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16- The Daily Sentinel,Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Jan . 15, 1975

~es

'648' board programs reviewed

Manley
died on Monday

Fin ancing the e!\an di ng
ser vices
and
prov1d1n g

Mrs. Agnes Manley, 57, died
Monda y" a t the Elm wood
Village Nurstn g Hom., in
Portsmouth.
Mrs Manley had res tded tn
Mtddleporl and Syracuse , but
for the past ftve years at the
home of Be tty Jewett tn
Rutland
She was preceded in death by
her pare nts , Ross and Goldie
Wtll Shumaker and by her
husband , Will ia m 1Bucky 1
Manley.

presently operating tn Me igs
Coun ty and being pll\llned for

facilities for them and the in itiahon in Jackson and Galha
re vised bienniunl budge t were Counties
re vi ewed last wee k at a
The board ts furt her tnvolved
meetmg of the exec utive wath the Conumssw ners m
commi ttee of the Gallta· Ja ckson C01mty m a ma Jor
Jackson-Meigs "648" board butldtng project where the
The board also undertook tn Board ha s secured a larger

or the constructiOn

a statement to clarify reports percentage
in area med1a concernmg the
Gallta Co unty 1975 ap·

funds for the Jackson Cotmty
Health and Mental Hea lth

pr opri atwns for the "648 " fac allty

The Board IS also
orkmg w1th the Gil lil a County
appropriations of .h1ckson &lt;Hl d f'omm asstoners to prov1de a
Me1gs ColUllH.'S .
nr\\ f~!c th ty 1n (;,&lt;llh po lts wtuch
The comnultcc frlt th~ t m
board and clime whtch mcl ucles

ord er to keep th e publtc
pro per ly
tnfor mrd
thr
followm g mfor nmtt tm should

be prese rned
By Jaw, the "G48" Hfl;trd

the loca l Men ta l

IS

llealtl1

aut hon ty for Galhd. Jackson.
and Metgs CoLm tJ es charg('d
w1t h thP rrsponstbtl 1ty nf
pl anmng. fundw g. coo rdina ttng. c\ al 1Wim g i-llld
deve lop tng mental health
se rv1ces and fac tl ltl rs At
present, the Board has

Me1gs Cotmltcs.
The board also ts opcrattng
an extensl\·e Drug Ed uratwn

prog ram Ill three l'ounttcs (lnd
is actively mvolvcd 111 Cnsts
Intervention through support

of the Metgs Careline . Ad·
dttional se rvaces are be mg

rendered by the Pe rso nal
Advocacy program wh ich ts

Roland OoddPrcr
died on Tuesda y
REEDSVILLE - Roland L.
Dodderer, 72, Rt . 1, ReedsVI lle,
di ed Tuesday at Vetera ns
Memorial Hospttal followmg 11
short illness.
Mr. Dodderer was born in
Meigs Coon ly, a son of the late
Lawr• nce and May HarT
Dodderer. He was preceded in
death by one brother, Robert,

Complications
cited in $40
subsidy lift ·
COLUMBUS I UPI) ~ Qwck
legtslalt \'e de ltvery of a $40.
perpupt l schoo l subsidy hike
could throw teacher contract
negouauons out of balance and
result m an add itwnal cost of

a nd arlmtn ts tra tors
'' an1ed.

have

Dean Jollay, a lobbyist fo r
the Ohio Sc ho ol Boards
Assuciatton (OSBA ) , eX·
plained Tuesda y mgh t the
immediate across·the-board
funding would mea n the sl:1te
would have to spend even more

lat er to equa li ze aid to
dislrtets.
" lt would make bargatmng
much more difficul t," added
Jolla)', noting that teachers in
up to half th e school districts in
the state would be able "to
reopen negotiations on current
contracts If additional sta te
funds became avatlable.
"They would say, 'it's there,
why can 't we get it, '" said
Jollay of t~e proposed $91
million supplemental appropria tion proposed last week
by Democ rati c · legisla tive
lender s.

The supplemen tal bill was
introduced m the House by
and a sister . MHnan.
Rep. Myrl Shoemaker, DMr. Dodderer, a farmer, was Bourneville . Hearings are to
a student of local history Ius begin next week, and Demoentire hfe .
crats are hopeful of qwck
He is survived by hts wife, passage . They plan to rewrite
Jessie Wilson Dodderer , three the school substdy formula
sons, David, of Pickermgton, later this year.
and John and Ronald , and two
"This is just another case of
grandchildren.
throwing lhe dog a bone," said
Funeral serv tces will be Paul Taylor of the Buckeye
Friday at 2 p.m. at the Whrte Association of Sebool Adminis·
Funeral Home in Coolville with trators (BASA ), pointing out
Rev. Robert Meece offtctaling. his organization favors ad~urial
will
be
in ditional money for schools but
Christian Church Cemetery at would rather walt until the
Tuppers Plains. Friends ma y school foundation formula is
call at the funeral home Thurs· revamped to provide equal aid
day from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p n1. to districts with equal needs.
"We can do a good job for the
children of this state with an
extra $500 milhon as proposed
No games, No gl~m lc ks
in the budget for the next
biennium," said Taylor. "1\ut
we can do an even better job
wiUt $591 million.

Just.Highest
Interest Rates
In The Area

" Wt:! a ren' t agH ins t ad-

ditional dollars for schools," he
said , but we have some ver y
11

'51f4%

sincere questions about how
it's dts trlbuted and the
timing."
~ 'This

ON PASSBOOK

is a

o ne~ot

sv. per cent year poud on
• Regular Passbook Savmgs,
No M~njmum . Int er e st
from date of deposit to dat e
ol withdr1wal. lniH e st
tompaunded quarterly,

MEIGS THEATRE

~BRANCH
Tht Al .. ns Coun1y
S.vii"MMJ, a. Lwn Co.

Jan . 17 18- 19
TH E CHINE SE

Pomeroy, Ohio

PROFESSIONALS
(Techn• color)

l n~ u red

To

mart 1a1 arts.

e

( R)

Al so

SCALAWAG
{Technlcolor)

•

Funeral se r:vices w11l be held

U1C board's agent to receive and expend and account for federal
funds.
The boa rd approved the purchase of the bond for the clerk
and estabhshed a service fund of $300 for the board and tis
representatives to use for expenses at professional meetings.
Dues p;1yment for membership in the Ohro School Boards
A.o;;;socta tion was approved .
Dunng the over four hour meeting, the board voted to accept
only a part of the tax millage provisions of tbe county budget
commtssion an d set up a plan to gain pubhc suppor'l for higher
nullage.
The County, Budget Conunission had granted 20 mills for
operations. a reduction of 2.5 mills this year. That is the portion
of the recommendation that tbe board refused to accept rn that
the 20 mtlls mtght fail to be htgh enough for the district to par·
tictpate tn state founda tion funds .
Snowden was named chairman to contact PTA groups so that
board members can appear before the groups and ask that the
operating millage be increased. The two paris of the County
Budget Commtsslon 's recommendations accepted were a one
ha lf mrll for the state o( Ohio building millage and five mllls, a
reduction of two mills, on the bond retirement millage.
•
The board Approved the purchase of liability insurance :rom RepublicFranklin Insurance C.o. at $20 per member.
Appointed Robert W. Downey as teacher for the remainder
of the school yea r rn grade eight scieni:e.
Aproved the appointment of Diana Phillips as a substitute
cook.
Approved the closrng of Pomeroy Elementary School on Dec.
17 and 18 due to furnace problems and all schools of the distnct
last Monday due to weather conditions.
Approved the reVIsed teacher corps project budget with an
Increase of $191.
Appointed Sanda McWiUtams, a vocal music teacher, as a
substitute pending Ohio certification.
Dwtght Goins and Fred Ruth, instrumental music instru ctors, were authortzed to attend the state meeting of the Ohio
Music Educators Assn. in Cincinnati on Feb. 6-8. John Blaettnar
was authorized to attend distributive education meetings in
Lancaster today, Feb. 4and rn Columbus on Feb.13.
The boa rd also authorized the attendance of Roger Brauer,
Ron Logan, John Arnott and Nolan P. Swackhamer to the state
baskelball tournament on March 20 and 21 in Columbus. Hrgh
school prmcipal James Dtehl smd that Swackhamer, longtime
mach an d official, will be named to Naismith BllskethaU Hall of
Fame during ceremonies at the State Tournament on March 22.
The board agreed to send Swackhamer a letter of commendatiOn.
The board accepted bids on the purchase of two buses. The
bodies are to be purchased from Davis and Son, Langsville, at
$e,l50 each and the chassis from International, Pomeroy at
$10,412 each.
Steve Walburn, president of tbe Student Council, was
authorized to purchase a couch and two chairs for the student
lounge at a cost not to exceed $400. Payment of overtime of six
hours each was approved for two Bradbury cooks. An Ohio
University proposal for an inservlce program for elementary
mathematics was turned down at this time. Hargraves reported
on tbe inspection of the high school with minor correctiOns to be
made.
Along discussion was held between board members and Don
Dixon, representing the Meigs Local Teachers, on reports on
meetings between a board representative and staffs of the
schools and the procedure was returned to tbe conununications
commi ttee for revision .
Anlos Ttllis was appmnted as a substitute bus driver and it
was agreed to tncrease the wage prud to Wallace Fetty for
ha uling trash from nine schools from $17.50 a day to $30 a day
with orgamzalwns outs1de of the school to pay $5 for special
hauling.
Snowden outlined various steps that he would like to see take
place as better reports on safety checks made on buses, and
activities of the athletic board on such matters as purchase of
equipment.
Board members attending were Snowden, Hoover, Pierce,
Virgil King and J6seph Sayre. Also present were Hargraves and
clerk L. W. McComas, parents, students, representatives of the
teachers and the non-teachtng employes.

Cox was·fmcd $35 and costs on
a charge of usmg lllegal hcense

Al so

•

three meces and a nephew .

\ ·, 11l ' lll l'1 'd frunl. pagl· l

cotu· t uf Mtddlcport Mayor
Fred Hoffm•n Tucsdd)' ntghl.

Starr ing masters of t

S&gt;II,OOO by FSLI C

Meigs board

Effi e Soltesz of Grove Ci ty,
at 1 p.m Wednesday at the
Ewmg Funeral Home with the
Rev. Lloyd Gnmm , Jr , of.
ftci ating Bunal will be tn the
Poplar Rid ge C&lt; mcteJy.
Fne nds ma y call at the funeral
hom e anytime.

James S. Doss
died Tuesday
James Sterling Doss, 85, New
Uma Rd ., Rutland , died at
Holze r
Medtcal Ce nter
followmg a short tllness. Dos.
was born Aug 26, 1889 at
Henderson, W. Va, the son of
the late James Fredert ck and
Alice Kathryn Sheline Doss.
The last of hts familv. Doss
was also preceded tn death by

I GI
Show Slarls 7:09p.m. •

plates. and $2a and costs on a
miscond uct charge . Vona
WtseJ' Mt ddl epor t,
was

asse~t~d rosts only on a charge

of fathng to tmderpin a mobile
home. Robe rt C. Cha ttin.
address not recorded, forfeited
a $50 bond posted on an assault
and tiattery charge.

II

Homebuilders
'.,
·g ive of selves

NEWS
Holzer Medical Center

1Discharged, Jan. l4)
Lotus Blevins, Mrs. Patrick
Brown and son, Luther Bro wn,
Mrs. Frank Capeharl Ill and
son, John Chaf m, Yvo nne

J ames

Sw in gle,

JV CHEERLEADER - Valerie Johnson, a freshman
from Racine, Ohio at Rio Grande College has been appointed

MarJ Ofle

a junior varsity cheerleader for 1974-75 at Rio Grande College
after competing with more th~n 30 Rio Grande College
women. Cheerleaders ·are selected on the basis of crowd
appeal, ability and skill. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Johnson, Racine.

Walters, April Wiener
1 Births)
Mr and Mrs. Roger Adams,
a son, Racine

Jury finds Thomas guilty
PT PLEASANT - Paul A.
Tlwmas was found guilty of a
neghgent homJc ade charge

tn

the death of Robert E. Davis,
by a jury late Tuesday in
Mason County Circwt CourL
Jurors had the case a little
less than an hour, when they
returned to the court to report
to Judge James Lee Thompson

SUMMON SQUAD
The Mtdclleport Emergency
Squad ans wered a call to the they were indectsave on a
Riverside Apa rtm ents at I 43 verdict.
p.m. Tuesday for Susre ~d·
Judge Thompson explained
wards, a m edica l patient, who briefly costs to the county when
seve n bro ther s. and four
was ta ken to th e Holzer
lhe cases are retried a!ld asked
sisters.
Medtcal Ce nte r
the jury to return to the jury
He was a veteran of the
Spamsh . American War and
room wtlh an open mind to try
EXCHANGES JOINED
attended the Rutland Churc h of
for
a verdict, " If you can do
Ge neral Telephone Co. of
this
without sacrifice of your
Christ.
Ohi o has announced two exconvictions".
They were m the
He is sw·vtved by his wtfe, changes, Chauncey and The
Rosaline Bohng Doss wh om he Platns, wtll be consoltdated on second session briefly, then
married on June 12, 1971, Jan. 19 to be known as "The returned with lhe finding of
,
four daughters, Mrs. Fred Plat ns '' Cus tomers with guilty.
Dorothy Noll was jury
(Ruth ) Stone , PI: Pleasant: qu estio ns c on cernin g the
Mrs. George (Eileen) Keener , merger may call the Athens
Gallipoli s ; Mrs. Vi rg inia business, 593-6621.

Mr Doss was a retired river

man.
Fun eral scrvtees wtll be held
at the Rutland Church of Christ
Frtday at 2 p m. with the Rev .
Rod Katser offtctalmg. Burt al
will be in Wyona Cemetery,
Henderson.
Military graveside services

Robert Davts, an employe at
the local Burger Chef, was first
taken to the local hospital after
the wreck which occurred
around 2:05 a.m. September 7
and then on to St . Mary's in
Huntington where his death
occurred a few days later.
The car in which Davis was a
passeng~r at the tune of the
accident in a car loaned with
five other young persons
drtven by Thomas when it
careened out of control near
Harmon Park.
Testimony turned on the key
issues of rate of speed at the
time of the accident, and the
degree of mtoxication of the
driver

pv:··ews
. . . . . . . •..... .in Briefs
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ByUnltedPresslntematlonal
CINCINNATI (UP!)- A two-alarm fire at a nursing home
not equipped with an automatic sprinkler system, as required by
state law, injured eight persons and routed aU 49 elderly
residents Wednesday.
Most seriously injured was Gustaves White, 83, listed in
'serious condition at General Hospital with burns over 40 percent
of his body. In serious condition with smoke inhalation were
Charles Houston, 78; Mack Davis, 84; and Frances Rosenberg,
89. Three, other elederly residents suffered less serious smoke
inhalation.

News. • • in Briefs

Ferguson , Dallas) Tex , and

Lori Lynn Boling, at home, two
grand children and two greatgrand children .

foreman.

The Pomeroy Emergency
Sq uad was called to Batley Rtin
at 5:43 a.m. Wednesday for start in 25 years. The auto industry reported Tuesday early
Mtldred Barnett, who was ill. January new car sales dropped 32 per cent from last year's
She was taken to Veterans already depressed levels.
Memori al Hospital.
The four automakers delivered an estimated 93,500 cars in
~:~:~:::~:::•:-:!~!«,~::::::K«~::::::::::::~:W!:~
the Jan. 1-10 period, compared with 138,109 in the same period
LOCAL TEMPS
last year that was marred by the energy crisis. Ford Motor Co.,
Temperatw-e in downtown the No. 2automaker, was the only automaker giving estimated
Pomeroy today at II a.m. was sales figures. Ford said official!igures would come later.
30 degrees under snol"y skies.

w1ll be conducted
Fnends may call at th e
Walker Funeral Home after 10
a m Thursda y untll noon
Friday al whtch lime the body
will be taken to the church to
lie in state.
The family will r ece1ve
friends at the funeral home
Thursday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m.

CINCINNATI - CUFFORD J. KROGER, despite being
convicted of kidnaping four-year~ld Allison Mechem, insists he
is innocent. "This is wrong," Kroger said after the verdict was
reached Wednesday afternoon. "I did not kidnap tlje child.! don't
know anymore to sar.,lh.a_t would help.''
Kroger, 38, of Winter Park, Fla., and a father of six children,
was convicted of kidnaping in the second degree by a sevenwoman, five-man Hamilton County Common Pleas Court jury
after eight hours deliberation.
The blontH!alred, blu~yed little girl, daughter of Taft
Broadcasting Co. board chainnan Charles S. Mechem, Jr., was
kidnaped from in front of her suburban Mt. Lookout home last
Sept. 23and found safe in a nearby motel room 24 hours later.
"This is beyond my comprehension to understand," added
Judge William Mathews. "The evidence has been mountainous
against tbe defendant."
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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
SHOP THURSDAY 9:30 TO 5 PM

Womens

.;. OESTOMEET
Evangeline Chapter 176,
OES, w11l meet at 7p.m. Thursday at th e Middleport Temple

, Center populatwn , fewer
patients now attend than did in
the first two or three years.
Figures for 1974 show UV.t
there were 925 men and women
at the parties and that the
actual money spent for game
prizes and refreshments was
about $940. In addition, people
of the church and community
contribute items such as new
or good used pieces of jewelry,
soap , washclothes , gloves,
btllfolds , hose, cosmetics,
scarves, purse;, paper and
pencrl and other thmgs to go
mto the four wicker baskets of
game prtzes which are taken to
Athens each month. Every
mon th since the program
started Osby ,. Martin of the
Middleport Pool Room has
provided candy bars for the
patients.
·
While the parties are
sponsored
by
the
Homebutlders Class, other
church organizations have
contrtbuted ftnanctally. Each
month the Loyal Women's
Class gives $25, and the Loyal
Berans and Philathea Women,
as well as indtviduals in the ·
church and the · communtty
donate to the project.
(Continued on page 7)

