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8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday,Jan.120. 197&gt;

-;,.

Steak House boss missing
A- missing person,s , report

has been fi led on Charles
Forbes, 44, of Kerr. Ohio. nig ht
\ lllanager of Bob Evans Steak
" 'House .
Forbes is 6-2, weighs 16\
pounds and has black half,
dark eyes and a sca r on h1s
ri ght cheek. and forehead . ·
Accord in g to Ga llipolis
police, Forbes \l as reported
m1ssing at 1 a m. Sunday by
hts wtfe He Ow n:; a green 1966
Ford Countr} Squire wagon
w1th Anzona plates .
Forbes was lo have deposi ted
the mghl receipL' at lhe Ohio
Valley Bank. but only one bag
reached the bank
Accord tng lo the report , one
hag was foWld in the night

deposttory, empty Another
was foWld w1th money . At least

two bags of money are missing.
Pollee deciirto reveal how

much money was involved.
lnvesti~ation revealed that
there was no sign of a di•tur-

Mrs. Bush died Monday morning
Mrs Mallie Wedge Bush, 89,
d1cd Monday morning at her
home on Ash St. in Middleport.
Mrs. Bush was bom May 22,
188510 Jackson Cpunty, W. Va .",
the daug hter of the late Charles
and Sara Elizabeth Rollins
Wedge . Besides her parents
she was preceded in death by
her husband, Henry E Bush, m
1959 and a brother, Denc1l
Wedge
Mrs. Bush was a member of
Heath Umted Methodist
Church, Wl1ite Rose Lodge.
Evangeline Chapter 172, Order
or Eastern Star. and the Wl1ite

Meigs
Property
\

Marvin Delbert King , dec. lo
Wimfred J. King, Cert. of
Trans., Salisbury .
· Wtnifred Jane King lo David
Allen Reed. .80 Acre,
Sahsbury
Arthur C. Gtbson, Mave
Gibson to Gary W. Gates,
B1;0!jda Gates, Parcels, Scipio.
• Earl E. French, Hilda
French,
Owen
French,
Patr1c1a

reallylceep and treasure , It
1s somethmg worth waiting
fo r "

If you have to wait f or a f ew
minutes whe n you v 1sit the

POMEROY CE MENT
BL OC K CO , REMEM BER , you' ll ge t the same
cou rt£.JUS and indiv1dua l
ser v1ce when you 'r e wa ited

on by our '" FR IE NDLY
ONE S'"

French 1

Shnne of Jerusalem .
She is survived by a
Mrs . J . J .
daughter,
(Kathleen) Davis. four
granddaughtets, Mrs . James
(Charlene) Batey. Gallipolis;
Mrs. Randall (Diana) Fisher,
Oxford; Mrs. Don (Elaine )
Swisher, Point Pleasant: and
Mrs. Don (Joyce) Ha~rd ,
Toucla, Mex1co, and three
great-grandchlldren .
Graveside ntes will be held
a_t 2 p. m. Wednesday at the
Hopewell Cemetery, MI. Alto,
W. Va. wtth the Rev . Robert
Bumgardner officiating
Fnends may call at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
anytime after 10 a . m
Tuesday.

/

Transfers

" tf 11 1s somelhmg you can

bance at the restaurant o!fice
prior to Forbes' disappearance .

Curtis

Columbus lass

for area

Junior Miss

accidfnts

MOUNT VERNON , Ohio
(UPI) - Taryn Lee Hunter, 17,
Columbus, badly discouraged
after doing no better than being
a runnerup in first night
judging, was crowned the
winner of the Ohio Junior Miss
Pageant here Saturday
night.
The daughter of Mrs. Winfield Hunter won the 1975 title
along with a modeling course,
a variety of scholarships and
prizes Saturday night in the
last of the two-&lt;lay judging of 28
teenagers from 24 Ohio counties.
Miss Hunter expressed shock
at winning, and commented
that ''my ooUege dreams have

Postpp,nements,
cancellations

French, Dixie French, Marion
French, Grace French, Trans
America Ins . Co., U. S.
Fidelity. &amp; Guaranty · Co. lo
Ronald D. Thomas, Karen L.
Thomas, Lots, Middleport.
Fred W. Q'ow III, Ancillary
Adm ., Marvin Mahre Hudson,
dec. to James N. Smith,
Constance C. Smith, Parcels,
Bedford.
•
Archie E. Lee, June P. Lee to come true .' 1
Carl S. Weaver, Hilda M.
She hadn 1 rated her chances
Weaver ,
0.34433
Acre, very hijlh after Friday night's
preliminary judging, where
Syracuse.
United States Marshal for So . she was nmnerup In poise and
Disl. of Ohio, Elmer V. Mit- appearance behind Holly
chell, Joy C. Mitchell to Far- Mayer of Geauga County, who
mers Home Adm .. 1.5 Acre, was fifth In the final" judging.
Runnerups, In order, were
Rutland.

YOUR

SAVINGS
TODAY?
You migh t say we 've got a green thumbmoney green ' We can show you a whole
varie ty of savings plans fro m regular passbook savin gs to ce rtifi ca te savings-each
plan desrg ne d to su1t your particular budget re quiremen ts and savings goals! So
drop 111 today and p lant yo ur savin~s with

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight thru Thursd1y

JAN. 20-23
NOT OPEN

FRIDAYthru SUNDAY
JAN. 24-25-24
JUGGERNAUT
(Technicolor,
Starring Richard Harris

lPG I

Co lorn rtoons
Show Storts 7; 00 p.m.

205.

FORTH£
PROTECTION
YOU NEED-

Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.
POMEROY, OHIO

Play it oaf~ 'and· aure.
It may be time to
have your preoent
policy updated.

MEMBER FDIC
Eachdoepoaitor insurMito $40,000

L•t's _folic Soon

MEMBER
FEDERAL RESERVE
SYSTEM

DALE C. WARNER
INS. AGENCY .
FIOEI&amp;l

Of, ~ SII

1NSU UH ( I

COI~UIION

102W.
I

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persons were treated for traffic
accident injuries suffered over
the weekeod after another
winter storm hit Mason
County, creating treacherous
icy roads.
Four me"'bers of a Pomeroy
·'
family were treated at
Pleasant Valley Hospital. The
father, Paul Wickline, 26, was
admitted with head injuries.
LETART, W. Va. - Dan· P.
Betty W1ckline, 20; Paul Jr ., 5,
Sayre
died Saturday at 9:20 a;
and Tammy Wickline, 4, were
m.
at
his
home here.
treated and released.
·
He
was·
born Jan. 24 1
Mary Dalton of 507 Kathnor
Lane in Point Pleasant was 1902 at Letart, the son of tlwi
also treated and released at the late Bert E. and Anna Thomal
local hospital. Details of the Sayre. He was also preceded b!
death by a sister, Esther C:
accident were not learned.
Carolyn Sue Roush of West Sayre; two brothers, Harry L:
Colwnbia reportedly was in- and John P. Sayre.
Mr. Sayre was a retired
jured in a single_,ar mishap,
and a 50 year member
farmer
but there was no report of her
of
Cottageville
Chapter ~
being treated . Sheriff's
deputies Rupert Rice and N. E. F&amp;AM.
He IS survived by his wife;
·Benson said Miss Roush was
Betty
Mitchell Sayre; a
driver of a vehicle that went off
daughter,
Catherine Lvnn
the road at 10:30 p. m.
Sayre
at
home,
and th~
Saturday on State Route 62
brothers, Rupert, Harold and
near West Columbia.
Saturday night police were Edward Sayre, all of Letart.
Funeral services will be held
scurrymg in all directions
dispatched to largely single- Tuesday at 2 p. m. at ilie a-owvehicle mishaps blamed on Hussell Funeral Home with th.e
road conditions. All were Rev. Rufus A. Q'omartie officiating. Burial will be In
minor.
The Mason County Sheriff's Letart Eve~green Cemetery.
Department is investigating a MaS()nic graveside rites will be
report of Mike Fielders of New held by the Cottageville
Haven being struck by a car Masonic Lodge. Friends may
driven by Randall F. McMillin call at the funeral home after 2
of Hartford, near New Haven p.m. today.

Emerson. Well, retires

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Po~N~n~Y

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

. Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Mary Hackney, Racine ;
Nancy Walker, Pomeroy ; Gail
~erce,Sara Pierce and Teresa
'Pierce, all of Pomeroy.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Andrew Hatfield, James
MorriSon , George Deem,
Norene' Shepard, Batty Boley.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS John Blosser, Middleport;
Larry Fields, Syracuse;
Elizabeth Bartoe, Long Bottom;
Evelyn
Kovalick,
Glendale, W. Va.; Esther.
Barker, Middleport; Florence
Baer, Minersville; Ruth
Thornton, Long Bottom; Terry
Little, Athens.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Ralp~ Brewer, Myrtle Durst,
Sara Pierce, Maria Waldnig.

_died Saturday

News.

• •

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WALTER CLELAND displays a tie tack awarded him in
recognition of 30 years of service with the State of Ohio .

Cleland honored
•
fo-r long service
Walter Cleland, a Racine
volunteer
f1r eman
and
manager of the Ohio Slate
Liquor Store 111 Pomeroy. has
been honored for completing 30
years of service with lhe Stale
of Ohio.
Cleland worked w1th the OhiO
Employment Services for two
,years before going into employment at the State Liquor'
Store about 2 years prior to
World War II. He left employment with the state during '
the war, returning to the liquor
store in 1947 where he has been
serving as manager since John
Will, long-lime manager,
resigned almost four years
ago.
Cleland is chief of the Racine
Emergency Squad and is fire
department secretary. He is "a
member of the IOOF Lodge 242

Briefs~

-

Continued from page I
.....
through smoke from dozens of tear gas grenades and forcect
security forces back with a hall of bricks. They swarmed Into thl!'·
courtyard of the two-l!tory building, tore down railings, smashed::
a showcase, and pulled down an American flag and hoisted &amp;:
Greek flag In its place.
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in Pomeroy. He is the son of. the
late Oakey and Blanche
Manuel Cleland.
Many res1dents are familiar
also w1th Mrs. Cleland, the
former Mae Howell , who has
been active in Racine Village
affairs for a number of years.
She is currently v!llage clerk
Mr and Mrs. Cleland have
e1ght children, Allen of
Weirton, W. Va.; George of
Delaware; David at home ;
John of Parkersburg ; Mary
Sloter of Racine; Earl of
Racine; Bruce of the Texas
Community in Meigs County,
and Carroll of Racine. They
have 17 grandchildren.
To mark the occasion
Cleland was presented a tie
lack in the shape of Ohio with
an inscription noting his 30
years of service.

•

KANSAS CITY,MO.- MURALIST TI!OMAS Hart Benton, It
close friend of the late President Harry S Truman, oollapsed a"
his home Sunday night and was pronounced dead at Menora~
Medical Center.
~
Benton, who would have been 86 April 15, had been acllv~:
until recent weeks. The artist was known for the huge mural he_:
painted at the Harry S Truman Library at nearby Independence.The mural, which covers one wall of the library, depicts &amp;:.
pioneer scene In Benton's rugged, realistic style.

By United Press International

WIND GUSTS OF MORE TI!AN 100 MILES PER HOUR
howled across the Colorado Rockies Monday, overturning trailer
homes, tearing roofs from homes and knocking radlo stations off
the air. A gasoline tank fire, fanned by 100 mile-per-hour winds,
spread to a farmhouse at Waverly, Colo . The owner of the home,
Orville Pierce, was seriously burned.
Wind gusts clocked at up to 104 miles per hour ripped through
the downtown section of Fort Collins, Colo., causing repeated
power shortages at KIIX radio. "We can't stay on the air," KIIX
News Director Ernie Over said. "We can't even get out to the
weather measuring instruments to find out how hard the wmd 1s
blowing."

COLUMBUS-THE OHIO EDUCATION ASSN. said Monday teachers should be in line for most of the $91.3 million
provided for in a bill being pushed through the General Assembly
to aid state schools. John Hall, chief lobbyist for the OEA,
testified before the Ohio Senate Finance Committee, and said the
money is needed for the teachers for a variety of reasons.
"As a generalization, school districts beset by inflation have
tended to cover added fixed costs first - transportation and
utilities, for example - and then told teachers tjlere is not
enough money to take care of their problems," said Hall. Spayde
noted that districts facing teacher contract deadlines April30 for
the 1975-76 school year need a clearer state funding picture.
Spayde pointed out that voters in 13 Ohio school districts
rejected higher property taxes three times last year and those in
35 other districts twice rejected new millage.

•

COLUMBUS - ABOUT 600 LOBBYISTS spent $407,000
during the 1974 session of the Ohio General Assembly to push
favorite bills, records filed with the Secretary of state's offlce
show.
The expenditures included $29,719 by the electr1c, telephone
and gas companies, $24,850 by lawyers, $18,116 by the insurance
Industry, $12,567 by the Ohio Education Assocation and $10,041 by
Blue Cross.
SANTA MONICA, CALIF. - HERMAN Paulk lay with a
knife wound in his heart, and there was no time for the niceties.
Without using an anesthetic, doctors cut into Paulk's chest, lifted
his heart and sewed up the hole. For all practical purposes,
Continued on page ij
0

Hike protested
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) More than 100 persons a!lended
a Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio hearmg Monday to
(I"Otest a request from the
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Electric Co. for a 12 per cent
rate hike . Other persons
picketed the commission's
offices during tbe })earing.
The electric company is
asking the PUCO to approve a
$50.7 million rate increase
which would affect nearly all of
· its customers in central and
southern Ohio.~ finn said it had already ·
reduced its operating expenditures and curtailed its con:
S!rucllon program "to a point
where there will be a
nrogressive reduction in
r .liability and qu~lity of

'
Trim , neat and terr ific ... easy llvmg cOordinates cut out for flattery .
In no-problem , easy-care knits of Encron( r) polyester that just
pack. up and go anywhere, arriving unmussed and beautiful! Belted,

skirt. long sleeved shirt, blazer. Stra ight-leg ,

shirt

iacket. In gi-een, yellow, and peach. Sizes 8 to20.

ALSO AVAILABLE IN WOMEN'S SIZES

Shop Tuesday 9:30_to 5 p.m.

ELBERF LOS IN·_POMEROY
'
f

Weather

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the Smith-Ne lson Motor Co.
The Well famil y for a
number of Yeurs residl'd on
Pleasa nt Hidge in Pomeroy
Wcll1s rt forme r Pomero) Fire
Ch1ef and IS .s hll a member or
the PomerO} F1re fJepa rtrnent
He and Mrs. Well hav e a sun,
Howard, who i.s also employed
at Snuth.Nelson Motor Co., and
a daughter, Doris Snowden,
F1ve Pmnls, employed al the
Pomeroy National Bank The
couple has one grandson, Terry
Snowden Well is lhe son o( the
late Mr. and Mrs. Val Well of
the Sumner Road Ne1ther Mr
nor Mrs Well was born m
Meigs County bul they were
reared here and have spent
their hves m the county
Well 's final day of employment was Friday . •

BILL NELSON, right, owner of Smith-Nelson Motor Co. presents a gift to Emerson Well
who IS retiring after 32 years of employmcntmaulo body shops. Mrs. Well is pictured with her
husband and Nelson.

at

Devoted To The

VOL XXVI NO. 196

en tine
lntere~ts

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

of The

Meig.~-M11.~on

Are11

TU ESDAY. JANUARY 21. 1975

15 CENTS

i Mayor

:;:::.-:;~=:;~:;$:~::&lt;~.==~~~;~-zm::X.:.."-:.:~!&gt;'X~:::;.,:::~:::::~;::o;.:;m::·;..:-:-;;.~:!.,~

~ Price raises o~ consumer

i~ goo4s slacken in December
f

WASHINGTON (UPI) -Consumer prices rose D. 7 per
;::: cent In December -the smallest monthly increase since
April - but the total 1974 jump of 12.2 per cent was the
largest since the end of World WarD, the government said

I
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;i;·
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.:~

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:;:;
il~

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expects water
system ready in March

Wblle the Consmuer Price Index was rising at a
slower rate during the last three months ol 1974 thau :·:·
Unes of the new water system In Pomeroy are 90 pel. unearlier In the year. the aooual rate was still the third m derground but completion will not be until March, Mayor Dale •
largest since records have been kept.
;:;: Smith told the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce Monday
-The BLS said the Index reached 155.41n December. II :;_._ :_,_l
Sunken areas where the lines have been laid , and debnswas the largest gain since au 18.1 percent Inflation rate In
httered uptown streets ca nnot be corrected and cleaned up until
1946, the year after World War II, and the second largest :;:; after completion of the project. " It's a bad situation," sa1d the
gain since 1918 when the government Index rose 2U per j~ mayor.
Invited to review progress of the new water system for the
cent after World War I.
;:l
The December mouth Increase matched tbe July rate :::. chamber following lunch at the Meigs Inn, by Ted Reed,
and was the smallest since AprU when consumer prices
president, Mayor Smith made these other points :
rose 0.5 per cent.
···
- The water for the system will be supplied from three wells
The Index means that a typlealselectlon of goods aad i\~ located in Syracuse .
services that cost $100 In 19&amp;7 cost $155.40 In December. :$
- The targe holes in the streets due to the laying of the lines
The Index Itself will produce Inflationary forces In ~ cannot be put back to the original condillon until the water
1975 since many union contracts and Social Security
system is completed which is expected to be some time In March
benefits are based on• the increase.
for two reasons, (I), when the new system is put mto service, the
The Increases In the consumer prlee Index for the last
lines will have to be flushed and (2), if there are any leaks, the
three months of 19741ndlcated some decline In the annual
cost to repair the streets and dig them up again would be
rate of Inflation to 10.1 per cent.
prohibitive.
Over the year about 40 per cent of the CPI Increase
- The lines have been connected but no water is going
was due to a 13.2 per cent rise In prices of nonfood comthrough them; they will bypass the present water plant; a new
modities. The food Index rose 12.2 per eent, exactly the
line onto Breezy Heights has not been laid.
same as the over lllndex during the year. Food accounts
- When the lines have been completed and the streets blackfor about 25 per cent of the CPl.
topped, the village will be cleaned up Smith said.
The higher prices in December were blamed on food,
- The new lines are taking the place of the main lines. When
especially sugar and Items using sugar. Other price Inthe new water system is turned on, water in Pomeroy wlil be
creases were In a wide range of goods and services, inturned off for 24 hours'; residents w1ll be given a 48-hour nollce.
eluding household supplies, gas and electricity, and public
- There will be better pressure in the area of Salisbury
transportation, the government said.
Scbool because, if needed, an additional tank will be placed at
Prices for beef, fresh fruits and vegetables, clothlug
ROck Springs .
and used cars declined In December.
- There are to be 18 to 20 additional taps in the Rock Springs
The December Increase In nonfood commodities was
area due to a new housing development.
0.4 per cent, the smallest monthly rise In ll!74.
·
- No new lines will be laid up Lincoln Hill but there will be to
Monkey Run.

fi

McKenzie hired '
bonald McKenzie was hired
as street superintendent
Monday night by the Pomeroy
Council by a vote of 5-l with
councilman Ralph Werry
casbng the dissenting vote.
McKenzie,. former
superintendent of schools on
the old Northern Local District
in Meigs Coun!r and of Southwestern Local in Gallia County
until two years ago and a
former teacher, also played a
role in consolidation of the
Meigs Local District.
McKenzie was hired on a
three month probationary
period.
In other business, council
hired Blain Rice, New Marshfield, as Pomeroy's new trash
collector of March l. Don
Griffith
of
Scientific
Samtat10n, who has been
servicing Pomeroy, let his

contract expire Dec. 31, 1974.
Rice will be Issued a license by
the village at a cost of $&gt;0 a
year. Jane Walton , cleFk, is to
nol!fy gr~lfith of council's
action .
The service will cost $3 per
month with no llm1t on containers, and one apphance
junked per year per familv
Police Chief Jed Webster
reported that he has been m
contact with Robert A. Coil, a
representative of the Rockwell
Parking Meter Co., Pittsburgh,
in regard to meeting with
council ~and demonstrating
meters. Council agreed that
Coil meet w1th them at the next
meetmg on Feb . 3.
In other. business, council
granted permission to the
Harrisonville PTO to sohci t
business establishments for a
spnng carnival this week and

to th e Auxiliary of Drew
Webster Unit 39 of the
Amencan Legion to se ll
poppies on May 23 and 24. They
also agreed lo pw-chse a new
typewnter for the Mayor's·
secretary , Dorina Nardei.
John Manley, coun cilman,
reported that Bill Watson IS
unable to gel in his driveway
smce Lasley Street was made a
one-way street. Council agreed
that the area should be painted
yellow to prohibit parking near
the driveway
Mayor Dale Sm1th reported
receipts for the month of Dec ,
1974, in the amount of $2,962.48.
Attending were Mayor
Smith, Ralph Werry, Wilham
Snouffer, Lou Osborne , ·
Manley , Harry Davis and Phil
Globokar, councilmen, Mrs.
Walton , clerk , Jed- Webster and
Henry Werry .

EXTENDED FORECAST
Thur s day through
Saturday, a chance of sfiow
Thursday or
Friday,
clea ring on Saturday. Highs
will be in the 20s Thursday,
warming to the mid 30s or
the mid 40s Saturday. Lows
wlll be in the teens early
Thursday and in the 20s
ea rly Sal~rday.

FILES SU IT
Mary Hendflcks, Syracuse,
filed sui t £or divorce w Meigs

County Common Pleas Court
against Donald Hendricks,
Syracuse, chargwg gross
neglect of duty and ex trere
cruelly

LO(;AL TEMPS

The temperature m down ·
to1•n Pomeroy alll a m. today

was 33 degrees under sunny
skies.

I

40 .opposing Racine ·annexation

service.''
Arthur G. Green, presjdent
of the firm and chariman of its
hoard, said the company is
unable, without immediate
RACINE - An estimated 40
temporary rate relief, to
citizens
of th1s community
secure external linancing
night elected to leave
Saturday
sufficient to refund its already
outstanding short tenn debt or the1r warm firestdes to register
opposition at a public meeting
to support its construction
to the proposed annexation of
program .
Among persons testifying
Monday was suburban Reynoldsburg Mayor Richard
PROPERTY STOLEN
Daughtery .
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Daughtety called recent Department reported that
electric
rate increases taken from Meigs High School
"ungodly" and said he wanted when it was broken into over
the cpmmi&lt;sion members tO the weekend ·and ransacked
recognize the 65 per c-ent were a tape recorder, two
electric rate Increase which · power units from physics lab
has occurred during the past 13 I and a five pound fire exmonths is "unreal ."
tinguisher.

outlying areas.
E. A Wingett, one-time
mayor of Racine, had called
the meeting of persons in opposi_tiOn to the annexation. He
sa1d "17 reasons'' were listed
at the meeting for opposition,
the "b1ggest one" bemg that
the area m question ts ''five to ·
six times larger" than Racine
as 11 is today. Also, the cos t of
· maintaimng additiOnal streets,
the larger water system, for
additional · li ghts and f1re
hydrants "would be' tremendous", accordi,ng t9 Winge tt.
Winge tt said, the present
•water syste m " paid for and

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pl oyment w1th the former
BlaC'ttnar firm after 1t became

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POMEROY

short- sl~ved

Mrs Bill Ne lson, owne rs.
hostmg the affair Members ol
the fam li) of Mr . and Mrs
Wells as well as co·workers
were on hand for the affmr
during whi ch ttme Nelson
presented a gift to the retlrmg
worker .
Well star ted w1 th the
Blaeltnar Auto Co 32 years ago
and w1th the exception of two
years when he worked m Ute
body shop of an Atl1ens firm ,
Veterans Memorial Hospital
has been al lhe Pomeroy
Well
Admitted - Lena Howard ,
Pomeroy; Charles Ohlinger, firm . He returned to em·
Rutland: Barbara Kassa!,
Parkersburg ; Carol Gheen ,
Pomeroy; AJva Barmtz,
Pomeroy; Joann Wolfe, • Lows tonight m the nuddle
Syracuse ; Zelia Lawson , 20s. Cloudy Wednesday.
Racine: Hugh Bush, Racme; chance of flumes , h1ghs in the
Larry Casto , Jr , Gallipolis .
upper 30s Probablhty of
DIScharged - Dav1d Jacks, precipitatiOn 20 pet today, 30
Harry Little, Celesta Bush
pet. tonight and Wednesday

?;

TIIREE ARAB GUERRilLAS WHO TOOK PART in a
bloody siege at Paris' Orly Airport surrendered in Baghdad
today, ending a daylong airborne odyssey in search of a refuge. A
Beirut newspaper said tbe guerrillas wanted to protest fsra~li
attacks on southern Le,banon.
Baghdad A1rport officials said an Air France 707 jetliner
carrying the guerrillas landed in the Iraqi capital this morning
for the second time In 12 hours and the gunmen surrendered.
"The surrender came without any problems," the officials said
in B, telephone conversation with UP!. They did not say if the
three requested asylum.
The officials said "the French crew of the plane is m good
condition."

pull-on pant. sleeveless turtleneck ,

Nelson Motor Co. w1U1 Mr. and

• . todav.

For the well-mannered air .. . Windowpane Checks by Queen Casuals

'

After 32 years of employment in automobile agency
body shops , Emerson Well of
Pomeroy Route 3, has retired
Well and his wife. the former
Ehzabeth Ross, daughter of the
late Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Ross
of Cherry Ridge in Meigs
County, were feted w1th a
buffet supper and par ty
Monday evening at the Smith-

Dan P. Sayre

died Saturday

CAN'T QUIT YET
COLUMBUS (UPI )
Greyhound bus lines has been
ordered to continue service
between Cleveland and Sandusky peoding an Investigation
and hearing by the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio
(PUCO) .

us !

Saturday at 6:40 p. m. Poli~
said Fielders was not treated !t
their knowledge.
'·

Gerald E. Ours

SUBSIDIES DISPERSED
COLUMBUS ( UPI) -A total
of $141,984 crlmlnal cost subsidies has been sent to 64 Ohio
county clerks of court.
State Auditor Thomas
Ferguson said the payments
ranged from $47.10 to Noble
County to $18,779 for CUya(loga
County.
The state pays for the successful prosecution and Imprisonment of Indigent persons
convicted of felony crimes
under the criminal costs
subsidy program.

NOT
PLANT

'"

PT. PLEASANT - Several

UEEN
CASUAlS

GREEN THINGS
GROW WELL

WHY

Veteran car_body man,

Cars banged up on ice _:

•Q ·ELBERFELDS IN

Market Report

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Susan Barboark, Xenia;
Marva Mosier, Celina;
Chrysann DeSantis, Canfield,
and Holly Mayer, Novelty.
Miss Barboark, competing
as Greene County Junior Miss,
won double honors Friday
night. She. took top scholastic
honors In her division as well
as the Kraft hostess award.

HERE!

