser was
4,768
pules
durtng
the
be continued on the hst of
drtven
de&lt;errnmatton of \\hether the school board has $90,000 available
month
schools
approved by the Ohio
for wage increases will be left to the courts. The Greenville
Department
of Educatlon " tO
08n Gy
Board of EducatiOn and the GEA, whtch represents the school
systems 215 teachers, agreed to hie a su1t JOtnUy on the question.
• •
The agreement came as Greenvtlle ctty school offtctals
started work on ftllmg jobs of about 120school teachers whom the
The Me1 gs Coun ty ComVeterans Memorial Hospital
board began to fll'e under the state's Ferguson Act proVLSlOns
mtssJoners
Tuesday named
ADMITTED Maxtne
wben they told teachers to end their strike and return to
C1oudy tomght, low in the
two
persons
to a 22·membcr
classrooms. The board also agreed to retam the 120 teachers tt lower 20s Cloudy wtth a Sellers, Racme, Lola Greer ,
board that operate s the
,
had be~ to fire and to declare a moratortum on several chance of snow Thursday and Mason
Ohw Emergency
Southeastern
DISCHARGED
Antta
proposed cutbacks m programs and peroonnel to whtch the htghs m the low or mtd 30s
Medt
cal
Serv
ice A th1rd
Probabthty of prectpttahon ts Lewts, Palrtcta Grounds,
teachers objected
perstm
IS
yet
to
be rlamed
70 per cent today, 20 per cent Georgta Oiler, Lyle Hysell,
Tuesday the commJsstoners
SAIGON - THE SAIGON GOVE;RNMENT offered amnesty tomght and 40 per cent Thurs- Lawrence Hoffner , Dtana
rtamed
Sco tt Lucas, adJarVIS
to draft dodgers and deserters today m a move to build up South day
mimstrato
r at Veterans
Vtetnam's hard-jll'essed, million-man anny. The government
news agency Vietnam Press amounCed a 6lank~t amnesty for all ,.. ,. :.::-o!~M~~m&amp;:o:wz..-..::~.~-~!:~~~ Memonal Hosp1tal as th e
"prov1der," and Joan Stewart ,
men who had deserted or sought Illegal refuge from the draft
Rutland,
as the "conswner ''
before Jan I, 1975.
Each
of
the etght c ount~es
The news agency said the offer, the first amnesty for
assoctaled 1n SEOEMS has
deserters and draft evaders m South Vtetnam's hllllnry, would be
three persons on 1ts govermn g
good until Feb 15, the day after the 72-hour lunar New Year
board
WASHINGTO!'J (UPJ) - Despite a sharp drop In
celebrations. In tbe past, the government forced captured
•
In other buswe ss , the
December, wholeaale prices jumped an average of 20.9 per
deserters and evaders to shave !hell' heads and serve as unarcommissiOners endorsed the
cent last year, the blggeat yearly Increase since 1948, the
med laborers at the battlefront.
Metgs Coun ty Coun cil on
!..abo~ Deparlment said today.
Agtng, Inc , as the offtetal and
The Wholesale Price Index dropped a seasonally.adPHJLADELI?HIA - THE BANKRUPT Penn Central
duly selected local Planmng
justed 0.5 per cent In Deceinber, the first monthly decllne
Railroad has cancelled its plans for extenstve layoffs and other
and
Servtce orgamzatwn for
since Oelober, 1973. The decllue was due mostly to lower
emergency ml!asures after being assllrt!d of recetvmg federal
Agmg
tn Metgs County
prices for farm produce ouch as grain, fresh and dried
funds the line's trustees satd Tuesday
It
was
announced that the
fruits and vegetables.
ibe trustees satd t~ Department of Transportation assured
Natwnal Assoctahon of County
them that the Ford administral!on has developed a legislative
Bat the overall rfae for 1974 was the largest since the
Commtsstoners
Will hold 1ts
Index jumped 31.1 per ceat In 1948.
program which would provtde e.mergency fundlllg In sustam the
convention
tn
Honolulu
on June
railroad through the first quarter of the year
The Wholesale Price Index is released monthly by tbe ;?
17
for
11
days
and
10
111ghls
government and Is a major Indicator of future eonsWDer ~
prices. The drop ID the llrholesale Judex for December ~ H o w ev~ r , neith er comDETROIT - THE NATION'S Alfi'OMAKERS sold fewer
should partially begin to sbow up at the retall level next ~ mtss toners Rober t Cla1·k,
cars the first 10 days of tbe new year thiw the same pertod 10
recession 1958, and oome analysts sa1d tt was the slowest sales
';"Onth,
~ Henry Wells nor Warden Ours
1nd 1t:ated 1n le nt10 n fJ f a.t1Contmued on page 16)
I _
T •••••• , 0 U$ •• :
. ~m.:~;.::-;:::zrh~.Jt/.uL,;~ te ndmg