polittctans .
The
Chief Execulive
arranged a breakfast meeting
"(tth
Democratic
and
recovery on the table, Presi- Republican congressiOnal
dent Ford today began a series leaders to discuss legislative
of meetings to sell his program handling bf ·the program he
to the nation's most influential unveiled m his State of the
::
~~~~~~~~ Union address to a nationally
televised JOtnt session of
EXTENDED FORECASE
Congress
Wednesday.
Saturday through Monday,
In the afternoon Ford was to
chance of snow Saturday and
personally
welcome more than
Sunday and cloudy Monday.
100 governors, mayors and
Highs will be between 30 and
county offlcals to a briefing in
35 In the north and between
the East Room by his top
35 and 40 In the south.
economic advisers on his
m
r·
proposals for turning the
Jlb
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UP!) With his blueprint for economic

~.,,. '. j ~ .

parties for hospital patients
· By Charlene Hoenlch
For the Homebuilders Class
of the Middleport Church of
Chrrst, 1975 marks the
begmning of the sixth year of
monthly parties for palrents at
th e Athens Mental Health
Center.
And for the church members
who have made the many trtps
up the winding road to Athens
tn all kinds of wather, the
feeling ts that the joy has been
theirs.
For them the pleasure of
putting a little sunshine into the
lives of those less fortunate,
has far exceeded the time and
money involved.
To be sure, staging the
parties month after month is a
lime consuming and expensive
project.
A lack of money there has
never been. Neither has there
been a dearth of volunteers to
assist with the parties, and
always there has been a pianist
in the group to play for the
hymn singing.
Through the years patient
attendance has ranged from 60
to 100 each month and the cost
has averaged a little less than
$100 a month . With the steady
decline in the Mental Health

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Cloudy, colder tonight, lows
between 10 and 15 Cloudy
Friday , highs in the lower 30s
Probability or .precipttalton 60
pet. today, 20 pet. tonight, and
10 pet Friday.
LOCAL TEMP

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LEAGUE TO MEET
The Middleport Chtld Con·
servalton League will meet at
7:30 p.m. Thursday at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. in Middleport with
Mrs . Margaret Ella Lewts of
the Meigs Commun tty School
to be the speaker.

Our entire stock
of Misses, Juniors,

•

Preteen and Womens
Size Winter Coats is

Ford says Union bad

included in this sale

('onl !lluNl from pa ge 1

He repeated he would not iniuate any new spending programs
this year, except to develop energy sources , and said he would
not hestitate to veto any new spending initiated by Congress.
Ford called on Coogress to cooperate wtth him in slowmg down
the growth of federal programs and called for reductions totaling
more than $17 billionin the 1976 fiscal year.
In a drive to restore the nation's ef)ergy capacity and make the
United States "invulnerable to cutoffs of foreign oil," Ford
recommended a plan that included :
- ExciSe taxes and import fees totaling $2 per barrel on
product imports and crude oil .
- Deregulation of new natural gas and enactment of a natural
gas excise tax. He asked for a tax of 37 cents per thousand cubic
feet or the equivalent of $2 a barrel.
- Enactment of a windfall profits tax to make sure oil
producers do not profit from the oil crisis. Ford also said he
would remove thepriee ceiling of $5.25 per barrel on old domestic
crude oil on April I.

MRS. DENVER RICE of the Homebuilders Class of the
Middleport Church of Christ displays one of four ·wicker
baskets of gifts and goodies which are taken to Athens Mental
Health Center monthly parties to be used for game prizes.

PRICE

For Your Dining rutd Listening
Pleao;; ure...

GEO. HALL

1·'
J

i

AND THE HALLMARKS

Open 'Both Friday

TONIGHT 8:00 JO,12:30

and Saturday
9:30 to 8 pm

The• MEIGS INN

/
t
Jf
!

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ELBERFELDS ·1N POMEROY

•

l'h. 992-::K&gt;:ll)

,
-

ISRAEIJ COMMANDOS CROSSED INTO LEBANON and
attacked Palestinian guerrilla targets today in the fifth conaectulve ' day of frontier clashes. Lebanon called for an
emergency conference of Arab leaders to help stop !heralds.
The Tel Aviv military command said tbe lsra!!lis killed foUl'
guerrillas in a gun hattie at the village of Cbouba, one mile north
of the border. It reportecl two Israelis were wounded. In a
polltical development,'~yptlan President Anwar Sadat sai~
Israel must make the next move for peace in the Middle East; but
SO--far- it has made t•&gt;-new_offers.

•

I
j

BRUSSELS I UP! I - Tbe U'.
S. dollar showed signs of settling back into one of its worst
slumps today, depressed by
low U.S. interest rates, gloomy

Devoted To The Interests of The
VOL XXVI

NO. 193

ce nts overmght.

Me~.g~·JtJason
.

THURSDAY, JANUARY 16, 1975

.POMEROY·M IDDLEPORT, OHIO

at 4.395 francs, a mere three
quarters of one centime above
Monday's 16-month low.
Paris bant-Ing officials said
Ford's economic package had
not raised lnunedlate hopes for
a halt to the U. S. buslneu
slump and the drop In U. S.
prime rates.

Area
15 CENTS

Congress set to
h d ]i'; d l
·

.

s re

WASHINGTON (UP!) President Ford advertised
ubad news/' and his tax and
energy program received a
polite but unenthusiastic
hearing from a Congress which
now begins taking it apart
piece by piece.
Many of the pieces likely will

Icy roads
•
provmg

dangerous

.

0

r p an

be discarded.

that: "I've got had news, and I

'f

Conservatives, who might don't expect much, if any,

have helped push the program
through, were stunned by the
budget deficit it will bring -lJO
billion in the current fiscal
year and a peacetime record
$45 billion in the fiscal year
beginning July 1.
Liberals found little to like
except the general idea of a tax
cut for individuals.
Ford told Congress in a
nationally televised State of the
Union address Wednesday

2 held for

'

COLUMBUS - CARL JOHNSON, 62, COLUMBUS, a
Republican member of the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio,
has been named chalnilan of PUCO, it was announced today.
Gov. James A. Rhodes named Johnson, who served ·a PUCO
cbalnnan in the previous Rhodes adminlsttation, to replace
Sally Bloomfield, a Democrat, wllo will remain on the commission. Mrs. Bloomfield was named chai.cman by former Gov.
Jolm J. Gilllg8li to succeed Ethnund Turlrwbo resigned.

The selling of the State of the
Union program will conllille
tomorroW with more lrleOnfll
for labor and buslnesa representatives .
Ford will ask Congresa for
permission to sulmlt his next
federal budget on Feb. 3 -a
little later than the deadline aet
by law.
'
He still plans another ~!»­
nomic message to Cong,_
and one on foreign policy, In
which he Is expected to repeat
his Wednesday appeal that
Congress leave foreign policy to the President.

en tine

applause." He got what he
expected from joint session of
Congress as be outlined a
program that would add 2 per
cent to the cost of living and
add at least 10 cents to the
price of a gallon of gas.
Ford's program calls for a 12
per cent rebate on 1974 individual income taxes, a $16.5
billion' permanent tax cut
mainly at tbe lower end of the
income scale, corporate tax
cuts, yearly $80 payments to
poor adults, a moratorium on
new federal spending and a cut
to 5per cent of an upcoming 8. 7
per cent Social Security coot:
of-living increase.
On the energy (ront, Ford's
program would bring about a
drastic increase in fuel costs by
ending price controls on oil and
natural gas and adding a $2 tax
to every barrel of domestic and
foreign oil. Ford said he
gradually would Impose by
April 1 a $3 per barrel tax on
imported oil -using his own
emergency powers -pending
congressional action on hilt
other propOsals.
Based
on
Initial
congressional reaction, bere Is
the status of Ford's program

Directors of
bank elected

SALE

.I think he's pleased.':

Dollar sinking under blows of fading faith

Zurich bullion dealers quoted
gold at $177.2:; an ounce, down
from $177.7a. In London, gold
opened at $177.75, down from
The temperature m down- eco:wmtc prospe cts and a $178.25, and slipped during the
town Pomeroy at 11 a. m fading fat th in President morning to $177.50. ,
Thursday was 35 deg rees under Ford's revival package.
The U. S. dollar dropped
cloudy sktes.
The price of gold dropped :;o three centimes an Paris to open

The Meigs County Sheriff's
FARMERS IN THE WIND-WHIPPED, SNOW-cLOGGED
•
Department
investigated
three
MIDWEST, already victims of a drought and an early freeze
accidents Wednesday and one
which killed off crops and livestock, took stock of tbeir latest
this morning.
Metgs County Sheriff Robert
losses today - the dead and missing, man and animal. The
Wednesday at 2 p.m. in C. Hartenbach said Wednesday
weekend storm piled mountains of snow on Midwest farm and
Letart Township on old TR 144 his department is holding for
ranch lands and brought bitter cold to the area.
William
Fetty, 24, Pomeroy, sentencing
Monte
Ray
The storm's death toll reached 64 persons Wednesday. The·
·
driving
his Seven-Up truck Barringer, 18, and Davtd
bodies of an elderly couple were found in their Rembrandt, Iowa,
south, slipped off the edge of Arthur Barringer , 21, of
home Tuesday night. They apparenUy had been dead since the
the road and went over an Hockingport, in connection
weekend, when t4e storm hit the area.
embankment.
The truck turned with the breaking and entering
The storm also took Its toll on farmers and cattlemen. The
over
on
its
side.
There was of an occupted home belonging
president of tbe SioUJt County, Iowa, Cattle Feeders Association
said Wednesday "tens of thousands" of head of cattle may have · moderate damage, but no to J. B. O'Brien on the Owl
injuries or citation.
Hollow Road in Orange
perished in the storm"and cold wave.
At 6: Ia p.m. Wednesday in Township on the 30th of
Sutton Township, (Miners· November, 1974.
CHARLESTON, W.VA.- INDUSTRY SPOKESMEN say
ville), Kenneth A. Turley, 25,
Barringer was also charged
they are pleased with President Ford's proposal to pltce greater
Racine,
travehng west ran mto with theft of first aid kits, fire now:
reliance on coal to belp solve the nation's energy problems. They
A tax cut is likely to be
a doe deer which was killed. extinguisher, flares, and fuses
applauded the President's address to Congress Wednesday,
(Continued on page 7)
There was moderate damage. from buses belonging to the
which stressed ooal research and development as a major
At
9:45
p.m.
Wednesday
in
solution to boost fuel resources.
Eastern Local School District
"Obviously, we have a favorable reaction to anything which Chester Township on SR 248 in parked across from the grade
front of Gaul's Store, Steven R. school in Tuppers Ptarns, off
would serve to generate further expansion, development and
Dill, 18, Rt. 1, Long Bottom, 681, on or about the 20th of
sl!lbllity of the coal U!dustry," spid Edwin Wiles, president of the
pulled
from a parking place November, 1974.
West Virginia Cool Association. "We have to encourage facilities
,and
struck
a parked car in the
now burning oil to convert to coal.''
Both men gave Sheriff
rear. The parked vehicle was Robert C. Hartenbach a
owned by Marcus Moore, statement admitting their guilt
AMARilLO, TEX. -AGRICULTURE SECRETARY Earl
Chester.
There was mediwn to these charges and were
L. Butz said Wednesday Congress and the Ford administration
Nine
directors
were
damage.
No citation was before Judge John C. Bacon on reelected at the annual
should Ignore pressure from some congressmen for importissued .
export controls and govenunental restrictions on agriculture.
Tuesday on a bill of in· meeting of the shareholders of
At 8:30 a.m. today in the formalton prepared by Ber· The Farmers Bank and
"Some of the new members of Congreu don't even know which
end of a cow you get milk from," Butz said during a news con- driveway at Racine Junior nard V. Fultz, prosecuting Savmgs Company .Wednesday
, ference following a speech to the National Association of Wheat High, Linda S. Parsons, 25, attorney, where they made a in the board room of the hank.
Syracuse, was stopped waiting · plea of guilty and were They were Dr. Fred R. Carsey,
Growers.
~
Butz said the future was good for grain fafliiCrS, but not so to pull out onto SR 124 when a remanded to the custody of the Jr ., Fred W. Crow, Jr .,
car driven by Steven L. sheriff until a pre-sentence Richard C. Follrod, Leslie F.
good for tbe cattle industry. He warned against listening to the
few congressmen who want to use their new offices, or possibly Stewart, 17, Minersville, pulled examination can be conducted Fultz, Thereon Johnson ,
spots on the Agriculture committee, as a means of attracting into the driveway. Stewart by the State.
- Ferman E. Maori,, Theodore T.
public attention. During his speech, Butz said futures markets applied his brakes, causing his
Some of the properly stolen Reed, · Jr ., E. 1 Rolrert
Indicate buyers are offering prices within 30 cents .a bushel of car to slide on ice and show from O'Brien, such as guns, S,chellhase and C. Wayne
eurrent levels for 1975-crop wheat at harvest time. He said in- covered gravel and strike power saws and tools were Swisher.
·
dicatl&lt;in.s are fanners in tbe United States and throughout the Parson's vehicle. There was recovered by deputy sheriffs of Reelected officers of the
world will plant a greatly increased arno\IDI of wheat next minor property damage, no Athens ~ounty in the State of bank are Theodore T. Reed,
injuries and no citation:
season, but the price should hold finn.
West Virginia.
Jr ., president; Thereon

Coat Sale

economy around with multibillion dollar tax cuts and $30
billion in higher fuel costs.
A White House aide said the
lrienng would go "in depth"
mto the President's economic
energy package with emphasis
on revenue sharing. Ford plans
$2 billion more in revenue
sharing to cover higher energy
bills.
Ford also was meeting today
with Israeli Foreign Minister
Yigal Ailon .
Press Secretary Ron Nessen
said Ford feels his State of the
Union package is "a darn good
program. He feels It wiU work.

Weather

sentenczng

to practice for im tiat10n

•

'
By HELEN
THOMAS

the joy is-theirs in giving

Donnell, Nellie Ebhn Joanne
Ferguson , Floren ce Fle~ing,
Mary Ford , D~wey Gay,
Sam uel Gtbbs, Wrlltam
Gt lmour, Mary Hatfield, Billy
Holland , Geo rge Ktll en,
Preston Maynard, Mrs Peter
Ohlin ger and daughter,
Gerhnda Plants. Dorothy Rice,
Alta
Rubb tns, Virgi nia
Rodgers, Jo Ann Rose , Darrin
Roush, Roger Shaffer, Roy
Sherrt ll, 11tsa Shockey,
Theothtlus Srmth , Inez Stumbo,

wc1s fmed on two charges tn the

FR I. -SAT .. SUN .

296 Second St.

Sur vlvmg are a sister , Mrs

FINED TWICE
Har\'ey Cox. 49, Galhpolis,

TON ITE lhru THURS
JAN . IS 16
NOT OPEN

4lMEIGS

All A ccounts

deal, "

said John Hauck of BASA.
"They aren't considering the
long-range approac h."

SAVINGS

In August, 1973, when th e
1974 budge t was submttted, the
"648" Board had ftvc em·
se rv aces 1n the th ree co unties. ployes, and the chnic had seven
This new Mental Health Center employees. At present, the
will be the most com- " 648" Board has ft ve emprehensive and co mpl ete ployees and the clinic has 21
employees.
fac thly tn South ern Ohio.
To clarif y sa lary ap·
ln conclusion, the mcrease in
propnalions for 1974 compared other expenses approprtalely
to 1975 the fo llowm g tn· refl ec ts th e expansion of
formatton ts submtlled by the c.hnical services m Gallia.
board
Jac kson, and Meigs Counties.

\1

establt s hed r ltntnd se rvt cc
programs wh trh mcl udcs the $26 mtllion to the state in Uw
Clmic bemg open ftve clays per · IQng nm . state school hoards

week m Gallm. Jackso n. :md

wtll be the property Of Gallia
Coon ty, and wtll serve as
headquar ters for all clinica l

HOSPITAL

1!111118iMitllllll88!1!1111!1!tllllltiiiWCilltl'l1mliimiiWCIIWCIIWCm!IIWCW.~.fj&lt;~Jm'S@Jm

• l S gel tmg
• ' 1
Co IDIDUDIS
C OSe
to Saigon in winter .drive

SAIGON (UPI) - The Commuolots' sb:·weelt:~ld
wbtler campaign, which baa led to the loss of an entire
SoJIIb Vietnamese province, Is moving closer to Saigon.
The Viet Coog fl_red eight ,roclt:ets Wednesday night at
a suburbiD army training center only 10 miles northwest
of the capital. The Saigon collll!'llnd said two penous
were lt:ll/ed and 44 wollllded at QaiDg Tnmg,
In tho Saigon area, Commanlst front Uoes"are within
35 mllu of the capital, and heavy combat bas taken place
wlthilr 00 miles or the cooter&lt; of .tbe city. ' 'TI!e military
si!Qtloa hasn't loo!red this t.d for a long tiine i" a hlpnmkiDg South VIetnamese officer said.

Johnson ,

executive

vice

L

INDUSTRIAL ARTS STUDENTS at Meigs High School display some of their wort: that wu
on exhibit at the Industrial Arls Show held Saturday night at the high school. Students llhown
with articles they made are, 1-f', Ronald Hawkins with miniature chest, Wayne CotterUI with
cedar chest, and Ronnie Wood with cheu board. Between 125 and 150 parsons altended the
Saturday night llhowlng.

I

J

'

'

'"

OFFICERS AND ADVISORS of the Industrial Arts Club of Meigs High School are, front, J.
r, Ronald Hawkins, secretary ; Neal Knight, vice president, and Sam Utile, president; back
row, Ben Slawter and Charles Frecker, advisors.

uuuuuuuu. b::.: t.t .. ».: •
. WINNING NUMBERS
NILES, Ohio (UP!) Here are this week's winning
numbers In the Ohio lottery:
Number 478 (fouNevenslx) In any box on ticket win~
$20.
Numbers 8!111 (eight-ninezero) and 246 ( tw&amp;-four-slx(
In green and blue wins $500.
Numbers 8!111 and 248 In
blue boxes wins $1,000.
Numbers 8!111 and 246 In
green boxes eligible for
$300,000 drawing and
automatically wins $15,000.

u
president ; Paul E. Kloes, vice -#~"'::
AUTO
STRUCK
prestdent ; Roger W. Hy!iell,
A small car owned by
cashier ; Jon P. Karschnik,
assistant cashier; Joanne J . Thomas Culp, W. Main St.,
was
heavily
Williams, assistant cashier; Pomeroy,
damaged
at
7:05
a.m.
Thurs,
Evelyn G. La~ning , assistant
cashier, and Addte W. Norris, · _day morning when it was
'struck by a Chesapeake and
loan officer.
President Reed reported to Ohio Railroad Train. Pomeroy
the shareholders. that even police said the vehicle was
though 1974 showed a general parked too close to the track
slow down in the general near the Modern Supply' Store,
economy, the bank ex· w."Maln st.
pert enceil another year of
STILL CONFINED
progress.
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov .
President Reed also reported James A. Rhodes remained at
that the second floor of the home today lot the third
bank has been completed and ~ onsecutive day, recuperating
frqm a v~ s.
'
leased as offi ces.

Anti ·annexers
will meet
'
.
on Saturday in Racine
RACINE - Pel'llons opposed a little at a lime and that the
to the proposed annexation of a water system Is in excellent
large area by Racine will meet physical condition and
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. i~ the financially sound. The rate for
club room at Roush's Landing. unlimited water is only $3.50 a
E. A. Wingett, chairperson, month.
said Joseph Cain, Gallipolis Wingett suggested that
attorney, will be present to persons Interested In the
explain legal procedure.
proposed annexation attend the
Wingett said the proposed meeting. A public meeting will
an~exatlon "is a friendly be held sometime next week on
community question" to the a date and at a lime to be anresidents. He also stated:
. nounced:
"We appreciate the work of
the commllee !hat prepared
the expansion, but feel t)tat the
NOT ON PROBATION
expansion is too large. An
Kevin Milam, Middleport,
agreement, I'm sure, can be son of Mrs: Louise Johnaon,
worked out. We can possibly has not been placed on one year
expand ·and include ' those probation by the Meigs County
residents, between 40 and 50 Juvenile Colli'!, contrary to
.'
homes, already receiving rumors. .
water from the local system,
but who live outside the cor. poration .' There is a lack of
MEETING PUT OFF
community interest in the
.The reg,uliJI' meeting of the
town. The slreels and drainage Pomeroy Democrat Com- ' :
are in deplorable condition." mitlee scheduled for ThUrsday;
· He also sugges.ted lhl\t an- Jan;-17 has been:paelpQned due
nexation possibly could be done to weathlr condiUoM./1• ·
••

�I ,•'

,,

. 3- The OaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Jan. 1_6,1975

2- ri.e Daily Sentinel, Mlddleporj·Pomeroy, 0., Th~y!_~an . 16, 1975

Waverly ·eighth in AA

Facing the century's last quarter

Editorial comment,
opinion, features

'

'

2000 could be a very prosperous year

world there has 'been a shift of curing the acute problems of
life's enjoyments in favor of at food shortage, people ,surplus
and reoource profligacy, aU of
would soon be proposing to least,some of those who were which it has rather ·stupidly
shoot his doctors because they previously the worst treated ignored in recent years.
,
did not make him feel better on group, namely working class
Pi-osperity
will
not
increase
the increasingly frequent housewives . In aU continents evenly, nO.. that 'knowledge,
oceasions when he was blind other than Asia and Africa,lt is which is transf~rable between
now unlikely that a mad die·
drunk.
nations, moves laoted to thtise
tator will start a war.
For idealistic reasons a Jellcountries
which have the most
At the end of this quarterwing British university lee• century of unexampled im· innoVation-oriented busineas
This country is not only in the midst of an energy crisis, it has
turer had just given this mad provernent, and at the gate of system. The most likely leader
a· "people crlsls "- a growing shortage of professional man·
Stalin 'the secret of nuclear the last quarter-century of the might be Japan because its
power in critical areas of the energy business.
fission with which he could second Chriotian milennium, business system has the most
So warns Wayne E. Glenn, president of the 50,ootknernber
destroy the world.
American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical and Petroleum
conventional opinion Is again useful tribal instincts. If not
In America, with more than feeling very gloomy indeed. On Japan, then by 2000 almost
Engineers. Glenn is also president of the Western Hemisphere
one-half of gross · world past form, this suggests that certainly China will be drawing
Petroleum and Chemical Division of one of the nation's largest
product,
the conventional 1975- 2000 should instead be a wealth and power inro the
oil oompanies, Continental Oil.
·
wisdom was that in a recession period of great advance , Pacific.
When the RliSSians put Sputnik inro orbit in 1957, there was a
the right economic course Teclmological conunon sense
trememdous call for engineers in this country, he recalls. Get·
But tribal instincts change
would
be
to
restrict
demand
by
ling an American on the moon and back safely became our
q1dckly. There Is a growing
suggests the same thing.
making sure that you balanced
foremost naUonal goal. Young people responded to the cballenge
danger
today that, not just in
In the next twt~-~~nd...a-llalf
the budget.
by literally standil)g in line tO enroll in engineering schools and w
paternal
Japan, but in the
decades
the computer,
Anybody who remembered telecommunication
claim the thousands of engineering jobs opening up in the space
democracies
of the West, tribal
and
that peace had lasted lor only automation revolutions will prudence will desert peoples
program and in supporting industries.
21 years after 1918, and that come of producti~e age. The wh9 have become too used too
Only a little over a decade later, however, the space program
1929 had come 11 years after it, spin-offs are fairly predictable. quickly to the free license of
was greatly curtailed and these same thousands of engineers and
could not easily believe that the They make it overwhelmingly democracy, to uninterruped
teclmiclans were losing their jobs and finding themselves unable
quarter-century 1950 - 74 likely that we should be able to economic growth and. to
w locate comparable employment.
would run its course without a enjoy at least another trebling military peace. That is the
As a result, the profesSion as a whole received very_bad
world
depression
im- of real gross world product in tangible danger already
publicity, even though unemployment among engineers was
poverishing us and then a 1975-2000, provided we again confronting America in its
never more than half the national average.
world war incinerating us.
Engineering enrollments in our colleges declined steadily.
increase world money supply foreign policy making. If that
Instead, that third quarter of and again permit a sufficiently happens then the memories of
The entering class of 1971 was the smallest in 2fJ years, and while
the Twentieth Century, has intelligent free market system today's children could he as
there have been enrollment increases in eaclf of the last three
been by far the most successful in at least some countries to grim as those of two quarteryears, the gap between demand for new engineers and the
in history. During it real gross keep bringing that new centuries ago.
number of engineering graduates has continued to widen.
.
world product has more than knowledge into productive
The nation loses about 75,000 professional engineers ·a year
In the 1921B and 1930s, intrebled, so that we have added effect.
by retirement, death or job-changing, but only 59,000 engineers
flation and then depression so
graduste each year, a gap of 18,000.
more than twice as much to
poiooned
tribal instincts in
Our small economic problem
annual productive power in at the gate of the new quarter- Gennany that civilized men
"Now, with a national commitment forming to return this
these brief 25 years as in all century
country to a greater degree of energy self-BUfficlency; we find
is
that
the sang hymns to a ffi8liS murprevious aeons of our plant. management of world money derer who was self-evidently
ourselves short of the teclmological brainpower to achieve this
goal," says Glenn.
Be Iter , the growth has gone to supply lllid the operation of mad. In the 1950s and 1960s a
many
of the right places.
Unfortunately, the suJiply of engineers is not something you
market mechanisms have been continuing capitalist boom so
In 1950 the average life ex- temporarily diorupted, addled some rich intellecluals'
pectancy of an Indian was because one commodity, crude tribal Instincts that they ntJW
probably in the 3Us and it is now oil, whose sales until 1973 regard it as progressive to call .
believed to be in the 50s. In accounted for about one·half for zero economic growth,
some other Asian countries per cent of gross world although this would mean that
infant mortality rates have prnduct, has been quintupled in infant mortality rates In poor
fallen by an amazing two. price, to a price incidentally 10 countries would fail to fall by
thirds in 1950 - 74. There has times its marginal cost; this two-thirds in the next 25 years.
been a worldwide surg, in has shifted one and one-llalf·
In the fourth quarter of this
education and in literat'Y .
century,
we face the
two per cent of gross world
In the rich one-fifth of the product out of people's spen- probability of the present fairly
I
I
ding power into sheiks' and bad inflation giving way to
I
shahs' savings which they hold fairly bad world depression
I
followed by opportunities lor
in very liquid form.
I
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
I
amount three times a day.
economic grtJWth than
faster
I
II
seems
improbable
that
DEAR DR. LAMB - Your
I
You can keep your husband I
ever.
we
will
not
solve
this
one
andI
column on dieUng and fad die is happy by preparing low calorie
one-half-two per cent of a
The main dangers of the new
was Umely for me. I've lost 17 dishes. Then he won't notice Speaking of ghettos ...
quarler-et:,ntury
will lie in the
problem
eventually,
by
the
pounds since June, eating less you don't eat so much. Low..fat
erratic
and
emotional
lolly
automatic
operation
of
the
high
and no snacks. However, I cooking does a lot to decrease
PO Box 167, Pomeroy, Ohio
elasticity
of
substitution
lor
which
can
be
a
deadly
stopped eating breakfast and calories in your diet and really
Janusry 12,1975
overexpensive. oU If by nothing characteristic in educated
lunch, as I don't have a helps· in weight control Dear Sir:
,
else.
If that can be achieved, tribes when rather easy
cooperative husband. He problems.
After reading Sunday Sentinel and letters w the Editor on
mankind
should turn its economic problems are hanthinks I don 't eat enough, so
Loss of excess salt and other &amp;!gar Run. I feel I must agree with the letter comparing it with a
By
Ray
Cromley
out
of
hand
if
the
congressmen
unexampled intelligence to , dled slightly wrong.
when he's home I'm compelled minerals often cause the citY ghetro but let me say they falled to tell it aU -Laurel Street
had
done
their
job.
WASHINGTON
(NEA)
w eat to keep peace on muscles to have a tendency to . in my eplnion Is worse yet - If you're wondering where Laurel
a
The CIA affair, un·weekends. It's disheartening to cramp. That cramp In your Street is, it's the street going up around the hill from the Sugar Twenty years ago
fortunately,
is but .. one
congressional
friend
get on the scales Monday call muscle can well be from Run MlU. Myself and a lot of other children grew up on that street
cosponsored
a
bill
w
set
up
a
demonstration
of the abject
morning.
and I can't remember ever bothering anyone.
loss of too much salt.
I've experienced dizzy spells
Almost every resident owns their own property and have joint committee to regularly failure of the Senate and House
If you lose weight gradually
as you described . Also I'm enough with a sensible diet worked hard for years to keep it nice. Peeple have always kept check on the Central In-' of Representatives to handle
one of the major functions
awakened early with a charley program your husband won't their sidewalks, yards and even their sewers cleaned for years. telligence Agency.
There were already Senate assigned them under the
By fillet 'hllaehDI
horse in my leg. Ill this coin· notice It so much. Don't forget Let me tell you, the street has gone to pot. I do not live on the
and
House committees with Constitution's system of checks
Amazin', isn't it, how many folks are superstitious?
cidence? Could I lose easier to use sensible exercise as part street, but I do own property there. People nowadays have no
Cuddled up in the subconsclous of aU of us is the hope of
regard .for people's property. They park on your sidewalks or authority to monitor and in- and balances - watching the
just eating vegetables? I'm 62 of your diet plan.
vesilgate
CIA
matters
but
they
executive.
escaping
our personal .vales of tears through a supernatural
and gained 20 pounds since I
Send your quesUons w Dr. anywhere they Uke, and that Includes the middle of the rosd if did litUe. Their hearings were
It
is
not
enough
that
action.
Call
it, If you will, relief from our problems by an event
quit working a few years ago. I Lamb, in care of this they so wlah. The condition of the rosd is terrible, and they tell
jokes.
These
men,
by
law
the
Congress
should
make
laws,
'
precipitated without a !mown or visible.cause; In other words, a
need to lose 25 pounds more. newspaper, P.O. Box 1551, me It is a new one .
The water company fixed a leak in front of my property and watchdogs, had in fact become decide programs and vote suspension of the natural law of cause (the event ).and effect (the
DEAR READER - I usually Radio Oty Station, New York,
think a person who needs to N.Y. 10019. For a COllY of pr.- left It in a mess. A driver decided he'd park his car over the open the lapdogs of the officials they funds for the CIA and aU other relief).
government agencies ,
It is this quality of the hwnan psyche that the most recent
lose 20 pounds or more should Lamb's booklet on loolng sewer and onto the sidewalk, making matters worse. What can were supposed to be watching
This
connection
could
be
Legislators are responsible for "chain letter" coming to my attention hinges its success.
have medical supervision. weight, send 50 cents w the you do - NOTHING! We cleaned the sidewalk and sewer five
SomeUmes people are over- same address and ask for the months ago and worked hard. It had been years since the broken only through a group of making certain these laws and strangely, the only peeple apparently making a monetary gain Ia
independent of the old Senate programs are carried out the U. S. Postal Department. According to widespread reports,
sidewalk had ever been cleaned off or the sewer cleaned out.
weight for medical reasons, "Losing Weight" booklet.
and
House cliques.
according to mandate, and that the No. 1 Postmaster (who has amounced his forthcoming
Kids run aU over your property, and it's no use lelling them
but I must admit it Is usually
My
friend's
bill
did
not
get
the moneys are opent as resignation In the face of 8180rted ~ges of hanky panky with
to stay off as kids nowadnys don't have any respect for property
from eating too much of the
out
of
committee.
Even
the
directed.
sweetened Postal Department contracts) conceivably could be at
or people and don't Usten to anyone.
wrong foods.
Washington
Post
was
against
ouUined
The
problema
the bottom of the moat recent chain letter reported in the Metgs.
Cats and dog• run loose all the time, and nothing Is done
You are not unusual in
it.
above,
unfortunately,
are
not
Gallla
area.
except clean dog dung off your shoes whenever you step out.
having a mate who sabotages
It
should
be
explained
that
confined
to
intelligence.
Mere
For this one merely asks me to send a copy of the letter
Yes - they missed the wrong ghetto- and we pay taxes too.
your diet efforts. Many men do
congressional
committee
this
friend
is
no
flaming
within
98 hours to 20 &lt;r more persons I think needs good luck! At
feel
councU
should
get
up
and
specuisle
about
the
whole
city.
I
not really want their wives to
tll(lll
not
have
come
members
liberal.
He's
a
conservative
today's
postal rates, that Is two buCks to each person getting the
The sidewalks and roads are in need of repairs. Don't say levy a
lose weight. Psychologiots
to
Identify
closely
with
the
strong
retired
colonel,
a
letter, lf he doe.s as directed, and 40 bucks to the postal depart..
tax, weare tax poor now. lhavetrled to find out an answer to this
offer all sorts of reasons for
federal
agencies
they
are
believer
in
intelligence
and
in
ment
each time the bag Ia turned over.
question,
and
would
appreciate
an
answer
if
anycihe
can
:
this, some on target and others
~to
supervise,
Some
milllary
preparedness.
Several
1bls
accounting does oot take Into account the extra business
"Who owns the sidewalks? Do I? Or doeWbe city? Who
that cause me to raise an
committees,
as
armed
serdirectors
of
CIA
have
been
his
COOLVILLE
Stockholders
in having 20 copies mimeographed, or typed; the envelopes, ·
maintains them and If I do bow do I keep people f~m parking on
eyebrow. One theory is that
friends. But he, and his vices, have- become veritable statlonecy, petrol or shoe leather to get to the post office, cr the
of the Tri County Bank here them? Ellen Rought, P.O. Box 167, Pomeroy, Ohio.
some merithlnk
that
if
the
wife
.
acquaintances in intelligenCe, spokesmen for the depart.. extra electrical mergy bumed up late at nlght preparing aU
· loses weJgbt she will be more showed their appreciation for a
were
convinced
this ments.
these copies (remember, I'm talltlng about 20 x 20.per turnover).
attractive to other men . $4 per share dividend during
The military committees are
congressional
laJmess
did
no
197~. and a good year generally
Maybe, even, It's President Ford's latest gimmick ~Uke
Another idea is tlu!t if she looks
favor to the nation or to the not alone. 1bls bias and lax- everybody clean up his plate real good) put onto us quleUy this
young and attractive she may by reelecting six directors at
intelligence community.
ness extends wone or IIICil'e of . time to shape up the ec:onpmy, beat lnDation, clobber the
be more demanding and may their recent annual meeting.
An
emphatic
contradiction
the
committees.assigned to the recession, and put the oU bogging Arabs In their place wblch
No agency works well if It
Reelected were J. Sterling
tax his ability to keep up, Of
becomes a law unro itself. Departments· of Health, must be.llllll'kedly lower on the htiman scale than we find proper
course, if be Is overweight Lamp, chairman of the board;
Bumbling
and boondoggling Education and Welfare; persons.
Middleport, Ohio
himself it can be quite a threat. Kenneth W. Stealey, secretary,
and
Urban '
Wbatever the reason, here-4n part-Is what l'm to do upon
Jan. 14,1975 increase. Wild-eyed ideas and Housing
This works both ways. A wife and Robert E. Holdren, Daniel
Development; Commerce; receiving the personally addresaed letter from a Middleport
inane
operations
are
not
nipped
Dear
Sir:
K.
Graham,
Carl
E.
Smith
and
may not really want her
I !liD wishing that you publish and make known to your in the bud. Some part of Transportation; Agriculture address signed by a person wli011e name is strange to me:
husband to lose weight. I have Jack E. White.
,AI the organizational reading audience this respoi\Se to an article tiUed "Convention management iilevitably steps and to a fistful of the IJI.
"Trust In !be Lord with aU your heart and aU will be
repeatedly seen wives who
out
of
line,
backed
by a power dependent agencies,
acknowledged
and He willligbt the way.
'
· ," : ·
meetlryg
which
followed,
J
.
Talk
Discussed,",
page
4,
of
your
newspaper
da'ted
January
'14,
would not help thejr husbands
The wordy congressional
base in the executive or in
''1bls prayer has been Belli to you lor good luck. The original ' :
with a diet.even after he had a Sterling Lamp was elected 1975.
criticisms
frequently reported copy came from the Netherlands. It has been around the world
Congress
.
An
agency
with
president;
Kertneth-W.
Stealey,
I
am
not
attempilng
to
be
critical
of
people
when
I
emmedical problem with heart
unmonitored power and by the press, more often than
"
disease or high blood pressure. executive vice' president 'and phatically contradict a position taken by sincere people wishing resources is a severe temp- not do/l't show up In COOimlttee nine times. Thelucthasbeesuenttoyou. You are to receive good
'
She doesn 't want wchange her cashier; Carl E. Smth and wknow the truth of Jesus 0\rist, b~t I caMOt knowingly let ari ts lion lor men in the White votes. It'• the exceptiqns that luck within four tlaya of ~ this letter. It Is no joke. You
"
errant
position
stand
as
the
truth
of
the
gospel.
William
F.
Hanneman,
vice
will
receive
it
In
tbe
mail.
Send
(liO)
twenty
copies
ol
this
letter
to
' '
way of cooking or food
•
House, as evidenced by the fact are widely publicized; the people you think need htct. PI- do not send money. Do not
presidents;
Hazel
G.
Westfall
"SpeBklng
In
tongue"
Is
both
a
gift
(Acts
2:38)
and
a
I
preparation. The doctor IS
- l
three
presidents
have
used
nontJBI
practice
of
going
almg
and
Maxine
Rader,
assistant
manifestation
(1
Cor.
12:
7)
of
the
HOly
Spirit
and
without
such
keep
this
letter.
II
!Rust
leave
within
98bours
after
you
receive
it.
ususily more successful if he
", I
those facilities for political Uke sheep is not neWs.
''A.R.S oflliier received $2,0110. ilm El&amp;tt received -.0110.
talks about diets w both the cashiers; Dixie Sovel, comp- you are ''none of His". (Rom. 8:9) . It not only waS'present in the ends.
.I
The teftdDB recently voled but loll It because be broke the chain. While in the Pblllppliles,
. I
husband and the wife. Un· troller, and Maxine Creamer, early cllurdl but continues lhrooghout the ages in the only
What
was
true
of
the
by
the
House
of
~
"I
bookkeeper.
O!urch
of
Jesus
Otirst.
U
you
seek
the
indwell.iilg
Spirit
of
Jesus
·
GfJileral
Walah
bt
bls
1rife
lib:
days
after
be
received
this
letter.
fortunately
those
conl
congressional watchdogs 20 tatives were alml!tl In part at He failed to i:lmtJaate tile prayer, Htiweva, before bls death, lie
O!rlst,
you
wW
manifest
the
Spirit
upon
receipt
with
tongues
as
versations, when they do "!:·
.'
increasing that watchdog received $771,0110 willdl ht wm. Pleue Mild 11 copies and. then
evidence. This ·is exactly the .same experience found with years ago is true today.
cur, are usually after the man
"
The Senate subcommittee on function. But the power and the see what bappm1 on the fourth day. Add your name to the botlou!
thousands,ol people near you today as In the early church.
"
·has survived a· heart attack
\
I challenge any and all. religious orders, denominations, or lntelligen-::e, .whicb has been duty have been there all along. o1. this lilt 8lld leave the top- off when CWY~n~."
and is on bis way home from
other loan open and public discussion of the matter. Any person beaded by Sen. John C. stennls
FoUowing In my letter were • names, the last oite the copier
the hQIPital. It would be much INCREASE DIVJDENJ)
•
(D-Miss.) and the House
who
can
poisitively
demonsirafe
thai:
·
ol
my
letl~. It CODcludetl by~ four mtn lnatanres ·of per·
•
better if it happened before the
CINClNNATI (UPI)
subcommittee which has been
•
(1) Spetl&lt;ing In tonues does not occur today.
.110118 wbo eltber deflllllted tlllllllldinc 011 the. letters and IIUfferid,
heart attack.
Procter 1: Gamble Co. dlrec'
chaired
by
Rep.
Lucien
N.
(2) The Bible teaches that these signs and mani!estat.ions
"America, I Love. You," by cr C'JIDp!!eol with tbe lnltructlona aad PI'CAi ! ted p-eatly. Un.
Now you know what I think lllrs Tuesday voted to Increase
Nedzi
(J&gt;.Micb.),
have
the
about fad diets, so you the annUal rate ol. the cun- ' ceased with the apostles, or the early church, or at any other power they need. They can MrsA'.arrie EbeiSbach Neutz.. fortwiately, 1'-e wlb:IUII were NllideiU ol fill' off placN lite
ling of Poineroy, a story of_Qne Provlllc:e 13~ ol Outer Mqolla 01' St. ADIOIIes; South Amerlt:ll
shouldn't ask about going on an pany'o common stock d!Yidmd tim@ wthe present and until He comes, or ·
•
.
question
anyone
in
the
CIA
at
( 3) This pbenomfJil,IJ experience is wm~ry w salvation in
•
of Meigo County's pioneer 1!blcb, of -.e Ci&amp;)body IUill' can place qult:kiy·on a map~
aU-vegetable diet . .Wbat you from $1.80 to $2 per shate.
length and study budget eifainWes active in . coal and our lerretllrim globe.
It marked the 19111 CIJiilecu.. our time, and, prove aU three by Biblical authority, tha,t person
need Ia a slow, sensible plan of
•
pendltutes down to ~ last industry, will be the feature of
will
have
me
for
a
convert
and
an
opeo
witness
of
his
persuasion.
Wbat Is IIIOtllamnh!'laiDJ .... &amp;lle CIJUI'alle Ia view of the
•
a weD-balanced diet. You need Uve year In which rompeny
And, .this proposal I am making is a sincere one from an pemy if they wW. They have the monthly meet1ns ol the · apparent Pllnful aulferlng I bave Invited by trea~ tii,y letter
~
· some protein in your diet, plus dividends have been~. •
consistently neglected their Meigs Coimty Pioneer and :with less awe~omet Ill Ibm IOIIIt roJb wauJd advise.
individual
woo,
if
nothing
elSe,
desires
w
find
'Sjlivation
with
vegetables.
In line with the ICIIon,
job.
·~
Meamrbile, If in the aat rew da:rwtt ill'elltllted that I move
Historical •Society •! 2 p.m.
~ dizZy spells usually oompany jlirectora declared 8 ~csus Christ. In all honesty, !,do not expect any take!'S because
Wbat's fl!llnired, therefore, Sunday at the Meigs Museum, my '70 tnde1 four-4oor bee'tllllllo lnother veblcle, or *ldded
the one thing peeple know is' they don't know what they are
.I
mean IQIS of water and sa.lt quarterly dividend ol 80 cents talking
Is
an investigation ol these
·
111
the
li:e
dlrlred
llilbwaY
inti
rolled
rn~
the
Oblo
~~mr,
or
liad·
--1
abOut
in
this
regarct.
'111ey
operate
by
faith
in
a
belief,
and
Butternut·
Ave.,
Pomeroy.
from an improper diet ir eve'l per share payable' on feb. 15 w
committees. ·For there Is no Members and non-members my hciuse burn down over my held, Ot-. bt •liiOtllloved 0!1!. It
not
by
knowledge.
In
Jesus
Name,
Thomas
!..
Kelly,
683
starvation. Try to eat a small , shareholders of record Jan. 24.
way in which the CIA could get are invited.
Chestnut St., "A new fentecostal\'.
will " plain wbi-11 ~ppe-~
-~
-- . I
~
· =- .
~
I
By NE:A
London
Economist News Service.
Because the Chris Uan era
began in AD ! instead of AD 0, start for another 12 months - a
theologians and chronologists pedant's view.
Since it is now 25 years to
say that the last quarter of the
January
of 2000, and 75 years
Twentieth Century will not
since January of 1900, most
ordinary people will not heed
it. Ordinary people hav.e done
bes t not to heed conventional
can turn on and off like a spigot. Employment stability in the- wisdom at the gate uf each
engineering profession must he demonstrated, not just promised. quarter of our astonishing
There must also be some shifting of technical manpower from century.
other ·less-important areas, where there is an abundance of
At the start of the first
engineers, to the more critical areas.
quar te r , in 1900, most
Glenn is not suggesting that every oth~r industry deplete its respectable people felt they
engineering manpower so that energy companies can, have aU were moving joyfully into a
they need . The object, instead, should be to Inc rase that total pool belle epoque in a world in
of available engineers and teclmicians.
whi ch
agriculture
and
Testifying at a Federal Energy · Administration hearing, domestic service were the two
Glenn recommended that a task force he created w measure the largest single occupations in
probable manpower requirements for each energy source every country_Before that first
conaidered in Project lndepend'll'ce so that the available supply quarter~e ntury was two-thirds
can be used most effectively.
run . youth and laughter and the
Beyond that, he says, "The most effective way to marshal belle epoque had gone to hell .
the nation 's manpower resources in this effort is to make it atBut , at the start of the second
tractive enough, rewarding enough and more socially desirable quarteG.oin 1925, most of our
for people to want to pursue careers in the fields. "
fa thers felt that civilization
could Charleston back to pre1914 normality provided we
kept cool with Coolidge and
trusted Stanley Baldwin .
Instead, that second quarter
Christmas trees may be hazardous w your health.
of our Twentieth Century was
This post«ason, Scroogelike warning comes from a the moSt beastly' and bloody
Canadian allergist, Dr. Derek Wyse, who reports that seven per quarter~ntury mankind has
cent of some 1,600 patients developed rashes and respiratory known. Before it was one-third
symproms during the Christmas holidays. The ailments, he run the world 's industrial
production had been suddenly
Wyse's cut by three.tenths through
investigations showed that the culprits were the same mold and easily-avoidable economic and
-pollen dusts responsible for summer allergies. When the trees dipl omatic mistakes, with
were brought into the house, ragweed, sage and grass pollens Hitler and mass murder as the
that had attached themselves wthe sticky bark of the evergreens result.
were released Into the warm,dry, indoor air.
At the gate of the third
quarter of the Twentieth
Century, in 1950, it was
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . , therefore conventional to be
Letlen of oplalon are welcomed. Tbey should be len
1 pessimistic . In Britain, un1
so. The most
tbu aoe worda loag (or be subject to reduction by the
I editor) ud moat be algned with the 1ignee's addreaa. I derstandably
powerful
army
in the world 's
I
I
history
stood
a
few
days' tank
I NUiea 11111y be withheld upon publication. However, on
I
ride
away
from
the
Channel
I requeat, names wW be diadosed. utters should be in good
I ports under the supreme
I taate, addresalng i11ueo, not personalities.
command of a despot who
I

Santa sneezes

cla':~~~g~:c:!"~b~~~~r~=!t~~snr.

I

Mate sabotages
,diet efforts

I

I

Ray Cromley

Glass houses of
Congress vs. the CL4

the day' after .

••

Directors

reelected

.

.

.

..

Speaker noted

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Mid·
dlerown's Mi,plty Middies have
taken over the , rop spot this
week in the United Press InNEW YORK (UP!) - Catfish Hunter has started something ternationai Ohio High School
nobody knows how to finish, and his ears should be burning Board of Coaches' Class AAA
because a small army of ballplayers with all the other clubs are basketball ratings .
using his name as an excellent lever to get every nickel they can,
Middletown, second to
and maybe some more .
.
Canton McKinley last week,
The players are taking substantially the same basic approach swept into first place with a 10.
with their employers ,
0record, with Barberton (II~)
"_Don't tell me you don 't have any money," they say. "I saw moving inro the runnerup spot
where you·were wilting to give Ca tfish Hunter a coupla' million, and McKinley ( 10.1 ) dropping
so I'm sure you have a little left for me. You're actually saving w third.
mon~ because I'm not asking you for anythin g near what he
The Middies , whO have
did ."
outscored 10 opponents by an
It is extremely difficult to"work up any sympathy for the average of 24.5 points per
owners here. In fact, my own personal feeling is they're getting game, received 11 first place
exactly what they deserve. Especially those who wanted to and 286 points from the 36 AAA
impress their fans they were doing everything they could w get coaches voting this week .
Hunter. What better way was there for them to look than to an- Barberton picked off six first
pounce publicly how much money they were offering Oakland's place votes and 248 points and
25-ilame winner ' Here was the ideal form · of free publicity', McKinley received four firsts
perfect for the consumption of the home fans, or so the club and 225 points.
operators thought.
Rounding out the top ten in
One thing club operators are learning now ·is all that wonderful AAA were Newark (13-0) in
free publicity they received two weeks ago is turning out to be fourth, Toledo Scott (II~) in
rather costly, more so than they ever imagined.
fifth and Kettering Alter (8-.())
Many clubs allowed their offers to Hunter to be published. If in sixth, followed by Cincinnati
they didn't come right out. and own up w them, 'ps did Eider (7-1 ), Oncinnati Hughes
Philadelphia , Cleveland, Kansa s City, San Diego, Minnesota, the
Dodgers and the Mets, then they managed w have their bids
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

..

"

.-

.'

..

•

(8-&lt;l), Dayton Roosevelt (9-1) ·
. and Cleveland East Tech t 9-1) '
The other two leaders remained the same as last week
with Wellsville again No. I in
Class AA and Mansfield St.
Peter 's tops in Class A,
although the Spartans hold
only a one point margin over
runnerup Canal Winchester
among the small schools.
'Wellsville, which has reeled
off eight wins in a row, was a
solid choice in AA, piling up 286
points to 201 for runnerup
Columbus Mohawk (9-1). The
Tigers of Coach Bobby Dawson
also received 11 first place
nods to six for Mohawk, ·
Moving inro the third spot in
AA was Delphos St. John's (H)1) with 182 points , followed
closely by Warsaw River View
(10-01 with 166 and Springfield
Shawnee (10-0) with 165.
Rounding out the rop ten in
AA were Rossford (1 1-1) ,
Buckeye South (3-01 , Waverly
(10.1), Circleville (10-0) and
Lisbon Beaver Local f 11-1),

•

Beaver Local replaced Canron
Lehman, which droppe&lt;l its
fifth game of the season and
fell out of sight
. St. Peter's, now 11-2 on the
year after a 73-60 victory over
Clear Fork Tuesday night,
received 10 firs t place votes
and 222 points, to hold its Class
A lead over Canal Winchester
by a single point. The Indians,
lll--0, received seve n first place
votes.
Norwalk St. Paul (II ~) , last
week's runnerup, fell to third
this week, with Anna (12-01
jumping all the way from tenth
to follrth and Lorain Clearview
(11-2) dropping from a tie for
third to fifth after losing its
second game of the season.
The rest of the Class A rop
len consists of Minster (II~).
Upper Scioto Valley (12~) .
Sebring (9-1), Wynford (9-1 )
and Lordstown (10-0), which
replaced Continental. Conlinent.al fell to lith and unbeaten Pettisville (II~) was
12th.

conveniently 1 'leaked.''

Ohio ratings
CO L UMBU S (UPI J The
weekly Uni t e d Pres s In
t ernaliona l Ohio H i gh Schoo l
Board o f CoactH?S' basketball
r a t ing s with f irst pla c e vote s
&lt;~nd
won lo s t r ec o r d s
in
par en the ses .
Cl&lt;t ss AAA
T eam
Po i nts
I M iddl e town ( II 10 0 1
'l . BMberton ( 6 11 0 )
3. C &lt;~nton M c Ki nl ey (·I 1()

American Conference match, . 10-3 season mark.
passed the 1,000 point scoring Break Lead
mark of his varsity career . He
In a .ga me played at Richhas now scored a 'total of 1,017 mond, Ky., six-foot-7 freshman
points.
Alan Elijah dumped in eight
Central, which is now 3--0 in straight points near the end of
the MAC and 10.1 overall, led the game to break Eastern
44-31 at halltime and never Kentucky University's lead
relinquished the lead through- and send the Dayton Flyers to
out the game.
a 7~ victory,
Bowling Green is now 3-2 in
Elijah ,· who collected 16
the league and 7-5 overall.
points in the game, got the
Leading the scoring for the eight points with 5:50 remainFalcons were guard Jeff ing and Eastern ahead, 61~0.
Montgomery with 22 points and
Junior guard"' Jolmny Davis
forward Corneilius Cash with added 21 points and I.eighron
20, Cash also passed the 1,000 Moulron, another junior guard,
point mark of his varsity had 17 for Dayron's seventh
victory in 13 games this season.
career.
Forwards Jeff Tyson and S.
Eastern, now f&gt;-7, was led by
L. Sales each scored 14 points Carl Brown with 20 points,
at Kalamazoo, Mich., Wednes- Jinuny Segar 13 and freshman
day night to lead Western Mike Oliver, who added 12
Michigan to a 73-56 Mid- points and a game.lJigh 18
American Conference victory rebounds
as
Eastern
over the University of Toledo, dominated the boards 4ih19.
The broncos are now lhS The Flyers led by three at the
overall and 2-2 in the MAC intermission, 33-30,
while the Rockets fell w IHl
overall and 2-2 in the conferen"'Judgment of the people is
ce.
ofte n wiser than the wisest
Toledo led .35-34 at halftime men. " - Louis Koss uth ,
but . Western Michigan ~arne Hungarian statesman.
back to score 15 unmatched
poinls in the first eight minules
of the second half to surge
ahead.
High scorer for Toledo was
guard Jim Kindle with 16
points.
Hard Fougbt Victory
Back at Athens, Ohio, junior
forward Dave Terek, in his
first start for the Bobcats,
scored with only four seconds
remaining in _the second
overtime to give Ohio
University a hardfought 92-90
Mid-American Conference
vicrory over Miami.
Terek, who went in for the
wiming bucket after Scott
"By winning (this season), it Love stole the ball for OU, had
was a better way for us to get sent the game into a second
·back at them than using harsh overtime with a 2Moot jump
words," Shoate said.
shot with seven seconds reTo win the Lombardi award, maining in the first overtime.
Shoate will have to be judged a
The Bobcats were paced by
better lineman than three other All-America candidate Walter
finalists , Ohio State defensive Luckett's 33 points and Terek
tackle Pete Cusick, Maryland fmished as second high scorer
defensive tackle Randy White with 12 points.
and Southern Methodist noseMiami got a 28-point scoring
effort from Chuck, Goodyear.
guard Louie Keleher.
This will be the fifth year for · Rod Dieringer added 19 and
the award, a block of granite · Steve Fields had 17.
.RACINE, OHIO
symbolizing player and coach
Both teams are now 2-1 in the
Lombardi, the smallest mem- conference, while the Bobcats
her of Fordham's line which are 7-5overall and Milimi has a
was called the ''seven blocks of
granite."
Previous winners were Notre
Dame's Walt Patulski, Nebras·
ka 's Rich Glover and two Ohio
State players, Jim Stillwagon
and Jolm Hicks.

which annually selecls the
Vince Lombardi lineman
award winner, tonight will
disclose Shoate's ranking
am9ng gridiron trenclunen at a
$100 a plate dinner.
But Shoate, feeling his unbeaten Sooners were maligned
when placed on probation the
The0 Dai~ Sentinel
past two years, excelled among
~~ni-~s\0 0TFHe
his peers for putting his beefs
MEIGS· MASON AREA
on the line.
CHESTER
L
.
TANNEHILL
"Violations and things like
Exec . Ed.
1
ROBERT
HOEFLICH
·
that go on not only at OU or
City Editor
·
Pubr ished daily except
Texas but even . at the small
saturday by The Ohio Va l l ey
schoo'-,"
Shoate said WednesPublishing Company , 1 11
c;
Court SL, Pomeroy . Oh;o
day. "We just happened to, get
45769 . Bu siness Office P hone
992 -2156 . Editorial ·Ph One 992·
caught."
2l~~·cond c lass Po sta ge paid at
Shoate said the probation,
Pomeroy , Ohio.
which barred the Sooners from
Nat r onal adver tisi n!J
tel · ·
st.
represen ta tiv e
Bo ttinell •- · ·
evtston or po season a~
Gallagher, ,Inc ., 12 East 4'2nd
pea ranees this season , inSt ., New York, New York .
s u b s c r i p t i on
r a t es :
tensified _his performance this
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ice not
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i .............................................,

•

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Tr a c.e ( 1) 27 ; 19. A da 26t 20.
(t i el
M oMo ev-i ll e
and
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Ot hers w it h 10 or. more
points : Chi l licothe F lageL
Ar c anum .. P!a t rick H enry ,
Se neca
East,
Burton
Berk Shire , Midd l etown Fen w ic k , Grand Volley ( 1 ), Nort h
Gn ll ia nnd Spring f i e ld Jef ferson ( 1)

715

-1 N ewark (4 13 01

Sooner lineman criticizes
NCAA for Oakie probation
HOUSTON (UP!) - Oklahoma Sooner linebacker Rod
~oa te may or may not he the
premiere college football lineman this season, but he rated
No. 1 in outspokeness.
A nationwide committee,

7. Up , Sc ioto Valley 13 ,12 OJ 98
8. Se b rin g(9 · 1l
89
9. Wyn ford( J 91 l
81
0. Lords town ( 1 10 01
69
Second 10 : 11
Con t in en tal
53 : 12. Pet tisvi ll e ( 21 41, 13
Marion Lo c al 34 . 14. (fit" )
Windham
and
Lu c asvi ll e
Vall ey 32 ea ch . 16 . Zan esvill e
Ro sec rans
31:
17
~ reder i ckfown 28 : 18 . Hannan

266
148

IJ

8. Waver l y (2 10-IJ
9 . Circ l ev il le ( 10-0 l
l O. Li sbo nB ea v- er l81 l

Michigan schools
get past Ohioans

Merely to set the record straight, the total package the
Yankees got Hunter for came to exactly $3 million, and that
figure includes $200,000 paid w his attorneys. The lawyers got
their money right away . Himter's. is tied up in escrow until it has
been legally decided he can pitch for the. Yankees, and that could
take some time.
The Yankees were not the highest bidder. San Diego was, in
one sense, and Kansas Oty in another, and if you remember
those two clubs went right down to the wire .
Kansas Oty offered $3.8 to Hunter. San Diego's bid was $3.7,
and then in an all-out effort to land the American League's 28- By United Press International
year-old Cy Young Award winner, the Padres offered him an
Michigan colleges had a field
open check book telling him to'fill in his own figure.
day Wednesday, with Eastern
A number of the offers for Hunter were primarily for the Michigan downing Kent State
henefil"of the home fans, and not compietely sincere. Some of the
56-55, Central Michigan defeatclubs that made offers might have had a lot of trouble coming up ing Bowling Green 83-73 and
with the money had Hunter accepted:
Western Michigan swamping
Kan8as Oty's offer was genuine. So was San Diego's.
Toledo 73-56.
If you remember, the Texas Rangers bid $2.6 for Hunter in the
Only one game, Wright State
early going, after which club owner Brad Corbett said he was
at Rollins (Fla,), is scheduled,
getting out of the poker game because he felt the stakes were
tonight.
growing unreasonable .
At Ypsilanti, Mich., senior
Corbett's offer was the McCoy, too, but now look what's hap- forward Talmadge Bell sank a
pened w him because of it.
free throw with just one second
Ferguson Jenkins had the same won-lost record for the
left in the game to break a 55-.55
Rangers last season Hunter had for the A's, 25 wins and 12losses.
tie "and give Eastern Michigan
He pitched 10 more innings and six more complete games than
a 56-55 win over Kent State.
Hunter did and struck out 82 more battlers. Do you think that , It was Eastern Michigan's
gave him some ideas? It cerlainly did.
· first Mid-American Conference
Jenkins received $125,000 from the Rangers last year and they
victory . The Hurons are now 6-offered him $145,000 for this year. Remembering the club's offer
7 overall and 1-4 in the league.
to Hunter, Ferguson Jenkins just laughed. He wasn't amused, , " Bell stole a pass from
though. He has let the Rangers know that· if· Catfish Hunler was
Bradley Robinson of Kent State
worth $2.6 million to them, theri Ferguson Jenkins is a bargain at
with six seconds remaining.
$200,000. He wants a multiyear contract, same as Hunter . Robinson fouled Bell, setting
There's no real way of knocking Jenkins' logic either.
up the free throw opportunity.
All the Rangers can tell him is that their offer to Hunter in·
Kent State is now 2-9 overall
cluiled other things "besides salary, like a bonus, a loan and in- 'and 0-3 in the MAC.
surance, wwhich Ferguson Jenkins would be less than human if
Ted Hipsher scored 11 points
be didn't come right back and say, okay, you give me those
to lead the Eastern Michigan
"other things," too.
scoring while teanunate Wa)t
Other Texas players besides Jenkins are coming off good
Jones added 10. Randy F.elhayears, fellows like Jeff Burroughs, the American League's MVP;
ber was high scorer fOr the
Lenny Randle, whose .302 average made him the league's sixth
Golden Flashes with ·16 points,
leading hitter, and shortstop Toby Harrah, who finished with 21
At Mount Pleasant, Mich.,
homers.
guard Jim McElroy and for·
Burroughs, according to one report, has his sights set on a
ward Dan Roundfield com·
three-year contract at $100,000 per year, and it would be no , bined for 43 points to propel
surprise whatsoever to hear Randle asking for maybe $75,000 and
Central Michigan to an 83-73
Harrah $50,000. It could even be these figures are a little low."
vicrory over Bowling Green
All these fellows, you see, read what the Rangers offered
and its lOth straight win.
Catfish Hunter. They figure they'd like to get theirs now, what
Passed Scoring Mark
they honestly feel they're worth. ,
Roundfield, who also nabbed
This feeling is known the world over. It's called human natur,e.
16 rebounds in the Mid-

.,..
•
~

...

Middies overhaul McKinley

Sport Parade

Economist commentary

Engineers ttre back in ·style

DR. LAMB

.

'

I

I

'.

�I ,•'

,,

. 3- The OaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Jan. 1_6,1975

2- ri.e Daily Sentinel, Mlddleporj·Pomeroy, 0., Th~y!_~an . 16, 1975

Waverly ·eighth in AA

Facing the century's last quarter

Editorial comment,
opinion, features

'

'

2000 could be a very prosperous year

world there has 'been a shift of curing the acute problems of
life's enjoyments in favor of at food shortage, people ,surplus
and reoource profligacy, aU of
would soon be proposing to least,some of those who were which it has rather ·stupidly
shoot his doctors because they previously the worst treated ignored in recent years.
,
did not make him feel better on group, namely working class
Pi-osperity
will
not
increase
the increasingly frequent housewives . In aU continents evenly, nO.. that 'knowledge,
oceasions when he was blind other than Asia and Africa,lt is which is transf~rable between
now unlikely that a mad die·
drunk.
nations, moves laoted to thtise
tator will start a war.
For idealistic reasons a Jellcountries
which have the most
At the end of this quarterwing British university lee• century of unexampled im· innoVation-oriented busineas
This country is not only in the midst of an energy crisis, it has
turer had just given this mad provernent, and at the gate of system. The most likely leader
a· "people crlsls "- a growing shortage of professional man·
Stalin 'the secret of nuclear the last quarter-century of the might be Japan because its
power in critical areas of the energy business.
fission with which he could second Chriotian milennium, business system has the most
So warns Wayne E. Glenn, president of the 50,ootknernber
destroy the world.
American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical and Petroleum
conventional opinion Is again useful tribal instincts. If not
In America, with more than feeling very gloomy indeed. On Japan, then by 2000 almost
Engineers. Glenn is also president of the Western Hemisphere
one-half of gross · world past form, this suggests that certainly China will be drawing
Petroleum and Chemical Division of one of the nation's largest
product,
the conventional 1975- 2000 should instead be a wealth and power inro the
oil oompanies, Continental Oil.
·
wisdom was that in a recession period of great advance , Pacific.
When the RliSSians put Sputnik inro orbit in 1957, there was a
the right economic course Teclmological conunon sense
trememdous call for engineers in this country, he recalls. Get·
But tribal instincts change
would
be
to
restrict
demand
by
ling an American on the moon and back safely became our
q1dckly. There Is a growing
suggests the same thing.
making sure that you balanced
foremost naUonal goal. Young people responded to the cballenge
danger
today that, not just in
In the next twt~-~~nd...a-llalf
the budget.
by literally standil)g in line tO enroll in engineering schools and w
paternal
Japan, but in the
decades
the computer,
Anybody who remembered telecommunication
claim the thousands of engineering jobs opening up in the space
democracies
of the West, tribal
and
that peace had lasted lor only automation revolutions will prudence will desert peoples
program and in supporting industries.
21 years after 1918, and that come of producti~e age. The wh9 have become too used too
Only a little over a decade later, however, the space program
1929 had come 11 years after it, spin-offs are fairly predictable. quickly to the free license of
was greatly curtailed and these same thousands of engineers and
could not easily believe that the They make it overwhelmingly democracy, to uninterruped
teclmiclans were losing their jobs and finding themselves unable
quarter-century 1950 - 74 likely that we should be able to economic growth and. to
w locate comparable employment.
would run its course without a enjoy at least another trebling military peace. That is the
As a result, the profesSion as a whole received very_bad
world
depression
im- of real gross world product in tangible danger already
publicity, even though unemployment among engineers was
poverishing us and then a 1975-2000, provided we again confronting America in its
never more than half the national average.
world war incinerating us.
Engineering enrollments in our colleges declined steadily.
increase world money supply foreign policy making. If that
Instead, that third quarter of and again permit a sufficiently happens then the memories of
The entering class of 1971 was the smallest in 2fJ years, and while
the Twentieth Century, has intelligent free market system today's children could he as
there have been enrollment increases in eaclf of the last three
been by far the most successful in at least some countries to grim as those of two quarteryears, the gap between demand for new engineers and the
in history. During it real gross keep bringing that new centuries ago.
number of engineering graduates has continued to widen.
.
world product has more than knowledge into productive
The nation loses about 75,000 professional engineers ·a year
In the 1921B and 1930s, intrebled, so that we have added effect.
by retirement, death or job-changing, but only 59,000 engineers
flation and then depression so
graduste each year, a gap of 18,000.
more than twice as much to
poiooned
tribal instincts in
Our small economic problem
annual productive power in at the gate of the new quarter- Gennany that civilized men
"Now, with a national commitment forming to return this
these brief 25 years as in all century
country to a greater degree of energy self-BUfficlency; we find
is
that
the sang hymns to a ffi8liS murprevious aeons of our plant. management of world money derer who was self-evidently
ourselves short of the teclmological brainpower to achieve this
goal," says Glenn.
Be Iter , the growth has gone to supply lllid the operation of mad. In the 1950s and 1960s a
many
of the right places.
Unfortunately, the suJiply of engineers is not something you
market mechanisms have been continuing capitalist boom so
In 1950 the average life ex- temporarily diorupted, addled some rich intellecluals'
pectancy of an Indian was because one commodity, crude tribal Instincts that they ntJW
probably in the 3Us and it is now oil, whose sales until 1973 regard it as progressive to call .
believed to be in the 50s. In accounted for about one·half for zero economic growth,
some other Asian countries per cent of gross world although this would mean that
infant mortality rates have prnduct, has been quintupled in infant mortality rates In poor
fallen by an amazing two. price, to a price incidentally 10 countries would fail to fall by
thirds in 1950 - 74. There has times its marginal cost; this two-thirds in the next 25 years.
been a worldwide surg, in has shifted one and one-llalf·
In the fourth quarter of this
education and in literat'Y .
century,
we face the
two per cent of gross world
In the rich one-fifth of the product out of people's spen- probability of the present fairly
I
I
ding power into sheiks' and bad inflation giving way to
I
shahs' savings which they hold fairly bad world depression
I
followed by opportunities lor
in very liquid form.
I
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
I
amount three times a day.
economic grtJWth than
faster
I
II
seems
improbable
that
DEAR DR. LAMB - Your
I
You can keep your husband I
ever.
we
will
not
solve
this
one
andI
column on dieUng and fad die is happy by preparing low calorie
one-half-two per cent of a
The main dangers of the new
was Umely for me. I've lost 17 dishes. Then he won't notice Speaking of ghettos ...
quarler-et:,ntury
will lie in the
problem
eventually,
by
the
pounds since June, eating less you don't eat so much. Low..fat
erratic
and
emotional
lolly
automatic
operation
of
the
high
and no snacks. However, I cooking does a lot to decrease
PO Box 167, Pomeroy, Ohio
elasticity
of
substitution
lor
which
can
be
a
deadly
stopped eating breakfast and calories in your diet and really
Janusry 12,1975
overexpensive. oU If by nothing characteristic in educated
lunch, as I don't have a helps· in weight control Dear Sir:
,
else.
If that can be achieved, tribes when rather easy
cooperative husband. He problems.
After reading Sunday Sentinel and letters w the Editor on
mankind
should turn its economic problems are hanthinks I don 't eat enough, so
Loss of excess salt and other &amp;!gar Run. I feel I must agree with the letter comparing it with a
By
Ray
Cromley
out
of
hand
if
the
congressmen
unexampled intelligence to , dled slightly wrong.
when he's home I'm compelled minerals often cause the citY ghetro but let me say they falled to tell it aU -Laurel Street
had
done
their
job.
WASHINGTON
(NEA)
w eat to keep peace on muscles to have a tendency to . in my eplnion Is worse yet - If you're wondering where Laurel
a
The CIA affair, un·weekends. It's disheartening to cramp. That cramp In your Street is, it's the street going up around the hill from the Sugar Twenty years ago
fortunately,
is but .. one
congressional
friend
get on the scales Monday call muscle can well be from Run MlU. Myself and a lot of other children grew up on that street
cosponsored
a
bill
w
set
up
a
demonstration
of the abject
morning.
and I can't remember ever bothering anyone.
loss of too much salt.
I've experienced dizzy spells
Almost every resident owns their own property and have joint committee to regularly failure of the Senate and House
If you lose weight gradually
as you described . Also I'm enough with a sensible diet worked hard for years to keep it nice. Peeple have always kept check on the Central In-' of Representatives to handle
one of the major functions
awakened early with a charley program your husband won't their sidewalks, yards and even their sewers cleaned for years. telligence Agency.
There were already Senate assigned them under the
By fillet 'hllaehDI
horse in my leg. Ill this coin· notice It so much. Don't forget Let me tell you, the street has gone to pot. I do not live on the
and
House committees with Constitution's system of checks
Amazin', isn't it, how many folks are superstitious?
cidence? Could I lose easier to use sensible exercise as part street, but I do own property there. People nowadays have no
Cuddled up in the subconsclous of aU of us is the hope of
regard .for people's property. They park on your sidewalks or authority to monitor and in- and balances - watching the
just eating vegetables? I'm 62 of your diet plan.
vesilgate
CIA
matters
but
they
executive.
escaping
our personal .vales of tears through a supernatural
and gained 20 pounds since I
Send your quesUons w Dr. anywhere they Uke, and that Includes the middle of the rosd if did litUe. Their hearings were
It
is
not
enough
that
action.
Call
it, If you will, relief from our problems by an event
quit working a few years ago. I Lamb, in care of this they so wlah. The condition of the rosd is terrible, and they tell
jokes.
These
men,
by
law
the
Congress
should
make
laws,
'
precipitated without a !mown or visible.cause; In other words, a
need to lose 25 pounds more. newspaper, P.O. Box 1551, me It is a new one .
The water company fixed a leak in front of my property and watchdogs, had in fact become decide programs and vote suspension of the natural law of cause (the event ).and effect (the
DEAR READER - I usually Radio Oty Station, New York,
think a person who needs to N.Y. 10019. For a COllY of pr.- left It in a mess. A driver decided he'd park his car over the open the lapdogs of the officials they funds for the CIA and aU other relief).
government agencies ,
It is this quality of the hwnan psyche that the most recent
lose 20 pounds or more should Lamb's booklet on loolng sewer and onto the sidewalk, making matters worse. What can were supposed to be watching
This
connection
could
be
Legislators are responsible for "chain letter" coming to my attention hinges its success.
have medical supervision. weight, send 50 cents w the you do - NOTHING! We cleaned the sidewalk and sewer five
SomeUmes people are over- same address and ask for the months ago and worked hard. It had been years since the broken only through a group of making certain these laws and strangely, the only peeple apparently making a monetary gain Ia
independent of the old Senate programs are carried out the U. S. Postal Department. According to widespread reports,
sidewalk had ever been cleaned off or the sewer cleaned out.
weight for medical reasons, "Losing Weight" booklet.
and
House cliques.
according to mandate, and that the No. 1 Postmaster (who has amounced his forthcoming
Kids run aU over your property, and it's no use lelling them
but I must admit it Is usually
My
friend's
bill
did
not
get
the moneys are opent as resignation In the face of 8180rted ~ges of hanky panky with
to stay off as kids nowadnys don't have any respect for property
from eating too much of the
out
of
committee.
Even
the
directed.
sweetened Postal Department contracts) conceivably could be at
or people and don't Usten to anyone.
wrong foods.
Washington
Post
was
against
ouUined
The
problema
the bottom of the moat recent chain letter reported in the Metgs.
Cats and dog• run loose all the time, and nothing Is done
You are not unusual in
it.
above,
unfortunately,
are
not
Gallla
area.
except clean dog dung off your shoes whenever you step out.
having a mate who sabotages
It
should
be
explained
that
confined
to
intelligence.
Mere
For this one merely asks me to send a copy of the letter
Yes - they missed the wrong ghetto- and we pay taxes too.
your diet efforts. Many men do
congressional
committee
this
friend
is
no
flaming
within
98 hours to 20 &lt;r more persons I think needs good luck! At
feel
councU
should
get
up
and
specuisle
about
the
whole
city.
I
not really want their wives to
tll(lll
not
have
come
members
liberal.
He's
a
conservative
today's
postal rates, that Is two buCks to each person getting the
The sidewalks and roads are in need of repairs. Don't say levy a
lose weight. Psychologiots
to
Identify
closely
with
the
strong
retired
colonel,
a
letter, lf he doe.s as directed, and 40 bucks to the postal depart..
tax, weare tax poor now. lhavetrled to find out an answer to this
offer all sorts of reasons for
federal
agencies
they
are
believer
in
intelligence
and
in
ment
each time the bag Ia turned over.
question,
and
would
appreciate
an
answer
if
anycihe
can
:
this, some on target and others
~to
supervise,
Some
milllary
preparedness.
Several
1bls
accounting does oot take Into account the extra business
"Who owns the sidewalks? Do I? Or doeWbe city? Who
that cause me to raise an
committees,
as
armed
serdirectors
of
CIA
have
been
his
COOLVILLE
Stockholders
in having 20 copies mimeographed, or typed; the envelopes, ·
maintains them and If I do bow do I keep people f~m parking on
eyebrow. One theory is that
friends. But he, and his vices, have- become veritable statlonecy, petrol or shoe leather to get to the post office, cr the
of the Tri County Bank here them? Ellen Rought, P.O. Box 167, Pomeroy, Ohio.
some merithlnk
that
if
the
wife
.
acquaintances in intelligenCe, spokesmen for the depart.. extra electrical mergy bumed up late at nlght preparing aU
· loses weJgbt she will be more showed their appreciation for a
were
convinced
this ments.
these copies (remember, I'm talltlng about 20 x 20.per turnover).
attractive to other men . $4 per share dividend during
The military committees are
congressional
laJmess
did
no
197~. and a good year generally
Maybe, even, It's President Ford's latest gimmick ~Uke
Another idea is tlu!t if she looks
favor to the nation or to the not alone. 1bls bias and lax- everybody clean up his plate real good) put onto us quleUy this
young and attractive she may by reelecting six directors at
intelligence community.
ness extends wone or IIICil'e of . time to shape up the ec:onpmy, beat lnDation, clobber the
be more demanding and may their recent annual meeting.
An
emphatic
contradiction
the
committees.assigned to the recession, and put the oU bogging Arabs In their place wblch
No agency works well if It
Reelected were J. Sterling
tax his ability to keep up, Of
becomes a law unro itself. Departments· of Health, must be.llllll'kedly lower on the htiman scale than we find proper
course, if be Is overweight Lamp, chairman of the board;
Bumbling
and boondoggling Education and Welfare; persons.
Middleport, Ohio
himself it can be quite a threat. Kenneth W. Stealey, secretary,
and
Urban '
Wbatever the reason, here-4n part-Is what l'm to do upon
Jan. 14,1975 increase. Wild-eyed ideas and Housing
This works both ways. A wife and Robert E. Holdren, Daniel
Development; Commerce; receiving the personally addresaed letter from a Middleport
inane
operations
are
not
nipped
Dear
Sir:
K.
Graham,
Carl
E.
Smith
and
may not really want her
I !liD wishing that you publish and make known to your in the bud. Some part of Transportation; Agriculture address signed by a person wli011e name is strange to me:
husband to lose weight. I have Jack E. White.
,AI the organizational reading audience this respoi\Se to an article tiUed "Convention management iilevitably steps and to a fistful of the IJI.
"Trust In !be Lord with aU your heart and aU will be
repeatedly seen wives who
out
of
line,
backed
by a power dependent agencies,
acknowledged
and He willligbt the way.
'
· ," : ·
meetlryg
which
followed,
J
.
Talk
Discussed,",
page
4,
of
your
newspaper
da'ted
January
'14,
would not help thejr husbands
The wordy congressional
base in the executive or in
''1bls prayer has been Belli to you lor good luck. The original ' :
with a diet.even after he had a Sterling Lamp was elected 1975.
criticisms
frequently reported copy came from the Netherlands. It has been around the world
Congress
.
An
agency
with
president;
Kertneth-W.
Stealey,
I
am
not
attempilng
to
be
critical
of
people
when
I
emmedical problem with heart
unmonitored power and by the press, more often than
"
disease or high blood pressure. executive vice' president 'and phatically contradict a position taken by sincere people wishing resources is a severe temp- not do/l't show up In COOimlttee nine times. Thelucthasbeesuenttoyou. You are to receive good
'
She doesn 't want wchange her cashier; Carl E. Smth and wknow the truth of Jesus 0\rist, b~t I caMOt knowingly let ari ts lion lor men in the White votes. It'• the exceptiqns that luck within four tlaya of ~ this letter. It Is no joke. You
"
errant
position
stand
as
the
truth
of
the
gospel.
William
F.
Hanneman,
vice
will
receive
it
In
tbe
mail.
Send
(liO)
twenty
copies
ol
this
letter
to
' '
way of cooking or food
•
House, as evidenced by the fact are widely publicized; the people you think need htct. PI- do not send money. Do not
presidents;
Hazel
G.
Westfall
"SpeBklng
In
tongue"
Is
both
a
gift
(Acts
2:38)
and
a
I
preparation. The doctor IS
- l
three
presidents
have
used
nontJBI
practice
of
going
almg
and
Maxine
Rader,
assistant
manifestation
(1
Cor.
12:
7)
of
the
HOly
Spirit
and
without
such
keep
this
letter.
II
!Rust
leave
within
98bours
after
you
receive
it.
ususily more successful if he
", I
those facilities for political Uke sheep is not neWs.
''A.R.S oflliier received $2,0110. ilm El&amp;tt received -.0110.
talks about diets w both the cashiers; Dixie Sovel, comp- you are ''none of His". (Rom. 8:9) . It not only waS'present in the ends.
.I
The teftdDB recently voled but loll It because be broke the chain. While in the Pblllppliles,
. I
husband and the wife. Un· troller, and Maxine Creamer, early cllurdl but continues lhrooghout the ages in the only
What
was
true
of
the
by
the
House
of
~
"I
bookkeeper.
O!urch
of
Jesus
Otirst.
U
you
seek
the
indwell.iilg
Spirit
of
Jesus
·
GfJileral
Walah
bt
bls
1rife
lib:
days
after
be
received
this
letter.
fortunately
those
conl
congressional watchdogs 20 tatives were alml!tl In part at He failed to i:lmtJaate tile prayer, Htiweva, before bls death, lie
O!rlst,
you
wW
manifest
the
Spirit
upon
receipt
with
tongues
as
versations, when they do "!:·
.'
increasing that watchdog received $771,0110 willdl ht wm. Pleue Mild 11 copies and. then
evidence. This ·is exactly the .same experience found with years ago is true today.
cur, are usually after the man
"
The Senate subcommittee on function. But the power and the see what bappm1 on the fourth day. Add your name to the botlou!
thousands,ol people near you today as In the early church.
"
·has survived a· heart attack
\
I challenge any and all. religious orders, denominations, or lntelligen-::e, .whicb has been duty have been there all along. o1. this lilt 8lld leave the top- off when CWY~n~."
and is on bis way home from
other loan open and public discussion of the matter. Any person beaded by Sen. John C. stennls
FoUowing In my letter were • names, the last oite the copier
the hQIPital. It would be much INCREASE DIVJDENJ)
•
(D-Miss.) and the House
who
can
poisitively
demonsirafe
thai:
·
ol
my
letl~. It CODcludetl by~ four mtn lnatanres ·of per·
•
better if it happened before the
CINClNNATI (UPI)
subcommittee which has been
•
(1) Spetl&lt;ing In tonues does not occur today.
.110118 wbo eltber deflllllted tlllllllldinc 011 the. letters and IIUfferid,
heart attack.
Procter 1: Gamble Co. dlrec'
chaired
by
Rep.
Lucien
N.
(2) The Bible teaches that these signs and mani!estat.ions
"America, I Love. You," by cr C'JIDp!!eol with tbe lnltructlona aad PI'CAi ! ted p-eatly. Un.
Now you know what I think lllrs Tuesday voted to Increase
Nedzi
(J&gt;.Micb.),
have
the
about fad diets, so you the annUal rate ol. the cun- ' ceased with the apostles, or the early church, or at any other power they need. They can MrsA'.arrie EbeiSbach Neutz.. fortwiately, 1'-e wlb:IUII were NllideiU ol fill' off placN lite
ling of Poineroy, a story of_Qne Provlllc:e 13~ ol Outer Mqolla 01' St. ADIOIIes; South Amerlt:ll
shouldn't ask about going on an pany'o common stock d!Yidmd tim@ wthe present and until He comes, or ·
•
.
question
anyone
in
the
CIA
at
( 3) This pbenomfJil,IJ experience is wm~ry w salvation in
•
of Meigo County's pioneer 1!blcb, of -.e Ci&amp;)body IUill' can place qult:kiy·on a map~
aU-vegetable diet . .Wbat you from $1.80 to $2 per shate.
length and study budget eifainWes active in . coal and our lerretllrim globe.
It marked the 19111 CIJiilecu.. our time, and, prove aU three by Biblical authority, tha,t person
need Ia a slow, sensible plan of
•
pendltutes down to ~ last industry, will be the feature of
will
have
me
for
a
convert
and
an
opeo
witness
of
his
persuasion.
Wbat Is IIIOtllamnh!'laiDJ .... &amp;lle CIJUI'alle Ia view of the
•
a weD-balanced diet. You need Uve year In which rompeny
And, .this proposal I am making is a sincere one from an pemy if they wW. They have the monthly meet1ns ol the · apparent Pllnful aulferlng I bave Invited by trea~ tii,y letter
~
· some protein in your diet, plus dividends have been~. •
consistently neglected their Meigs Coimty Pioneer and :with less awe~omet Ill Ibm IOIIIt roJb wauJd advise.
individual
woo,
if
nothing
elSe,
desires
w
find
'Sjlivation
with
vegetables.
In line with the ICIIon,
job.
·~
Meamrbile, If in the aat rew da:rwtt ill'elltllted that I move
Historical •Society •! 2 p.m.
~ dizZy spells usually oompany jlirectora declared 8 ~csus Christ. In all honesty, !,do not expect any take!'S because
Wbat's fl!llnired, therefore, Sunday at the Meigs Museum, my '70 tnde1 four-4oor bee'tllllllo lnother veblcle, or *ldded
the one thing peeple know is' they don't know what they are
.I
mean IQIS of water and sa.lt quarterly dividend ol 80 cents talking
Is
an investigation ol these
·
111
the
li:e
dlrlred
llilbwaY
inti
rolled
rn~
the
Oblo
~~mr,
or
liad·
--1
abOut
in
this
regarct.
'111ey
operate
by
faith
in
a
belief,
and
Butternut·
Ave.,
Pomeroy.
from an improper diet ir eve'l per share payable' on feb. 15 w
committees. ·For there Is no Members and non-members my hciuse burn down over my held, Ot-. bt •liiOtllloved 0!1!. It
not
by
knowledge.
In
Jesus
Name,
Thomas
!..
Kelly,
683
starvation. Try to eat a small , shareholders of record Jan. 24.
way in which the CIA could get are invited.
Chestnut St., "A new fentecostal\'.
will " plain wbi-11 ~ppe-~
-~
-- . I
~
· =- .
~
I
By NE:A
London
Economist News Service.
Because the Chris Uan era
began in AD ! instead of AD 0, start for another 12 months - a
theologians and chronologists pedant's view.
Since it is now 25 years to
say that the last quarter of the
January
of 2000, and 75 years
Twentieth Century will not
since January of 1900, most
ordinary people will not heed
it. Ordinary people hav.e done
bes t not to heed conventional
can turn on and off like a spigot. Employment stability in the- wisdom at the gate uf each
engineering profession must he demonstrated, not just promised. quarter of our astonishing
There must also be some shifting of technical manpower from century.
other ·less-important areas, where there is an abundance of
At the start of the first
engineers, to the more critical areas.
quar te r , in 1900, most
Glenn is not suggesting that every oth~r industry deplete its respectable people felt they
engineering manpower so that energy companies can, have aU were moving joyfully into a
they need . The object, instead, should be to Inc rase that total pool belle epoque in a world in
of available engineers and teclmicians.
whi ch
agriculture
and
Testifying at a Federal Energy · Administration hearing, domestic service were the two
Glenn recommended that a task force he created w measure the largest single occupations in
probable manpower requirements for each energy source every country_Before that first
conaidered in Project lndepend'll'ce so that the available supply quarter~e ntury was two-thirds
can be used most effectively.
run . youth and laughter and the
Beyond that, he says, "The most effective way to marshal belle epoque had gone to hell .
the nation 's manpower resources in this effort is to make it atBut , at the start of the second
tractive enough, rewarding enough and more socially desirable quarteG.oin 1925, most of our
for people to want to pursue careers in the fields. "
fa thers felt that civilization
could Charleston back to pre1914 normality provided we
kept cool with Coolidge and
trusted Stanley Baldwin .
Instead, that second quarter
Christmas trees may be hazardous w your health.
of our Twentieth Century was
This post«ason, Scroogelike warning comes from a the moSt beastly' and bloody
Canadian allergist, Dr. Derek Wyse, who reports that seven per quarter~ntury mankind has
cent of some 1,600 patients developed rashes and respiratory known. Before it was one-third
symproms during the Christmas holidays. The ailments, he run the world 's industrial
production had been suddenly
Wyse's cut by three.tenths through
investigations showed that the culprits were the same mold and easily-avoidable economic and
-pollen dusts responsible for summer allergies. When the trees dipl omatic mistakes, with
were brought into the house, ragweed, sage and grass pollens Hitler and mass murder as the
that had attached themselves wthe sticky bark of the evergreens result.
were released Into the warm,dry, indoor air.
At the gate of the third
quarter of the Twentieth
Century, in 1950, it was
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . , therefore conventional to be
Letlen of oplalon are welcomed. Tbey should be len
1 pessimistic . In Britain, un1
so. The most
tbu aoe worda loag (or be subject to reduction by the
I editor) ud moat be algned with the 1ignee's addreaa. I derstandably
powerful
army
in the world 's
I
I
history
stood
a
few
days' tank
I NUiea 11111y be withheld upon publication. However, on
I
ride
away
from
the
Channel
I requeat, names wW be diadosed. utters should be in good
I ports under the supreme
I taate, addresalng i11ueo, not personalities.
command of a despot who
I

Santa sneezes

cla':~~~g~:c:!"~b~~~~r~=!t~~snr.

I

Mate sabotages
,diet efforts

I

I

Ray Cromley

Glass houses of
Congress vs. the CL4

the day' after .

••

Directors

reelected

.

.

.

..

Speaker noted

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Mid·
dlerown's Mi,plty Middies have
taken over the , rop spot this
week in the United Press InNEW YORK (UP!) - Catfish Hunter has started something ternationai Ohio High School
nobody knows how to finish, and his ears should be burning Board of Coaches' Class AAA
because a small army of ballplayers with all the other clubs are basketball ratings .
using his name as an excellent lever to get every nickel they can,
Middletown, second to
and maybe some more .
.
Canton McKinley last week,
The players are taking substantially the same basic approach swept into first place with a 10.
with their employers ,
0record, with Barberton (II~)
"_Don't tell me you don 't have any money," they say. "I saw moving inro the runnerup spot
where you·were wilting to give Ca tfish Hunter a coupla' million, and McKinley ( 10.1 ) dropping
so I'm sure you have a little left for me. You're actually saving w third.
mon~ because I'm not asking you for anythin g near what he
The Middies , whO have
did ."
outscored 10 opponents by an
It is extremely difficult to"work up any sympathy for the average of 24.5 points per
owners here. In fact, my own personal feeling is they're getting game, received 11 first place
exactly what they deserve. Especially those who wanted to and 286 points from the 36 AAA
impress their fans they were doing everything they could w get coaches voting this week .
Hunter. What better way was there for them to look than to an- Barberton picked off six first
pounce publicly how much money they were offering Oakland's place votes and 248 points and
25-ilame winner ' Here was the ideal form · of free publicity', McKinley received four firsts
perfect for the consumption of the home fans, or so the club and 225 points.
operators thought.
Rounding out the top ten in
One thing club operators are learning now ·is all that wonderful AAA were Newark (13-0) in
free publicity they received two weeks ago is turning out to be fourth, Toledo Scott (II~) in
rather costly, more so than they ever imagined.
fifth and Kettering Alter (8-.())
Many clubs allowed their offers to Hunter to be published. If in sixth, followed by Cincinnati
they didn't come right out. and own up w them, 'ps did Eider (7-1 ), Oncinnati Hughes
Philadelphia , Cleveland, Kansa s City, San Diego, Minnesota, the
Dodgers and the Mets, then they managed w have their bids
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

..

"

.-

.'

..

•

(8-&lt;l), Dayton Roosevelt (9-1) ·
. and Cleveland East Tech t 9-1) '
The other two leaders remained the same as last week
with Wellsville again No. I in
Class AA and Mansfield St.
Peter 's tops in Class A,
although the Spartans hold
only a one point margin over
runnerup Canal Winchester
among the small schools.
'Wellsville, which has reeled
off eight wins in a row, was a
solid choice in AA, piling up 286
points to 201 for runnerup
Columbus Mohawk (9-1). The
Tigers of Coach Bobby Dawson
also received 11 first place
nods to six for Mohawk, ·
Moving inro the third spot in
AA was Delphos St. John's (H)1) with 182 points , followed
closely by Warsaw River View
(10-01 with 166 and Springfield
Shawnee (10-0) with 165.
Rounding out the rop ten in
AA were Rossford (1 1-1) ,
Buckeye South (3-01 , Waverly
(10.1), Circleville (10-0) and
Lisbon Beaver Local f 11-1),

•

Beaver Local replaced Canron
Lehman, which droppe&lt;l its
fifth game of the season and
fell out of sight
. St. Peter's, now 11-2 on the
year after a 73-60 victory over
Clear Fork Tuesday night,
received 10 firs t place votes
and 222 points, to hold its Class
A lead over Canal Winchester
by a single point. The Indians,
lll--0, received seve n first place
votes.
Norwalk St. Paul (II ~) , last
week's runnerup, fell to third
this week, with Anna (12-01
jumping all the way from tenth
to follrth and Lorain Clearview
(11-2) dropping from a tie for
third to fifth after losing its
second game of the season.
The rest of the Class A rop
len consists of Minster (II~).
Upper Scioto Valley (12~) .
Sebring (9-1), Wynford (9-1 )
and Lordstown (10-0), which
replaced Continental. Conlinent.al fell to lith and unbeaten Pettisville (II~) was
12th.

conveniently 1 'leaked.''

Ohio ratings
CO L UMBU S (UPI J The
weekly Uni t e d Pres s In
t ernaliona l Ohio H i gh Schoo l
Board o f CoactH?S' basketball
r a t ing s with f irst pla c e vote s
&lt;~nd
won lo s t r ec o r d s
in
par en the ses .
Cl&lt;t ss AAA
T eam
Po i nts
I M iddl e town ( II 10 0 1
'l . BMberton ( 6 11 0 )
3. C &lt;~nton M c Ki nl ey (·I 1()

American Conference match, . 10-3 season mark.
passed the 1,000 point scoring Break Lead
mark of his varsity career . He
In a .ga me played at Richhas now scored a 'total of 1,017 mond, Ky., six-foot-7 freshman
points.
Alan Elijah dumped in eight
Central, which is now 3--0 in straight points near the end of
the MAC and 10.1 overall, led the game to break Eastern
44-31 at halltime and never Kentucky University's lead
relinquished the lead through- and send the Dayton Flyers to
out the game.
a 7~ victory,
Bowling Green is now 3-2 in
Elijah ,· who collected 16
the league and 7-5 overall.
points in the game, got the
Leading the scoring for the eight points with 5:50 remainFalcons were guard Jeff ing and Eastern ahead, 61~0.
Montgomery with 22 points and
Junior guard"' Jolmny Davis
forward Corneilius Cash with added 21 points and I.eighron
20, Cash also passed the 1,000 Moulron, another junior guard,
point mark of his varsity had 17 for Dayron's seventh
victory in 13 games this season.
career.
Forwards Jeff Tyson and S.
Eastern, now f&gt;-7, was led by
L. Sales each scored 14 points Carl Brown with 20 points,
at Kalamazoo, Mich., Wednes- Jinuny Segar 13 and freshman
day night to lead Western Mike Oliver, who added 12
Michigan to a 73-56 Mid- points and a game.lJigh 18
American Conference victory rebounds
as
Eastern
over the University of Toledo, dominated the boards 4ih19.
The broncos are now lhS The Flyers led by three at the
overall and 2-2 in the MAC intermission, 33-30,
while the Rockets fell w IHl
overall and 2-2 in the conferen"'Judgment of the people is
ce.
ofte n wiser than the wisest
Toledo led .35-34 at halftime men. " - Louis Koss uth ,
but . Western Michigan ~arne Hungarian statesman.
back to score 15 unmatched
poinls in the first eight minules
of the second half to surge
ahead.
High scorer for Toledo was
guard Jim Kindle with 16
points.
Hard Fougbt Victory
Back at Athens, Ohio, junior
forward Dave Terek, in his
first start for the Bobcats,
scored with only four seconds
remaining in _the second
overtime to give Ohio
University a hardfought 92-90
Mid-American Conference
vicrory over Miami.
Terek, who went in for the
wiming bucket after Scott
"By winning (this season), it Love stole the ball for OU, had
was a better way for us to get sent the game into a second
·back at them than using harsh overtime with a 2Moot jump
words," Shoate said.
shot with seven seconds reTo win the Lombardi award, maining in the first overtime.
Shoate will have to be judged a
The Bobcats were paced by
better lineman than three other All-America candidate Walter
finalists , Ohio State defensive Luckett's 33 points and Terek
tackle Pete Cusick, Maryland fmished as second high scorer
defensive tackle Randy White with 12 points.
and Southern Methodist noseMiami got a 28-point scoring
effort from Chuck, Goodyear.
guard Louie Keleher.
This will be the fifth year for · Rod Dieringer added 19 and
the award, a block of granite · Steve Fields had 17.
.RACINE, OHIO
symbolizing player and coach
Both teams are now 2-1 in the
Lombardi, the smallest mem- conference, while the Bobcats
her of Fordham's line which are 7-5overall and Milimi has a
was called the ''seven blocks of
granite."
Previous winners were Notre
Dame's Walt Patulski, Nebras·
ka 's Rich Glover and two Ohio
State players, Jim Stillwagon
and Jolm Hicks.

which annually selecls the
Vince Lombardi lineman
award winner, tonight will
disclose Shoate's ranking
am9ng gridiron trenclunen at a
$100 a plate dinner.
But Shoate, feeling his unbeaten Sooners were maligned
when placed on probation the
The0 Dai~ Sentinel
past two years, excelled among
~~ni-~s\0 0TFHe
his peers for putting his beefs
MEIGS· MASON AREA
on the line.
CHESTER
L
.
TANNEHILL
"Violations and things like
Exec . Ed.
1
ROBERT
HOEFLICH
·
that go on not only at OU or
City Editor
·
Pubr ished daily except
Texas but even . at the small
saturday by The Ohio Va l l ey
schoo'-,"
Shoate said WednesPublishing Company , 1 11
c;
Court SL, Pomeroy . Oh;o
day. "We just happened to, get
45769 . Bu siness Office P hone
992 -2156 . Editorial ·Ph One 992·
caught."
2l~~·cond c lass Po sta ge paid at
Shoate said the probation,
Pomeroy , Ohio.
which barred the Sooners from
Nat r onal adver tisi n!J
tel · ·
st.
represen ta tiv e
Bo ttinell •- · ·
evtston or po season a~
Gallagher, ,Inc ., 12 East 4'2nd
pea ranees this season , inSt ., New York, New York .
s u b s c r i p t i on
r a t es :
tensified _his performance this
••1

Delivered by carri er w n er e
available H cents per we ek ;

By Motor
Route
where
ca rrOne
ier
serv
ice not
ava
i lab le,
month , $3. 25. By mai l in Oh io
and, w. Va ., One Year , S22.00 ;
SiK months , $11 .50 ; Tt1ree
months , $7 .00 . Elsew here
$26 . 00 year ·; Six mon th s
$13.50; three mont tls, S7.5 D.
Subscription price includes
Sundav T imes -Sen tin e l.
• ·-

' "-

year. . . .

IL Ci n e HugiH!S (1 8 0)
9. Oaytorl Roo seve lt (9 . 1) 101
10. Cle ve. East Tec h ( 1 10 I ) 64
S~cond T en : 11 A ll ia n ce 57 :
17 Zanesv i lle 32 . 13. Elyria '1 9 ;
1&lt;1 . New Philadelph i l!l 28 . 15.
Cinc1nna t i Roger Bacon 2 1; 16
C leve land Heig ht s 16 ; 17 (ti el
To l edo Devi lb i s ~ and Marion
Harding , 13 each ; 19 . Oie J
Co l umbusCentra l and Oregon
Clay , 10 each
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Pllints
1. Wellsvi ll e ( 11 8-0 J
286
2 Colurnb us Mohawk 16 9- l l

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5. Sp r1n g Shawnee &lt;3 10 OJ
165

1JO

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118
108
51
Second - 10 :
II.
Lo r ain
Catholic 38 : 12. Coshocton 36 ,
13 . Warr en K enned y 32 ; 14.
Newt on Fa lls 29; 15. Be llai re
28 ; 16 . (tie) Brook lyn ( 1) and
Cin c i nnati M c Nicho l as 27
eac t-1 : 18. (t iel London , A k ron
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Ot hers with 10 or mo r e
PQi nt s : Will ar d Lima Bath ,
F ai rvi ew , Granv- ille , Sher id an ,
As ht abu l a H arbo r . Olmsted
F a ll s , Wneer ers burg , J ac k son Milton
( 11 ,
D oy l «!stown
Ch i ppewa ( 1J and Bexley .
CLASS A
TEAM
Points
I. Mans . St. Peter 's ( 10 10·21
222
2. Cana l Wincn ester 17 10 -0l

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116
105

s. Toledo s co tt 14 11 0 1
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i .............................................,

•

-

Tr a c.e ( 1) 27 ; 19. A da 26t 20.
(t i el
M oMo ev-i ll e
and
Cov ing ton 23 each .
Ot hers w it h 10 or. more
points : Chi l licothe F lageL
Ar c anum .. P!a t rick H enry ,
Se neca
East,
Burton
Berk Shire , Midd l etown Fen w ic k , Grand Volley ( 1 ), Nort h
Gn ll ia nnd Spring f i e ld Jef ferson ( 1)

715

-1 N ewark (4 13 01

Sooner lineman criticizes
NCAA for Oakie probation
HOUSTON (UP!) - Oklahoma Sooner linebacker Rod
~oa te may or may not he the
premiere college football lineman this season, but he rated
No. 1 in outspokeness.
A nationwide committee,

7. Up , Sc ioto Valley 13 ,12 OJ 98
8. Se b rin g(9 · 1l
89
9. Wyn ford( J 91 l
81
0. Lords town ( 1 10 01
69
Second 10 : 11
Con t in en tal
53 : 12. Pet tisvi ll e ( 21 41, 13
Marion Lo c al 34 . 14. (fit" )
Windham
and
Lu c asvi ll e
Vall ey 32 ea ch . 16 . Zan esvill e
Ro sec rans
31:
17
~ reder i ckfown 28 : 18 . Hannan

266
148

IJ

8. Waver l y (2 10-IJ
9 . Circ l ev il le ( 10-0 l
l O. Li sbo nB ea v- er l81 l

Michigan schools
get past Ohioans

Merely to set the record straight, the total package the
Yankees got Hunter for came to exactly $3 million, and that
figure includes $200,000 paid w his attorneys. The lawyers got
their money right away . Himter's. is tied up in escrow until it has
been legally decided he can pitch for the. Yankees, and that could
take some time.
The Yankees were not the highest bidder. San Diego was, in
one sense, and Kansas Oty in another, and if you remember
those two clubs went right down to the wire .
Kansas Oty offered $3.8 to Hunter. San Diego's bid was $3.7,
and then in an all-out effort to land the American League's 28- By United Press International
year-old Cy Young Award winner, the Padres offered him an
Michigan colleges had a field
open check book telling him to'fill in his own figure.
day Wednesday, with Eastern
A number of the offers for Hunter were primarily for the Michigan downing Kent State
henefil"of the home fans, and not compietely sincere. Some of the
56-55, Central Michigan defeatclubs that made offers might have had a lot of trouble coming up ing Bowling Green 83-73 and
with the money had Hunter accepted:
Western Michigan swamping
Kan8as Oty's offer was genuine. So was San Diego's.
Toledo 73-56.
If you remember, the Texas Rangers bid $2.6 for Hunter in the
Only one game, Wright State
early going, after which club owner Brad Corbett said he was
at Rollins (Fla,), is scheduled,
getting out of the poker game because he felt the stakes were
tonight.
growing unreasonable .
At Ypsilanti, Mich., senior
Corbett's offer was the McCoy, too, but now look what's hap- forward Talmadge Bell sank a
pened w him because of it.
free throw with just one second
Ferguson Jenkins had the same won-lost record for the
left in the game to break a 55-.55
Rangers last season Hunter had for the A's, 25 wins and 12losses.
tie "and give Eastern Michigan
He pitched 10 more innings and six more complete games than
a 56-55 win over Kent State.
Hunter did and struck out 82 more battlers. Do you think that , It was Eastern Michigan's
gave him some ideas? It cerlainly did.
· first Mid-American Conference
Jenkins received $125,000 from the Rangers last year and they
victory . The Hurons are now 6-offered him $145,000 for this year. Remembering the club's offer
7 overall and 1-4 in the league.
to Hunter, Ferguson Jenkins just laughed. He wasn't amused, , " Bell stole a pass from
though. He has let the Rangers know that· if· Catfish Hunler was
Bradley Robinson of Kent State
worth $2.6 million to them, theri Ferguson Jenkins is a bargain at
with six seconds remaining.
$200,000. He wants a multiyear contract, same as Hunter . Robinson fouled Bell, setting
There's no real way of knocking Jenkins' logic either.
up the free throw opportunity.
All the Rangers can tell him is that their offer to Hunter in·
Kent State is now 2-9 overall
cluiled other things "besides salary, like a bonus, a loan and in- 'and 0-3 in the MAC.
surance, wwhich Ferguson Jenkins would be less than human if
Ted Hipsher scored 11 points
be didn't come right back and say, okay, you give me those
to lead the Eastern Michigan
"other things," too.
scoring while teanunate Wa)t
Other Texas players besides Jenkins are coming off good
Jones added 10. Randy F.elhayears, fellows like Jeff Burroughs, the American League's MVP;
ber was high scorer fOr the
Lenny Randle, whose .302 average made him the league's sixth
Golden Flashes with ·16 points,
leading hitter, and shortstop Toby Harrah, who finished with 21
At Mount Pleasant, Mich.,
homers.
guard Jim McElroy and for·
Burroughs, according to one report, has his sights set on a
ward Dan Roundfield com·
three-year contract at $100,000 per year, and it would be no , bined for 43 points to propel
surprise whatsoever to hear Randle asking for maybe $75,000 and
Central Michigan to an 83-73
Harrah $50,000. It could even be these figures are a little low."
vicrory over Bowling Green
All these fellows, you see, read what the Rangers offered
and its lOth straight win.
Catfish Hunter. They figure they'd like to get theirs now, what
Passed Scoring Mark
they honestly feel they're worth. ,
Roundfield, who also nabbed
This feeling is known the world over. It's called human natur,e.
16 rebounds in the Mid-

.,..
•
~

...

Middies overhaul McKinley

Sport Parade

Economist commentary

Engineers ttre back in ·style

DR. LAMB

.

'

I

I

'.

�•
)

•

4- The Daily Senlinei,Middleport-l?omeroy, 0., Thursday, Jan . 16, 1975

Ever~hing falling. in place for Canadiens

Pro Stanf!ings
ABA 5to~nding~
By United Prns Jnternatl onal

Eut

'*' ·
19

K entu c k y
Ne'w Yor k

29

Sl . Lou i s
Memph is
V ir ~'~: ..

18
II

9
West

F lin t
Muskeg on
P t. H ur on
I. pet: g .b. La n sing
u .707
Ka l am a .
IJ . 69b
27 &lt;OO 13 ·~
3'2 lS6 19
Day ton
33 . 11.. 20 1'1 Co lumbus

w. I. pet . g . b.
Oen.ver
36 7 .837
SaM Anton io
26 20 .565 Jl l •
Ind iana
19 22 . 463
San D iego
19 2&lt;~ .442
Ut ah'
20 26 .435 171 •
Weelne sdiV 'S Result s
ln&lt;l ian a Il l N ew Yor·k 106
Ke nt ucky 108 V Ir g in ia 102
San Anl on i o 96 U ta h 9 1
St . L Ovi S 104 Mem phiS 99
San D ieg o 121 D en ve r 109
ThurtdiV ' S Gamet.
Denver a t Ut ah

""

NHL Stand i ng s
Bv United Pre ss International

Divi sion 1
w . I. f .
Ph ila dlp h ia 27 10 6
NY Rang er s 22 12 8
At tan 1a
19 16 9
NY Island ers 17 16 11
C i vili on 2
w . 1. t .
Van co u ver
11 5
Ch i cag o
20 19 J.
St L ouis
17 20 7
M innno t a
11 25 5

n

ph gf 91
60 15 1 95
52 179 134
•7 113 122
45 146 123
ph gf g a
49 15 1 140
44 147 178
41 14 \ I SJ
21 11 0 181

Ka nsa sC i t y
a 29 4 20 102 179
Division l
w . 1. t . piS gf ga
Mon tr ea l
25 6 13 63 201 120
Los An geles 24 6 12 60 139 84
Pittsbur gh
16 11 9 41 11 1 160
De tro i.f
10 23 7 27 112 156
Wa sh ingron
3 36 5 11 90 237
Division 4
w. l. t . ph gt 91
B uffal o
27 9 1 6 1 187 134
Boston
24 11 7 55 201 128
Toront o
16 20 1 39 149 16J.
Cal iforn ia
1 1 21 8 30 119 180
Wednesday ' s Results
P i tt sburgh 5 Atlanta 3
Montreal 5 Bos ton 3
Ch ic ag o 2 Van cQuv er I
NY Rangers 5 M i nnesot a 3
Toronto 4 St . Lou i s I
B~Jifalo 4 Clllifornla 0 .
Thursday ' s Gimes
Kansas City at Detroit
Los Ange l es at Bos ton
Wuhlngton at Ph i lad elphia
WHA Standings
By United Pren International

East

w. I. I .
New Eng tnd 23 15 2
Cl eveland · 16 2 1 2
Chicago
16 22 1
Ind ianapolis 7 3 1 3
West
w. I. t .
Houston
28 12 0
Phoeni x
19 17 6
Minnesola
20 18 0
San Diego
Michigan

ph gt 91
48 146 142
34 11 0 127
33 133 148
17

92 172

ph gf ga
56 189 117

44 141 138
40 162 134

1 39 129
13 26 3 29 106
C•n1di1n
w. 1. 1. pts gt
Quebe c
26 15 0 S2 170
Toronto
23 17 2 48 180
Edmonton
19 13 2 40 122
19 19

133
177

ga
133
157
11 3

'
Winnipeg
17 17 1 36 139 120
V&amp;n covver
17 20 2 36 119 127
·.vednesday•s Results
New England 7 Chi ca go 5
M innesota 4 Cleveland 2
Houston 9 Edmonton 2
Vancouver 4 Winnip eg 2
Toronto S PhoeniK 5, ot
ThurJday ' s Games
Chl c aoo at M ic higan . ppd .
Cleveland at Ind ianapoli s
Edmonton at San OleoO
International
Hockey League Standings
By United Press International
North
w. I. I . pts vt · 91
Saginaw 29 16 1 59 180 151

.'

To l edo

Des
Mo i nes

11 14 J 59
26 11 1 53
18 23 2 38
12 28 1 25
10 11 2 n
South
W. L I. !)I S
18 12 3 59
'1 5 19 1 5 1
10 24 1 41
19 24

2

168 123
181 123
146 15 1 .

145 217
10 1 147

gl
178
179
160

ga
146
1.1 9
167

40 149 172

F t . Wayne 15 15 2 32 I dS 169
W ednesda y's R esu lts
Day t on J F or i Way n e 3
P o ri H uron 3 To ledo 1
Mu s kegon B Lans in g 2

Col um bus 8 Saginaw 1
To&lt;lav's Gam es
N o games sch eduled

•

The triumph stretched the
Canadfens'
unbeaten streak to
The Montreal Canadiens
can't seem w do anything 21 gamos, which is only two
short of Uie NHL record set by
wrong these days.
CurrenUy in first place in the the Bruins 34 years ago.
MootrClll twice turned back
National Hockey League 's
Division 3, the Canadiens were Boston's potent power pla y
outshot by the Boston Bruins , attack early in the first period
39-23, Wednesday night but still and Canadiens' Coach Scotty
managed to squeeze out a S-3 Bowman felt this was the
victory on the strength of a pair turning point of the game.
By Uolled Press International

of goals by V vl'ln r 0urnm•f"r .

Marchibroda new
Baltimore ·c oach
By PETER BAYLOR
BALTIMORE (UPI ) - Ted
Marchibroda , who faced a tw&lt;&gt;quarterback dilemma as an
assistant coach with the Wash·
ington Redskins, steps intAJ
another tw&lt;Hjuarterback problem as the newly hired head
coach of the Baltimore Colts.
He seems to wek'Ome it.
At a news conference where
his signing of a three-year
contract was announced Wednesday, · the 43-year..,ld Marchibroda declined for the
moment to commit himself to
either Colt quarterback Marty Domres or Bert Jones.
"I think we have a quarterback here, " he said. "I should
say'!'~ have two, and that's the
essential of a good football

around this year , Marchibroda
said he is fairly satisfied with
all aspects of the Baltimore
team except its offensive line.
He indicated that Thomas
would have major say in the
upcoming draft in which the
Colts have either first or
second choice of the college
stars, depending on a coin flip,
because their losing record
was equalled only by the New
York Giants.
Aformer college star with St.
Bonaventure
and
the
University of Detroit, Marchlbroda played four seasons
of pro ·ball with the Pittsburgh
Steelers and St . Louis Cardinals with time out for
military service during the

"They had two JlOWer play
goals. 'against us in the first
P!'riod and did not manage a
goal on 12 shots during that
tirne,

11

sa'id Bowman. "That

.
America
Football
Conference
CANTON, Ohio (UP! )
and
the
NFL,
was
AU-NFL
for
Four football stars of the last
generation, G~orge Connor , two years , played in three pro
Dante Lavelli, Lenny Moore bowls , and set career receiving
and Roosevelt Brown , will be records in six NFL tiUe games.
Moore went from Penn State
inducted into the Pro Football
Hall of Fame Aug . 2, Director to become rookie of the ye;rr
Dick Gallagher announced for the Baltimore Colts in 1956
and five times was voted AIIWednesday.
They were selected by the NFL, both as a flanker and as a
hall 's 27-member selection running back, playing in seven
board at its meeting in New pro bowls.
And Brown, picked on the
Orleans last Saturday , as part
,
27th
round of the 1953 draft,
of Super Bowl weekend.
'{he induction will be high- promptly became the New
lighted by the Cincinnati York Giants' right offensive '
Bengals
playing
the tackle for 13 rears, playing in
.Washington Redskins in the nine pro bowls and being
annual AFCNFC Hall of Fame picked All-NFL for eight
consecutive seasons.
game.
Connor, a member of the
Chicago Bears from 1948-.&gt;S,
College Basketball Re s ults
was All-League as a defensive
By United PreH International
East
tackle in 1952, as an offensive Fo r dham 74 Lafa
yett e 72
tackle in 1953, and as a Vi l l anova 82 Niag ara 67
lo 72 Col gat e 6J
linebacker in 1953 and 1955, Buffa
Brock p r 67 Oneont a 52
playing in the first four pro St . V in e 80 Cla r ion 73
Pt . P a rk 80 Mrcyhrst 79
bowl games.
U S C G 83 C la r k Mas s . 67
Lavelli, who starred for the A lbr ig t11 69 Kut zto wn 55
Cleveland Browns in the All- Conn . 7J New Hamp . 67
.

Korean War.
Marchibroda broke into pro
coaching as an assistant to Bill
McPeak at Washington in 1961.
He joined George Allen in Los
Angeles nine years ago and
came with liim w Washington
in 1970.
As the seventh Allen
assistant to move up to head
coach sta tus, the new
Baltimore coach summarized:
"In my five years with McPeak, I learned my X's and
O's.

" Under Allen, I learned the
other basics : organization,
hard work, how to handle
people . With those two
backgrounds I think I'm
ready."

tion ."

Direction
has
been
something the Colis have been
lacking recently . Marchibroda
is their fourth head coach in
three years under the
leadership of General Manager
Joe Thomas and owner Robert
lrsay.
Expressing belief he could
turn the once powerful Colts

Pacers· still have kick
By Uulted Press International
The Indiana Pacers, American Basketball Association
champions as recenUy as two
seasons ago but now a sub-.500
team, still have a litUc kick
left .
Indiana knocked the New
York Nets, who succeeded the
Pacers as league champions,
out of the lead in the ABA's
Eastern Division Wednesday
night by beatl!lg New York,
IU-106.
That defeat, coupled with
Kentucky's IIJ3.102 victory over
the Virginia Squires, left the
Colonels a half .game ahead of
the Nets in the East.
Meanwhile, Indiana, which
has only a 19-22 record this
year, is 16 games behind

Denver in the West following
the Nuggets' 121-109 setback at
Son Diego.
In other ABA games Wednesday night, San Antonio
defeated Utah, 96-91, and St.
Louis topped Memphis, 104-99.
There were no games in the
NBA with that league
scheduled to resume action
tonight following a three-day
break for the All.Star game.
Pacers 111 Nels 106:
George McGinnis scored 25
points and grabbed 22 rebounds
to lead the Pacers, who
overcame ·a 30-point effort by
Julius Erving of New York.
Behind McGinnis, Darnell,
Hillman had 24 for the Pacers, •.
Billy Knight 20, Johnny Neu-

mann 11, Len Elmore 13 and
Kevin Joyce 14.
Larry Kenon scored 24 points
and grabbed 18 rebounds for
the Nets. Brian Taylor had 23
points and Billy Paultz added
1~.

Colonels 108 Squires 10Z:
Marvin Roberts scored 9 of
his 13 points in the fourth
quarter to lead the Colonels to
a comeback victory. Roberts
sank a pair ot free throws with
4:18 remaining to break a 96-96
tie and put Kentuck): on top, 91196, and then scored his team 's
next two baskets.
Forivard Will Jones was
Kentucky's top scorer with 21,
while, Virginia, which announced it would protest the
game because of a dispute over
whether Roberts or Artis
Gilmore should have shot those
free throws with 4:18 to go, was
led. by guard Dave Twardzik,

Martins Ferry
•
d
Coach
w~ h~1~~gets
tops gymnasts •th unimpresse
d h •

••
109:
·
The Conquistadors beat Denver for the first time in seven
tries with Travis Grant hitting
' TROY, Ohio ( UPI) The rest of the top· ten, with
16 of 23 shots from the floor for
Averaging 125.79 points per meet averages, include : 3.
39 points. It was the fourth
meet, unbeaten Martins Ferry Franklin, 117.27; t Miamis- By Uulled Press lnlernaliooal Bryant finished with 18 points victory in five games for San
has grabbed the top spot in the burg, 113.28; S. Lakewood,
LaSalle College railks as the to lead all scorers.
Diego since Beryl Shipley took
first weekly state high school 109.80; 6, Dayton Wayn e, surprise of the college basketNo. 14 North Carolina was over as coach.
gylllllas!ics ratings conducted 108.27 ; 7. Cuyahoga Falls , ball season thus far , but the the only other nationally
Bo Lainar had 23 points for
by the Ohio High School 99.35; 8. Kettering Fairmont club's strong showing hasn't ranked club w see action San Diego while Ralph SimpGymnastics
Coa c hes East, 92.80; 9. Worthington, reallY turned the head of Coach Thursday night, and the Tar son led Denver with 25.
Aosocialion.
92.77; 10. Lyndhurst Brush , Paul Westhead.
Heels barely squeezed by Wake
Spurs 96 Stars 91:
The J'urple Riders of coach 91.80.
Westhead thought all along Forest, 80-78. Walter Davis
James Silos scored 26 points
Dave McKim, 2.0 on the year,
The ratings are compiled his team had the talent to have paced the Tar Heels with 18 and Rich Jones 25 for San
lead runnerup Boardman each week by Stan Simpson. a standout season. Yet because points while Mitch Kupchak Diego, which strengthened its
which has averaged 121.22 gyri\nasUcs coach at Troy High the Explorers were fairly chipped in with 16 points and hold on second place in the
points per meet.
young and had a difficult grabbed 14 rebounds. Skip ABA West . George Gervin and
School.
/
.
schedule he preferred to Brown had 22 points for the Swen Nater added 12 points
remain cautiously optimistic. Deacons.
each for the winners.
Ohio College
DOZE'N
HONORED
In
other
games,
Duke
edged
The
Explorers,
currently
Rookie Moses Malone, with
Basketball R esu Its
NEW YORK (UP! ) - A rated No . II , ran their winniqg Clemson, 75-72, Kansas State 23 points, and veteran Ron
By United Press International
Ohio Un iversity 92 M iam i 90
dozen of professional basket- streak to eight games and nipped Arkansas, 73-71, Ford- Boone, with 22, provided the
12 ot l
ball's greatest personalities of boosted their overall record to ham squeezed by Lafayette, 74- offensive spark for Utah.
Dayton 73 Eastern Kentuc k y 6.5
Cinc i nna ti
1u6
So ut h e rn
the last 50 years will be .13-1 Thursda y night by 72 in overtime, Villanova
Spirits 104 Sounds 99:
Method is t 74
honored by the Max Kase downing St. Joseph 's (Pa.) , 611- ripped Niagara, IIU7, Virginia
Youngstown Srate 111 All i an ce
Eugene Kennedy's 2S points
62
Sports
Lodge
of
B'Nai
B'Rith
clobbered
Penn
State,
'/3.00,
60.
led
St. Louis over Memphis,
Mount Uion 73 Ba l dw i n .
at Its annual Bill Corum
Wallace 6.5
The victory might not appear and Cincinnati routed SMU, which wasted a 4()point perforWittenberg 78 Otterb ein 68
Memorial Dinner Saturday at that impressive as St. Joseph's 100-74.
mance by Stew Johnson.
Gannon ( Pa . ) 75 Akr on 67
the Hotel Roosevelt.
Central State 75 Ash l and 73
now has lost 10 straight games,
Case Wes tern Re serve 77 W&amp; J
Among
those
to
be
cited
at
but LaSalle played more than
( Po . l 50
.
the affair, honoring National 12 minutes of the first half
Hano"Yer { Ind .) 68 W i lm i ngton
65 lofl
Basket.b all Association without its star, Joe Bryant,
Findlay 80 Taylor {Ind . ) 78
Commissioner J. Walter • who was sidelined by foul
Marie-tta 75 Den ison 74 (o f)
Central Michigan 83 Bowl in g
Kenndy as the "Man of the trouble. He returned in the
Green 73
Year" in sports, are Red second half to score 16 points as
Eastern M i ch i gan 56 K ent
State ss
Auerbach, president and the Explorers built a 16-point
Western Michigan 73 ToLeod 56
general
manager of the Boswn lead before letting down a bit.
D1yton 73 Eas t ern K en tu c ky 65
Earlham lind . ) 85 Bluffton 82
Celtlcs; Wayne Embry,
Alleohen V ( Pa . l 7 ~ J ohn
general manager of l,he MilCarroll 71
·,,auk~e
BQcks;
Danny
Wfili'E WJNS AW1HD
KNn&lt;IE TO EXPOS
Biasone,
former
owner
of the
WILMINGTON, [)el. (UP!) .
MONTREAL (UPJ.) - The
...., .Randy Wliite, Maryland's Syracuse Nats; Eddie ~ttlieb, Montreal Expos announced
All-America defensive end and former owner of the Wednesday they have signed
wllller al tile 1974 OUtland Philadelphia Warriors and a righthander Mark Sleven
"Award, was presenlellthe John consultant to the NBA; Willis Knose, the c1ub.'s first-round
J. Brady Memorial Award Reed, former captau\ of the selection in the free-agent draft
WedneiJday as Delaware's out- New York Knicks; former held last Week.
standing alblete of the year. Knick Riehle Guerin; Jack
Knose, 19, of Harrison, Ohio,'
The award was !ftsented at 'Iwynian, a:Uncinnatl Royals wW report ill the Expos' minor
the amual Wilmington Sports star; plus Paul Al'izen, . Bob . league spring training camp..in
Writers and Broadcasler!l N!· Davies, Sam Jooes, Dolph Daytona Beach, Fla ., in
.,. CIMIOI OP
aoclation banquet attended by Schayes, Bill Sharman, and March.
....
aii'MI.,.r · W
George~. aU members of
1100 pei'IJOns here.
•
the NBA's Silver Anniversary
tfN7it
BLAIR SIGNS CONTRAcr
Team.
·
OJI'FICIAL Bosr
171M. I
MONTREAL (UP! )- Pitch4'8 VEGAS (UP!) - Ken
er Dennis Blair, who had an 11·
~te, former Cleveland
1 record ·in his rookie seasan
lndlanl' manager, was hired
with the Mootreal Expos last ·
Wedneaday 11 an offl$1 host
year, signed with the club for
at ~ Palace Hotel.
, LEG BROKEN
the
season Wednesday. •
· AipniiiODie played with siz
BLOOMINGTON, Minn . · The ~year old rlg!Jthaoder,
majclr letlaue teams durmg his (UP!) - Right wing Rick from Middleto\fll, Ohio, was
career and managed the In- Middletoo of the New York the lhird member of tile club's
•
dlus fnm· 18'12 tlr9ugh 1974 . Rangers, a leading c,andidate 40-man winter roster to sign a
1!ben he wu fired to make way for !fflL Rookie of the Ye&lt;U" 197~ contract. Catcher Barry
· for Frank Robinson, baseball's honors, suffered a broken left Foote and first baseman Mike '
··flnt blact manager.
. leg Wednesdily !Ught.
, Jorgensen signed earlier.

WI '

goo ' s

0 wmg

...lei•

the contest fr
and will
f be lost
the team om our to
weeks .
Hawks 2 Canucks 1:
Rookie Grant
1 midMulvey's tie-.
breaking goa
way through
the second period enpbled the
tr'::'i,;re, we' re gilnna keep this Black Hawks to hand the
streak goin'," said Co urnoyer. Canucks their seventh loss in a
"Why not?"
row. John Marks got Chicago's
1n other NHL games, Pitts- first goal while Bob
burgh topped Atlanta, 5-3, the tallied for Vancouver .
New York Rangers beat MUJ·
Maple Leafs 4 Blueo 1:
nesota , 5-3, Chicago nipped
Bob Neeley and Errol
vancouver, 2-1 ; Toronto Thompson scored first-period
whipped st. Louis, 4-1, and goals and the Maple Leafs went
Buffalo blanked California, 4-0. on to easily defeat the mues.
Houston routed Edmonton, 9- Gary Sabourin and Lonny
2, New lj:ngiand defeate d McDonald also scored for
Chica go, 7-5 , Minne so ta Toronto while Chuck Lefley got ·
downed Cleveland, 4-2, Van- St. Louis' lone goal.
couver beat Winnipeg, 4-2, and
Sabres 4 Seals 0:
Phoenix and Toronto played to
Rick Dudley scored two
a ·5-5 tie in World Hockey goals to lead the Sabres to
Association games.
victory over the Seals .
Penguins 5 Flames 3:
Goaltender Roger Crozier
The Penguins ran their home registered his second shutout,
unbeaten string to 12 g~mes by • turning back 26 shots.
downing the Flames. Jean
WHA:
Pronovost's 21st goal snapped
Andre Hinse tied a league
a 3-3 tie in the final period and record with five goals in
Chuck Arnason added an in- Houston's rout of Edmonwn;
surance tally.
Larry Pleau scored twice w
Rangers 5 North Stars 3:
pace New England over ChicoThe Rangers scored three go; Fran Huck recorded two
goals in 3'h minutes in the goals and an assist in Minsecond period to defeat the nesota 's victory over CleveNorth Stars. Pete Stemkowski, land; Don McCleod blocked 40
Jean Ratelle and Rod Gilbert shots to help Vancouver down
tallied for the Rangers during a Winnipeg and last-period goals .
22-&lt;lhot second-period attack. by Tom Simpson and Paul
Rangers ' rookie right wing Henderson enabled Toronw w
Rick Middlewn broke his leg in tie Phoenix.

Prices Valid
'

.

I

t,~.~~;,;~M~
..~~~u::·t~~~~,'~~i
M~~ "

the hospital board with a picture of the hospital as it will look
when construction is completed. Lefttorightare G. A. Biggs,
chairman; Charles J . Hyer, Dr. Jack Buxton, Jack Burdett,
pointing· to the new addition, and Carroll Casto.

NEW ADDITION TO HOSPITAL - The Pleasant Valley
Hospital Board of Directors learned Tuesday evening construction of the hospital's proposed $2 million addition will
begin within 60 days. Pictured are some of the members of

PT. PLEASANT - "Construction of a $2 million addition to Pleasant Vall ey
Hospital should begin within 60
day s ,' ' J . Buckner Morse,
,. executive vice president of
Hospital
Building
and
Equipment Company of St.
Louis, Mo. told the Pleasant
Valley Hospital Board of
Directors Tuesday evening in
their annual meeting.
All plans are now completed
for Phase I of the construction
project, It will include a two
story tower with a ground level
floor . The two stories will
accommodate approximately
80 new hospital beds and the
ground level will house 10
executive suites for 10
,. physicians.
As soon as Phase 1 is com~

hospital.
Meanwhile, Tuesday turned
out to be the hospiial's most
populous day in its I&gt; year
his tory, when 98 patients
jammed the licensed 86-patient
bed hosp ital.

~

NEW HAVEN, W. Va . -

• 'Several area residents have
~ been promoted at the Foote
•· Mineral Co. Graham Plant,
: John Wolfe, plant manager,
annoWlces.
:: · William Slone was promoted

r.

!: ·~o

Five

member s

tains 34 patient beds.
Present at the meeting were
Mr. and Mrs . .Jack Burdett,
Me . and Mrs. William Knight,
Mr. and Mrs. Ralnh Crnm p,

were

OFF

OWENS CORNING

LAY-IN

Rtl. '3.00

~6~~

$4

I

NEW HAVEN, W. Va. Town Council Tuesday evening
discussed national flood in·
surance and ;ast due water
bills.
Mayor Charles Smith and
Councilmen Bernard Lieving ;
William Gibbs, Tom Grinstead,
Charles Roush, Police Officers
Ronnie Chandler and Harold
Moxley, and Recorder Pat
Paugh heard a letter read from
the Farm Home
Ad-

HOSPITALIZED ·
Mrs. Odus (Mae) Nelson,
formerly of the Bailey Run
area is confined to the
Riverside Methodist Hospital,
Columbus. Her home address
is 3101 Lockbourne Road, 43201 .
DANCE PLANNED
A public square dance will be
held at the Senior Citizens
Center, Saturday, Feb. 25,
from 8 to 11 p.m . Children
under 12 will be admitted free
to the dance which is considered a family affair.

SALE
BIG LOT BOYS'

BOYS

1!

. SHIRTS

1.49 · To 51.99

!

5

I MEN'S PANTS

.

I

WRANGLER JEANS
Sizes 12·14-16
Slim Cut Only

•2.49

! KNIITING YARN
!
4 oz . Skeins

Va. lues To $13.00 ·

~---M~-~·ddleport Department

Store
OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAYTILL8:00
~--

'

.

,,..,

with COI.IJIOII

'
M·I•DDLEPORT, OHICf

.,

ministration concerning the
flood protection insurance
which said no application has
been received for the insurance. Of the water bill
deficits , council learned
requests for payment of past
due bills has met good
responses .

1111

114c.lf

~·~ -.
~],J\o l":!' ••

u"

i_W: · ~ \
·-""':.~ -~
'-.·

.... &amp;•

J9~

I
I

wuh co upon

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

m
•
dJ

Pnctl val td th rough J~ro u o• y 19

• 'lf'f

GILLETTE TRAC II

~::OR

TRIAL

t"'.

35e ., .. m ..

Personna 74
TUNGSTUN
DOUBLE-EDGED
BLADES
5 Stolnl.-.1 St.-.1 Uhldtl

.;tg~g
~

DISPOSABLE
DOUCHE
• M orecoml or t~blt &gt;h!lf.Je

Insurance, past due bills noted

.r~-;;;;;;:;;--~--;;N"'i"i";;~-;-i-·-;E ~~~·;:;;--·
00110~ ~NNEL

, H•l pl sollr:tlt. ln lrl'lf"ll!ld ll tlly "
• Ntlllr Stlc ~ · N•~ •• Orem

6 oz. MASSENGILL
• u 11er Hl