Continued from page 1
Owen Ralph Norton, 73,
getting down to cases.
Pomeroy, died this morning in
Morton underlined Ford's
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
comments. "Let's start with
Mr. Norton was the son of the
the President's program in the
late
William C. and Nettie
Congress and if it later nee&lt;b
Knapp
Norton . He was also
adjusting, let's adjust II."
(l"eceded In death by a brother,
Nessen said the long-range
Uoyd ; -three sisters, Mildred
tax reduction and energy
Merle
Norton, Gladys Marie
conserva lion proposals would
Hoffman,
aod Goldie Evelyn
go to Congress later. "It would
North .
be Irresponsible," Morton
Mr. Norton was retired from
said,'' for Congress not to act''
the
C. &amp; 0. Railroad and a
on some form of energy conAIRMAN HARPER
of the Fraternal
member
servation.
TUpPERS PLAINS
Order of Eagles, Pomeroy .
Morton accepted suggestions
Airman Lawrence C. HarHe is survived by his wife,
that Ford's plan of Increasing
per, son of retired Air Force Della M. Hoffman Norton ;
charges on imported crude oil
Master Sergeant and Mrs. three sons, Carl H. and Harold
by $3 per barrel would evenDrury L. Harper of Tuppers
T. Norton , Pomeroy, and
tually raise the price of
Plains, has been assigned to Clarence E. Norton, Minersgasoline between IOor I&gt; cents. Chanute AFB, Ill., after
ville; one sister, Ruth Mae
Zarb explained :
.
completing Air Force basic McCormick, Beckley, W. Va.;
"The average pr1ce of petraining. The alnnan has a brother, Eugene Wayne
troleum product will go up 10
been assigned to the Norton, Winterhaven, Fla.;
cents a gallon," he said. 1 ~The
Technical Training Center at eight grandchildren, two greataverage price of gasoline may
Chanute for specialized grandchildren, and several
go up somewhat more, but that
training in weather services. nieces aod nephews.
means ... lh'l (l"oducts people
Harper is a 1974 graduate of
Funeral services will be held
need day In and day out and
Eastern High School.
Wednesday at I p.m. at the
have little choice over, such as
Ewing Funeral Home with the
fuel oil, may (go up) a little
Rev . Dear! Porter officiating.
less than 10 cents a gallon."
will be In Salem Center
Burial
Simon was asked if he is
Cemetery.
Friends may call at
fighting for Ford's program.
the funeral home Tuesday
"I most certainly am," he
from
2 to &gt; and_7 to 9.
replied, "and I am very optimistic we are going to succeed."
Morton appeared on ABC's
NOWYOUKNOW
••Issues and Answers,'' Zarb on
The lowest temperature ever
CBS' "Face the Nation," and
recorded
was minus 126,9
No charges were filed m
Simon on NBC's "Meet the three area !raffle accidents degrees Fahrenheit at the
Press."
investigated oyer the weekend Soviet Antarctic station Vostok
by the Gallia-Me1gs Post State on Aug . 2~. 1960.
Highway Patrol.
The first occurred Saturday
on Rt. 684, two and eight tenths
Holzer Medical Center
of a mile north of Rt. 143. The
(Births)
patrol $8id an auto driven by
Friday
Mr. and Mrs.
A mee ling of the Racine PTA Robert J. Rickelman, Jr., 23, of
scheduled tonight has been Rutland, hit an icy spot in the Virgil M. Dill, son, Syracuse.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Mccancelled due to weather highway .
Coy,
daughter, Ray, Ohio. Mr.
conditions. A new date will be
R1ckelman 's car went out of and Mrs. Richard E. Reese,
set.
cOI].trol and struck a telephone daughter, oak Hill and Mr. and
pole owned by General Mrs. Stephen G. Wilbur, a
A MEETING of the CanTelephone Company . There 'daughter, Wellston .
dystripers
of
Veterans was moderate damage to his
Saturday - Mr. and Mrs:
Memorial Hospital scheduled car.
Robert L. Lewis, daughter,
this evening has been post.
At 7: 5Q p. m. Saturday on Rt. Middleport.
poned due to the weather.
218, one mile south of Rt. 7, ! Sunday - Mr. and Mrs.
Charles D. Ellis, 16, Gallipolis,
SCHOOLS OF Meigs County lost control of his car which Arthur Lee King, son, MI. Alto,
were closed today for the went off the highway striking a W.Va. Mr. and Mrs. Larry E.
second consecutive Monday hght post owned by Russell E. Prater, son, Oak Hill.
due to a snowfall overnight Fellure. There was moderate
which created icy driving damage.
conditions.
A Sunday acc1dent occurred
at 4:30p. m. on the FairfieldCentenary Rd. eight tenths of a
mile north of Rt. 141.
GAlLIPOLIS, OHIO,
Officers said David J . WorkJan. 18, 1975
man, 18, Gallipolis, lost control
Sales Report ol
of hiS car wh1ch went off the
Ohio Valley Uvestock Co.
right side of the highway
STOCKER CATTLE
striking a tree. There was
STEERS - 250 to 300 lbs. 18 to heavy damage to h1s car.
24.7&gt;; 300 to 400 lbs. 2Q lo 27.&gt;0;
400 to 500 lbs. 19 to 28; 500 to 600
lbs. I7 to 26.&gt;0; 600 to 700 lbs. 20
to 31; 700 lbs. and Over 25.&gt;0 to
33.5Q.
HEIFER CALVES - 250 to
300 lbs. 17 .&gt;0 to 21.5Q; 300 to 400
lbs. 16 to 23; 400 to liOO lbs. 17.&gt;0
to 22.&gt;0; 500 to 600 lbs. 16.5Q to. HUNTINGTON, W. Va. 23; 600 lo 700 lbs. 20 to 22; 700 Gerald Eli Ours, 1'&gt;5, Huntington, formerly of Portland
lbs. and Over 18 to 30.
m
Meigs County, Ohio, died
STOCK COWS &amp; BUU.S
~By the Head) - Stock Cows Saturday. He was the S()n of the
100 to 18&gt;; Stock Cows and late E. E. and Ethel Gorrell
Calves 160 to 215; Stock Bulls Ours.
no to !85; Baby Calves 7.&gt;0 to . Mrs. Ours was with the U.S.
30; (By the Pound 1 - Canners Army Corps of Engineers and
!. CUtters Cows 13 to 17.50; served as chief of the Locks
Holstein Cows 15 to 19.85; and Dams Branch until his
Commercial Bulls ( 1,000 lbs. retirement In 1972. He was a
member of the Ninth Ave.
and over) 21' to 24.75.
VEAL CA'-IYES - Tops 220 United · Methodist Church, a
lbs. to25048'to M; Medium 200 veteran of World War II and a
lbs. to 300 30 to ~~; - Culls 30 member of the Propeller Club
Port of Huntington.
tKnvn.
'
He is survived by his wife,
SHOATS - 8 to 17.
Mary Louise McDade Ours;
one daughter, Mrs. David
(Linda Lou) Wright, Miramar,
SEE GRADUATES
Sheppard AFB, Tex ., has Fla.; one son, Lynn Duane
announced graduation of Ours, Barboursville, W. Va.;
Serg~ant Billy D. See of two sisters, Mrs. Thelma
Middleport from the U. S. Air Kellenberger, Columbus, and
Force refrigeration and air Mrs. Garnet Johnson, Belpre,
conditioning course conducted and two granddaughters.
Funeral services will be held
by the Air Training Command.
The son of Mrs . Laura Tuesday at 2 p. m. at Beard
Garlinger of 640 (,Burel St., Funeral Home, Huntington,
Middleport, he is a 1969 with the Rev. Irvin C onner
graduate of Meigs High School. officiating. Burial will be m
White Chapel Memorial
Gardens, Huntington . Friends
IN HOSPITAL
may call at the funeral home
Mrs . Olan Genheimer, lodayfrom 2to ~and 7 to9.
Minersville, is a surgical
patient at' Holzer Medical
Center. Hei- room number is

Blame ice

crowned Ohio's

'

'

Owen R. Nortol\
, died on Monday

-·"'

- ·

The opposilion feets the town
has a surplus of $18,000. He said
should
grow but doesn't feel
the oppo,«il10n to annexation
'
that
the
town people should be
appreciated the efforts of the
ladefl
with
debt to progress.
committee headed by Tom
Wolfe, Frank Cleland and Joe They feel annexmg should be
Stobart. Wingett felt ·that done m smaller areas , one at a
some thm g could be worked out time.
Wingett was mayor when the
that all would agree to.
ex
ishng water system was
. Wmgett sa1d the annexation
constructed
and he said tt was
had been done in secret, and
all
done
without
grants, with
the people of the village want to
kn ow more about the proposal all people working together .
A public hearmg on the
and JUst what IS gomg on.
propa.ed
annexatiOn will be
Wolfe and the other two men
who proposed. the annexation held m the court room of the
feel that the village needs to cour th ouse by the Me 1gs
grow and now IS the time to act, County Commissioners Jan . 28
at I p.m.
not wall until 1t is too la te.

- There will be emergency electr1c power at the well site
where there will be three pumps, one on standby.
- In regard to the reports several weeks ago that the water
in Pomeroy was not safe 1o drink Smith held that the water was 1
not contaminated, only discolored with sediment.
IN OTI!ER BUSINESS, Reed introduced a new member,
Mrs. Nell Haymaker who along with her husband own and
operate theN &amp;N SporlsShop in Pomeroy.
Reed showed chamber members an attractive picture of
Pomeroy taken by night from the West Virginia side of the Ohio
River. A gift to Reed from Water G. Seinsheimer of Cincinnati,
Reed suggested the picture be processed and imprinted on post.
cards.
Reed and C. E. Blakeslee will attend a meetlng of the Ohio
Historical Society on Thursday to designate certain btilldings as
historical sites.
Mrs. VanMeter asked if the chamber was considering
purchasing Christmas decorations. Reed explruncd thai plans
are to purchase new decorations and that the plan was certainly
not a dead issue.
B1ll Grueser and Mrs. Millard VanMeter
stated that the hole in the street on West Main near Modern
Supply was very dangerous and should have a caution light to
warn motonsts.
Reed asked Smith if Pomeroy V11lage Council is stiU interested in the old Pomeroy Senior High building and Smith said
yes. He said the present city hall_is in bad condition and he,
Smith, is in fear it will be condemned.
Attending were Reed, Mrs. Millard VanMeter, Melvin
VanMeter, Bill Grueser, Ferman Moore, Richard Chambers,
Wendell Hoover, Blakeslee, Smith, John Koebel, Dale Warner,
Mrs. Haymaker, Virgil Teaford, Bob Jacobs, Jack Carsey,
Beulah .Jones, Melissia Cerise, and Katie Crow.

$806,009 budget
given approval
The 1975 buagel providing
ex penditures of $800,000 was
approved 'and several staff
m ~ mbers were g1ve n. per·
m1 ssi on tv , atte nd special
events by the Southern Local
Sc hool D~Stncl Board of
EducatiOn Monday mght.
Th e board approved the
attenda nce of h1gh school
Princi pal Jim Adams to a
sen.mar on student records at
Ne lsonville on Jan . 22, and
Mr s Lee Lee , mus1c In·
s tructor , to a state convention
10 Cmcmllllh F"eb. 6-8.
The
Ra Cine
Alumm
AssociatiOn was give n per·
missiOn to usc the high school
on May 2.1-24 for its annual
reunion and Cub Scouts were
given use of , the high school
ca feteria on Feb 25 for a Blue
and Gold Banquet.
Calamity Days, including the
past tw o Mondays when
schools were closed due to
weather, were approved .
The board approved Ben
Bickers as a subsl!tute bus
. the 'release
dnver and demed
of the ch1ldren. of Fred Morrow
from Southern to the Meigs

Loca l Dis.tr1ct for transportation purposes.
It was reported that a
committee has been named to
study high school facilities and
make recommendations to the
board. Makmg up the commitl.ee will be Supt. Bobby Ord ,
pnnc1pal Adams, board
president Denny Evans and
one citizen from each of the
school areas. The next board
meeting was set for Feb. 19.
Attend1ng were board
members , Evans, Dennie Hill,
Grove r Salser, Jr., David
Nease and Ja ck Bostic, Supt.
Ord, C)erk Jane Wagner,
Jennings Beegle, principal of
the junior high, and William
Downie represe nting the
teachers of lhe district.

Car left road

No injuries and no damage
were reported in a single car·
accident Monday al 6:10p .m.
at Hemlock Grove, Bedford
Township, on TR 162, Cook
Road.
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Department reported that Earl
MEET TONIGHT
C. Kauff, Jr., 21, Hemlock
MASON - Town Councrl has Grove, was traveling west on
made plans for ·a special Cook Road when he lost control
mee ting this evening at 7 p.m. of his car on the ice. The car
in the town hall when officials started sliding ~ideways going
will meet with representatives off on the left, causing lhe right
of PoinTView Cable TV to front fender to strike a fence
discuss rate mcreases . Mayor post on the Robert Hawk
Fred Taylor and councilmen property . No citation was"
1nv1te all 1ryterested persons. issued.
;f

'

_L

I

�2- The Dall) Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Tuesday Jan 21 1975
..:

TOM TIEDE

Editorial comment,

at the PX

•

•

opznzon, features

By Ralph Novak
Hey B1lly who s your
favonle baseball player ' Hank
Aaron ' Baby Ruth ' Jolmny

Ford's energy package getting more flak dilily
Although Prc&lt;ldent Ford s whole tax

Eve r~ one

agrees that the saggmg econom y

needs a boost m the form of

1

masstve trans

fusiOn of spendmg mane} mto the pockets of

Ameri cans The dtspute 1s over hoy. bag a tax
cut there sho tid be and ho" I o;hould be han

dled
Democrats m Congress however are
mcreasmgh opposed to the 01! pn ce hike Idea
The President estimates that It would result 1n
htg hcr gasoline pnccs of sorne tlun~ under 20
cents a ga llon fhe extrn fed~ra l mcume from
th1s as n ell as other taxes he proposes on
domes tic 01! and natural gas plus tan•s on 011
compan) wmd f til profi ts v. o 1ld eventually be
return ed to the economy

In an) event Europea ns toda} are domg

whdt Amencans Will probably do They are
p tymg the pnce for gasolme - m some
CO\tntrles as much as $1 50 for $1 85 a gallon -

and cuttmg theJr conswnphon only m1mmally
Well what can be done to cut gasoline
consumplion ';l Does an} one have a better Idea
th 1n Mr Ford '

The cntl( s argue that the l1ghcr cost of
gasoltne and home hcctLtfl g fuel \\ Oulcl not on!)
d1reru, ht tc1 ns umers \\h{'re tl hur ts most The
h1gher (Ost uf c1ude 01! would tndu cc tly ra1se
the pncts of 1 multi tude uf p1 od H.'ls n udc from
petroct emt cals from too t! b1 ushe s to textiles
and thus feed the st11l r tt;: tlg fu es of mnat10n
all the more
At the same t1me b} r usmg the cost of
manufa ctunng such thmgs l:IS automobt les

whtch use so man) plasttcs 1t could silffen
al ready strpl\g conswner 1cs1 s ~tn cc to bu) mg
and further aggravate recesswna ry forces

throughout the economy
As fo r the energy •av1ng hopes of the plan
1t may be wondered whetl1cr a like n! or 20cent or even htg her hike m the cost of a ga llon
or gasoline would dtscourage Amen ca ns fr om
dnvmg to an \ slgl;llfu.: an t degi ee
For better 01 \'r OI se An e1tcans are vitally

dependent upon lhe1r cars and the hkel) 1esult
of hnvmg to spend mm e to opel ate those ca rs
SA) some obse1 vers woul d be that th ~y would

Bench? Tom Seaver?

Oh come on Johnny you
know better than that My
favonte player 1s the great
n ght.hander Dogfish Huntle;

spend less on other lhmgs
The experience of Europe may be m
struct1ve m this regard Long before anybody of course
heard of Abu Dhabi or the OPEC Eureopeans
R1ght I forgot He s the one
were paymg pnces for gasoline that would who started out hls career w1lh
have made Amencans blanch Desptle thts the Brutes then went to the
and desp1te lov.er average mcomes than Noblemen the Aardvarks the
Amen ca ns
Europea ns took Co the Loopholes the Sapsuckers the
aut omobiles after World War II m the same Prof1leers the Eels and the
way Amcncans d1d tn the early decades of the Kangaroos before s1gmng last
ce ntury •
week w1th the Cap1tahsts He
To be sure European s always favored 1 got $118 mllll on a nommatwn
small econom1&lt; al cars partly beca use of the to the U S Senate three dates
h1gh cos t of gasohne but also beca use their ctty Wllh Raquel Welch and an
streets and country roads were not butlt to option to buy Upper Volta I
handle Amencan stze cars
thmk How long has he been w

cuttmg recess ton ftghting encrg.,.-conscr\ 1ng
package seems lo r m mto more co ngress wnal
fla ck \11th ead passmg da) by fa r t1 e most
contro\erstal aspect of 1t 1:s h1s proposal to rwse
fees on fore1gn otl b1 $3 a barrel to discourage
consumption

Many m Congress favor rat10mng argumg

th tt tits would llm1t automobile use wh1le not
contnbuttng to mflatwnary pressures But
unhke a h1gher tax on gasohne wh1ch at least 1s
a s tratgh~forward uncomplicated approach
ratwmng would reqUire the settmg up of
bureaucra tic machmery reachmg from the

fede ral to the local level and raiSe all kmds of
queshons about fa1 rness and as m World War
11 poss tbly create a black market tn coupons
As 11 looks now Americans are gomg to get
a tax cut wh1ch IS bound to have a benefiCial
counter recessJOnary effect

But there IS no solutwn m s1ght to the
energy crtsts whtch IS the central problem
facmg us tn the Immediate years ahead and
thus hllle prospect that we are not gomg to
have to turn around and spend th1s new found
money so that hke Ah ce m Wonderland we
can JUSt keep runnmg m the same place we are

today

DR. LAMB

the maJors agam?
Two

seaso ns

Wha t

'

•

\\ Ill mam latn good hea lth m the
future

fh e t1 pe of d1et suggested for
people \11th colon problems IS a
subject

or contra\ ers)

among

ph1SIC!ans The end result 1s
I m confused about what to do
Am Information or advice }DU

can g1ve \\Ould be grea tly
appreciated
DEA R READER - There IS
lots of room for confus1on For
yea rs doctors have presCribed
bland low res1due d1ets for
spasllc or 1rr1table colon Work
by a Brahsh surgeon smce
co nfirmed b) man) other
doctors strongly suggestS that
th1s was exact!) the oppos1te of
what most people m our h1ghly
CIVIlized soc•el) reall) needed
ThiS gave nse to the bulk d1et
concept, w1th parllcular em
phaslS on ge ttmg cereal fiber
from w~ole wheat and whole
cereal products as opposed to
refmed flour
It has smce been shown that

' eget.,ble fiber IS also helpful
Whenever there 1s a drastic
change m thmkmg like this
there "Ill be a period before
there IS general agreement
Then there IS always the ex
cephonal case that requrres a
d1fferent approach Still the
ev1dence IS very good that the
colon needs bulk and that
means vegetable and cereal
fiber m the d1et
Intolerance to lactose the
double sugar m nulk IS still a
different problem Many adults
have this condition and 11
causes the same symptoms as
a spastic colon It IS qUickly
and dramatically treated by
Simply stopprng use of m1lk
and all nulk products These
people w1U need another source
of calc1wn l\ltlk mtolerance
w1lf cause d~geslive problems
even If your d1et Is otherwute
nearly perlect and contains
adequate bulk That may have
been your mam problem The

'

a

competitor I remember \\hen

he first came up they sa1d he
had all the tools electron1c
calculator New York agent
Sw1ss bank account m
vestment counselor degree m
fiscal policy from the London
School of Econom1cs I
remember how glad th e
Brutes o"ner Farley 0
Chmley was when he s1gned
Hun Uey He sa1d 1t would mear
a sure pennant for the Brutes
but he hadn t figured Huntley
would JWllp after two games
That s baseball though The
game IS nev er O\er until all the
players show up
I sl!ll don t see what 1t IS
about Huntley that you hke so
much Johnn) '
Well you remember how
Chmley wanted to s1gn DogfiSh
to a 37 year contract calhng for
a $1.-a year automatic ra1se
w1th starhng pay of $12 a
wee~'
Old DogfiSh saw
through that r1ghtaway That s
why he went to the Noblemen
Yeah now 1 remember how
thnllmg 1t was to read about
that m the busmess sectwn
But have you ever gotten an
autograph from Dogf1sh or
anythmg '
One hme I wrote and asked
hun to s1gn my baseball card of
h1m He sent me back a form
le tter hsting hiS rates for
autographs wh1ch ran from 50
cents for an Illegible scrawl
\\nlten w1th h1s left hand to
$29 95 for an Olde English
Signatur e featunng a self
portrait as the dot for the 1 m
DogfiSh I settled for a
pawprmt from one of hiS 73
cats for $4 99
You rea great fan Billy Is
1t true that you wanted your
father to keep changmg JObs so
you would always hve m the
tow n w1th Dogfish s home
team 7
Boy was Dad a spOilsport
He kept saymg how somebody
had to hav e loyalty to
somethmg these days and
anyway he hadn l had any good
offers recently When I asked
h1m why he couldn t Just work
out hiS option he h1t me with
h1s lunch pall
I guess I still don t un
derstand exactly why you ve
been so faithful to Huntley and
thmk he s so cool Was 1t
because he restored your fa1th
m our old natwnal pastime '
Exactly
It s great Billy tha t you
sllll ha\ e such fa1th m
baseball
Who sa1d anything about
baseball ' He restored my fa1th
m that old natwnal pastime
greed Now I know better than
to waste my time readmg the
sports page when I can be
checking trust laws That
Dogfish really knows how to set
an example

Bulk diets are suggested
By Lawrenre E Lamb MD
DEAR DR
1 AMB
Recently I read ) our art1cle 1 n
combatmg
cereal fiber
d•verllcul os•s I de1eloped a
spastic colon last Februar)
M) doctor put me on a bland
diet and Ubrax After t" o
months my cond1h on had on!\
unproved somewhat He took
me off whole m• lk and no11 I
am starling to see a real 1m
provement
I m very confused at th1s
time I only started dramkill,l( a
lot ot rmlk a short time before
my spastic colon problem
started I have never been
much of a vegetable or salad
eater but I d1d mclude them m
my meals several times a
week I really don t know what
brought the condition on
My doctor sa1d I must stay on
a bland d1et, but I feel that you'
need · roughage as you ex
plained I'm 31 and would hke
to have a seccmd child I need to
be on a correct d1et now so I

Wedding bells ring for Bench

Showdown

m1!k problem here IS the same
w)lether) ou are usmg whole or
skim m1lk II IS the double
sugar and not the fa! that IS
causmg the problem
You may need a bowel
trammg program For more
mlormallon on this wnte to me
at P 0 Box 1551 Rad1o Cit)
Stahon, New York N Y 10019
and ask lor the booklet on
spastic colon Send 50 cents to
cover costs
You can always do some
experimentation on your own
and fmd out Stay off all milk
and milk products mcluding
cheese buttenrulk and foods
that use lots of m1lk m
preparatiOn then see what
happens
You can also try the foods
w1th lots of bulk and see if that
Improves your condition Also
stay away from coffee tea
colas and other caffemaled
beverages

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
NEWYORK I UPI) - B1ll Walton has gotten cold feet
That s the easy thmg to say and a lot of people sa)'lng 1t
Portland s rookie red-head IS bemg hkened to the young man
who falls m love marnes the g1rl lives with her siX montha and
discovers he made a lernble miStake He gets a divorce vows
hell never go through another ordeallike that as long as he lives
then turns nght around and marnes agam ms1de of a year
From all reports B1ll Walton has grown diSenchanted w1th the
c1ty of Portland and With playmg basketball there In pla m
words he wants out
He comes from La Mesa m sunny southern CaWorrua and has
been quoted as saymg Oregon IS not warm enough for him and
that h1s feet m particular get cold whenever he practices m
Portland s Memonal Colisewn
B1ll Walton has been called a non-eonfornust who marches to
his own type drummer Be that as 11 may he also 1s an ex
trordmarily sens1hve 22-yearold who has been thrust m an en
tirely different enVIronment lor the f1rst time m his life
The world of professwnal basketball IS a demandmg one
highly competitive and mtensely combat1ve Wilt Chamberlam
had h1s troubles adJustmg hiS first year m professwnal basket
ball particularly to 1ts sociologiCal aspects So for that matter
did Kareem Abdu!Jabbar Who can ever forget all the problems
ElVIn Hayes had making the tranSition from the UmverSJty of
Houston to the San D1ego Rockets
Walton sformer coach at UCLA John Wooden IS a WISe man
an understandmg man and he was the f1rst one to fore see the
possible pitfalls that loomed ahead lor Walton after leavmg
UCLA Wooden never had the slightest reservation about his
talented &amp;-11 center making 1t m pro ball He was reasonabl) sure
Walton even w1th that IriCk knee of hiS wouldn t have any
physiCal problem He d1d md1cate though Walton s most dif
f1cult adJustment would be emotwnally and mentally
John Wooden was absolutely nght
Of them to whom much IS g1ven much will be expected
John Wooden used to tell B1ll Walton quotmg from the Scnr&gt;tures
What B1ll needs more than anything else IS more disc1plme
John Wooden told me from hiS off1ce m Los Angeles Monda)
When I had to be f1rm w1th hun I was I remember havmg a
problem w1th h1s harr He wanted to wear a beard but he never
wore a beard He will listen If you listen to him he w1lllislen to
you He has a nght to hiS opm10ns He doesn t have to conform to
everythmg but there are certam thl!l/lS he has to conform to m
our soc1ety and learrung that 1s part of adJusting
The Sl tuatwn m Portland 1s this
The fans there went all out lor B1ll Walton Last year the Tra1l
Blazers were able to sell only 2 900 season tickets this year w1th
Walton they sold 6 000 for their arena wh1ch has a capacity of
11 781 Portland fans are unhappy over B1ll Walton s ge neral
attitude toward them and the c1ty, and the Tnul Blazers may be
forced to trade Walton to appease !herr season ticket holders
They may deal him to some club like the Los Angeles Lakers
now m last place and looking around for a shot rn the arm
If the Lakers have a chance to get Walton Pete Newell therr
general manager IS mterested
He s from the area and you have to conSider him one of the
potentially great players m profesSional basketball Newell
says If there IS a chance of getting him from Portland- ! say
1f because we don t want to be gUJlty of tampermg-1 d want to
talk to him and find out what he expected of us If you ever made
a move like that yo u d also have to consider what the Portland
club would ask m return They would never g1ve hun up for
nothmg
The NBA s tradmg deadlrne IS only II days off on Feb 1
Walton s teanunates aren t sure whether the club will keep him
or deal hun Sidney Wicks who played w1th Walton at UCLA and
IS a teammate of h1s now w1th the Trail Blazers doesn t thmk
they ll trade hun
My own feelmg IS there IS a better than 50-50 chance they will
the same way Atlanta traded PIStol Pete MaroVIch Baltunore
let go Earl Monroe and the Vtrguua Squrres parted w1th Julius
Ervmg when those three msJSted upon gomg elsewhere
He s great WICks says of Walton Its beautiful playmg
with the guy
B1ll Walton meanwhile lSn t letting thiS sudden storm knock
him off his feet He feels he can r1de 11 out and he probably w1ll

Mason County

News Notes:
~

By Alma Marshall
MASON- Wahama High School has been notified that the 13
students rn the White Falcon Band have been chosen to play rn
the All-State Band thiS year Donna Marr who plays the con
trabass clannet a frrst year band member rated highest rn the
stale competition
Dianna Evans alto clarmet, was Judged second m the state
and Jeanette Oldaker who plays the french hom also placed
second rn the state
Others selected for the All-State Band by a team of several
Judges are Louellen Roush, flute , clarrnet B flat D1ana Frn
rucum trombone Jenn1fer Oldaker baritone horn John
Froendt tuba Robert Jarrell tenor saxophone Mark Harmon
french hom L1sa VanMatre trumpet Cheryl Wea\er bass
clarrnet Kim Knight and Cheryl Adams B flat clarrnet
P(rticJpants tr1ed out on an indiVIdual baSIS at Parkersburg
H1gh on January 10 Waha¥1" s White Falcon Band co-drrectors
are Charles Yeago and Tliomas Phillips
NEW HAVEN - Children love to surpriSe therr parents on
therr birthdays even though many of us Muld love to forget
them
Mrs DaVId IEtta ) Richardson was pleasantly surprised w1th
a brrthday party g1ven by ,her children Crystal and M1ke
Richardson and a ne1ghbor s child Came HarriS on January
13 The children gathered at the home of Came Harr1s where
they baked the cake and decorated to perfection
They all went to the Richardson home where 1ce cream and
cake were-served to Mr and Mrs Dav1d Richardson and Sandra
Harns by the children
MANY F AMIUES m the New Haven and Mason areas have
taken up roller skating at the New Haven rmk Among them are
Mr and Mrs Cecil Cundiff and daughter Tanya Mr and Mrs
Raymond Cundiff and son Johnny Mrs Norma Quillen and
daughters Sandy and Brenda Mrs Dallas Cadle and daughter
JOHN S WHARTON State Chaplarn State Council of West
Vrrgm1a Jumor Order Umted Amencan Mecharucs anq the New
Haven Council No 175 which meets every Thursday evenmg at 8
w1th Danny Harbour Councilor extends the folloWU\g prayer
grant unto us, 0 God, eyes qu1cl&lt; to see the loveliness of the
world m which we live Tram our mmds to be responstve to Thy
care and lovmg kindness Instill rn us eagerness of heart to show
our gratitude for Thy love manifested espec1all) m Jsus ChriSt
our Lord Amen
THE FRIENDSHIP CLASS of Clifton Uruted MethodiSt
&lt;llurch are takmg orders for Vmyl pocketbooks wtth pnces
rangmg frOm $6 to around $10 There ore 19 different styles and
14 different colors to choose from If mterested call Mrs
Hamson Robmson Jr 7'i:!&lt;i786 Proceeds will be used for the
benefit of the church

By Tom Tiede
FORT BELVOffi Va - (NEAl - When the military
command of the 1800s began rece1vmg gripes that vagabond
hustlers were peddlrng rotgut whiSkey and rancid beans to food
short out-back troops the post conurussary was ordered up as a
solution The 1dea back wben soldiers earned $10 a month and
when the nearest CIVIlian stores were often on the other s1de of
the Ind1ans "as to prov1de cheap and convement on-garriSon
grub for the sake of rank and file morale
It has rn the years smce become a se!'VIce mstitullon of no
small consequence The .government spends $250 million an
nually to operate 420 commlSS8rles worldwide and some three
m1lllon military people now cons1der 1t therr sacred right to
purchase food at cost (the average commiSsary savmgs IS be
tween $25 and $30 per $100 of goods)
Small wonder then the gloom that has settled among the
grapefrmt of post stores throughout the nation as the Ford ad
nurustrallon acts to alter the tradition The Pres1dent has or
dered severe cuts m commlSS8ry subs1d1es has ordered the
stores to become seU.. upportmg by 1977 and m essence may be
callmg for an end to a rmlitary pr1v1lege that some consider as
unportant as retirement pay
My Dan s enlistment IS up m April says a pmcurled wife
of a Fort Belvorr sergeant if they cut the coiTUillSsary they can
kiss hiS thirteen years goodbye
Indeed so ser1ous 1s the matter ms1de the serv1ce that
Pentagon obeervers hrnt of possible rebellion w1th national
secunty unpllcations if the Ford plan IS adopted The argument
IS that an all volunteer Army IS not formed on patnotism alone
that certam comforts must,be guaranteed to attract :ne bnd1es
If Congress mcreases pay to cover the commlSS8ry loss okay,
says a manpower general otherwiSe I think we may be
knocking off 20 per cent of our potentials
Desp1te such nsks however the Ford proposal IS to many
outside the IIIIlitary a welcome maneuver And not only for the
few milhon 11 may save the harassed taxpayer The greater
s1gnif1cance of removmg supports from cormrussary operations
IS that 1t may eventually force serv1ce people to mmgle more
wtth us regular ctvillallS
If pnces on .post nse military people will mcreasmgly go off

post to compare The result could be some str1ppmg away of the
msulating effect of rmhtary serVIce a remtroduction to the real
world
There can be no doubt the remtrnduction IS desrrable
Although military posts no longer mamtarn the protecllve gr1p on
personnel they once d1d (In the 1930s many posts forbade large
numbers of troops from all but rare CIVilian contact) garriSon
makeup 1s still deSigned to ISolate
Fort Belv01r as example has not only a coiTUillSsary for
groceries but a PX for department store 1tems, a bank and two
branches a credit uniOn a nower shop a photo studio a library
three on-post elementary schools a theater a bowling alley a
golf course a gas station, a firehouse - and tivrng quarters for
three of four of everybody ass•gned Technically says a post
publiciSt a man and his farmly could serve two years here
without ever gomg outs•de the gates '
Preswnably no one does spend all hiS tune m the womb but
one must wonder Though younger troops retam the more out
than m sentunent career1sts do not They often talk of c1v1lian
life as outs1de ciVIlian busmess as gypsters c1v1lian
problems as the1rs not ours The worry m this should be
obVIous especially m the all volunteer or mercenary military
era An tsolated serVIce IS a riSky serVIce civilian control
demands that ClVIhan attitudes be present
In times past certarnly there was good argument for
provldmg on-post convemences for servicemen and women A
corporal earnmg $140 a month trymg to support a wife and child
needed protectwn and cut-rate groceries
Now however an Army pnvate earns $344 base pay a Wyear-old corporal gets more than $500 - and maJOr generals
who also frequent the diScount coiTUillSsarles, are pa1d $36 000 a
year Most ea rn the1r salanes to be sure but as for the other
privileges It seems unwise to put soldiers many other world than
the rest of us

Generation

Rap

By Helen and Sue Hottel
Once a Klutz, Always a

?