Ttoo ap])Ointed

b

d '-

commrsswners

Weather

Things wholesale up 20.9%

i

The board agreed to accept
b1ds for 1960, '66 and '72 schopl
buses and gave Charles W1lls,
band Instructor, approval to
attend a state mustc convenlwn m Columbus Feb 7, 8
and 9 and Sp1ke Berkhuner,
head football coach, to attend a
football chmc m Kentucky Feb.
6, 7, Rand 9
The board authomed Riebel
to be m charge of all federal
PI og1am
The board also approved the '
gr aduatiOn of 1:1 students
foilow1ng a report from thetr
teachers If they have compie ted their WOI k sahsfactonly
they wtll receive their
dtplomas
Riebel also reported they
adopted te mporar y ap ·
propnaltons ThiS Wlil be
completed at a la ter date
The board recessed until
Jan 24 v.hen they w1ll meet
w1th the OhiO AssoCia tiOn of
Pubhc School Employes .
Atlendmg \\ere Howar d
Caldwell , Orts Sm1th, C1ydc
Kuhn, Dorsell.arkms, Starlm g
Massar, board members, C 0
Newl and, cler k, Chester
Goodtng, pnnc1pal and Riebel,
supennte ndent

I

THIS SMALL CEMENT BWCK ROOM being added to
the f1rst noor level of Mtddleport Vtllage Hall Hppears inSJgniftcant However, if you happen to become a priSoner m
the Mtddleport jatl, you'll think it's pt etty Ullportant The
small room wtll contam shower facthtles for prisoners, who
have not had such a "luxury" m past years The small room
wtll also con tam pemtentJary type restroom equ1pment. The
department of Mamtenance Supervisor Harold Chase IS
constructing the addtllOn which ISnow ready to be roofed

Detente set back
Rw;~aans would accept He also ,. objected to wha t they called
satd attempts to create good persecution nf rtisstdents in the
relaltons betwee n th e tw o SoVIet Umon, cspcctally Jews
superpowers would contmuc
who wa nted to leave tbe
uAll the comrnumcatwn s we country
ha'.'e re~et ved from the Sovtet
The measure passed wtth an
governm ent seem to suggest u;tformal agreement to hberaltha t the pohtJcal ortentation ts tr.e emtgralton The trade btU·
unchanged, and we wtll con- was stgned on Jan 3, In a Wlate
duct our pohcy until we rece1ve llouse ceremony and Widely
ev idence fD the contrary on the pra tsed.
bas1s of ca rrymg forward the
Kissmger srud, "The Sovtet
policy of detente."
Umon constders thts legtslation
The cornerstone of the trade as contraverung both the !972
agreement of 1972 gave Russta trade agreement, whtch had
most-favored-natiOn tra de sta- ca lled for an uncondi twmil
tu s, essenttally the same elumnul!on of discrlDluJatnry
treatment othe r friendly tra de re stnct!ons and the
na ltons recetve This changed prmctple of norunterference m
an old cold war trade policy domestic affairs
which, although hberalized,
"The Sovtet government
tions ."
still put oome Ullport barriers states that tl does not mtend to
Although he sq uare~y blamed m llle way ot Russian goods. accept a trade status that IS
Congress. for the reJectwn,
The change had to be ap- discrlD1JI181ory ~ nd subJect to
Ktssinger said he would go to proved by Congress However, pohti~al conditions and, accorCap1tol , H1ll "m a spmt of mcmy lay, makers 1 led by Sen
dmgly, that 1t 1\tll not put into
concthatwn " '1o see tf he could Henry M. Jackson , D·Wash , fo r e~
the
1972
trade
ge t a b11l passed tha t the held up approval because they agreement "

WASHINGTON (UP!) - In a
maJor setback to Secretary of
State Henry A Kissmger's
policy of detente, the Sovtet
Ummrhas turned down a trade
agreement because Congress
demanded the Kremlin perm1t
mcreased emigration of Russta n dtss Jd ents , espectall y
Je" s .
Ktssinger aMounced the re.
Jection m a Tuesday news
conference
''The admlmstration regrets
this turn of even~'!,'' he satd
"It has rega rded and contmues
to regard an orderly and
mutuallv beneficia l trade relationship. \\tth the SclVIet Umon
as an tmportant element m the
overall 1D1provement of rela-