~~~~---~---~~~~:_~1--~~;~--i
!
TO .

6 oz. Touch of Sweden
HAND LOTION

---------

"Well, 1 guess ol' Catfish Hunter sure whipped infla tion, eh?"
·

Mrs. Charlotte Coon was
promoted from PBX operator
to secretary to the personnel
manager at the Graham Plant.
Mrs. Coon started her employment with Foote Mineral
May 2, 1969. Mrs. Coon's
husband is employed as a
teacher in the Mason County
School System. They reside
with their two children at 210
Walnut St. , New Haven.
Mrs. Sandra Griffith was
promoted to PBX operator at
the Graham Plant. She has
been employed as relief
stenographer since April 22, ,
1973. She resides with her
husband at 1730 Silver Ridge,
Reedsville, Ohio.

· · ·
!
BRAS · GIRDLES - SLIPS!
Values to'$8.00
1

• Fo r il'odoor n• Dul dOOt ull

1975 by tfE..I . Inc

Mason.

Big Lot Ladies'

Joy "Su119r Turf"
DOOR MAT

too

49C

.,,

'

mor~

~~ . . . . . . .

!

.

'h PRICE

lite- '1.1S

~---;,~;~;;--:-.r--·~:;:;~;;;;--l·--;~;-,:;,-;~;0;;~-•
CHILDREN'S '
I
.
[ LADIES&amp;CHILDREN'S
.'
.
! SPORTSWEAR
I
COATS
PRESSES &amp; SKIRTS I
l/. .
All Reducl!d for

••

LOVE LEMON FRESHENER

LOVE FRESH
LEMON CLEANSER
'h PRICE

20 oz.
LISTERINE
ANTISEPTIC

~1.2~~~:-._l_~~~w T~· $~~-· l -----~.!~ ,_ ,__

"

Mr. Charles Lanham , Mr. and
Mrs. Carroll Casto, Mr . and
Mrs. Charles Hyer, Mr . L .
Slack and James L. Farley .

• H "" • HI\\""

:THROUGHOUT THE STOREI

45 m. w.tde

~.\I

' .. (( f'rk:IIWilldltvDuFtJtt~u.,.y t; )).....

Fu o Uftl Ofl ~ tt01 01.

JANUARY CLEARANCE.·. .

••
"%

I

\Et•dtluouyi• J•"""' ~ 19)). . . . .

II

ami lou

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

$1

CEILING TILE

1.-,

1I

PRITT GLUE STICK

THE SHOE BOX

OFF

,

99(" wt t h co upon
U mlt 2
Llnut :?' •.6'{
~
~.• . 39 &amp;:.J ,,. ,t,0 c"" P"'"
"1~.......
1 IIIII . . . . _ _ _MJ
•·--·------------------------~------------------------

p&amp;p&amp; r. 16broc . leothtr.

plunger in the production
department. He attended
Wahama High School and
gradu.ated in 1961. He resides
. with his wife and family at

foreman in the production

CONTINUES

·~

ti" K I IO Window m&lt;)u nlu&gt;g

Berrys World

Different Shoes Added Dai~

15%

•..

ond 'l!'t&gt;O•Ibll brK~ti iOO"

•

Come in and
check 9ur bargain
table regularly-

••

c:))

ouTDOOR ....,.
THERMOMETER
(
Willllt lr ltll~tllw ct nter !IIIC
.

will be converted to an out- Mr . Lyle Austin, Mr. Harry
patient clinic as well as the Miller, Mr . K. G. Greene, Dr.
laboratory. It currently con- Jack Buxton, Mr. G. A. Biggs,

reelected to three year terms
on the hospital board. They are
'Charles Lanham, T. R. Friar,
James Hall, William Knight
and Harry Miller .
In reviewing the success of
the past year it was noted that
with the exception of pediatrics
and obstetrics the hospital had
102 per cent occupancy.
The total construction
project should take between 21
and 24 months, according to
Farley. In this time, if the
proposed addition turns out to
be too small, preparations are
being made to add additional
facilities onto the hospital.
The north wing, which is
currently used for in-patients,

:·department. Slone has been
•· employed at the Graham Plant
~ since Nov. I, 1967, and worked
~various positions in the
;·production department. His
:;_last position before being
~promoted was furnace tapper.
~Slone resides with his wife and
~lamily at Rt. I, Gallipolis
::Ferry, W. Va .
;:-: George Ray Vanmatre was
; promoted to foreman in · the
~ roduction
department.
~Vanmatre has been employed
;Jit the Graham Plant since
') larch 19, 1968. Vanmatre's
;position before the announced
'promotion was a noduloy

SAVE
·20% ON

~ , ~~

1. ~-t-.._.. .........................._,..

at Foote Mineral

•
•

DUTCH
STANDARD
PAINT

I
I
I
I

,

lie(. 2J'1.()()

'

F NITUR~

Po tCUYi hd tho ough Jt nw. r -l fil

~~
t-

Uo• S"PI''
Mu ..a t fv
L•PII""'e''•"''"'
M~ our
r lmr•

·f·Several promoted

JANUARY

.

·$,2 million addition assured

Sale

15%

N~t l

!

JANUARY CLEARANCE

.ALL
WALL
PANELING

P&lt; ,rr,,;,h&lt;llhr uu\I"•. J~.....

R. ~T.~:~.e_T,~s cosMETics

pleted, a projected $700,000
" renovation of the north wing of
the hospital will commence,
according
to James Farley,
'
., executive director of th e

MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

Through JanuaiJ 19

Quantities Lim ited

f:"i:'"--

~:

BAKER
FURNITURE'S
.

•

1-·--·--·------------------------------------------------II
")('-· ~
'"'*""
.
-

.,

...

Bu c kn e ll 71 St . Fran , NY 63
W i lkes 76 Ph a . Pharm 57
Chyny St 56 W. Ch s tr 53
Sc ranton 66 Ph a . T e x 61
Un ion NY 83 A mh er st 59
Navy 76 Muhl enb erg 55
RPI 73 Allred 48
D el. St . 100 Coppin St 80
Havrf r d 73 Lebnon 09
Man sf l d 07 Sh ipp ensbg 64
Seton Hall 9 2 Ston ehl/ 63
Bethany 64 Crng ie -M IIn 57
Juniat a 65 D ick in son 63
Co l by 75 Bat es 64
Spr ingf ld 85 Wi ll iams 77
Am Int i 79 So . Conn . 7 1
L a Sall e 68 Sf. Jo s Pa 60
F airf ld 76 Geotown DC 65
VPI 87 We st Virg in i a 86
Cent Conn . 59 We sle yan 48
South
Geo . .W ash 10 1 Richmond 80
Old Domi n ion 89 M adis on 54
V a . Cmmnwlth 89 Md . -E . Sh . 57
VMI 86 Chr istphr N ewp t 66
So F la . 77 Fla . St . 71
Day ton !:J. E . Kentucky 65
N o . K y . ~t. 96 Mar ian 92
No . Car . 80 Wak e Fore st 78
V ir gin ia 73 Penn St . 50
Duke 75 Cl em son 72
F la . A &amp;M 80 Tu sk egee 7J.
Elon 67 Lenoi r Rhyne 58
Wm . Ca r ey 81 Millsap s 76
Jck snvl St . 95 Shortr 73
T r oy St. 87 Hunt ing ton 66
Ky . St 122 P ikeville 101
C.w . Po st 78 Fl a . Tec h 73
Geotwn K y. 95 Thos . More 67
Midwest
C in c inna t i 106 SMU 74
End St .. T .H . 66 E . Ill. 64
Butler lnd 69 DePauw 56
W i s .. M i l 77 FDU -Rihrf r d 66
Kansas St 73 Arkansas 71
R ipon 70 Beloit 63
Evansvl 94 Ind . Central 80
No . Dak . St . 81 Concordia 60
Ohio U . 92 Miam i. Ohio 90
Yngst wn St . 112 Allian c e 62
Yngstwn St .- 11 2 Alliance 62
Mt Union 7J Bldwn -WII ce 65
Wittenberg 78 Ott erbein 68
Gann'on 75 Akron 67
Cent . Sf. , ? . 75 A shlnd 73
F indlay 80 Taylor 78
A llegh eny 7A J . Carroll 71
Tr i State 66 Goshen 57
Ros e -Hu l man 86 II !. Coli 77 ·
St . Fran Ind . 74 Marion 53
St . Thos Minn . 7- 5 M cAistr 58
West
Redlands 74 Wh ittier 72
Puget Sd .as Mankto St 59
Occdntl 76 Ctrmnt -Mudd 61
Pom -Pi t zer 100 Cal Tech 51
Ca t -Dav is 66 San Jose St. 55

ms

I

BAR_GA IS

onn at4 ·.!0of the first ,
of the sea ~
perl.od and he added his second
of the .game at 7:35 of the
second perl·od. Serge Sevard,
Jacques Lemalf
· e and Guy
Lafleur also scored for Mon-

·
Four SCheduled
for induction

team."
While
pra1smg
both
Baltimore · quarterbacks who
shared ihe starting role during
a dismal 2-12 season, Marchlbroda observed he would be
spending a lot of his time
working with Jones, a two-year
veteran.
"Jones has no •ifs.' The~e's
nothing he can't do. It's just a
matter of bringing it to the
fore, Experience is the only
thing he lacks -and direc-

turned the game around for us.
We're playing excellent hockey
now."
.
CoUrnoyer
got Montrea I off
h gO a1 .
to a l&lt;J 1ea d WI'th h'IS 14t,.

~..

, , , ,,

.;,:,.

33C

~ a--

will! COUpOI\

Ill

1'111 . . . . . .

-T---"""':~;,;~~~~~~~~~~~;;.:;:;;:,i·-·--·I

1
1

SYLVAN.IA

~t!IM;;~:;s~,

I

.LI

.

.

..

6/99c .....

~-

·

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•..-.. .........................-..If·
-------------!-·-·--·----------------------I' ---------::VIIIIdtlvOiol -h.Mnuf'
Y II
·I
.
I
MAX FACTOR BATH OIL
Lorna
'h
PRICE
·
WASTEBASKET
I
""''1.50
I
.
1
. ~
""''"
49 ~ ...........
. L
....$1.25.,.,~·(

Fairview
News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. Emmie Plichta of
Cleveland, 0., Roger· Sayre of
Jacksonville, Fla. visited Mr.
and Mrs . Herbert Sayre
Saturday.
Christmas Day guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Russell Roush were
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis,
Clifton, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Russell and · children of
Wolfpen, Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa
Pickens .
Mr. and Mrs. Brice Sayre
and family of Jackson visited
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Sayre
recently. Mr. and Mrs. Dean
Sayre of Middletown, Pa . spent
Christmas week with the
Sayres and Christmas Day
guests of the Sayres were Mr.
and Mrs. David Sayre and
grandchildren, Mrs . Peggy
Gregory of Fairborn, 0., Mr.
and Mrs. Carroll Sayre of
Racine .
Mr. and Mrs. John Johnson
and children of Loraine, 0 .
spent Christmas week with his
parents,. Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Johnson· and George .
Christmas Day guesl.!l,. ·of
Mrs. Bertha Robinson were
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Shields,
Mr. and Mrs . H ~ward
Robinson, Flatwoods, W. Va.,
Mr. and Mrs. Blll Robinson and
" children, Mrs. Marlen~ fisher,
·children Molly, Larry and AmY
of Racine. Calling Christmas
evening were Mr. and Mrs .
Philip Radford and Stephanie,
Mrs . Jack Sargent.
.' Mrs. Hazel Mitchell of '
Columbus, Mrs . Frances Coe of
Carbon Hill, Mrs . Fqcie
Hayman , Mrs. Mabel Shields ·
spent Sunday night with Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Haught at
Walker; W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs ..Herbert Roush
xisited Mr. and Mrs . Ott Boston
at Rncine Chrisl'llas Day.

STurd~

olall ic.

1uor t~d

le&amp;- 11-H

1f0

color &gt;

··

Llml l 2

w it h OO UpQO

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

......

Procet•~ hd

•

•

--,;;;;.-;;:----~
·

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~i&lt;-valldthruu.. JIIIlUtrV Ill

~

I
I
I
•
~
-~·
II
~ --------------------I
((Pr
I
Devillbiss
ECONOMY STEAM
I
VAPORIZER
I
$2.99wiOh &lt;OoP""
...1:•
I
~ ~---•111
-------------------------•
******Yr..
I

n

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

l Li mit2

99Cwoth coupO r\

11 I

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t:., wll id through Jann••yt Q)). . . . .

TOILET WATER
y, PRICE
.... ~.00

~

Prict i •J ild tl,.uugh Jonu ory 111

&amp;~~•o ~~""
.

'

99·'t; ...,,h to"VV"

L1m11

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12 oz.

REVLON LEMON
HAND CREAM
... '!jO
'h PRICE

'

$1,25""'" """"'
, Uml&lt;&gt; .J ,
.,~I,!J.lJ~-----------------

----1~-;;;,;;~~~~~~~~~·--~
Prl~.,.lidthrouoi1Janu•ylf

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49C
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· ,_____ _
•

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BARBASOL
SHAVE CREME

JERGENS
SOAP

Rttul., or ,...,!hoi . 11 Ol .

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...

45'

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39~

woth co upon

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.~..-;; through Ja nuary 19 ) ) . . . . . . . .. .
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P!ic:.vtlld~..lwttWyl!lJ

!

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Llmit1

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. . . ,.

$2.50withtoup0fl

--------------------- ---1

Rea. 17.95

............ I

'

.