fulp

You grow, up m a small town and you get a label Mme was
always dopey I was fat and clumsy I always sa1d the wrong
thmg so people started laughing befre I even opened my mouth
I m a JWUOr m htgh school now and not fat any more but who
notices' I m still dopey Howard If I asked a grrl out sbe d
run
Last summer I VISited my aunt and uncle m Oh1o and met a
gtrl there who didn t know l was poiSOn I was able to talk to her
and we got along great I d1dn t exactly lie but I didn t let her
know the truth either We've been wr1tlng every week
I ll be seemg her agam next summer Should I tell her how
unpopular I am or JUst let her keep on thinkmg I m one of the
crowd' The funny thmg IS I AM one of the crowd m her town,
because SHE accepts me Sure Wish I could live there all year
round - DOPEY HOWARD
Dear Howard
Let your grrl believe the TRUTH about you which IS you re one of the crowd m her town and probably m any other
town but your own
Meanwhile work on that local ~mage Since you re easlly
accepl&lt;j.d elsewhere only two things keep you dopey at home
group blindness and your acceptance of 11 Bust loose and SHOW
em fnend 1 - HELEN
Dear Howard
Breaking an unage ISII t easy - unless you re away for a
year or two and then come back a 'new man
Couldn t you talk your folks mto letting you stay m Ohto until
you graduate from h1gh school'
It nught be the best rnvestment they ever made - SUE
P S Read on
Dear Rap
When we were m grade school we called this kid
coollebug and pretended if we touched hun wed get cooties
Nobody liked him He was the school joke and he must have been

CINCINNATI iUPli ~ John South Carolina
pla1 baseball he sa1d I m
ny Bench one of Cincmnati s
Bench sa1d he had seen M1ss sure she s gomg to be a good
and the sports world s most Chesser on te levJsJon dmng an baseba ll fan though She
ehg1ble bachelors 1s getting Ultra Bnte toothpaste com seems mlerested enough
mamed to a grrl he has known mercaal
We \\ ere m Las Vegas
less than a month
But she has ne\ er seen me durmg the New Year hohda) S
The Cincrnnati Reds catcher
tw1ce the most valuable player
m the National League broke
the news Monday he w1ll marry
New York Cllty model V1 ck1e
Chesser here Feb 21
Bench a nat1ve of Oklahoma
City Okla IS 27 and MISS
Chesser 1s 25
A fnend of mme mtroduced
MIAMI (UP! ) - The 1974 placed sore-armed Fran Tar
me to her Dec 28 sa1d Bench
National Football League sea
kenton of Mmnesota m the All
II e ve been talking engage
son
ended
Monday
mght
w1th
Star
ga me and "on the Most
ment for the last week and
one of the same messages that
Valuable
Pla)er IIward for his
decided to make 11 public after
marked
1ts
begmmng
wa)
back
performa
nee
talking to her parents and
last August black quarter
Gomg mto the game the
nune
backs can get the JOb done
AFC
had \\On the last three
Bench wouldn t concede 1t
The Los Angeles Rams Super Bowls and SIX of t~e last
was exactly love at first sight
James Ha rm made the latest seven and the last three Pro
but I will adm1t It came on
dent
m one of the most long
pretty fast
standmg preJudices among
MISS Chesser whose parents
sports fans He led the Natwnal
live rn Mt Pleasant S C IS a
Conference to a 17 10 wm over
graduate of the Uruvers1ty of
the Amencan Conference m
the an nua l Pro Bowl by
throwmg e1ght yard touchdown
B e l p r e t o p s passes to Mel Gra; of the St
LouiS Cardmals and Charley
Taylor of the Washmgton
Red skins
Meigs girls
The season began w1th Joe
G1lham
another
black
NEW YORK (UP!) - In
The Me1gs g1rl gymnasts quarterback who led the d1ana one of only two
were defeated by Belpre H1gh Pittsburgh Steelers to a strong remammgundefeated teams m
Saturday at Me1gs H1gh School start He was later replaced by maJor college basketball m
Those placmg f1rst and second Terry Bradshaw who brought creased 1ts lead today m the
respechvely were Mar; Pittsburgh the NFL cham
weekly Umted Press Interna
Blaettnar and Sally Walters on p10nsh1p last week
tiona! Board of Coaches ratmgs
the uneven parallel bars
Monday mght HarriS re
but UCLA held on to the No 2
Others competing were Debb1e
spot desp1te suffermg 1ts f•rst
McLaughlin l1sa !homas
setback of the year
Becky Thomas Jackie Brown
The Hoos1ers boastmg a
and Faye Riebel
perfecll!Hl record rece ived 38
Fol\owmg 1s the remamder
first place votes and 416 pomts
6f the schedul e
from the 42-membe r coaches
Wellston away Jan 25
board and Widened thetr lead to
Ironton away Feb 6
89 pomts over the runnerup
Wellston home Feb 15
Brums UCLA which has a 13 I
L / Belpre away March 1
record was upset by PacifiC
Ironton home March 6
E•ght
nval Stanford 6HO at
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
Athens home March 8
Palo
Alto
Calif , Fnday mght
Cmcmna ll Reds promotiOnal
bandwagon IS rolhng through but rebounded to wallop Cali
four states to drum up mterest forma 102 72 on Saturday
m the baseball team s 1975 mght
NOf IN UNEUP
Lomsvllle the only other
EDMONTON (UP!) - Mike prospects and games
unbeaten
team replaced North
The annual tub-thwnpmg
Walton of tlle Mmnesota F1ght
Carolina
State as the No 3
mg Sarnts and AI SIIIIth of the tour of the Midwest opened at
New England Whalers will not Dayton Monday rught and
be m the lineup Tuesday mght goes to LouiSVIlle Ky and In ATTENDANCE DROPS
for the third World Hockey dianapolis today
MONTREAL (UP!) - Na
Club President Bob Howsam bona!
AssoCiation All-Star game
Hockey
League
Smith the Whalers goalie Manager Sparky Anderson
president Clarence Campbell
stayed home for personal coach Ted Kluszewsk1 and sa1d on the eve of the league s
reasons wh1le Walton 1s several players head the annual AllStar game that 1t IS
suffering w1th a pulled grom tourrng group scheduled to begmn1ng to feel the crunch of
make seven appearances m current economic conditions
muscle
four days Each w1ll be a lunch and at the present tune are
or dmner for area sports not thmking of seeking out
GAME AWARDED
writers
other places to play
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
The group will be m Fort
Campbell sa1d however that
North Amencan Soccer Wayne Ind and Columbus attendance for the first 298
League m an effort to turn lis Wednesday and m Huntmgton league games this season not
Aug 24 champiOnship game W Va and Lexmgton Ky the mcludmg the two expanswn
mto somethmg like the Super next day
teams sho\\ed an average
Bowl Monday awarded the
Players at the var1ous stops drop of nearly 100 fans per
game to San Jose Calif
w1ll come from among Jack game
B1lhngham Fred Norman
Don Gullett Pete Rose Merv
Thts Weeks Spectal
Rettenmund John VukoVIch
W1U McEnaney and Darrel PLAYER OF WEEK
VALI.)E
Chaney
SAN FRANCISCO iUPI) RATEC
RICh Kelley of Stanford who
scored 22 pornts aga1nst UCLA
and JO pomts agamst Southern
USED CARS
Califorma to help the Cardmals
wrn w1th upsets has been
named Pac1f1c-8 Conference
~nat on at Hock ey
Basketball player of the week
L eag ue Stand ngs

and 1 guess some of my fnenc!:;

sht: slid tv H l

\\ Cie f1llmg he1 111 on my

too

baseball ab1hl\ tellmg her I
was a pt ett1 good catcher
What rea llv doubled me 1p

I lie n cdd ang i ~ sci edu led U1e
(i(n Bench as suppo.secl to
rt:pmt fm :spr n~ ta umn ~ m

though

hr added

"

~~

famp;t

wht:r

~

' u

t:

m ta t

Pro Smndings

70 OLDS 88
ROYALE
HT COUPE

Gold

w th tan

matchmg

gold

vmyl roof
nt

full

power a1r

'1495
Karr &amp; Van Zandt
You tl L keULrOua uy
Way of Don g Bus n ess

GMAC FINANCING
992 5)42

Pomeroy

Open Evemngs T1l6 00

Ttll PM Sat

By Un ted Press Internal onal
North
w I I pts gf ga
Sag naw
30 16 2 62 184 155
Fl n l
26 15 4 60 178 134
Muskeg on 27 17 2 56 190 1J 1
PI Huron
19 25 2 40 156 63
K Lans
12 28 1 25 145 217
Kalam a
11 29 2 24 110 63
South
w I t pts gf ga
Dayton
29 13 J 61 186 15 1
ColJmbus 262 1 I 53 192 167
To le do
21 25 2 44 174 174
Des Mo nes 20 25 3 43 157 18 1
Fl Way ne 17 26 2 36 57 174
x l eam d sbancted
Mondays Re sults
No games sche duled
Ton ght s Games
F l n at Lan s ng
Mu skegon at Tol edo
Port Hu on a Ka ama zoo

ffilserable

His farmly moved when we were starting high school Now
I m m college and guess who I ran rnto last week Cootiebug 1
But now he s 6 feet 2and terrific r Also abram To think I used to
snub hun
He can t see me for dust How can I change that' - NEVER
DREAMED
Dear N D
Looks like your cootiebugs came home to roost And tbey
may have caused an Itch you can t scratch - HELEN

UP

+++

to

~PIDNEER*

more

Saws with
muscle for guys hke me who
like to use a httle less(-'L.U
! " JLAA.It"'l
"TheCha1n

iwme IMMnt _... tecll: • O.Wit Liont. Fvot bol\ ,CI ,il

'I

SAYRE HARDWARE
NEW HAVEN

882 2525

W VA.

t

Ill

shape

V1ck1C loves to JOg

\\ tth

Bowls but Hams satd he me Knox scud Wt tvcn h Hl
wasn t aware or that problem b'11 \ s voluntccllllg to gu 111 l n
the klC koff te un Our go 1\s
1 NFC Coac h Chuck Knox also
of Los Angeles was and so \\el c out to be 1t the Af C and
wer e man)

of ht s other

players
I he players had bee n
wmtmg (or this and 1t was a
great personal sHllsfact10n fo r

Ho11 docs Bench dcsc nbe Ius
111fc to be
Shape!) of course
he
answf rs She sa model Shes
dbout 5-6 and 1 d say sorta
blonde
Beds m 1nagct Sparky And
e1so n sa1 d he le a rn ed of
Be nch s plans a couple of
wccb ago

rhe ll!O Grande Red men Will
try to stretch the1r current wm
sb eak to four games tomght
when they host the Wilberforce
Bulldogs
Wilberforce w1th [US! one
loss on Its record dropped a
close dec1s1on to h1 ghly touted
Wnghl State earher m the
season

The Redmcn of Art l.anham
mean" h1le are sporhng a f&gt;-7
record but have been commg
01 stron~

as or late mcludmg a

120-75 thrashmg of Urbana
have ~ouu.:: fun Wt; thd bot h
Saturda) mght
II sa gl"eat 11 ay to statt 1975
Probable starteJS for Rio
lhe nati on lllv tele\tsed
Grande w11l be G1l Pr1ce and
ga me got off to a sl1 \\ star t J u n i o r g i r l s Jim Noe at the guards Dan
bcfo1e H dt ~appotntm g c1O\\ d of
Bollinger and Andy Davenport
only 26 ~8~ f ms and 1t th, lul lf
at the cor ners and J1m Stewart
Chester Marco! s fie ld goal
at center
lose
gave the NFC a 3-0 le 1d
F1rst Redmen off the bench
Emlv 1r1 Ute tim d qu u te t
most hkely w1ll be Bob Cald
M1mm qum terbock Bob Gt1esc
II e M€lgs JwHOI H1 gh g1rls well Mac Barbee Browme
hit Dolphm teamm 1lr Pa u1 ~
H e defeated m their ftrst Wilson and George VIckroy
Warfield on a srm mg l2 lard b sketball game of the season Tipoff IS al 8 p m w1th the
post pattet n P1l[,;but ~It s llov
1 d 11 by Poml Pleasant 24
JuniOr va1 s11les battling at
Gerela then m.1dc 1t 10-3 for U\C
5 ~5
AFC wtth a 33 yard ftcld go 11
Scot tn g fm Me1gs were
In other Ohw college action
fhat s
wh en
Ha1rt s
Peggy J ohnson with 4 pmnts tomghl Cmcmnall vlslls
1eplacmg St Lows Jam Hart P m1 B1 a ue1 wtlh 1 pomt Ktm Marquette Mount Umon IS at
\\ho " en t out wtth an eye 1n Seth w1th 2 pomt,; Patty Dyer Kenyon Wittenberg goes to
JUr) wen t to work wtth h1s 1\\ o w1th 2 pmnts and Marcia Muskm gum
Demson at
sconng passes He ft mshed the Holcomb w1th 1 pom t
Baldwm Walla"e Wooster at
day w1U1 seve n c.:ompletlon s m
Othet Marauders seemg Oberlin Gannan (Pa ) at
13 attempts for 119 ) ards
achon we1e Tem W1lson V1ck1 Ashland Fmdlay at Man
AFC Coach John Madd en of Bla nkenship Charlene chester I lnd ) Allegheny (Pa )
the Oakland Ra1ders admitted Goeg letn Yvonne Core Lon at Hiram Ml Vernon at
disa ppomtmen t
Wood Beverly Hoffman Malone and Cedarville at
Any tune ;ou lose vou r e Br cnda Brown and Robtn Central State
disa ppomted he smd We Sou thc1 n
Monday night Steubenville s
m1ssed a lot of opportumtJes
!Ius Fnda) Me1gs hosts T1m H1rton dropped m 26 pomts
but all m all 11 was a cnsp Potnl Pleasant begmmng at 4 and e1ght rebounds as hls B1g
game It wasn t slopp)
1&gt; m
Red rallied to a 77-6ll wm over

24-10

team after boostmg Its 1ecord
to 12-0 !he Card mals wh o
ranked fourth a week ago
rece1ved thr ee hrst place
votes

Maryland wh1ch got the on!)
other
fir st place
vote
benefitted fr om Its 103 85
whippmg of North Carohna
State to climb one notch to No
4 and North Carohna Stale
which barely squeaked past
North Carolma m overtune

followmg 1ts loss to Maryland
dropped two places to No 5
Alabama Jwnped one place
lo
~after ra1smg 1ts record
to 11
while Southern
Califorma also an upset v1ctun
at the hands of Stanford on
Saturday mght fell two spots
to No 7
Arizona Stale held onto the
No 8 spot With Oregon and
Kentucky roundmg out the top
10
S1x coaches from each of the
seven geographical areas of
the country compnse the UPI
ratmg s board Each week they
are asked to vote for the top 10
teams and pomts are awarded
on a 10-9-3-7~-'I.J 2-1 baSis for
votes from first to lOth

•

•

7 5o ulh € rn Ca l 3 7)
B Ar zona Sta e (1 5 1
90egonl1 2 1
10 Kentucky ( 1 21
11 La Sal l e I 14 1
2 Marquetle 1 1 2
13 Ar z.ona 14 2
14 N orth Caro l na (8 4
15 South Caro na (9 4 )

6 UN Las v egas 1 2 J J
17 ere gh on 1 2 4)
8 Stanford 8 6
9 (T
9
T

e Kansa s 9 J
eJ u la h 1 3

B1g Ten Basketball Roundup
CHICAGO (UP!) - Oh1o
Slate was supposed to flmsh
near the bottom of the B1g Ten
basketball race this season so
It was no surpr1se when the

VIctory 89-69 over W1sconsm

\4
66

Minn esota pulled w1thm balf a
of second place Purdue
game
59
with a 67-08 "'"over M1chigan
40
and Iowa rallied from 11 pomts
10 behmd to upset M1ch1gan State
7
6 83 79
5
ll was a W Ohto State
4
2 Coach Fred Taylor sa1d alter

"

"
1

hts teams wm

We Yreren l

Wildcats serve notice
record last season the W1ld
cats served notice Monday that
Kentucky was ready to reclaun
ownership of the SEC basket.
ball title The lOth ranked
Wildcats overcame a poor

f1rsthalf perlormance to drop
Alabama the conference
favorite 74-69
Kentucky s v1ctory over the
s1xth ranked Cnmson Tide
created a three way fie which
also mcludes Auburn atop the
SEC
Freshman Jack G1vens
layup w1th seven nunules left
m the game broke ~ 55-05 l1e
and put Kentucky ahead for
good '!'he Wildcats had shot a
nuserable 28 per cent m the
first half allowmg Alabama to
grab a three-pmnt halftune
The Oat~ Sentmel
lead
DEVOTED TO THE
But semor guards Kevm
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
Grevey who hrushed w1th 20
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
pomts and Junmy Dan Con
Exec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
ner wbu hart 18 gu1ded the
CtiV Ed lor
Pub! shed da I Y except
Wildcats
sec ond half
Satu r da y b'f The Oh o Valley
resurgence
Theu
outs 1d e
Pub l sh ng Com pa ny
Ill
Court Sl
Pom e oy Oh o shootmg keyed the Kentucky
45769 B\JS ness Off ce P hone
comeback but M1ke Flynn
992 2156 Ed1tor a Phone 992
2157
added 12 pomts on driVIng
Second c a ss postage pa d at
Po me ro y Dh10
layups through the Alabama
Nat1onal ad ve r ts ng
man for-man defense
representa t ve
Bott nell
Gallagher Inc 12 Ea.sl 42nd
Alabama IS now II 2 overall
St New Y ork New Yo k
while the W1ldcats are 12 2
S ub sc r pi on
ra tes
Del vered by earner where
In other games mvolvmg
ava lable 75 cen l s per week
By Motor Route w h ere car r en natwna!ly ranked teams topserv1ce nol ava able One
ranked lnd13na crws~d to 1ts
m an lh S3 25 By ma I n Oh o
and W Va One Year sn oo
20th strrught v1ctory 89-69,
S 1&lt; month!.
511 50
T hree
over WJSconsm and 15th
months
S7 00
Els e whel'i~
$26 00 year
S )( monthS
ranked South Car-ohna dumped
Sl J 50 three manths S7 50
Subscr pi on pr ce
nc udes
N1agara 99 79
I :)undav T m"'S. t.p nt ne t
------- Qumn Bucknrr the Hoos1ers

•

aga1n

VICtOriOUS

Buckeyes dropped the1r ftrst
three league games
But Monday n1ght the
T o p T w e n t y s uckeyes let th e rest of the
conference know they don l
They won the1r
N EW YORK ( UPI
T e hke losmg
Un ted Pr ess
nl e r na o na fourth straight game 77-67 at
Board
of
Coa c he~
co l ege
ba sk etba I rat ng s w 1'1 n umber the expense of a frustrated
ot fi r s pla ce vo tes and cco rd s Northwestern team to SW'ge
hrou gh Sa tur day Jan
a n
pa re n heses (42 of ~ 2 coac hes ahead of MIChigan and mto
vet ng l (Se v enth weekl
fourth place m the standmgs
Team
Po.nts
t lndan atJBII160
416 w1th a 4 3 record
2 UC L A
J 1
J27
No
I ranked
Ind1ana
3 Lou sv I e JJ 112 OJ
306
1ts
hold
on first
strengthened
J Ma r yland
lJ
186
5 N C S (I 2
139 place w1th 1ts 2oth straight
6 Alabama 11 J
161
149

Point Park
Dan Kraft who led Alr Force
w1th 16 points hit a a-toot
Jumper with 2 01 to play
Monday mght and gave the
Falcons the lead for good m a
54 51 wm over Xavier ol Ohio
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
RESULTS
Ge neva 8'2 Alliance 64
Steubenvl le 77 F't Park 68
S l V n c 88 waynesburg 78
Sl Fran 108 Roanoke 88
Ga St 70 So Miss 65
Augu sta 96 P edmont 67
Ga Co l 70 Ga Southwestern

69
M dd e Ga

103 Columbus 88
N Ga 95 C C Spartilnburg 65
Ga So uthern 110 Samford 106
LS U 90 Georgia 8~
I= lor da 85 MI SS 80
NC AS h ev !le 6J NC Wilm 47
Ea st Ca r 110 Da\1 dson 78
Hof stra
F ta Southern 61
U n on 79 Della St 73
Tenn Te c h 71 A Peav 69
East Tenn 89 Murray 85
W Ky 107 E Ky 82
Tu skegee 7q Sl l lm an 54
A la Huntsv 1 e 103 Hunt ngcton

n

"

F ta St 95 B scayne

as

Auburn 98 M ISS Sf 89
Tulsa 106 Okla C!ty 105
Det Tech 79 Saginaw Val 71
H 1 sdale 82 Aqu nas 79
nd lana 89 Wis consin 69
Iow a 83 Michigan S t 79
Notre Dame 96 Holy Cross 91
Ohio st n Northwestern 67
M nnesota 67 Mich igan 58
OePau 103 St Mary s 68
No Ill 78 New Orleans 75
Boston Co 1 61 Dartmouth 55
Hous Bapt 79 Te x Art 78
S F Au st n 8'2 E Te)( 78
Ange lo 77 Tarleton 64
S W Tell: 96 Tex A&amp; I 79
W Tex 82 E New Mex 55
Ark St 56 Stetson 51

SW Me 82 Mo Rolla 59
NE Mo 10.4 Mt Marty 76
DrlJry 63 Kan Newman 62
L nco ln 67 NW Mo 55
Nicholls

st

79 Livingston 64

NE La 95 La Tech 78

Morgan St 71 v St 65
VMI 72 Belhany 43
Wesleyan 56 M T 55
R IT 71 Utica 64
Kentucky 74 Alabama 69
Tenn 65 Vanderbilt 61
Portland St 96 No Ar r. as'
Lew s &amp; Clark 65 Wilmette
Pac Lulh 94 Call of Ida 80

Surprising Bucks j"·'" ""'"""
expected to wm at all when the
season started so I ll take
them any way I can get them
He credited learn pr1de for
the Buckeyes 10-4 record this
year-as opposed to last sea
son s 9-15 fm1sh wh1ch was the
worst OSU showing m 22 years
This team was disgusted
With last year and they d1dn t
enJOY 1t at all Taylor sa1d
The ktds have worked hard
They 11ant to change 1t
B•ll Andreas hit I !kif 13 shots
and hrushed w1th 25 pomts
CraJg Taylor scored 17, and
sophomore Larry Bolden ar
nved m Evanston Ill Monday
sill\ mourrung hiS mother s
death but scored 12 pomts
Northwestern Coach Tex
Wmterwas havmg less success
turrung his team around and
he vowed We re deflmtely

Local Bowling
POMEROY LANES
Ear ly Sunday M111ed
J anuarv 12 1975
Won Lost
Sw sher L ohse Pharmacv

Tom s

By CHRIS SCHERF
UP! Sports Writer
The rafters of the Uruvers1ty
of Kentucky Memorial Coles•
wn are littered With banners
commemorating the Wildcats
bundle of Southeastern Confer
ence champ10nsh1ps won under
the aeg1s of Adolph Rupp
They hang like the Sword of
Damocles over the head of
Kentucky Coach Joe Hall who
had the IIIIsl or tune of takrng
over the Kentucky basketball
program at the same time the
rest of the SEC diSCOvered the
eXIstence of the sport of
basketball
But after a disastrous 1:1-13

he

go mg to be tough to keep up

top poll spot

•

Be ne h IS conflden( he wlll
1 ep 01

smcl She runs a couple of
uulcs e\en mormng Shes

Hoosiers hold

host Reds
on Thursday

m Iampa the next day

Ia

Harris named MVP

Huntington to

rlt \t 11 be no problem
though says Bench We ll be

Redmen
host 'dogs

Ca rry Ou
Putt n s EKe&lt;wa t n y
Eag es C u b
Maye r &amp; H I Brnbcr
Fr c n d l v Ta v e n

22

0

B
12
6

4
'

6

I4

8

B 24
r Ph elps
6
John Ty r ee 44 Women
B e ty Sm h 54 2 M a r l ene
W ISO 505
H gil Game
Joh n Ty r ee
'1 6 J
Ph e ps 209 Wom en
Be y Sm h 230
B arbara
Dugan 86
H gh Team Oame
Tom s
Ci!r v O u 7
Tom s
H qh Team Se r es
Ca r y Ou 2046
H

h lnd

Ser es -

outstandmg guard who has
concentrated up on h1s defense
and settmg up h1s teammates
thiS season scored 26 pomts tn
leadmg Indiana to 1ts SIXth Btg
fen VICtory of the season
lnd1ana center Kent Benson
ndustnat Le ague
added 20 pomts ahd Scott May
January 9 197 5
17 to the romp
won Lost
2
4
The Gamecocks now 10-4 M hon e Soh o
n Boa I nn
0 6
converted 67 per cent of thc1r Slea
K C ewe e r s
0
6
6
10
shots to easily handle N1agara Jack s P ac!:!
A
6
10
Holy Cross held the natwn s LTeam
an dm ark
4
1'2
H gh Team Se res M lh one
leading scorer Adnan Dan
o 2511.'&gt; Jacks Pa ce 2464
tley to SIX held goals but the Soh
K C J eY e er s 23!!3
H gh Tea m Ga m e - M hon e
sophomore forward converted
o 893 M I hon e So h o 850
111-of 22 free throws to carry the ~ oh
a c k s. P ace 848
H gh
l nd
Se r es B II
Imh to a 96-91 VIctory Dantley
W !ford 606 Jr Ke nnedy 552
fm1shed With JO pomts two Ed Voss 543
H gh
nd
Ga m e
B I
below his average
N !for d 2 J Ed Voss 212 Tom
C et and 208

go1ng to make some changes
I ve gone with four or five guys
all year thinking they would do
the job and it s ev1dent they re
not gomg to We want to find
some players who want to play
and won t quit on us It s not a
quesllon of the size of the
players It s the slze of their
spirits and hearts They
weren t watching the score
and that s what I look for in a
team
Indiana s speed, he1ght and
ball handling were too much
for host Wisconsin The
Hoosiers led 4!&gt;-29 at the half
and coasted the rest of the way
behind 26 points from Quinn
Buckner and 22 from Kent
Benson
Minnesota s 6 foot 7
sophomore
Mark Land
sberger who scored 28 points
Saturday agamst Michigan
State put In 31 while the
towermg Gophers handled
M1ch1gan Mmnesota Is now 5-2
m the league, 12-3 overall and
8-0 at home Michigan was held
to a season low of 57 points, 16
below its average
Iowa traded 40-29 at the hall
but outscored Michigan State
IJ-1 m the frrst six minutes of
the second half to get back In
the game The Hawks went
aheatl to stay 6~ on a drlvmg
layup by Larry Parker w1th
2 20 left

Are you sure
you're not
wasting
money on
your car and
home
insurance?

U ca r and home nsurance
seem Ike a b g tem n your
budget maybe 11 s because

you re wasting money on the
wrong k nd or ~:~mount of cov
erage Too I tile protect on IS
Just as was1elul as buymg
more protect on than you ac

lually need
That s where
adv1ce
agent

of
can

the profess1onal
tndependent
often save you
an

plenty In prem urn dollarsand future regrets We are the
mdependent representative of
several 1n surance compan1es
wh ch lets us ptck the one

compa ny that has the besl
po l1cy for you
So ca ll us or come m soon
and lets tal k over your presen
and fut ure msurance needs

Wtlham D Ch1lds

DOWNING-CHILDS
AGENCY, INC.
Mtddleport, Ohio

Henry Block bas
17 reasons why you
should come to us
for income tax help.
I

Reason 5. If the IRS should call you
m for an aud1t, H &amp; R Block will go
w1th you, at no additional cost Not
as a legal representative
but we
can answer all questiOns about how
your taxes were prepared

I or \our Uuung .md LJstenmg
Pleasure• .•.

GEO. HALL
AND THE HALLMARKS

TONIGHT 8:00 TO 12:30

The MEIGS INN
I'on leroy

THE INCOME tAX t'EOPLI!
618 E MAIN ST
POMEROY, OHIO
Qpen 9 A M to S P M Man Sol:.&lt;
Ph t92 3795
NO APPOINTMEN 1 NE&lt;;ESSARY

;

�2- The Dall) Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Tuesday Jan 21 1975
..:

TOM TIEDE

Editorial comment,

at the PX

•

•

opznzon, features

By Ralph Novak
Hey B1lly who s your
favonle baseball player ' Hank
Aaron ' Baby Ruth ' Jolmny

Ford's energy package getting more flak dilily
Although Prc&lt;ldent Ford s whole tax

Eve r~ one

agrees that the saggmg econom y

needs a boost m the form of

1

masstve trans

fusiOn of spendmg mane} mto the pockets of

Ameri cans The dtspute 1s over hoy. bag a tax
cut there sho tid be and ho" I o;hould be han

dled
Democrats m Congress however are
mcreasmgh opposed to the 01! pn ce hike Idea
The President estimates that It would result 1n
htg hcr gasoline pnccs of sorne tlun~ under 20
cents a ga llon fhe extrn fed~ra l mcume from
th1s as n ell as other taxes he proposes on
domes tic 01! and natural gas plus tan•s on 011
compan) wmd f til profi ts v. o 1ld eventually be
return ed to the economy

In an) event Europea ns toda} are domg

whdt Amencans Will probably do They are
p tymg the pnce for gasolme - m some
CO\tntrles as much as $1 50 for $1 85 a gallon -

and cuttmg theJr conswnphon only m1mmally
Well what can be done to cut gasoline
consumplion ';l Does an} one have a better Idea
th 1n Mr Ford '

The cntl( s argue that the l1ghcr cost of
gasoltne and home hcctLtfl g fuel \\ Oulcl not on!)
d1reru, ht tc1 ns umers \\h{'re tl hur ts most The
h1gher (Ost uf c1ude 01! would tndu cc tly ra1se
the pncts of 1 multi tude uf p1 od H.'ls n udc from
petroct emt cals from too t! b1 ushe s to textiles
and thus feed the st11l r tt;: tlg fu es of mnat10n
all the more
At the same t1me b} r usmg the cost of
manufa ctunng such thmgs l:IS automobt les

whtch use so man) plasttcs 1t could silffen
al ready strpl\g conswner 1cs1 s ~tn cc to bu) mg
and further aggravate recesswna ry forces

throughout the economy
As fo r the energy •av1ng hopes of the plan
1t may be wondered whetl1cr a like n! or 20cent or even htg her hike m the cost of a ga llon
or gasoline would dtscourage Amen ca ns fr om
dnvmg to an \ slgl;llfu.: an t degi ee
For better 01 \'r OI se An e1tcans are vitally

dependent upon lhe1r cars and the hkel) 1esult
of hnvmg to spend mm e to opel ate those ca rs
SA) some obse1 vers woul d be that th ~y would

Bench? Tom Seaver?