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the program at

Bradbury
Parents sa1d that they feared then cluldren would uot be able
to keep up wtth reqmred work when they move mto JUntO! !ugh
school Allen Lee Kmg, another parent, urged parents to cons1de•
ca refully the matter of U1e Bradbury School :xoyrng tha lli It Iurns
out that the system used there IS good, then the progra m should
not be dtscarded becau~e of a personahtv confhd betwee n
parents and the prtnclpal Snowden smd that the teacher .,student
rat10 at U1e Bradbur) School1s lower Ulan at other schools
pe reent.uge
After llle length) dlscusston, 1he public mee!Jng for &lt;ill
Board member Wendell Hoo"'rr, \o\ho wos elected vicepersons concerned w1th lhe school was sel It \\ ciS calso mdtcctted president of th e hoard, said he could see the po,.lbillty of schools
that, perhaps, U1e sta ff of th e JUtuor lugh school should be , having to close for periods In Februnry and March when the
brought mto the meetmg stnt"e tl handles all of the rluld1enol the
quota alloued " '" "-•cd. II was agreed to rontact the Publlc
district when they move out of the var1 ou. siXth b'l'ades
U!JIIllt·s Commlsslou of Ohio and Ute giiS rompany about the
The board then went mto u closed sessiOn to discuss what \\as
matter
apparently a basketball problem w1 th s ~1ff members , parenls
l11t• Sdlm' of board mernbe1 s wHs set at S20 per regular
and apparently several players.
meetlflt' dm mg 1975 cmd the supermtendent wc~ s designated as
The boa rd approved the 1975 approp1wtwns p1 OI'Jd Jng for ,111
1(ontmucd on lhlgc 16 )

&lt;

in Briefs

."

Bradbury m other schools, or else do away

expendtture of $2,528,193 39.
B1edkdown of the budget mcludes-administrat10n, $43,889;
1nstruct10n, $1 ,376,935 64, aux iltary age nctes, $126,551 95;
oper,1t10n of school plant, $76,320, mamtenance, $19,000; special
se1VI('Cs, $7,600; supplies, $197,500, matenals for maintenance,
$56,700, eqwpment reijlncernent, $&amp;1,21180, contract and open
ordt•r servJcc, $12.1,585, fiXed charges, $401,400; contingent,
$10,000, and cap1tal outlay, $24,500
Dut mg Uw mcet1ng, Supt Harb'l'aves reported that he has bee n
nott!Jed by Columb1&lt;1 G"' of Ohio tha t the lugh school and Juntor
h1gh school llHL'it reduct' 1ts nc~ tural ~.1s consW11pt10n 40 pet
&lt;lUI mg Ji'eb!1Jar y ~md March A d1scuss1on was .held on the
mattPr, but bo,H d mrmbers fai led to c·ornt\ up with any solution
on how Uw he,tlmg of the bu1ld1ngs could be reduced by that

Devoted To The lntere.~t.~ oj' Tht• t11 eig~t - ~1u.~on .-lreu

]ll'Oiection, Glenn concedecl.lhe
government "may have to 1M!
back some" on antl-pollul:jon
regulatioll8 in favor of~­
ate energy and economic
needs.
"The people of Steubenville,
he said, "they don't mind the
dirt in the street If they ~
have a paycheck."

CHICAGO- BOBBIE ARNSTEIN, EXECUTIVE secretary
to Playboy publisher Hugh Hefner, wu found dead Monday in a ·
hotel room, the apparent victim of a self-admlnl8tered drag
overdose, authorities said. MlsiJ Arnstein, 32, rt!CI!ntly w&amp;a,
sentenced In 15 years in prillon on drug charges and wu a~
pealing the sentence at the time of her death,
:'
Police investigator Ted CoMor termed ber death "an ap "
parent suicide" and said two notes Indicating she was con-templating taking her life were found In her room at the
Maryland Hotel on the city's Near North Side nightclub strip__
The notes Instructed authorities to cootact her atl&lt;rney, '"111ls Is
a simple drug overdose, that's alllt ts. One of a mllUon," Comtll'
said. "We are not conducting a crlmlnal investigalioo."
,,

on request of the board
Ca rol Pierce, elected new pres1dent of U1e Board Tuesday
mght, ' satd the Metgs Boa rd has been concerned w1 th the
Bradbury School for some tune Hesa td thll t the board had askecl
Supt Hargraves to look Into the matter and use the S) stems of