~~hoN INTIMATE

PLAYTEX
GLOVES
~~~~~r~;~~¥~r'9 h'
R"''5'

~tt-.........

.

,,11
---------------------·----

..

--------Mil!---------·--·-·

"'r'~........... l l l l l . . . . . . . . . . . . . ,

----------

Sterling. '"· '3·"
PLASTIC
LETTER FILE

• tm plcl rtutunrpOt ~ DI'OP ~lltfll
• Anont!l ~Olort

$2.4!) ... ~ ....

----------

rI

234 with eou~

Pf oet'velift t~J~~""' V 19

---~-·--·-·

•

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·
.
TOOTHBRUSH

!. ~

15~

...t~couvon .

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•

4- The Daily Senlinei,Middleport-l?omeroy, 0., Thursday, Jan . 16, 1975

Ever~hing falling. in place for Canadiens

Pro Stanf!ings
ABA 5to~nding~
By United Prns Jnternatl onal

Eut

'*' ·
19

K entu c k y
Ne'w Yor k

29

Sl . Lou i s
Memph is
V ir ~'~: ..

18
II

9
West

F lin t
Muskeg on
P t. H ur on
I. pet: g .b. La n sing
u .707
Ka l am a .
IJ . 69b
27 &lt;OO 13 ·~
3'2 lS6 19
Day ton
33 . 11.. 20 1'1 Co lumbus

w. I. pet . g . b.
Oen.ver
36 7 .837
SaM Anton io
26 20 .565 Jl l •
Ind iana
19 22 . 463
San D iego
19 2&lt;~ .442
Ut ah'
20 26 .435 171 •
Weelne sdiV 'S Result s
ln&lt;l ian a Il l N ew Yor·k 106
Ke nt ucky 108 V Ir g in ia 102
San Anl on i o 96 U ta h 9 1
St . L Ovi S 104 Mem phiS 99
San D ieg o 121 D en ve r 109
ThurtdiV ' S Gamet.
Denver a t Ut ah

""

NHL Stand i ng s
Bv United Pre ss International

Divi sion 1
w . I. f .
Ph ila dlp h ia 27 10 6
NY Rang er s 22 12 8
At tan 1a
19 16 9
NY Island ers 17 16 11
C i vili on 2
w . 1. t .
Van co u ver
11 5
Ch i cag o
20 19 J.
St L ouis
17 20 7
M innno t a
11 25 5

n

ph gf 91
60 15 1 95
52 179 134
•7 113 122
45 146 123
ph gf g a
49 15 1 140
44 147 178
41 14 \ I SJ
21 11 0 181

Ka nsa sC i t y
a 29 4 20 102 179
Division l
w . 1. t . piS gf ga
Mon tr ea l
25 6 13 63 201 120
Los An geles 24 6 12 60 139 84
Pittsbur gh
16 11 9 41 11 1 160
De tro i.f
10 23 7 27 112 156
Wa sh ingron
3 36 5 11 90 237
Division 4
w. l. t . ph gt 91
B uffal o
27 9 1 6 1 187 134
Boston
24 11 7 55 201 128
Toront o
16 20 1 39 149 16J.
Cal iforn ia
1 1 21 8 30 119 180
Wednesday ' s Results
P i tt sburgh 5 Atlanta 3
Montreal 5 Bos ton 3
Ch ic ag o 2 Van cQuv er I
NY Rangers 5 M i nnesot a 3
Toronto 4 St . Lou i s I
B~Jifalo 4 Clllifornla 0 .
Thursday ' s Gimes
Kansas City at Detroit
Los Ange l es at Bos ton
Wuhlngton at Ph i lad elphia
WHA Standings
By United Pren International

East

w. I. I .
New Eng tnd 23 15 2
Cl eveland · 16 2 1 2
Chicago
16 22 1
Ind ianapolis 7 3 1 3
West
w. I. t .
Houston
28 12 0
Phoeni x
19 17 6
Minnesola
20 18 0
San Diego
Michigan

ph gt 91
48 146 142
34 11 0 127
33 133 148
17

92 172

ph gf ga
56 189 117

44 141 138
40 162 134

1 39 129
13 26 3 29 106
C•n1di1n
w. 1. 1. pts gt
Quebe c
26 15 0 S2 170
Toronto
23 17 2 48 180
Edmonton
19 13 2 40 122
19 19

133
177

ga
133
157
11 3

'
Winnipeg
17 17 1 36 139 120
V&amp;n covver
17 20 2 36 119 127
·.vednesday•s Results
New England 7 Chi ca go 5
M innesota 4 Cleveland 2
Houston 9 Edmonton 2
Vancouver 4 Winnip eg 2
Toronto S PhoeniK 5, ot
ThurJday ' s Games
Chl c aoo at M ic higan . ppd .
Cleveland at Ind ianapoli s
Edmonton at San OleoO
International
Hockey League Standings
By United Press International
North
w. I. I . pts vt · 91
Saginaw 29 16 1 59 180 151

.'

To l edo

Des
Mo i nes

11 14 J 59
26 11 1 53
18 23 2 38
12 28 1 25
10 11 2 n
South
W. L I. !)I S
18 12 3 59
'1 5 19 1 5 1
10 24 1 41
19 24

2

168 123
181 123
146 15 1 .

145 217
10 1 147

gl
178
179
160

ga
146
1.1 9
167

40 149 172

F t . Wayne 15 15 2 32 I dS 169
W ednesda y's R esu lts
Day t on J F or i Way n e 3
P o ri H uron 3 To ledo 1
Mu s kegon B Lans in g 2

Col um bus 8 Saginaw 1
To&lt;lav's Gam es
N o games sch eduled

•

The triumph stretched the
Canadfens'
unbeaten streak to
The Montreal Canadiens
can't seem w do anything 21 gamos, which is only two
short of Uie NHL record set by
wrong these days.
CurrenUy in first place in the the Bruins 34 years ago.
MootrClll twice turned back
National Hockey League 's
Division 3, the Canadiens were Boston's potent power pla y
outshot by the Boston Bruins , attack early in the first period
39-23, Wednesday night but still and Canadiens' Coach Scotty
managed to squeeze out a S-3 Bowman felt this was the
victory on the strength of a pair turning point of the game.
By Uolled Press International

of goals by V vl'ln r 0urnm•f"r .

Marchibroda new
Baltimore ·c oach
By PETER BAYLOR
BALTIMORE (UPI ) - Ted
Marchibroda , who faced a tw&lt;&gt;quarterback dilemma as an
assistant coach with the Wash·
ington Redskins, steps intAJ
another tw&lt;Hjuarterback problem as the newly hired head
coach of the Baltimore Colts.
He seems to wek'Ome it.
At a news conference where
his signing of a three-year
contract was announced Wednesday, · the 43-year..,ld Marchibroda declined for the
moment to commit himself to
either Colt quarterback Marty Domres or Bert Jones.
"I think we have a quarterback here, " he said. "I should
say'!'~ have two, and that's the
essential of a good football

around this year , Marchibroda
said he is fairly satisfied with
all aspects of the Baltimore
team except its offensive line.
He indicated that Thomas
would have major say in the
upcoming draft in which the
Colts have either first or
second choice of the college
stars, depending on a coin flip,
because their losing record
was equalled only by the New
York Giants.
Aformer college star with St.
Bonaventure
and
the
University of Detroit, Marchlbroda played four seasons
of pro ·ball with the Pittsburgh
Steelers and St . Louis Cardinals with time out for
military service during the

"They had two JlOWer play
goals. 'against us in the first
P!'riod and did not manage a
goal on 12 shots during that
tirne,

11

sa'id Bowman. "That

.
America
Football
Conference
CANTON, Ohio (UP! )
and
the
NFL,
was
AU-NFL
for
Four football stars of the last
generation, G~orge Connor , two years , played in three pro
Dante Lavelli, Lenny Moore bowls , and set career receiving
and Roosevelt Brown , will be records in six NFL tiUe games.
Moore went from Penn State
inducted into the Pro Football
Hall of Fame Aug . 2, Director to become rookie of the ye;rr
Dick Gallagher announced for the Baltimore Colts in 1956
and five times was voted AIIWednesday.
They were selected by the NFL, both as a flanker and as a
hall 's 27-member selection running back, playing in seven
board at its meeting in New pro bowls.
And Brown, picked on the
Orleans last Saturday , as part
,
27th
round of the 1953 draft,
of Super Bowl weekend.
'{he induction will be high- promptly became the New
lighted by the Cincinnati York Giants' right offensive '
Bengals
playing
the tackle for 13 rears, playing in
.Washington Redskins in the nine pro bowls and being
annual AFCNFC Hall of Fame picked All-NFL for eight
consecutive seasons.
game.
Connor, a member of the
Chicago Bears from 1948-.&gt;S,
College Basketball Re s ults
was All-League as a defensive
By United PreH International
East
tackle in 1952, as an offensive Fo r dham 74 Lafa
yett e 72
tackle in 1953, and as a Vi l l anova 82 Niag ara 67
lo 72 Col gat e 6J
linebacker in 1953 and 1955, Buffa
Brock p r 67 Oneont a 52
playing in the first four pro St . V in e 80 Cla r ion 73
Pt . P a rk 80 Mrcyhrst 79
bowl games.
U S C G 83 C la r k Mas s . 67
Lavelli, who starred for the A lbr ig t11 69 Kut zto wn 55
Cleveland Browns in the All- Conn . 7J New Hamp . 67
.

Korean War.
Marchibroda broke into pro
coaching as an assistant to Bill
McPeak at Washington in 1961.
He joined George Allen in Los
Angeles nine years ago and
came with liim w Washington
in 1970.
As the seventh Allen
assistant to move up to head
coach sta tus, the new
Baltimore coach summarized:
"In my five years with McPeak, I learned my X's and
O's.

" Under Allen, I learned the
other basics : organization,
hard work, how to handle
people . With those two
backgrounds I think I'm
ready."

tion ."

Direction
has
been
something the Colis have been
lacking recently . Marchibroda
is their fourth head coach in
three years under the
leadership of General Manager
Joe Thomas and owner Robert
lrsay.
Expressing belief he could
turn the once powerful Colts

Pacers· still have kick
By Uulted Press International
The Indiana Pacers, American Basketball Association
champions as recenUy as two
seasons ago but now a sub-.500
team, still have a litUc kick
left .
Indiana knocked the New
York Nets, who succeeded the
Pacers as league champions,
out of the lead in the ABA's
Eastern Division Wednesday
night by beatl!lg New York,
IU-106.
That defeat, coupled with
Kentucky's IIJ3.102 victory over
the Virginia Squires, left the
Colonels a half .game ahead of
the Nets in the East.
Meanwhile, Indiana, which
has only a 19-22 record this
year, is 16 games behind

Denver in the West following
the Nuggets' 121-109 setback at
Son Diego.
In other ABA games Wednesday night, San Antonio
defeated Utah, 96-91, and St.
Louis topped Memphis, 104-99.
There were no games in the
NBA with that league
scheduled to resume action
tonight following a three-day
break for the All.Star game.
Pacers 111 Nels 106:
George McGinnis scored 25
points and grabbed 22 rebounds
to lead the Pacers, who
overcame ·a 30-point effort by
Julius Erving of New York.
Behind McGinnis, Darnell,
Hillman had 24 for the Pacers, •.
Billy Knight 20, Johnny Neu-

mann 11, Len Elmore 13 and
Kevin Joyce 14.
Larry Kenon scored 24 points
and grabbed 18 rebounds for
the Nets. Brian Taylor had 23
points and Billy Paultz added
1~.

Colonels 108 Squires 10Z:
Marvin Roberts scored 9 of
his 13 points in the fourth
quarter to lead the Colonels to
a comeback victory. Roberts
sank a pair ot free throws with
4:18 remaining to break a 96-96
tie and put Kentuck): on top, 91196, and then scored his team 's
next two baskets.
Forivard Will Jones was
Kentucky's top scorer with 21,
while, Virginia, which announced it would protest the
game because of a dispute over
whether Roberts or Artis
Gilmore should have shot those
free throws with 4:18 to go, was
led. by guard Dave Twardzik,

Martins Ferry
•
d
Coach
w~ h~1~~gets
tops gymnasts •th unimpresse
d h •

••
109:
·
The Conquistadors beat Denver for the first time in seven
tries with Travis Grant hitting
' TROY, Ohio ( UPI) The rest of the top· ten, with
16 of 23 shots from the floor for
Averaging 125.79 points per meet averages, include : 3.
39 points. It was the fourth
meet, unbeaten Martins Ferry Franklin, 117.27; t Miamis- By Uulled Press lnlernaliooal Bryant finished with 18 points victory in five games for San
has grabbed the top spot in the burg, 113.28; S. Lakewood,
LaSalle College railks as the to lead all scorers.
Diego since Beryl Shipley took
first weekly state high school 109.80; 6, Dayton Wayn e, surprise of the college basketNo. 14 North Carolina was over as coach.
gylllllas!ics ratings conducted 108.27 ; 7. Cuyahoga Falls , ball season thus far , but the the only other nationally
Bo Lainar had 23 points for
by the Ohio High School 99.35; 8. Kettering Fairmont club's strong showing hasn't ranked club w see action San Diego while Ralph SimpGymnastics
Coa c hes East, 92.80; 9. Worthington, reallY turned the head of Coach Thursday night, and the Tar son led Denver with 25.
Aosocialion.
92.77; 10. Lyndhurst Brush , Paul Westhead.
Heels barely squeezed by Wake
Spurs 96 Stars 91:
The J'urple Riders of coach 91.80.
Westhead thought all along Forest, 80-78. Walter Davis
James Silos scored 26 points
Dave McKim, 2.0 on the year,
The ratings are compiled his team had the talent to have paced the Tar Heels with 18 and Rich Jones 25 for San
lead runnerup Boardman each week by Stan Simpson. a standout season. Yet because points while Mitch Kupchak Diego, which strengthened its
which has averaged 121.22 gyri\nasUcs coach at Troy High the Explorers were fairly chipped in with 16 points and hold on second place in the
points per meet.
young and had a difficult grabbed 14 rebounds. Skip ABA West . George Gervin and
School.
/
.
schedule he preferred to Brown had 22 points for the Swen Nater added 12 points
remain cautiously optimistic. Deacons.
each for the winners.
Ohio College
DOZE'N
HONORED
In
other
games,
Duke
edged
The
Explorers,
currently
Rookie Moses Malone, with
Basketball R esu Its
NEW YORK (UP! ) - A rated No . II , ran their winniqg Clemson, 75-72, Kansas State 23 points, and veteran Ron
By United Press International
Ohio Un iversity 92 M iam i 90
dozen of professional basket- streak to eight games and nipped Arkansas, 73-71, Ford- Boone, with 22, provided the
12 ot l
ball's greatest personalities of boosted their overall record to ham squeezed by Lafayette, 74- offensive spark for Utah.
Dayton 73 Eastern Kentuc k y 6.5
Cinc i nna ti
1u6
So ut h e rn
the last 50 years will be .13-1 Thursda y night by 72 in overtime, Villanova
Spirits 104 Sounds 99:
Method is t 74
honored by the Max Kase downing St. Joseph 's (Pa.) , 611- ripped Niagara, IIU7, Virginia
Youngstown Srate 111 All i an ce
Eugene Kennedy's 2S points
62
Sports
Lodge
of
B'Nai
B'Rith
clobbered
Penn
State,
'/3.00,
60.
led
St. Louis over Memphis,
Mount Uion 73 Ba l dw i n .
at Its annual Bill Corum
Wallace 6.5
The victory might not appear and Cincinnati routed SMU, which wasted a 4()point perforWittenberg 78 Otterb ein 68
Memorial Dinner Saturday at that impressive as St. Joseph's 100-74.
mance by Stew Johnson.
Gannon ( Pa . ) 75 Akr on 67
the Hotel Roosevelt.
Central State 75 Ash l and 73
now has lost 10 straight games,
Case Wes tern Re serve 77 W&amp; J
Among
those
to
be
cited
at
but LaSalle played more than
( Po . l 50
.
the affair, honoring National 12 minutes of the first half
Hano"Yer { Ind .) 68 W i lm i ngton
65 lofl
Basket.b all Association without its star, Joe Bryant,
Findlay 80 Taylor {Ind . ) 78
Commissioner J. Walter • who was sidelined by foul
Marie-tta 75 Den ison 74 (o f)
Central Michigan 83 Bowl in g
Kenndy as the "Man of the trouble. He returned in the
Green 73
Year" in sports, are Red second half to score 16 points as
Eastern M i ch i gan 56 K ent
State ss
Auerbach, president and the Explorers built a 16-point
Western Michigan 73 ToLeod 56
general
manager of the Boswn lead before letting down a bit.
D1yton 73 Eas t ern K en tu c ky 65
Earlham lind . ) 85 Bluffton 82
Celtlcs; Wayne Embry,
Alleohen V ( Pa . l 7 ~ J ohn
general manager of l,he MilCarroll 71
·,,auk~e
BQcks;
Danny
Wfili'E WJNS AW1HD
KNn&lt;IE TO EXPOS
Biasone,
former
owner
of the
WILMINGTON, [)el. (UP!) .
MONTREAL (UPJ.) - The
...., .Randy Wliite, Maryland's Syracuse Nats; Eddie ~ttlieb, Montreal Expos announced
All-America defensive end and former owner of the Wednesday they have signed
wllller al tile 1974 OUtland Philadelphia Warriors and a righthander Mark Sleven
"Award, was presenlellthe John consultant to the NBA; Willis Knose, the c1ub.'s first-round
J. Brady Memorial Award Reed, former captau\ of the selection in the free-agent draft
WedneiJday as Delaware's out- New York Knicks; former held last Week.
standing alblete of the year. Knick Riehle Guerin; Jack
Knose, 19, of Harrison, Ohio,'
The award was !ftsented at 'Iwynian, a:Uncinnatl Royals wW report ill the Expos' minor
the amual Wilmington Sports star; plus Paul Al'izen, . Bob . league spring training camp..in
Writers and Broadcasler!l N!· Davies, Sam Jooes, Dolph Daytona Beach, Fla ., in
.,. CIMIOI OP
aoclation banquet attended by Schayes, Bill Sharman, and March.
....
aii'MI.,.r · W
George~. aU members of
1100 pei'IJOns here.
•
the NBA's Silver Anniversary
tfN7it
BLAIR SIGNS CONTRAcr
Team.
·
OJI'FICIAL Bosr
171M. I
MONTREAL (UP! )- Pitch4'8 VEGAS (UP!) - Ken
er Dennis Blair, who had an 11·
~te, former Cleveland
1 record ·in his rookie seasan
lndlanl' manager, was hired
with the Mootreal Expos last ·
Wedneaday 11 an offl$1 host
year, signed with the club for
at ~ Palace Hotel.
, LEG BROKEN
the
season Wednesday. •
· AipniiiODie played with siz
BLOOMINGTON, Minn . · The ~year old rlg!Jthaoder,
majclr letlaue teams durmg his (UP!) - Right wing Rick from Middleto\fll, Ohio, was
career and managed the In- Middletoo of the New York the lhird member of tile club's
•
dlus fnm· 18'12 tlr9ugh 1974 . Rangers, a leading c,andidate 40-man winter roster to sign a
1!ben he wu fired to make way for !fflL Rookie of the Ye&lt;U" 197~ contract. Catcher Barry
· for Frank Robinson, baseball's honors, suffered a broken left Foote and first baseman Mike '
··flnt blact manager.
. leg Wednesdily !Ught.
, Jorgensen signed earlier.

WI '

goo ' s

0 wmg

...lei•

the contest fr
and will
f be lost
the team om our to
weeks .
Hawks 2 Canucks 1:
Rookie Grant
1 midMulvey's tie-.
breaking goa
way through
the second period enpbled the
tr'::'i,;re, we' re gilnna keep this Black Hawks to hand the
streak goin'," said Co urnoyer. Canucks their seventh loss in a
"Why not?"
row. John Marks got Chicago's
1n other NHL games, Pitts- first goal while Bob
burgh topped Atlanta, 5-3, the tallied for Vancouver .
New York Rangers beat MUJ·
Maple Leafs 4 Blueo 1:
nesota , 5-3, Chicago nipped
Bob Neeley and Errol
vancouver, 2-1 ; Toronto Thompson scored first-period
whipped st. Louis, 4-1, and goals and the Maple Leafs went
Buffalo blanked California, 4-0. on to easily defeat the mues.
Houston routed Edmonton, 9- Gary Sabourin and Lonny
2, New lj:ngiand defeate d McDonald also scored for
Chica go, 7-5 , Minne so ta Toronto while Chuck Lefley got ·
downed Cleveland, 4-2, Van- St. Louis' lone goal.
couver beat Winnipeg, 4-2, and
Sabres 4 Seals 0:
Phoenix and Toronto played to
Rick Dudley scored two
a ·5-5 tie in World Hockey goals to lead the Sabres to
Association games.
victory over the Seals .
Penguins 5 Flames 3:
Goaltender Roger Crozier
The Penguins ran their home registered his second shutout,
unbeaten string to 12 g~mes by • turning back 26 shots.
downing the Flames. Jean
WHA:
Pronovost's 21st goal snapped
Andre Hinse tied a league
a 3-3 tie in the final period and record with five goals in
Chuck Arnason added an in- Houston's rout of Edmonwn;
surance tally.
Larry Pleau scored twice w
Rangers 5 North Stars 3:
pace New England over ChicoThe Rangers scored three go; Fran Huck recorded two
goals in 3'h minutes in the goals and an assist in Minsecond period to defeat the nesota 's victory over CleveNorth Stars. Pete Stemkowski, land; Don McCleod blocked 40
Jean Ratelle and Rod Gilbert shots to help Vancouver down
tallied for the Rangers during a Winnipeg and last-period goals .
22-&lt;lhot second-period attack. by Tom Simpson and Paul
Rangers ' rookie right wing Henderson enabled Toronw w
Rick Middlewn broke his leg in tie Phoenix.

Prices Valid
'

.

I

t,~.~~;,;~M~
..~~~u::·t~~~~,'~~i
M~~ "

the hospital board with a picture of the hospital as it will look
when construction is completed. Lefttorightare G. A. Biggs,
chairman; Charles J . Hyer, Dr. Jack Buxton, Jack Burdett,
pointing· to the new addition, and Carroll Casto.

NEW ADDITION TO HOSPITAL - The Pleasant Valley
Hospital Board of Directors learned Tuesday evening construction of the hospital's proposed $2 million addition will
begin within 60 days. Pictured are some of the members of

PT. PLEASANT - "Construction of a $2 million addition to Pleasant Vall ey
Hospital should begin within 60
day s ,' ' J . Buckner Morse,
,. executive vice president of
Hospital
Building
and
Equipment Company of St.
Louis, Mo. told the Pleasant
Valley Hospital Board of
Directors Tuesday evening in
their annual meeting.
All plans are now completed
for Phase I of the construction
project, It will include a two
story tower with a ground level
floor . The two stories will
accommodate approximately
80 new hospital beds and the
ground level will house 10
executive suites for 10
,. physicians.
As soon as Phase 1 is com~

hospital.
Meanwhile, Tuesday turned
out to be the hospiial's most
populous day in its I&gt; year
his tory, when 98 patients
jammed the licensed 86-patient
bed hosp ital.

~

NEW HAVEN, W. Va . -

• 'Several area residents have
~ been promoted at the Foote
•· Mineral Co. Graham Plant,
: John Wolfe, plant manager,
annoWlces.
:: · William Slone was promoted

r.

!: ·~o

Five

member s

tains 34 patient beds.
Present at the meeting were
Mr. and Mrs . .Jack Burdett,
Me . and Mrs. William Knight,
Mr. and Mrs. Ralnh Crnm p,

were

OFF

OWENS CORNING

LAY-IN

Rtl. '3.00

~6~~

$4

I

NEW HAVEN, W. Va. Town Council Tuesday evening
discussed national flood in·
surance and ;ast due water
bills.
Mayor Charles Smith and
Councilmen Bernard Lieving ;
William Gibbs, Tom Grinstead,
Charles Roush, Police Officers
Ronnie Chandler and Harold
Moxley, and Recorder Pat
Paugh heard a letter read from
the Farm Home
Ad-

HOSPITALIZED ·
Mrs. Odus (Mae) Nelson,
formerly of the Bailey Run
area is confined to the
Riverside Methodist Hospital,
Columbus. Her home address
is 3101 Lockbourne Road, 43201 .
DANCE PLANNED
A public square dance will be
held at the Senior Citizens
Center, Saturday, Feb. 25,
from 8 to 11 p.m . Children
under 12 will be admitted free
to the dance which is considered a family affair.

SALE
BIG LOT BOYS'

BOYS

1!

. SHIRTS

1.49 · To 51.99

!

5

I MEN'S PANTS

.

I

WRANGLER JEANS
Sizes 12·14-16
Slim Cut Only

•2.49

! KNIITING YARN
!
4 oz . Skeins

Va. lues To $13.00 ·

~---M~-~·ddleport Department

Store
OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAYTILL8:00
~--

'

.

,,..,

with COI.IJIOII

'
M·I•DDLEPORT, OHICf

.,

ministration concerning the
flood protection insurance
which said no application has
been received for the insurance. Of the water bill
deficits , council learned
requests for payment of past
due bills has met good
responses .

1111

114c.lf

~·~ -.
~],J\o l":!' ••

u"

i_W: · ~ \
·-""':.~ -~
'-.·

.... &amp;•

J9~

I
I

wuh co upon

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

m
•
dJ

Pnctl val td th rough J~ro u o• y 19

• 'lf'f

GILLETTE TRAC II

~::OR

TRIAL

t"'.

35e ., .. m ..

Personna 74
TUNGSTUN
DOUBLE-EDGED
BLADES
5 Stolnl.-.1 St.-.1 Uhldtl

.;tg~g
~

DISPOSABLE
DOUCHE
• M orecoml or t~blt &gt;h!lf.Je

Insurance, past due bills noted

.r~-;;;;;;:;;--~--;;N"'i"i";;~-;-i-·-;E ~~~·;:;;--·
00110~ ~NNEL

, H•l pl sollr:tlt. ln lrl'lf"ll!ld ll tlly "
• Ntlllr Stlc ~ · N•~ •• Orem

6 oz. MASSENGILL
• u 11er Hl

~~~~---~---~~~~:_~1--~~;~--i
!
TO .

6 oz. Touch of Sweden
HAND LOTION

---------

"Well, 1 guess ol' Catfish Hunter sure whipped infla tion, eh?"
·

Mrs. Charlotte Coon was
promoted from PBX operator
to secretary to the personnel
manager at the Graham Plant.
Mrs. Coon started her employment with Foote Mineral
May 2, 1969. Mrs. Coon's
husband is employed as a
teacher in the Mason County
School System. They reside
with their two children at 210
Walnut St. , New Haven.
Mrs. Sandra Griffith was
promoted to PBX operator at
the Graham Plant. She has
been employed as relief
stenographer since April 22, ,
1973. She resides with her
husband at 1730 Silver Ridge,
Reedsville, Ohio.

· · ·
!
BRAS · GIRDLES - SLIPS!
Values to'$8.00
1

• Fo r il'odoor n• Dul dOOt ull

1975 by tfE..I . Inc

Mason.

Big Lot Ladies'

Joy "Su119r Turf"
DOOR MAT

too

49C

.,,

'

mor~

~~ . . . . . . .

!

.

'h PRICE

lite- '1.1S

~---;,~;~;;--:-.r--·~:;:;~;;;;--l·--;~;-,:;,-;~;0;;~-•
CHILDREN'S '
I
.
[ LADIES&amp;CHILDREN'S
.'
.
! SPORTSWEAR
I
COATS
PRESSES &amp; SKIRTS I
l/. .
All Reducl!d for

••

LOVE LEMON FRESHENER

LOVE FRESH
LEMON CLEANSER
'h PRICE

20 oz.
LISTERINE
ANTISEPTIC

~1.2~~~:-._l_~~~w T~· $~~-· l -----~.!~ ,_ ,__

"

Mr. Charles Lanham , Mr. and
Mrs. Carroll Casto, Mr . and
Mrs. Charles Hyer, Mr . L .
Slack and James L. Farley .

• H "" • HI\\""

:THROUGHOUT THE STOREI

45 m. w.tde

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Fu o Uftl Ofl ~ tt01 01.

JANUARY CLEARANCE.·. .

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II

ami lou

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

$1

CEILING TILE

1.-,

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PRITT GLUE STICK

THE SHOE BOX

OFF

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p&amp;p&amp; r. 16broc . leothtr.

plunger in the production
department. He attended
Wahama High School and
gradu.ated in 1961. He resides
. with his wife and family at

foreman in the production

CONTINUES

·~

ti" K I IO Window m&lt;)u nlu&gt;g

Berrys World

Different Shoes Added Dai~

15%

•..

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•

Come in and
check 9ur bargain
table regularly-

••

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ouTDOOR ....,.
THERMOMETER
(
Willllt lr ltll~tllw ct nter !IIIC
.

will be converted to an out- Mr . Lyle Austin, Mr. Harry
patient clinic as well as the Miller, Mr . K. G. Greene, Dr.
laboratory. It currently con- Jack Buxton, Mr. G. A. Biggs,

reelected to three year terms
on the hospital board. They are
'Charles Lanham, T. R. Friar,
James Hall, William Knight
and Harry Miller .
In reviewing the success of
the past year it was noted that
with the exception of pediatrics
and obstetrics the hospital had
102 per cent occupancy.
The total construction
project should take between 21
and 24 months, according to
Farley. In this time, if the
proposed addition turns out to
be too small, preparations are
being made to add additional
facilities onto the hospital.
The north wing, which is
currently used for in-patients,

:·department. Slone has been
•· employed at the Graham Plant
~ since Nov. I, 1967, and worked
~various positions in the
;·production department. His
:;_last position before being
~promoted was furnace tapper.
~Slone resides with his wife and
~lamily at Rt. I, Gallipolis
::Ferry, W. Va .
;:-: George Ray Vanmatre was
; promoted to foreman in · the
~ roduction
department.
~Vanmatre has been employed
;Jit the Graham Plant since
') larch 19, 1968. Vanmatre's
;position before the announced
'promotion was a noduloy

SAVE
·20% ON

~ , ~~

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at Foote Mineral

•
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DUTCH
STANDARD
PAINT

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M~ our
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·f·Several promoted

JANUARY

.

·$,2 million addition assured

Sale

15%

N~t l

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JANUARY CLEARANCE

.ALL
WALL
PANELING

P&lt; ,rr,,;,h&lt;llhr uu\I"•. J~.....

R. ~T.~:~.e_T,~s cosMETics

pleted, a projected $700,000
" renovation of the north wing of
the hospital will commence,
according
to James Farley,
'
., executive director of th e

MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

Through JanuaiJ 19

Quantities Lim ited

f:"i:'"--

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BAKER
FURNITURE'S
.

•

1-·--·--·------------------------------------------------II
")('-· ~
'"'*""
.
-

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Bu c kn e ll 71 St . Fran , NY 63
W i lkes 76 Ph a . Pharm 57
Chyny St 56 W. Ch s tr 53
Sc ranton 66 Ph a . T e x 61
Un ion NY 83 A mh er st 59
Navy 76 Muhl enb erg 55
RPI 73 Allred 48
D el. St . 100 Coppin St 80
Havrf r d 73 Lebnon 09
Man sf l d 07 Sh ipp ensbg 64
Seton Hall 9 2 Ston ehl/ 63
Bethany 64 Crng ie -M IIn 57
Juniat a 65 D ick in son 63
Co l by 75 Bat es 64
Spr ingf ld 85 Wi ll iams 77
Am Int i 79 So . Conn . 7 1
L a Sall e 68 Sf. Jo s Pa 60
F airf ld 76 Geotown DC 65
VPI 87 We st Virg in i a 86
Cent Conn . 59 We sle yan 48
South
Geo . .W ash 10 1 Richmond 80
Old Domi n ion 89 M adis on 54
V a . Cmmnwlth 89 Md . -E . Sh . 57
VMI 86 Chr istphr N ewp t 66
So F la . 77 Fla . St . 71
Day ton !:J. E . Kentucky 65
N o . K y . ~t. 96 Mar ian 92
No . Car . 80 Wak e Fore st 78
V ir gin ia 73 Penn St . 50
Duke 75 Cl em son 72
F la . A &amp;M 80 Tu sk egee 7J.
Elon 67 Lenoi r Rhyne 58
Wm . Ca r ey 81 Millsap s 76
Jck snvl St . 95 Shortr 73
T r oy St. 87 Hunt ing ton 66
Ky . St 122 P ikeville 101
C.w . Po st 78 Fl a . Tec h 73
Geotwn K y. 95 Thos . More 67
Midwest
C in c inna t i 106 SMU 74
End St .. T .H . 66 E . Ill. 64
Butler lnd 69 DePauw 56
W i s .. M i l 77 FDU -Rihrf r d 66
Kansas St 73 Arkansas 71
R ipon 70 Beloit 63
Evansvl 94 Ind . Central 80
No . Dak . St . 81 Concordia 60
Ohio U . 92 Miam i. Ohio 90
Yngst wn St . 112 Allian c e 62
Yngstwn St .- 11 2 Alliance 62
Mt Union 7J Bldwn -WII ce 65
Wittenberg 78 Ott erbein 68
Gann'on 75 Akron 67
Cent . Sf. , ? . 75 A shlnd 73
F indlay 80 Taylor 78
A llegh eny 7A J . Carroll 71
Tr i State 66 Goshen 57
Ros e -Hu l man 86 II !. Coli 77 ·
St . Fran Ind . 74 Marion 53
St . Thos Minn . 7- 5 M cAistr 58
West
Redlands 74 Wh ittier 72
Puget Sd .as Mankto St 59
Occdntl 76 Ctrmnt -Mudd 61
Pom -Pi t zer 100 Cal Tech 51
Ca t -Dav is 66 San Jose St. 55

ms

I

BAR_GA IS

onn at4 ·.!0of the first ,
of the sea ~
perl.od and he added his second
of the .game at 7:35 of the
second perl·od. Serge Sevard,
Jacques Lemalf
· e and Guy
Lafleur also scored for Mon-

·
Four SCheduled
for induction

team."
While
pra1smg
both
Baltimore · quarterbacks who
shared ihe starting role during
a dismal 2-12 season, Marchlbroda observed he would be
spending a lot of his time
working with Jones, a two-year
veteran.
"Jones has no •ifs.' The~e's
nothing he can't do. It's just a
matter of bringing it to the
fore, Experience is the only
thing he lacks -and direc-

turned the game around for us.
We're playing excellent hockey
now."
.
CoUrnoyer
got Montrea I off
h gO a1 .
to a l&lt;J 1ea d WI'th h'IS 14t,.

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MAX FACTOR BATH OIL
Lorna
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PRICE
·
WASTEBASKET
I
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1
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....$1.25.,.,~·(

Fairview
News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. Emmie Plichta of
Cleveland, 0., Roger· Sayre of
Jacksonville, Fla. visited Mr.
and Mrs . Herbert Sayre
Saturday.
Christmas Day guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Russell Roush were
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis,
Clifton, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Russell and · children of
Wolfpen, Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa
Pickens .
Mr. and Mrs. Brice Sayre
and family of Jackson visited
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Sayre
recently. Mr. and Mrs. Dean
Sayre of Middletown, Pa . spent
Christmas week with the
Sayres and Christmas Day
guests of the Sayres were Mr.
and Mrs. David Sayre and
grandchildren, Mrs . Peggy
Gregory of Fairborn, 0., Mr.
and Mrs. Carroll Sayre of
Racine .
Mr. and Mrs. John Johnson
and children of Loraine, 0 .
spent Christmas week with his
parents,. Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Johnson· and George .
Christmas Day guesl.!l,. ·of
Mrs. Bertha Robinson were
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Shields,
Mr. and Mrs . H ~ward
Robinson, Flatwoods, W. Va.,
Mr. and Mrs. Blll Robinson and
" children, Mrs. Marlen~ fisher,
·children Molly, Larry and AmY
of Racine. Calling Christmas
evening were Mr. and Mrs .
Philip Radford and Stephanie,
Mrs . Jack Sargent.
.' Mrs. Hazel Mitchell of '
Columbus, Mrs . Frances Coe of
Carbon Hill, Mrs . Fqcie
Hayman , Mrs. Mabel Shields ·
spent Sunday night with Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Haught at
Walker; W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs ..Herbert Roush
xisited Mr. and Mrs . Ott Boston
at Rncine Chrisl'llas Day.

STurd~

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Devillbiss
ECONOMY STEAM
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VAPORIZER
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-------------------------•
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TOILET WATER
y, PRICE
.... ~.00

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HAND CREAM
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PLAYTEX
GLOVES
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Sterling. '"· '3·"
PLASTIC
LETTER FILE

• tm plcl rtutunrpOt ~ DI'OP ~lltfll
• Anont!l ~Olort

$2.4!) ... ~ ....

----------

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234 with eou~

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&amp;- The DaUy Sentlno!l,.Mlddleport,Pomeroy, o~, Thursday; Ja~.,~~· !97S

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By PO I.tY CRAMER ·

The altar was draped and a
~;.
&lt; . memonal servtce cond ucted
:j1:: for Hugh. Nichols, past grand
C
§;a patron, at the Tuesday night
WJ meeting of Pomeroy Chapter
:;:?,:j 186, order or the Eastern Star
~~ij at the Pomer oy Masoni~
BY POLLY CRAMER
Temple.
DEAR POLLY - While I was ironing a plastic bag blew onto
Mrs . Florence Well and Dale
the !Jottom of my hot steam iron and ruined it. I cannot !ron with Smith , worthy matron and
Plastic allover the bottom of the iron and~othing I have tried wlll worlhj(patron , presided at the
remove it. If anyone knows how to do this please hurry and tell mee ting during which time
me. I need my iron. - PEAR.
four petitioners were elected to
DEAR PEARL -A couple of weeb ago I absent-mindedly receive the degrees of the
put my bot iron down on an acetate scarf so naturally a piece the order.
site of the Iron stuck to It like glue. ID fact It looked like the Iron
CommW1icati ons were read
bad a 11rfped plate oa the bottom. I l{r&amp;bbed a soap-filled from the worthy grand matron
scrubbing pad. Wblle tbe lroa was WARM.\crubbed away every ou tl i nin~ her projec f_oc.: fnr the
bit very quickly and theiroa was left smooth and UMCratched.POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is with those politicians who
do not have their signs removed when the election is over. The
posters seem to be on almost every tree and pole. Of a U people
A Shrove Tuesday pancake
they should be the first to be Interested In keeping our roadsides
supper
for members of St. Paul
looking neat.
.
Lutheran
Chur&lt;.·h and fri ends
~e of the handiest gadgets I have around my sewmg
machine is a long corsage pin that I use to help guide small wa s planned at the Tuesday
pieces of material under the needle. This is especially handy night meeting of the Ameriea n
when making something small like doll clothes or sewmg Lutheran Church Wo111en at the
home of Mrs. Frances Warner.
together quilt pieces or anything with a very narrow seam. Mrs . Helen Deiner presided
MERLYN.
the meeti ng • when the
at
DEAR POLLY - Jessie can separate her stacked aluminum
women
also planned to
tumblers by putting ice cubes in the top one and put the stack in
hot water. Repeat the process unUl aU come apart. Ice wiU remember residents of lhe
contract the top one and the heat will expand the bottom one. I Meigs Counly Infirma ry on
have done this many times and also used the same on stainless Valentine's Day. Treats will be
taken to the infi rmary Sunday,
steel mixing bowls. - ANN B. ,
16.
Named
coDEAR POLLY - We live in a tw().Btory house . It seemed I Feb.
chairwomen
for
the
pancake
was always having to make an extra trip downstairs to get a
spoon to give medicine to one of the children who happened to be supper were Mrs. Lois Clelland
sick. I saved plastic spoons from drive-in restaurants, wash them and Mrs. Judy Eichinger.
It was reported that
with hot, sudsy water and put them in a plastic bag that is kept in
notepaper
wh1ch pictures the
the medicine chest. ( am saved many steps and my good flatware
church
on
the
front has arrived
is always where it should be. The children are less reluctant to
and is for sale at $1.50 per box.
take medicine from a colored spoon, - DIANE .
DEAR POLLY - I have a tendency to scuff the toes of my Mrs. Eichinger is chairwoman
shoes and my navy blue ones can be repaired with blue polish . I of the sale.
Chairwomen named fQr the
could not find the bright pollsh needed for my red shoes so
dabbed some red food coloring on a cotton swab and solved the year were Mrs. Davis, rummage sale; Miss Erna Jesse
problem. - MRS. J.D.D.
and
Mrs. Davis, Rega tta and
DEAR MRS. J.D.D. - I scuff the heels of my 1boes wbeo
driving the Clll' 10d find marking pens of the proper colon also do weddin g recepti on: Mrs.
Barbara Fry, publicity. Others
1 great touch-up job. -POLLY.
attendin g were Mrs. Margaret
Blaellnar , Mrs . Ri chrd
Downie, Mrs. Jean Braun and
Pastor William Middleswart .

('
JOap
pad k ans
plastiC Ojf iron

Lutherans set
pancake supper

eve r yo ne formin g a eircle

aroWld the altar and being
given the ubligalion by the
worthy patron .
Sin ce the school of instruction t:onflicls with the
AMY ERWIN
regular meeting time of the
chapter. the dale wa s changed
to Feb. :1. Mrs. Well asked that
all members be prese nt at 7
p.m. to practice for the opening
march. The initi atory work win
be examplified at that time .
Refreshments were served
bv Mrs. Well and Smi lh fr om
t&lt;ibles decorated with candle
snowmen . Shrink
craft
Mr. and Mrs. Don Erwin,
snowmen were used for pinons Midd lepo rt , e nt er tai ned
at the mee tmg.
Monday even ing with a McDonald 's party honoring their
daughter&gt;:' Amy, on her eighth
birthday.
Amy and her guests were
ta ken to McDonald 's in Athens
wh ere the party was staged.
Hamburgers, french fri es and
soft drinks were served along
Mrs. Susan Blaker was in- with Ronald McDonald favors
stalled president or th e and a decorated ca ke .
Cat holic Women's Club r ~ Re s taurant
personnel
Sacred Hear t Church rece ntly presented Amy with a miniat the church.
theatre.
Other officers installed by
The group then returned to
!lev . Fr. Paul Welton were Middleport and at the Erwin
Elsie Southerland, vice home, Amy opened her gifts.
president; Jo Ellen Roush, Garnes were played with prizes
sec r e tary; Barbara Smi th, going to Scott McKinley , Mary
treasurer;
Rose Sisso n, Beth Long and Danny Thomas,
auditor: and Mary Kun ze lman, who also won the door prize.
historian .
Mrs. Erwin assisted by Mrs.
Follow in g th e meeting Clarice Erwin and Mrs. Betty
refreshrnents were s~rvc&lt;l, by McKinley se rved ca ke and ice
Jan e Frymeycr, Mar il yn cream:
Epple, Mrs. Roush and Jani ce
Others attending tne party
Deem.
were Terri Sprouse, Beth
Wolfe, Holly Miller, Matthew
Erw in and Jennifer McKinley.
.
.
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· ··· · ·-;.o:.vv;~·.·;·;·.·.........
...·.········~~·········
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~-~v:-:....·'*-·.-.---·.·.•.•.•.•
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Method ist Chu rc hes ha ve t
planned for a specia l activity to ~§
:~:~
help prepare for upcoming :;::
;:;:
effo r ts. It in cludes the ~:::
;:q,
engagement of Dr. Cha rles
Whittle of the Board of :::~
::~:::::
Evangelism, Nashville, Tenn., ::::
for a one night conference on
THURSDAY
o; Using
the
Bible
in
TWIN CITY Shrine Club,
Eva ngelism". Also ideas on Thursday at the Racine Shnne
ways and methods of Park. 7:30p .m. Refreshments.
promoting evangelism will be All Nobles inv ited to attend.
discussed by Dr . Whittle.
CLASS 12, Heath . United
The one night conference
Me thod ist Church, 7:30p .m. at
with Dr. Whittle will be at the
the church. New officers will
Asbury Un ited Meth odi st
be hostesses.
Church in Syracuse, Monday
Nondenominational Gospel
night, Jan . 20.
se rvi ces bein g held today,
The meeting will open with a
Wedne sday, Fr iday and
carry-in •neal at 6:30p.m .
Sunday 7:30 nightly at Jr .
Each family is asked to bring
O.U.A.M. Hall, 201 Fourth St.,
a covered dish and their table
New Haven. Public invited.
service. Mea t. coffee , tea and
MEIGS Coun ty Better Beef
bread will be furni shed .
Anyone not comin g for the u'veslock Club, 7: 30 p.m., at
County F: xle nsion Office. All
meal should be present by 7: 30
p.m. for the program and members are asked to attend.
EVANGELINE Chapter 176, ·
discussion.
OES 7 p.m. practice for
Everyone is welcome.
initiation, Middleport Masonic ·
Temple .
MIDDLEPORT
Child
Conse rvation Leag ue , 7:30
p.m., Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electri c Co . Mrs.
Margaret Ella Lewis of the
Meigs Community Sc hoo! to be
the speaker.
FRIDAY
' TUPPERS PLAINS - New
RUTLAND Gun Club, 8 p.m.
officers · were elected at a
SATURDAY
recent meeting of the Tuppers
BEAN
Dinner, 5 to 7 p.m. at
Plains Community Club.
Middleport
Ma ~onic
Hall
Elected were Mrs . Nita Jean
Ritchi e, president: Mrs . sponsored by Meigs Chapter
Lyons,
vice Order of DcMolay. Menu inElizabeth
president: Palsy chapman . etudes. beans, cornbread, pie
secretary ; Mrs. Oneta Cole. and cake.
SUNDAY
treasurer ; Mrs. Shirley Baker.·
COUN
TYWID
~
Prayer
news re porter ; Mrs. Vera
meeting,
2
p.m.
at the
Weber, telephone committee;
and Mrs. Mildred l)rooks. ways Wesleyan Holin ess Chur ch,
Pomeroy, with Glen Bissell,
and means chairwoman .
class leader.
Named as trustees for the
club wHe Lindsey Lyons ,. AMERICA, I Love You, a
Clifford Longenette, Norman story a bout one of Meigs
Weber and Leo Kennedy, Jr . CoWlty 's Pioneer families in
Plans were made for a jitney coal and industry by Ca rrie
supper Feb. 22, starting at 5 Ebersbach Neutzling to be
p.m. at the new fire depart- fea tured at 2:30 p.m. when
ment and commWlity building. Meigs County Pioneer and
Donat ins are being taken by . Histori cal Society meets at the
th e .fire depar tment on a Meigs County Museum , Butportable television, a portable ternut Ave .. Pomeroy. Public
invited.
bar and an electric razor.

Birthday
observed

Mrs. Blaker
leads women

SYRACUSE - Five groups
of Methodists will be stressing
Evangelism in the year 1975.
The United Methodist and the
Free Methodist. both of which
are to be foWld in Meigs
County, will join other groups
in this effort.
One phase of the emphasis
included a tour of the Holy
Land where the Ch ristian
Gospel began. The tour was in
November , 1974. Although
Meigs County was likely not
represented in the tour. Rev.
Paul Hawks, pastor of Gra ce
Church, Gallipolis. took the
tour .
In Molog County, United

s0cIa•I

Adul ts may hold the key to
improved reading for Meigs
County yoWlg people and with
this in mind the Meigs CoWlty
Teacher Corps Program hopes
to encourage adults to )ISe that
key.
Today, the program ccordinators, Mrs. Jane Snouffer
and ca·rl Denison, announced
that a reading program for
adults-to provide lips on how
young people can be helpedwill get underway next
Tllursday .
There will be six sessions in
the reading course being offered free of charge to adul ts .
The six sessions will be held at
four different centers for the
next six Thursdays 6:30 to 8 p.
m. Not only that, but activities
for young people from four to
13 will be provided at the
centers where their pafents
are taking part in the reading
course .
Centers at which the course
will be offered on the six
Thursday nights are Meigs
Senior High .School, Meigs
JWlior High Sc hool, Rutland
. Eleme nt ary, Sc hool and
Ha rr iso nville Elementary
School. Teacher-i nterns of the
teacher corps program, which

Alfred
Social

got Wlderway this fall in the
Meigs Local School Oistr1ct , as
well as team leaders .will be
conducting the .adult sessions.
The course wiU consist of
suggestions and activities that
the adult or parent can use at
home to help his own children
or children of the neighborhood
to improve their reading ~kills.
The corps program off1c1als
are quite aware that the prime
responsibility for readmg
instruction does lie in the
school district. However, they
feel that the support and encouragement of adults close to
the children involved in the
instruction is extremely im·
portanl.
With the development of
some .very basic instructional
skills and the kn owledge or
some
specific
reading
techniques and enric hment
activities, the suppor ting
parent or adult can do much to ,
help a child reach full potential
in reading, corps officials point
out . The Teachers Corps' whole
reason for being is to help the
children in the Meigs Local

CIN CINNATI iUPI)
Singe•· Pearl Bailey ·said
Vc lcrans Memurialllospltat
Wednesda y, " Wh at this
ADMITTF:D Mildred country needs is a goddarned
Barnett , Po mer oy; Linda enemi1, not just a cleansing."
Bailey, Rutland ; Juani ta
"Then ," she said WedWamsley, Middleport: Joseph nesday, "We can start doing
Stewart, Bidwell : Jose ph what President Ford said ... "
Quivey, Pomeroy : Carolyn
Miss Ba iley, appearing at a
Johnson, Mason; Pea rl Great- •ughtclub in n orth~rn Kenhouse, Por tl a nd ; Clifford tucky, across the Ohio River
Michae l, Co lumbus ; David from here, ear lier tl1is week
Jack s, Middleport : Be rth a was quoted us saying she is
Smith. Bidwell.
serious about running for the
DISCHARGED - Andrew presidency in 1976.
Warner. Dav id Klein , Dorothy
She said Fur·d 11 has an honest
Anthony , Diana Neal. Rube1·t fa ce, and I'm pretty good about
Harmon, Deborah Ferg uson, judging these tltings."
Clara Smith. Julia Mcewan ,
11
1 Utink," she added , "if he
Ear l King , Kilty Metzger, put down the papers (Ius state
Ronald Bostie. Betty Bailey of the union address) and just
and Sharon Stark.
ta lked to me, he'd co me

The Planned Parenthood
Organization of Southeastern
Ohio will stage a fWld raisin g
benefi t in the form of theaterbuffet supper Friday , Jan. 31.
The play, " Jesus Christ,
Superstar " will be presented
by the Ohio University Theatre
in Memorial Auditorium ,
Athens, with a buffet supper to
follow the play in the State
Room o! Baker Center.
Cost for the theater-buffet is
$7.50 a person. Tickets may be
· .
PIanned
...secured by wr1tmg
Parenthood, 8 North Court St.,
Athens , 45701. Anyone wishing
additi onal informa ti on may
call Mrs. Betty ·Fultz, 992-3346.
The deadline for securing
ticke ts is Jan. 24.

:;
;: caIen dar:;

SJDEWALK SUPERINTENDENTS find the progress
being made at' the site of the new apartment complex on the
corner of Third and MUI Sts. hard to believe. In less than a

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National Bank Region No.4

REPORT OF CONDITION, CONSOLIDATING
DOMESTIC SUBSIDIARIES, OF THE

CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK
of Mlddl~port In the Stale of Ohio, at the close of business on December 31, 197t
published In response to call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under 'ntle
12, ,United States Code, Section 161.
ASSETS
Cash and due from banks - - - - - • • - - - - - • - - - - - • $ 1,003,678.18
U.S. Treasury securities • - - - - - : - - - - - • - - - - - 2,438,t30.00
· Obligations of States and political subdivisions - - - 1,893,133.82
Otber securities - - - - • • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 21,000.00
Federllf fWlds sold and securities purchased
Wlder agreements to resell - - - - - - 1,000,000.00
Loans • - - - - - - - - - - - - - • - - •
4,645,886.45
Bank premises, furniture a~d fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises - - - - • - 94,812.39
Real estate owned other than bank premises • - - - - - - 4,789.47
Other assets - - - - • - - - - - - - • • - - - - - - - 31.568,6!
TOTAL ASSETS - - - • - - - - - - - • - - · - $11,133,088.92
LIAB!LfriES

Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
and corporations - - - - - - - - - • • - - - • - - - $2,001,283.51
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
- 7,027,013.75
partnerships , and corporations - - - - • • - - - • •
Deposits of United States Goverrunent - - - - - - - - - 31,605.00
Deposits of States and political subdivisions • • - - - - • - - 709,084.28
Deposits of commercial banks - - - - - - • - - - - - - • S,OOO.OO
Certified and officers' checks, etc. - - • - • - - - - - - t0,053.88
TOTAL DEPOSITS • - - · • - - • - 19.814.040.42
(a) Total demand deposits - • - - - . - - - $2,5811504.().1
(b) Total tiii)e ·and savings deposits - - - - - $7,232,536.38
Other liabilities - - • • • • - - - - - - - - - - - , 231,348.76
TOTAL LIABIUTIES - - - - - - • • - - - - - • - $10,ot5,389.18
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings) - - - • • - • - • • - - - - - 74,~.82
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SEClJRITIES - - - $74,608.82
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Equity capital-total - - - - - - $1,013,090.92 .
Common Stock-total par value - • - - - •
100,000.00
· No. shares authorized · 2,000
· No. shares outstanding -2;000
Surplus - - - • - • • - - - - - - - • • • - • - •
- 600,000.00
Undivided profits • - - - - - - • • •
• 313,090.92
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS · 1,013,090.92 .
TOTAL UABIUTIES, RESERVES, AND
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
$1!,133,088.92
MEMORANI;lA
Average of total deposits for, the 15 calendar
days ending with call date • - - - - - - - - $9,830,426.08
Average of total loans for the IS calendar
days ending with call date - - - - - - - - - - $4,637,259.84

m

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LOSE UGLY FAT

1975 O~SK- CALENDAR PAD &amp; STANDS
1975 YEAR BOOKS
1975 APPOINTMEN.T BOOKS

1, Manning Kloes, Cashier, of the abov~H~amed bank do hereby declare that
this report of condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and
Mannm11 ~
belief.
We, the undersigned directors attest the correctneSs of this report of condition and declare that it has been examined by us and to the best of our
knowledge and belief is true . and e&lt;»;rect
·
.
Paul s. Smart
Raoe S. ~)'llokll - Dlreclon
RodDey llowuJD«

COLUMBUS (UPI) - A the Coa lition of Concerned
group of 30 low and middle Utility Users here to fight
income persons have formed proposed rate increases by the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co.
The group said it would
(Continued from page I )
picket
during a hearing sche-·
The parties take place on the
duled by the PUCO Monday.
second Tuesday of each month The hearing will be on a
and, at the reques t of the proposed 12 per cent rate hike
Homebuilders Class, all Meigs by the utility .
Countians at the Health Center
The new coalition is comare invited to attend. Going posed of individuals who are
from the church her&amp; are members. of several social
usually between 11 and 15, service organizations, inIncluding the pastor and his cluding the Welfare Rights
wife, currently the Rev . and
Mrs. George Glaze.
When the chur ch group
arrives, the patients are ready
and waiting in the recrea tion
(Continued from page I)
room. Mh . Denver Rice, passed by mid.,summer, alchairwoman for the class since though there will be much
the parties started, describes squabbling over how big a cut
the scene as one where they are and how to make it. Any cut or
greeted with open arms. Many rebate is likely to be aimed at
of the same patients attend the low al'ld· moderate income
parties month after month .
taxpayers.
Arriving hetween 6:30 and 7,
Some rebate on 1974 taxes is
the parties last Wltil about 8:30. possible, although it has drawn
There is a hymn sing with strong conservative opposition.
request time and even specials Sen. Barry Goldwater R-Ariz.,
from the patie~ts themselves. said " tax culs, in my opinion,
Then games are played. Their are not going to save the
favorite - bingo. For refresh- economy." Uke many conserments the class usually takes vatives, Goldwater feels the
•sandwjche§, cookies or cakes, huge deficits brought on by a
some fruit, and a beverage. . tax cu't will cause inflation.
For the months with holidays,
Ford's proposed $80 yearly
a theme is carried out, and at payment to families too poor to
Christmas there is a wrapped pay taxes still is a question
gift for each one persoqa lly mark in Congress.
presented by Santa .
Strong opposition has deveTo add a little diversion, loped to For~'s proposed
Denver Rice sOme times en- business tax cuts, particularly
tertains with his guitar or ·his slash or the corporate lax
violin. Occasionally someone rate from 48 per cent to 42 per
from outside the Middlepor t cent. "That one will be hard to
Church of Christ contributes sell," said Sen. Russell Long,
their talents, such as Margaret D-La. , chainnan of the Senate
Neuman who has joined the Finance Committee. Some ingroup several times as piani_st crease in the investment tax
for the hymn sings.
credit is likely, although it may
Mrs. Rice and Mrs. Norman not match Ford's proposed
Yeauger, who mov ed to increase from 7 per cent to 12
Florida a couple of years ago, per cent.
were first chairwomen for the
Ford's energy package is the
project, and now assisting Mrs . most controversi.al. Even Ute
Rice is Mrs. Leonard Van- measures that Ford can imMeter.
pose on his own authority,
The monthly partie s all including the $3 per barrel
began when Mary Martin, a increase in imported oil tariffs,
member of the Homebuilders can be repealed by Congress.
Class, visited the hospital in
Sen. Henry M. Jackson, DconjWlction with her American Wash ., predicted the new
Legion Auxiliary work with import levy will never go into
veterans there, and saw the effect.
tremendous need of the
There is opposition to Ford's
patients for outside social proposal that Congress impose
contact. That was in Decem- a $2 per barrel tax on all oil,
ber , 1969, and that month the foreign and domestic.
Homebuilders held a ChristAdministration officials have
mas party for those on the estimated Ford's energy
intensive care ward.
proposals would result in an
The personal reward of ·increase in the amount the
seeing the pleasure they average family spends for .
brought to the men and ~omen gasoline, electricity and horne
that night was enough to make heating fuel from $950 to $1200
the Homebuilders want to -an increase of more than 25
per cent.
return..