Oh come on Johnny you
know better than that My
favonte player 1s the great
n ght.hander Dogfish Huntle;

spend less on other lhmgs
The experience of Europe may be m
struct1ve m this regard Long before anybody of course
heard of Abu Dhabi or the OPEC Eureopeans
R1ght I forgot He s the one
were paymg pnces for gasoline that would who started out hls career w1lh
have made Amencans blanch Desptle thts the Brutes then went to the
and desp1te lov.er average mcomes than Noblemen the Aardvarks the
Amen ca ns
Europea ns took Co the Loopholes the Sapsuckers the
aut omobiles after World War II m the same Prof1leers the Eels and the
way Amcncans d1d tn the early decades of the Kangaroos before s1gmng last
ce ntury •
week w1th the Cap1tahsts He
To be sure European s always favored 1 got $118 mllll on a nommatwn
small econom1&lt; al cars partly beca use of the to the U S Senate three dates
h1gh cos t of gasohne but also beca use their ctty Wllh Raquel Welch and an
streets and country roads were not butlt to option to buy Upper Volta I
handle Amencan stze cars
thmk How long has he been w

cuttmg recess ton ftghting encrg.,.-conscr\ 1ng
package seems lo r m mto more co ngress wnal
fla ck \11th ead passmg da) by fa r t1 e most
contro\erstal aspect of 1t 1:s h1s proposal to rwse
fees on fore1gn otl b1 $3 a barrel to discourage
consumption

Many m Congress favor rat10mng argumg

th tt tits would llm1t automobile use wh1le not
contnbuttng to mflatwnary pressures But
unhke a h1gher tax on gasohne wh1ch at least 1s
a s tratgh~forward uncomplicated approach
ratwmng would reqUire the settmg up of
bureaucra tic machmery reachmg from the

fede ral to the local level and raiSe all kmds of
queshons about fa1 rness and as m World War
11 poss tbly create a black market tn coupons
As 11 looks now Americans are gomg to get
a tax cut wh1ch IS bound to have a benefiCial
counter recessJOnary effect

But there IS no solutwn m s1ght to the
energy crtsts whtch IS the central problem
facmg us tn the Immediate years ahead and
thus hllle prospect that we are not gomg to
have to turn around and spend th1s new found
money so that hke Ah ce m Wonderland we
can JUSt keep runnmg m the same place we are

today

DR. LAMB

the maJors agam?
Two

seaso ns

Wha t

'

•

\\ Ill mam latn good hea lth m the
future

fh e t1 pe of d1et suggested for
people \11th colon problems IS a
subject

or contra\ ers)

among

ph1SIC!ans The end result 1s
I m confused about what to do
Am Information or advice }DU

can g1ve \\Ould be grea tly
appreciated
DEA R READER - There IS
lots of room for confus1on For
yea rs doctors have presCribed
bland low res1due d1ets for
spasllc or 1rr1table colon Work
by a Brahsh surgeon smce
co nfirmed b) man) other
doctors strongly suggestS that
th1s was exact!) the oppos1te of
what most people m our h1ghly
CIVIlized soc•el) reall) needed
ThiS gave nse to the bulk d1et
concept, w1th parllcular em
phaslS on ge ttmg cereal fiber
from w~ole wheat and whole
cereal products as opposed to
refmed flour
It has smce been shown that

' eget.,ble fiber IS also helpful
Whenever there 1s a drastic
change m thmkmg like this
there "Ill be a period before
there IS general agreement
Then there IS always the ex
cephonal case that requrres a
d1fferent approach Still the
ev1dence IS very good that the
colon needs bulk and that
means vegetable and cereal
fiber m the d1et
Intolerance to lactose the
double sugar m nulk IS still a
different problem Many adults
have this condition and 11
causes the same symptoms as
a spastic colon It IS qUickly
and dramatically treated by
Simply stopprng use of m1lk
and all nulk products These
people w1U need another source
of calc1wn l\ltlk mtolerance
w1lf cause d~geslive problems
even If your d1et Is otherwute
nearly perlect and contains
adequate bulk That may have
been your mam problem The

'

a

competitor I remember \\hen

he first came up they sa1d he
had all the tools electron1c
calculator New York agent
Sw1ss bank account m
vestment counselor degree m
fiscal policy from the London
School of Econom1cs I
remember how glad th e
Brutes o"ner Farley 0
Chmley was when he s1gned
Hun Uey He sa1d 1t would mear
a sure pennant for the Brutes
but he hadn t figured Huntley
would JWllp after two games
That s baseball though The
game IS nev er O\er until all the
players show up
I sl!ll don t see what 1t IS
about Huntley that you hke so
much Johnn) '
Well you remember how
Chmley wanted to s1gn DogfiSh
to a 37 year contract calhng for
a $1.-a year automatic ra1se
w1th starhng pay of $12 a
wee~'
Old DogfiSh saw
through that r1ghtaway That s
why he went to the Noblemen
Yeah now 1 remember how
thnllmg 1t was to read about
that m the busmess sectwn
But have you ever gotten an
autograph from Dogf1sh or
anythmg '
One hme I wrote and asked
hun to s1gn my baseball card of
h1m He sent me back a form
le tter hsting hiS rates for
autographs wh1ch ran from 50
cents for an Illegible scrawl
\\nlten w1th h1s left hand to
$29 95 for an Olde English
Signatur e featunng a self
portrait as the dot for the 1 m
DogfiSh I settled for a
pawprmt from one of hiS 73
cats for $4 99
You rea great fan Billy Is
1t true that you wanted your
father to keep changmg JObs so
you would always hve m the
tow n w1th Dogfish s home
team 7
Boy was Dad a spOilsport
He kept saymg how somebody
had to hav e loyalty to
somethmg these days and
anyway he hadn l had any good
offers recently When I asked
h1m why he couldn t Just work
out hiS option he h1t me with
h1s lunch pall
I guess I still don t un
derstand exactly why you ve
been so faithful to Huntley and
thmk he s so cool Was 1t
because he restored your fa1th
m our old natwnal pastime '
Exactly
It s great Billy tha t you
sllll ha\ e such fa1th m
baseball
Who sa1d anything about
baseball ' He restored my fa1th
m that old natwnal pastime
greed Now I know better than
to waste my time readmg the
sports page when I can be
checking trust laws That
Dogfish really knows how to set
an example

Bulk diets are suggested
By Lawrenre E Lamb MD
DEAR DR
1 AMB
Recently I read ) our art1cle 1 n
combatmg
cereal fiber
d•verllcul os•s I de1eloped a
spastic colon last Februar)
M) doctor put me on a bland
diet and Ubrax After t" o
months my cond1h on had on!\
unproved somewhat He took
me off whole m• lk and no11 I
am starling to see a real 1m
provement
I m very confused at th1s
time I only started dramkill,l( a
lot ot rmlk a short time before
my spastic colon problem
started I have never been
much of a vegetable or salad
eater but I d1d mclude them m
my meals several times a
week I really don t know what
brought the condition on
My doctor sa1d I must stay on
a bland d1et, but I feel that you'
need · roughage as you ex
plained I'm 31 and would hke
to have a seccmd child I need to
be on a correct d1et now so I

Wedding bells ring for Bench

Showdown

m1!k problem here IS the same
w)lether) ou are usmg whole or
skim m1lk II IS the double
sugar and not the fa! that IS
causmg the problem
You may need a bowel
trammg program For more
mlormallon on this wnte to me
at P 0 Box 1551 Rad1o Cit)
Stahon, New York N Y 10019
and ask lor the booklet on
spastic colon Send 50 cents to
cover costs
You can always do some
experimentation on your own
and fmd out Stay off all milk
and milk products mcluding
cheese buttenrulk and foods
that use lots of m1lk m
preparatiOn then see what
happens
You can also try the foods
w1th lots of bulk and see if that
Improves your condition Also
stay away from coffee tea
colas and other caffemaled
beverages

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
NEWYORK I UPI) - B1ll Walton has gotten cold feet
That s the easy thmg to say and a lot of people sa)'lng 1t
Portland s rookie red-head IS bemg hkened to the young man
who falls m love marnes the g1rl lives with her siX montha and
discovers he made a lernble miStake He gets a divorce vows
hell never go through another ordeallike that as long as he lives
then turns nght around and marnes agam ms1de of a year
From all reports B1ll Walton has grown diSenchanted w1th the
c1ty of Portland and With playmg basketball there In pla m
words he wants out
He comes from La Mesa m sunny southern CaWorrua and has
been quoted as saymg Oregon IS not warm enough for him and
that h1s feet m particular get cold whenever he practices m
Portland s Memonal Colisewn
B1ll Walton has been called a non-eonfornust who marches to
his own type drummer Be that as 11 may he also 1s an ex
trordmarily sens1hve 22-yearold who has been thrust m an en
tirely different enVIronment lor the f1rst time m his life
The world of professwnal basketball IS a demandmg one
highly competitive and mtensely combat1ve Wilt Chamberlam
had h1s troubles adJustmg hiS first year m professwnal basket
ball particularly to 1ts sociologiCal aspects So for that matter
did Kareem Abdu!Jabbar Who can ever forget all the problems
ElVIn Hayes had making the tranSition from the UmverSJty of
Houston to the San D1ego Rockets
Walton sformer coach at UCLA John Wooden IS a WISe man
an understandmg man and he was the f1rst one to fore see the
possible pitfalls that loomed ahead lor Walton after leavmg
UCLA Wooden never had the slightest reservation about his
talented &amp;-11 center making 1t m pro ball He was reasonabl) sure
Walton even w1th that IriCk knee of hiS wouldn t have any
physiCal problem He d1d md1cate though Walton s most dif
f1cult adJustment would be emotwnally and mentally
John Wooden was absolutely nght
Of them to whom much IS g1ven much will be expected
John Wooden used to tell B1ll Walton quotmg from the Scnr&gt;tures
What B1ll needs more than anything else IS more disc1plme
John Wooden told me from hiS off1ce m Los Angeles Monda)
When I had to be f1rm w1th hun I was I remember havmg a
problem w1th h1s harr He wanted to wear a beard but he never
wore a beard He will listen If you listen to him he w1lllislen to
you He has a nght to hiS opm10ns He doesn t have to conform to
everythmg but there are certam thl!l/lS he has to conform to m
our soc1ety and learrung that 1s part of adJusting
The Sl tuatwn m Portland 1s this
The fans there went all out lor B1ll Walton Last year the Tra1l
Blazers were able to sell only 2 900 season tickets this year w1th
Walton they sold 6 000 for their arena wh1ch has a capacity of
11 781 Portland fans are unhappy over B1ll Walton s ge neral
attitude toward them and the c1ty, and the Tnul Blazers may be
forced to trade Walton to appease !herr season ticket holders
They may deal him to some club like the Los Angeles Lakers
now m last place and looking around for a shot rn the arm
If the Lakers have a chance to get Walton Pete Newell therr
general manager IS mterested
He s from the area and you have to conSider him one of the
potentially great players m profesSional basketball Newell
says If there IS a chance of getting him from Portland- ! say
1f because we don t want to be gUJlty of tampermg-1 d want to
talk to him and find out what he expected of us If you ever made
a move like that yo u d also have to consider what the Portland
club would ask m return They would never g1ve hun up for
nothmg
The NBA s tradmg deadlrne IS only II days off on Feb 1
Walton s teanunates aren t sure whether the club will keep him
or deal hun Sidney Wicks who played w1th Walton at UCLA and
IS a teammate of h1s now w1th the Trail Blazers doesn t thmk
they ll trade hun
My own feelmg IS there IS a better than 50-50 chance they will
the same way Atlanta traded PIStol Pete MaroVIch Baltunore
let go Earl Monroe and the Vtrguua Squrres parted w1th Julius
Ervmg when those three msJSted upon gomg elsewhere
He s great WICks says of Walton Its beautiful playmg
with the guy
B1ll Walton meanwhile lSn t letting thiS sudden storm knock
him off his feet He feels he can r1de 11 out and he probably w1ll

Mason County

News Notes:
~

By Alma Marshall
MASON- Wahama High School has been notified that the 13
students rn the White Falcon Band have been chosen to play rn
the All-State Band thiS year Donna Marr who plays the con
trabass clannet a frrst year band member rated highest rn the
stale competition
Dianna Evans alto clarmet, was Judged second m the state
and Jeanette Oldaker who plays the french hom also placed
second rn the state
Others selected for the All-State Band by a team of several
Judges are Louellen Roush, flute , clarrnet B flat D1ana Frn
rucum trombone Jenn1fer Oldaker baritone horn John
Froendt tuba Robert Jarrell tenor saxophone Mark Harmon
french hom L1sa VanMatre trumpet Cheryl Wea\er bass
clarrnet Kim Knight and Cheryl Adams B flat clarrnet
P(rticJpants tr1ed out on an indiVIdual baSIS at Parkersburg
H1gh on January 10 Waha¥1" s White Falcon Band co-drrectors
are Charles Yeago and Tliomas Phillips
NEW HAVEN - Children love to surpriSe therr parents on
therr birthdays even though many of us Muld love to forget
them
Mrs DaVId IEtta ) Richardson was pleasantly surprised w1th
a brrthday party g1ven by ,her children Crystal and M1ke
Richardson and a ne1ghbor s child Came HarriS on January
13 The children gathered at the home of Came Harr1s where
they baked the cake and decorated to perfection
They all went to the Richardson home where 1ce cream and
cake were-served to Mr and Mrs Dav1d Richardson and Sandra
Harns by the children
MANY F AMIUES m the New Haven and Mason areas have
taken up roller skating at the New Haven rmk Among them are
Mr and Mrs Cecil Cundiff and daughter Tanya Mr and Mrs
Raymond Cundiff and son Johnny Mrs Norma Quillen and
daughters Sandy and Brenda Mrs Dallas Cadle and daughter
JOHN S WHARTON State Chaplarn State Council of West
Vrrgm1a Jumor Order Umted Amencan Mecharucs anq the New
Haven Council No 175 which meets every Thursday evenmg at 8
w1th Danny Harbour Councilor extends the folloWU\g prayer
grant unto us, 0 God, eyes qu1cl&lt; to see the loveliness of the
world m which we live Tram our mmds to be responstve to Thy
care and lovmg kindness Instill rn us eagerness of heart to show
our gratitude for Thy love manifested espec1all) m Jsus ChriSt
our Lord Amen
THE FRIENDSHIP CLASS of Clifton Uruted MethodiSt
&lt;llurch are takmg orders for Vmyl pocketbooks wtth pnces
rangmg frOm $6 to around $10 There ore 19 different styles and
14 different colors to choose from If mterested call Mrs
Hamson Robmson Jr 7'i:!&lt;i786 Proceeds will be used for the
benefit of the church

By Tom Tiede
FORT BELVOffi Va - (NEAl - When the military
command of the 1800s began rece1vmg gripes that vagabond
hustlers were peddlrng rotgut whiSkey and rancid beans to food
short out-back troops the post conurussary was ordered up as a
solution The 1dea back wben soldiers earned $10 a month and
when the nearest CIVIlian stores were often on the other s1de of
the Ind1ans "as to prov1de cheap and convement on-garriSon
grub for the sake of rank and file morale
It has rn the years smce become a se!'VIce mstitullon of no
small consequence The .government spends $250 million an
nually to operate 420 commlSS8rles worldwide and some three
m1lllon military people now cons1der 1t therr sacred right to
purchase food at cost (the average commiSsary savmgs IS be
tween $25 and $30 per $100 of goods)
Small wonder then the gloom that has settled among the
grapefrmt of post stores throughout the nation as the Ford ad
nurustrallon acts to alter the tradition The Pres1dent has or
dered severe cuts m commlSS8ry subs1d1es has ordered the
stores to become seU.. upportmg by 1977 and m essence may be
callmg for an end to a rmlitary pr1v1lege that some consider as
unportant as retirement pay
My Dan s enlistment IS up m April says a pmcurled wife
of a Fort Belvorr sergeant if they cut the coiTUillSsary they can
kiss hiS thirteen years goodbye
Indeed so ser1ous 1s the matter ms1de the serv1ce that
Pentagon obeervers hrnt of possible rebellion w1th national
secunty unpllcations if the Ford plan IS adopted The argument
IS that an all volunteer Army IS not formed on patnotism alone
that certam comforts must,be guaranteed to attract :ne bnd1es
If Congress mcreases pay to cover the commlSS8ry loss okay,
says a manpower general otherwiSe I think we may be
knocking off 20 per cent of our potentials
Desp1te such nsks however the Ford proposal IS to many
outside the IIIIlitary a welcome maneuver And not only for the
few milhon 11 may save the harassed taxpayer The greater
s1gnif1cance of removmg supports from cormrussary operations
IS that 1t may eventually force serv1ce people to mmgle more
wtth us regular ctvillallS
If pnces on .post nse military people will mcreasmgly go off

post to compare The result could be some str1ppmg away of the
msulating effect of rmhtary serVIce a remtroduction to the real
world
There can be no doubt the remtrnduction IS desrrable
Although military posts no longer mamtarn the protecllve gr1p on
personnel they once d1d (In the 1930s many posts forbade large
numbers of troops from all but rare CIVilian contact) garriSon
makeup 1s still deSigned to ISolate
Fort Belv01r as example has not only a coiTUillSsary for
groceries but a PX for department store 1tems, a bank and two
branches a credit uniOn a nower shop a photo studio a library
three on-post elementary schools a theater a bowling alley a
golf course a gas station, a firehouse - and tivrng quarters for
three of four of everybody ass•gned Technically says a post
publiciSt a man and his farmly could serve two years here
without ever gomg outs•de the gates '
Preswnably no one does spend all hiS tune m the womb but
one must wonder Though younger troops retam the more out
than m sentunent career1sts do not They often talk of c1v1lian
life as outs1de ciVIlian busmess as gypsters c1v1lian
problems as the1rs not ours The worry m this should be
obVIous especially m the all volunteer or mercenary military
era An tsolated serVIce IS a riSky serVIce civilian control
demands that ClVIhan attitudes be present
In times past certarnly there was good argument for
provldmg on-post convemences for servicemen and women A
corporal earnmg $140 a month trymg to support a wife and child
needed protectwn and cut-rate groceries
Now however an Army pnvate earns $344 base pay a Wyear-old corporal gets more than $500 - and maJOr generals
who also frequent the diScount coiTUillSsarles, are pa1d $36 000 a
year Most ea rn the1r salanes to be sure but as for the other
privileges It seems unwise to put soldiers many other world than
the rest of us

Generation

Rap

By Helen and Sue Hottel
Once a Klutz, Always a

?

fulp

You grow, up m a small town and you get a label Mme was
always dopey I was fat and clumsy I always sa1d the wrong
thmg so people started laughing befre I even opened my mouth
I m a JWUOr m htgh school now and not fat any more but who
notices' I m still dopey Howard If I asked a grrl out sbe d
run
Last summer I VISited my aunt and uncle m Oh1o and met a
gtrl there who didn t know l was poiSOn I was able to talk to her
and we got along great I d1dn t exactly lie but I didn t let her
know the truth either We've been wr1tlng every week
I ll be seemg her agam next summer Should I tell her how
unpopular I am or JUst let her keep on thinkmg I m one of the
crowd' The funny thmg IS I AM one of the crowd m her town,
because SHE accepts me Sure Wish I could live there all year
round - DOPEY HOWARD
Dear Howard
Let your grrl believe the TRUTH about you which IS you re one of the crowd m her town and probably m any other
town but your own
Meanwhile work on that local ~mage Since you re easlly
accepl&lt;j.d elsewhere only two things keep you dopey at home
group blindness and your acceptance of 11 Bust loose and SHOW
em fnend 1 - HELEN
Dear Howard
Breaking an unage ISII t easy - unless you re away for a
year or two and then come back a 'new man
Couldn t you talk your folks mto letting you stay m Ohto until
you graduate from h1gh school'
It nught be the best rnvestment they ever made - SUE
P S Read on
Dear Rap
When we were m grade school we called this kid
coollebug and pretended if we touched hun wed get cooties
Nobody liked him He was the school joke and he must have been

CINCINNATI iUPli ~ John South Carolina
pla1 baseball he sa1d I m
ny Bench one of Cincmnati s
Bench sa1d he had seen M1ss sure she s gomg to be a good
and the sports world s most Chesser on te levJsJon dmng an baseba ll fan though She
ehg1ble bachelors 1s getting Ultra Bnte toothpaste com seems mlerested enough
mamed to a grrl he has known mercaal
We \\ ere m Las Vegas
less than a month
But she has ne\ er seen me durmg the New Year hohda) S
The Cincrnnati Reds catcher
tw1ce the most valuable player
m the National League broke
the news Monday he w1ll marry
New York Cllty model V1 ck1e
Chesser here Feb 21
Bench a nat1ve of Oklahoma
City Okla IS 27 and MISS
Chesser 1s 25
A fnend of mme mtroduced
MIAMI (UP! ) - The 1974 placed sore-armed Fran Tar
me to her Dec 28 sa1d Bench
National Football League sea
kenton of Mmnesota m the All
II e ve been talking engage
son
ended
Monday
mght
w1th
Star
ga me and "on the Most
ment for the last week and
one of the same messages that
Valuable
Pla)er IIward for his
decided to make 11 public after
marked
1ts
begmmng
wa)
back
performa
nee
talking to her parents and
last August black quarter
Gomg mto the game the
nune
backs can get the JOb done
AFC
had \\On the last three
Bench wouldn t concede 1t
The Los Angeles Rams Super Bowls and SIX of t~e last
was exactly love at first sight
James Ha rm made the latest seven and the last three Pro
but I will adm1t It came on
dent
m one of the most long
pretty fast
standmg preJudices among
MISS Chesser whose parents
sports fans He led the Natwnal
live rn Mt Pleasant S C IS a
Conference to a 17 10 wm over
graduate of the Uruvers1ty of
the Amencan Conference m
the an nua l Pro Bowl by
throwmg e1ght yard touchdown
B e l p r e t o p s passes to Mel Gra; of the St
LouiS Cardmals and Charley
Taylor of the Washmgton
Red skins
Meigs girls
The season began w1th Joe
G1lham
another
black
NEW YORK (UP!) - In
The Me1gs g1rl gymnasts quarterback who led the d1ana one of only two
were defeated by Belpre H1gh Pittsburgh Steelers to a strong remammgundefeated teams m
Saturday at Me1gs H1gh School start He was later replaced by maJor college basketball m
Those placmg f1rst and second Terry Bradshaw who brought creased 1ts lead today m the
respechvely were Mar; Pittsburgh the NFL cham
weekly Umted Press Interna
Blaettnar and Sally Walters on p10nsh1p last week
tiona! Board of Coaches ratmgs
the uneven parallel bars
Monday mght HarriS re
but UCLA held on to the No 2
Others competing were Debb1e
spot desp1te suffermg 1ts f•rst
McLaughlin l1sa !homas
setback of the year
Becky Thomas Jackie Brown
The Hoos1ers boastmg a
and Faye Riebel
perfecll!Hl record rece ived 38
Fol\owmg 1s the remamder
first place votes and 416 pomts
6f the schedul e
from the 42-membe r coaches
Wellston away Jan 25
board and Widened thetr lead to
Ironton away Feb 6
89 pomts over the runnerup
Wellston home Feb 15
Brums UCLA which has a 13 I
L / Belpre away March 1
record was upset by PacifiC
Ironton home March 6
E•ght
nval Stanford 6HO at
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
Athens home March 8
Palo
Alto
Calif , Fnday mght
Cmcmna ll Reds promotiOnal
bandwagon IS rolhng through but rebounded to wallop Cali
four states to drum up mterest forma 102 72 on Saturday
m the baseball team s 1975 mght
NOf IN UNEUP
Lomsvllle the only other
EDMONTON (UP!) - Mike prospects and games
unbeaten
team replaced North
The annual tub-thwnpmg
Walton of tlle Mmnesota F1ght
Carolina
State as the No 3
mg Sarnts and AI SIIIIth of the tour of the Midwest opened at
New England Whalers will not Dayton Monday rught and
be m the lineup Tuesday mght goes to LouiSVIlle Ky and In ATTENDANCE DROPS
for the third World Hockey dianapolis today
MONTREAL (UP!) - Na
Club President Bob Howsam bona!
AssoCiation All-Star game
Hockey
League
Smith the Whalers goalie Manager Sparky Anderson
president Clarence Campbell
stayed home for personal coach Ted Kluszewsk1 and sa1d on the eve of the league s
reasons wh1le Walton 1s several players head the annual AllStar game that 1t IS
suffering w1th a pulled grom tourrng group scheduled to begmn1ng to feel the crunch of
make seven appearances m current economic conditions
muscle
four days Each w1ll be a lunch and at the present tune are
or dmner for area sports not thmking of seeking out
GAME AWARDED
writers
other places to play
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
The group will be m Fort
Campbell sa1d however that
North Amencan Soccer Wayne Ind and Columbus attendance for the first 298
League m an effort to turn lis Wednesday and m Huntmgton league games this season not
Aug 24 champiOnship game W Va and Lexmgton Ky the mcludmg the two expanswn
mto somethmg like the Super next day
teams sho\\ed an average
Bowl Monday awarded the
Players at the var1ous stops drop of nearly 100 fans per
game to San Jose Calif
w1ll come from among Jack game
B1lhngham Fred Norman
Don Gullett Pete Rose Merv
Thts Weeks Spectal
Rettenmund John VukoVIch
W1U McEnaney and Darrel PLAYER OF WEEK
VALI.)E
Chaney
SAN FRANCISCO iUPI) RATEC
RICh Kelley of Stanford who
scored 22 pornts aga1nst UCLA
and JO pomts agamst Southern
USED CARS
Califorma to help the Cardmals
wrn w1th upsets has been
named Pac1f1c-8 Conference
~nat on at Hock ey
Basketball player of the week
L eag ue Stand ngs

and 1 guess some of my fnenc!:;

sht: slid tv H l

\\ Cie f1llmg he1 111 on my

too

baseball ab1hl\ tellmg her I
was a pt ett1 good catcher
What rea llv doubled me 1p

I lie n cdd ang i ~ sci edu led U1e
(i(n Bench as suppo.secl to
rt:pmt fm :spr n~ ta umn ~ m

though

hr added

"

~~

famp;t

wht:r

~

' u

t:

m ta t

Pro Smndings

70 OLDS 88
ROYALE
HT COUPE

Gold

w th tan

matchmg

gold

vmyl roof
nt

full

power a1r

'1495
Karr &amp; Van Zandt
You tl L keULrOua uy
Way of Don g Bus n ess

GMAC FINANCING
992 5)42

Pomeroy

Open Evemngs T1l6 00

Ttll PM Sat

By Un ted Press Internal onal
North
w I I pts gf ga
Sag naw
30 16 2 62 184 155
Fl n l
26 15 4 60 178 134
Muskeg on 27 17 2 56 190 1J 1
PI Huron
19 25 2 40 156 63
K Lans
12 28 1 25 145 217
Kalam a
11 29 2 24 110 63
South
w I t pts gf ga
Dayton
29 13 J 61 186 15 1
ColJmbus 262 1 I 53 192 167
To le do
21 25 2 44 174 174
Des Mo nes 20 25 3 43 157 18 1
Fl Way ne 17 26 2 36 57 174
x l eam d sbancted
Mondays Re sults
No games sche duled
Ton ght s Games
F l n at Lan s ng
Mu skegon at Tol edo
Port Hu on a Ka ama zoo

ffilserable

His farmly moved when we were starting high school Now
I m m college and guess who I ran rnto last week Cootiebug 1
But now he s 6 feet 2and terrific r Also abram To think I used to
snub hun
He can t see me for dust How can I change that' - NEVER
DREAMED
Dear N D
Looks like your cootiebugs came home to roost And tbey
may have caused an Itch you can t scratch - HELEN

UP

+++

to

~PIDNEER*

more

Saws with
muscle for guys hke me who
like to use a httle less(-'L.U
! " JLAA.It"'l
"TheCha1n

iwme IMMnt _... tecll: • O.Wit Liont. Fvot bol\ ,CI ,il

'I

SAYRE HARDWARE
NEW HAVEN

882 2525

W VA.

t

Ill

shape

V1ck1C loves to JOg

\\ tth

Bowls but Hams satd he me Knox scud Wt tvcn h Hl
wasn t aware or that problem b'11 \ s voluntccllllg to gu 111 l n
the klC koff te un Our go 1\s
1 NFC Coac h Chuck Knox also
of Los Angeles was and so \\el c out to be 1t the Af C and
wer e man)

of ht s other

players
I he players had bee n
wmtmg (or this and 1t was a
great personal sHllsfact10n fo r

Ho11 docs Bench dcsc nbe Ius
111fc to be
Shape!) of course
he
answf rs She sa model Shes
dbout 5-6 and 1 d say sorta
blonde
Beds m 1nagct Sparky And
e1so n sa1 d he le a rn ed of
Be nch s plans a couple of
wccb ago

rhe ll!O Grande Red men Will
try to stretch the1r current wm
sb eak to four games tomght
when they host the Wilberforce
Bulldogs
Wilberforce w1th [US! one
loss on Its record dropped a
close dec1s1on to h1 ghly touted
Wnghl State earher m the
season

The Redmcn of Art l.anham
mean" h1le are sporhng a f&gt;-7
record but have been commg
01 stron~

as or late mcludmg a

120-75 thrashmg of Urbana
have ~ouu.:: fun Wt; thd bot h
Saturda) mght
II sa gl"eat 11 ay to statt 1975
Probable starteJS for Rio
lhe nati on lllv tele\tsed
Grande w11l be G1l Pr1ce and
ga me got off to a sl1 \\ star t J u n i o r g i r l s Jim Noe at the guards Dan
bcfo1e H dt ~appotntm g c1O\\ d of
Bollinger and Andy Davenport
only 26 ~8~ f ms and 1t th, lul lf
at the cor ners and J1m Stewart
Chester Marco! s fie ld goal
at center
lose
gave the NFC a 3-0 le 1d
F1rst Redmen off the bench
Emlv 1r1 Ute tim d qu u te t
most hkely w1ll be Bob Cald
M1mm qum terbock Bob Gt1esc
II e M€lgs JwHOI H1 gh g1rls well Mac Barbee Browme
hit Dolphm teamm 1lr Pa u1 ~
H e defeated m their ftrst Wilson and George VIckroy
Warfield on a srm mg l2 lard b sketball game of the season Tipoff IS al 8 p m w1th the
post pattet n P1l[,;but ~It s llov
1 d 11 by Poml Pleasant 24
JuniOr va1 s11les battling at
Gerela then m.1dc 1t 10-3 for U\C
5 ~5
AFC wtth a 33 yard ftcld go 11
Scot tn g fm Me1gs were
In other Ohw college action
fhat s
wh en
Ha1rt s
Peggy J ohnson with 4 pmnts tomghl Cmcmnall vlslls
1eplacmg St Lows Jam Hart P m1 B1 a ue1 wtlh 1 pomt Ktm Marquette Mount Umon IS at
\\ho " en t out wtth an eye 1n Seth w1th 2 pomt,; Patty Dyer Kenyon Wittenberg goes to
JUr) wen t to work wtth h1s 1\\ o w1th 2 pmnts and Marcia Muskm gum
Demson at
sconng passes He ft mshed the Holcomb w1th 1 pom t
Baldwm Walla"e Wooster at
day w1U1 seve n c.:ompletlon s m
Othet Marauders seemg Oberlin Gannan (Pa ) at
13 attempts for 119 ) ards
achon we1e Tem W1lson V1ck1 Ashland Fmdlay at Man
AFC Coach John Madd en of Bla nkenship Charlene chester I lnd ) Allegheny (Pa )
the Oakland Ra1ders admitted Goeg letn Yvonne Core Lon at Hiram Ml Vernon at
disa ppomtmen t
Wood Beverly Hoffman Malone and Cedarville at
Any tune ;ou lose vou r e Br cnda Brown and Robtn Central State
disa ppomted he smd We Sou thc1 n
Monday night Steubenville s
m1ssed a lot of opportumtJes
!Ius Fnda) Me1gs hosts T1m H1rton dropped m 26 pomts
but all m all 11 was a cnsp Potnl Pleasant begmmng at 4 and e1ght rebounds as hls B1g
game It wasn t slopp)
1&gt; m
Red rallied to a 77-6ll wm over