at

ta~U:~ h! he~:e~

WASHINGTON - uPPER INCOME wage earners, and
perhaps those in the upper middle brackets, might as well f~
about a cut in lues If initial congressional reaction Is a gulde.Wlth few exceptions, lnfluentlal House members said any cut In
taxes - such as President Ford's proposed 12 per cent 1974
rebate to a maxlmiun of $1,0110-should be aimed only at those In
the lower to middle Income brackets, ·
~
Rep. AI Ullman, ~ .• Incoming chairman of the lu:·'
wrltl.ng House Ways and Means Committee, ssld the (ianel would
begin work on a lu cut soon with with an eye Iowan! having a bill
on the House floor In March. But he said Ford's prognuil
probably would be altered significantly. ''The President's lu '
red11clion program Is acceptable In amount but not in the way It
Is effected," UUman saill "Airy credit for 1974 lues would have
tn be given to the low and moderate Income group to be a0o
ceptable to Congress In my judgment."
.,

should be tssued Carsey referred to the Bradbury School as a
"flat place m the wheel of education "
Sup! George Hargraves said that earlier 11 had been agreed
that a pubhc meeting would be beld for all tnvolved wtth the
school, mcludmg the staff. Carsey sa1d parents at the meeting
mtght not be 111 agreement wtth the plan
One parent attending last mght questtoned why She would
have to provtde transportation for her chtld if taken out of the
Bradbury School and placed in the Pomeroy Elementary School
Hargraves satd that he was followtng board pohcy m tlus
Situation
Several parentr satd that some ctuldren need "pushmg" and
that thell' children are not bemg pushed at Bradbury One
coiiiplamed because her child dtd not have home work Several
parents S3ld that grade cards should be tssued so that they would
know how lhetr children are domg Under the system of the
school, conftrences are held by the Bradbury staff wtth parents
twice a year on the progress bemg made by each student
Board o!Educatton member Robert Snowden suggested tlutl
the board request records of Bradbury students over the years so
that the records could be placed on graphs to determme how
students from Bradbury fared compared to other students whf)n
movtng on In other schools These records are avatlable from the
office of Metgs County Supermtendent of Schools Robert Bowen

•

week,

Cont!!Jued Jrom page 1
of education met Monday with Federal Mediator Joseph Santa.
Emma, but no progress was reported.
The teachers are demanding a 12 per cent pay hike and have
refused the board's offer of a 4.08 pay boost. "We presented lnfonnalion which we belleve Indicates they (the board) have the
money necessary to find a substantial increase," CEA executive
director Jack Burgess said Monday.
Burgess said the teachers would be working on a day In day
basis while the CEA continues to bargain for a new contract. He
said teachers expected the Colwnbus School Board to alSO
continue bargaining In good faith tts stipulated by the court order.

to Meigs fair

BY BOB HOEFUCH
•
A public meeting to hear the "pros and cons" of the Bradbury School (a non.graded, prog ressive school for fifth and sixth
graders) wlll'be held al 7 30 p m on Feb 4 at the Metgs Junior
Htgh School m Middleport
Thill was the dectston made by the Metgs Local School
Dllltrtct Board of Educatton Monday mgh t when 15 parents of
children attending Ute school expressed dtsapproval of how the
teachmg of thetr children ts done
The " mnovative" schoo1 was rounded f1ve years ago and
allows students to move at thetr own speed through progressiVe
levels of study Mrs Phyllis Hackett ts the pnnctpal
Thurman Carsey, who had appeared at an earUer meeung of
the board to lodge compla mts agatnsl the schoo l, saJd last ntght
that some parents are dissatished w1th the Bradbury School and
want tl returned to a conventional type He sa1d grade cards

senate seat 111 •
sprlngboanllntn 1976 p-eaideJI.

usiJlg JUs

biggest increase since '46

Thrs Frlgodalre

Dryer deltvers plenty or flbrtc care Wtth ttS
2· posrtton Fabrtcs selector featunng a Oelrcate settrng plus a set1rng for Knrt. Heavy,
Regular, and Permanent Press loads., Cyole

Cloudy , continued cold
tomght, lows between 10 and
15 Wednesday cloudy and cold,
high m the mtd or upper 2!6
Probability of prectpttation 10
per cent tnmght, 20 per cent
Wednesday

MmkdR;at

'

Meigs Board hears· dispute over Bradbury School

8- The Dally Sent mel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, Jan H, 1975

Meigs

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