Homebuilders

1 GROUP
OF
LADIES

Cbarter No. 8«1

week-despite inclement , freezing weather when workers
bave been on the jol&gt;-the second story has been added to this
section of the complex. Construction is by the Third &amp; Mill
Corp., Middleport .

r

Organization, the Columbus
Metropolitan Area Community .
Action Organization and the
Central Ohio Agency on Aging.
Henry Eckhart, former
PUCO chainnan, was invited
to advise the new group on how
to fight the proposed increase.
Eckhart Wednesday told the
coalition's first meeting here
be had never seen such a
"great outcry about utility
increases in Ohio .,

through.! kepl hoping he would we're going to cleanup
thrown those papers up into the buildings, clean the streets and:
air and say "another thing, s~rl progress.", ·
:

•

SHOE
Continues.
This
Week
MENS, WOMEN 'S, CHILDREN'S

MARGUERITE'S SHOES
102 E. Main

Pomeroy

Betty Ohlinger

- Thursday, Friday,
Saturday and Sunday

,
;

NICHOLAS DANILOFF
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Director William E. Colby of the
Central Intelligence Agenc y
has acknowledged to Congress
that his agency kept files on
10,000 American citizens .and
said it also used American
business as cover for agents
abroad.
Colby made the public ad·
missions in testimony to the
Intelligence subcommittee of
the Senate Appropriations
Committee Wednesday.
He also said:
- The CIA was tipped in 1~71
or 1972. to an alleged plot to
assassinate Vice President
Spiro Agnew and kidnap then
CIA Director Ricbard Helms.
It alerted the FBI and Secret
Service, -but it also conducted
its own surveillance in two U.S.
cities. Neither the CIA, the FBI
or Secret Service would
elaborate.
- The CIA infiltrated agents
into the movement against the
Vietnam War.
-The CIA staged three
break-ins, in 1966, 1969, and ·
1971, in an effort to safeguard
CIA secrets and secunty,
which appears to be allowed
Wlder the 1947· charter.
-The CIA tapped the phones
of 21 U.S. residents between
19[H-196S to check on leaks of
classified information.
- The CIA read mail from
persons in the United States to
two unnamed Communist
countries between 1953-1973.
But he said said cases in
which the agency "may have ·
overstepped its boWlds" were

Are Unbeatable
REX ALL

VITAMIN E

that the agency never conducted ''massive, illegal, domestic
intelligence activity."
Colby said that as a result of
President Lyndon B. Johnson's
concern about civ:il disorder,
the'CIA established a counterintelligence office in 1967 to
find out whether foreign.
powers were inciting American
radicals. He said files on 10,000
Americans were amassed in·
this program, which ended in
March, 1974.
.
A report by The New York
Times on the keeping of these
files led to current investiga,
lions of CIA in Congress and by
an administration panel
headed by Vice President
Rockefeller.
Colby testified the CIA's
Cover and Commercial Staff
negotiated with U.S . companies to provide for cover for
its agents abroad.
·
"An example of the work of

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this staff," -be said, "is an
arrangement with a corporalion, either · an independent
firm or a wholly owned
proprietary, to provide the
ostensible source of income
and rationale for a CIA officer
to reside and work in a foreign
country."
He said the CIA managed to
persuade a number of U.S.
corporations to create special
departm ents, suitably dis·
guised,
tu
develop
sophisticated technological
methods of espionage :
Investigations by Sen. How·
ard Baker, R-Te~n ., who
served as vice-chainnan of the
Senate Watergate committee,
disclosed that the Mullen and
Co., of .Washington D.C., a
public relations firm, had
provided cover for CIA agents
in Europe and Asia .
Colby cited arrangements
with Lockheed - which developed the high-flying U2 spy
plane -'-&lt;IS an example of how
American
companies
cooperate.

By

POMEROY ._OHIO

Ntlinl&gt;
OUr .COnvtnient t..y-A,W.y l'lan.

rouLoOIC

used:as covers

_.N,~NKL:JIY.
. PHONE
. 21!0'202 EAst 1¥',.1nSf.
992'&gt;34"

"This is the first group I
knQw of where poor people who
are playing the bills are getting
together," Eckhart said .
· ~ Eve ry other major sta te has
had a consumer group to fight
such increases but Ohio .1ever
had any.
Group spokesmen said they
planned to protest other utility
increases and utility-related
envirorunental problems.

U. S. business

SHOPPI

.

-

Rate increase draws protest

.....-----!:=====
Call No. 492

I.

•

••
••
•
these•

Pe.1rl suggests we get to the bottom of this

. NEWS

School District develop the
reading skills necessary to
reach their goals in life. Of.
ficials state that they are
certain that this goal cannot be
achieved without the, support
and encouragement of parents
and com munity members.
Officials hope that adults will
take advantage of the specilll
course which is being offered.
Both mothers and fathers are
being ·encoura ge d to par.
Ucipate and officials point out
that having small children,
from four to 13, is no reason not
to participate . Tutoring, arts
and crafts, reading games and
a readi ng corner will be
provided at each of the centers
for the children of parents
enrolling in the course .
Anyone having any question
about the program is asked to
call the corps office, 992-7532.
Even transportation will be
prov ided parents not having a
way to get to the center where
they will take part in the
course . Those needing transportation also may call the
corps office.

Group slates
fund-raiser

Officers
.
selected

'

.•
••

, 7- The illlilv Sent!no!I. Middleuort-Pomeroy, 0.~ Thursday, Jan. 16, 19)'!;

·Adults hold reading key ,

years and n.oting irreg ularities
found in some chapters m 1974.
It was noted that cha rms, tie
tacs , and lapel pins honoring
Howard Shull, grand patron,
are for sale.
The district sc hool' of instru.ction was announced for
Feb. 4 and plans were made to
prepare and serve a dinner for
the Masons Jan. 28. Obligation
vows were rent:wed with

Evangelism discussion set

By GAY PAULEY
compared with 36 by those 65
UPI WOMEN'• Editor
and over.
NEW YORK (Ui?l)
Shoppers tend to leap frog
Women llke to shop. Most of the from store to store or tend to
shopping is done by car. The other business in the area. Only
decision to viait a retallstore or four out of 10 general merchanstores usually l.s on short dlse visits started from home,
notice.
went to a shopping al1!a, and
Once Inside, the woman Is returned home. Many of the
apt to purchase several items women started their shopping
above and beyond the original from their job?, but the
list. The more upenslve the researchers didn 't try to
!tern, the further the shopper pattern the working women's'
wil1 travel for It. And· yoWlg shopping habits .
people fonning families are the
The decision to visit a shop or
biggest travelers.
shops usually "Is made just
These are among the conclu- shorUy before or &lt;Ill the same
sions in an extensive research day." More than half gave as
·"
project done by Response reason "immediate .need ," Swartz, Shade.
Clair Woode of Circleville
Analysts Corp., of Princeton, "last chance" and others listed
made an airplane flight to
N.J ., as guidance for relaller "sale" or "saw an ad."
Colorado on Friday where he
and newspaper advertiser on
The percentage of purchases
attended a COBA convention,
reac:hing the customers.
not planned ahead ranged from
returning to Cl rclev il ~ on
. For the study, five cities 31 per cent for women 's
Tuesday. where he resumed
diverse· in location, siu and outerwear to 26 per cent for
his job as COBA Distric t
social clulracter were selected. men 's outerwear and down to
Manager of Southwes tern
They were Boston, AUanta, 10per cent for hardware, tools,
Ohio,
which position he has
Portland, Ore., Omaha, and lamps and home improvemen~
since
Dec. I, 1974. He
held
Erle.
r.IBterlals.
began in November 1962, as
The researchers contacted
The studies were sponsored
COBA
technician in Meigs Co.
female heads of households by the 'Newsf)rint Information
Recent
callers in. the William
three times each-twice by Cotrunittee, an organization of
Ca
rr
home
bes1des th ose
phone and once by mall Canadian paper mills, and the
mentioned eerlier have been
Advertising
questlonnaire. Husbands also · Newspaper
Mr.
and Mrs. Under Dains,
were asked to mall a question· Bureau.
Pomeroy
, RD ; Dorothy
naire.
Robinson, Marlene Donovan ,
Each woman kept a threeGenevieve
Guthrie, Mr. and
day diary or. all the shopping
Mrs.
Arthur
Atherton, and Mr.
she did, whether it resulted in a
and Mrs. Charles D. Woode,
purchase and
so, what,
Note.~
local. Mrs. Carr remains about
where she went, why, what
the same.
she spent.
There was an attendance of
, All told, there were close to
SWlday School attendance on
13,000 interviews during May Jan. 12 was :;o, the offering 18 at prayer services at the
and June of 197~ore the S2U L Worship services were church here last Wednesday
recession deepened.
held aJ. II a.m. with the Rev. evenin g with Ruth Brooks
The women, speaking about Meece speaking ftom Matt. 7 ·leader. Special guests were
their last shopping expedition on "The Greatest Thing In All Mr. and Mrs. Randy Lavender
for general merchandise, llsted the World" . Attendance was 22, and sons, Sayn and Shad.
by a large margin two reasons offerin g was $16 , pledges stationed with the airforce in
California and formerly serfor going-"lt was a nice way $S7.&gt;0.
ving
as pastor on ihe Tuppers
to spend my tiii)e" and " It • SWlday School officers for
Plains
charge. Ran dy en· gave me good ideas aboUt 197S are : Supt. Uoyd Dillinger,
tertained
with several guitar
things to buy."
assistant, Charles D. Woode ;
Both men and women teachers are : SWlbeams Class , numbers, several of his own
· shopped · by · car, even for Doris Dillinger and Charlotte composition. They also visited
downt.own visits, the research- VanMeter : . Pr imary class , at_ the Ernest Taylor horne
ers found. The larger percent· Oi;ie Mae Follrod and Nina early in the evening. Mr . and
qes shopped in the subur'os Robinson: Busy Bee class, Mrs. Kenneth Griffin of West
and at shopping centers.
MyrUe Flanders and Dorothy ·Virginia were also visitors at
AbOut distance and - the Bucke: Willing Workers class, the church services. Randy
relation to ~ndlture, the Thelma Henderson and Ruth ' expects to fulfill his duties in
study found that six out of 10 Brooks ; Young Adults class, the services of his country by,
big tick.et items (major ap. Howard Flanders ar.d Eleanor October, 197S, then to come
pllances, furniture and the Boyes; Adult Class ; Nellie . back to Athens Ohio University
Ilke )
bought five or more Pa rker and' Helen Woode ; to work on his doctorate
miles from · home, compared secretary and tteasurer, Unda degree.
with fiw to 10 other general Williams and Randy Dillinger;
merchandise items. Some Librarians, Kathy Ann Follrod
women, however, made both and Kathy Jo Dillinger; Roll
large and 111111!11 purcbases on Call Book . Ricky Dillinger and Stlrt losi~ weight today or money
t.ck. MONAO"EX is a tiny tllbJet ·
the same trip.
ushers, Stephen Follrod and _. ...... to take. MONA DEX will
hflp curb. your desire for IJCtell
Fifty-two per cent of the five Timothy Spencer.
food. Eat ~- .... weigh - . Coiltains
miles ·01"' more trips were by
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. no dilngtrOPJS drug&amp; lind will not
people wjth family Income of at Woode and Nina Robinson INike you nervDUs. No strenuouaIXMC•. ChMge your lift , .. start
lea8i $1$,000, C001pared wi!h 36 attended the special hymn sing ·· MONADEX «1St $3.00 for
1 20 doy supply. L""" economy
per cent for !lboppers with at North Bethel Saturday, sill
is $5.00,' AIIO try AQUATABS :
ii~C~~rnes under $10,000.
evening, Jan. 11.
they won: Jllfltly tO Nip you lost
AQUA TABS - J "w.t• Y01111g people as ,the biggest
Saturday evening guests of wtter·blott.
pill" tha t _w orks - $3.00. Both
travelers? Re!learc:hen found Clara Follrod and. Nina .,arantted lnd soJd by :
that 49 per Cl!llt of the viaits five · Robinson were Mr. and Mrs." Sw isher &amp; l:.ohse Pharmacy , .
E . Main. Pom eroy, 0 .,
miles or more from home were Bill Follrod and Sue Ann, 112
Dutt on Drug Store, M iddl cJiort ,
by : w~ 18 to :U y.ears, Athens, and Mr. and Mrs. Otto o .• ,Ma il orders fill ed . ~ adv .
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How far fora
single purchase?

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TERS
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a:oo1oa:oo Fri.-Sat. ·
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ONLY

3.14

REG. 2.50
ONLY

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&amp;- The DaUy Sentlno!l,.Mlddleport,Pomeroy, o~, Thursday; Ja~.,~~· !97S

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By PO I.tY CRAMER ·

The altar was draped and a
~;.
&lt; . memonal servtce cond ucted
:j1:: for Hugh. Nichols, past grand
C
§;a patron, at the Tuesday night
WJ meeting of Pomeroy Chapter
:;:?,:j 186, order or the Eastern Star
~~ij at the Pomer oy Masoni~
BY POLLY CRAMER
Temple.
DEAR POLLY - While I was ironing a plastic bag blew onto
Mrs . Florence Well and Dale
the !Jottom of my hot steam iron and ruined it. I cannot !ron with Smith , worthy matron and
Plastic allover the bottom of the iron and~othing I have tried wlll worlhj(patron , presided at the
remove it. If anyone knows how to do this please hurry and tell mee ting during which time
me. I need my iron. - PEAR.
four petitioners were elected to
DEAR PEARL -A couple of weeb ago I absent-mindedly receive the degrees of the
put my bot iron down on an acetate scarf so naturally a piece the order.
site of the Iron stuck to It like glue. ID fact It looked like the Iron
CommW1icati ons were read
bad a 11rfped plate oa the bottom. I l{r&amp;bbed a soap-filled from the worthy grand matron
scrubbing pad. Wblle tbe lroa was WARM.\crubbed away every ou tl i nin~ her projec f_oc.: fnr the
bit very quickly and theiroa was left smooth and UMCratched.POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is with those politicians who
do not have their signs removed when the election is over. The
posters seem to be on almost every tree and pole. Of a U people
A Shrove Tuesday pancake
they should be the first to be Interested In keeping our roadsides
supper
for members of St. Paul
looking neat.
.
Lutheran
Chur&lt;.·h and fri ends
~e of the handiest gadgets I have around my sewmg
machine is a long corsage pin that I use to help guide small wa s planned at the Tuesday
pieces of material under the needle. This is especially handy night meeting of the Ameriea n
when making something small like doll clothes or sewmg Lutheran Church Wo111en at the
home of Mrs. Frances Warner.
together quilt pieces or anything with a very narrow seam. Mrs . Helen Deiner presided
MERLYN.
the meeti ng • when the
at
DEAR POLLY - Jessie can separate her stacked aluminum
women
also planned to
tumblers by putting ice cubes in the top one and put the stack in
hot water. Repeat the process unUl aU come apart. Ice wiU remember residents of lhe
contract the top one and the heat will expand the bottom one. I Meigs Counly Infirma ry on
have done this many times and also used the same on stainless Valentine's Day. Treats will be
taken to the infi rmary Sunday,
steel mixing bowls. - ANN B. ,
16.
Named
coDEAR POLLY - We live in a tw().Btory house . It seemed I Feb.
chairwomen
for
the
pancake
was always having to make an extra trip downstairs to get a
spoon to give medicine to one of the children who happened to be supper were Mrs. Lois Clelland
sick. I saved plastic spoons from drive-in restaurants, wash them and Mrs. Judy Eichinger.
It was reported that
with hot, sudsy water and put them in a plastic bag that is kept in
notepaper
wh1ch pictures the
the medicine chest. ( am saved many steps and my good flatware
church
on
the
front has arrived
is always where it should be. The children are less reluctant to
and is for sale at $1.50 per box.
take medicine from a colored spoon, - DIANE .
DEAR POLLY - I have a tendency to scuff the toes of my Mrs. Eichinger is chairwoman
shoes and my navy blue ones can be repaired with blue polish . I of the sale.
Chairwomen named fQr the
could not find the bright pollsh needed for my red shoes so
dabbed some red food coloring on a cotton swab and solved the year were Mrs. Davis, rummage sale; Miss Erna Jesse
problem. - MRS. J.D.D.
and
Mrs. Davis, Rega tta and
DEAR MRS. J.D.D. - I scuff the heels of my 1boes wbeo
driving the Clll' 10d find marking pens of the proper colon also do weddin g recepti on: Mrs.
Barbara Fry, publicity. Others
1 great touch-up job. -POLLY.
attendin g were Mrs. Margaret
Blaellnar , Mrs . Ri chrd
Downie, Mrs. Jean Braun and
Pastor William Middleswart .

('
JOap
pad k ans
plastiC Ojf iron

Lutherans set
pancake supper

eve r yo ne formin g a eircle

aroWld the altar and being
given the ubligalion by the
worthy patron .
Sin ce the school of instruction t:onflicls with the
AMY ERWIN
regular meeting time of the
chapter. the dale wa s changed
to Feb. :1. Mrs. Well asked that
all members be prese nt at 7
p.m. to practice for the opening
march. The initi atory work win
be examplified at that time .
Refreshments were served
bv Mrs. Well and Smi lh fr om
t&lt;ibles decorated with candle
snowmen . Shrink
craft
Mr. and Mrs. Don Erwin,
snowmen were used for pinons Midd lepo rt , e nt er tai ned
at the mee tmg.
Monday even ing with a McDonald 's party honoring their
daughter&gt;:' Amy, on her eighth
birthday.
Amy and her guests were
ta ken to McDonald 's in Athens
wh ere the party was staged.
Hamburgers, french fri es and
soft drinks were served along
Mrs. Susan Blaker was in- with Ronald McDonald favors
stalled president or th e and a decorated ca ke .
Cat holic Women's Club r ~ Re s taurant
personnel
Sacred Hear t Church rece ntly presented Amy with a miniat the church.
theatre.
Other officers installed by
The group then returned to
!lev . Fr. Paul Welton were Middleport and at the Erwin
Elsie Southerland, vice home, Amy opened her gifts.
president; Jo Ellen Roush, Garnes were played with prizes
sec r e tary; Barbara Smi th, going to Scott McKinley , Mary
treasurer;
Rose Sisso n, Beth Long and Danny Thomas,
auditor: and Mary Kun ze lman, who also won the door prize.
historian .
Mrs. Erwin assisted by Mrs.
Follow in g th e meeting Clarice Erwin and Mrs. Betty
refreshrnents were s~rvc&lt;l, by McKinley se rved ca ke and ice
Jan e Frymeycr, Mar il yn cream:
Epple, Mrs. Roush and Jani ce
Others attending tne party
Deem.
were Terri Sprouse, Beth
Wolfe, Holly Miller, Matthew
Erw in and Jennifer McKinley.
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Method ist Chu rc hes ha ve t
planned for a specia l activity to ~§
:~:~
help prepare for upcoming :;::
;:;:
effo r ts. It in cludes the ~:::
;:q,
engagement of Dr. Cha rles
Whittle of the Board of :::~
::~:::::
Evangelism, Nashville, Tenn., ::::
for a one night conference on
THURSDAY
o; Using
the
Bible
in
TWIN CITY Shrine Club,
Eva ngelism". Also ideas on Thursday at the Racine Shnne
ways and methods of Park. 7:30p .m. Refreshments.
promoting evangelism will be All Nobles inv ited to attend.
discussed by Dr . Whittle.
CLASS 12, Heath . United
The one night conference
Me thod ist Church, 7:30p .m. at
with Dr. Whittle will be at the
the church. New officers will
Asbury Un ited Meth odi st
be hostesses.
Church in Syracuse, Monday
Nondenominational Gospel
night, Jan . 20.
se rvi ces bein g held today,
The meeting will open with a
Wedne sday, Fr iday and
carry-in •neal at 6:30p.m .
Sunday 7:30 nightly at Jr .
Each family is asked to bring
O.U.A.M. Hall, 201 Fourth St.,
a covered dish and their table
New Haven. Public invited.
service. Mea t. coffee , tea and
MEIGS Coun ty Better Beef
bread will be furni shed .
Anyone not comin g for the u'veslock Club, 7: 30 p.m., at
County F: xle nsion Office. All
meal should be present by 7: 30
p.m. for the program and members are asked to attend.
EVANGELINE Chapter 176, ·
discussion.
OES 7 p.m. practice for
Everyone is welcome.
initiation, Middleport Masonic ·
Temple .
MIDDLEPORT
Child
Conse rvation Leag ue , 7:30
p.m., Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electri c Co . Mrs.
Margaret Ella Lewis of the
Meigs Community Sc hoo! to be
the speaker.
FRIDAY
' TUPPERS PLAINS - New
RUTLAND Gun Club, 8 p.m.
officers · were elected at a
SATURDAY
recent meeting of the Tuppers
BEAN
Dinner, 5 to 7 p.m. at
Plains Community Club.
Middleport
Ma ~onic
Hall
Elected were Mrs . Nita Jean
Ritchi e, president: Mrs . sponsored by Meigs Chapter
Lyons,
vice Order of DcMolay. Menu inElizabeth
president: Palsy chapman . etudes. beans, cornbread, pie
secretary ; Mrs. Oneta Cole. and cake.
SUNDAY
treasurer ; Mrs. Shirley Baker.·
COUN
TYWID
~
Prayer
news re porter ; Mrs. Vera
meeting,
2
p.m.
at the
Weber, telephone committee;
and Mrs. Mildred l)rooks. ways Wesleyan Holin ess Chur ch,
Pomeroy, with Glen Bissell,
and means chairwoman .
class leader.
Named as trustees for the
club wHe Lindsey Lyons ,. AMERICA, I Love You, a
Clifford Longenette, Norman story a bout one of Meigs
Weber and Leo Kennedy, Jr . CoWlty 's Pioneer families in
Plans were made for a jitney coal and industry by Ca rrie
supper Feb. 22, starting at 5 Ebersbach Neutzling to be
p.m. at the new fire depart- fea tured at 2:30 p.m. when
ment and commWlity building. Meigs County Pioneer and
Donat ins are being taken by . Histori cal Society meets at the
th e .fire depar tment on a Meigs County Museum , Butportable television, a portable ternut Ave .. Pomeroy. Public
invited.
bar and an electric razor.

Birthday
observed

Mrs. Blaker
leads women

SYRACUSE - Five groups
of Methodists will be stressing
Evangelism in the year 1975.
The United Methodist and the
Free Methodist. both of which
are to be foWld in Meigs
County, will join other groups
in this effort.
One phase of the emphasis
included a tour of the Holy
Land where the Ch ristian
Gospel began. The tour was in
November , 1974. Although
Meigs County was likely not
represented in the tour. Rev.
Paul Hawks, pastor of Gra ce
Church, Gallipolis. took the
tour .
In Molog County, United

s0cIa•I

Adul ts may hold the key to
improved reading for Meigs
County yoWlg people and with
this in mind the Meigs CoWlty
Teacher Corps Program hopes
to encourage adults to )ISe that
key.
Today, the program ccordinators, Mrs. Jane Snouffer
and ca·rl Denison, announced
that a reading program for
adults-to provide lips on how
young people can be helpedwill get underway next
Tllursday .
There will be six sessions in
the reading course being offered free of charge to adul ts .
The six sessions will be held at
four different centers for the
next six Thursdays 6:30 to 8 p.
m. Not only that, but activities
for young people from four to
13 will be provided at the
centers where their pafents
are taking part in the reading
course .
Centers at which the course
will be offered on the six
Thursday nights are Meigs
Senior High .School, Meigs
JWlior High Sc hool, Rutland
. Eleme nt ary, Sc hool and
Ha rr iso nville Elementary
School. Teacher-i nterns of the
teacher corps program, which

Alfred
Social

got Wlderway this fall in the
Meigs Local School Oistr1ct , as
well as team leaders .will be
conducting the .adult sessions.
The course wiU consist of
suggestions and activities that
the adult or parent can use at
home to help his own children
or children of the neighborhood
to improve their reading ~kills.
The corps program off1c1als
are quite aware that the prime
responsibility for readmg
instruction does lie in the
school district. However, they
feel that the support and encouragement of adults close to
the children involved in the
instruction is extremely im·
portanl.
With the development of
some .very basic instructional
skills and the kn owledge or
some
specific
reading
techniques and enric hment
activities, the suppor ting
parent or adult can do much to ,
help a child reach full potential
in reading, corps officials point
out . The Teachers Corps' whole
reason for being is to help the
children in the Meigs Local

CIN CINNATI iUPI)
Singe•· Pearl Bailey ·said
Vc lcrans Memurialllospltat
Wednesda y, " Wh at this
ADMITTF:D Mildred country needs is a goddarned
Barnett , Po mer oy; Linda enemi1, not just a cleansing."
Bailey, Rutland ; Juani ta
"Then ," she said WedWamsley, Middleport: Joseph nesday, "We can start doing
Stewart, Bidwell : Jose ph what President Ford said ... "
Quivey, Pomeroy : Carolyn
Miss Ba iley, appearing at a
Johnson, Mason; Pea rl Great- •ughtclub in n orth~rn Kenhouse, Por tl a nd ; Clifford tucky, across the Ohio River
Michae l, Co lumbus ; David from here, ear lier tl1is week
Jack s, Middleport : Be rth a was quoted us saying she is
Smith. Bidwell.
serious about running for the
DISCHARGED - Andrew presidency in 1976.
Warner. Dav id Klein , Dorothy
She said Fur·d 11 has an honest
Anthony , Diana Neal. Rube1·t fa ce, and I'm pretty good about
Harmon, Deborah Ferg uson, judging these tltings."
Clara Smith. Julia Mcewan ,
11
1 Utink," she added , "if he
Ear l King , Kilty Metzger, put down the papers (Ius state
Ronald Bostie. Betty Bailey of the union address) and just
and Sharon Stark.
ta lked to me, he'd co me

The Planned Parenthood
Organization of Southeastern
Ohio will stage a fWld raisin g
benefi t in the form of theaterbuffet supper Friday , Jan. 31.
The play, " Jesus Christ,
Superstar " will be presented
by the Ohio University Theatre
in Memorial Auditorium ,
Athens, with a buffet supper to
follow the play in the State
Room o! Baker Center.
Cost for the theater-buffet is
$7.50 a person. Tickets may be
· .
PIanned
...secured by wr1tmg
Parenthood, 8 North Court St.,
Athens , 45701. Anyone wishing
additi onal informa ti on may
call Mrs. Betty ·Fultz, 992-3346.
The deadline for securing
ticke ts is Jan. 24.

:;
;: caIen dar:;

SJDEWALK SUPERINTENDENTS find the progress
being made at' the site of the new apartment complex on the
corner of Third and MUI Sts. hard to believe. In less than a

&gt;

Congress

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CONNIE

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PRICE
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All other
winter boots

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20% oH

heritage ·house
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
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National Bank Region No.4

REPORT OF CONDITION, CONSOLIDATING
DOMESTIC SUBSIDIARIES, OF THE

CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK
of Mlddl~port In the Stale of Ohio, at the close of business on December 31, 197t
published In response to call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under 'ntle
12, ,United States Code, Section 161.
ASSETS
Cash and due from banks - - - - - • • - - - - - • - - - - - • $ 1,003,678.18
U.S. Treasury securities • - - - - - : - - - - - • - - - - - 2,438,t30.00
· Obligations of States and political subdivisions - - - 1,893,133.82
Otber securities - - - - • • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 21,000.00
Federllf fWlds sold and securities purchased
Wlder agreements to resell - - - - - - 1,000,000.00
Loans • - - - - - - - - - - - - - • - - •
4,645,886.45
Bank premises, furniture a~d fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises - - - - • - 94,812.39
Real estate owned other than bank premises • - - - - - - 4,789.47
Other assets - - - - • - - - - - - - • • - - - - - - - 31.568,6!
TOTAL ASSETS - - - • - - - - - - - • - - · - $11,133,088.92
LIAB!LfriES

Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
and corporations - - - - - - - - - • • - - - • - - - $2,001,283.51
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
- 7,027,013.75
partnerships , and corporations - - - - • • - - - • •
Deposits of United States Goverrunent - - - - - - - - - 31,605.00
Deposits of States and political subdivisions • • - - - - • - - 709,084.28
Deposits of commercial banks - - - - - - • - - - - - - • S,OOO.OO
Certified and officers' checks, etc. - - • - • - - - - - - t0,053.88
TOTAL DEPOSITS • - - · • - - • - 19.814.040.42
(a) Total demand deposits - • - - - . - - - $2,5811504.().1
(b) Total tiii)e ·and savings deposits - - - - - $7,232,536.38
Other liabilities - - • • • • - - - - - - - - - - - , 231,348.76
TOTAL LIABIUTIES - - - - - - • • - - - - - • - $10,ot5,389.18
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings) - - - • • - • - • • - - - - - 74,~.82
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SEClJRITIES - - - $74,608.82
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Equity capital-total - - - - - - $1,013,090.92 .
Common Stock-total par value - • - - - •
100,000.00
· No. shares authorized · 2,000
· No. shares outstanding -2;000
Surplus - - - • - • • - - - - - - - • • • - • - •
- 600,000.00
Undivided profits • - - - - - - • • •
• 313,090.92
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS · 1,013,090.92 .
TOTAL UABIUTIES, RESERVES, AND
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
$1!,133,088.92
MEMORANI;lA
Average of total deposits for, the 15 calendar
days ending with call date • - - - - - - - - $9,830,426.08
Average of total loans for the IS calendar
days ending with call date - - - - - - - - - - $4,637,259.84

m

AS SEEN ON TV
Pocket Fisherman.: .............. 19.95
Battery Operated Light Weight

Sewing Machine................... 9.98
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Battery Operated

Miracle Broom... ,.................. 9.911.

BIG 9 SALE
COMING SOONI

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LOSE UGLY FAT

1975 O~SK- CALENDAR PAD &amp; STANDS
1975 YEAR BOOKS
1975 APPOINTMEN.T BOOKS

1, Manning Kloes, Cashier, of the abov~H~amed bank do hereby declare that
this report of condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and
Mannm11 ~
belief.
We, the undersigned directors attest the correctneSs of this report of condition and declare that it has been examined by us and to the best of our
knowledge and belief is true . and e&lt;»;rect
·
.
Paul s. Smart
Raoe S. ~)'llokll - Dlreclon
RodDey llowuJD«

COLUMBUS (UPI) - A the Coa lition of Concerned
group of 30 low and middle Utility Users here to fight
income persons have formed proposed rate increases by the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co.
The group said it would
(Continued from page I )
picket
during a hearing sche-·
The parties take place on the
duled by the PUCO Monday.
second Tuesday of each month The hearing will be on a
and, at the reques t of the proposed 12 per cent rate hike
Homebuilders Class, all Meigs by the utility .
Countians at the Health Center
The new coalition is comare invited to attend. Going posed of individuals who are
from the church her&amp; are members. of several social
usually between 11 and 15, service organizations, inIncluding the pastor and his cluding the Welfare Rights
wife, currently the Rev . and
Mrs. George Glaze.
When the chur ch group
arrives, the patients are ready
and waiting in the recrea tion
(Continued from page I)
room. Mh . Denver Rice, passed by mid.,summer, alchairwoman for the class since though there will be much
the parties started, describes squabbling over how big a cut
the scene as one where they are and how to make it. Any cut or
greeted with open arms. Many rebate is likely to be aimed at
of the same patients attend the low al'ld· moderate income
parties month after month .
taxpayers.
Arriving hetween 6:30 and 7,
Some rebate on 1974 taxes is
the parties last Wltil about 8:30. possible, although it has drawn
There is a hymn sing with strong conservative opposition.
request time and even specials Sen. Barry Goldwater R-Ariz.,
from the patie~ts themselves. said " tax culs, in my opinion,
Then games are played. Their are not going to save the
favorite - bingo. For refresh- economy." Uke many conserments the class usually takes vatives, Goldwater feels the
•sandwjche§, cookies or cakes, huge deficits brought on by a
some fruit, and a beverage. . tax cu't will cause inflation.
For the months with holidays,
Ford's proposed $80 yearly
a theme is carried out, and at payment to families too poor to
Christmas there is a wrapped pay taxes still is a question
gift for each one persoqa lly mark in Congress.
presented by Santa .
Strong opposition has deveTo add a little diversion, loped to For~'s proposed
Denver Rice sOme times en- business tax cuts, particularly
tertains with his guitar or ·his slash or the corporate lax
violin. Occasionally someone rate from 48 per cent to 42 per
from outside the Middlepor t cent. "That one will be hard to
Church of Christ contributes sell," said Sen. Russell Long,
their talents, such as Margaret D-La. , chainnan of the Senate
Neuman who has joined the Finance Committee. Some ingroup several times as piani_st crease in the investment tax
for the hymn sings.
credit is likely, although it may
Mrs. Rice and Mrs. Norman not match Ford's proposed
Yeauger, who mov ed to increase from 7 per cent to 12
Florida a couple of years ago, per cent.
were first chairwomen for the
Ford's energy package is the
project, and now assisting Mrs . most controversi.al. Even Ute
Rice is Mrs. Leonard Van- measures that Ford can imMeter.
pose on his own authority,
The monthly partie s all including the $3 per barrel
began when Mary Martin, a increase in imported oil tariffs,
member of the Homebuilders can be repealed by Congress.
Class, visited the hospital in
Sen. Henry M. Jackson, DconjWlction with her American Wash ., predicted the new
Legion Auxiliary work with import levy will never go into
veterans there, and saw the effect.
tremendous need of the
There is opposition to Ford's
patients for outside social proposal that Congress impose
contact. That was in Decem- a $2 per barrel tax on all oil,
ber , 1969, and that month the foreign and domestic.
Homebuilders held a ChristAdministration officials have
mas party for those on the estimated Ford's energy
intensive care ward.
proposals would result in an
The personal reward of ·increase in the amount the
seeing the pleasure they average family spends for .
brought to the men and ~omen gasoline, electricity and horne
that night was enough to make heating fuel from $950 to $1200
the Homebuilders want to -an increase of more than 25
per cent.
return..

Homebuilders

1 GROUP
OF
LADIES

Cbarter No. 8«1

week-despite inclement , freezing weather when workers
bave been on the jol&gt;-the second story has been added to this
section of the complex. Construction is by the Third &amp; Mill
Corp., Middleport .

r

Organization, the Columbus
Metropolitan Area Community .
Action Organization and the
Central Ohio Agency on Aging.
Henry Eckhart, former
PUCO chainnan, was invited
to advise the new group on how
to fight the proposed increase.
Eckhart Wednesday told the
coalition's first meeting here
be had never seen such a
"great outcry about utility
increases in Ohio .,

through.! kepl hoping he would we're going to cleanup
thrown those papers up into the buildings, clean the streets and:
air and say "another thing, s~rl progress.", ·
:

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SHOE
Continues.
This
Week
MENS, WOMEN 'S, CHILDREN'S

MARGUERITE'S SHOES
102 E. Main

Pomeroy

Betty Ohlinger

- Thursday, Friday,
Saturday and Sunday

,
;

NICHOLAS DANILOFF
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Director William E. Colby of the
Central Intelligence Agenc y
has acknowledged to Congress
that his agency kept files on
10,000 American citizens .and
said it also used American
business as cover for agents
abroad.
Colby made the public ad·
missions in testimony to the
Intelligence subcommittee of
the Senate Appropriations
Committee Wednesday.
He also said:
- The CIA was tipped in 1~71
or 1972. to an alleged plot to
assassinate Vice President
Spiro Agnew and kidnap then
CIA Director Ricbard Helms.
It alerted the FBI and Secret
Service, -but it also conducted
its own surveillance in two U.S.
cities. Neither the CIA, the FBI
or Secret Service would
elaborate.
- The CIA infiltrated agents
into the movement against the
Vietnam War.
-The CIA staged three
break-ins, in 1966, 1969, and ·
1971, in an effort to safeguard
CIA secrets and secunty,
which appears to be allowed
Wlder the 1947· charter.
-The CIA tapped the phones
of 21 U.S. residents between
19[H-196S to check on leaks of
classified information.
- The CIA read mail from
persons in the United States to
two unnamed Communist
countries between 1953-1973.
But he said said cases in
which the agency "may have ·
overstepped its boWlds" were

Are Unbeatable
REX ALL

VITAMIN E

that the agency never conducted ''massive, illegal, domestic
intelligence activity."
Colby said that as a result of
President Lyndon B. Johnson's
concern about civ:il disorder,
the'CIA established a counterintelligence office in 1967 to
find out whether foreign.
powers were inciting American
radicals. He said files on 10,000
Americans were amassed in·
this program, which ended in
March, 1974.
.
A report by The New York
Times on the keeping of these
files led to current investiga,
lions of CIA in Congress and by
an administration panel
headed by Vice President
Rockefeller.
Colby testified the CIA's
Cover and Commercial Staff
negotiated with U.S . companies to provide for cover for
its agents abroad.
·
"An example of the work of

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this staff," -be said, "is an
arrangement with a corporalion, either · an independent
firm or a wholly owned
proprietary, to provide the
ostensible source of income
and rationale for a CIA officer
to reside and work in a foreign
country."
He said the CIA managed to
persuade a number of U.S.
corporations to create special
departm ents, suitably dis·
guised,
tu
develop
sophisticated technological
methods of espionage :
Investigations by Sen. How·
ard Baker, R-Te~n ., who
served as vice-chainnan of the
Senate Watergate committee,
disclosed that the Mullen and
Co., of .Washington D.C., a
public relations firm, had
provided cover for CIA agents
in Europe and Asia .
Colby cited arrangements
with Lockheed - which developed the high-flying U2 spy
plane -'-&lt;IS an example of how
American
companies
cooperate.

By

POMEROY ._OHIO

Ntlinl&gt;
OUr .COnvtnient t..y-A,W.y l'lan.

rouLoOIC

used:as covers

_.N,~NKL:JIY.
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"This is the first group I
knQw of where poor people who
are playing the bills are getting
together," Eckhart said .
· ~ Eve ry other major sta te has
had a consumer group to fight
such increases but Ohio .1ever
had any.
Group spokesmen said they
planned to protest other utility
increases and utility-related
envirorunental problems.

U. S. business

SHOPPI

.

-

Rate increase draws protest

.....-----!:=====
Call No. 492

I.

•

••
••
•
these•

Pe.1rl suggests we get to the bottom of this

. NEWS

School District develop the
reading skills necessary to
reach their goals in life. Of.
ficials state that they are
certain that this goal cannot be
achieved without the, support
and encouragement of parents
and com munity members.
Officials hope that adults will
take advantage of the specilll
course which is being offered.
Both mothers and fathers are
being ·encoura ge d to par.
Ucipate and officials point out
that having small children,
from four to 13, is no reason not
to participate . Tutoring, arts
and crafts, reading games and
a readi ng corner will be
provided at each of the centers
for the children of parents
enrolling in the course .
Anyone having any question
about the program is asked to
call the corps office, 992-7532.
Even transportation will be
prov ided parents not having a
way to get to the center where
they will take part in the
course . Those needing transportation also may call the
corps office.

Group slates
fund-raiser

Officers
.
selected

'

.•
••

, 7- The illlilv Sent!no!I. Middleuort-Pomeroy, 0.~ Thursday, Jan. 16, 19)'!;

·Adults hold reading key ,

years and n.oting irreg ularities
found in some chapters m 1974.
It was noted that cha rms, tie
tacs , and lapel pins honoring
Howard Shull, grand patron,
are for sale.
The district sc hool' of instru.ction was announced for
Feb. 4 and plans were made to
prepare and serve a dinner for
the Masons Jan. 28. Obligation
vows were rent:wed with

Evangelism discussion set

By GAY PAULEY
compared with 36 by those 65
UPI WOMEN'• Editor
and over.
NEW YORK (Ui?l)
Shoppers tend to leap frog
Women llke to shop. Most of the from store to store or tend to
shopping is done by car. The other business in the area. Only
decision to viait a retallstore or four out of 10 general merchanstores usually l.s on short dlse visits started from home,
notice.
went to a shopping al1!a, and
Once Inside, the woman Is returned home. Many of the
apt to purchase several items women started their shopping
above and beyond the original from their job?, but the
list. The more upenslve the researchers didn 't try to
!tern, the further the shopper pattern the working women's'
wil1 travel for It. And· yoWlg shopping habits .
people fonning families are the
The decision to visit a shop or
biggest travelers.
shops usually "Is made just
These are among the conclu- shorUy before or &lt;Ill the same
sions in an extensive research day." More than half gave as
·"
project done by Response reason "immediate .need ," Swartz, Shade.
Clair Woode of Circleville
Analysts Corp., of Princeton, "last chance" and others listed
made an airplane flight to
N.J ., as guidance for relaller "sale" or "saw an ad."
Colorado on Friday where he
and newspaper advertiser on
The percentage of purchases
attended a COBA convention,
reac:hing the customers.
not planned ahead ranged from
returning to Cl rclev il ~ on
. For the study, five cities 31 per cent for women 's
Tuesday. where he resumed
diverse· in location, siu and outerwear to 26 per cent for
his job as COBA Distric t
social clulracter were selected. men 's outerwear and down to
Manager of Southwes tern
They were Boston, AUanta, 10per cent for hardware, tools,
Ohio,
which position he has
Portland, Ore., Omaha, and lamps and home improvemen~
since
Dec. I, 1974. He
held
Erle.
r.IBterlals.
began in November 1962, as
The researchers contacted
The studies were sponsored
COBA
technician in Meigs Co.
female heads of households by the 'Newsf)rint Information
Recent
callers in. the William
three times each-twice by Cotrunittee, an organization of
Ca
rr
home
bes1des th ose
phone and once by mall Canadian paper mills, and the
mentioned eerlier have been
Advertising
questlonnaire. Husbands also · Newspaper
Mr.
and Mrs. Under Dains,
were asked to mall a question· Bureau.
Pomeroy
, RD ; Dorothy
naire.
Robinson, Marlene Donovan ,
Each woman kept a threeGenevieve
Guthrie, Mr. and
day diary or. all the shopping
Mrs.
Arthur
Atherton, and Mr.
she did, whether it resulted in a
and Mrs. Charles D. Woode,
purchase and
so, what,
Note.~
local. Mrs. Carr remains about
where she went, why, what
the same.
she spent.
There was an attendance of
, All told, there were close to
SWlday School attendance on
13,000 interviews during May Jan. 12 was :;o, the offering 18 at prayer services at the
and June of 197~ore the S2U L Worship services were church here last Wednesday
recession deepened.
held aJ. II a.m. with the Rev. evenin g with Ruth Brooks
The women, speaking about Meece speaking ftom Matt. 7 ·leader. Special guests were
their last shopping expedition on "The Greatest Thing In All Mr. and Mrs. Randy Lavender
for general merchandise, llsted the World" . Attendance was 22, and sons, Sayn and Shad.
by a large margin two reasons offerin g was $16 , pledges stationed with the airforce in
California and formerly serfor going-"lt was a nice way $S7.&gt;0.
ving
as pastor on ihe Tuppers
to spend my tiii)e" and " It • SWlday School officers for
Plains
charge. Ran dy en· gave me good ideas aboUt 197S are : Supt. Uoyd Dillinger,
tertained
with several guitar
things to buy."
assistant, Charles D. Woode ;
Both men and women teachers are : SWlbeams Class , numbers, several of his own
· shopped · by · car, even for Doris Dillinger and Charlotte composition. They also visited
downt.own visits, the research- VanMeter : . Pr imary class , at_ the Ernest Taylor horne
ers found. The larger percent· Oi;ie Mae Follrod and Nina early in the evening. Mr . and
qes shopped in the subur'os Robinson: Busy Bee class, Mrs. Kenneth Griffin of West
and at shopping centers.
MyrUe Flanders and Dorothy ·Virginia were also visitors at
AbOut distance and - the Bucke: Willing Workers class, the church services. Randy
relation to ~ndlture, the Thelma Henderson and Ruth ' expects to fulfill his duties in
study found that six out of 10 Brooks ; Young Adults class, the services of his country by,
big tick.et items (major ap. Howard Flanders ar.d Eleanor October, 197S, then to come
pllances, furniture and the Boyes; Adult Class ; Nellie . back to Athens Ohio University
Ilke )
bought five or more Pa rker and' Helen Woode ; to work on his doctorate
miles from · home, compared secretary and tteasurer, Unda degree.
with fiw to 10 other general Williams and Randy Dillinger;
merchandise items. Some Librarians, Kathy Ann Follrod
women, however, made both and Kathy Jo Dillinger; Roll
large and 111111!11 purcbases on Call Book . Ricky Dillinger and Stlrt losi~ weight today or money
t.ck. MONAO"EX is a tiny tllbJet ·
the same trip.
ushers, Stephen Follrod and _. ...... to take. MONA DEX will
hflp curb. your desire for IJCtell
Fifty-two per cent of the five Timothy Spencer.
food. Eat ~- .... weigh - . Coiltains
miles ·01"' more trips were by
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. no dilngtrOPJS drug&amp; lind will not
people wjth family Income of at Woode and Nina Robinson INike you nervDUs. No strenuouaIXMC•. ChMge your lift , .. start
lea8i $1$,000, C001pared wi!h 36 attended the special hymn sing ·· MONADEX «1St $3.00 for
1 20 doy supply. L""" economy
per cent for !lboppers with at North Bethel Saturday, sill
is $5.00,' AIIO try AQUATABS :
ii~C~~rnes under $10,000.
evening, Jan. 11.
they won: Jllfltly tO Nip you lost
AQUA TABS - J "w.t• Y01111g people as ,the biggest
Saturday evening guests of wtter·blott.
pill" tha t _w orks - $3.00. Both
travelers? Re!learc:hen found Clara Follrod and. Nina .,arantted lnd soJd by :
that 49 per Cl!llt of the viaits five · Robinson were Mr. and Mrs." Sw isher &amp; l:.ohse Pharmacy , .
E . Main. Pom eroy, 0 .,
miles or more from home were Bill Follrod and Sue Ann, 112
Dutt on Drug Store, M iddl cJiort ,
by : w~ 18 to :U y.ears, Athens, and Mr. and Mrs. Otto o .• ,Ma il orders fill ed . ~ adv .
.•
1

u

•

'.

~

How far fora
single purchase?

'·

HOSPITAL

.i~~ Service conducted
TERS
POllY 'S POJN
'*'~ ·
·
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a:oo1oa:oo Fri.-Sat. ·
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1.

9 - TheOaily Sentinel ,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thurs~y , Jan. 16, 1975

.the firs t 1 uesday of eve ry
month at the Jackson Credit

Prices taken. on -5 farm supplies
Southeastern Ohio Farmers
~ Co-Op officers and six committee members met in
Columbus Wednesday with
• dealers of five farm products
• thst are n9t available or are in
short supply in this· area.
The committee, made up of
nine SEO farmers, will report
to members on Tuesday (Jan.
21) at 7:30 p.m. in the
basement of the Jackson Credit
Production Association
Building, Upper Rt. 7.
Earlier this week, ap HONORED FOR SERVICE - First Sergeant CarreL
Cox, left, was honored recently with a 3().year technician
service award, presented by Col. Richard R. Tatterson,
Conunander, lllth Engineer Group (CBT) in ceremonies
held in the Pt. Pleasant National Guard armory.

RECEIVE MERITORIOUS MEDAlS - Col. Richard R. Tatterson, left, Commander,
111th E~gineer Group (CBT) presented West Virginia Meritorious Medal awards to the
following West Virginia guardsmen recently: CW4 Charles Clarke, CW4 Cleo Reynolds, W0-1
ArthurRupeand First Sill. C',;u.,.eJ Cox. SFC RobertHite, SFCCarl Roach, SSC Elza Powell and
SSG Jack Kauff.

Conunander, llltlj, Engineer Group (CBT) makes the presentntion (Photo by First Lieutenant
Larry Boyer ).
·

I

EARN SERVICE RIBBONS - The following West Virginia National Guardsmen received
service ribbons for five years service recenUy by Col. Richard Tatterson, left, commander,
lllth Engineer Group (CBT) during ceremonies held in the Pt. Pleasant armory . First row,
left to right ~ Sp-4 Carl Drummond, Sp-5·Charles Olinger, Sp-5 Preston Blankenship, Sp-4 Dean
Newman and !!r&gt;-4 Donald Slone. Rear--8p-4 Louis Miller, Sp-5 Gary French, Sp-4 Dennis
Schilling, Sp-5 Larry Long, Sp-4 Mark Kerns and Sp-4 James Miller. (Photo by First Lieutenant
Larry Boyer) .

'sation bill, which has bipartisan support, would extend
benefits from 26 to 39 weeks,
meeting a federal requirement
for up to a full year's coverage,
The proposal was part of the
package of bills rushed through
by Democrats last week, but
the fate of those measures is in
doubt in the courts.
Sen. Donald E. Woodland, DColumbus, chairman of the
Commerce and Labor Conunittee, said if the legislature acts
promptly, the bill can be signed
OUTSTANDING RECRUITING AWARDS were presented to the following by First
into law and take effect by Jan.
Lieutenant
William F. Hockenberry, left, conunander of the 3664th Maint. Co. (LOS)- SSG
26, the deadline for receiving
Floyd Muncy,SSG Elza Powell and Sp-5 George Crump (holding trophies for placing in the top
first benefits under the new
three). Receiving letters of commendation for outstanding recruiting were: SSG William
federal requirements .
Wood,
Sp-5 Jerry Tillis, Sp-4 Ronald Grate, Sp-4 Terry Shirley, Sp-5 Richard Fetty, Sp-5 Larry
., A delay, Woodland said,
Parsons
and Sp-5 Roger Garrett. (Photo by First Lieutenant Larry Boyer).
would force Ohioans to wait until Feb. 26 to come under the
new provisions.
Woodland said the bill can be
voted in the Senate by next
Tuesday and pushed right to 3 \2 per cent rather than the cleared the Senate last year,
penalize tfiose citizens who
through the House. It ap- flat 5 per cent.
but not the House.
have set aside savings for their
parently has no opposition.
Require Allocation
"The intangibles tax is future needs, by taxing their
Sen. Stanley J. Aronoff, R·
The bill would require that · clearly discriminatory," AronCincinnati, introduced legisla- 2.6 per cent of general state off said, "especially when one savings at a higher rate than
tion repealing the tax on in- revenues be allocated to local considers that many people, other people."
Sen. Thomas E. Carney, Dtangibles and placing them libraries, which now receive particularly the 'elderly,
Girard,
introduced a bill
under. the graduated personal their revenues from the in· depend oo interest from their
calling
for
a 12 'per cent boost in
income tax.
tangibles tax.
savings and investments to workmen's
compensation
Stock dividends, savings acRepeal of the intangibles tax augment Social Security and benefits for permanently and
counts and pension funds would has been proposed in past pensions.
totally disabled workers.
be taxed as income at one-half sessions but never enacted. It
"There is no justification to
"

·.

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mrs . Lelia Robinson of
Syracuse spent Tuesday
through Christmas with her
son, Mr. and Mrs. Jim ·Riffle
and family .
Christmas Day and weekend
~ests of Mr . and Mrs. Lester
loush were Mr. and Mrs. Don
\iffle and cllildren, Lucasville,
u., Mr. and Mrs. Jim Connolly,
Brian and Shelly of Syracuse;
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Manuel
and Angie, Racine; Mrs. Edna
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Grimm of Belpre.
John Day of Ada, 0 ., visited
Raymond Adams Thursday .
Mrs. A,lice Balser, Mr. and ·
Mrs. Lawrence Ables, Racine,
visited Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Ables, Christmas. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Balser
of Mansfield, 0 . visited his
mother, Mrs. Alice Balser
Thursday.
Christmas week guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Alex Wheeler
were Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Morris and children of Nashville, Tenn.; Mr. and Mrs .
Larry Foster and children of
Columbus; Bill Wheeler,
, student at Ohio State
University, spent two weeks
with his parents.
Mr. and Mrs . Ted Hayman
and children of Westerville, 0.
. visited Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
. Hayman and Keith Monday
, evening. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Hayman, Keith visited their
children, Mr. and Mrs . Gene
Jewell at Letart, W. Va., Mrs.
Phyllis Young at Mason, W.
Va.,Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hart,
Racine, Christmas Day.
;;.;:. Mrs. Ada Norris, Mrs. Erwin
: Gloeckner
and
Carrie
: Gloeckner v.isi ted Mrs. Golda
: Story at Darwin Christmas

PUT YOUR SALESMAN
AT EVERY DOORSTEP. ••
A consistent, well co-ordinated advertising campaign placed
•

in your hometown paper can reach more people, quicker
'

..

when people are motivated ... they buy! So, Mr.
Merchant, when you want to reach the most people, the
fastest way possible . .. think newspaper. We
•
cover more of the people you want to reach, everyday . .

"

' •"C

BLUEBERRY
MUFFIN
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BROWNIE
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control of his ca r when it

There was minor damage.
Blackston was cited to Meigs
County Court for speed fo r
conditions.
A deer was kill ed in an ac-

skidded on an icy spot in t.l!e cident Wednesday morning on
roadway off the left side of the Rt. 588, four tenths of a mile

13 oz.
75c Value

KYI~.

$2.40 Value

.,49

$3.20 Value

84 oz.

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;,;t

$2.19 Value

~9c

Value

51.29 Value

•1.77 '

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$2.25 Value

rofl: .