24-10

team after boostmg Its 1ecord
to 12-0 !he Card mals wh o
ranked fourth a week ago
rece1ved thr ee hrst place
votes

Maryland wh1ch got the on!)
other
fir st place
vote
benefitted fr om Its 103 85
whippmg of North Carohna
State to climb one notch to No
4 and North Carohna Stale
which barely squeaked past
North Carolma m overtune

followmg 1ts loss to Maryland
dropped two places to No 5
Alabama Jwnped one place
lo
~after ra1smg 1ts record
to 11
while Southern
Califorma also an upset v1ctun
at the hands of Stanford on
Saturday mght fell two spots
to No 7
Arizona Stale held onto the
No 8 spot With Oregon and
Kentucky roundmg out the top
10
S1x coaches from each of the
seven geographical areas of
the country compnse the UPI
ratmg s board Each week they
are asked to vote for the top 10
teams and pomts are awarded
on a 10-9-3-7~-'I.J 2-1 baSis for
votes from first to lOth

•

•

7 5o ulh € rn Ca l 3 7)
B Ar zona Sta e (1 5 1
90egonl1 2 1
10 Kentucky ( 1 21
11 La Sal l e I 14 1
2 Marquetle 1 1 2
13 Ar z.ona 14 2
14 N orth Caro l na (8 4
15 South Caro na (9 4 )

6 UN Las v egas 1 2 J J
17 ere gh on 1 2 4)
8 Stanford 8 6
9 (T
9
T

e Kansa s 9 J
eJ u la h 1 3

B1g Ten Basketball Roundup
CHICAGO (UP!) - Oh1o
Slate was supposed to flmsh
near the bottom of the B1g Ten
basketball race this season so
It was no surpr1se when the

VIctory 89-69 over W1sconsm

\4
66

Minn esota pulled w1thm balf a
of second place Purdue
game
59
with a 67-08 "'"over M1chigan
40
and Iowa rallied from 11 pomts
10 behmd to upset M1ch1gan State
7
6 83 79
5
ll was a W Ohto State
4
2 Coach Fred Taylor sa1d alter

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1

hts teams wm

We Yreren l

Wildcats serve notice
record last season the W1ld
cats served notice Monday that
Kentucky was ready to reclaun
ownership of the SEC basket.
ball title The lOth ranked
Wildcats overcame a poor

f1rsthalf perlormance to drop
Alabama the conference
favorite 74-69
Kentucky s v1ctory over the
s1xth ranked Cnmson Tide
created a three way fie which
also mcludes Auburn atop the
SEC
Freshman Jack G1vens
layup w1th seven nunules left
m the game broke ~ 55-05 l1e
and put Kentucky ahead for
good '!'he Wildcats had shot a
nuserable 28 per cent m the
first half allowmg Alabama to
grab a three-pmnt halftune
The Oat~ Sentmel
lead
DEVOTED TO THE
But semor guards Kevm
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
Grevey who hrushed w1th 20
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
pomts and Junmy Dan Con
Exec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
ner wbu hart 18 gu1ded the
CtiV Ed lor
Pub! shed da I Y except
Wildcats
sec ond half
Satu r da y b'f The Oh o Valley
resurgence
Theu
outs 1d e
Pub l sh ng Com pa ny
Ill
Court Sl
Pom e oy Oh o shootmg keyed the Kentucky
45769 B\JS ness Off ce P hone
comeback but M1ke Flynn
992 2156 Ed1tor a Phone 992
2157
added 12 pomts on driVIng
Second c a ss postage pa d at
Po me ro y Dh10
layups through the Alabama
Nat1onal ad ve r ts ng
man for-man defense
representa t ve
Bott nell
Gallagher Inc 12 Ea.sl 42nd
Alabama IS now II 2 overall
St New Y ork New Yo k
while the W1ldcats are 12 2
S ub sc r pi on
ra tes
Del vered by earner where
In other games mvolvmg
ava lable 75 cen l s per week
By Motor Route w h ere car r en natwna!ly ranked teams topserv1ce nol ava able One
ranked lnd13na crws~d to 1ts
m an lh S3 25 By ma I n Oh o
and W Va One Year sn oo
20th strrught v1ctory 89-69,
S 1&lt; month!.
511 50
T hree
over WJSconsm and 15th
months
S7 00
Els e whel'i~
$26 00 year
S )( monthS
ranked South Car-ohna dumped
Sl J 50 three manths S7 50
Subscr pi on pr ce
nc udes
N1agara 99 79
I :)undav T m"'S. t.p nt ne t
------- Qumn Bucknrr the Hoos1ers

•

aga1n

VICtOriOUS

Buckeyes dropped the1r ftrst
three league games
But Monday n1ght the
T o p T w e n t y s uckeyes let th e rest of the
conference know they don l
They won the1r
N EW YORK ( UPI
T e hke losmg
Un ted Pr ess
nl e r na o na fourth straight game 77-67 at
Board
of
Coa c he~
co l ege
ba sk etba I rat ng s w 1'1 n umber the expense of a frustrated
ot fi r s pla ce vo tes and cco rd s Northwestern team to SW'ge
hrou gh Sa tur day Jan
a n
pa re n heses (42 of ~ 2 coac hes ahead of MIChigan and mto
vet ng l (Se v enth weekl
fourth place m the standmgs
Team
Po.nts
t lndan atJBII160
416 w1th a 4 3 record
2 UC L A
J 1
J27
No
I ranked
Ind1ana
3 Lou sv I e JJ 112 OJ
306
1ts
hold
on first
strengthened
J Ma r yland
lJ
186
5 N C S (I 2
139 place w1th 1ts 2oth straight
6 Alabama 11 J
161
149

Point Park
Dan Kraft who led Alr Force
w1th 16 points hit a a-toot
Jumper with 2 01 to play
Monday mght and gave the
Falcons the lead for good m a
54 51 wm over Xavier ol Ohio
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
RESULTS
Ge neva 8'2 Alliance 64
Steubenvl le 77 F't Park 68
S l V n c 88 waynesburg 78
Sl Fran 108 Roanoke 88
Ga St 70 So Miss 65
Augu sta 96 P edmont 67
Ga Co l 70 Ga Southwestern

69
M dd e Ga

103 Columbus 88
N Ga 95 C C Spartilnburg 65
Ga So uthern 110 Samford 106
LS U 90 Georgia 8~
I= lor da 85 MI SS 80
NC AS h ev !le 6J NC Wilm 47
Ea st Ca r 110 Da\1 dson 78
Hof stra
F ta Southern 61
U n on 79 Della St 73
Tenn Te c h 71 A Peav 69
East Tenn 89 Murray 85
W Ky 107 E Ky 82
Tu skegee 7q Sl l lm an 54
A la Huntsv 1 e 103 Hunt ngcton

n

"

F ta St 95 B scayne

as

Auburn 98 M ISS Sf 89
Tulsa 106 Okla C!ty 105
Det Tech 79 Saginaw Val 71
H 1 sdale 82 Aqu nas 79
nd lana 89 Wis consin 69
Iow a 83 Michigan S t 79
Notre Dame 96 Holy Cross 91
Ohio st n Northwestern 67
M nnesota 67 Mich igan 58
OePau 103 St Mary s 68
No Ill 78 New Orleans 75
Boston Co 1 61 Dartmouth 55
Hous Bapt 79 Te x Art 78
S F Au st n 8'2 E Te)( 78
Ange lo 77 Tarleton 64
S W Tell: 96 Tex A&amp; I 79
W Tex 82 E New Mex 55
Ark St 56 Stetson 51

SW Me 82 Mo Rolla 59
NE Mo 10.4 Mt Marty 76
DrlJry 63 Kan Newman 62
L nco ln 67 NW Mo 55
Nicholls

st

79 Livingston 64

NE La 95 La Tech 78

Morgan St 71 v St 65
VMI 72 Belhany 43
Wesleyan 56 M T 55
R IT 71 Utica 64
Kentucky 74 Alabama 69
Tenn 65 Vanderbilt 61
Portland St 96 No Ar r. as'
Lew s &amp; Clark 65 Wilmette
Pac Lulh 94 Call of Ida 80

Surprising Bucks j"·'" ""'"""
expected to wm at all when the
season started so I ll take
them any way I can get them
He credited learn pr1de for
the Buckeyes 10-4 record this
year-as opposed to last sea
son s 9-15 fm1sh wh1ch was the
worst OSU showing m 22 years
This team was disgusted
With last year and they d1dn t
enJOY 1t at all Taylor sa1d
The ktds have worked hard
They 11ant to change 1t
B•ll Andreas hit I !kif 13 shots
and hrushed w1th 25 pomts
CraJg Taylor scored 17, and
sophomore Larry Bolden ar
nved m Evanston Ill Monday
sill\ mourrung hiS mother s
death but scored 12 pomts
Northwestern Coach Tex
Wmterwas havmg less success
turrung his team around and
he vowed We re deflmtely

Local Bowling
POMEROY LANES
Ear ly Sunday M111ed
J anuarv 12 1975
Won Lost
Sw sher L ohse Pharmacv

Tom s

By CHRIS SCHERF
UP! Sports Writer
The rafters of the Uruvers1ty
of Kentucky Memorial Coles•
wn are littered With banners
commemorating the Wildcats
bundle of Southeastern Confer
ence champ10nsh1ps won under
the aeg1s of Adolph Rupp
They hang like the Sword of
Damocles over the head of
Kentucky Coach Joe Hall who
had the IIIIsl or tune of takrng
over the Kentucky basketball
program at the same time the
rest of the SEC diSCOvered the
eXIstence of the sport of
basketball
But after a disastrous 1:1-13

he

go mg to be tough to keep up

top poll spot

•

Be ne h IS conflden( he wlll
1 ep 01

smcl She runs a couple of
uulcs e\en mormng Shes

Hoosiers hold

host Reds
on Thursday

m Iampa the next day

Ia

Harris named MVP

Huntington to

rlt \t 11 be no problem
though says Bench We ll be

Redmen
host 'dogs

Ca rry Ou
Putt n s EKe&lt;wa t n y
Eag es C u b
Maye r &amp; H I Brnbcr
Fr c n d l v Ta v e n

22

0

B
12
6

4
'

6

I4

8

B 24
r Ph elps
6
John Ty r ee 44 Women
B e ty Sm h 54 2 M a r l ene
W ISO 505
H gil Game
Joh n Ty r ee
'1 6 J
Ph e ps 209 Wom en
Be y Sm h 230
B arbara
Dugan 86
H gh Team Oame
Tom s
Ci!r v O u 7
Tom s
H qh Team Se r es
Ca r y Ou 2046
H

h lnd

Ser es -

outstandmg guard who has
concentrated up on h1s defense
and settmg up h1s teammates
thiS season scored 26 pomts tn
leadmg Indiana to 1ts SIXth Btg
fen VICtory of the season
lnd1ana center Kent Benson
ndustnat Le ague
added 20 pomts ahd Scott May
January 9 197 5
17 to the romp
won Lost
2
4
The Gamecocks now 10-4 M hon e Soh o
n Boa I nn
0 6
converted 67 per cent of thc1r Slea
K C ewe e r s
0
6
6
10
shots to easily handle N1agara Jack s P ac!:!
A
6
10
Holy Cross held the natwn s LTeam
an dm ark
4
1'2
H gh Team Se res M lh one
leading scorer Adnan Dan
o 2511.'&gt; Jacks Pa ce 2464
tley to SIX held goals but the Soh
K C J eY e er s 23!!3
H gh Tea m Ga m e - M hon e
sophomore forward converted
o 893 M I hon e So h o 850
111-of 22 free throws to carry the ~ oh
a c k s. P ace 848
H gh
l nd
Se r es B II
Imh to a 96-91 VIctory Dantley
W !ford 606 Jr Ke nnedy 552
fm1shed With JO pomts two Ed Voss 543
H gh
nd
Ga m e
B I
below his average
N !for d 2 J Ed Voss 212 Tom
C et and 208

go1ng to make some changes
I ve gone with four or five guys
all year thinking they would do
the job and it s ev1dent they re
not gomg to We want to find
some players who want to play
and won t quit on us It s not a
quesllon of the size of the
players It s the slze of their
spirits and hearts They
weren t watching the score
and that s what I look for in a
team
Indiana s speed, he1ght and
ball handling were too much
for host Wisconsin The
Hoosiers led 4!&gt;-29 at the half
and coasted the rest of the way
behind 26 points from Quinn
Buckner and 22 from Kent
Benson
Minnesota s 6 foot 7
sophomore
Mark Land
sberger who scored 28 points
Saturday agamst Michigan
State put In 31 while the
towermg Gophers handled
M1ch1gan Mmnesota Is now 5-2
m the league, 12-3 overall and
8-0 at home Michigan was held
to a season low of 57 points, 16
below its average
Iowa traded 40-29 at the hall
but outscored Michigan State
IJ-1 m the frrst six minutes of
the second half to get back In
the game The Hawks went
aheatl to stay 6~ on a drlvmg
layup by Larry Parker w1th
2 20 left

Are you sure
you're not
wasting
money on
your car and
home
insurance?

U ca r and home nsurance
seem Ike a b g tem n your
budget maybe 11 s because

you re wasting money on the
wrong k nd or ~:~mount of cov
erage Too I tile protect on IS
Just as was1elul as buymg
more protect on than you ac

lually need
That s where
adv1ce
agent

of
can

the profess1onal
tndependent
often save you
an

plenty In prem urn dollarsand future regrets We are the
mdependent representative of
several 1n surance compan1es
wh ch lets us ptck the one

compa ny that has the besl
po l1cy for you
So ca ll us or come m soon
and lets tal k over your presen
and fut ure msurance needs

Wtlham D Ch1lds

DOWNING-CHILDS
AGENCY, INC.
Mtddleport, Ohio

Henry Block bas
17 reasons why you
should come to us
for income tax help.
I

Reason 5. If the IRS should call you
m for an aud1t, H &amp; R Block will go
w1th you, at no additional cost Not
as a legal representative
but we
can answer all questiOns about how
your taxes were prepared

I or \our Uuung .md LJstenmg
Pleasure• .•.

GEO. HALL
AND THE HALLMARKS

TONIGHT 8:00 TO 12:30

The MEIGS INN
I'on leroy

THE INCOME tAX t'EOPLI!
618 E MAIN ST
POMEROY, OHIO
Qpen 9 A M to S P M Man Sol:.&lt;
Ph t92 3795
NO APPOINTMEN 1 NE&lt;;ESSARY

;

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,.

I

I

•

I

BUYS .

Fun ·with Food

News, Event

Nature's
Energy

By Charlen,e Hoeflich

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DE:AR POLLY - My wh ite plastic curtains have turned a
yellow ish color. I wonder if there is anything I can wash them in
to bring back their original white color as Uley were quite exfM'ns ivc. - MILDRE:D.
DE:AR MIT,DRE:D - Information released by one of the
. makers of a well-known bleach says that plastic curtains will
·look cleaner and sme ll fresher with the use of a chlorine bleach.
Wash thoroughly and then ooa k in a solution of one tablespoon
liquid chlorine bleach to each gallon of ~ol d wate r . Rinse well .
When such curtains become dingy loo king, wash in washer
- FIVE YE,\RS OLD - Mr.
with a mi ld detergent on the delicate cycle and line Q[Y. Some
and Mrs. Howard C. Sm ith,
plastic curtains ca n be dyed at home should one wish a chang"e of
color. we are told. If the curtain is patterned, the ctesign outline
l.inrolu HilL PomNoy .
will remain and may even be diHerent in color ... But as a last
t•n lntaim•d Saturda}' wi th 11
part~
honoring
th eir. resort thi~ mrg ht give added use to old curtains. - POLLY.
d:ntghtn, TnH')' Lynn. on
IH~ r

fifth birt hday . :\
, ·ah•ntinC' lht·mc was c·arrit·d
tlUI ~ ith ' rNI anrt whitt•
o.; tn•a mcrs and ballonn!i. ,\
ra kt', dt·i·ora tt'Ct in rrd and
"hitf', irt• rrra m . :wrl r·okr•
wt•rt· s t•ni'(l tn 1\tiduu•l. Paul
and TPrr~~t. Mul fo r d, .l udy
!\IN'S, Kim St'th, ( irt·~ and
Hirk~· Smith. St•ndiug gifts
'u·n· her )!ntmiJJan·nts. Mr.

mul !\lrs. Thumas Garten.

Rlount. W. \'a.: Mr. ancll\1rs.
.lt1hn Smith, Churlrs ton, W.
\ 'a .. and .lark. Donna, Rt•r ky
and .Jn(·kit· lh.1ncllt•y.

OEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is with the selvage edges on
l'otton not permanen tly pressed) sheets as the edges. have to be
1roned scpan1tely or they fold as a result of drying them in the
d.ryl' r . Perl1ups smne rea der has found a solution for this and will
pass it on .
I aloo think manufacturers co uld save materia l !and thus be .
able to lower the price\ if they would red uce by several inches
the• width of twin,,ize sh..,ts. bla nkets an d spreads. My beds a re
hig hl'r than most but I still fin d these domestics hang almost to
llw noor on l:x&gt;th sides. I wo nder if others have this same compi!! in!. - GI; RTRUDE .
DEAR POI. I.Y - ! love quilts and enjoy embro idering them
but do out like to do the qu i ltin ~. So I bought quilted mattres&amp;
patls and stamped and embroidered Ulem. I have two reallnoking quilt s that I usc witll dust ruffles on twin beds in my
1 ·:~1!· \y Anwrican guest room. - LOIS.
DE:AR PO LLY · and Linda - When you cannot buy shoe
strings short enough for baby's shoes, cut the strings through the
1.

~i(;:;:-:;:::·:·S
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=::::::::I,,,._,,,,,,Tt ~:~:,cl~l~l~i~~: ;;~~;~~ ~~:~ ~~~= ~~:~~!~~~~~t~~:~~s:~~s~eep
·.

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Calendad
TUESDAY

J\M F: HI('AN Legwn Drt•w
Wct.Jst~o·r Post :39 spaghetti
dinner at 7::w !J.IIl . followl'd by

rt•g ul itr mel'ting .

CHESTER .. Counci l 3Z:I,
Amcrice~, 7::10
the lwll. Charter "to be

Daughter!-; of

p.m. a!
rl r aped for Mrs. Eli zabeth
Wickham . l\It:mbcrs to wc1Jr
whit e.
OtiiO Ek1 Pili Chapter. Bet"
SignHI
Phi
So r ori ty,
progress ive dinner. Mem bers
to mt'el on lhe Pomeroy upper
parking lot al 6· 15. Appetize r
at Kathy Cumings, Sy racuse ;
SaiHd.
Dottie
Musse r ,
Mulberry He ighl"i, Pomeroy;
Main course. Wilma Reece,
Midd lepo rl : an d dessert,
Debbie Buck, Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy . Cultura l prog ram by
Mrs. Buck.
GROUP II , Midd leport Firs !
Uniled PJ·esbylerian Church.
7::w p.m. home of Mrs. Harry
S. Moore. Mrs. Mildred Ba iley
. to be c~h os tess.
SOUTHERN ·Band Boosters
will meet at U1e high sc hool at
7:30 p.m:

FR IENDLY Cirde. Trini ty
Church, (i p.m . potluc k. Miss
Mary K Chapman to have the
program.
POMEROY Ch&lt;1 ptcr . Roya l
. Arch 1\·lasons, 7::lOp.m. at the
Pome-·rov Masonic · 1l't' mp le.
Spl'cial ;1 1echn~ to Clmft'r the
mo~t CXl~ llent mastC'rs degree .
1\ liTLA~D
FIREMEN'S
Auxiliar) . Tuesday. 7::10 p.m.
at the
firehouse.
i\ ny
prospccti"c rncmbt.'r im·iled to
attend .
II'EDNF.SDA Y
AMEHIC!Iit
Legio n
Au:oli ary, F ec ney-Bt:nnl'tt
Pos! 128. Middli.'port. business
nH•e ling Lll 7:JO p.m. · nt the

hall. Mt•mbers reminded to
k1ke gifls for the Peck of Wee
Ones projt:•ct. The nweting wil!
b(' prect•dt'(l with a potluck
d!IHlt'!' :1 t ti ::Hl p.m . with the
legionnaircs In bt' l!m~sts.

...

A~IERICAi\'
Legion
Auxiliary . Feeney - Bennett
Post 128, 7:30p .m. nt th~ hall.

'·

s.:\s
Now,
A FrH
For
EvaiUI1ion
Your

Since you purchaSed y ou r
life Insurance, wages and t he
i:pst of l i ving have probabl y
gone up i.md this m~ ns tha t
if would take more monev to
make up for financial loss to
your family if somett'ting: • :
happened to you. Let us Mlp
you protect your familv .

REUTERBROGAN
INSURANCE
PH. 992-51311
101 Sycam•re

Pomeroy

MHS.V . Q.

'
Polly's Nott' - Have the knot between the first tWo eyelets
wht·rc yuu start lo lucc the shoes .

A1inisters meet
The
Meigs
Co un ty
Min is ter·ia l Assoc iation rn e t
.Monday at Rio Gr an de.
rollege . Hev . Harold Dee th ,
host pastor , led in opening
devo tions .
He \1. CHrl Hieks. president,
l'Onduc ted
the
busi ness
1necting .
Rev . Steve Skaggs re ported
on the cha pla incy 1:1t Holzer
Medical Center and asked tha t
a ll mi nisters se nd
in
reg istrl'!tion cards for semi nar
at lh~ hosp ital immed ialely.
He also requested !hal an
updaled ' list of ·eou nty
ministe r·s be se nt to the
Medical Ce nt er chapla in 's
office.
Rev Howarcl Shive ley,
secre lar)1 , read a lette r from
Mrs. Eleanor Thomas, director
of the Senior Citizens Pr ogram
of the county. Mrs. Thomas is
to be asked to speak at the next
ministeria l mee ting.
After the bu-siness meeti ng
was held, the ,ministers met
wit h Rev. J.ullter Tra cy,
professor at Rio Grande, Dr.
Hu ghey
Jones,
Dis tri ct
Superintendent of the Portsmouth District, Rev. Gera hl
Erte r , Distric t Progra m
Assi s tan t of the Athens
Distric t, and Hcv. Glenn
Biddle. Director of the Jackson
ArNt Ministeries . to receive
information and to plan for the
Sou thern Ohio Preac hers'
Confr,rence lo be led by the
Meigs Mi nisters and held at
Rio Grande . The date was se t
for ,\pri l 7-8. II will beg in April
7 with regis tration in , Davis
Ha ll at 9 a.m.
·
Tlw theme fo r tht• l.'onfl' rcnrc

Wedding··vows exchanged
HUTI.AND - The Hulland
Church of Jes us Christ was the
setting for the Nov 7 we dd in~
of Miss Dia na Lynn Clay,
da ugh ter of Mr. and M r~.
Warren Clay, Rutlanrl, and
Sherman Da le White , son of
Mr. and Mrs. Nev Whi le , Rt . 2,
Pomeroy.
Elde r Ray Roush, grandfather of the bride, offi cia led at
the 6:30 p.m. wedding. Nuptial
music was prov ided by Mrs.
Gl'~lte Whi te.
Given in marriage by he r
fat hf' r, the bride wore a gown
of silk organza, alencon lace
an d sa tin f&lt;~s hi on crl wit h a

was chcw ged to: Extension!:
Exti nction'?? J The Cha llenge of
the Church in Southea.stc rn
Ohw.)
The co nfe re nce will be
broken down in to four sessions
with the topic&gt; to be
!i AL LI PO!.IS
The are open to and availa ble for
Evangelism . E duc~1ti on . Youth
.J
a
nu
a
r
y
pa
r
e
nt
-c
h
ild everyone. Membership in the
Work, and Stewardship and
Finance, as the Bible speaks to . work shop will br l1eld this ·FAC is not required to attend
Sunday, Je.&lt;:. 20 from 2 un til ; the workshop. There is no
these lneeds in the church.
Those who are to be ron. p. m. nt Riverby, First Ave .. chm ge or donation expected. It
lflcted as resource pe r~cn~ Gallipolis , home of the French is re queste d tha t - small
childre n be accompanied by a
are :
J ane
Thompson, Ar t Colony.
Mrs.
Sa
tu1
dra
Koby
and
Mrs.
parent or responsible adult.
Presbyteri an, Rev. Char les
Lusher, Baplis l, and Bishop Gabby Satller will be on hand Bring a friend and plan to
George Weaver, Unit ed to teac h and de monst ra te atte nd !!
" Finge r Prin t Ar t". Mater ials
Brethren.
used
wi ll· be paper, steneils.
Those to be conlm:ted for
devotional leaders are Dr . fi ne felt- lipfM'd mulli-&lt;:olored
Hu ghey
J ones, · Unit ed pens , ~1pe and in k stamp pads.
Methodist, Rev. Pa ul Welion. Materi als will be provided;
CHILLICOTHE - The South
Ca tho lic, Re v. Art Lund. however, the F' AC is shor t of
Lutheran, and The District ink sl&lt;t mp pads and fine felt Ce ntral Ohio Prese r vat ion
Sriperin tendc nl
of
the lipped pens. ll would be ap- Soc iety , Inc., ''SCOPE". will
Nazare ne Churc h fr om preciated if you could bring mee l Stu1day afternoon , Feb. 2
these articles from home with at 2 p.m., in the court room of
Columbus.
,
you.
It would also be wise to the Brown County Court House,
Those present for the
wear
old cothing or some type in Georgetown . Georgetown is ·
meeting were Rev. Carl Hicks.
Howar d Shi veley , Sieve of clo th tn ~ protection. An in- the home of "SCOPS" new
Skaggs, Floy d Shook. Uoyd teres ti ng and fun-filled af- president, Judge Harold C. Neu
1 pronounced Nye).
Grimm. Robert Shook, Robert ternoon is promised.
The
parent-child
workshops
The meeting will las t aboul
Bumgarner , Dwight Zavi tz and
an hour , and will be followed by
Harold Dee tl1.
a walk aro und Georgetown to
Next meetin g will be Feb. 10
see
the res toration work done
at the Syr ac use Naza rene
Church, Rev. Howard Black.
host pastor.

Parent-child workshop set

SCOPS will meet Feb. 2

TOPS names
committee
Mason Area
Class 12 to·
News, Notes
.

Do ri s Hensl0r. Do nna
Alesh ire, Helen Hill, and
Debbie Hill were named to the
"Miss Spri ngti me"' co ntes t
co•nmil lee at the Tuesday
night meeling of the TOPS
tTake Off Pounds Sensibly)
Club last week at the Middleport Ame rican Le gion Hall.
Mrs . Belly Cla rk opened the
meeting ·with devotions and the
new TOPS Ru les were
prese nted , one of whic h
requires tha t all members are
to be weighed between 7 and
7:30p .m. Kathy McDaniel and
Be tt y Sayre we re named
quee ns fo r the past two weeks
on the basis of weight loss·. 1\vo
new members were we lcomed.
Twenty-on(' mem bers attended .

beirig hung ·y. With Iewer calo r~es. your
weight goes down. Sale ta ken 11.5
directr d . will not make you ner,vous
Look b~U er feel better as y·ou start

sHmmingd)wn today with ODRINEX .

Great buy
for your
favorite

on many of the old houses.
For the next two years all
"SCOPS" meetings will concentrate, on buildings, houses
and di s tricts ,.· eligible for
nomination to the · Nati onal
Register . For the many who
wish to lrnow whal to look for in
selecti ng nominati ons these
mee tings will serve as training
session s.
All "SCOPS" meetings are
open to the public.

.::=.

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jewe led watch.
Water and shock
resistant. Styled in
gleaming chrome and
stainless steel. With a
swee p second hand. Full
numerat dial. Black
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Bulova guarantee:
Al l fo r a mere $14.95 .

· Final ·Clearance
MEN ' S DRES-S &amp; CASUAL

SHOES
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Court St., Pomeroy

Middleport, Ohio

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FairView
News Notes

LARGE SELECTION
'

OF OOWRS

· By Mrs. Herbert Roush '
Mrs. Mary Donohue has been
.confined to her home with
pneumonia,
, Mrs . Doris Sayre, .Mrs.
Mabel Shields were in
(jallipolis on Monday, Mrs.
Shields consulted her doctor.
Mr. and Mrs. Oan~y Sayre of
Columbus spent Sunday with
Mr, and Mrs. Herbert Sayre.
Mr, and Mrs. Russell Roush
and children, Mr. and Mrs.
porsa Parsons attended a
birthday party for Mrs. Elsie
Ditrst Saturday evening at her
htme In Ravenswood. Mrs.
Durst was 78 years "young.
Hosts for' the party were Mr.
and Mrs. 'Chester Durst, Niles,
Ohio who presented her with a
!arg; birthday cake which was
~erved during the evening to
gues!s calling on· Mrs. · Durst.
· Misses Sharon and Cindy,
Roush spent Monday evening ·
_ witll. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert

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Food I
SUPER MARKET - Open Daily 9 to 10 • Sun. 10 to 10
We Accept Federal Food !}tamp.•
PHONE "£·,J~ou

---

Roush. •
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1

MIDOLE PORT

MARK V
SPECIAL

FLUFFO

VALUE!

Shortening

KIMBIES
MEDIUM
30's

$169

24's

USDA CHOICE BEEF

For Baking &amp;Cooking

CRISCO
OIL

Hot Cocoa
MIX

38 oz.
bottle

$1.69

30oz.~r

SUPERIORS BONELESS

SANITARY
NAPKINS

$17 9

CAKE MIX

40 COUNl

box

TIDE
KING SIL~
ONLY

5lB. 40Z
NEW SIZEI

JIF
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10. oz.

,ar

MARl&lt;

V

FROZEN

Fresh USDA
Choice Pork

lb.

$119

PORK SAUSAGE •••••••H.o:!~~! ••••••••••••• !b~.,89'
SUPERIORS
lb. 79'
GE
POLISH SAUSA ,••••• ••.••••••••••• •• •••.•••• SUPERIORS FRESH
lb. 49'
Po RK LIVER•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
_....
PORK NECK BONES.. :R.E!H~ :~A: •••••••••••• !b~ ••49'
SWIFT'S PREMIUM EVERSWEET
lb. 99'
SLICED .BACO N•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
12 oz. 69e
FRENCH CITY
.SKINLESS WIENERS••••••••••••••••••••·;~ ...
ALL MEAT BOLOGNA •• !~::~~R·s·········· •••1~•• 79'
12 oz. 69'
·
SUPERIORS
.
SKINLESS WIENERS ••••••••••••••••••••• P., ..
SUPERIORS
12 oz. 79'
ALL BEEF WIENERS •••••••••••••••••••••P!i~ • .
THURSDAY ONL V

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INSTANT
COFFEE

40 oz.

79¢

lb.

.FOLGER'S

PEANUT BUTTER

PORK ROAST

GROUND
ROUND

•1 09

lb.

$169

Superor
Regular

lb.

GROUND
CHUCK

KOTEX
DUNCAN HINES

DIET RITE

FLAVORS

$199

5

Everyday Price -8 Pale '1.59
'

Whipped Topping

LEMONADE

10 ounce

6

container
'

OCEAN PERCH

ALL WEEI&lt; PRICE

'159

4

OR N£1'1 DIET RifE COlA (SUGAR FREEl

loaves
lor
j

C O UP O N

.
BROUGHTON'S

2% MILK
$129

MAXWELL HOUSE
COFFEE
Hb

can

99e

With
Coupon

Limit t Coupon per customer

Good Only at Mark V
Offer E~oires: 2-28 ~75

pkg,

ON-COR
SALISBURY
STEAK

Sliced Turkey
'

DAD'S ROOT BEER

FAVORITE BREAD

gallon

16 oz.

ON-COR

32 oz.
" pkg.

$100

NICKERSON'S

FISH &amp; FRIES
box

cans

'

GORTON'S
32 oz.

6 oz.

'

32 oz.

' 1''

pkg.

I

'1''

U. S. GRADE A MEDIUM

EGG-S
, dozen

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8 '::•129

SATURDAY ONLY

SCOT LAD

RC COLA

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quarts
lor

FOODS

RICH'S

PORK
STEAK
lb.

GROUND
BEEF

Carnation

SUPERIORS

(l '

3 lb.$
can

TODDLER
DAYTIME

DAYTIME

·USDA

CHOICE

The

,.....

guy

Savings Co.
Rev. Yeager is rector of St.
Timothy's Church in Massillon
where the marriage service
was held: It was conducted by
the Right Reverend John Burt,
Bishop of the Diocese of Ohio .
The new Mrs. Yeager, the
granddaughter of the late
Theodore T. and Sara
Calderwood Reed, is an
element ary teacher in . the
Plain Local School District,
Canton .
After a wedding trip to
Jamaica, the newlyweds will
reside in Massillon .

do decorating
Class 12 meeting Thursday
ntg ht at Hea th United
Methodist Church agreed to be
responsible for the church
decorations at both Easte r and
Christmas.
Mrs . Rober t Rinehart
pres ided at the meeting and
gave a reading on the New
Yea r . Devoti ons by Mrs. L. W.
MeComas
included
a
med itation ti tled ''As a Little
Child".
Two quizzes were held , one
on poetry conducted by Mrs.
Nan Moore and won by Mrs.
Emerson Jones, and the other
on popular music of yesteryear
played by Mrs. Jones at th~
piano for a "name tha t tune''
qu iz won by Mrs. ·James
Criswe ll .
Refreshments were se rved
by Mrs. Rintihart. Mrs. McComas and Mrs. Jones.

VISITORS COME
Mrs. Bernard Schramm ,
Zanesville , spent the weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. John Lyons
and grandson, Eddie , in
Middleport. '

Miss Schellhase marries
Mr , and Mrs. Theodore T.
Reed, Jr ., son, Torn ~ were in
Can tor. over fhe weekend to
atte nd the wedding of Mr.
Reed's niece, Miss Christine
Ann Schellhase, to Rev. Wayne
Yeager.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr . and Mr s. E . Robert
Sc hellhase. Mrs. Schellhase is
the former Agnes Reed. and
Mr. Schellhase served on the
Board of Directors of the
Pomeroy Farmers Bank and

Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
were at Chester to visit with
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Clark and
family and see their new greatgranddaughte r , Wendy
Jaylene, born at O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital, Athens, on
December 31. Grandparents of
the new baby are Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Clark and Mr. and Mrs. ·
Roy Wiseman, Harrisonville,
and great-gr a ndp ar ent s
besides the Starkeys include
Mrs. llla Wiseman, Chillicothe,
and Mrs . Ava Gilke y,
Harrisonville . Two sis ters,
Tamra and Penny, welcomed
the little one home.
Mrs . Kelly Kerns and
Dorothy, Ripley, W. Va., spent
a day with Zelia Perry and the
Carrel Woodgerd family .
Members of the Temple
United Methodist Women met
with Leah Crabtree for their
January
meeting .
The
devotionS from the Call to
Prayer and Self-Denial
progam ·were used by Westina
Crabtree assisted by Elizabeth
Jordan and Leah Crabtree.
Reports were com pie ted and
plans were made to ·send a
payment on the District Office
., Building. Plans for the
February meeting will be
completed later.
Steve Gillogly went with
other youth from the First
Christlad Church, Athens, to
the Ohio State CYF Convention
at Bethany College in Bethany,
W. Va. Over 900 CYF youth
from Ohio were in attendance.
.; · He reported that Ohio has the
largest group of any state in
the USA and is composed of
four conferences.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Stans·
bury and sons, Reynoldsburg,
~o
were weekend guests of his
,. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dale
' . Stansbury and other relatives
here.
r
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Stansbury
have received word that their
daughter,
Mrs .
Eileen
Gryctke,
recently
underwent
•
,.
major surgery at an Annapolis
Hospital bul is reportedly
convalescing satisfactorily at
this time,
Mr. and Mrs. William
Culwell visited relatives in
the. Flatwoods, Ky. area at
the home of Bertie Tackett and
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hensley on
· ' Sunday.
:' "
Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Starkey
' ,. · were in Colwnbus to see his
,•' ·' - sister, Jessie Jewell, on
Thursday. Mrs. Jewell is now
at the St. Luke Convalescent
Home, Room 310, Souders
Avenue, Columbus , Ohiol
43~, and would like to continue hearing from her friends
and relatives In this area ..
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Peck
and family received greetings
from their son-in-law and
: • daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Kuykendall (Helen Peck ), who
' are residing in Japan while .
" serving with the U. S. Air
Force .
Mr. and Mrs . Donald Peck,
; · Blue Springs, Missouri, spent
.,: ' two weeks vacation here wilh
:: his brother_ and sister·in-law,
' Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Peck and
family . Other guests who came
' ·, to see them while they were
' here included Mr. and Mrs.
Nathan Brady and daughter of
' Ashland; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
, Peck, Nelsonville; Mr. and
, Mrs. George William Peck ,
;·• Enid Peck, Hazel Peck, Mrs.
Doris Campbell and Jack and
; · Gene Quinn; Springfield; Mr.
' and Mrs. John Peck, Hamden;
· Mr. and Mrs. Edwin peck and
. ' family, Mr. and Mrs, Jake
· · Edwards and children ijnd
' Randy Leiving, Albany, and
•• Mr. and Mrs. Lavern Peck and
• daW!hter. local.

BAPTISED Robby
Wayne Wyatt, the year old
son of Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Wyatt, received the rites of
lnlant baptism Sunday, Dec,
29, 197~, at the Laurel CUff
Free Methodist Church. Rev.
Floyd F. Shook, pastor, and
Robert Barton, assistant
pastor, officiated. The Wyatt
family resides in JacksoJ&gt;o
vill_e, Fla., where WyaH Is
stationed with .the U. S.
Navy. Robby is the grandson
of Robert Barton, Chester,
and Mrs. Nella Seyler,
Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs,
. Charles Wyatt, New Haven,
W. Va.

Mr. and Mrs. Sherman D. White

Mr . and Mrs. La wre nce
Wolfe and son, Timmy of
L-e tart, visi ted on Sugday wi th
his sister and brother-in-law.
Mr. and Mrs. John Robert
Ronch and fam ily.
Henry ('iatworthy lo present
Mrs . Edw ar d Rya n has
11.111\l chPck from post to Gifl s return t~d home fr om Roanoke.
for the Ynnks to PauJ Cusri.
Va. wh ere she visited her son
Dislrirt B chairma n. Anot her and da ugh ter-in- law. Mr. and
guest at the meeting will bt.• Mrs. Patrick Ryan and fam ily.
Mr. and Mrs. Edwa rd Ryans·
Kenny Harri s . . Division . 5
commandt&gt;r. 6 .:30 p.m. dinner. son, James of Roanoke, is
expected to visit his parents
POMEROY . Middlt'port
I Jons Club. M ('i~s Inn , noon. this coming weekenp.
Mrs . Mo llie Fox of Clifton
CHIIP \ ':lil1'\ Cll!ll!H:tlldt' I'V
visiti'd her daughter and sonf\nq..;ht:o !"t•t;lplar , rt"t!U I&lt;;r·
in-law,
Mr. and Mrs . Johnny
Cll!!l' lii l"t'. 7: :ln p.Ill !'Oilll'I'O\·
ForsJtee
at Barberton, Ohio.
~tl.Sl l iJlC. Tt'IIIpk.
.
RE\'IVAL SET
The Mason Emerge ncy
A
reviva
l will be held al the
\llll ll i. F:PORT LITERARY Squad look Mari on Rayburn to
rlub. 2 p:m Wednesday at the
Pleasan t Valley Hospital on H)·sell Rtm Fr.., Methodist at
home of Mrs. 0 . B. Stout . Mrs, Monday. He re mains a patient 7:30 each eve ning Thursday
through Stu1day with Danie l
Dwight Walla ce to redcw there.
Roush. Rolland. as spea ker .
"China - Past and Presen t. "
Rev. Pa ul Neville . pasto r ,
by Pea rl S. Buck. Roll call. an
invi tes !he public.
outstanding Chinese leader.
ATIEND MEETING
THU RSDAY
Rev . and Mrs. Ha rold Dee th.
TWIN City Shrinelles. 7:30 Mr . and Mrs. Theodore Reed
p.m . at 1\rin Ci iJ· Shrine Club, and Mr. and Mrs. Harry S.
Racine . t\11 members invited. Moore represented the Grace
Episcopal Church. Pome roy.
·at the centennial meeting of the
Diocese of Southern Ohio Jan.
1().12, Columbus. Mr . and Mrs.
New chni c.l l tests comj)lett&gt;d at a Moore· remained in Columbus
major uni.·n• tv h osp •t~t pro•e th8 t Ihe
fo r several days following the
OOR INEX rtJn Will he! p ynu lose
meeting so tha t Mrs. Moore
rxce.ss wcif,hl qUiddv
cou ld attend the EpisCOP&lt;II
OOAINEX rt~nt.lms ar1 .Jmazin(!:
hung_m tamer thJt suppresst&gt;s the
Churchwomen's Board
appettte. Enrov th•eE' good meil ls a day
sessions on Wednesday and
as the tmy ODRI N E X tablet auto·
maticatly helps you ra t les s _without , Thursday.

FIGHTS UGLY FAT
3 TIMES A DAY

•
The Ohio Food Market "Situation and outlook" has oome
interesting facts on what we as conswners can expect in the
mark~t place this year, and ther~ are a few bright spots.
The prediction, based on supply and demand, is that this
year retail beef will be lower in cost than last year. But, on the
other hand , pork prices are exfM'c!ed to be above last year's
refle cting the drop in pork production.
As for fish prices , "Situation and Outlook" says we can
expe ct slightly lower prices due to the large frozen stocks, while
' the price of poultry and eggs will be higher the first quarter of
this year and then fM'rhaps decline during the second quarter.
Milk and da iry food products will stay about !be same from
oow through mid-year , according to the publication put out by
Conswner Food Marketing, an affiliate of the CoofM'rative Extension Service at Ohio State University.
"Situation and Outlook" also reports that coffee prices will
be about the same this year as in 1974, that cereal and bakery
product prices will not rise as fast as they did last year, and that
the price of potatoes will continue to be lower than they were last
year.
The exfM'cted large citrus crop is also exfM'cted to keep fresh
fru it prices at attractive levels, but fresh vegetable prices will
average higher than they were in the first half of 1974.
However, with conswners fee ling a pinch in the pocketbook,
wha t with the increase in cost of all of the necessities of life,
particularly the utilities , it would appear that conswner demand
in the food market is not likely to increase because of this infla tionary pressure on personal incomes.
"Outlook" reports that real income level has fallen during
the past few quarters and will likely continue to fall in the near
fu ture.
To some extent this situation may be altered as Congress
consid
ers a tax cut to increase consumer purchasing power .
'
cameo neckli ne a fi tted bodice
Mea nwhile, homemakers will probably continue to resist
and long sleeves. Her chapel · sharp price increases as they have in the case of sugar.
length veil fe ll from a J uliet
cap.
FOR. THE: next few weeks in the "Fun With Foods" column,
Ma id of honor lor the bride we'll be talking about ways to get the most for your food money, a
was Miss Caroly n Jean Moore, concern of e~ery homemaker. Convenience foods , the best buys
La ncaster. She wore a gown of in meat, meat substitutes will be among' the topics, and much of
pink lrnit and a short matching the information will come from Miss Marta Gui!key, the Meigs
veil. Robert Mash, Rt. 2,
County E:xtension home' economist,
Pomeroy, st.ved as bes t man
·for the bridegroom.
DID YOU know that 2 ounces cheddar or processed cheese,
Th e
newlyweds
are
"'c. cottage cheese, 2 or 3 eggs, 1 c. cooked dry beans, peas or
grad uates of Meigs Hi gh lenlils, or 4 tsbp. peanut butter are equivalent to ohe serving of
School. Mr. Whi te is employed meat ?
a t the G. and J. Auto Parts and
the coup le res ides at 271 North
Front St., Middleport .

59e
·~·

.

MAXWELL HOUSE
COFFEE
3 lb. $279 ·.wml
can .
·

per.cus~

Umit 1 coupon
Good Oni y at Mark V
9fter Expire~ : 2-28-7'5

•

•

•

�'

,.

I

I

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I

BUYS .

Fun ·with Food

News, Event

Nature's
Energy

By Charlen,e Hoeflich

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DE:AR POLLY - My wh ite plastic curtains have turned a
yellow ish color. I wonder if there is anything I can wash them in
to bring back their original white color as Uley were quite exfM'ns ivc. - MILDRE:D.
DE:AR MIT,DRE:D - Information released by one of the
. makers of a well-known bleach says that plastic curtains will
·look cleaner and sme ll fresher with the use of a chlorine bleach.
Wash thoroughly and then ooa k in a solution of one tablespoon
liquid chlorine bleach to each gallon of ~ol d wate r . Rinse well .
When such curtains become dingy loo king, wash in washer
- FIVE YE,\RS OLD - Mr.
with a mi ld detergent on the delicate cycle and line Q[Y. Some
and Mrs. Howard C. Sm ith,
plastic curtains ca n be dyed at home should one wish a chang"e of
color. we are told. If the curtain is patterned, the ctesign outline
l.inrolu HilL PomNoy .
will remain and may even be diHerent in color ... But as a last
t•n lntaim•d Saturda}' wi th 11
part~
honoring
th eir. resort thi~ mrg ht give added use to old curtains. - POLLY.
d:ntghtn, TnH')' Lynn. on
IH~ r

fifth birt hday . :\
, ·ah•ntinC' lht·mc was c·arrit·d
tlUI ~ ith ' rNI anrt whitt•
o.; tn•a mcrs and ballonn!i. ,\
ra kt', dt·i·ora tt'Ct in rrd and
"hitf', irt• rrra m . :wrl r·okr•
wt•rt· s t•ni'(l tn 1\tiduu•l. Paul
and TPrr~~t. Mul fo r d, .l udy
!\IN'S, Kim St'th, ( irt·~ and
Hirk~· Smith. St•ndiug gifts
'u·n· her )!ntmiJJan·nts. Mr.

mul !\lrs. Thumas Garten.

Rlount. W. \'a.: Mr. ancll\1rs.
.lt1hn Smith, Churlrs ton, W.
\ 'a .. and .lark. Donna, Rt•r ky
and .Jn(·kit· lh.1ncllt•y.

OEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is with the selvage edges on
l'otton not permanen tly pressed) sheets as the edges. have to be
1roned scpan1tely or they fold as a result of drying them in the
d.ryl' r . Perl1ups smne rea der has found a solution for this and will
pass it on .
I aloo think manufacturers co uld save materia l !and thus be .
able to lower the price\ if they would red uce by several inches
the• width of twin,,ize sh..,ts. bla nkets an d spreads. My beds a re
hig hl'r than most but I still fin d these domestics hang almost to
llw noor on l:x&gt;th sides. I wo nder if others have this same compi!! in!. - GI; RTRUDE .
DEAR POI. I.Y - ! love quilts and enjoy embro idering them
but do out like to do the qu i ltin ~. So I bought quilted mattres&amp;
patls and stamped and embroidered Ulem. I have two reallnoking quilt s that I usc witll dust ruffles on twin beds in my
1 ·:~1!· \y Anwrican guest room. - LOIS.
DE:AR PO LLY · and Linda - When you cannot buy shoe
strings short enough for baby's shoes, cut the strings through the
1.

~i(;:;:-:;:::·:·S
:»!::-:O
: .: :.:.:::C:
::::::: I~: a
=::::::::I,,,._,,,,,,Tt ~:~:,cl~l~l~i~~: ;;~~;~~ ~~:~ ~~~= ~~:~~!~~~~~t~~:~~s:~~s~eep
·.

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.~:,;.;~.

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'i

Calendad
TUESDAY

J\M F: HI('AN Legwn Drt•w
Wct.Jst~o·r Post :39 spaghetti
dinner at 7::w !J.IIl . followl'd by

rt•g ul itr mel'ting .

CHESTER .. Counci l 3Z:I,
Amcrice~, 7::10
the lwll. Charter "to be

Daughter!-; of

p.m. a!
rl r aped for Mrs. Eli zabeth
Wickham . l\It:mbcrs to wc1Jr
whit e.
OtiiO Ek1 Pili Chapter. Bet"
SignHI
Phi
So r ori ty,
progress ive dinner. Mem bers
to mt'el on lhe Pomeroy upper
parking lot al 6· 15. Appetize r
at Kathy Cumings, Sy racuse ;
SaiHd.
Dottie
Musse r ,
Mulberry He ighl"i, Pomeroy;
Main course. Wilma Reece,
Midd lepo rl : an d dessert,
Debbie Buck, Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy . Cultura l prog ram by
Mrs. Buck.
GROUP II , Midd leport Firs !
Uniled PJ·esbylerian Church.
7::w p.m. home of Mrs. Harry
S. Moore. Mrs. Mildred Ba iley
. to be c~h os tess.
SOUTHERN ·Band Boosters
will meet at U1e high sc hool at
7:30 p.m:

FR IENDLY Cirde. Trini ty
Church, (i p.m . potluc k. Miss
Mary K Chapman to have the
program.
POMEROY Ch&lt;1 ptcr . Roya l
. Arch 1\·lasons, 7::lOp.m. at the
Pome-·rov Masonic · 1l't' mp le.
Spl'cial ;1 1echn~ to Clmft'r the
mo~t CXl~ llent mastC'rs degree .
1\ liTLA~D
FIREMEN'S
Auxiliar) . Tuesday. 7::10 p.m.
at the
firehouse.
i\ ny
prospccti"c rncmbt.'r im·iled to
attend .
II'EDNF.SDA Y
AMEHIC!Iit
Legio n
Au:oli ary, F ec ney-Bt:nnl'tt
Pos! 128. Middli.'port. business
nH•e ling Lll 7:JO p.m. · nt the

hall. Mt•mbers reminded to
k1ke gifls for the Peck of Wee
Ones projt:•ct. The nweting wil!
b(' prect•dt'(l with a potluck
d!IHlt'!' :1 t ti ::Hl p.m . with the
legionnaircs In bt' l!m~sts.

...

A~IERICAi\'
Legion
Auxiliary . Feeney - Bennett
Post 128, 7:30p .m. nt th~ hall.

'·

s.:\s
Now,
A FrH
For
EvaiUI1ion
Your

Since you purchaSed y ou r
life Insurance, wages and t he
i:pst of l i ving have probabl y
gone up i.md this m~ ns tha t
if would take more monev to
make up for financial loss to
your family if somett'ting: • :
happened to you. Let us Mlp
you protect your familv .

REUTERBROGAN
INSURANCE
PH. 992-51311
101 Sycam•re

Pomeroy

MHS.V . Q.

'
Polly's Nott' - Have the knot between the first tWo eyelets
wht·rc yuu start lo lucc the shoes .

A1inisters meet
The
Meigs
Co un ty
Min is ter·ia l Assoc iation rn e t
.Monday at Rio Gr an de.
rollege . Hev . Harold Dee th ,
host pastor , led in opening
devo tions .
He \1. CHrl Hieks. president,
l'Onduc ted
the
busi ness
1necting .
Rev . Steve Skaggs re ported
on the cha pla incy 1:1t Holzer
Medical Center and asked tha t
a ll mi nisters se nd
in
reg istrl'!tion cards for semi nar
at lh~ hosp ital immed ialely.
He also requested !hal an
updaled ' list of ·eou nty
ministe r·s be se nt to the
Medical Ce nt er chapla in 's
office.
Rev Howarcl Shive ley,
secre lar)1 , read a lette r from
Mrs. Eleanor Thomas, director
of the Senior Citizens Pr ogram
of the county. Mrs. Thomas is
to be asked to speak at the next
ministeria l mee ting.
After the bu-siness meeti ng
was held, the ,ministers met
wit h Rev. J.ullter Tra cy,
professor at Rio Grande, Dr.
Hu ghey
Jones,
Dis tri ct
Superintendent of the Portsmouth District, Rev. Gera hl
Erte r , Distric t Progra m
Assi s tan t of the Athens
Distric t, and Hcv. Glenn
Biddle. Director of the Jackson
ArNt Ministeries . to receive
information and to plan for the
Sou thern Ohio Preac hers'
Confr,rence lo be led by the
Meigs Mi nisters and held at
Rio Grande . The date was se t
for ,\pri l 7-8. II will beg in April
7 with regis tration in , Davis
Ha ll at 9 a.m.
·
Tlw theme fo r tht• l.'onfl' rcnrc

Wedding··vows exchanged
HUTI.AND - The Hulland
Church of Jes us Christ was the
setting for the Nov 7 we dd in~
of Miss Dia na Lynn Clay,
da ugh ter of Mr. and M r~.
Warren Clay, Rutlanrl, and
Sherman Da le White , son of
Mr. and Mrs. Nev Whi le , Rt . 2,
Pomeroy.
Elde r Ray Roush, grandfather of the bride, offi cia led at
the 6:30 p.m. wedding. Nuptial
music was prov ided by Mrs.
Gl'~lte Whi te.
Given in marriage by he r
fat hf' r, the bride wore a gown
of silk organza, alencon lace
an d sa tin f&lt;~s hi on crl wit h a

was chcw ged to: Extension!:
Exti nction'?? J The Cha llenge of
the Church in Southea.stc rn
Ohw.)
The co nfe re nce will be
broken down in to four sessions
with the topic&gt; to be
!i AL LI PO!.IS
The are open to and availa ble for
Evangelism . E duc~1ti on . Youth
.J
a
nu
a
r
y
pa
r
e
nt
-c
h
ild everyone. Membership in the
Work, and Stewardship and
Finance, as the Bible speaks to . work shop will br l1eld this ·FAC is not required to attend
Sunday, Je.&lt;:. 20 from 2 un til ; the workshop. There is no
these lneeds in the church.
Those who are to be ron. p. m. nt Riverby, First Ave .. chm ge or donation expected. It
lflcted as resource pe r~cn~ Gallipolis , home of the French is re queste d tha t - small
childre n be accompanied by a
are :
J ane
Thompson, Ar t Colony.
Mrs.
Sa
tu1
dra
Koby
and
Mrs.
parent or responsible adult.
Presbyteri an, Rev. Char les
Lusher, Baplis l, and Bishop Gabby Satller will be on hand Bring a friend and plan to
George Weaver, Unit ed to teac h and de monst ra te atte nd !!
" Finge r Prin t Ar t". Mater ials
Brethren.
used
wi ll· be paper, steneils.
Those to be conlm:ted for
devotional leaders are Dr . fi ne felt- lipfM'd mulli-&lt;:olored
Hu ghey
J ones, · Unit ed pens , ~1pe and in k stamp pads.
Methodist, Rev. Pa ul Welion. Materi als will be provided;
CHILLICOTHE - The South
Ca tho lic, Re v. Art Lund. however, the F' AC is shor t of
Lutheran, and The District ink sl&lt;t mp pads and fine felt Ce ntral Ohio Prese r vat ion
Sriperin tendc nl
of
the lipped pens. ll would be ap- Soc iety , Inc., ''SCOPE". will
Nazare ne Churc h fr om preciated if you could bring mee l Stu1day afternoon , Feb. 2
these articles from home with at 2 p.m., in the court room of
Columbus.
,
you.
It would also be wise to the Brown County Court House,
Those present for the
wear
old cothing or some type in Georgetown . Georgetown is ·
meeting were Rev. Carl Hicks.
Howar d Shi veley , Sieve of clo th tn ~ protection. An in- the home of "SCOPS" new
Skaggs, Floy d Shook. Uoyd teres ti ng and fun-filled af- president, Judge Harold C. Neu
1 pronounced Nye).
Grimm. Robert Shook, Robert ternoon is promised.
The
parent-child
workshops
The meeting will las t aboul
Bumgarner , Dwight Zavi tz and
an hour , and will be followed by
Harold Dee tl1.
a walk aro und Georgetown to
Next meetin g will be Feb. 10
see
the res toration work done
at the Syr ac use Naza rene
Church, Rev. Howard Black.
host pastor.

Parent-child workshop set

SCOPS will meet Feb. 2

TOPS names
committee
Mason Area
Class 12 to·
News, Notes
.

Do ri s Hensl0r. Do nna
Alesh ire, Helen Hill, and
Debbie Hill were named to the
"Miss Spri ngti me"' co ntes t
co•nmil lee at the Tuesday
night meeling of the TOPS
tTake Off Pounds Sensibly)
Club last week at the Middleport Ame rican Le gion Hall.
Mrs . Belly Cla rk opened the
meeting ·with devotions and the
new TOPS Ru les were
prese nted , one of whic h
requires tha t all members are
to be weighed between 7 and
7:30p .m. Kathy McDaniel and
Be tt y Sayre we re named
quee ns fo r the past two weeks
on the basis of weight loss·. 1\vo
new members were we lcomed.
Twenty-on(' mem bers attended .

beirig hung ·y. With Iewer calo r~es. your
weight goes down. Sale ta ken 11.5
directr d . will not make you ner,vous
Look b~U er feel better as y·ou start

sHmmingd)wn today with ODRINEX .

Great buy
for your
favorite

on many of the old houses.
For the next two years all
"SCOPS" meetings will concentrate, on buildings, houses
and di s tricts ,.· eligible for
nomination to the · Nati onal
Register . For the many who
wish to lrnow whal to look for in
selecti ng nominati ons these
mee tings will serve as training
session s.
All "SCOPS" meetings are
open to the public.

.::=.

It's a precision
jewe led watch.
Water and shock
resistant. Styled in
gleaming chrome and
stainless steel. With a
swee p second hand. Full
numerat dial. Black
leath er strap. And a
Bulova guarantee:
Al l fo r a mere $14.95 .

· Final ·Clearance
MEN ' S DRES-S &amp; CASUAL

SHOES
Now

lfz

Goessler

PrTte

JEWELRY
STORE

heritage house

Court St., Pomeroy

Middleport, Ohio

.Give Rooms New Look Now!
Chief Interior
Latex

WALL PAINT

~6'' gal.
LATEX WALL PAINT

FairView
News Notes

LARGE SELECTION
'

OF OOWRS

· By Mrs. Herbert Roush '
Mrs. Mary Donohue has been
.confined to her home with
pneumonia,
, Mrs . Doris Sayre, .Mrs.
Mabel Shields were in
(jallipolis on Monday, Mrs.
Shields consulted her doctor.
Mr. and Mrs. Oan~y Sayre of
Columbus spent Sunday with
Mr, and Mrs. Herbert Sayre.
Mr, and Mrs. Russell Roush
and children, Mr. and Mrs.
porsa Parsons attended a
birthday party for Mrs. Elsie
Ditrst Saturday evening at her
htme In Ravenswood. Mrs.
Durst was 78 years "young.
Hosts for' the party were Mr.
and Mrs. 'Chester Durst, Niles,
Ohio who presented her with a
!arg; birthday cake which was
~erved during the evening to
gues!s calling on· Mrs. · Durst.
· Misses Sharon and Cindy,
Roush spent Monday evening ·
_ witll. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert

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Chief Latex
ZENITH

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Nelson 's Dru g Store

'

"Pomeroy . Oh io ..

..
""

I .

,.
'

Food I
SUPER MARKET - Open Daily 9 to 10 • Sun. 10 to 10
We Accept Federal Food !}tamp.•
PHONE "£·,J~ou

---

Roush. •
-

---,

1

MIDOLE PORT

MARK V
SPECIAL

FLUFFO

VALUE!

Shortening

KIMBIES
MEDIUM
30's

$169

24's

USDA CHOICE BEEF

For Baking &amp;Cooking

CRISCO
OIL

Hot Cocoa
MIX

38 oz.
bottle

$1.69

30oz.~r

SUPERIORS BONELESS

SANITARY
NAPKINS

$17 9

CAKE MIX

40 COUNl

box

TIDE
KING SIL~
ONLY

5lB. 40Z
NEW SIZEI

JIF
~r

10. oz.

,ar

MARl&lt;

V

FROZEN

Fresh USDA
Choice Pork

lb.

$119

PORK SAUSAGE •••••••H.o:!~~! ••••••••••••• !b~.,89'
SUPERIORS
lb. 79'
GE
POLISH SAUSA ,••••• ••.••••••••••• •• •••.•••• SUPERIORS FRESH
lb. 49'
Po RK LIVER•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
_....
PORK NECK BONES.. :R.E!H~ :~A: •••••••••••• !b~ ••49'
SWIFT'S PREMIUM EVERSWEET
lb. 99'
SLICED .BACO N•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
12 oz. 69e
FRENCH CITY
.SKINLESS WIENERS••••••••••••••••••••·;~ ...
ALL MEAT BOLOGNA •• !~::~~R·s·········· •••1~•• 79'
12 oz. 69'
·
SUPERIORS
.
SKINLESS WIENERS ••••••••••••••••••••• P., ..
SUPERIORS
12 oz. 79'
ALL BEEF WIENERS •••••••••••••••••••••P!i~ • .
THURSDAY ONL V

..