M&amp;M .. M&amp;M PEANUTS,
rf
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STURDY METAL

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AFTER SHAVE
LOTION
. 4 oz.
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Wood grain or
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DENIM-LIKE

Mr. and Mrs. David
::,Gloeckner and daughter Carrie
::were Christmas dinner guests
; of her father, Russell Lockhart
:;and children at Vienna, W. Va.
~ Mrs. Edna Roush spent ·
••
"Christmas Day with Mr. and
:;Mrs. Howard Roush. Other
~guests of the Roushes were
:~heir daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
:Jlud Lampen of Portsmouth.
:;. Visiting Mr, and Mrs. Vernon
'Donohue Friday through
::thristmas Day were their
:Zhildren, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
::llarden and Eric, Marion, 0.,
)1r. and Mrs. Lowell Burton
) nd Sherry of Columbus, Mr .
'llnd Mrs. Charles Winebrenner
e nd children, Cheshire, visited
:lhe Donhews on Sunday.
::: Christmas dinner guests of
~. and Mrs. Dallas Hill were
~s. Dolly Wolfe, Mrs. Ruth
~onohue, Mr. and Mrs. Darrell
illorris and . Tracy, Mr. and
Mrs. Marshall Roush·and Joey,
111r. and Mrs. Carl Wolfe Jr.
and famil:t of Hacine.
; Art Hill is home visiting his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dallas
Hill for a month from
ll\orehead
University,
Morehead, Ky.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ables and
daughter Vicki, Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Ables visited James
·Ables at the home ol Mrs.
Edith Gilkey at Gallipolis
Thursday.
.
Vlsi ling Mrs. Erma Wilso,n
and family over Cristmas were
Mr. and MJ:s. Richard Wilson
and children, Detroit, Mich.;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Burris,
BiUy Wilson of Bolivar Dam;
Mr. and Mrs. Butch Wilson and
family, Mr. and Mrs. William
Wickline and sons, Scottie and

CREST

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Self-Adhesive
Assorted Colors
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18" 'By 3 yds .
52.00

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CONTAC
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1 lb. 7 01.
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SPECIAL SALEI

SOROKA

WALL

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·

•

PlAQUES

Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Furgeson

THE
DAILY SENTINEL

struck the same icy spot and
skidded into Cons Lanzo's car .

Road 1 in Meigs County .
The Gallia-Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol said John D.
Constanzo, 22, of Dexter, lost

· RIGHT
GUARD

Double Fudge

c

than your salesmen. Newspaper advertising motivates people

Membership dues are $100 a
ye ar . Deadlin e fo r memberships is March 4. Those who
join after that date will pay an
additional $60 a year.
All area farmers, members
and non-members , are invited
to attend the monthly sessions.

highway . A few se~ds later a
ca r driven by Robert M.
Bt'\ckston, 22, of Pomeroy,

'.

: Day.

..

annOIUlced .

Slippery ro ad co nditi ons
we re blam ed for a c ha in
reaction acci dent a t 8:20 a .m.
Wednesday on Rt. 324. three
tenths Of a mile west of Coun ty

News, Events

Compensation hill
on tap next week
By LEE LEONARD
UPJ Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The
Ohio House was to hold a
nskeleton" session today with
a few members on hand, but
for all practical purposes the
General Assemby has adjourned for the weekend.
The Senate scheduled a 7:: J
p.m. session for Jan. 211, while
the House is :.0 reconvene the
following day at II a.m.
The quiet inaugural week in
the legislature was in marked
contrast to the first week of the
lllth session whem Democrats
ranuned through a package of
six partisan bills.
,
A new measure surfaced
Wednesday , as the Senate
Commerce and Labor Committee placed in position for
passage early next week an
emergency bill designed to
make Ohioans eligible late this
month for up to a full year of
unemployment compensation
benefits.
Sigolllcant Action
Advancement of the bill in
committee was the only signifi·
cant action of the week ;JJ
lawmakers awaited legislative
proposals of Gov. James A.
Rhodes.
The unemployment compen-

members. Other products will be delivered.
Any fertilizer o•ders can be
fr om three SEO counti es be m•ailable after discussion
delivered
to the' Gallipolis area
orga nized the SEO Ohio with organ izati on mt mber s
within
10
to 14 days to co-op
Tuesday.
Farmers' Co-Op.
As report ed earli er tfiis members in 20-ton lots. Other
Committeemen Wednesday
week,
it will be necessary for products ca n be ordered within
discussed the prices of fertilizer, bailing twine, barbed · th e Organizati on to have a 3tklay delivery date .
'!'hose wishing to join the new
wire and chemicals. These submi tied a charte r aporganization
should attend the
plica
tion
to
the
Secretary
of
items will be available for
group's
regular
meeting , held
Stat~
before
these
products
can
·Orders Tuesda y to Co-Op
proXimately 61 area £arms

Tuesday of the monUt and not
every Tuesday as previously

Ice ditched two autos

Apple Grove

I '

SSG Charles Hanson, left, received a West Virginia Cofll11)endation Med'al during recent
ceremonies held In the national guard armory at Pt. Pleasant. Col. Richard R. Talterson,

Pr oduction Assn. , b'uilding .
The group meets the fi rst

east of the Bidwell-Rodney Rd.
The animal ran into the path of
a car operated , by Jimmy
Grown , '41, of Gallipolis. There
was minor damage tO his car. i
Asingle car mishap occurred .
at 5 p.m. Wednesday on Tycoon
Rd . seven tenths of a mile
north of Rt. 554 . Officers said
Ivan L. Hurt, 29, Bidwell, lost
control of his car whl£11 ran off
the left side of the road striking
an embankment and fence .
There was moderate damage
and no charges were filed.

oi

Point Pleasant, Mr. and
Mr s. Clarence · Roy ·and
children, Rex and Nancy, were
Cllristmas Day guests of Mr.
ruld Mrs. Homer Warner. Mrs.
Uzzle Wood daughter, Debbie
and husband of Racine visited
Mr .. and Mrs. Wamer Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. R&lt;Jbert Smith,
are visiting relatives in
Pittsburgh , Pa. and other
places ip Pennsylvania,
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Cross
of Columbus visited his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew
Cross during ll)e holidays. · ·
Mrs. Owen Anderson was
retUrned to her home Saturd~y
from veterans Memorial ·
'Hoopi\')1. ·
,

Large colorful plaques
will
attractively
decorate and brighten
any room in your home.
Assorted designs.

Sr:

'109

Each

TUSSY
LIPSTICKS
Assorted Shades
$1.00 Value

BOXED ENVELOPES
Size: 3%"x6'h "
100 Envelopes
69c Value

59~

,,•
),

•·.
l
~·

.'
'
'

•

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. ..,

I

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. I ·r

.I

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1.

9 - TheOaily Sentinel ,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thurs~y , Jan. 16, 1975

.the firs t 1 uesday of eve ry
month at the Jackson Credit

Prices taken. on -5 farm supplies
Southeastern Ohio Farmers
~ Co-Op officers and six committee members met in
Columbus Wednesday with
• dealers of five farm products
• thst are n9t available or are in
short supply in this· area.
The committee, made up of
nine SEO farmers, will report
to members on Tuesday (Jan.
21) at 7:30 p.m. in the
basement of the Jackson Credit
Production Association
Building, Upper Rt. 7.
Earlier this week, ap HONORED FOR SERVICE - First Sergeant CarreL
Cox, left, was honored recently with a 3().year technician
service award, presented by Col. Richard R. Tatterson,
Conunander, lllth Engineer Group (CBT) in ceremonies
held in the Pt. Pleasant National Guard armory.

RECEIVE MERITORIOUS MEDAlS - Col. Richard R. Tatterson, left, Commander,
111th E~gineer Group (CBT) presented West Virginia Meritorious Medal awards to the
following West Virginia guardsmen recently: CW4 Charles Clarke, CW4 Cleo Reynolds, W0-1
ArthurRupeand First Sill. C',;u.,.eJ Cox. SFC RobertHite, SFCCarl Roach, SSC Elza Powell and
SSG Jack Kauff.

Conunander, llltlj, Engineer Group (CBT) makes the presentntion (Photo by First Lieutenant
Larry Boyer ).
·

I

EARN SERVICE RIBBONS - The following West Virginia National Guardsmen received
service ribbons for five years service recenUy by Col. Richard Tatterson, left, commander,
lllth Engineer Group (CBT) during ceremonies held in the Pt. Pleasant armory . First row,
left to right ~ Sp-4 Carl Drummond, Sp-5·Charles Olinger, Sp-5 Preston Blankenship, Sp-4 Dean
Newman and !!r&gt;-4 Donald Slone. Rear--8p-4 Louis Miller, Sp-5 Gary French, Sp-4 Dennis
Schilling, Sp-5 Larry Long, Sp-4 Mark Kerns and Sp-4 James Miller. (Photo by First Lieutenant
Larry Boyer) .

'sation bill, which has bipartisan support, would extend
benefits from 26 to 39 weeks,
meeting a federal requirement
for up to a full year's coverage,
The proposal was part of the
package of bills rushed through
by Democrats last week, but
the fate of those measures is in
doubt in the courts.
Sen. Donald E. Woodland, DColumbus, chairman of the
Commerce and Labor Conunittee, said if the legislature acts
promptly, the bill can be signed
OUTSTANDING RECRUITING AWARDS were presented to the following by First
into law and take effect by Jan.
Lieutenant
William F. Hockenberry, left, conunander of the 3664th Maint. Co. (LOS)- SSG
26, the deadline for receiving
Floyd Muncy,SSG Elza Powell and Sp-5 George Crump (holding trophies for placing in the top
first benefits under the new
three). Receiving letters of commendation for outstanding recruiting were: SSG William
federal requirements .
Wood,
Sp-5 Jerry Tillis, Sp-4 Ronald Grate, Sp-4 Terry Shirley, Sp-5 Richard Fetty, Sp-5 Larry
., A delay, Woodland said,
Parsons
and Sp-5 Roger Garrett. (Photo by First Lieutenant Larry Boyer).
would force Ohioans to wait until Feb. 26 to come under the
new provisions.
Woodland said the bill can be
voted in the Senate by next
Tuesday and pushed right to 3 \2 per cent rather than the cleared the Senate last year,
penalize tfiose citizens who
through the House. It ap- flat 5 per cent.
but not the House.
have set aside savings for their
parently has no opposition.
Require Allocation
"The intangibles tax is future needs, by taxing their
Sen. Stanley J. Aronoff, R·
The bill would require that · clearly discriminatory," AronCincinnati, introduced legisla- 2.6 per cent of general state off said, "especially when one savings at a higher rate than
tion repealing the tax on in- revenues be allocated to local considers that many people, other people."
Sen. Thomas E. Carney, Dtangibles and placing them libraries, which now receive particularly the 'elderly,
Girard,
introduced a bill
under. the graduated personal their revenues from the in· depend oo interest from their
calling
for
a 12 'per cent boost in
income tax.
tangibles tax.
savings and investments to workmen's
compensation
Stock dividends, savings acRepeal of the intangibles tax augment Social Security and benefits for permanently and
counts and pension funds would has been proposed in past pensions.
totally disabled workers.
be taxed as income at one-half sessions but never enacted. It
"There is no justification to
"

·.

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mrs . Lelia Robinson of
Syracuse spent Tuesday
through Christmas with her
son, Mr. and Mrs. Jim ·Riffle
and family .
Christmas Day and weekend
~ests of Mr . and Mrs. Lester
loush were Mr. and Mrs. Don
\iffle and cllildren, Lucasville,
u., Mr. and Mrs. Jim Connolly,
Brian and Shelly of Syracuse;
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Manuel
and Angie, Racine; Mrs. Edna
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Grimm of Belpre.
John Day of Ada, 0 ., visited
Raymond Adams Thursday .
Mrs. A,lice Balser, Mr. and ·
Mrs. Lawrence Ables, Racine,
visited Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Ables, Christmas. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Balser
of Mansfield, 0 . visited his
mother, Mrs. Alice Balser
Thursday.
Christmas week guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Alex Wheeler
were Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Morris and children of Nashville, Tenn.; Mr. and Mrs .
Larry Foster and children of
Columbus; Bill Wheeler,
, student at Ohio State
University, spent two weeks
with his parents.
Mr. and Mrs . Ted Hayman
and children of Westerville, 0.
. visited Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
. Hayman and Keith Monday
, evening. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Hayman, Keith visited their
children, Mr. and Mrs . Gene
Jewell at Letart, W. Va., Mrs.
Phyllis Young at Mason, W.
Va.,Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hart,
Racine, Christmas Day.
;;.;:. Mrs. Ada Norris, Mrs. Erwin
: Gloeckner
and
Carrie
: Gloeckner v.isi ted Mrs. Golda
: Story at Darwin Christmas

PUT YOUR SALESMAN
AT EVERY DOORSTEP. ••
A consistent, well co-ordinated advertising campaign placed
•

in your hometown paper can reach more people, quicker
'

..

when people are motivated ... they buy! So, Mr.
Merchant, when you want to reach the most people, the
fastest way possible . .. think newspaper. We
•
cover more of the people you want to reach, everyday . .

"

' •"C

BLUEBERRY
MUFFIN
MIX

BROWNIE
MIX

''

,.,"

"'

PH; 992.-2156
ADVERTISING DEPf.

..,'

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.
'"

""
'

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control of his ca r when it

There was minor damage.
Blackston was cited to Meigs
County Court for speed fo r
conditions.
A deer was kill ed in an ac-

skidded on an icy spot in t.l!e cident Wednesday morning on
roadway off the left side of the Rt. 588, four tenths of a mile

13 oz.
75c Value

KYI~.

$2.40 Value

.,49

$3.20 Value

84 oz.

. 7 01·
;,;t

$2.19 Value

~9c

Value

51.29 Value

•1.77 '

•

~'

•2.29

, PANTRY PACK-CANDY SALE

$2.25 Value

rofl: .

M&amp;M .. M&amp;M PEANUTS,
rf
~
••• MILKY WAY, SNICKERS
l'il
.&amp;,.~... '"· .
- ~1~
,.
3 MUSKETEERS, OR
Reg. •2.25

•.1 ''

39
STURDY METAL

HAl
KARATE

(}IECK FILE

AFTER SHAVE
LOTION
. 4 oz.
$2.00 Value

.,29

FILE BOXES
Wood grain or
Avocado woodgrain
Each with lock and key.
Reg . 54.00

'2"
COTY

Prince Matchabelli

CACHET

SCENTED
HAND LOTION

COLOGNE
SPRAY MIST
'

TOOTHPASTE

Disney Print-28"x16'h"x12 112"

3-RING
BINDER
NOTEBOOK

Jjt

TOOTHBRUSHES

With 's trong plastic handles
and dust proof cover.
Choose
Floral Print-25"x13'h"x11'12"

DENIM-LIKE

Mr. and Mrs. David
::,Gloeckner and daughter Carrie
::were Christmas dinner guests
; of her father, Russell Lockhart
:;and children at Vienna, W. Va.
~ Mrs. Edna Roush spent ·
••
"Christmas Day with Mr. and
:;Mrs. Howard Roush. Other
~guests of the Roushes were
:~heir daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
:Jlud Lampen of Portsmouth.
:;. Visiting Mr, and Mrs. Vernon
'Donohue Friday through
::thristmas Day were their
:Zhildren, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
::llarden and Eric, Marion, 0.,
)1r. and Mrs. Lowell Burton
) nd Sherry of Columbus, Mr .
'llnd Mrs. Charles Winebrenner
e nd children, Cheshire, visited
:lhe Donhews on Sunday.
::: Christmas dinner guests of
~. and Mrs. Dallas Hill were
~s. Dolly Wolfe, Mrs. Ruth
~onohue, Mr. and Mrs. Darrell
illorris and . Tracy, Mr. and
Mrs. Marshall Roush·and Joey,
111r. and Mrs. Carl Wolfe Jr.
and famil:t of Hacine.
; Art Hill is home visiting his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dallas
Hill for a month from
ll\orehead
University,
Morehead, Ky.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ables and
daughter Vicki, Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Ables visited James
·Ables at the home ol Mrs.
Edith Gilkey at Gallipolis
Thursday.
.
Vlsi ling Mrs. Erma Wilso,n
and family over Cristmas were
Mr. and MJ:s. Richard Wilson
and children, Detroit, Mich.;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Burris,
BiUy Wilson of Bolivar Dam;
Mr. and Mrs. Butch Wilson and
family, Mr. and Mrs. William
Wickline and sons, Scottie and

CREST

STORAGE BOXES

Self-Adhesive
Assorted Colors
and Designs
18" 'By 3 yds .
52.00

..

TEK

Detergent

7 oz.
51.89 Value

CONTAC
SHELF PAPER
'

TIDE

Deodorant

1 lb. 7 01.
Family Size
~1.19 Value

12.7

2 oz.

...

oz.

..,:

'275
SPECIAL SALEI

SOROKA

WALL

.

·

•

PlAQUES

Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Furgeson

THE
DAILY SENTINEL

struck the same icy spot and
skidded into Cons Lanzo's car .

Road 1 in Meigs County .
The Gallia-Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol said John D.
Constanzo, 22, of Dexter, lost

· RIGHT
GUARD

Double Fudge

c

than your salesmen. Newspaper advertising motivates people

Membership dues are $100 a
ye ar . Deadlin e fo r memberships is March 4. Those who
join after that date will pay an
additional $60 a year.
All area farmers, members
and non-members , are invited
to attend the monthly sessions.

highway . A few se~ds later a
ca r driven by Robert M.
Bt'\ckston, 22, of Pomeroy,

'.

: Day.

..

annOIUlced .

Slippery ro ad co nditi ons
we re blam ed for a c ha in
reaction acci dent a t 8:20 a .m.
Wednesday on Rt. 324. three
tenths Of a mile west of Coun ty

News, Events

Compensation hill
on tap next week
By LEE LEONARD
UPJ Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The
Ohio House was to hold a
nskeleton" session today with
a few members on hand, but
for all practical purposes the
General Assemby has adjourned for the weekend.
The Senate scheduled a 7:: J
p.m. session for Jan. 211, while
the House is :.0 reconvene the
following day at II a.m.
The quiet inaugural week in
the legislature was in marked
contrast to the first week of the
lllth session whem Democrats
ranuned through a package of
six partisan bills.
,
A new measure surfaced
Wednesday , as the Senate
Commerce and Labor Committee placed in position for
passage early next week an
emergency bill designed to
make Ohioans eligible late this
month for up to a full year of
unemployment compensation
benefits.
Sigolllcant Action
Advancement of the bill in
committee was the only signifi·
cant action of the week ;JJ
lawmakers awaited legislative
proposals of Gov. James A.
Rhodes.
The unemployment compen-

members. Other products will be delivered.
Any fertilizer o•ders can be
fr om three SEO counti es be m•ailable after discussion
delivered
to the' Gallipolis area
orga nized the SEO Ohio with organ izati on mt mber s
within
10
to 14 days to co-op
Tuesday.
Farmers' Co-Op.
As report ed earli er tfiis members in 20-ton lots. Other
Committeemen Wednesday
week,
it will be necessary for products ca n be ordered within
discussed the prices of fertilizer, bailing twine, barbed · th e Organizati on to have a 3tklay delivery date .
'!'hose wishing to join the new
wire and chemicals. These submi tied a charte r aporganization
should attend the
plica
tion
to
the
Secretary
of
items will be available for
group's
regular
meeting , held
Stat~
before
these
products
can
·Orders Tuesda y to Co-Op
proXimately 61 area £arms

Tuesday of the monUt and not
every Tuesday as previously

Ice ditched two autos

Apple Grove

I '

SSG Charles Hanson, left, received a West Virginia Cofll11)endation Med'al during recent
ceremonies held In the national guard armory at Pt. Pleasant. Col. Richard R. Talterson,

Pr oduction Assn. , b'uilding .
The group meets the fi rst

east of the Bidwell-Rodney Rd.
The animal ran into the path of
a car operated , by Jimmy
Grown , '41, of Gallipolis. There
was minor damage tO his car. i
Asingle car mishap occurred .
at 5 p.m. Wednesday on Tycoon
Rd . seven tenths of a mile
north of Rt. 554 . Officers said
Ivan L. Hurt, 29, Bidwell, lost
control of his car whl£11 ran off
the left side of the road striking
an embankment and fence .
There was moderate damage
and no charges were filed.

oi

Point Pleasant, Mr. and
Mr s. Clarence · Roy ·and
children, Rex and Nancy, were
Cllristmas Day guests of Mr.
ruld Mrs. Homer Warner. Mrs.
Uzzle Wood daughter, Debbie
and husband of Racine visited
Mr .. and Mrs. Wamer Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. R&lt;Jbert Smith,
are visiting relatives in
Pittsburgh , Pa. and other
places ip Pennsylvania,
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Cross
of Columbus visited his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew
Cross during ll)e holidays. · ·
Mrs. Owen Anderson was
retUrned to her home Saturd~y
from veterans Memorial ·
'Hoopi\')1. ·
,

Large colorful plaques
will
attractively
decorate and brighten
any room in your home.
Assorted designs.

Sr:

'109

Each

TUSSY
LIPSTICKS
Assorted Shades
$1.00 Value

BOXED ENVELOPES
Size: 3%"x6'h "
100 Envelopes
69c Value

59~

,,•
),

•·.
l
~·

.'
'
'

•

,·

. ..,

I

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. I ·r

.I

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�10 - The Daily Senllnei,M•ddleport Pomeroy 0 Thursda\ J "' 16 1975

For Fast Results Use Senti11:el Classifieds/
BOARD OF
MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS

Se rv ces.
44 616 00
Secu r tv of Person s
And Proper tv
Pol ce D epartm ent
Not•ce
to
Mo o r
Veh c ~
Person.l l Serv ce s
28 500 00
Dealers
O ther
9 509 00
To ta For Po ce
In accorda nce w t h Sec l07 86
A RESO L U T ON
o maKe
of the Oh o Rev sed Code
Department
38 009 00
app r opr a on!&gt; lo
Cu r enl
sealed b ds w
be r ece \led by
F re D ep ar tm ent
Expenses
and
other
Ex
Tile
Me gs
County
Com
558 00
pend ures of !h e v lage o f Per sona Se r v ces
m ss oners n the r oil ce n t he
Other
3 69' oo
M
ctd
c
por
t
SH'I1e
o
f
Oh
o
Court House Po ne ov Oh o
d
ng the I sea year e d ng To!a For F r e
45769
until 10 00 AM
on
4 750 00
D eparlment
Decembe r .11 19 75
January 78th 1975 at wh ch
For Sec ur y of
Sec on 1 BE T RE SO LVE D Tota
Per sons and Property
I me and pla ce he l:l dS w t be
by th e Counc tor th e V r ag e ot
he
opened and ead aloud fo
42 259 00
M dd epo 1 St ate o f Oh o Tha t
follow ng veh c l es
L es ure lf1 m e Act1v 1 es
to
p
ov
d
e
fo
h
e
cur
ren
CK
B ds must b e SIJbm lfed n wo
Park s and Pla)lgrounds
penses and o ner e)( p end turc s Per sona
proposals
each proposa
1o
Serv ces
4 400 00
o he sad v t age o f M dd epo t
meet t he cond to s a d dur
Oher
360000
g r e I H a yea end ng To a For Parks and
spec t ca nn s as l o tows
Decemb er
31
975
ne
s
.a 000 00
to ow n Q sums be and t hey are ToPlayground
Proposal No I
a l For Le sure T me
hereby se t as de and ap
On 19 75 M ode dump !ruck
A c v t es
a ooo oo
p ropr a l ed a s fol ow s v 1
w th dump bod y 108 X 30 her.d
Commun1ly Env ronment
and ta gate w t h cen er door
PI ann ng Co mm1 ss 1on
Sect on ') That t he r e be ap
gate
300 00
p r op :1 ed from th e G ENERAL Persona l Serv ces
Hel!vy duty 8
ho s w ll
Oth er
200 00
FU ND
To al Fo r Plenn ng
P T 0 &amp; l ev ers
General Governmental
~
cab p o ec o
w
7
Comm ss o
500 00
Serv ces
w ngs
To ta For Commun ty
Mavor
Cab gilt s &lt;l cu r e I g s &amp; 6
Env ron men!
500 00
Persona Se v ce s
~ 1 50 0 00
reflectors
Street L1ghf1ng
Ohe
~50000
Mud f aps
2 500 00
Tot a For Ma yur
6 000 00 Oth er
Tota Fo r S! reer
Wheel base 72 cli'b ro ~x eo
Cl erk Treasurer
su tllble for bod y
L ght g
2 500 00
Persona Se v ces
1 500 00
:1 4 000 lbs G V W o hea,. er
Othe
2 500 oo Tota For Transpona on
7 000 bs
Bean front li' K e
F ac t t es
2 500 00
Totnr for C er k Tr easu rer
8 500 bs 2 spe ed r ee~ il)( e
Sect on 3 That nere be ap
4 000 00
5 speed sy chron esh t an s
propr aled from he GENERAL
Sol c tor L ega l Advtsor
m ss on d r ec t n I f l h
or
Persona Se rv ces
500 00 F UND for coni ngenc es
34 0 cu n V 8 aas enq ne or
purposes
not
otherw se
To n Fo Sol c l or
lar ger
prov d ed for to be eKpended n
ega A rj v so r
~00 00
4 000 bs m n nun fr on t
accordance w fh he prov sons
COUtlC!I
spr n g capac y
P e sana Se rv ccs
576 00 of Sec t on 5705 40 R c he sum
11 000 tb s
m n nun rear
o il F or Cou nc 1
5 6 00 of s 1 500 00
spr ng c apa c y
Grand Tot al Genera Fund
Bu d ng~ &amp; M sc
AuK I a y r e a sp r qs
App r opr at on
99 375 00
o r er
33 5 1000
Combna on reil
B.
ront
Sec t on 4 Tl1at !h ere be ap
lola F or Bu d nQ s &amp;
d reel on a s g na r qhts
Msc
33 54000 propr a ed from tile STREET
Traft c hazard sw rc r
CONSTRUC TION
MA IN
To il
For Gene al Govf'rn
D~a e ec tr c hurn s
TE NANC E
A ND
REPA R
n t:n l ll
Heater B. defroster
F UND (AlJJtO L CENSE A ND
2 speed w ndsh e d w pe s &amp;
G ASO L NE TAXI
washer s
Stre et M a in tenance
Power Steer ng
Per sona Serv ces
12 86 5 8&lt;1
900 X 20 10 pty s1ee 1 be ted
Oth er
18 13&lt;1 16
r ad a
front t r es h ghway
Tota for Str ee Ma ntena n ce
POMEROY
tread 7 r m s
Fund
31 000 00
BOWLING LANES
900 x 0 I 0 p y s ee l bel ed
To t al For Stree t
TUESDAY
TRIPLICATE
rll dlll l r ear t res on &amp; ort tr ead
Const ru c t on
Ma n t enance
Jan 7 1975
7 r ms
and Repa r Fund
3 000 00
Ste~nd ng s
One add I anal 7 r m
Sect on 6 That the r e be ap
Team
Cas t spoke whee s
propr ated
from
the
Fr endly laver l
14 1 CEMETERY FU ND
Heavy dutv clutch
Royal Crown Botti ng
8 ll
Heav y duty brake boosler
Publtc H ealth Sar v 1ces
NY C o h ng House
8 8
Wtlh 7 r ea r bra kes
Ceme t ery Opera! on
K ng BU ld Supply
8 8
Heavy duty bumper 8. front
And Ma ntenanc e
Turner s Grocery
6 10 Personal Se rvIces
two hooks
B 371 04
Roya Oak Pork
4 2 Other
L H &amp; R H Sr w es l cos
'328 96
H gh
nd
Game
Pa
m1rrors
Tota l For Cemeter)l
Carson 194 Dot R f e sabelle
70 amp banery
Oper at en and
Couch and Betty Srn h 168
Ma ntenance
SO amp or arger alte ator
10 700 00
H gh Ser es
Pat Carson
Ca b g r l!lb hand es L &amp; R
Tota l Fo r Cemetery
488 sa be le Couch 479
Full depth foam sca t
Fund
10 700 00
Tea Y H gh G&lt;1n e
Tu r
Hea vy duty f aclorv
e '
Sec t on 9 That th er e be ap
ner
s
Groc
ery
4Ri.l
for ced frame
propna ted from the WATER
Team H gh Ser ies
Royal
Co lor Omaha Orange
f RI:VENUEJ FUND
Cr own Bo ll ng 135 3
Proposal No 2
Adm l nisfratton- Waler
Same as preposa l No 1
Persona l Serv ces
19 490 00
Wednesday Early B rd
Debt Se r v ce
36 570 00
Jitn
8
19
7.5
Bidder te f urn sh the r own
Other
29 740 00
Stanelmg s
biCI for ms Md submit b d s tor
Tota For Admm stra t lon
T
eam
each p roposal as number ed
- Wa t er
85 800 00
4 To tal For Water
The front o l til e cnve ope Depe dable Con tr aCI ng 17
1
5
enclosing the b ds mu st be Roush s Land ng
(Revenue) Fund
85 800 00
Ebersbach Hardware
10
6
marked TrucKs
Sect on 10 Th at th er e b e
Ben
To
1
Corp
7
9
The County Com m ss o 1er s
app r opr at ed from th e SEWE R
6 10
mey ac ept th e lowe;;t bid or Francs Flor sts
REVE NUE) F UND
Eve yn s Groc
2 14
select lh e best btd for the n
Adm niStrat•on- Sewage
H g h l nd Game
Betty
tend&amp;d purpos e and reserve 11 e
Persona Ser .. ces
16 074 00
rlg htte reje c t rtny or a b ds or Wh !lat ch 187 Belfy Wh t a c t
Deb t Serv ce
74 360 00
any part thereof
Otner
566 00
H tgn
Seres
Betty
To a t For Adm n si r at on
Wh t et ch 534 Mary Voss 511
Me 9s Co
- Sewage
63 000 00
Team
H gh
Game
Total For Sewe r
Cornm ss oners
Dcpendab e Contract g 828
( Revenue Fund
6300000
Team
H gh
Se r ies
Marth.:~ Cha
ber s
Sec ! on 17 Th at there be
Dependabl
e
Contract
ng
1434
Clerk
appropr atcd
f rom
the
(1) 9 16 :itc
POLICEMA N S REL EF AND
PENS O N FU ND
O! her
1 06 1 00
ta For Po Iceman s
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
with Ma1ar Hoopl• ToRei
ef and Pens on
Fun d
1061 00
Sec t on 1.1 That there be
appropr a t ed
f rom
he
GENERAL
BO N D
RET REME N T FU N D
Paymen t of Pr nc pa
8 000 00
Paym ent of Int erest
2
oo
0 her
450 00
To al For General Bond
Ret r('menr Fund
11 015 00
! PRESUME THAT YOU Ll INSIST ON
Sec t on 15 That th ere b e
ARNOlD STAYING AS OUR GUEST FOR
appropr ated fr om th e METER
!&gt;-FEW DA~5 1
DEPOS I T FUND

Local Bowling

n

"'

sas

0 Mer
2 500 00
Tota F or Meter
D epos t Fund
'1;'500 00
Sect on 16 Thilt there be
appropr ated
from
the
FEDE R AL
REVENUE
SHA R
NG
FU ND
Otner
8 000 00
Total For Federa
Revenue Shar ng
8 000 00
Total All
Appropr at ons
312 451 00

Professor's plan
rejected
RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI {UP! /- Plcs1
dent Ford d1dn t mentiOn
banmn g credit ca rd s tn h1s
economic plan and that angers
eeooomiSt Dr Joseph Lmk
Unk says he be he' es a one
B}

day a week mora IOttum on
usmg credit cards IS the on!\
real practiCal wa) of tighten
mg up U.e economy
Unk, 59 a 3().) ear 'eteran

econorrucs professor at Xcn ter
Unrversii) had \Hillen It Ford
about hiS plan
The Pres1den1 " rote Line
thanked hun for the Idea and
said he had subnutled the
suggestion to his economic
adVISers
But of course Link \\asn t
surpnsed when Ford dul.n t !&lt;Ilk
about the plan m a Presidential
address to U.e nation about
econonucs Monda) mght
You won t get good econom
1cs from a politician
com
plained Unk The\ re mamh
concerned ab&lt;lut bemg re
elected
I don't think Washington can
do much about tightemng up
the economy It takes 210
millfon Americans shoulder toshoulder to do It
'I m a practical \\Ork-a-&lt;lay
world type of eeonoJillst says
the teacher who also IS
pre$1dent or a hotel a lumber
company and an apartment
complex Believe me, what
thiS coun lry needs now Is to
slow dOWII this credit card

craze
Too many Amertcans a1 e
buymg thmgs Ule) don t need
and can t afford The) have
beer budgets but sti ll have
champagne appetites E\Cr)
bod\ \\antsa se\\ers)stem but
nobodv " ants to dig ditches
If we could designate one
day a " eek that credit cards
\\ Ould be outlawed - use cash
or don t buy J! - tl \\ Otild be
extreme!) healUiy for the
conn lr)
Lmk blames much of t he
coun Iry s eeonom1c problems
on advcrt1smg and certam
trend mdustr1es hke automo
biles and fashiOn
There 1sn t enough buyer
resistance to the pressure ot
advert1smg People are con
stantly bemg shown all new
products-gadgets that aren t
an) more needed Ulan \he man

m the moon

Sec tton l7 And th e V1 ! age
Cl erk s hereby author zed to
draw h s warrants on the
V Iage Treasurer for pa yments
from any of th e forego n9 ap
propr a ons upon r ece v ng
proper
ce rt ft cates
and
vou c hers tllerefor approved by
the board or off cen. au t hor zed
by law to approve the same or
an ordina n ce or resotul on of
counc I to make the epKen
d tures
prov ded that no
wa r rants sha l be drawn or pad
for sa l ar es or Wllges except to
persons employed bv authorltv
of and n accordance w th l aw or
ordnance Prov ded furlher
tha the appropr at ens f orc on ngenc es can on l y be eK
pended upon appeal of two
h~rds vote of Counc 1 tor t erns
ot ex.pense cons! tut ng a -ega!
ob gat on aga nst th e v 1 age
and for purposes other than
hose covered by
t e other
spec I c appropr at ons here n
made
Sect on 18
Th s resolut on
sl'1at rake effect at the ea t est
per od al owed by aw
Passed January 13
Attest

975

Gene Grate
ClerK of Counc 1
M l Ke ly
Pres dent of Counc

CERTIFICATE
Sec! on 5705 39 R c
No
appropr at on measure shal
become effect ve unt there s
f ed w th the appropr at ng
author tv bv the countv aud tor
A cert f cate that tile total ap
propr at ons from each funcl
taken logether \Yifl'1 al l other
outs t and ng appropr at ons do
not
exceetl
such
off ctal
est mate o amended off clal
es.t mate
When
the
ap
propr at on does not exceed
such off c al estimate
the
county aud tor shall g ve suth
ce rt1f cate forthwith
upon
rece v ng
f rom
the
ap
prop nat ng author lv a cer l fed
c opy of the appropr at on
mea sure

As for cars U.ere should be
a law agamst U.e annual model
change Engmeers don t e\en
The State of Oh o
Me gs
know "hat to put on ne" Coun fy ss
models
I Gene Grate Clerk of the
Wh) should U.ere ~ eight vI age ef M ddteport n sad
or 10 taillights on a ne" car ' Coun"ty .an\1 10 whose custody
the Ftles Journals and Recerds
No "onder there are so many are requ.red br the laws of the
auto worker la)Olfs
The State of Oh o to be kept do
hereby
cerltfy
that
the
mdustr) has O&gt; er exerted Itself forego ng Annual Appropr at ton
The same thmg goes for Resoi1.Jt1on tS taken and cop i es
from the or1g nal Resolutton
new fashion st)les ever) ) ear now on ftle w th sad V11lage
thar the foregotrrg Resolution
They are not needed
has been comp ared b Y me Wtth
Interest rates on these the sad ongmal and that lhe
credit card purchases Is 18 per same IS a true and correct:st;opy
thereo f
cen1
pomts out Lm k
w tness my Stgnature thiS
They re h•lpmg keep people m 13'h day of January 1975
debt They say JUSt Juy 1t on
Gene Grate
Clerk of the Villageet
layaway Yeah you re gomg to
Middleport Oh o
be lard away m the grave
Me1gs County Ott o
J an 16
before It s paid off

'

•

'

'---~

RESOLUTIO N NO 1018 7S
ANNUAL
APPROPR IAT IO N
RESOL UTION
(V Il lAGE)

2 SIGNS
Pomeroy
OF
QUALITY Motor Co.
1971 CHEVROLET

U495

2 Ton cab &amp; c hass1s 102

II- The Daily Sentinel Middleport-Pomeroy 0 Thursday Jan 16 197'f'!&lt;5-~\~-~~---~-~i881Ji881J!IIli8!!MI!illl!ll&gt;l

J)

cab to a xle 350 V 8 engine

IS 000 lb 2 speed rear oxle good 825x20 t res good solid

Business 'Services
'

1972 CHEVROLET
Ton 8 Fleelslde H duty IS

tlres 4 speed

$2250
trans V 8

Blown Into Walls
and Athcs
Free Est1mates

949 3832 or 843 2667

Phone 16141 m 2798

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING

STRIPPING FINISHES
FURNITURE METALS-ETC
MODERN&amp; ANTIQUE
Refinishing
Repairing

From a

11

For Rent
2 or 3 BEDROOM home l m1le
fr om Pomeroy on 0 d 33 Call
992 7571
1 16 6tc

Not1ce

TRAILER spa ce 2m les fro m
Pomeroy Rt 143 Phone 99 2
5858
10 21 lfc

NotiCe

CO N S G N ME NT S we l come at
P&amp;J Auc r on
11 5 North
Second M ddteport
1 9 30tc

SHOOTING MATCH
Co rn
H olfow Gun Club rurn f r sl
r gh t after M es Cemeterv
Ru! and
Fac t ory c h-eked
guns only Su nday January
19 1 p m
1 16 3tc

GU N Shoot Sa turd av Jan 18 1
p m M e H t Rd Assorted
nea s fa ctory choked guns
on l y Sponsored by Ra e ne
F re Dept
AUL TION
Th u r sday
and
I 53 C
Saturday n gh t 7 p m at
Mason Aucf on Hor t on St n
FOR your
0 11 of M nk
Mason W Va Cons gnments
Cosme ! cs Phone BROWN S
welcome Ph on e (304) 773
9915113
5471
1 7 tfc
10 3 tfc
SHOO T N G match Ra e ne Gun
Club Sunday 1 p m Assorted
m eats and fa cto ry choke ouns
only
1222tfc

A UCTION
SA LE
s ta rt
Fr day Jan 17 a t 7 p m
N
Second
M dd l epo rt
P&amp;J Odds and Ends
19

SH OO fiNO Match Rae ne Gun
Club Su nda y January 19 l
pm

NOVEL TY Fabr c and Crafts
recentlv p ur cha sed a la rge
nven to ry o f craft supp l es
save so p et to 60 p et on all
craft c oseouts toda y Novelty
F abrlcs and Cra fts Belpre

Oh o

Fede ral and State Taxes will
be done by appo nfm ents
only Please phone 992 227 2 or
see Mr s Wanda Eb l tn Laurel
Cl ff Rd Pomero y Oh 10
1 3 30tc

SEWING AND
CRAFT CLASSES

Wanted To Buy
WANTED old upri ght ptanos
any cond t1on
Pav ing SlO
ca sh F rst IIO?f only Wr te
anel gt ve d re c t ons to Wttten
P ano Co
Bo x la8 SardtS
Oh o 43946
1 15 6tp

Thursday Evenmgs
At7 00 PM

NOVELTY FABRIC
&amp;CRAFTS
Belpre, 01!10

----------

ORDINANCE NO

1017

----

OLD furn1t ure ce boxes brass
beds or complete households
Wr te M D M Iter R t 4
Pomerov Oh1o Cal! 992 7760
10 7 74

Ph 423 5061
74

JUNK autos
com plete and
del v er ed to our yard We pick
An Ord nan ce to establ Sh
up auto bod1es and buy ell
V llag e lobs and wage rate s
and estab tSh ng l egal hoi days
k nds of scrap metals and
vacat ons and s ck eave
ron R der s Sa lvage Sf Rt
124 Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh o
Ca ll 992 5468
Be t ordam ed by the CounCI
of the V !I age of M dd eport as
10 17 tiC
follows
Sec
That the fo towmg CASH paid for all makes and
wage sea e s hereby adopted
medets o f mobile homes
Phone area code 614 423 95 31
for emp oyees of the V l a9e of
M dd lepor t
4 13 tfc
Ch et of Pol ce $664 40 per
mon th
Regu l ar Patrolman S2 95 per
hour
Regu la r Patr ol man a fter
Pol ce Schoo l ng $3 00 per hour
Extra Po ! tee S2 95 per hour
Su perv so r
of
v llage
Ma ntenance $763 71 per menth
St r ee t Employees (40 hour
week) S2
per hour
Po o l and Park D re cto r
S404 25 per month
L feg uards S 35 per hour
Secr etary to Mayor S28 S 10
per month
Extra Cter cal He p S2 70 per
hour
Clerk
Ceme tery Tru st ees
S81 82 per month
Vo unteer F1remen Sl2 00 per
yea r
Coun c lman (not to exceed 24
meet ngs) S4 00 per m eel ng
Board of Pub I c Afla rs (not
to exceed 12 meet ng sl $4 00
per m ee t ng
c erk Board et Publ c Af
fa.rs $450 SO per month
Beg nnmg apprent ce Clerk
Board of Publ c Affatrs S2 00
per nour
E xt ra Cl er cal HeiR ( Board of
Pub c Affa1rs 1 $2 45 per hour
D spa t che r SS5 00 per month
ClerK of Water D epartm ent
S2 70 p er hour

as

Auto Sales
1972 SUPER Beet e Vo l ks
wagen Phone 992 3981
l 8 lOtc
1968 CHEVROLET Coronet 6
cyl 3 speed 4 dr runs good
II.JSt needs w ndsh1etd Phone
985 3861
1 16 6tp

-

--------

--

-

1973 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass S
p s
p b
and factory a~r
25 500 m les
Call 992 3914
after 5 p m
1 14 6tp

J9 69 C H EvROLETI; pa~ 4dr
sedan

---

Call 992 7240

----.-----

1 14 )tp

RARE
1968
Plymouth
Barra cu da fa.stba ck factory
a c and fact 4 speed P 0 B
P S sma I v 8 Contact 992

7605

I 12 6tp

--------COMET
19 000 m les
-

1973
ai.Jtomat c t ra nsm ss on ltke
new Call any f me 667 3442
1 12tp

- -

s

----------~
FORO 352 V 8 engt c

2 BEDROOM tr a t!er Phone 99 2
397S or 992 2571
1 3 tf c

' 54

-iOME
I mpr ovem ent
and
Repa r Serv1 ce Anyth ng
t xed ar ound the home from
roof lo basement You w H
1 k e our wor K and rates
Phon e 742 5081
12 29 He

Real Estate For Sale
BUILDING IOI 80 It frontage
by 165ft The second Iotan left
on li! v er v ew Dr ve Lmcoln
H 1 Pom eroy Oh o If n
ter es ted ca 1992 3230 atrer 5 p
m
10 17 tf c

608 E
MAIN

.PO~IlO~O

For Sale

RUTLAND - 1 story frame
5 rooms &amp; bath I ving R has

GROCERY bus ne ss for sa le
Bu ld ng for sa le or lease
Phone 173 5618 from 8 30 p m
to 10 p m for appo ntment
3 10 tf c

ftre pla ce
renovated

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

JER SEY Guernsey m lk cow to
fr eshen soon Also Hereford
mnced ca lves 3 weeks old
Phone 84 )..2353
1 12 Stc
EAR CORN for sale by bushel
for S3 25 Phone 1 (614 J 367
74 81 or 388 9991
l 16 71C

------ - -----OVATION 12 strm g acousttc

guitar w th hardshe ll case
N ew cos t S500 will sell for
S325 G1b son Les Paul Deluxe
electr c gu tar w th hard she ll
case New cost S530 w111 sel l
for S325 Call 949 5913 Steve
C e and Ra c tne Oh e 4577 1
1 16 6tc

------------CO RN for sa l e $3 25 bu l E

Phone H6 14 )985 4127
1 16 3tp

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

19 71 F M C As t ro w th wet I ne
1974 Ira I mob le flat tra ler
Phone (3 0"') 882 2829
1 17 6t c

recently
carpeted

gilrage

51x125

lot

JUST $9 500 00
FAIRVIEW HTS - Lovely
br ck &amp; tram~ 4 bedrooms 2
baths lovely kotchen &amp;
dtn ng

utiltty R
about 1
acre n ce workshop ln the
rear $26 000

TUPPERS PLAINS -

-

d nlng har.dwood floors
basement wtth forced atr

heal utility R A REAL
BARGAIN $13 500
PORTLAND - 4 nice level
lots (good ground) close to
nver good dr lied well and
water system good co ncrete

block garage storage bldg
large house 4 BR ONLY
$4 700
ALL CASH FOR YOUR
HOME LET US SELL FOR
YOU
992 2259 or 992 2568

t ra c tor w th live hydraul c
and 3 pont h tch One owner
2 039 hOurs AJso almost new 3
pt h1fch Ford mower Wtth 6
ft cutter bar Contact Marvm
Keebaugh
Days 992 5342
Even lngs 985 3913
1 15 6tc