INSTANT
COFFEE

40 oz.

79¢

lb.

.FOLGER'S

PEANUT BUTTER

PORK ROAST

GROUND
ROUND

•1 09

lb.

$169

Superor
Regular

lb.

GROUND
CHUCK

KOTEX
DUNCAN HINES

DIET RITE

FLAVORS

$199

5

Everyday Price -8 Pale '1.59
'

Whipped Topping

LEMONADE

10 ounce

6

container
'

OCEAN PERCH

ALL WEEI&lt; PRICE

'159

4

OR N£1'1 DIET RifE COlA (SUGAR FREEl

loaves
lor
j

C O UP O N

.
BROUGHTON'S

2% MILK
$129

MAXWELL HOUSE
COFFEE
Hb

can

99e

With
Coupon

Limit t Coupon per customer

Good Only at Mark V
Offer E~oires: 2-28 ~75

pkg,

ON-COR
SALISBURY
STEAK

Sliced Turkey
'

DAD'S ROOT BEER

FAVORITE BREAD

gallon

16 oz.

ON-COR

32 oz.
" pkg.

$100

NICKERSON'S

FISH &amp; FRIES
box

cans

'

GORTON'S
32 oz.

6 oz.

'

32 oz.

' 1''

pkg.

I

'1''

U. S. GRADE A MEDIUM

EGG-S
, dozen

.

8 '::•129

SATURDAY ONLY

SCOT LAD

RC COLA

'

quarts
lor

FOODS

RICH'S

PORK
STEAK
lb.

GROUND
BEEF

Carnation

SUPERIORS

(l '

3 lb.$
can

TODDLER
DAYTIME

DAYTIME

·USDA

CHOICE

The

,.....

guy

Savings Co.
Rev. Yeager is rector of St.
Timothy's Church in Massillon
where the marriage service
was held: It was conducted by
the Right Reverend John Burt,
Bishop of the Diocese of Ohio .
The new Mrs. Yeager, the
granddaughter of the late
Theodore T. and Sara
Calderwood Reed, is an
element ary teacher in . the
Plain Local School District,
Canton .
After a wedding trip to
Jamaica, the newlyweds will
reside in Massillon .

do decorating
Class 12 meeting Thursday
ntg ht at Hea th United
Methodist Church agreed to be
responsible for the church
decorations at both Easte r and
Christmas.
Mrs . Rober t Rinehart
pres ided at the meeting and
gave a reading on the New
Yea r . Devoti ons by Mrs. L. W.
MeComas
included
a
med itation ti tled ''As a Little
Child".
Two quizzes were held , one
on poetry conducted by Mrs.
Nan Moore and won by Mrs.
Emerson Jones, and the other
on popular music of yesteryear
played by Mrs. Jones at th~
piano for a "name tha t tune''
qu iz won by Mrs. ·James
Criswe ll .
Refreshments were se rved
by Mrs. Rintihart. Mrs. McComas and Mrs. Jones.

VISITORS COME
Mrs. Bernard Schramm ,
Zanesville , spent the weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. John Lyons
and grandson, Eddie , in
Middleport. '

Miss Schellhase marries
Mr , and Mrs. Theodore T.
Reed, Jr ., son, Torn ~ were in
Can tor. over fhe weekend to
atte nd the wedding of Mr.
Reed's niece, Miss Christine
Ann Schellhase, to Rev. Wayne
Yeager.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr . and Mr s. E . Robert
Sc hellhase. Mrs. Schellhase is
the former Agnes Reed. and
Mr. Schellhase served on the
Board of Directors of the
Pomeroy Farmers Bank and

Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
were at Chester to visit with
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Clark and
family and see their new greatgranddaughte r , Wendy
Jaylene, born at O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital, Athens, on
December 31. Grandparents of
the new baby are Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Clark and Mr. and Mrs. ·
Roy Wiseman, Harrisonville,
and great-gr a ndp ar ent s
besides the Starkeys include
Mrs. llla Wiseman, Chillicothe,
and Mrs . Ava Gilke y,
Harrisonville . Two sis ters,
Tamra and Penny, welcomed
the little one home.
Mrs . Kelly Kerns and
Dorothy, Ripley, W. Va., spent
a day with Zelia Perry and the
Carrel Woodgerd family .
Members of the Temple
United Methodist Women met
with Leah Crabtree for their
January
meeting .
The
devotionS from the Call to
Prayer and Self-Denial
progam ·were used by Westina
Crabtree assisted by Elizabeth
Jordan and Leah Crabtree.
Reports were com pie ted and
plans were made to ·send a
payment on the District Office
., Building. Plans for the
February meeting will be
completed later.
Steve Gillogly went with
other youth from the First
Christlad Church, Athens, to
the Ohio State CYF Convention
at Bethany College in Bethany,
W. Va. Over 900 CYF youth
from Ohio were in attendance.
.; · He reported that Ohio has the
largest group of any state in
the USA and is composed of
four conferences.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Stans·
bury and sons, Reynoldsburg,
~o
were weekend guests of his
,. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dale
' . Stansbury and other relatives
here.
r
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Stansbury
have received word that their
daughter,
Mrs .
Eileen
Gryctke,
recently
underwent
•
,.
major surgery at an Annapolis
Hospital bul is reportedly
convalescing satisfactorily at
this time,
Mr. and Mrs. William
Culwell visited relatives in
the. Flatwoods, Ky. area at
the home of Bertie Tackett and
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hensley on
· ' Sunday.
:' "
Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Starkey
' ,. · were in Colwnbus to see his
,•' ·' - sister, Jessie Jewell, on
Thursday. Mrs. Jewell is now
at the St. Luke Convalescent
Home, Room 310, Souders
Avenue, Columbus , Ohiol
43~, and would like to continue hearing from her friends
and relatives In this area ..
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Peck
and family received greetings
from their son-in-law and
: • daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Kuykendall (Helen Peck ), who
' are residing in Japan while .
" serving with the U. S. Air
Force .
Mr. and Mrs . Donald Peck,
; · Blue Springs, Missouri, spent
.,: ' two weeks vacation here wilh
:: his brother_ and sister·in-law,
' Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Peck and
family . Other guests who came
' ·, to see them while they were
' here included Mr. and Mrs.
Nathan Brady and daughter of
' Ashland; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
, Peck, Nelsonville; Mr. and
, Mrs. George William Peck ,
;·• Enid Peck, Hazel Peck, Mrs.
Doris Campbell and Jack and
; · Gene Quinn; Springfield; Mr.
' and Mrs. John Peck, Hamden;
· Mr. and Mrs. Edwin peck and
. ' family, Mr. and Mrs, Jake
· · Edwards and children ijnd
' Randy Leiving, Albany, and
•• Mr. and Mrs. Lavern Peck and
• daW!hter. local.

BAPTISED Robby
Wayne Wyatt, the year old
son of Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Wyatt, received the rites of
lnlant baptism Sunday, Dec,
29, 197~, at the Laurel CUff
Free Methodist Church. Rev.
Floyd F. Shook, pastor, and
Robert Barton, assistant
pastor, officiated. The Wyatt
family resides in JacksoJ&gt;o
vill_e, Fla., where WyaH Is
stationed with .the U. S.
Navy. Robby is the grandson
of Robert Barton, Chester,
and Mrs. Nella Seyler,
Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs,
. Charles Wyatt, New Haven,
W. Va.

Mr. and Mrs. Sherman D. White

Mr . and Mrs. La wre nce
Wolfe and son, Timmy of
L-e tart, visi ted on Sugday wi th
his sister and brother-in-law.
Mr. and Mrs. John Robert
Ronch and fam ily.
Henry ('iatworthy lo present
Mrs . Edw ar d Rya n has
11.111\l chPck from post to Gifl s return t~d home fr om Roanoke.
for the Ynnks to PauJ Cusri.
Va. wh ere she visited her son
Dislrirt B chairma n. Anot her and da ugh ter-in- law. Mr. and
guest at the meeting will bt.• Mrs. Patrick Ryan and fam ily.
Mr. and Mrs. Edwa rd Ryans·
Kenny Harri s . . Division . 5
commandt&gt;r. 6 .:30 p.m. dinner. son, James of Roanoke, is
expected to visit his parents
POMEROY . Middlt'port
I Jons Club. M ('i~s Inn , noon. this coming weekenp.
Mrs . Mo llie Fox of Clifton
CHIIP \ ':lil1'\ Cll!ll!H:tlldt' I'V
visiti'd her daughter and sonf\nq..;ht:o !"t•t;lplar , rt"t!U I&lt;;r·
in-law,
Mr. and Mrs . Johnny
Cll!!l' lii l"t'. 7: :ln p.Ill !'Oilll'I'O\·
ForsJtee
at Barberton, Ohio.
~tl.Sl l iJlC. Tt'IIIpk.
.
RE\'IVAL SET
The Mason Emerge ncy
A
reviva
l will be held al the
\llll ll i. F:PORT LITERARY Squad look Mari on Rayburn to
rlub. 2 p:m Wednesday at the
Pleasan t Valley Hospital on H)·sell Rtm Fr.., Methodist at
home of Mrs. 0 . B. Stout . Mrs, Monday. He re mains a patient 7:30 each eve ning Thursday
through Stu1day with Danie l
Dwight Walla ce to redcw there.
Roush. Rolland. as spea ker .
"China - Past and Presen t. "
Rev. Pa ul Neville . pasto r ,
by Pea rl S. Buck. Roll call. an
invi tes !he public.
outstanding Chinese leader.
ATIEND MEETING
THU RSDAY
Rev . and Mrs. Ha rold Dee th.
TWIN City Shrinelles. 7:30 Mr . and Mrs. Theodore Reed
p.m . at 1\rin Ci iJ· Shrine Club, and Mr. and Mrs. Harry S.
Racine . t\11 members invited. Moore represented the Grace
Episcopal Church. Pome roy.
·at the centennial meeting of the
Diocese of Southern Ohio Jan.
1().12, Columbus. Mr . and Mrs.
New chni c.l l tests comj)lett&gt;d at a Moore· remained in Columbus
major uni.·n• tv h osp •t~t pro•e th8 t Ihe
fo r several days following the
OOR INEX rtJn Will he! p ynu lose
meeting so tha t Mrs. Moore
rxce.ss wcif,hl qUiddv
cou ld attend the EpisCOP&lt;II
OOAINEX rt~nt.lms ar1 .Jmazin(!:
hung_m tamer thJt suppresst&gt;s the
Churchwomen's Board
appettte. Enrov th•eE' good meil ls a day
sessions on Wednesday and
as the tmy ODRI N E X tablet auto·
maticatly helps you ra t les s _without , Thursday.

FIGHTS UGLY FAT
3 TIMES A DAY

•
The Ohio Food Market "Situation and outlook" has oome
interesting facts on what we as conswners can expect in the
mark~t place this year, and ther~ are a few bright spots.
The prediction, based on supply and demand, is that this
year retail beef will be lower in cost than last year. But, on the
other hand , pork prices are exfM'c!ed to be above last year's
refle cting the drop in pork production.
As for fish prices , "Situation and Outlook" says we can
expe ct slightly lower prices due to the large frozen stocks, while
' the price of poultry and eggs will be higher the first quarter of
this year and then fM'rhaps decline during the second quarter.
Milk and da iry food products will stay about !be same from
oow through mid-year , according to the publication put out by
Conswner Food Marketing, an affiliate of the CoofM'rative Extension Service at Ohio State University.
"Situation and Outlook" also reports that coffee prices will
be about the same this year as in 1974, that cereal and bakery
product prices will not rise as fast as they did last year, and that
the price of potatoes will continue to be lower than they were last
year.
The exfM'cted large citrus crop is also exfM'cted to keep fresh
fru it prices at attractive levels, but fresh vegetable prices will
average higher than they were in the first half of 1974.
However, with conswners fee ling a pinch in the pocketbook,
wha t with the increase in cost of all of the necessities of life,
particularly the utilities , it would appear that conswner demand
in the food market is not likely to increase because of this infla tionary pressure on personal incomes.
"Outlook" reports that real income level has fallen during
the past few quarters and will likely continue to fall in the near
fu ture.
To some extent this situation may be altered as Congress
consid
ers a tax cut to increase consumer purchasing power .
'
cameo neckli ne a fi tted bodice
Mea nwhile, homemakers will probably continue to resist
and long sleeves. Her chapel · sharp price increases as they have in the case of sugar.
length veil fe ll from a J uliet
cap.
FOR. THE: next few weeks in the "Fun With Foods" column,
Ma id of honor lor the bride we'll be talking about ways to get the most for your food money, a
was Miss Caroly n Jean Moore, concern of e~ery homemaker. Convenience foods , the best buys
La ncaster. She wore a gown of in meat, meat substitutes will be among' the topics, and much of
pink lrnit and a short matching the information will come from Miss Marta Gui!key, the Meigs
veil. Robert Mash, Rt. 2,
County E:xtension home' economist,
Pomeroy, st.ved as bes t man
·for the bridegroom.
DID YOU know that 2 ounces cheddar or processed cheese,
Th e
newlyweds
are
"'c. cottage cheese, 2 or 3 eggs, 1 c. cooked dry beans, peas or
grad uates of Meigs Hi gh lenlils, or 4 tsbp. peanut butter are equivalent to ohe serving of
School. Mr. Whi te is employed meat ?
a t the G. and J. Auto Parts and
the coup le res ides at 271 North
Front St., Middleport .

59e
·~·

.

MAXWELL HOUSE
COFFEE
3 lb. $279 ·.wml
can .
·

per.cus~

Umit 1 coupon
Good Oni y at Mark V
9fter Expire~ : 2-28-7'5

•

•

•

�•
6- The Daily Sentmel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Tuesday Jan 21 1975

Justice,

Discount stores
buck price order

not blood

COLUMBUS tUPI) - fhe
Oh1o Department of Commerce
Monday was asked to reopen
heanngs on a reg ula110n
reqwnng discount storeS"lo sell
at least 75 per cent of their
merchandise at 10 per cent
below regular market pnces
John Mahane} prcs1dcn1 of
the Ohw Councn of Re t 111
Merchants said the reg ulat wu
approved b) the departmenl

rct.Hling slipped m four pages
of a reg ulat1 on wh1ch we knew
notlun~ clbout
The ne\~ rules were flied Jan

Wlder the admamstrat10n of

9 b}

former Gov John J G1lhgau
was unlawful
Mahaney \\ants Go1don
Peltier named dtrec tor of the
department b) Gov James 1\
Rhodes to dela } enforcem ent

th e

a(i\ er tl smg
\.\ h1ch
\\ hdt s.,1les pnces

stJpul a t l~s

are
Whf!t are regular market
prtces 0 asked Mahanev rhe
peop le m n ., diVISIOn whom we
ha\e had tro""Juble w1th smce
Ute~ don t see m to understand

Consumer Pr ote ctiO n
Dl\tSIOn offH:Ial s w1th th e

secretar) of state before the
G1U1Han

Adrmmstrat10n

had

offl r lally ended 1!s term
Pel t1 er sa td he wa s studying
the regula tiOn and had been

of the regulatiOn and to reopen se 1' eel not tee of appcCJI by
hearmgs
Rev co Inc Cleveland and
The Consumer Protedwn Goldman Stores Ill Dayton
DlvlSton of the depaltmtmt Pell«r could cte!a) or suspend
held heanngs tn Decrmber on lhe rules for 60 days

G M joins rebate war
DETROIT 1UP!\ - (,ene ral
Motors Corp
&lt;~nnounc e d

l o cuslome1s \\ho bought cars

Monday 1t 1s JOJnmg the pr1u?

from Jan 1 ~

cus tomers and .1rc reb oac ttvc

CrM the gwnt of the tndustry
war among riHlJOI automll kCJs
and Will pa) rebates rangtng sa1cl 11 would pay $200 rebates
fr om S200 to S500 lu bu) ers of lo bo}CI s of all Chevrolel Vega
1ts lU re· subcompa c t and Pontiac /\stre Chevrolet Nova
compact IIHX1el I s Chair Pont1at Venture Oldsmobtle
man Thomas A ~ phy sa1d Omega and Bolek Apollo and
the rebates w1l go do ectly to Skyl.1rk models
It als o salclll \\Ould pay $500
1ebates on &lt;ill Chevrolet Monza
2 plus 2 Oldsmobtle Starftre
and Bu1ck Sk)hawk models
Murph) sa1d he hoped the
1 ebatc program \-\ hiCh will run
throu gh
Feb
26
w11l

Apple Grove

News, Events

Mrs Clara Adams, Ractne
Rt IS a med1c1! pahent at
Veterans Memonal Hospital
Mr and Mrs Bob Morns and
children have moved to lheu
home they recen Uy purchased
and remodeled from Russell
Quillen
Chrtstmas dinner guests of
Mr and Mrs Don Bell were
Mr an~ Mrs Paul Ervm and
son Wendell Mr and Mrs
Eugene Ervm and Kelbe of
Bashan Rd Mr and Mrs
Gene Chaney, Mr and Mrs
John Chaney Roger and Ed of
Five Pomts Raymond Bell of
Oak Grove, MISS Lorna Bell
and Bruce Hart
Ho) t
Mr
and
Mrs
Furgerson of Pomt Pleasant
Steve Norrt1; of Racme visited
Mr and Mrs Floyd Noms
Chrtstmas Day
Mrs Erma W1 !son Mrs

Laura Byers were dmner
guests of Mr and Mrs Roy
Van Meter and children and
Chester Van Meter Saturda)
evening .tnd attended !he
Christmas program at Mor
nmg Star church
Mr and Mrs Milo Richard
son of Michigan spen t the
holidays at the1r farm and
VISIted Mr and Mrs I"'" IS
Ours and other relaltves
Mr and Mrs Ro} Donohew
spent Christmas "1U1 Mr and
Mrs Eugene Webster and
Amta at Cleveland 1he)
VISited Saturday through
Thursday
Christmas dmner guests of

"

d1 amatlcall y mcrease the sale

of 250 000 compacl and sub
compac t models now on dealer
and ~.:o mpany lots

Laurel Cliff
News Notes
BY BERTHA PARKER
Sabbath School attendance
Jan 12 at the F1 ee Methodist
Church was 87 Offertng was
$74 10 building fund $19
Re&gt; a~ Mrs Floyd Shook
" ere ca lled to New York due to
the illness of their son tn law
M1 T J Whttaker
Mr M&lt;irk Sl&lt;ihl and Mr
Raymond H1ckhmn Stockport
Vlstted r ece ntly Wi th Mr Hnd

M1 and Mrs He1 bert Roush
were Mr a nd Mrs Roger
Housh Mrs Iva Orr Mr and
Mrs D.1na Lewis Chftun
ca lled on the Roushes Sunda)
evemng

Chrtstmas D11y guesls of Mr
and Mrs Charles !'.hchael were
Mrs Russell Fmdley Mar)
and Ed Lewis P1ckelt of
Crown Cit) Ca llmg 1n the
afternoon were Mr and Mrs
i\rclue Jarrell and sons Mr
and Mrs Roger Roush Mr
and Mrs He1 ber t Roush Mrs
I\ a Orr

CHARLESTON W Va
1UPI) - A Ku Klux Klan
l ea~er
saying he wants
JUStice and not bloodshed, '
has announced plans for
another KKK rally at West
V1rgm1a s Capitol to protest
contmued use of controversial
textbooks
Dale Reusch a presulenllal
hopeful of the Nattonal Kntghts
of the KKK , telephoned UP!
from Lodi, Oh1o, Monday night
and sa1d a demonstratiOn
would be held on the steps of
the Ca pitol m about two
weeks
Our aun 1s not to corrupt
society or create any vaolen

ce, ' Reusch sa1d

We are
and not

seekmg JUStice
bloodshed '
Reusch also sa1d he was
studymg school textbooks of
the Oh1o public school system
and srud some of the oontroverslal texts were tn
Oberlin, Oh1o classrooms near
Cleveland
The auto worker responded
to cr1t1 c1sm by the Charleston
branch of the NAACP which
w-ged state and City leaders to
denounce the Klan's antitextbook appearance here last
Saturday
Black leaders sa1d the KKK
was trymg to mteqect racial
b1gotry mto the long-ruMm£
textbook battle and warned
slmllar gathenngs could
erupt mto racially-motivated
crunmal violence '
Reusch proposed a special
election to determme whether
Kanawha County residents fa
vored the disputed texts which
opponents claun undermme
God and country
'Let's brmg the 1ssue to the
ballot box, he sa1d
U")he majo11ty favored the
texts, ban-the book forees
should start set ling up pr 1vate
schools, the KKK leader said
Reusch asserted a lot of
people were getting bostile to
h1s group and KKK co
ordmator Ed Miller srud be had
rece1ved ' a couple of
threatening telephone calls "
Hooded Klansmen told a
weekend gathermg of about 150
persons therr great mvls1ble
soc~ety w1ll do everything 1t
can to help you ftne people f1ght
these books of filth '
They pjedged fmanclal support to the anti-textbook forces

Less moonshine brewed
By CHARLF.'i PENTECOST

LOUJSVU.Le K) (UP! ) The Kentucky moonshmer of
tradillon and folklore, once the
subject of ballads and conuc
postcards, may be gomg the
way of the passenger pigeon to
extinction
Walter Conklin, agent m
charge of the bureau of
alcolhol, tobacco and f1reanns
here, an ann of the treasur)
department, sa1d,
Even
before the pnce of sugar \\ent
skyhigh we weren t havmg
much trouble w1th moon
shiners Our work now IS
mostly ftrearms and ex
ploSI ves VIOlations
' Oh, occaSionally we get a
small still up m the mountalllS
but the number •s nothtng ltke
tl was live or 10 years ago he
added "
Bureau records for the last
fiscal year show that moon
shine arrests for the entire
alate of Kentucky have averaged only one a month No
moonshine arrests were

reported 10 December but the
\\ mter months never were
popular "1th outside sttll
operations be cause of bad
\\eather and lack of screemng
foliage
As late as 1964 federal
agents arrested 300 persons tn
Kentuck\ for !tquor law vtola
t1on s durtng an II months
period
You can say the declme IS
due to a combmatton of factors,
mcludtng the curr ent coa l
boom 1n the mountams
Con klin
sa1d
Almost
e\er) bod) m southeast Kentuck)' IS workmg m the mmes
no" for good "ages
The federal gove rnment
took over the Goldenpond area
m "estern Kentucky near the
Tennessee state line once a
botbed of moonshi!UIIg for the
land between the lake s recreational area and moved all the
people out ' be added
illiCit wh1sk:y makmg m that
Kentucky-Tennessee state !me
area nC\ er has recovered from
the resetUement

YOU CAN HEAR THESE
GREAT PROGRAMS ON:

1390 RADIO
-Fashion Fare
-Swap Shop
-Link's Little Ones
-Earl Nightrngale

WMPOAM

Then too education lS a
factor, ' Conklin sa1d Work
around a still 1s hard and the
young people may be lookmg
for someth111g better
Another deterrent 1s the
nagging fear of discovery and
federal priSOn
As for the old Appalachian
code of honor" between
moonshlners
and
revenooers " Conkhn sa1d
with a chuckle, I suppose 1t still
eXIsts - we JUSt don t get
enough of them any more
real!} to tell
Th1s 1s a far cry from IS to 20
years ago when federal author!Ues chartered bus~ m
some southeast Kentucky
towns to take moonshinmg
\1olators to prison followmg
therr oonv1ctions m lederal
court
In the past moonshiners
caught by federal agents at a
"orkmg still often were placed
011 therr honor to oome lll frlllll
ISOlated rural areas for court
appearances -and no-shows
were UY&gt;~

If you have rustv water that
statns futures and clothrng

YOlfD

WMPO

•

9OS AM

10 00 A M and 3 35 P M
12 46 P M
4 00 PM
6AM. til5 30PM Datly

For Fast Results Use Sentin~l Classifieds

BETTER
CALl
Sayre Hardware
New Haven W V a

882 2525

USE OUR

2 SIGNS
OF

Pomero~
T=

Motor Co.

QUALITY
1974 CHEVROLET IMPALA

au toma t1c power steering power brakes factory a1r
hnted glass d elu :.te body and wheel openmg mold1ngs
sandstone 11myl seats beauflful dark red f 1n1sh TRULY A

000

Blown Into Walls
and Attics
Free Est•mates

52250

Lany Lavender

CREA M PUFF

NOWS2695
rad10 5

1913 DATSUN 12002 DR CPE

Local 1 owner car &amp; on l y 20 000 m les automatt c trans
rad10 w h l e wall t1re s 11 ny l 1ntenor sharp as a tack
Orange f msh

FOR Rent
tobacco ba se 2
l eaf e 2 300 lbs on chars or
otherw se Phone 742 516
1 21 5tc
SHO OTIN G match Rac1ne Gun
Club Sunday 1 p m As sort ed
meats and fa ctory choke gun ~
only
12 22 tfc
AUL TION
Thursday
and
Sa turday n ght 7 p m at
Mason Auc tton Horton St U1
Ma son W Va Cons tgnm en ts
we lcome Phone 13041 773
5.471

10 3 tf c
~ -- --------

-FOR your
Cosme t cs

0 1 of Mtnk
Phone BROWN 5

99'15113

1 7 lf c

OLA N
Mils needs
s ate s
managers tra nees Good
earn n g poten t ta l
mus t be
fr ee to tra11e1 t r sta te area
Apply to V rgtn a F re eman
!rater court next to the Datry
Is le M ddleport
1 20 3tc
PORTRA T Sa tes 3personsfu ll
or partt m e We tra 1n you to
conta c t cus tomers from our
off tce to offer an Olan M lis
Portra1t Pan
Rece ve SJ
com m sston
for
each
del ve red sa le
M n mum
hourly wage guaranteed
A pply to V rg n1a Freeman
Tra ler court ne )( t to th e
D a tr y Isle M ddleport
1 20 Jtc

WOMAN to make home Wtlh me
and do ltght hou sew ork for
room and board Phone 992
72 68
1 21 3t c

1951 CHE V ROLET
5502

1 21 3tc

Priced

1973 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass S
850 ser es farm
p S P B and factory a r 1956 FORD
tractor w1th 1111e hydrauliC
25 500 m11es
Call 992 391 4
and 3 pornt h t c h One owner
afterSpm
2 039 hours Also almost new J
1 21 6tp
pt httch Ford mower w th 6
...!.--------- ------.fl c utter bar Contact Mar 11 m
1972 CU TLA SS Supreme 30 000
Keeb augh
Days 992 5342
mt es Fac tory a r p s p b
Even ngs 985 39 13
new rad al ttre s 350 V!l Am
1 15 6tc
F m radto st er eo tape deck
Phone 992 5870 afler S 30 p m
duty
automattc
1 20 5tc HEAVY
washer
s ngle bed w1th
mattress S amese ca t Phone
992 7201
1 19 4tp

WILL do babys1ttmg any ftme
aft er 12 noon Call 992 5783
1 20 3tc

TRACTOR 1953 Ferguson 30
eKCellent cond1t1on S 1 250
Phone 985 3594
1 19 7tp

---- ---------~ EMODELING

plumbmg
heatmg
and al l types of
general
repa tr
Work
guaranteed 20 years ex
per ence PhOne 992 2409
1 19 He

1965 JOHN Deer e Dozer 8 6
outs1de hydrau 1c b la de new
tracks
new clutch es
and
brakes
new pa1nt
tn A I
shape 56 500 Phone 985 3594
I 19 7tp

USED FUEL OIL
HEATER, s50

Dai~

Sentinel

992 2156

L -----------'

FINANCIAL REPORT
OF TOWNSHIPS
For F1scat Yen End1ng
December 31 1974
Columbia Townshtt)
Me1g5. County
Rt 3 Albany Oh1o
January 10 1915
1 c ertify the follow ng r epor t
to be cor rect
Glor a Hutton
Townsh p Clerk
SUMMARY OF CASH

BALANCES RECEIPTS

AND EXPENDITURES
Bai.Jnce Jan 1 1974
General F und
s 2 309 42
Motor Veht cle L cense
T&amp; )( Fund
1 023 25
Gasotme Ta x Fund
I 208 02
Road and Br dg e Fund
52 97
Totals
4 593 66
Total Rece tpts
General Fund
12 .:103 91
Motor Vehtcle L c ense
Tax F und
6 215 01
Gasoline Ta x F1.1nd
15 600 00
RoadandBrdg eFu nd 1 531 07
F edera l Re11enue
Sha r ng Fund
2 366 00
Totals
3811599
Total Recetph &amp; B;alances
General Fund
14 713 33
Motor Veh1cle L tce nse
Ta xF und
723!126
Gasoline Tax Fund
16 808 02
Road and Br dge Fund I 584 0.:1
Federal Re11enue Sharmg
Fun d
236600
Tota l s
42 709 65
E Kpendtlure5.
Gene ra l Fund
8 768 09
Motor Veh c le License
Tax Fund
5 605 IS
Gasol ne Ta x Ftmd
15 659 61
Road and Br dge Fund
99 3 44
Federal Revenue Shar1ng
Fund
1 138 00
Totals
)2 164 29
Bilance Dec 31 1974
General Fund
5 945 24
Motor Veh cle L•cense
Tax Fund
1 63 3 11
Gasol ne Ta~ Fund
1 148 41
Road and Bndoe Fund
S90 60
Federal R evenue
Shar no Fund
1 228 oo
Tot., ! s
I O 545 36

CASH BALANCE
RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITURES

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

WANTED old uprght panes
any cond1110n
Pay ng S10
cash F rrst fl oor on ly Wr te
and gtve d re ct ons to Wttfen
P1ano Co
Box 188 Sard •s
Oh ro 43946
1 15 6tp
OLD furn lure 1ce bo xes brass
beds or complete hou se holds
Wrt te M D Miller Rt 4
Pomeroy OhtO Call 992 77 60
I O 7 74
JUNK autos
complete and
delivered ro our yard We p ck
up auto bodtes and buy all
k nds of scrap metals and
ron R1der s Salvage St Rt
124 Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh o
Call 99 2 5468
10 17 tfc

APT 3 rooms all electn c has
table lop range waH oven
real n ce and clean modern
Lo c ated
m
Porn eroy
overtook1ng the Oh o R ver
Phone Gal •pol s day 446
7699 e11en1ngs 446 95.39
I 19 6tc I
COUNTRY Mob l e Home Park
Rt 33 ten mt les nort h of
Pomeroy
Large lots w tth
concrete pat os
Sidewalks
runner s and
off
street
park ng Phon e 99 2 7479
123l lfc
FURNISHED
apartment
utilll tes fu~n1shed
su1table
for two work1ng men or
ret1red couple L1vmg room
k1tchen shower and bath On
rna nh1ghway Mason W Va
Phone 773 51 47
10 27 tfc
TRA ILER space 2 mtles from
Pomeroy Rt 143 Fhone 992
5858
I O 27 tfc