12 18 tfc

- ------------- SIEGLER and
MONOGRAM

~~~~t~~~:;i;3

breeze a y
ag
an acre Sl8 500 00

ost

CLOSE IN -

6 room frame
home bath electric heat
garage and level lot

and large foyer $17 500 00

LOOK AT THIS -49 acres 1ust
off 124 Water tap and lots of

DO YOU HAVE A NICE
LARGE OLDER HOME THAT
YOU WANT TO SELL
We Need A Bunch of Small

------------Empklyment Wanted

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

Real Estate For Sile

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

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

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

.

8 QO-Capt Kangaroo B Lass e 6 Popeye 10 Sesam e St 33

8 25-Capt Kangaroo 10
8 30-Bog Valley 6
9 oo-A M 3 To Be Announced 4 Ph ol Donahue 15 Bullw nkle
8 #&lt;&gt;rnlng with D J 13
9 2~huck While Reports 10
9 3()-Not For Women Only 3 Dmah 6 Ha zel 8 Tattletales 10

'

Arthur Smrth 12

11 QO-Htgh Rollers 3 15

One Ltfe to L ve

4 oo-Mr

Cartoon 3

I Dream ot Jeann e 4

Bonanza 15

5 GO-FBI 3 Merv Griffin A Andy Grofflth 8 Mi'ster Rogers
Neighborhood 20 33 Raymond Burr 13
5 30-News 6 Beverly Ho/lb /1/ies 8 Hodgepodge Lodge 20

2 11 tfc

k,

WIN AT BRIDGE

Here's our expert's expert

r:c-

Dear Mike
Congratulations on your reapportionment I And may I add
To rea ders
I have one sure-cure formula for losmg weight Learn to
enJOY hunger pangs m U.e same way you enJOY muscle soreness
after a good exercise session They make you feel worUiy
Once you ~ealize It ISn t necessary to fill your stomach each
time It srgnals U.e urge for snacks or extra meals w1ll disappear
and you ll feel much more alert not bemg b&lt;lgged down with
unnecessary fond - HELEN
Note from Sue Here s another formula for U.e we1ght
U.reatened Don t walt until you re so heavy It snohceable When
U.e baUiroom scales say you ve gamed three pounds - take em
off nght now You cando It m a week with rw stram
Bu t 20 or 30 ugly pounds IS something else You re liable to
giVe up U.mlnng the fight IS too much for you Prevention s the

word'

+++

Rap

Sam and I have been gomg togeUier for 14 monUis and
startedhavmg sex e1ght months ago Were b&lt;JUI 17 expect to get

Per

2Q

6

3G-NBC News 3 4 IS ABC News 13 Sew tched
8 10 Zoom 20

6

CBS News

7 00-Truth or Cons 3 4 Law re nce Welk 6 Bowltng for Dollars

6

WCHS TV R Fonrt A

Avoat/on Weather 33 News 10

News 10 J mmy Dean 13 I Spy 15 Avtat1on Wea ther 20

7 30- Porter Wagoner 3 Pop Goes the Country 4 New Candid
Camera 6 Pop Goes the Country 8 Treasure Hunt 10 Tn
Tel l The Truth 13 Blac k Perspect ive on the News 20 33

8 oo-sanford &amp; Son 3 I&gt;

Noght Stalker 6 13 The Land The
Sea The Choldren There 4 Movoe Battle for the Planet of
the Ape s

8 10 Washmg ton Week In Revtew 20 33

"'K 10 4

For Friday J•n 17 1975
ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 19)

Mctsterp1e ce Theatr e 20

9 3G-Mov e

PISCES (Fob 20 M•rch 20)

better judgmen t and you m
pulses as to wh c h rules you
pu se to day Make I at leas t a

d rEIW

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23 Dec
21) A mater al ssue could be
the reason tor a nasty ram ty
d•spute today Be sure you re
not the one wh o pr ovokes t

LEO (Jul'tl , , A

•

tn

.,.,\

CAPRICORN (Dec 22 J•n
11) Don I rev tve somelh ng that
t as at gered yo cor cern r g
o e now esse 1t at to you m
med ale plans I w II mpede

vn

married don t feel guilty but - I m scared and so IS he
I d like to take U.e pili but I ca n t ask my mother for a
prescription and I m afraid our doctor would tell her My best
friend says she leveled w1UI her Mom and everything was cool
but I m chicken
If I went to the Family Center m ou:- next big town I doubt
U.ey d help without getting permission from my parents
Don t say break up or stop lovmg or get mamed or let him
take U.e responsibility The hrst U.ree are Impossible and U.e
last 1sn t very safe - HELP

Kee p fr end s out of your
bu smess m atters today or one
who means only to help will
cause comp hcat ons

~

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I Kmd of shell I Kind of
5 C1vet
mfm1t1ve
tO Heap
2 Opera
II Wandenng
wear
13 Wmder
3 Standish s

mer..e s

News 20

AMMIX

n

nwnber

WHAi THE CONTKACTO~S

A Gilme of Death

10

1!1U61NE55 WAS t701NC.

apostrophes

-ODDL.Y E:NOUC'&gt;H
Movle

Janakt 33

1 oo-M dnoght Specoal 3 4 15 W de World n Concert 6 News
13
1 15- Movoe Dr Goldfoot and the Blk nl Machine 10
2 3G-Mov e Johnny T ger A
4 oo-Movle Something Wild 4
4

I I

l

(J I

hints E :~r h

Now orranre the circled letten
to rorm the owprloe ........ ..
•urreoted bJ the above cartoon

(AMwen

te~DDrrawJ

l•mhloo TAKEN STOOP ABUSED BECKON

YHtr-rd•y.

Aatwer1

Where

aome

for£une• art read- IN BANKBOOKS

OQZ

QCU

CF

JCBVM

fHACKERAY

DICK TRAry

(D)

• A2

t A Q 10 9
.AQJ98
North-South vulnerable
West

Modern San tat on 992 3954 or
992 7349
9 18 tfc
NEIGLER
BUILDING SUP
PLY FOR REMODELING
AND KITCHEN CABINETS
CALL GUY NEIGHLER
RACINE OHIO PHONE 949
3604
12 19 26tc

Nortll

2•

Dbie

Pass

Pass

3•

Pass

Pass

Pa ss
Pass

Openmg lead -

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

I.

East

Soutb

CAPTAIN EASY
F ~H51K HAJ WA ~T~
PRINCf55 J~MJN KePT
UNDER WRAPS 1 RE C )(O~
A 5UPE:IlTANI&lt;ER S Ao;;.
GAFE A PL.ACE MANY

3t
4¥

K •

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Some experts are more ex
pert Ulan oUiers If you don t
think SO ]US( look at UiiS hand
played by Lou Mathe of Los
Angeles 10 an Important team
match
North s double of two spades
was one or U.ose popular but

Pi'.o.NO
tunmg and repatr
Charles Sc ott 992 37 18

13 32tp

--------------C BRADFORD Auct oneer

SEPTIC tanks
exca vating
dump truck Phone 742 3742
12 20 26tc

rather U.at
confus
mg like
negto
a II
ve
doubles
experts
use
It asked Mathe to bid a new sUit
If he could do so
North s three spades was
sheef Idiocy Normally the b1d
wduld be a slam try and
Mathe s lour heart call was his
start to a slam 10 one of U.e
minor sUits North realized he
had gotten himself mto trouble
and decided to pass while still
ahve
West opened w1UI the kmg
and ace of spades and U.en
made the brilliant (?) lead of a
low spade East rnffed w1UI U.e
Jack and MaUle simply d1sca&lt;jl
ed a diamond
Stnce East had started with
four hearts there was no way to
keep Lou from takmg U.e rest
of. the tricks and chalk10g up a
lboroughly undeserved game
Strangely enou'h U.ere was
no way to beat him once West
had cashed two spades prov1d
ed Lou ftgured out where all U.e
cards lay

----------ZENITH
COLOR TV

•

.aLAcK &amp;
WHITE TV
•STEREO

MASON FURNilURE
HERMAN GRATE
MASON, W VA

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The bidding has been
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West

James Diehl

BORN LOSER

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eldier aderltld IHr spades
110tnmp You do

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overbid fDH

TODAY S QUESTION

In response 1o your Blackwood
overfnd your partner b1ds fiVe
dwnoods to show one ace What do
Y"U do

'f"l

PAW
GIT UP
WIF TH SUN

I GIT UP FROM
TH BEDSTID

AN PAW GITS UP
FROM TH CARD
TABLE

and

formahon of t he
are diffe rent

letters

\\Ords

are

all

ZFKJ

PQJ

BXUJB

LCRJ
RCM

PZ

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UVJ J E

PXVV
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Yesterdays Cryptoquote WHEN I WALK WITH YOU I
FEEL AS IF I HAD A FLOWER IN MY BUTTONHOLE

• J7

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ANKS
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the l eng th
the code

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CRYPTOQUOTE

• 763

SOUTH

AXYDLBAAXK
LONGFELLOW

One letler Simp!) stands for another In this sample A It
used for th e tl1rce L s X for the two 0 s etc Songte letters

EAST

• J 63

Mcx1can

Is

Paul

Coast of Skeletons 6 Movoe VIllage of the Damned B

Yesterday's Answer
19 Biblical
29 Small
weed
JOb
22 Assistant
30 European
23 - s JUry
river
24 Played
31 Not a
U.e
soul
glutton
I 2 wds l
25 Endure
32 Anesthetic
46 Inhibit
37 Playing
27 Hardy s
marble
38 Naughty
partner

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It

Nuchoms 33
IQ 3G-World Press 20
II OG-News 3 4 6 810 13 15 ABC News 33
11 3D-Johnny Carson 3 4 15 W d e World m Concerl 13

(Sp)
5 Present
oneself
6 Redolence
l - Lanka
(Ceylon)
8 New

JJllJJdM;-~=~.-~=

Shaft B 10 Assognment Ameroca 33
Baretta 6 13

4 Kmg

18 frumpet
city
blare
9 Jotted
20 Nrgenan
down
tribesman
12 Purport
21 Edict
16 Freshwater
22 Southwest
fish
wmd
23 Nucleus
25 German art
song
Help
26 Peace symbo l
The Planned ParenUiood Association offers brrth control 27 Youngster
counselmg to teena gers In your state parental permission 1s not 28 Before
necessary if you re over 16 - SUE
29 Barracks '" a 1=--+-t-~
+++
gamson town
l'lelp
33 High But you might be surpriSed how well your mother takes U.e
(M Anderson
announcement that you need U.e pill Do you thinlLshe s so naive
play)
U.at she ISn t worried about a possible pregnancy' - HELEN
3.4 Beachcomb·
er s home
35 One kmd
or seat
36
Becharm
Unscramble these four Jumbles.,
38 Irrsh
one letter to each s.quare to
form four ordtnary word11
exclamatiOn
39 H1l the sack
40 Actress
Jackson
41 Insurgent
42 Rummant

• B6
• J9 5 4
t K 8 74

""52

stand m

title
14 Mich igans
Grosse 15 Smn Femer s
home ( abbr 1
16 Not foreign
{abbr )
17 Countdown

Consumer Su rv val Krt 33

10 OQ-Polt ce Womiln 3 4 15

Honeymoon

Jan 17 1175

24 Nov 22) II
w II be a contest between

CANCER (June 21 July 22) Be
care ru hOw you phr ase thmgs
or you II ptt one 1stener agatnst
the ot her and have both upset
at you

Prudeflt

You 11 assume a more active
role thts year In group projects
and ho d some position of
authortly Con tac ts developed
th rough these efforts will be
t:Jeneftc AI .,.lsewhere too

SCORPIO (Ocl

Be
very tactful n handling people
you have auth o r ty over Don t
reward one and gnore th e
others

mQn eyw se

sent at to w1nd up n th e black

TAURUS (April 20 M•r 20)

GEMINI (M•r 21 June 20)

you

s not a good day to extend an
mpromptu nv tatlon to come
1o your home w thout con
su1t ng w th your mate

LIBRA (Sepl 23 Ocl 23) Fo

ph losophical d scusslon w
anse w th a lnend To make
you r po nts and keep your pal
keep you r temper n check

AQUARIUS (Jon 20 Fob 18)
s w111 be a m Ked day fo r

Th

management of tmances Is es

ttle sake of your ell c•ency
pace you r se lf sens bly
workw se The mo e you hurry
the more c areless you II be

A

progress

VIRGO (Aug 23 Sepl 22) ThlS

Although yo u II be tempted 10
do other wise manage things
from beh nd th e scenes Let
another take t he bows

8 3G-Choco &amp; the Man 3 4 15 Wall Street Week 20 33
9 110- Rockford F les 3 4 15 S x Mi/loon Dollar Man 6 13

16

WEST
.AKQJ04
¥ 10 B 3

Per

Meigs High School Principal

Elec Co

• 9 53 2
• K Q7 6
• 52

CARPET-;;stallat o; S l25
ya rd Phone R1 ch ard west
84 3 2667
12 24 26tp

12

6

sonallfy &amp; Beha'ltoral Development 33

5 3Q-Mov e

NORTH

P&amp;J
a '-t'
heatmg
cool ng
refrtg
plumb ng
electr ca l ap
pi an ces We servtce and
repair anytmg n the hom e or
b.us ness
215 N
Sec ond
M ddtepert Phone 992 3509
1 9 30tc

WMPO-AM-FM

I would like to offer a males vrew 011 bemg fat I can
remember
I Never wearmg a skmny-r rbbed pullover or hlf&gt;"huggmg
Jeans because my belly was so b1g
2 Saggmg pectoral muscles tha put the girls to shame
and havmg U.e guys comment on my bust development
3 Gomg on a date' If I was lucky ont was blmd
4 Watching my double chin grow
5 Learrung U.at oversize bagb&lt;ly cloUies were expensive
I fmally discovered that bemg fat IS a state of mmd Like any
other habit overeatmg can be cured I eat sensibly now don t
chea t between meals exerCise a lot and I feel and look better
Ulan I ever have
Lately I ve seen more and more fat guys Take It from an
ex you don t have to be resigned - you can get reapportioned
- FORMER FATTY MIKE

Movte

V-J .Ifc

FRIDAY~~ 10;15 A.M. ON

Somerset 15

Gilligan sIs 6 Taftlta/es 8 Sesame 51 20 33 Movoe House
on Telegraph H II 10 Mike Douglas 13
4 30-Bew/tched 3 Jackpot 4 Mod Squad 6 Lucy Show 8

5232

I

Rap

Trails West 15 E/ec Co 33
; oo-News 3 4 B 10 13 15 ABC News

12 GO-Jackpot 3 15 Password All Stars 6 13 Bob Braun s 50 50
Club 4 News 8 10 ,
12 3G-Biank Check 3 Spilt Secondo 13 Search for Tomorrow
8 10 To Be Announced 33
12 A.S--E iec Co 33
12 55-NBC News 3 15
1 GO-News 3 All My Ch oldren 6 13 Phol Donahue 8 Not For
Women Only 15 Young &amp; the Restless 10
1 30-HowToSurvveaMarroage3415 $10000Pyram od613
Guiding Light 8 10
2 30-Doctors 3 4 15
B g Showdown 6 13 Edge of N ght 8 10
3 GO-Another World 3 4 15 General Hospotal 6 13 Pr ce s
Roght 8 10 Ascent of Man 20
3 30-Cne Lofe to Lovell Lucy Show 6 Match Game 8 10

EXCAVATING dozer loader
and backhoe work
sept c
tanks nstalled dump trucks
and le boys for hire w II haul
f1!1 dirt top sot I limestone &amp;
gravel
Call Bob er Roger
Jeffer s da y phone 992 7089
n ght phene 992 3525 or 99 2

Kaleidoscope

6 N ow Y ou See It

13

CREMEANS CONCRETE de
11ver ed Monday through
Saturday
and
evening s
Phone 446 1142
6 lJ tfc

77:1-5592

10 Mov oe

8 10
11 •30-Ho/lywood Squares 3 4 15 Brady Bunch 6 Love of L fe
8 10 Sesame St 33
11 55- Taker Kerr with Graham B Dan !mel s World 10 News

--- - --------- I

Easy Terms!
Free Delivery!

8

13

LETI'ER FROM A FAT MAN

10 3G-Wheel of Fortune 3 15 Phtl Donahue 4 Gamb 18 10

--~--~--

•

New Zoo Revu e 13

10 oo-Ce/ebrlly Sweepstakes 3 15 Joker s Wold
Somebodv Lo..,.es Me

tr m or cut t rees tlr
shrubbery
clean
out
basements att cs etc 949.
3221 or 742 4441
12 15 26tc

---- -------For Rent

Btble Answers B

6 35--Columbus Today 4 Morn ng Report 3 Filrmt me 10

'-lviLL

----

News 6

7 GO-Today 3 415 AM Amer ca 613 CBS News B 10

DOZER work !and c learmg by
the acre hourly or contract
Farm ponds
ro.ads
etc
Large dozer and operator
w1th over 20 years ex
per ence Pulltns Excavat ng
Pomerey Oh o Phone 992
2478
12 19 tfc

---

News 13

Public Allaors 10 Blue Rodge Quartet 13

Complete Serv ce
Phone 949 3821 er 949 3161
Racne Oho
Crttt Bradford
5 1 tfc

Help Wanted

34

6 ~o-F ve M inutes to L ve 8)1 41

---- -----HOme
Malnft

frontage on water line N1ce
si te for houses or small farms
SH M.1 nn

FUEL OIL
HEATERS

oo- Tomorrow

6 oo-Sunrose Seminar 4 6 25-Farm Report 13

READY MIX CONCREf~
I vered nght to you r proJeCt
Fast
and
easy
Free
es ttmate s Phone 992 3284
Goeg l em Ready MIX Co
Mtddteport Oh io
6 30 tfc

~

B Mev e

FRIDAY JANUARY 17 1975

dozer
backhoe
and
d tcher
waterl i ne footers drams
road s and brush clean ng no
tob too small no weather too
bad Charles R Hatf eld Rt I
Rutland 0
Phone 742 6092
1 7 26tc

ELECTROLUX Sweeper l ~.;. e
model
Complete w th all
clean no anachments and NEAR STORES- 3 bedrooms
I.JSes paper bags Sllghtlo; used
but c leans and tooks 1 ke new w1th closets bath nat gas
W II set I for S37 25 cash or FA furnace porche s wall to
terms ava1 labte Phone 992 wall carpeting good paneling

7755

1

heatmg serv1ce and
general sheet metal
works
Free
Est1mates
Phone 949 5961
' Emergency 992 3995
or 99l 5700

3891

How To Murder Your W fe

Mov1e

6
Ou r Very

Own 10 Janako ~3
12 30-Wode World Specoal 6

EAI..A~ ..... TING

STEREO RADIO 8 track tape
combmat on
am fm rad o
Balance SI Ol 40er terms Call
992 3965
1 15 tfc

-1956- F ORD
--------- 850 ser es fa rm

HEU.
RACINE PWMBING
&amp;HEATING
Complete plumbmg &amp;

EXCELSIOR Salt Works East
Mam s t Pom erey AI! kinds
of salt water pellets water
nuggets block salt and own
Ohto R ver Salt Phone 992

the Sun Shines Nellie
Pathfinder 33
OG-Mov/n On 3 4 15 Harry 0 6 13 Woman 33
JG-Caught inthe Act 33
GO-News 3 4 6 8101315 20 ABC News 33
30-Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Wode World Spec al 13 FB I

10
10
11
11

2 BR bath noce kitchen &amp;

--------

1'11 66
..
Pr1ced for Quick Sale
water Me ter Readers &amp;
barr el rebutlt n!w gaskets
~epa rn en S3 37 per hl)ur ( 1 2
t m ng cha n p st ons rmgs
1 New Wood Burmng
t mes over 40 ho urs ) S4 88 per
S150 New c lutch plate throw
hour
out barr ng s S2S 3 speed
HEATER-139 95
App rent ce Water Dept or
transni ss on S25 Call 99 2
San tarv Se w er S3 OS per hour
I
&gt;OMEROY LANDMARK
31 08 !fter S p m
Wate r D epartmen t Extra
l9•
~
Juk W Carsey Mgr
1 10 61C
help ~2 85 per hour
(...
Phont 992 2181
Meehan c 13 16 per hour
•
Cusl od an $38 SO per month
Cemeterv SelCtOn 574 10 p er
mon th
1957 CHEVY parts
NEW
FU EL , TRUCK dnver wanted
Relief D spatch er $2 45 per
Lakewo od trattlon bars hi
must
nave
ex
per
ence
dr
v
ng
hour
1a cke r a r shocks
hooker
truck Mall rep/ es to Box
All extra ho\Jrs for hourly
headers w th 3 collecto r s for
729E co The Da11y Sent mel
employees w 1 be at the hourly
small b lo ck
Call 992 3496
Pomeroy Ohio
rate
after 6 p m BEST OFFER
1 16 Me
Sec
I
That secretar at
10 11 tfc
cler ca l and or bookkeep ng
WAITRESSES
needed
apply
10
record Keep ng hfJUr y em
person Crews Steak House
CLOSE OUT on new Zig Zag
p l oyees be em plo ye d at a
Pomeroy
sew ng mach nes For sewing
max mum of JS hOurs per week
stretch fabrics buHonhol es
1 7 lfc
except for an emerg en cv that
fancy destgn s etc Pai nt
sha l ar se sad emergency of
sl gh tly bltm shed Cho ce of
eKtf'a nours to be approv ed by
carry ng case or sewing
Counc I
stand S49 80 cash or terms
Sec II
The following are
ava table Phone 992 7155
hereby dectllred as leg al 5 ROOM un fur n slled house
basement and yard
325
12 18 tfc
hoi days for the emp lovees ot
Sprmg Avenue References
the VII ag e of Middleport New
Ph one 992 7660
Years Day
Memor a t Da y
1 8 tfc
Independence Day Labor Oa y
ThanKsg v no Day Chr stmas
~
Day
plumb, ng
4 RM o~~pt furn shed ut l1t es REMODEL I NG
hut ng and all types of
Sec IV That satd salartes
pad one ch ld a cce pted John
general
repa i r
Work
w It be n effect Jan uar y 1 1975
Sheets
3 mites south of
guaranteed 20 years e x
M ddLeport
Sec. II Each full t me em
perience Phone 992 2409
ployee of the Yll aoe shall be
1 14 6tp
1 3 12tc
ent fled to s ck leave n the
amount of one and one fourth COUNTRY Mob1le Home Par k
(1 ~ l days pf:r month and shall
R T 33 ten m les north of
be en t t ied ta accr ue sad s ck
Pomeroy
Large tots w1th
leave up ta one nunelred twent y
conc re1e pat1os s dewalks
( 120 1 days
runn ers
and
off
street 3 BEDROOM hou,_e SSOO down
$90 month Phone 992 3975 or
Sec VI Each full time em
park ng Ph(;nt 992 1479
992 2571
ployee of the \o 1J1ag e mcludmg
12 31 tfc
1 3 ttc
full t m-e hourly rate employees
shall be entitled during each FURNISH EO apt
10 M d
ye ar after the f~rst year to two
dleport uttl 1 es pa id Phone
HOUSE SS 000 Phone 992 5871
WIEeks vacatton excluding legal
992 3205 before 7 n evenmg
I 12 lBtc
hohdavs Wtlh pay Employees
1 15 3tc
wath f fteen or more years
serv •ce sh alt be enhtl~ to three 3 ROOMS and bath tu r;:;-ished NEW HOMES No Monev Down
Payments accord i ng to
weeks v acalton w th pay each
n ce and clean Phone 997
ncome on Farmers Home
vear
2937
Adm 1n1strat•on loan Con
Sec vI t All Ordman ces n
venttonat f inancing also
I 12 6t~
cenft1ct wtth ttus Ordnance are
ava lable w1th m ntmum
hereby repealed
down L ov!IY homes In three
Sec
VI I I This Ordn ance 3 and 4 ROOM furn shed and
locations m Meigs County
unfurn shed
apartml'nts
shall take effect and be in force
Some tlomes w th wooded
Phent 992 504
from and after Jan uary 1 1975
lots
Call for more m
4 12 tfc
Passed the 13th day of
format ton 992 5976
Janu ary 1975
1 15 '26tc
PRIVATE mett,tmg room for
any organ1zaflon phone 99 2
Attest Gent Grate
3975
Clerk
1 ROOM house bath and 13
3 11 tfc
exceH~nt neighborhood wall
M L Ke lly
to wall carpet ng large lot
Pres dent of Counctl FURNISHED a·p t Adults only
garag_e rtuonable ufll1t es
M 1ddltport Phone 992 387.t
Call 9&lt;02 3877
11 141 lfc
J an 16 23
1 9 lfc

-----

I

level acre ranch type home

1970 - Z 28 CAMARO and 2
horse tra ler Phone 992 7338
l 12 6tc

--

Streets of Sa n Franc sea 6 13 Move
Secref of fhe Incas 8 Mov le Ugetsu
M ov te Wiltt t I

paneled tiled porches NG
heat

6

9 ()()-Ironside 3 4 15

SEWING MACHINE R.epatrS
servi ce all makes 992 2284
The Fabr c Shop Pomeroy
A uthonzed s nger Sales and
Se rv ce We sharpen Sc1ssors
3 29 ttc

adults

1 H OUSE unfurn Shed 7 rooms
and bath n ce Phone 992 2780
or 992 3432
1 9 tfc

Cantng

Ptck up Serv1ce Available

12 31 26tp

1 9 ttc

Amos

Burmshoing

Upholstering
We Also Buy Antiques

FUR N TURE Upholster ng
Reasonable
rat es
free
est mates
p1 cku p
and
de ve ry prompt serv ce
Mowrey s Upholstery Pont
P easant w va Ph one 6J!'5

2 BEDROOM modern fu rn1shed
ap t no pets Phone Robert
H I R a c ne 949 3811
I 0 6tp

8tc

--------------INCOME Ta x Prepared both

1 15 4tC

F URNI S HED
apartment
ut llt1es furn shed
su table
for two work ng men or
r etired couple L v ng room
K1tchen Shower and ba t h On
men h ghway Mason W Va
Phun e 773 5147
10 27 tfc

ng
215 2 BEDR OOM tra ler
At
on lv Phone 992 33 24

HUMANE Society Thnft Shop
ac ro ss from Pom eroy Post
Ort ce Clearan ce on w nter
c l oth ng
handmade fur
nllure
open
Frtday
Saturda y
l 14 4tc

1 1s 4tc

Pomeroy Oh1a

e1c

$1695

T P ckup 8 wrde body V 8 engine automatic trans &amp;
power steering radio sport custom cab good tires green
&amp; white fin ish

I00 Kerr SlrMI

a house

shelf to

By Helen and Sue BoHel

Elec Co 20 Teaching
Children with Special Needs 33
•
6 30-NBC News 3 4 15 ABC News 13 Bewotched 6 CBS News
8 10 Zoom 20 What Now Amer ca &gt; 33
7 oo-Truth or Cons 34 Bowling for Dollars 6 What s My L ne
8 News 10 Lets Make a Dea l 13 To Be Announ ced 15 Two
Way Street 20 Nova 33
7 30-Ho/lywood Squares 3 4 Fred Taylor Ba s~etball 6 New
Price Is Right 8 Consumer Survival K I 20 W ld K ngdom 10
To Te/lthe Truth 13 Get Smart 15
• oo-Mac Davis 3 4 15 Yankee Doodle Crlckel 6 13 The
Waltons 8 10 lnlernatlonal Report 20 33
~ 30-Cldd Couple 6 13

Modem Qlemicals

Pa1ntmg s1d1ng roohng
paper hanging
k•tchen
cab1nets expert carpeting

Phone 9,92 3993
Datly After 5 00

engine sol d cab rad o

1970 FORD

4 GO-News 3 4 8 10 13 15 ABC Nw s

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCTION
PHONE

Larry Lavender

Generation Rap

THURSDAY JANUARY 16 1975

Fire Retardant
Insulation

truck

'~'•

Television Log

t~nd to be &amp; b 1 tpo possess ve
today You re nothkely to take
polite measures to Cove your
feet ngs

WELL I VE eEEN FALUN6
MLEEP IN ClASS ! GIIES5
AAD M~ TEACHE~ 5 KIND
OF LJI'SET ABOVT IT

�10 - The Daily Senllnei,M•ddleport Pomeroy 0 Thursda\ J "' 16 1975

For Fast Results Use Senti11:el Classifieds/
BOARD OF
MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS

Se rv ces.
44 616 00
Secu r tv of Person s
And Proper tv
Pol ce D epartm ent
Not•ce
to
Mo o r
Veh c ~
Person.l l Serv ce s
28 500 00
Dealers
O ther
9 509 00
To ta For Po ce
In accorda nce w t h Sec l07 86
A RESO L U T ON
o maKe
of the Oh o Rev sed Code
Department
38 009 00
app r opr a on!&gt; lo
Cu r enl
sealed b ds w
be r ece \led by
F re D ep ar tm ent
Expenses
and
other
Ex
Tile
Me gs
County
Com
558 00
pend ures of !h e v lage o f Per sona Se r v ces
m ss oners n the r oil ce n t he
Other
3 69' oo
M
ctd
c
por
t
SH'I1e
o
f
Oh
o
Court House Po ne ov Oh o
d
ng the I sea year e d ng To!a For F r e
45769
until 10 00 AM
on
4 750 00
D eparlment
Decembe r .11 19 75
January 78th 1975 at wh ch
For Sec ur y of
Sec on 1 BE T RE SO LVE D Tota
Per sons and Property
I me and pla ce he l:l dS w t be
by th e Counc tor th e V r ag e ot
he
opened and ead aloud fo
42 259 00
M dd epo 1 St ate o f Oh o Tha t
follow ng veh c l es
L es ure lf1 m e Act1v 1 es
to
p
ov
d
e
fo
h
e
cur
ren
CK
B ds must b e SIJbm lfed n wo
Park s and Pla)lgrounds
penses and o ner e)( p end turc s Per sona
proposals
each proposa
1o
Serv ces
4 400 00
o he sad v t age o f M dd epo t
meet t he cond to s a d dur
Oher
360000
g r e I H a yea end ng To a For Parks and
spec t ca nn s as l o tows
Decemb er
31
975
ne
s
.a 000 00
to ow n Q sums be and t hey are ToPlayground
Proposal No I
a l For Le sure T me
hereby se t as de and ap
On 19 75 M ode dump !ruck
A c v t es
a ooo oo
p ropr a l ed a s fol ow s v 1
w th dump bod y 108 X 30 her.d
Commun1ly Env ronment
and ta gate w t h cen er door
PI ann ng Co mm1 ss 1on
Sect on ') That t he r e be ap
gate
300 00
p r op :1 ed from th e G ENERAL Persona l Serv ces
Hel!vy duty 8
ho s w ll
Oth er
200 00
FU ND
To al Fo r Plenn ng
P T 0 &amp; l ev ers
General Governmental
~
cab p o ec o
w
7
Comm ss o
500 00
Serv ces
w ngs
To ta For Commun ty
Mavor
Cab gilt s &lt;l cu r e I g s &amp; 6
Env ron men!
500 00
Persona Se v ce s
~ 1 50 0 00
reflectors
Street L1ghf1ng
Ohe
~50000
Mud f aps
2 500 00
Tot a For Ma yur
6 000 00 Oth er
Tota Fo r S! reer
Wheel base 72 cli'b ro ~x eo
Cl erk Treasurer
su tllble for bod y
L ght g
2 500 00
Persona Se v ces
1 500 00
:1 4 000 lbs G V W o hea,. er
Othe
2 500 oo Tota For Transpona on
7 000 bs
Bean front li' K e
F ac t t es
2 500 00
Totnr for C er k Tr easu rer
8 500 bs 2 spe ed r ee~ il)( e
Sect on 3 That nere be ap
4 000 00
5 speed sy chron esh t an s
propr aled from he GENERAL
Sol c tor L ega l Advtsor
m ss on d r ec t n I f l h
or
Persona Se rv ces
500 00 F UND for coni ngenc es
34 0 cu n V 8 aas enq ne or
purposes
not
otherw se
To n Fo Sol c l or
lar ger
prov d ed for to be eKpended n
ega A rj v so r
~00 00
4 000 bs m n nun fr on t
accordance w fh he prov sons
COUtlC!I
spr n g capac y
P e sana Se rv ccs
576 00 of Sec t on 5705 40 R c he sum
11 000 tb s
m n nun rear
o il F or Cou nc 1
5 6 00 of s 1 500 00
spr ng c apa c y
Grand Tot al Genera Fund
Bu d ng~ &amp; M sc
AuK I a y r e a sp r qs
App r opr at on
99 375 00
o r er
33 5 1000
Combna on reil
B.
ront
Sec t on 4 Tl1at !h ere be ap
lola F or Bu d nQ s &amp;
d reel on a s g na r qhts
Msc
33 54000 propr a ed from tile STREET
Traft c hazard sw rc r
CONSTRUC TION
MA IN
To il
For Gene al Govf'rn
D~a e ec tr c hurn s
TE NANC E
A ND
REPA R
n t:n l ll
Heater B. defroster
F UND (AlJJtO L CENSE A ND
2 speed w ndsh e d w pe s &amp;
G ASO L NE TAXI
washer s
Stre et M a in tenance
Power Steer ng
Per sona Serv ces
12 86 5 8&lt;1
900 X 20 10 pty s1ee 1 be ted
Oth er
18 13&lt;1 16
r ad a
front t r es h ghway
Tota for Str ee Ma ntena n ce
POMEROY
tread 7 r m s
Fund
31 000 00
BOWLING LANES
900 x 0 I 0 p y s ee l bel ed
To t al For Stree t
TUESDAY
TRIPLICATE
rll dlll l r ear t res on &amp; ort tr ead
Const ru c t on
Ma n t enance
Jan 7 1975
7 r ms
and Repa r Fund
3 000 00
Ste~nd ng s
One add I anal 7 r m
Sect on 6 That the r e be ap
Team
Cas t spoke whee s
propr ated
from
the
Fr endly laver l
14 1 CEMETERY FU ND
Heavy dutv clutch
Royal Crown Botti ng
8 ll
Heav y duty brake boosler
Publtc H ealth Sar v 1ces
NY C o h ng House
8 8
Wtlh 7 r ea r bra kes
Ceme t ery Opera! on
K ng BU ld Supply
8 8
Heavy duty bumper 8. front
And Ma ntenanc e
Turner s Grocery
6 10 Personal Se rvIces
two hooks
B 371 04
Roya Oak Pork
4 2 Other
L H &amp; R H Sr w es l cos
'328 96
H gh
nd
Game
Pa
m1rrors
Tota l For Cemeter)l
Carson 194 Dot R f e sabelle
70 amp banery
Oper at en and
Couch and Betty Srn h 168
Ma ntenance
SO amp or arger alte ator
10 700 00
H gh Ser es
Pat Carson
Ca b g r l!lb hand es L &amp; R
Tota l Fo r Cemetery
488 sa be le Couch 479
Full depth foam sca t
Fund
10 700 00
Tea Y H gh G&lt;1n e
Tu r
Hea vy duty f aclorv
e '
Sec t on 9 That th er e be ap
ner
s
Groc
ery
4Ri.l
for ced frame
propna ted from the WATER
Team H gh Ser ies
Royal
Co lor Omaha Orange
f RI:VENUEJ FUND
Cr own Bo ll ng 135 3
Proposal No 2
Adm l nisfratton- Waler
Same as preposa l No 1
Persona l Serv ces
19 490 00
Wednesday Early B rd
Debt Se r v ce
36 570 00
Jitn
8
19
7.5
Bidder te f urn sh the r own
Other
29 740 00
Stanelmg s
biCI for ms Md submit b d s tor
Tota For Admm stra t lon
T
eam
each p roposal as number ed
- Wa t er
85 800 00
4 To tal For Water
The front o l til e cnve ope Depe dable Con tr aCI ng 17
1
5
enclosing the b ds mu st be Roush s Land ng
(Revenue) Fund
85 800 00
Ebersbach Hardware
10
6
marked TrucKs
Sect on 10 Th at th er e b e
Ben
To
1
Corp
7
9
The County Com m ss o 1er s
app r opr at ed from th e SEWE R
6 10
mey ac ept th e lowe;;t bid or Francs Flor sts
REVE NUE) F UND
Eve yn s Groc
2 14
select lh e best btd for the n
Adm niStrat•on- Sewage
H g h l nd Game
Betty
tend&amp;d purpos e and reserve 11 e
Persona Ser .. ces
16 074 00
rlg htte reje c t rtny or a b ds or Wh !lat ch 187 Belfy Wh t a c t
Deb t Serv ce
74 360 00
any part thereof
Otner
566 00
H tgn
Seres
Betty
To a t For Adm n si r at on
Wh t et ch 534 Mary Voss 511
Me 9s Co
- Sewage
63 000 00
Team
H gh
Game
Total For Sewe r
Cornm ss oners
Dcpendab e Contract g 828
( Revenue Fund
6300000
Team
H gh
Se r ies
Marth.:~ Cha
ber s
Sec ! on 17 Th at there be
Dependabl
e
Contract
ng
1434
Clerk
appropr atcd
f rom
the
(1) 9 16 :itc
POLICEMA N S REL EF AND
PENS O N FU ND
O! her
1 06 1 00
ta For Po Iceman s
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
with Ma1ar Hoopl• ToRei
ef and Pens on
Fun d
1061 00
Sec t on 1.1 That there be
appropr a t ed
f rom
he
GENERAL
BO N D
RET REME N T FU N D
Paymen t of Pr nc pa
8 000 00
Paym ent of Int erest
2
oo
0 her
450 00
To al For General Bond
Ret r('menr Fund
11 015 00
! PRESUME THAT YOU Ll INSIST ON
Sec t on 15 That th ere b e
ARNOlD STAYING AS OUR GUEST FOR
appropr ated fr om th e METER
!&gt;-FEW DA~5 1
DEPOS I T FUND

Local Bowling

n

"'

sas

0 Mer
2 500 00
Tota F or Meter
D epos t Fund
'1;'500 00
Sect on 16 Thilt there be
appropr ated
from
the
FEDE R AL
REVENUE
SHA R
NG
FU ND
Otner
8 000 00
Total For Federa
Revenue Shar ng
8 000 00
Total All
Appropr at ons
312 451 00

Professor's plan
rejected
RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI {UP! /- Plcs1
dent Ford d1dn t mentiOn
banmn g credit ca rd s tn h1s
economic plan and that angers
eeooomiSt Dr Joseph Lmk
Unk says he be he' es a one
B}

day a week mora IOttum on
usmg credit cards IS the on!\
real practiCal wa) of tighten
mg up U.e economy
Unk, 59 a 3().) ear 'eteran

econorrucs professor at Xcn ter
Unrversii) had \Hillen It Ford
about hiS plan
The Pres1den1 " rote Line
thanked hun for the Idea and
said he had subnutled the
suggestion to his economic
adVISers
But of course Link \\asn t
surpnsed when Ford dul.n t !&lt;Ilk
about the plan m a Presidential
address to U.e nation about
econonucs Monda) mght
You won t get good econom
1cs from a politician
com
plained Unk The\ re mamh
concerned ab&lt;lut bemg re
elected
I don't think Washington can
do much about tightemng up
the economy It takes 210
millfon Americans shoulder toshoulder to do It
'I m a practical \\Ork-a-&lt;lay
world type of eeonoJillst says
the teacher who also IS
pre$1dent or a hotel a lumber
company and an apartment
complex Believe me, what
thiS coun lry needs now Is to
slow dOWII this credit card

craze
Too many Amertcans a1 e
buymg thmgs Ule) don t need
and can t afford The) have
beer budgets but sti ll have
champagne appetites E\Cr)
bod\ \\antsa se\\ers)stem but
nobodv " ants to dig ditches
If we could designate one
day a " eek that credit cards
\\ Ould be outlawed - use cash
or don t buy J! - tl \\ Otild be
extreme!) healUiy for the
conn lr)
Lmk blames much of t he
coun Iry s eeonom1c problems
on advcrt1smg and certam
trend mdustr1es hke automo
biles and fashiOn
There 1sn t enough buyer
resistance to the pressure ot
advert1smg People are con
stantly bemg shown all new
products-gadgets that aren t
an) more needed Ulan \he man

m the moon

Sec tton l7 And th e V1 ! age
Cl erk s hereby author zed to
draw h s warrants on the
V Iage Treasurer for pa yments
from any of th e forego n9 ap
propr a ons upon r ece v ng
proper
ce rt ft cates
and
vou c hers tllerefor approved by
the board or off cen. au t hor zed
by law to approve the same or
an ordina n ce or resotul on of
counc I to make the epKen
d tures
prov ded that no
wa r rants sha l be drawn or pad
for sa l ar es or Wllges except to
persons employed bv authorltv
of and n accordance w th l aw or
ordnance Prov ded furlher
tha the appropr at ens f orc on ngenc es can on l y be eK
pended upon appeal of two
h~rds vote of Counc 1 tor t erns
ot ex.pense cons! tut ng a -ega!
ob gat on aga nst th e v 1 age
and for purposes other than
hose covered by
t e other
spec I c appropr at ons here n
made
Sect on 18
Th s resolut on
sl'1at rake effect at the ea t est
per od al owed by aw
Passed January 13
Attest

975

Gene Grate
ClerK of Counc 1
M l Ke ly
Pres dent of Counc

CERTIFICATE
Sec! on 5705 39 R c
No
appropr at on measure shal
become effect ve unt there s
f ed w th the appropr at ng
author tv bv the countv aud tor
A cert f cate that tile total ap
propr at ons from each funcl
taken logether \Yifl'1 al l other
outs t and ng appropr at ons do
not
exceetl
such
off ctal
est mate o amended off clal
es.t mate
When
the
ap
propr at on does not exceed
such off c al estimate
the
county aud tor shall g ve suth
ce rt1f cate forthwith
upon
rece v ng
f rom
the
ap
prop nat ng author lv a cer l fed
c opy of the appropr at on
mea sure

As for cars U.ere should be
a law agamst U.e annual model
change Engmeers don t e\en
The State of Oh o
Me gs
know "hat to put on ne" Coun fy ss
models
I Gene Grate Clerk of the
Wh) should U.ere ~ eight vI age ef M ddteport n sad
or 10 taillights on a ne" car ' Coun"ty .an\1 10 whose custody
the Ftles Journals and Recerds
No "onder there are so many are requ.red br the laws of the
auto worker la)Olfs
The State of Oh o to be kept do
hereby
cerltfy
that
the
mdustr) has O&gt; er exerted Itself forego ng Annual Appropr at ton
The same thmg goes for Resoi1.Jt1on tS taken and cop i es
from the or1g nal Resolutton
new fashion st)les ever) ) ear now on ftle w th sad V11lage
thar the foregotrrg Resolution
They are not needed
has been comp ared b Y me Wtth
Interest rates on these the sad ongmal and that lhe
credit card purchases Is 18 per same IS a true and correct:st;opy
thereo f
cen1
pomts out Lm k
w tness my Stgnature thiS
They re h•lpmg keep people m 13'h day of January 1975
debt They say JUSt Juy 1t on
Gene Grate
Clerk of the Villageet
layaway Yeah you re gomg to
Middleport Oh o
be lard away m the grave
Me1gs County Ott o
J an 16
before It s paid off

'

•

'

'---~

RESOLUTIO N NO 1018 7S
ANNUAL
APPROPR IAT IO N
RESOL UTION
(V Il lAGE)

2 SIGNS
Pomeroy
OF
QUALITY Motor Co.
1971 CHEVROLET

U495

2 Ton cab &amp; c hass1s 102

II- The Daily Sentinel Middleport-Pomeroy 0 Thursday Jan 16 197'f'!&lt;5-~\~-~~---~-~i881Ji881J!IIli8!!MI!illl!ll&gt;l

J)

cab to a xle 350 V 8 engine

IS 000 lb 2 speed rear oxle good 825x20 t res good solid

Business 'Services
'

1972 CHEVROLET
Ton 8 Fleelslde H duty IS

tlres 4 speed

$2250
trans V 8

Blown Into Walls
and Athcs
Free Est1mates

949 3832 or 843 2667

Phone 16141 m 2798

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING

STRIPPING FINISHES
FURNITURE METALS-ETC
MODERN&amp; ANTIQUE
Refinishing
Repairing

From a

11

For Rent
2 or 3 BEDROOM home l m1le
fr om Pomeroy on 0 d 33 Call
992 7571
1 16 6tc

Not1ce

TRAILER spa ce 2m les fro m
Pomeroy Rt 143 Phone 99 2
5858
10 21 lfc

NotiCe

CO N S G N ME NT S we l come at
P&amp;J Auc r on
11 5 North
Second M ddteport
1 9 30tc

SHOOTING MATCH
Co rn
H olfow Gun Club rurn f r sl
r gh t after M es Cemeterv
Ru! and
Fac t ory c h-eked
guns only Su nday January
19 1 p m
1 16 3tc

GU N Shoot Sa turd av Jan 18 1
p m M e H t Rd Assorted
nea s fa ctory choked guns
on l y Sponsored by Ra e ne
F re Dept
AUL TION
Th u r sday
and
I 53 C
Saturday n gh t 7 p m at
Mason Aucf on Hor t on St n
FOR your
0 11 of M nk
Mason W Va Cons gnments
Cosme ! cs Phone BROWN S
welcome Ph on e (304) 773
9915113
5471
1 7 tfc
10 3 tfc
SHOO T N G match Ra e ne Gun
Club Sunday 1 p m Assorted
m eats and fa cto ry choke ouns
only
1222tfc

A UCTION
SA LE
s ta rt
Fr day Jan 17 a t 7 p m
N
Second
M dd l epo rt
P&amp;J Odds and Ends
19

SH OO fiNO Match Rae ne Gun
Club Su nda y January 19 l
pm

NOVEL TY Fabr c and Crafts
recentlv p ur cha sed a la rge
nven to ry o f craft supp l es
save so p et to 60 p et on all
craft c oseouts toda y Novelty
F abrlcs and Cra fts Belpre

Oh o

Fede ral and State Taxes will
be done by appo nfm ents
only Please phone 992 227 2 or
see Mr s Wanda Eb l tn Laurel
Cl ff Rd Pomero y Oh 10
1 3 30tc

SEWING AND
CRAFT CLASSES

Wanted To Buy
WANTED old upri ght ptanos
any cond t1on
Pav ing SlO
ca sh F rst IIO?f only Wr te
anel gt ve d re c t ons to Wttten
P ano Co
Bo x la8 SardtS
Oh o 43946
1 15 6tp

Thursday Evenmgs
At7 00 PM

NOVELTY FABRIC
&amp;CRAFTS
Belpre, 01!10

----------

ORDINANCE NO

1017

----

OLD furn1t ure ce boxes brass
beds or complete households
Wr te M D M Iter R t 4
Pomerov Oh1o Cal! 992 7760
10 7 74

Ph 423 5061
74

JUNK autos
com plete and
del v er ed to our yard We pick
An Ord nan ce to establ Sh
up auto bod1es and buy ell
V llag e lobs and wage rate s
and estab tSh ng l egal hoi days
k nds of scrap metals and
vacat ons and s ck eave
ron R der s Sa lvage Sf Rt
124 Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh o
Ca ll 992 5468
Be t ordam ed by the CounCI
of the V !I age of M dd eport as
10 17 tiC
follows
Sec
That the fo towmg CASH paid for all makes and
wage sea e s hereby adopted
medets o f mobile homes
Phone area code 614 423 95 31
for emp oyees of the V l a9e of
M dd lepor t
4 13 tfc
Ch et of Pol ce $664 40 per
mon th
Regu l ar Patrolman S2 95 per
hour
Regu la r Patr ol man a fter
Pol ce Schoo l ng $3 00 per hour
Extra Po ! tee S2 95 per hour
Su perv so r
of
v llage
Ma ntenance $763 71 per menth
St r ee t Employees (40 hour
week) S2
per hour
Po o l and Park D re cto r
S404 25 per month
L feg uards S 35 per hour
Secr etary to Mayor S28 S 10
per month
Extra Cter cal He p S2 70 per
hour
Clerk
Ceme tery Tru st ees
S81 82 per month
Vo unteer F1remen Sl2 00 per
yea r
Coun c lman (not to exceed 24
meet ngs) S4 00 per m eel ng
Board of Pub I c Afla rs (not
to exceed 12 meet ng sl $4 00
per m ee t ng
c erk Board et Publ c Af
fa.rs $450 SO per month
Beg nnmg apprent ce Clerk
Board of Publ c Affatrs S2 00
per nour
E xt ra Cl er cal HeiR ( Board of
Pub c Affa1rs 1 $2 45 per hour
D spa t che r SS5 00 per month
ClerK of Water D epartm ent
S2 70 p er hour

as

Auto Sales
1972 SUPER Beet e Vo l ks
wagen Phone 992 3981
l 8 lOtc
1968 CHEVROLET Coronet 6
cyl 3 speed 4 dr runs good
II.JSt needs w ndsh1etd Phone
985 3861
1 16 6tp

-

--------

--

-

1973 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass S
p s
p b
and factory a~r
25 500 m les
Call 992 3914
after 5 p m
1 14 6tp

J9 69 C H EvROLETI; pa~ 4dr
sedan

---

Call 992 7240

----.-----

1 14 )tp

RARE
1968
Plymouth
Barra cu da fa.stba ck factory
a c and fact 4 speed P 0 B
P S sma I v 8 Contact 992

7605

I 12 6tp

--------COMET
19 000 m les
-

1973
ai.Jtomat c t ra nsm ss on ltke
new Call any f me 667 3442
1 12tp

- -

s

----------~
FORO 352 V 8 engt c

2 BEDROOM tr a t!er Phone 99 2
397S or 992 2571
1 3 tf c

' 54

-iOME
I mpr ovem ent
and
Repa r Serv1 ce Anyth ng
t xed ar ound the home from
roof lo basement You w H
1 k e our wor K and rates
Phon e 742 5081
12 29 He

Real Estate For Sale
BUILDING IOI 80 It frontage
by 165ft The second Iotan left
on li! v er v ew Dr ve Lmcoln
H 1 Pom eroy Oh o If n
ter es ted ca 1992 3230 atrer 5 p
m
10 17 tf c

608 E
MAIN

.PO~IlO~O

For Sale

RUTLAND - 1 story frame
5 rooms &amp; bath I ving R has

GROCERY bus ne ss for sa le
Bu ld ng for sa le or lease
Phone 173 5618 from 8 30 p m
to 10 p m for appo ntment
3 10 tf c

ftre pla ce
renovated

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

JER SEY Guernsey m lk cow to
fr eshen soon Also Hereford
mnced ca lves 3 weeks old
Phone 84 )..2353
1 12 Stc
EAR CORN for sale by bushel
for S3 25 Phone 1 (614 J 367
74 81 or 388 9991
l 16 71C

------ - -----OVATION 12 strm g acousttc

guitar w th hardshe ll case
N ew cos t S500 will sell for
S325 G1b son Les Paul Deluxe
electr c gu tar w th hard she ll
case New cost S530 w111 sel l
for S325 Call 949 5913 Steve
C e and Ra c tne Oh e 4577 1
1 16 6tc

------------CO RN for sa l e $3 25 bu l E

Phone H6 14 )985 4127
1 16 3tp

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

19 71 F M C As t ro w th wet I ne
1974 Ira I mob le flat tra ler
Phone (3 0"') 882 2829
1 17 6t c

recently
carpeted

gilrage

51x125

lot

JUST $9 500 00
FAIRVIEW HTS - Lovely
br ck &amp; tram~ 4 bedrooms 2
baths lovely kotchen &amp;
dtn ng

utiltty R
about 1
acre n ce workshop ln the
rear $26 000

TUPPERS PLAINS -

-

d nlng har.dwood floors
basement wtth forced atr

heal utility R A REAL
BARGAIN $13 500
PORTLAND - 4 nice level
lots (good ground) close to
nver good dr lied well and
water system good co ncrete

block garage storage bldg
large house 4 BR ONLY
$4 700
ALL CASH FOR YOUR
HOME LET US SELL FOR
YOU
992 2259 or 992 2568

t ra c tor w th live hydraul c
and 3 pont h tch One owner
2 039 hOurs AJso almost new 3
pt h1fch Ford mower Wtth 6
ft cutter bar Contact Marvm
Keebaugh
Days 992 5342
Even lngs 985 3913
1 15 6tc

12 18 tfc

- ------------- SIEGLER and
MONOGRAM

~~~~t~~~:;i;3

breeze a y
ag
an acre Sl8 500 00

ost

CLOSE IN -

6 room frame
home bath electric heat
garage and level lot

and large foyer $17 500 00

LOOK AT THIS -49 acres 1ust
off 124 Water tap and lots of

DO YOU HAVE A NICE
LARGE OLDER HOME THAT
YOU WANT TO SELL
We Need A Bunch of Small

------------Empklyment Wanted

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

Real Estate For Sile

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

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

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

.

8 QO-Capt Kangaroo B Lass e 6 Popeye 10 Sesam e St 33

8 25-Capt Kangaroo 10
8 30-Bog Valley 6
9 oo-A M 3 To Be Announced 4 Ph ol Donahue 15 Bullw nkle
8 #&lt;&gt;rnlng with D J 13
9 2~huck While Reports 10
9 3()-Not For Women Only 3 Dmah 6 Ha zel 8 Tattletales 10

'

Arthur Smrth 12

11 QO-Htgh Rollers 3 15

One Ltfe to L ve

4 oo-Mr

Cartoon 3

I Dream ot Jeann e 4

Bonanza 15

5 GO-FBI 3 Merv Griffin A Andy Grofflth 8 Mi'ster Rogers
Neighborhood 20 33 Raymond Burr 13
5 30-News 6 Beverly Ho/lb /1/ies 8 Hodgepodge Lodge 20

2 11 tfc

k,

WIN AT BRIDGE

Here's our expert's expert

r:c-

Dear Mike
Congratulations on your reapportionment I And may I add
To rea ders
I have one sure-cure formula for losmg weight Learn to
enJOY hunger pangs m U.e same way you enJOY muscle soreness
after a good exercise session They make you feel worUiy
Once you ~ealize It ISn t necessary to fill your stomach each
time It srgnals U.e urge for snacks or extra meals w1ll disappear
and you ll feel much more alert not bemg b&lt;lgged down with
unnecessary fond - HELEN
Note from Sue Here s another formula for U.e we1ght
U.reatened Don t walt until you re so heavy It snohceable When
U.e baUiroom scales say you ve gamed three pounds - take em
off nght now You cando It m a week with rw stram
Bu t 20 or 30 ugly pounds IS something else You re liable to
giVe up U.mlnng the fight IS too much for you Prevention s the

word'

+++

Rap

Sam and I have been gomg togeUier for 14 monUis and
startedhavmg sex e1ght months ago Were b&lt;JUI 17 expect to get

Per

2Q

6

3G-NBC News 3 4 IS ABC News 13 Sew tched
8 10 Zoom 20

6

CBS News

7 00-Truth or Cons 3 4 Law re nce Welk 6 Bowltng for Dollars

6

WCHS TV R Fonrt A

Avoat/on Weather 33 News 10

News 10 J mmy Dean 13 I Spy 15 Avtat1on Wea ther 20

7 30- Porter Wagoner 3 Pop Goes the Country 4 New Candid
Camera 6 Pop Goes the Country 8 Treasure Hunt 10 Tn
Tel l The Truth 13 Blac k Perspect ive on the News 20 33

8 oo-sanford &amp; Son 3 I&gt;

Noght Stalker 6 13 The Land The
Sea The Choldren There 4 Movoe Battle for the Planet of
the Ape s

8 10 Washmg ton Week In Revtew 20 33

"'K 10 4

For Friday J•n 17 1975
ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 19)

Mctsterp1e ce Theatr e 20

9 3G-Mov e

PISCES (Fob 20 M•rch 20)

better judgmen t and you m
pulses as to wh c h rules you
pu se to day Make I at leas t a

d rEIW

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23 Dec
21) A mater al ssue could be
the reason tor a nasty ram ty
d•spute today Be sure you re
not the one wh o pr ovokes t

LEO (Jul'tl , , A

•

tn

.,.,\

CAPRICORN (Dec 22 J•n
11) Don I rev tve somelh ng that
t as at gered yo cor cern r g
o e now esse 1t at to you m
med ale plans I w II mpede

vn

married don t feel guilty but - I m scared and so IS he
I d like to take U.e pili but I ca n t ask my mother for a
prescription and I m afraid our doctor would tell her My best
friend says she leveled w1UI her Mom and everything was cool
but I m chicken
If I went to the Family Center m ou:- next big town I doubt
U.ey d help without getting permission from my parents
Don t say break up or stop lovmg or get mamed or let him
take U.e responsibility The hrst U.ree are Impossible and U.e
last 1sn t very safe - HELP

Kee p fr end s out of your
bu smess m atters today or one
who means only to help will
cause comp hcat ons

~

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I Kmd of shell I Kind of
5 C1vet
mfm1t1ve
tO Heap
2 Opera
II Wandenng
wear
13 Wmder
3 Standish s

mer..e s

News 20

AMMIX

n

nwnber

WHAi THE CONTKACTO~S

A Gilme of Death

10

1!1U61NE55 WAS t701NC.

apostrophes

-ODDL.Y E:NOUC'&gt;H
Movle

Janakt 33

1 oo-M dnoght Specoal 3 4 15 W de World n Concert 6 News
13
1 15- Movoe Dr Goldfoot and the Blk nl Machine 10
2 3G-Mov e Johnny T ger A
4 oo-Movle Something Wild 4
4

I I

l

(J I

hints E :~r h

Now orranre the circled letten
to rorm the owprloe ........ ..
•urreoted bJ the above cartoon

(AMwen

te~DDrrawJ

l•mhloo TAKEN STOOP ABUSED BECKON

YHtr-rd•y.

Aatwer1

Where

aome

for£une• art read- IN BANKBOOKS

OQZ

QCU

CF

JCBVM

fHACKERAY

DICK TRAry

(D)

• A2

t A Q 10 9
.AQJ98
North-South vulnerable
West

Modern San tat on 992 3954 or
992 7349
9 18 tfc
NEIGLER
BUILDING SUP
PLY FOR REMODELING
AND KITCHEN CABINETS
CALL GUY NEIGHLER
RACINE OHIO PHONE 949
3604
12 19 26tc

Nortll

2•

Dbie

Pass

Pass

3•

Pass

Pass

Pa ss
Pass

Openmg lead -

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

I.

East

Soutb

CAPTAIN EASY
F ~H51K HAJ WA ~T~
PRINCf55 J~MJN KePT
UNDER WRAPS 1 RE C )(O~
A 5UPE:IlTANI&lt;ER S Ao;;.
GAFE A PL.ACE MANY

3t
4¥

K •

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Some experts are more ex
pert Ulan oUiers If you don t
think SO ]US( look at UiiS hand
played by Lou Mathe of Los
Angeles 10 an Important team
match
North s double of two spades
was one or U.ose popular but

Pi'.o.NO
tunmg and repatr
Charles Sc ott 992 37 18

13 32tp

--------------C BRADFORD Auct oneer

SEPTIC tanks
exca vating
dump truck Phone 742 3742
12 20 26tc

rather U.at
confus
mg like
negto
a II
ve
doubles
experts
use
It asked Mathe to bid a new sUit
If he could do so
North s three spades was
sheef Idiocy Normally the b1d
wduld be a slam try and
Mathe s lour heart call was his
start to a slam 10 one of U.e
minor sUits North realized he
had gotten himself mto trouble
and decided to pass while still
ahve
West opened w1UI the kmg
and ace of spades and U.en
made the brilliant (?) lead of a
low spade East rnffed w1UI U.e
Jack and MaUle simply d1sca&lt;jl
ed a diamond
Stnce East had started with
four hearts there was no way to
keep Lou from takmg U.e rest
of. the tricks and chalk10g up a
lboroughly undeserved game
Strangely enou'h U.ere was
no way to beat him once West
had cashed two spades prov1d
ed Lou ftgured out where all U.e
cards lay

----------ZENITH
COLOR TV

•

.aLAcK &amp;
WHITE TV
•STEREO

MASON FURNilURE
HERMAN GRATE
MASON, W VA

-

' "''

"

Is The Guest On

The bidding has been
North Eaol

Soulb

"'~ mGIJI101J
tlO)I H~111E~

lb\J H/&gt;.'Jl&lt;

~-Fl~~

~II-6K

'tltJ FOR A
f,ll.(.J&lt;E.l, I I-101/J

MUG11 WII.&lt;'PJH~

ALLEYOOP
F I 11W$T MY
ON"' Of M.'l ~ TTEH
N~nAnoN'

Be SUI1E 10 HillE
"!HAT DERRINGER
SOMEPLJ&gt;.CE
OOOLA 1

t•

lolo

Pass
Pass
you Soulb bold

16

'

What do you do now'
Tile tcleatlltl bave all sorts

A -

ollucy ...)'I to bW *II bud Voa

••

I""

LZ4H; I:j t!fu£~1 !l

•K7143.A2t9oloAK732

•

ullL:::AB=N.::E::R.:.__---:;;::;:;;~~~7::-;;;::-'\1 (]~~~~~~

!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE: ASSN

West

James Diehl

BORN LOSER

~

-

eldier aderltld IHr spades
110tnmp You do

........
•

overbid fDH

TODAY S QUESTION

In response 1o your Blackwood
overfnd your partner b1ds fiVe
dwnoods to show one ace What do
Y"U do

'f"l

PAW
GIT UP
WIF TH SUN

I GIT UP FROM
TH BEDSTID

AN PAW GITS UP
FROM TH CARD
TABLE

and

formahon of t he
are diffe rent

letters

\\Ords

are

all

ZFKJ

PQJ

BXUJB

LCRJ
RCM

PZ

IJ

UVJ J E

PXVV
FZZF - 0
QZOJVVU
Yesterdays Cryptoquote WHEN I WALK WITH YOU I
FEEL AS IF I HAD A FLOWER IN MY BUTTONHOLE

• J7

-SEPT
-----------IC
ANKS
c leaned

the l eng th
the code

d:1.y

CRYPTOQUOTE

• 763

SOUTH

AXYDLBAAXK
LONGFELLOW

One letler Simp!) stands for another In this sample A It
used for th e tl1rce L s X for the two 0 s etc Songte letters

EAST

• J 63

Mcx1can

Is

Paul

Coast of Skeletons 6 Movoe VIllage of the Damned B

Yesterday's Answer
19 Biblical
29 Small
weed
JOb
22 Assistant
30 European
23 - s JUry
river
24 Played
31 Not a
U.e
soul
glutton
I 2 wds l
25 Endure
32 Anesthetic
46 Inhibit
37 Playing
27 Hardy s
marble
38 Naughty
partner

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It

Nuchoms 33
IQ 3G-World Press 20
II OG-News 3 4 6 810 13 15 ABC News 33
11 3D-Johnny Carson 3 4 15 W d e World m Concerl 13

(Sp)
5 Present
oneself
6 Redolence
l - Lanka
(Ceylon)
8 New

JJllJJdM;-~=~.-~=

Shaft B 10 Assognment Ameroca 33
Baretta 6 13

4 Kmg

18 frumpet
city
blare
9 Jotted
20 Nrgenan
down
tribesman
12 Purport
21 Edict
16 Freshwater
22 Southwest
fish
wmd
23 Nucleus
25 German art
song
Help
26 Peace symbo l
The Planned ParenUiood Association offers brrth control 27 Youngster
counselmg to teena gers In your state parental permission 1s not 28 Before
necessary if you re over 16 - SUE
29 Barracks '" a 1=--+-t-~
+++
gamson town
l'lelp
33 High But you might be surpriSed how well your mother takes U.e
(M Anderson
announcement that you need U.e pill Do you thinlLshe s so naive
play)
U.at she ISn t worried about a possible pregnancy' - HELEN
3.4 Beachcomb·
er s home
35 One kmd
or seat
36
Becharm
Unscramble these four Jumbles.,
38 Irrsh
one letter to each s.quare to
form four ordtnary word11
exclamatiOn
39 H1l the sack
40 Actress
Jackson
41 Insurgent
42 Rummant

• B6
• J9 5 4
t K 8 74

""52

stand m

title
14 Mich igans
Grosse 15 Smn Femer s
home ( abbr 1
16 Not foreign
{abbr )
17 Countdown

Consumer Su rv val Krt 33

10 OQ-Polt ce Womiln 3 4 15

Honeymoon

Jan 17 1175

24 Nov 22) II
w II be a contest between

CANCER (June 21 July 22) Be
care ru hOw you phr ase thmgs
or you II ptt one 1stener agatnst
the ot her and have both upset
at you

Prudeflt

You 11 assume a more active
role thts year In group projects
and ho d some position of
authortly Con tac ts developed
th rough these efforts will be
t:Jeneftc AI .,.lsewhere too

SCORPIO (Ocl

Be
very tactful n handling people
you have auth o r ty over Don t
reward one and gnore th e
others

mQn eyw se

sent at to w1nd up n th e black

TAURUS (April 20 M•r 20)

GEMINI (M•r 21 June 20)

you

s not a good day to extend an
mpromptu nv tatlon to come
1o your home w thout con
su1t ng w th your mate

LIBRA (Sepl 23 Ocl 23) Fo

ph losophical d scusslon w
anse w th a lnend To make
you r po nts and keep your pal
keep you r temper n check

AQUARIUS (Jon 20 Fob 18)
s w111 be a m Ked day fo r

Th

management of tmances Is es

ttle sake of your ell c•ency
pace you r se lf sens bly
workw se The mo e you hurry
the more c areless you II be

A

progress

VIRGO (Aug 23 Sepl 22) ThlS

Although yo u II be tempted 10
do other wise manage things
from beh nd th e scenes Let
another take t he bows

8 3G-Choco &amp; the Man 3 4 15 Wall Street Week 20 33
9 110- Rockford F les 3 4 15 S x Mi/loon Dollar Man 6 13

16

WEST
.AKQJ04
¥ 10 B 3

Per

Meigs High School Principal

Elec Co

• 9 53 2
• K Q7 6
• 52

CARPET-;;stallat o; S l25
ya rd Phone R1 ch ard west
84 3 2667
12 24 26tp

12

6

sonallfy &amp; Beha'ltoral Development 33

5 3Q-Mov e

NORTH

P&amp;J
a '-t'
heatmg
cool ng
refrtg
plumb ng
electr ca l ap
pi an ces We servtce and
repair anytmg n the hom e or
b.us ness
215 N
Sec ond
M ddtepert Phone 992 3509
1 9 30tc

WMPO-AM-FM

I would like to offer a males vrew 011 bemg fat I can
remember
I Never wearmg a skmny-r rbbed pullover or hlf&gt;"huggmg
Jeans because my belly was so b1g
2 Saggmg pectoral muscles tha put the girls to shame
and havmg U.e guys comment on my bust development
3 Gomg on a date' If I was lucky ont was blmd
4 Watching my double chin grow
5 Learrung U.at oversize bagb&lt;ly cloUies were expensive
I fmally discovered that bemg fat IS a state of mmd Like any
other habit overeatmg can be cured I eat sensibly now don t
chea t between meals exerCise a lot and I feel and look better
Ulan I ever have
Lately I ve seen more and more fat guys Take It from an
ex you don t have to be resigned - you can get reapportioned
- FORMER FATTY MIKE

Movte

V-J .Ifc

FRIDAY~~ 10;15 A.M. ON

Somerset 15

Gilligan sIs 6 Taftlta/es 8 Sesame 51 20 33 Movoe House
on Telegraph H II 10 Mike Douglas 13
4 30-Bew/tched 3 Jackpot 4 Mod Squad 6 Lucy Show 8

5232

I

Rap

Trails West 15 E/ec Co 33
; oo-News 3 4 B 10 13 15 ABC News

12 GO-Jackpot 3 15 Password All Stars 6 13 Bob Braun s 50 50
Club 4 News 8 10 ,
12 3G-Biank Check 3 Spilt Secondo 13 Search for Tomorrow
8 10 To Be Announced 33
12 A.S--E iec Co 33
12 55-NBC News 3 15
1 GO-News 3 All My Ch oldren 6 13 Phol Donahue 8 Not For
Women Only 15 Young &amp; the Restless 10
1 30-HowToSurvveaMarroage3415 $10000Pyram od613
Guiding Light 8 10
2 30-Doctors 3 4 15
B g Showdown 6 13 Edge of N ght 8 10
3 GO-Another World 3 4 15 General Hospotal 6 13 Pr ce s
Roght 8 10 Ascent of Man 20
3 30-Cne Lofe to Lovell Lucy Show 6 Match Game 8 10

EXCAVATING dozer loader
and backhoe work
sept c
tanks nstalled dump trucks
and le boys for hire w II haul
f1!1 dirt top sot I limestone &amp;
gravel
Call Bob er Roger
Jeffer s da y phone 992 7089
n ght phene 992 3525 or 99 2

Kaleidoscope

6 N ow Y ou See It

13

CREMEANS CONCRETE de
11ver ed Monday through
Saturday
and
evening s
Phone 446 1142
6 lJ tfc

77:1-5592

10 Mov oe

8 10
11 •30-Ho/lywood Squares 3 4 15 Brady Bunch 6 Love of L fe
8 10 Sesame St 33
11 55- Taker Kerr with Graham B Dan !mel s World 10 News

--- - --------- I

Easy Terms!
Free Delivery!

8

13

LETI'ER FROM A FAT MAN

10 3G-Wheel of Fortune 3 15 Phtl Donahue 4 Gamb 18 10

--~--~--

•

New Zoo Revu e 13

10 oo-Ce/ebrlly Sweepstakes 3 15 Joker s Wold
Somebodv Lo..,.es Me

tr m or cut t rees tlr
shrubbery
clean
out
basements att cs etc 949.
3221 or 742 4441
12 15 26tc

---- -------For Rent

Btble Answers B

6 35--Columbus Today 4 Morn ng Report 3 Filrmt me 10

'-lviLL

----

News 6

7 GO-Today 3 415 AM Amer ca 613 CBS News B 10

DOZER work !and c learmg by
the acre hourly or contract
Farm ponds
ro.ads
etc
Large dozer and operator
w1th over 20 years ex
per ence Pulltns Excavat ng
Pomerey Oh o Phone 992
2478
12 19 tfc

---

News 13

Public Allaors 10 Blue Rodge Quartet 13

Complete Serv ce
Phone 949 3821 er 949 3161
Racne Oho
Crttt Bradford
5 1 tfc

Help Wanted

34

6 ~o-F ve M inutes to L ve 8)1 41

---- -----HOme
Malnft

frontage on water line N1ce
si te for houses or small farms
SH M.1 nn

FUEL OIL
HEATERS

oo- Tomorrow

6 oo-Sunrose Seminar 4 6 25-Farm Report 13

READY MIX CONCREf~
I vered nght to you r proJeCt
Fast
and
easy
Free
es ttmate s Phone 992 3284
Goeg l em Ready MIX Co
Mtddteport Oh io
6 30 tfc

~

B Mev e

FRIDAY JANUARY 17 1975

dozer
backhoe
and
d tcher
waterl i ne footers drams
road s and brush clean ng no
tob too small no weather too
bad Charles R Hatf eld Rt I
Rutland 0
Phone 742 6092
1 7 26tc

ELECTROLUX Sweeper l ~.;. e
model
Complete w th all
clean no anachments and NEAR STORES- 3 bedrooms
I.JSes paper bags Sllghtlo; used
but c leans and tooks 1 ke new w1th closets bath nat gas
W II set I for S37 25 cash or FA furnace porche s wall to
terms ava1 labte Phone 992 wall carpeting good paneling

7755

1

heatmg serv1ce and
general sheet metal
works
Free
Est1mates
Phone 949 5961
' Emergency 992 3995
or 99l 5700

3891

How To Murder Your W fe

Mov1e

6
Ou r Very

Own 10 Janako ~3
12 30-Wode World Specoal 6

EAI..A~ ..... TING

STEREO RADIO 8 track tape
combmat on
am fm rad o
Balance SI Ol 40er terms Call
992 3965
1 15 tfc

-1956- F ORD
--------- 850 ser es fa rm

HEU.
RACINE PWMBING
&amp;HEATING
Complete plumbmg &amp;

EXCELSIOR Salt Works East
Mam s t Pom erey AI! kinds
of salt water pellets water
nuggets block salt and own
Ohto R ver Salt Phone 992

the Sun Shines Nellie
Pathfinder 33
OG-Mov/n On 3 4 15 Harry 0 6 13 Woman 33
JG-Caught inthe Act 33
GO-News 3 4 6 8101315 20 ABC News 33
30-Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Wode World Spec al 13 FB I

10
10
11
11

2 BR bath noce kitchen &amp;

--------

1'11 66
..
Pr1ced for Quick Sale
water Me ter Readers &amp;
barr el rebutlt n!w gaskets
~epa rn en S3 37 per hl)ur ( 1 2
t m ng cha n p st ons rmgs
1 New Wood Burmng
t mes over 40 ho urs ) S4 88 per
S150 New c lutch plate throw
hour
out barr ng s S2S 3 speed
HEATER-139 95
App rent ce Water Dept or
transni ss on S25 Call 99 2
San tarv Se w er S3 OS per hour
I
&gt;OMEROY LANDMARK
31 08 !fter S p m
Wate r D epartmen t Extra
l9•
~
Juk W Carsey Mgr
1 10 61C
help ~2 85 per hour
(...
Phont 992 2181
Meehan c 13 16 per hour
•
Cusl od an $38 SO per month
Cemeterv SelCtOn 574 10 p er
mon th
1957 CHEVY parts
NEW
FU EL , TRUCK dnver wanted
Relief D spatch er $2 45 per
Lakewo od trattlon bars hi
must
nave
ex
per
ence
dr
v
ng
hour
1a cke r a r shocks
hooker
truck Mall rep/ es to Box
All extra ho\Jrs for hourly
headers w th 3 collecto r s for
729E co The Da11y Sent mel
employees w 1 be at the hourly
small b lo ck
Call 992 3496
Pomeroy Ohio
rate
after 6 p m BEST OFFER
1 16 Me
Sec
I
That secretar at
10 11 tfc
cler ca l and or bookkeep ng
WAITRESSES
needed
apply
10
record Keep ng hfJUr y em
person Crews Steak House
CLOSE OUT on new Zig Zag
p l oyees be em plo ye d at a
Pomeroy
sew ng mach nes For sewing
max mum of JS hOurs per week
stretch fabrics buHonhol es
1 7 lfc
except for an emerg en cv that
fancy destgn s etc Pai nt
sha l ar se sad emergency of
sl gh tly bltm shed Cho ce of
eKtf'a nours to be approv ed by
carry ng case or sewing
Counc I
stand S49 80 cash or terms
Sec II
The following are
ava table Phone 992 7155
hereby dectllred as leg al 5 ROOM un fur n slled house
basement and yard
325
12 18 tfc
hoi days for the emp lovees ot
Sprmg Avenue References
the VII ag e of Middleport New
Ph one 992 7660
Years Day
Memor a t Da y
1 8 tfc
Independence Day Labor Oa y
ThanKsg v no Day Chr stmas
~
Day
plumb, ng
4 RM o~~pt furn shed ut l1t es REMODEL I NG
hut ng and all types of
Sec IV That satd salartes
pad one ch ld a cce pted John
general
repa i r
Work
w It be n effect Jan uar y 1 1975
Sheets
3 mites south of
guaranteed 20 years e x
M ddLeport
Sec. II Each full t me em
perience Phone 992 2409
ployee of the Yll aoe shall be
1 14 6tp
1 3 12tc
ent fled to s ck leave n the
amount of one and one fourth COUNTRY Mob1le Home Par k
(1 ~ l days pf:r month and shall
R T 33 ten m les north of
be en t t ied ta accr ue sad s ck
Pomeroy
Large tots w1th
leave up ta one nunelred twent y
conc re1e pat1os s dewalks
( 120 1 days
runn ers
and
off
street 3 BEDROOM hou,_e SSOO down
$90 month Phone 992 3975 or
Sec VI Each full time em
park ng Ph(;nt 992 1479
992 2571
ployee of the \o 1J1ag e mcludmg
12 31 tfc
1 3 ttc
full t m-e hourly rate employees
shall be entitled during each FURNISH EO apt
10 M d
ye ar after the f~rst year to two
dleport uttl 1 es pa id Phone
HOUSE SS 000 Phone 992 5871
WIEeks vacatton excluding legal
992 3205 before 7 n evenmg
I 12 lBtc
hohdavs Wtlh pay Employees
1 15 3tc
wath f fteen or more years
serv •ce sh alt be enhtl~ to three 3 ROOMS and bath tu r;:;-ished NEW HOMES No Monev Down
Payments accord i ng to
weeks v acalton w th pay each
n ce and clean Phone 997
ncome on Farmers Home
vear
2937
Adm 1n1strat•on loan Con
Sec vI t All Ordman ces n
venttonat f inancing also
I 12 6t~
cenft1ct wtth ttus Ordnance are
ava lable w1th m ntmum
hereby repealed
down L ov!IY homes In three
Sec
VI I I This Ordn ance 3 and 4 ROOM furn shed and
locations m Meigs County
unfurn shed
apartml'nts
shall take effect and be in force
Some tlomes w th wooded
Phent 992 504
from and after Jan uary 1 1975
lots
Call for more m
4 12 tfc
Passed the 13th day of
format ton 992 5976
Janu ary 1975
1 15 '26tc
PRIVATE mett,tmg room for
any organ1zaflon phone 99 2
Attest Gent Grate
3975
Clerk
1 ROOM house bath and 13
3 11 tfc
exceH~nt neighborhood wall
M L Ke lly
to wall carpet ng large lot
Pres dent of Counctl FURNISHED a·p t Adults only
garag_e rtuonable ufll1t es
M 1ddltport Phone 992 387.t
Call 9&lt;02 3877
11 141 lfc
J an 16 23
1 9 lfc

-----

I

level acre ranch type home

1970 - Z 28 CAMARO and 2
horse tra ler Phone 992 7338
l 12 6tc

--

Streets of Sa n Franc sea 6 13 Move
Secref of fhe Incas 8 Mov le Ugetsu
M ov te Wiltt t I

paneled tiled porches NG
heat

6

9 ()()-Ironside 3 4 15

SEWING MACHINE R.epatrS
servi ce all makes 992 2284
The Fabr c Shop Pomeroy
A uthonzed s nger Sales and
Se rv ce We sharpen Sc1ssors
3 29 ttc

adults

1 H OUSE unfurn Shed 7 rooms
and bath n ce Phone 992 2780
or 992 3432
1 9 tfc

Cantng

Ptck up Serv1ce Available

12 31 26tp

1 9 ttc

Amos

Burmshoing

Upholstering
We Also Buy Antiques

FUR N TURE Upholster ng
Reasonable
rat es
free
est mates
p1 cku p
and
de ve ry prompt serv ce
Mowrey s Upholstery Pont
P easant w va Ph one 6J!'5

2 BEDROOM modern fu rn1shed
ap t no pets Phone Robert
H I R a c ne 949 3811
I 0 6tp

8tc

--------------INCOME Ta x Prepared both

1 15 4tC

F URNI S HED
apartment
ut llt1es furn shed
su table
for two work ng men or
r etired couple L v ng room
K1tchen Shower and ba t h On
men h ghway Mason W Va
Phun e 773 5147
10 27 tfc

ng
215 2 BEDR OOM tra ler
At
on lv Phone 992 33 24

HUMANE Society Thnft Shop
ac ro ss from Pom eroy Post
Ort ce Clearan ce on w nter
c l oth ng
handmade fur
nllure
open
Frtday
Saturda y
l 14 4tc

1 1s 4tc

Pomeroy Oh1a

e1c

$1695

T P ckup 8 wrde body V 8 engine automatic trans &amp;
power steering radio sport custom cab good tires green
&amp; white fin ish

I00 Kerr SlrMI

a house

shelf to

By Helen and Sue BoHel

Elec Co 20 Teaching
Children with Special Needs 33
•
6 30-NBC News 3 4 15 ABC News 13 Bewotched 6 CBS News
8 10 Zoom 20 What Now Amer ca &gt; 33
7 oo-Truth or Cons 34 Bowling for Dollars 6 What s My L ne
8 News 10 Lets Make a Dea l 13 To Be Announ ced 15 Two
Way Street 20 Nova 33
7 30-Ho/lywood Squares 3 4 Fred Taylor Ba s~etball 6 New
Price Is Right 8 Consumer Survival K I 20 W ld K ngdom 10
To Te/lthe Truth 13 Get Smart 15
• oo-Mac Davis 3 4 15 Yankee Doodle Crlckel 6 13 The
Waltons 8 10 lnlernatlonal Report 20 33
~ 30-Cldd Couple 6 13

Modem Qlemicals

Pa1ntmg s1d1ng roohng
paper hanging
k•tchen
cab1nets expert carpeting

Phone 9,92 3993
Datly After 5 00

engine sol d cab rad o

1970 FORD

4 GO-News 3 4 8 10 13 15 ABC Nw s

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCTION
PHONE

Larry Lavender

Generation Rap

THURSDAY JANUARY 16 1975

Fire Retardant
Insulation

truck

'~'•

Television Log

t~nd to be &amp; b 1 tpo possess ve
today You re nothkely to take
polite measures to Cove your
feet ngs

WELL I VE eEEN FALUN6
MLEEP IN ClASS ! GIIES5
AAD M~ TEACHE~ 5 KIND
OF LJI'SET ABOVT IT

�••

~

.,

••••
••

•
•

I

12- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Jan . 16, 191&gt;

By GENE BERNHARDT
WASHINGTON (UP! )
Two veteran House members
battled today to retain their
powerful committee chair·

3 ·suits filed

manships in wtw t many ol&gt;servers agreed was a losing
fight.
Tite 24-member Democrutic
Steering and Poli cy Com·
mittee, in an apparently unprecede nted , action, voted
Wednesda y to rejec t the
nominati on of Reps. Wayne .
Hays of Ohio as chairman of
Admin istration Committee und
Wright Patman of Texas for
U1e Banking Committee .
Only a vote in the caucus of
all291 House Democrats today
to reject Rep. Frank Thompson
of New Jer sey as chairman of

,
.
In Meigs County Common
Plea s Court a sui t for divorce,
another for support, and a
judgment for money have been
filed .
·
Jan ice J. Davis, Rt. 1,
Rutlan d, fil ed for div orce
against Lawrence R. Davis.
APO, . New York. charging
gross neg lect of duty and e&lt;treme cruel ty.
Alva Lee Heed, Rt . 3,
COLUMBUS IUPII - Feder
Pmaeroy , filed for support
under
tht
Reciproca l aJ .sta te summary of Ohio
livestock au c tions Wednesday .
Agreement
At l again s t
Ca tl le : Compared to last
William Hise Heed, Florida. Wednesday slaughter steers
·1 lower , slaughter heifers
The Apex Feed and Supply s1.50
teady to 2 lower. sla ughter
Co., Marietta, ask s jud~ment cows steady to 1.50 lower ,
in the amount of $5,851;.23, slaughter bull s an d bullocks J.J ·
against Billy C. Hill , Rl . I , lower , vea lers 5 lower , Ieeder
cat tl e steady exc ept heifer s in
Racine .
·Urbana 1-3 lower .
,

Administration and Henry
Reuss of Wisconsin for
Banking could keep the hopes
of Hays and Patman alive.
The vote of 13-11 to den y
Hays the nomination for the
committee he has headed for
the past four yea rs to ok
Speaker Carl Albert, chairman
of the steering committee, and
the rest of the leadership by
surprise.
Patman, dean M the House
with 46 years, 10 of them liS
Banking Committee chairman,
went down 13·11 on the first
ballot.
Hays and Patman im·

Market Report

Former teadter
dead in Florida
CHARLESTON. W. Va .
Funeral serv ices f or Mrs .
Bonnie Withers Shumate, 73,
Tampa, Fla., a former Mason
County School teacher, were
conducted today at the Bartlett
Burdette Funera l Home,
Charles ton.
Rev. William B. Allbright
offi'ciated and entombmen t
followed in the Woodmere
Mausoleum, Ch a r l~ston . Mrs.
Shumate died Monday at the
home of a sister, Mrs. Gladys
Mynes, Cha rleston. She wa s a
sister of Silas ,Y , Withers.
Apple Grove, and E. L.
Withers, Jr .. GaUipolis Ferry,
Rev . A. B. Withers, Elkins, and
Charles H. Withers, Gallipolis.
Additional surv ivors include
the husband , Earl R. Shumate,
Tampa, Fla ., and a son, Victor
W. Shumate, Tampa .

Meigs

Property
Transfers
William A. Snyder, Inez E.
Snyder to United States ,
Farmel'li Home Adm., part lots
9-10, Middleport.
W. 0. Barnitz, Ruth Barnitz
to Robert W. Barnltz, Corena
L. Barnitz, parcel, Pomeroy.
Fred Riggs , Lutchie Riggs to
Ohio · Valley
Chris tian
Assembly, 1.1 acres, Bedfond .
Charles L. Eskew, Frances
J . Eskew to Amos Tillis, lot,
Pomeroy.
•
Jerry L. Tillis, Darlene Tillis
ID Harold D. Graham, Janet K.
Graham, .82 acre, Scipio,
June Hysell, Dana Hysell,
Fred E. Dunfee, Irene Dunfee,
Robert 0. Dunfee, Virginia
Dunfee, William H. Dunfee,
Colleen Dunfee, Betty Biggs,
Nathan Biggs to J ames
Whittington, Maggie Whit·
Ungton, lots, Rutland.
Maggie Whittington to June
Wickersham, lots, Rutland .
June Wickersham to Maggie
Whittington, Leo Whittington,
lots, Rutland .
E. Wlnnifr-ed. Dougherty,
John C. Dougherty to Edward
E. Dougherty, 84 .56 acres.
Scipio.

Slaughter st eers : Choice and
prime 900 · 1275 lb yi eld grad e 2
4 37-39.70 . choice 875-1200 yield
grade 3 4 35 36.50; good 33 -36 ,
standa rd 25-30 70 .
Slaughter hei fers · Choi ce anc;t
prime 850-1050 lb yi eld grade 2
4 36-38 .50 ; choi ce y ield grade 3·
4 35 36, good 31 3485.
Slaughter cows : Ut ility and
commercial 1200-1885 tb 17.75
21. cutter 12 · 15.50 ..
Slaug hter bul ls · Yield grade 1

1680·1950 lb 24-27 .75.
Vea lers : Choi ce 200·135 lb 50·
53.

Jan. 17-18-19

THE CH INESE
PROFESSIONALS
(TKhnicolod
S.tarr ln g masters

of

t

martial arts .

' ( RI

Also

SCALAWAG
( Technicolor )

Show Starts 7:00 p.m.

( GJ

18.50 21, 400·600 lb 20-23.

Hog s: Barrows and gil t s .SO

higher, U.S. 2·3 207-256 lb 4040.70.
Feeder p igs 2 lower, U.S. 2-3

30-40 lb 10-16 .7S pe r head . 50·80
lb 20.50-22. 50 per head.

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WOMEN'S sportswear

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Misses. Juniors . Half Sizes

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Special group of Preteen, 4-6x and 7-14 Tops. and ~.
Bottoms.

--·----------·---..,.~----·
-----------·---·---·-:....--l---..,--·--·------·----·-.
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Womens
1 Final Clearance!
I CLEARANCE SALEI

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5a I'e p rices

January Sale

TABLECOVERS

~

and sport shirts, a good selection. Sizes .
small, medium, large and extra large. ..

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I January Sole Days

! Boys Sport and Dress Shirts
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Den I'm Western Jackets

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. Famous ~iWrangler and Lee makes. True II~

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western styling, extra heavy blue denim .
Sizes 36 to 50.
·

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14.49 Lee Western Jackets ____ Sale $12.39

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"'"··'·"'"·'···'!"

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Clearance Sale

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Sale Prices

r;;,:;~;;;------·------~
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Double Kn .ll. SpOrt Coa"'~
I
Solid colors and patterns. Sizes 36 to 46 . A good
selection .

Sale •2488

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Sale! Famous Brand

Men's Dre5s Socks
.

One size fits all sizes 10 through 13. White, black
and a complete selection of colors.
Our popular orion dress socks .

speCI3I

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------------·----·----1I
FINAL CLEARANCE'

!

Includes Winter Jackets - lined and unlined .
CPO Jackets . Outer Shirts . Not every size but a
good se lection .

11.50 to 16.95 JaclefL ____ Sale 5.49

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r-~~.:.~ ~ 45~~~~..::::.::.5!e .~~49-~l·
Mens Lee $18.98

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lined Overall Jackets .
Special This Sale

, 1669

,...,.w

Sizes 36 to 50. Regulars · Shorts Longs, (not
every size) ' Extra well made , double action
zi pper.
18.98 Fisher Stripe (Grey)
Coveralls
,

r.----·----.

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· -~-,"~--W"I --1

Mens 1.00 Banlon Panel Dress Socks----- 88c
•

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'15"
&amp;

Reg. m.oo 1 pc. Round Tabte-wood Grain ..• • sate
Reg. 239.00 s pc . Rectangular Table-Green .- .. Sate
Reg . 224 .00 7 pc . Rectangular Table-Wood Grain
Sale 174.00
Reg. 339.00 s pc. Octagonal Tabte-Btack · · · · ·Sale
Reg. 109.00 s pc . Round Orop-Leaf-Table •• ... Sale
Reg. 289.00 9 pc . Rectangular Table-Wood Grain
Sate 232.00 ·
Reg. 204.00 s.pc . Round Table-Wood Groin .... • Sale
Reg. m.oo s pc. Rectongular Table-Beige .. " .. Sate

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F
De rt t d Floo r
urn ure pa men • 3r

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it'

168.00
192.00

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Another Big Shipment

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Choice of three finishes · 8 day
movement Westininster Chimes. 72

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RUBBERBACK
CARPET
··

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Warehouse' on Mechanic Street ,

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I SAVE NOW

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... _ _

l------------------:---5;e~i.i-~ ·
~ carpet.
15 ft; width Rubber back
$490 Sq. Yd• . ~
Green Tweed.

8 qua~t covered Dutch Oven or 14'12" covered

-·

- -·

•

Choose poppy, avocado or gold.

in now -· select the set you want
and really save. ·
· .

L,.__

•

Oval Roaster.

•

I· Stop

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Prompt In-

'''~~,.~.~~~ .~~~.~~~ ,,. 1.· Famo~(o:,·~~~ c~~I(WARE

.Colo. r TV Consoles and XL100 RCA
1 portable color sets.

REG. 24.95 .SALE
5

·•.'

'14. ..

97

_ _,______...,....___________,______"""!'..............,, •·•·
'.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
.

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Figures show

economy level

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"'--~-~~-

Gas to ·sc·bools ·
churches cut '

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$5,200 asked

in judgment

H ayman fiaJne
.. d h

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15 CENTS

EPA orders eased

took $53,550
.

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and Linoleum.

FRIDAY, JANUARY 17, 1975

County

colors-Forest Green, Spice Gold, September.

....._....,.______
. _______..! · Save on Carpet
- 1 sta llation.

POMEROY MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

in mishaps

212.00 ...
79.00
. ..

r--::::::::::::,.,,.,...,,
GRANDfATHER CLOCKS l
1

VOL. XXVI NO. 1'94

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N0 b0 dy h url

239.oo
192 .00
. .

Sale! Our Regular '465"'

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Reg . 279.00 s pc. Oval Table-Swivet Chain .. . Sate 219.00 Reg . 229.00 s pc . Rectangular Table-Wood Grain . .
Sale 184.00
~~: · 1~:~o:o 7 pc. Rectangular Tab to ewood Grain . .

0

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~-.;.....,....,.

· LEE COVERALLS

0

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• 12 Feet Wide.

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-------"---·w~·"-"-:--·-----·Special Sale!

Just arrived - a new shipment of sturdily ::constructed Howell Dinettes.

• 100 Per· Cent Continuous Filament Nylon

Sizes 36 to 50. Zipper front waist length jackets
and button front coat length. Famous Lee Blue
Den im .

Sale

pair

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17.50 to 23.95 Jackets·----- Sale 6.49 I

17.98 Army Twill (Green)
Coveralls

ss~

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MEN'S JACKETS

,

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SALE!_ DINElTE SETS

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en tine

10,240 vehicles
bought- in 1974

FornitureJrd Floor

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1·,, til"" ho111 c. It was durmg
· th e
1·
1
convcrsa wn among t 1e fi·ve
per so 11s tl 1a t M.ISS Fru II. 1
· 1of 11er eyes "uurmng
·
c•omp1amcc
· kl y.
&lt;mu.,. rcel1
• ' ng stc
Afl
th
· · t had bcen
· er e v1so
•o
I
t
1
M.
' mp e e&lt; ISS F ru lh an d Mr.
Meadows return ed ·to their
rf''inL'l'li vP homes .

Apparentl y Miss Fruth
became somewhat disturbed
over ·the situation' and after
reac hing home tried to call her
sister. When she. could not
arouse anyone, she became
more alarmed and called Mr.
Meadows, asking him to check.
It was during this time that
he fo un d the three persons and
a small dog unconscious .
The nearby Stevens Funeral
Home was alerted and Mr.
Stevens and three other of his
personnel responded with their
(C&lt;intinued on page 10)

Devote£/ To The Interest.~ of The Meig.~·M11so11 Are11

IN:ews
. •• zn Briefs.

Includes all our cut and sewn shirts· knit
shirts - flannel shirts . Sizes 6 to 20.

Our entire stock of vinyl or cloth table~vers
included . All popular sizes in oblongs, squares,
rounds and ovals.

SAVEl

Pomeroy

3.49

MEN'S AND YOUNG MEN'S

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Pleasant Vallt'J' f1ospilal
DISCHARGES - Banjamin
Monre, Bidwell; Mrs. Kenneth
Tu.lly, Racine: Mrs . John
Jo hanna Huddte'stonand
daughter, Gallipolis Fern·.

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Choose brushed tricot . challis or flannel in Long
Gowns, Robes, Pajamas and Waltz Gowns. ·

released . At 12:06 a. m. the
squad went to Butland for
Eugene Roush, a medica l
patient, who · was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was ·admitted.

.Chapman'~
SHOES
--

CPO

1 SPECIALI

WINTER SLEEPWEAR

trea ted and

SNO-BOOTSON SALE

Jackets · tined and unlined II eludes
Jackets and outer shirts.
I 6.95 to 8.95 Jackets .... - .. Sale

Womens

THREE RUNS MADE
The Middleport Emergency
Squad answered three calls
W edn~sday and Thursday
morning. Clifford Michael,
Bailey Run , suffering from
lacerations of the head was
•akcn to Veterans Memorial
HOspital where he was ad·
milled at 2:51 p. m. Wednesday. At 9:25 p. m., the
squad took Jerry Ferguson
fr om his home in Middleport to
Veterans Memorial Hospi tal
where he was

I"'" •'• ~. ~~~,}~~~~ ·~'· , ~ '''~~s.=m~~ ,=.~..~~...

WINTER COATS

be cause Mr s . Loomi s was
kn
own not to be feeling well
lately . ·
1
W1en Meadows arrived &lt;Jl
1
t \c Loomis residence he also
Ioun d M.rss HeIen F ruth, a
· · t·mg
·siste•• of M~s . Loum1·s, VIS!

COLUMBUS fUPI) - Ned E. former Gov. John J . Gilligan, earlie r
this
week . equipment is spent wisely.
Wil!iams , director of the Ohio specified that parti culate sim ulta neous ly requested a With today·' s energy and
utiUties re duce servo-valve
erosion by limiting chlorine Envir onmenta l Protectio.n regulations must be met no reconsideration by the EPA economic difficulties, every
content, red~cing particulate Agency, said today he has later than April, 1977 . .
director and also filed an ap- required expenditure has to be
content and increasing elec- suspended an order requiring
peal with the Environmental carefully eva luated, " said
I
The decision also staled that Board of Review.
Ohio's electric utility comtrical resisUt nce.
Williams.
Users of the product have panie s · to meet certain sulfur oxi de requirements
" I have decided to review
" I don 't want the utility
a ls o been able better to pollution abatement standards would be suspended for utili ty this decision f~r severa l . companies to spend one cenl
mainta in EHC systems by by April, 1977 and said he companies until such time re asons," said Williams. less for control equipment than
when adequate air quality data "First, the appeal prcx:ess is is needed, but I don't want
taking advantage of Stauffer's would review the case.
·
co
uld r eq uire their rein- both costly and lime con- them to spend one cent more
co mprehen sive te chni ca l
The . earlier decision 1 anservice suppor t and fluid nounced during the waning statement.
suming. If this situation can be either, " said Williams.
Eight utility co mpani es resolved without spe nding
evaluatiOn program.
days of the administra tion of
" I have asked the office of
· Through this program,
three to four years in the the Attorney General and my
turbine hydraulic fluid samcourts, then everyone will be air pollution staff to conduct an
ples are evaluated at Stauffer's
expedi tious review and to
better off .
Plant in GallipoJis Ferry, with
"We all agree that Ohio's air publicly provide r ecom·
respect to viscosity, chlorine,
pollution problems need to be mendations by January, 31,
·water and mineral oi1 content,
solved and spending a lot of · "Williams said. "During this
par ticle count and resistivity .
precious Hme and money in time, I have temporarily
· Readin gs fed back to the
and out of courts will only stayed the effectiveness of the
utilities then help indica te
delay the achievemen t or our orders issued in December.'·'
problems before they become
goals," said Williams.
Williams said after receiving
WASHINGTON
(UP!)
The
serious enough to cause long
"Secondly, I want to make the recommendations, he
the distorting effects of inflaturbine shutdowns and costly American economy is in the tion removed - would take sure that the money spent to would then issue findings and
valve repairs .' Production of grips of the deepest recession another "substantial plul)lle in install pollution control orders.
CHECK PRESENTED
Ray Manley, secretacy.
Fyrquel EHC at Gallipolis since World War II ended - the current ianuary•March
treasurer of the Gallla-Melgs Fraternal Order of Pollee, on
Ferry is expec ted to continue . and it's getting worse.
quarter and pertwps a small
..•...
blllllllf Qf,that.Qrganlzatiop, 'J:Jlur~ presented a check for
That
assessment
was
con·
growth dur ing 197&amp;.
decline in Apr1l.June. "f don't
$50 to Mrs. Mildred Jacobs, superintendent of the Meigs
firmed in a Gross National think we' re at the trough
C&lt;Junty
Infirmary . Last Saturday Munley presented a check
Product report released Thurs- (recession bottom) yet."
for
same
amount to Ule Galllpolls Children's Home. Manley
day by the Commerce DepartThe slide is enough to go into
said the Fr~ternal Order of Police made $1,000 by sponsoring
ment. It showed:
the record books as the
a
county western show in Gallipolis. Manley is a security
· -Output of the economy, steepest since 194&gt;·1946, when
guard
at the Southeastern Ohio Mental Health Center,
adjusted for inflation, fell at the economy made th e
Athens,
and a deputy of the Meigs County Sheriff's Departthe startling rate of 9.1 per cent wrenching shift from war
COLUMBUS. (UP! )
The granted Monday, those afment.
between OciD~ and Decem- production to peace time.
By United Press International
Public Utilities Commission of fected by the cutbacks would
BELFAST - THE LONGEST CEASE-FIRE in Northern ber, the second fastest threeEconomists, however, view Ohio ( PUCO) has granted. be penalized April I an excessIreland's five years of religious war ended today in a flurry of month plunge on record.
the postwar recession as a temporary authority for OJ. use charge of $10 per 1,000
~Inflation
in
the
·
same
shootings aoo recrimination and a warning by Scotland Yard of a
special case that should not be lumbia Gas of Ohio, Inc., to cut cubic foot of gas used over and
raced
upwand
-13.7
per
.period
possible new Irish Republican Army offensive in Britain. The
compared with normal dips in back na Iural gas supplies by up above the amount allowed by
British Army reported several Northern Ireland incidents ttwt cent. It's the .fastest increase the business cycle. If that is so, IAl 40 per cent ID· churches. C&lt;Jlumbia.
Hampton . said cutbacks .
began even before the 25-day IRA truce ended at midnight but it since the government began one has to go back to the schodlo and stores in the slate
likened them to "cowboy ineidents" rather than a planned IRA keeping quarterly statistics in Depression Era ID find worse using I million cubic feet of gas could last after the normal
1947.
heating season ends In March
offensive.
recessions than this. In 1929-33, or more per month .
- Economic growth has now GNP fell 33 per cent and in
and
gas saved during summer
Police stepped up security in London and all major cities and
Paul E. H~mpton, chief of
months
would be placed in
Scotland Yard warned the public to be wary of the Irish Republic declined four straight quar- 1937-38, 13 per cent. .
the PUCO's Division of Tariffs
Meigs Counlians purcha·sed chased out of the slate for total
ters.
The
last
such
uninstorage
for
use
next
winter.
in a bid to counter any new outbreak of violence. A total of 52
and
Economics,
said
today
10,420
motor vehicles and fees of $3,996. The state got
From November, 1973, when
Cutbacks
were
based
on
the
persons has been killed and nearly 800injured In Britain since the terrupted slide was in 196tl- the undula ling business cycle supplies
to
industrial
mobile homes during 1974, $.1,63&gt; of thai total, $33o,:;o
IRA began its bombing campaign there in 1972. Of these 43 were 1961.
reached its latest peak, customers were being reduced largest gas conswnption ty according to the anhual report coming to the county.
''The current • econoffilc through December, 1974, the by up ID 55 per cent.
Columbia customers in the last of Meigs · County Clerk of
killed in 1974.
There were 39 salvage in·
situation is very bad," said last date for which figures are
Hampton said gas saved by three winlfrs, said Hampton. Courts Larry Spencer.
spections
with the entire $195
MT. VERNON, OHIO - JUDGING OF THE 28 high sehool James L. Pate, assistant available, GNP fell 5 per cent. cutbacks to churches, schools
Meigs Counlians, the report collected for the Inspections
senior girls from 24 Ohio counties entered in the 14th annual Ohio commerce secretary for That is a much bigger drop and stores would be passed on
states, paid $352,520.11 in sales going to the state. Spencer's
Junior Miss Pageant begins here tonight. Cindy Meyer of economic affairs. He ticked off than any of the five post-World to industrial customers.
tax, fou~ percent of th e pur· office issued 122 boat titles on
Whitehouse, last year's titlist, will crown the 1975 winner at the the bad news in a list of in~'There just isn't any more
(Continued on page 10)
cha se price, on those vehicles collections totaling $23~, the
end of the Saturday night judging in . the restOred Memorial flation-adjusted fourth quarter
gas, at least not in Ohio, and
with the coun ty's share totaling state's being $55.2&gt; , the
Theater. The pageant is sponsored by the Mt. Vernon Jaycees. figures : Consumer spending,
the conunission has tried to
$3,525.20, the stale's share county's $179.&gt;0.
The teenagers arrived last Saturday, were weleomed by ··down 12 per cent; durable
apportion it where It will do the
$348,9114.91.
Spencer's office paid into the
EXTENDED FORECAST
Mayor Harold Johnson and other city officials and assigned to gooda expenditures, led by a
most good," said Hampton:
Spencer's offi ce durin g 1974 coun ty general fund for the
Sunday through Tuesday,
host families. They have been practicing their routines ibis wee.k staggering $11.5 billion decline
A hearing, at which those
Three accidents were in· issued 10,420 certificates of "tear in legal and title fees a
a chance of snow Sunday and affected by the cutbacks can vestigated by the Meigs County title; 3,1&gt;9 notations of lien ; total of $31,481.97.
for presentation at the two nights of judging. Amoog them i:J Miss in new car sales, down 43 per
cent; nonresidential in·
Babs Witte of RD Pomeroy.
again Tuesday..Highs will be express their views before the Sheriff's Department Thurs. 1,890 memorandum s; &gt;4
vestment, down 19 per cent,
between 30 and 40 and lows PUCO, was scheduled for Feb. day in which no personal in· salvage titles; 10,423 ap ·
COLUMBUS- AN OFFICIAL OF THE OHIO Mining and and home and apartment
will be in the upper teens and 10 at the c~lon offices. jw-ies were reported and no plica ti ons, affidavits and .Musical show is
lower 20s.
Reclamation Association IDday called on the Ohio legislature and construction, down 44 per cent.
Hampton said rules governing citations issued.
assignments ; 762 penalties; 273 tonight at school
state officials to begin an immediate review of slate strip mining
"These are the facts," Pate w.;:;.'®'.&amp;;:::&lt;::::::,:,&gt;.::&gt;.:-..ID"h:i» the cutback program could be
Al11 :20 a.m. on SR 124lhrcc certified copies for Iota! fees of
TUPPERS PLAINS - A
laws to eliminate needless paperwork.
said . "They speak for themsel·
changed after. the meeting.
miles east or Racine Eldon R. $26,559 with the county's share
Neal-S. Tostenson, Cambridge, executive vice president of ves. Everything is bad ."
TWO FINED
According to the authority Kraeuter, 73, ·Raci ne, was being $21.584 .75 and the stale's Country-Wes tern musical show
will be presented from 7 to 10
the association, said a recent report from the U. s. Bureau of
President Ford's program of
Fined in the Court of
traveling cast in a curve when share being $4,974.25.
tonight ~~ the Tuppers Plains
Mines showed that estimated Ohio coal production for 1974 was"· . tax cuts and busiiless invest- Pomeroy Mayor Dale E. Smith
he went slightly left of center
There were 1,322 auto . inElementary
School under the
43.28 million tons, a decrease of over 2 mUlion tons from 1973. ment incentives is aimed at Thursday · night were Steve
,
and struck the left rear dual spectio ns 'on vehic~es pursponsorship of the Tuppers
Tostenson said that coal production would be increased sub- reversing these declines by Wilson, Racine, $5 and costs pn
COurt
wheel on a milk lanker driven
Plains Boosters Club.
stantially in Ohio without affecting land reclamation standards if injecting more purchasing an assured clea r distance ·
by William Sam Massar, 41 ,
Children under six will he
power into the economy.
charge, and Earl Phelps," ol,
"needless" paperwork is eliminated.
Rt. I, Reedsville. There was
admitted free with adult adPate said' real GNP -the West Columbia, $10 and costs,
moderate damage lo lio th
mission being $1.25 and student
ISRAEU TROOPS BATTLED PALESTINIAN guerrillas in value of all goods and services operating a motor vehicle
vehicles.
admission
$1. Featured will be
southern Lebanon today in fightlllg marked by the biggest Israeli produced by the economy with while under suspension . .
Meigs County CoUrt receiptS
At 2:30 p.m. on U.S·. 33, in
the
Working
Man Band, Th~
tank thrust into the area in more than two years. Beirut newsfor the year 1974 totaled Bedford Township, Paul N.
Chutes
Band
and The Tri·
o
.
$53,&gt;49.~8 according to Betty Smith, 19, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, was
Thomas A. Hawley Thursday
papers said guerrUla chief Yasser Arafat had personally taken
eharge of resistance operations.
. . ·
. ·
C ail"I118D Hobstetter, clerk.
" traveling southwest on a farm fil ed sui t for judgment in the County Travelers with Gary
Witllesses said the ISraelis pounded several IDw115 with ar-.
·
·
Receipts for the year were tractor and was attempting to amount of $5,200 in Meigs Smeeks, Don Morrow, Adrian
tillery fire and mortar shells for the sixth consecutive day.
RACINE_ Charles Hayman Simpson, Mildred Gillilan, distributed as follows: fines to make a left turn wh'en struck County Common Pleas Court. Stanley, The Westlin Family
Combined figures Irol!' guerrUla spokesmen in Beirut put the was elected chairman , John T. Claudia
Roush , ljpnnie stale, $16,172.37 ; fees to sheriff, by a ·car attempting to pass,
Hawley asks that sum · plus and Jim Riston.
casualty toll for fighting Thursday and ·today near Lebanon's Wolfe president and cashier Lawren ce and Charlotte $2,207.83; fines and cost to ·The car was driven by Russell interest and cos to agains t
HIGH HONORS WON
coun ty,
ge neral
fund , Junior Tucker , 24, Rt. 2, Hollywood Brands, a conborder with the lsraeli~upied Golan Heights of Syria at 21 and Clarence Price . vic~ Stewart.
Patricia
Louise Ihle, Racine
J.sraells killed and several wounded and four guerrillas killed and ' president of the bo~rd of'' Wolfe reported to the $21J,653.11; auto license and gas Racine. There was moderate. solfdated food company, and
10 wounded.
· directors of the Racine Home stockh olders that 1974 was a fund , $6,140.85; law library damage to the tractor and Dorothy L.· Youn g, dba Route I, daughter of Mr. and
slig ht damage to the car.
Young's Market, Middleport. Mrs. John lhle was among the
Na tional Bank at its annual good year for the bank. The .fund , $8,315.&gt;2.
181 students graduating with
WASHINGTON - HOUSE DEMOCRATS, VOTING in the meeting of stockholders.
bank makes it their policy to
Criminal cases filed last year
At 6:42 p.m . on Olive
Hawley purchased a Zero high honllrs following the fall
name of c&lt;ingressional reform, threw two powerful committee
Other boa rd members invest the ir deposits in local were 1,803; civil Mlll!S.,. ~7 and Township Road 28) Shirley A. . Candy Bar containing a piece quarter at Ohio University. A
ehairmen olit of office and came close to deposing iwo others . elected were Harold Carnahan, home loans, auto loans, and sm~ll claim civil caseS122.
Jones, 34, Tuppers Plains, was ·of foreign material which was
.
student must . receive ail ac' ·
The baronl.al Reps. w. R. Poage of Texas, eight years chairman Earl · Cross, J. Dillon "Cross, other famil y expenses. Their
Receipts for the month of !raveling west when the right or a metal consistancy and
cumulative grade point
Of the Agriculture Committee and F. );:dward Hebert of , Albert Hill, Jr., Freelaad fai th in the people or the Decem ber,
1974 ,
were, front wheel of her car we nt off broke the plainliff'!J upper left
average
or over to
Louisiana, four years head of Armed Services were the only Norri s, Carroll Norris, George communi ty has been rewa rded Sa,063.80, Mrs. Hobsletler the highway into a ditch, central tooth . awley is graduate ofwith3.5 high
honors.
011es. The 291-member caucus elected 17 other chairmen Wed- Neigler, Arthur Orr, J. W. by continuous growth, Wolfe reported .
ca using the car to strike an claiming negligence ag~inst Miss !hie received he; Master.
nesday who ·were ~ther incumbents or next on the seniority Weaver, Jr. , and Charles D. 'reported . .
Dislribijlion was as follows, em bankment. The veHicle both named defendants.
of Education degree.
ladder.
.
In another entry, William E.
Yost.
The directors· and members fines to state, $2,077.80 ; fees to crossed, the highway into a
· Reps. Wayne Hays Of Ohio and Wright Patman of Texas,
LOCAL TEMPS
Employes ' of lhe Racine 'of the bank extend their thanks sheriff, $1&gt;0:3&gt;; fines ·and costs pasture field, . struck another Pickens, Rl. I, Long Bottom,
earlier denied the nomination by the Democratic Steering and Home National Bank are .Ben to the depositors for their to .. county , ·general fund, embanknnent, cro5sed a small filed for divorce agains.t Joyce
The temperature Jn down- · .. ~
Policy C&lt;Jmmittee to continue as chairmen of Administration and Petrel , Frances Wilcoxen, business in 1974 and are looking $1,7&gt;2.47; law library fund, creek and ca me to a stop.
A. Pickens, 1\1. I, Long Bottom , IDwn Pomeroy at 11 a.m. today ..'
Bankirig respectively, were expecte&lt;l to win those nominations Betty D. Justis, Ruth ·c. forward to the challenges of $660.89; auto license and gas
There · was
mode rate dharging gross neglect of duty ·. was 25 degrees under sunny '
(Continued on page 101
damage ,
and extreme CrueJiy.
Skies.
L
. '
1975.
funa. $422.29.
GALLIPOLIS FERRY Stauffer Chemical Company's
Gallipolis Ferry plant, having
completed its first year of
commercial production of
Fyrquel EHC, a fire resistant,
synthetic hydraulic fluid for
steam turbines, Plant Manager
T. R. Friar was presented a
plaque in recognition of that
achievement in a brief
ceremony Thursday ni ght
following · a dinner at the
Kanauga Holiday Inn .
"Through the intensive efforts of our plant staff, we have
been able continuou sly to
produce a superior quality
product that can reduce down
time and result in cost saving~
for the utility industry," Ron
James, a product mana ger in
Stauffer's Specialty Chemical
Division, said in making the
presentation.
The · one year-old product,
designed specifically for use in·
electro-hydraulic control "EH·
C" systems, has helped

.

Hosptt(tl although Mrs. Loomis
is 'in the intensive care un it.
City Pn trolmct n Don Spence,
State Pol r·c·o Tr&lt;Joper· 1.. ' A.
.,Akers and Sheriff's n.·pul)• N.
•A:
K Benson were ca lled to the
scene when the three persons
were found IIIH'Onscious b1• a
neig hbor , Hoy Meadows. ·
From poli..:t• aml Dthers tl11·s
slory 1mfolded :
Mr. and Mrs. Meadows are
neig hbor s of the Loomis' and
since they have recen tly been
away. Mr . Meadows decided to
go over an d visi t with them.

at

•
Fyrquel EHC m
key utility role

GIRLS SPORTSWEAR . ~:

I
1

Misses and Womens Sizes.

•

PLAQUE PRESENTED - Participating in the
ceremony recognizing the first year of commercial
production of Fyrquel EHC at the Gallipolis Ferry Stauffer
Chemical Company Plant was Ron James, second right;
product manager from the firm 's corporate offices. James
awarded the plaque toT. R. Friar, manager of the Gallipolis
Ferry Stauffer Chemical Plant, third from left. Looking on .
are Jim Cunningham, area superintendent for the Gallipolis
Ferry Plarit, far left; Bob Agate, production manager at the
local plant, second from left, and Gordon Harlow, area
superintendent at the local plant, right.

••

-

Dresses and evening..Wear 1

PT. PLEASANT - Three
''
persons narrow ly escaped
dea th Thursday night in a
downtown residence when they
were ove reome by car bon
monoxide flunes . Ql~ick action
of a neig hbor and others was
credited toda)' wi UJ sav ing
their li ves.
.
Fotmd tm consciOu.s at 1311
,.,viand St. were Mrs. Nor"
Loomi s, 81; her son, Harold•
Loomis, 51, and a housekeeper,
Edna Baxter, G7 .
Today they were reported
.
.
llll provmg in Pleasant Valley

,____s_a~!!~~!--~~~~~!;=~~-L-~!(_!__

Shoes For The Family

Main St.

I

"5ti II a good selection in Juniors
Preteens . Misses and Womens Sizes.

Holzer Medica l Center
(Discharged, Jan. 15!
Theresa Adams , Rebecca
Bateman. Kathy Chcelwood ,
Helen Cohenour. Ernest Cook,
Alice Coug henour, Marie Hall,
Eithel Ha lstead, Charles
Hampt on,
Jr .,
Willard
H olcomb . Rosetta
Hollingshead. Betty Hnlchison,
Naom i Kee ls, Cecil Kir k.
Jonathan M·cCabe,. Robert
Morrow , William Mullins,
Re becca Perkin s, Kathryn
Phillips, Lena Raike, Clarice
Rapp, Loretta Reynolds , Oscar
Robertson , Peggy Simpson,
Roy Smith , James Surbaugh,
Rnth Sweeny, Mrs. Charles
Taylor and daughter, Eloise
Taylor, Erin Thompson, Ruth
Weed , Wilma Weimann, Mrs.
James Holley and daughter,
Mrs . Thomas Cross and
daughter .
( Rtrlhs)
Mr . an d Mr s. Charles
Sprouse, a daug hter, Wellston ;
Mr. and Mrs. James Butcher, a.
son. Middleport.

30%-40%
EVEN 50%

'

~

-;~:;~;~;~-·------·---·---r~;~~~;;;""~·-----------T -s::e~;,-;-;~~;n-;----------1

shorn 93-103 lb &lt;0.70-42.50.

.
I

.

~

Attending were Bradbury,
and principals CUff WUson 'Of
North GaUla; Bob Laminl!,
Kyger Creek; Paul Oillqll,
Hannan Trace ·and Llo~d
Myers of Southwestern.
.·:

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 8 PMe

Sheep : Slaughter lambs I
higher , c hoi ce and prime faH

Gearance Time At Chapman's

.

westem.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
JANUARY SALE DAYS

'

-·

••

graduation l!llercises will :J&gt;e
moved back one week due:,to
last fall's strike.
•
bacGraduation· and
calaureate servlcea will ,..
held at North Gallla, ~
Creek and Hannan Trace H)sh
Schools on Friday, May 30th.
Commencement and lllii:calaureate will be held Sn
Sunday, June I at Sout.b-

24 .50 ; c hoice heifers 285·375 lb

e

Also

and Supt . Bradbury kre
the school wlll be limited .
PrinciP,al Lanning urged working with Gallla County
students and teachers to wear Sheriff Oscar C. Balrd and
heavier clothing until warmer Judges R. WUUam Jenkins and
weather arrives. The Kyger Robert S. Betz to correct the
Creek area schools are only situation.
buildings in the GaUla County
Nancy Ramig of the SouthLoc'\1 Schools heated by
natural gas.
eastern Ohio Emergency
This was one of several items . Medical Services announced
dis.cussed this morning during that first aid lessons are being
a · secondary principals' planned in the eounty schools.
meeting with Bradbury .
A minimwn of 20-30 people
Another major problem are needed for the eight-hour
reviewed was unruliness of course. Principals will discuss
students and adults at county the course with members of
basketball ~ games and other their teaehing staffs. It was
sc hool functions. Principals announced that high school

'

1

•'

Feeder catt le : Choice steers

MARRIAGE LICENSES
Pearl Allan Smith, 18. Rt. 2.
Pomeroy, and Patricia Lou
Darst, 17, Rl. I, Middleport.
John B. Artrip, Jr., 26,
Pomeroy. and Eva Jane Artrip, 21. Pomeroy .

FRI.-SAT.-SUN.

••
"•

300-600 lb 13-40-17.50. 630·715 lb
25.25-28.30 : good 300-600 lb 13.50·

MEIGS THEATRE
TONIGHT
JAN. 16
NOT OPEN

Gallla
County School
mediately launched telephone
Superintendent
C. .Comer
and letter writing campaigns
to fellow Democrats urging Bradbury informed Kyger
rejection of Thompso~ and . Creek High School Principal
Reuss in the caucus. Thompson Robert L. Lanning today
se nt out his own udear C&lt;Jlwnbia Gas of Ohio has
colleague" letter stating he ordered a 40 pet. reduction in
would accept the ehairmanship use of natural gas at Kyger
and asking caucus support. • Creek High School.
Marvin Patrick, Colwnbia
DEMOS TO ME ET
Gas of Ohio represe~tative
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The from Portsmouth. said the cut
executive committee of the will beconie eUective imOhio Democra tic Party is mediately. Bradbury said Ule
scheduled to meet here Jan . 24 order will affect both heating
to name a new chairman. The the school and coo king .
new cha irman would replace Thermostats mwt be lowered
William A. Lavelle of Athens at night and night activities at
who resigned D&lt;:c 20

Two women,man escap~ l
death by gas poisoning

'•

40% reduction in g~s use ordered

Veterans battle to .hold onto job

.

..

•.,

'·

'·

~.

I
• !

•"

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