CASH patd for all makes "nd
models of mob le homes
Phone area code 614 423 9531
4 13 tfc

2 or J BEDROOM home I m1le
from Pomeroy on Old 33 Call
992 1571
1 16 6tc

CONSIG NME NTS welcome at
P&amp;J Aucr on
215 North
Second M ddleport
I 9 30tc

I HO US E unfurn shed 7 rooms
and bath nrce Phone 992 2780
or 992 3432
1 9 tfc

-----------

--

3 and 4 ROOM furn shed and
Ma nten.ance
4 140 36
unfurniShed
apartment s
Gra nd Total Expend iture s
Phone 992 5434
Motnr Veh1cle L1cense
4 12 tfc
Tax Fund
S 605 15 - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Bal Dec 31 1974
1 633 11 PR I VATE meet 1ng room for
Total Expend 1tures Plus
any organ 1zat on pt1one 992
Bat Dec 31 1974
7 238 26
397 5
Gasoltn~TaxFund
311tfc
Ba l Jan 1 197.:1
1 208 02 - - - - - - -- - - - - - -Receipts
FURNISHED apt Adults only
Gaso l me Ta~
1S 600 00
Mtddleport
Phone 992 387-t
Tot a Re ce rpts
IS 600 00
11 I4 tfc
Tota l Begmn ng Balance
- - - - ---- - --Plus Re ce pts
16 808 02

Expend1!ures

Tota l Expenditures Mtscellaneous
7 818 67
Mamtenance
7 840 94
Gr and Total EKpend lures Gasol •ne Ta)( Fund
15 659 61
Bal Dec 31 1974
t 148 41
Total Exp Plus Bal
Dec Jl 1974
16 808 02
Road and Bndge Fund
Bal Jan 1 1974
52 97
Rece1pls
Ge neral Property Tax Real Estate { Gross )
658 27
Tang b le P ersonal Propert y
Tax (G rass l
57 1 17
Trans fer s
301 63
Total Recetpls
1 531 07
Tota l Beg nn ng Balan ce
Plus Re cetpts
1 584 0.:1
Expendttures
Total Expenditures M ISCellaneous
166 07
Mamtenance
827 37
Grand Total Expenditures Road and Bndge Fund 993 44
Bal Dec 31 1974
590 60
Total Exp Plus Bal
Dec 31 1974
I 584 04
Federal Revenue.
St'lartng Fund
Rece1pts
Grants- Federal
2 366 OQ
Tota l Rece1pts
2 366 00
E)(pendtfures
Ma1nt and Oper111on
EQUIPment
1 138 00
Total Expenditures
1 138 00
Bal Dec 31 1974
1 228 00
Total Exp Plus Sa l
2 366 00
Dec 31 1'974
TOWNSHIP DEBT-NOTES
Purpose For Wh ich
Not e Debt Was Created
Motor Grader
Outstandtng Jan 1
1974
• 313 03
Redeemed D ur .ng Year
I974
1 138 00
Pal Outstand ing Dec
31 197A
Rate of tnt
Date ot Ftnal Mat
Motor Grade
Outstandtng J an
191A
4 313 02
Redeemed Dur1ng Year
197A
I 138 00
Balance Outstand ng
Dec 31 1n4
431302
Rate of lnt
6 P et
Da te of Fmjll Mat
4 9 1976
Total - Outstandmg
Jan 1 PH4
R 626 OA
Tota l - Redeemed Durmg
Year 197&lt;1
1 138 00
Tota l Bala.rce Outstandmg
Dec 31 1974
7 A88 04

BY FUND
General Fund
Bal Jan 1 197.f
2 309 42
Rece1pts
General Propert y Tu Real Esl."tt~ (Gross ) 4 349 03
Tano •ble Personal Property
Tax ( Gross l
37 12 60
lnhentan ce Tax
( Gross)
31436
Local Govt D st
2 39 4 .t6
C1garette License Fees
and F nes (Gro5.s l
19 50
Check Refund
75 00
Sale of Cemetery Lots
170 00
lnfa ngrb tes
I 368 96
Total Rece pt!O
12 403 91
Total Begmnmg Balance
P lus Rece 1pts
14 713 33
Exptnd•turu
Total Ex.pendrtures Adm 101strat ve
it il30 20
Town Halls Memor al
B ldg and Grounds
I 284 87
Cemetene-s
759 00
Ltght ng
94 02
Grand Total Expend lures Genera l Fund
8 768 09
Bal Dec 31 197&lt;1
5 9A5 24
Tota l E•p P l us Sa l
Dec 31 1'914
14 713 33
Motor Vehtcle L•cense
Tu Fund
Bal Jan 1 1974
1 023 25
Rece1pts
Motor Vtohtcle Ltcense
Tax
6 215 01
Total Rece pts
6 215~1
Total Beg nn ng Balan ce
PIus R ece pts
7 238 26
Ex pend1tures
Total txpend ttures ( ll 21 lfc
M•scet aneous
1 464 79

All New Heaters
Now
Discounted'
1 New Wood Burmng
HEATER-139 95
~POMEROY
•

LANOMAfl .('l
Jack W Carsey Mgr
Phone 992 2181

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

OVATION 12 stnng acouStiC
gu.tar Wtth hardshell case
New cos t S500 w II sell for
$325 G bson Les Paul De l uxe
electr c gut tar With hard she l l
case New cost $530 w II sell
for S325 Call 949 5913 Steve
C eland Racme Oh o .:15771
1 16 6tc

-------------GROCERY busrness for sale

Bulldrng for sale or leas~
P'hone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
to 10 p m fo r appomtment
3 10 tfc

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

Real Estate For Sale
HOUSE 55 000 Phone 992 587I
1 12 18tc
BUILD ING lot 80 ft frontage
by 165ft The second lot on l eft
on R1verv1ew Dr 1ve L ncoln
Hil l Pomeroy Ohio If m
teres ted cal l 992 3230 after 5 p
m
10 17tfc

ELECT~OLUX Sweeper l ,. tV

e

model
Complete W1fh all
cleanmg attachments and
uses paper bags Sltghtly used
but cleans and looks like new
Will sen for S37 2S cash or
terms a11a lable Phone 992
775S
12 18 tfc

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

CLOSE OUT on new Zig Zag
sew1ng machtnes For sew ng
stretch fabr 1cs buttonholes
fancy destgn s etc
Pa1nt
Sl ght l y blemrshed Cho 1c e of
ca rry ng case or sewmg
stand 5H 80 cash or te rms
avarlable Phone 992 7755
12 18 lfc
------ - -------RENTA L ncome property 9
rm house double apt located
at 228 StXth Sf
M dd leport
Conta c t George C Holter
Ho lter Da1ry Farm
1 21 3tc

--------------REDUCE sate and fast With

GoBese Tab l ets &amp; E Vap
water Pills
Ne lso n Drug
1 21 lfp

--------------ST EREO RADIO 8 track tape
combtnatlon am fm
way speaker sound
Balance s 08 7A or
budget terms Call

rad to 4
syste m
use our
992 3965
1 21 tfc

-------------USED
Kelv•nator electr c

71 dn lled

10 town w1th room tor

parking
4 UNITS - Apartment bulldtng
w1th all furniture and good
mcome

A BUY - Would you g1ve
s8 000 oo for $9 000 00 of good
stock and busmess

97 ACRES -

1 19 12tc
- - -- - - - - - - - - -- 1970 DODGE Coronet 500 eiC
ce l l ent cond ttt on pr1ced to
sell Phone 992 5663
1 17 6tp

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

I95 7 CHEVY par:ts
NEW
LakeNood tr act1on bars h r
1acker atr shocks
hoo ker
headers wrth 3 collectors for
sm'all b lock
Call 992 3496
after 6 p m BEST OFFER
10 17 lfc

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

1111.,;
~I&lt;'IJ(X)J
n•

WE'LL JUS"T WA,IT AND

I I l

I
I () rl
I
(l )

I RUGAU

I OAUPIN

1

WEll IM

'feu SU: HH HA.t&gt; A. P~HTY
8AD SMO\IIt-1 MOUND HE D l'IIIIED
1\WFIA. HARD TO MAKE $0/I'IETMIN
816 0 EOHITE 1b HELP E~ER'IJObY

N O"T ZACTL'1

SiJRE. ll WAS
SOME Pllt.CE AN
AWJ'UL LONG
WA.'i FROM ~EA'E

THEN 'lHATJ:OB RUINED
EVE'R~IHG
A.Ntt 1111.\.EO
PoOit OLC&gt; M~ Eo~

SO~T

0 SIC!'(

HE 0
HA.D ENOUGH FOR A WHILE
SO HE WEN,. A I.OkG LONCi
Wt.'1S AWA"'
Tl-t.l'1"$ A.ll I KHOW •

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

READY MIX- CONCRETE de
I vered nght to your pro 1ect
Fast
and
eas-y
Free
est mates Phone 992 3284
Goegle n Ready MIX Co
Middleport Oh10
6 30 lfc

GASO!JNE ALLEY

Some

protect1on

1

SEWING MACHINE Repairs
service all makes 992 22!14
The Fabnc Shop Pomeroy
Authonzed S nger Sates and
Serv ce We Sharpen Setssors
3 29 tfc

\

You must
th1nk I'm

awful,
commq tn

here'

E1-;z;;-c

lJL ABNER

,.,...,_

ITLL COST

AND NCNE'

c ··- .. ~ ... ...

M LLI0f.JS -

DoGPAT0-1 ElACJ&lt;

GIVE' US

24 HOURS
AND WELL.

backhoe
and
d t fcher
waterlme footers dra1ns
roads and brush cleanmg nq
tob too small no weather too
bad Char les R Hatfield Rt 1
Rutland 0 Phone 742 6092
1 7 26tc

13UT ITL.l
BE WORTH
IT "-

To 115 ORIGINAL-

S!TES "-

MOV~

S~5HLY
.SUFF~R fJ

I PAPPY"
NOW AH KIN YANK TH'

"TRUMPET OUTA HIS
SKULL

OUR
HOTE'L-

- - - - --

P&amp;J
Home
Ma 1ntenan c e
heatrng
cool ng
refr tg 1
plumb 1ng
electncal ap •
pi ances We serv1ce an~
repa1r anyt ng n the home or.
bUSiness
21S N
Second,
Mtddleport Phone 992 3509
301~

------- ------ - Real Estate For sare

•
1

-

t

-=::=s

I 0.1

WINNIE
'oiJIN NIE

FSMIAE FASH ION

MAG~ZIN !: JU ~T
HIT THE 5TAND5

ANDlOOK AT

:HIS F~NTASTIC
SPREAD OF
BONNAZ

"1:;HI0~ 51

~

HAT .:..

WINNIE

D~)

THIS HnS
B=:oN'

JO • Y YOU

WE R E~T

PAI?OLEO YOU
WALKED OUT OF
PRISON IN ONE
YOUR IMNY

MINIMUM
SECURITY FACiliTY;
IT WAS A

5NAP'

this

BI I

BPQZND

•
ADTAID

RFD

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w 1r-s 11 ( n y you { 1 w I
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GEMINI ( Mnv 2 1 June 20 ) You
lnvc :-~. It nde KY 10 s:-~. y one
th q
tl I 1 It &lt;1
II 0 11tH Yu
n IY II lk yn l H d I HI t
C C\IGIIY
l II 0 1 (
W II &lt;;OP
1 r01 qt" 1 1 (' l :1C 111
CANCER (June 211 July 22) A
r I 11 0 I 1 I 11 !
I
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s r dt;
01
'-&gt;1
Cll 7 1 H JOI Ot 1
Cl 1 y
I )
ll
LE O (Jul y 23 Aug 22) ll n 11
th 11 fl 1 ) IJ
dl
\1
bo I
l1 I np )r\ II I CJ I 1 k ';(
m~ll slcp
JW u t v 11
I rg1
o you II los nwm; n um
VIR GO ( Aug 23 S&amp;pl 22) Nor
1 I )
J
JILl'-; 'f
I h rf &lt;l hf'
we well 1 qhl C!
T&lt;dJvwl
be ;1 l ex( pi Jll
S OVO I ly
vllul
wit
t J11lJ
t111e1 es "
LIBRA ( Sept 2::1 Oct 23 ) Co I
LJP.I yr ur t 1 1v "' t1 liON 1
lll()\ht I
{ J rrtp
1 j
llrl I

basement, gas FA heat
carpeted paneled tiled,
garage, roofed patio double'
lot 519 900
POMEROY- CLOSE IN 2
yrs old BRICK &amp; FRAME,
4 BR 2 balhs lovely kitchen
and dlnmg ulllily R about
an

acre,

nice

outside

building workshop
MINERSVILLE AREA Cost less lhan a !ratter, lots
of ground 3 BR, bath n1ce
kitchen NG h&lt;!1it, TP water,
storage bldg 57 900
ALL CASH FOR YOUR
HOME- LET US SELL IT
m 2259or 992 2568

J fN

.

"" '' "
\

...

11 11 11 11

()

s u h v,. ms the fr rs t spade

\

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A I
.., 1

1:

.

WEARIN TH
WHEN AUNT ZINNIA
'GITS HERE, LUKEY,
DADBURIV
! WANT 'IE TO WEAR
THING 11
:THAT SOW TIE SfjE GOT

1 fER

SIRFDAV

HERE SHE
COMES NOW

'

I

I

( 1

\\ '-; ltumrs v.1 t h two leads
l ~ ti l tq) h ~ctrts and clubs

I

J that West has follow
d I! o 1e heart and to both
c I11IJs Nuv. South leads a low

.:.Jnd 11ot
~

&lt; lui&gt;
Jl \\

''

tt

'I

\u tl

csl \.\ n s the tnck he must

sr des

After followmg

Sout l1 gets to ruff In one
I tnd nd cl1scard a heart from
1tt c 1t h( r If East wtns he can
r

I

' "

l

Hl

&lt;.t..,h a I cart but the n must gtve

S uri I 1 ' uff and spade d1scard

'"

Ill
I 0
I

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~'\II

fii&lt; ISt

ASS~

tZ: H;l :~ l!t§,&gt;.,1D
I I r h1d rl pg ha s been

II~

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1lfl \ lwu .., It otn

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nd \ II c!
It
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21

South

lolo
I ~"'
4¥
\
I
~ tll h II lr.J
A K-fl 41 ¥ i\ 2 t 9 . AK732
\\ht! d \OU do llUY.&gt;{}
\ - H1d lour spades Th1s b1d
m t\ t osl 'uu hu l It ts more likely to
p
In~ d1v1dends

¥

1'

100\Y' (jUES IION
Jm.l( td )f JUmpmg to four hea rts
I l"l hI S JUS I bid IWO hearts What
t \ J f)) m lh s Insta nce"

hJS Jlll tn( I

IJ \ou hcnltl11 brc1 n-;

SMILE
MMBE ! CAN &lt;&gt;ET A GoOD
NtG&gt;lT 5 SLEEP I'DR ONCE
AND NOT FEEL SO Tlli:EO
I
TOMORROW

d1

I ll\

.. I
I

Ill

..•

¥ h
\

and ~;.~ 1 d

I AM

s w• be a yea r when many
n · ~ 1 1 oprorl uA tres w 111 be
d 'l 1g t d be f o r e you r eye s
Dor 1 nnke sudden changes
ur e:;"' you re posltrve where
t ( v II lend
\ J V. " l t\t I I! I Nl l llii\ISf ASSN I
11

l

dh (Oillpllca ted In ract It IS
sun llllnf prO\ Jded West has
• 1glt l sp Hies and at least one

BPSZED -C FDNHD NR
d f &lt;t 1 ;_rn 111 1 qui h 1 th m &lt;1
Yesterday's Cryptoquote A GOOD L!SfE NER IS NOr bJ'\IVlll ~ JiH k;_rso,;: \oOU \\OUid
ONLY POPULAR EVERYWHERE BUT AFTER A WHILE HE hu'h k t pi y 1ur mou th slu t 1nd
v.rapp('d up \Oil! &lt;onu 1cl
KNOWS SOMETHING - WILSON MIZNER
""Jo1til v. ~-. 11 ~ hl omd th( pl rn
(C) 191'5 Kin&amp; Futures Syndic•te In c )

WY

Jan 22 1975

1

4 BR 1112 baths,
reception R sewing R full

Rf

~~?f~

/o ' I l k( irve d1amonds IS not

TJ

ETQD

SCORPI O (Ocl 24 Nov 22)
E rclllc moves on your behalf
lorli"ly r.ould 10oparchze th e har
110 l Y 1 l nn Imp o r tant
rf' la t1onsh 1p Be mode rate
Keep coo l
SAGITTA RIUS (Nov 23-Dec:
21) You re li kely to fall he•r to
1dd t ona l ta sks today You II
• 3nagc nea tly If yo u don t
1 tkn t em cem tougtler than
lh cy arc
C APR ICO RN (Dec 22 Jan
19) l u 1 c far too sensible to
be l eve yo u ca n get something
101 not 111g yet today yo u II
t 1 k you r !l o pes on that
\llemc
AQUARIUS (Jan 20·Ftb 19)
It yOl re too d ctatorlal w1th
11 o se u yo ur charge today 1t
w 1 pr ovoke a 11ery unpleasant
re ponse - one d1tf1Cult to
t 1 l.l ltO
PISCES (Fob 20 March 20)
Yn 1 w 11 ,,, ve so me dlfftcu ty
1 t •v
( 0 ng I old o f people
V&lt;'t l y 111 rnpo r tan l ap
po rr ~ cn ts

!I

\f tlt Ill

you must see $3 BOO
POMEROY - Nice older

XFT

m1:1k1ng

o r s borrow 119 or ad11IS inQ

Go od p lay ca n ha ndle overbid

11

XZYI' I Q

T tl 1k tv.1 ce be fore

WIN AT _B_R IDGE;

\\

home

7 ROOM house bath and AI
e)(cellent netghborl:'tood wa ll
to wall carpet1ng , large lol
garage reas onabl e uttlttres
Call 992 3877
l 9 lfc

I.ONGFEII OW

One lett er s1mpl y stand&lt;;: for anot her In th1 s samp l e I\ 1s
used for the three L s X fo1 th e tw o 0 s rt c; S ngl lcltt rs

XD

I

TAUR US

/)t /I Ifill I / """"II lm /1 d

rds

.,

r I( II If

letter~

BY UN LOCKING HIM

\ \t

N

p r; 1 Hetl IOc II
S 11 \
'I

DONKEY

POMEROY- CLOSE IN2 62 acres lovely building
site on good road, TP water

N !)l

For WednesdA\1 Jan 22 1975

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to wn 1k t1
AXYDJ, B.\AXR
lo

D

a Barnt ce Bede Oso l

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 European
I Not hollow
river
2 Blue Gown
s Brand
g1rl
names
3 Pooped
10 - podnda
( 2 wds )
11 Most
4 Wnter
distresSing
Bradbury
12 Symbol
5 Old
of France
6 Macaw
Yesterday s Ans.,.,er
lJ Nebraska
7 Table 1tem
22 Beauty shop JO Pal Joey s
nver
8 Art lover
for autos
r1 eatm
l4 Here (Fr)
9 Clam
(2 wds )
31 ( 1unmal
15 Be well
11 Cattmess
23 Opera lie song 32 Candid
- of
15 Sunder
24 DISperse
37 Bm d s
16 Tea variety t8 Son of Adam 25 F1sh
evet
17 Thickness
21 Inverness
27 Robust
3~ I ye
19 - and haw
eg
29 V1r1le
s h~eld
20 N1ght
r;-T,""""i';-14"""
prwr
21 Attra~t1ve
22 Standtng
rank
25 Trade 26 Punc1pal
27 In the
know ( sl)
28 Inlet
29 Flee
( 2 wds )
33 Drtpptng
34 Metrtc
land
measure
35 Pronoun
36 Be present
38 Song
ref ram
39 Metallic
40 Ferrous
41 Tease
42 Clammy

Lucy

l I '}

AstroGraph

CRYPTOQUOTE

available good spr1ng

_____ ________ _

up -

FLAUNT

J

u•

rn u:I j DJ

apostrophes the l eng th nnd f orm;~t 1 on of 11 e
hmts Each d ay the code letters are d1ffer c nt

2 ACRES PLUS - In Pomeroy
for houses or small farm

NEW HOMES No Money Down
Payments accordmg to
mcome on Farmers Home
Adrnln1stratron loan Con
vent1onat f1nancmg
atso
availab l e With m n•mum
down Lovely homes •n three
locations m Me1gs Countv
Some homes w rth wooded
tots
Call for more •n
format 1on 992 5976
.._
1 1S 26tc

If It"

4.n•wr.r
&lt;"

BIL LY IT WAS A

D SGUISt:-&amp;1

SMALL FARMS NEEDED IN
THE WEST END OF THE
COUNTY

\

lUCID

:1o:,

MCtlt u 1t 01 8 10 News 20 Fa mtly Af
W11 JJ
tl Jo Y
r h
~ N &gt;w 10
100 N~.-wo;
160 tO 1315 ABC News 33
11 JO J 1 1, 'Y Cl t "o' J 415 W 1d c Wor ld Spec tal 13 FBI 6
Mov e 0 nis t Prey B M ov1e The Bllllona tre' 10
Janak JJ
I JO W cit W tid S1 CC id l 6
00 T l lllOI rov. J ! Nrw~ 13

form the surpnse Bml\\o er ll.'l
suggested by the abo-.e cartoon

Jumblf'~ GIANT

M 1-.t 0olJQ

II

tl

1 v
0 00

~

yard Phone RIChard west
843 2667
12 24 26tp

19

f

81.1'1 " FLOwU~: MISTER?

----- --- ----CARPET n-sta l lat10n S1 2S per

--- - - --

lt f'Jif'rfi•y 1

m 1 e 4 Somerstt 1~
'lr 1 51 ?0 33 M 'civl e The

o (

(An.wf' nl nt t r1o "l

~e '-'1~

{ t Jt~

s

A

ll NI\L N ., 1 11~ 1\!JC N l \ OS 13 Bew1tched 6 CBS News
H 1 I
) Y r F l I l 1 '&gt; Now 33
1 00
1 r ull 1 C nc 1
{-\{ wlmg f or Dol l ar s 6 What s My Ltoe
11
N w
1lry Ml 11... Ju b lee 13
Ou tlool-.'~ 1\ 1 1 1 ~, 1 u J\J K 1 )W ~ our Schoo ls 33
11 1 1 1 l \
l Nrl n
I I tl l 1 u l &lt;:' 4 Let s Make a Det.! ~
r, \\lit
H 1 ,., t1 T
It rig&lt;' 10 To Te ll the Trulh 11r"
1 t
\ 1 1
1 1 13nok lk'1120 E p1SodeAct1on33
lll
Ll ~ l 1 111~
tpP llllc 1ll l 5 Tha l s MyMama613
1 ') n 11 r {' "" n 1 v1 B n F e t ng Good 20 S.nners 33
JO A
l H 1 I IQl' 6 ll
111
" Ot l1 ( 1 ~
I u r r 11 l~
l C~nr on 8 10
Ragt1me 20
M1.,l!rJ
r II 1! r ll
9 J O M v 1 ~~ r ~w 1y
11 M( v e The Man Wh o Wanted to

MOU&gt;J"TA INE:ER \\il S

[r..,U.IISIIHS.\1 .... ON THE

cln

A!H At , r~c h m.' ;;,pecwl 6 Ja ckpot 4

~

f f

'c

Now arrange the c1rclcd

111r111

t.

\\HAT TH E

1

WELl.. o.N&gt;D'I $Al0 IT AI.\.
MAD£ HIM DISGUSTED AND

~~

1[11 \'•

I
I
to
~=l::::::A===:;-':~·=~·

' '

--=----

-EXCAVATING
-------------dozer

t-. t\J

0
I "/\\' ~~·~~~l~\~\)l
"'\ \
rJ

~

.

1

(

!1\lll
1\ v.1l r I

(( ~-i~Jr1 ~

...n
\1'H4R(:L'!
vr ~

, !JTI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

Lwv ShClw 6 Ma tch Ga me 8 10

1J

\

~

Y

CJ.. .:\\

Lv

VI t 1
M rv Gr 11111 1 ABC Afterschool
11 t
w I)
J Ar dy Gr fflth 8 M1ster
R 1 r
Nt tl h Jrl
d 0 )J
., 1l' N ,
t. ll "' rly H lib t\~ 8 Hodge podge L odge 20
I 1 I W o:,
f I
ll
t&gt; 10 N .,
1 t1IO 1t 1~ 1\rK Nlv.o; 6 El ec Co 20 lTV
Ul nl
\l

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I UI'DYM I

NE.6.RIN'

'"

0

1\\

\

&gt;?1'

fl(t!J ! ~r;' \_

form four ordinary • ords

HOPE "THE KIDNAf'PB1SI
An; SOMEWHERE

F URN IT URE Upho lster ng
Reasonab l e
rat es
fre e
est1mates
p ckup
and
de l very prompt se rv1 c e
Mowrey s Upholstery P01nt
Pleassnt. W Va Phone 675
415.:1 ~ 12 31 26tp

~,

\1

\

(II

JJt!JJWI::3J1l]®{f;;{,,&lt;:~::~~:.~.~.r::.
·;/) (\_

Ct 11 am Kerr 8 Da n I met s World 10

'I' lit

1 (]

I

10

8 10

EXCELSIOR Salt Works East
Man St Pomeroy All k.nds
of sa lt water pellets wat er
nuggets block salt and own
Oh o R 1ver Salt Phone 992
3691
6 5 lfc

v~ll;y-

{

11 3o-Hollywood Squares 3 4 15 Bra d y Bunc h 6 Love ol L tfe
8 10 Sesam e St 33

Unscramble these rour Jumbles
one letter to each square to

I~

ou

Il

111

kr Kt
IJ

Ill (
I I
\n
1 ll

9 25- Chuck Wh1 te Reporfs 10
9 JQ-Not For Wom en On ly 3 D1na l ~ Ga l lop1ng Guur n ~I ll
T attletales 10
New Zoo Rvue 13
10 oo-Celebrtty Sweepstakes 3 15 Phil Donahue 1 Jc ke r s
Wild 8 10 M ov 1e W1 ves and L overs 1J
10 Jo-Wheel of F ortune 3 15 Gambll 8 10.
11 OD- H1gh Rollers 3 4 15 One L if e lo L 111e 6 Now You Stc

~~

2 11 tfc

DOZER work land clearmg by
the acre 1 hourly or contract
Farm ponds
roads
etc
Large dozer and operator
Wtth over 20 years ex
penence Pul l ms Excavt~~tmg
Pomeroy Oh o Phone 992
2478
1219tfc

~

DJ

~~SQP?t...

Mostly limber

Phone 742 3656

load Phone 742 A831

8 30- Big Vall ey 6
9 00- A M 3 It Takes A Th el 4 Bu lwmkl t: S M orn 1q

M'iiX.D

some bottom old house and
gas well All Mmerals and good
huntmg

-1 72------------ACRES and tocust poSts
-F 1R ------------e-wooo tor sale S15 per

r - - - - - ;1 ~ lfJTo1

EXCAVATING dozer loader
and backhoe work
sepftc
tanks 1nstallef&amp; dump trucks
and lo boy s fof h re w tll haul
fill d1rt top soli l 1mestone &amp;
gravel Call Bob or Roge r
Jeffers day phone 992 1089
n 1Qflt phone 992 3525 or 992

m town w1th a l l util1hes

BUSINESS BUILDING - Has

BORN LOSER

1 21 26tp

5232

Amenca 20 33
8 3Q-M ov e
Death Sla k 3 4 15 M o v 1e Th e Ab udu c l tol
Sa mt Anne 6 13 M ash 8 10 A scen t of Mnn 10 33
9 OO- Hawa1 F 111e 0 8 10
9 30--Woman 20 Wtfness I a Yest erd ay 33
10 oo--Pol1ce Story 3 4 15 Mar cus Wel by M D 6 11 Ba t letb,
Jones 8 10 N ews 20 Sou ndslage 33
10 30--Your Futu re IS Now 20
11 oo-N ews 34 8 10 13 15 ABC New s 33
11 30--Johnny Carson 3 4 IS W1de or d M ys ler y 13 F B 6
Banacek 8 M ov1e H1gh Soc1ety 10 Ja 1ak 1 JJ
12 3o-W 1de World My stery 6
1 00- Tomorrow 3 4 New s 13

6 oo-Sunnse Sem nar 4 Publ 1c A lla 1r s 10
6 15- Engltsh 505 3 6 25- Farm Reporl 3
6 JD-F1ve Mmules to L 1ve By 4 N ew s 6 B1 bl ~ Answf'r ~ !l
Sc h ool Sce ne 10 The Stor y IJ
6 35 - Columbus Today 4
6 45 - Mornmg Reporl F armtnnc 0
7 00- Today 3 4 15 AM Am enca 1J 6 CB S News H 0
8 00- Lasste 6 Ca ptam Kangar oo 8 Popeyc 10 Sesam e St
8 25- Cap t Kangaroo 10

CREMEAN S CONCRETE de
l1vered Monday through
Sat1.1rday
and
e11enmgs
Phon e 446 1142
6 13 tfc

POMEROY - 2 bedroom home

range coppertone au to oven
excellent c ond1tton Phone
949 28 91

I 19 12tp

992 3057

RFD20 Marco Spor tl l te33
Hap p y Days 6 13 Good Tm es 6 10..

WEDNESDAY JANUARY 22 1975

EXPERT t ree ser111ce
free
est mates
20 years ex
per.ence Ca l l ( 1) 667 3041 or

well septic tank and cellar on
Rt 7 near town $4 000 00

6 room

•

SEPTIC tanks
excavaftng
dump truck Phone 742 3742
122026tc

restdent al and commerc1al
w nng Btg and l 1ttle tobs
Call 593 8078 Athens
Free
est1mates
I 19 10tc

TRAILER LOT -

A&gt;JY(; ODY 5

-- ----- ------~l_!_fc 1

HffiiNG

for Sale

IF

FORGOTTE"-.1

C BRADFORD Auct toneer
Complete Serv1ce
Phone 949 3821 or 949 3I61
Rae ne Oh1o
Cnft Bradford

- - ------ - -- EAR CORN for sale by bl.lshel
for SJ 25 Phone 1 ( 614 ) 367
7481 or 388 9991
1 16 7tc

D A R I\JEO R,J_,HT

A&gt;J r

HElL

PIANO
1.m ng and repa1r
Char les ScoH 992 3718
12 13 J2tp

3 PT HITCH mower 6 fl bar
$125 ~ew se t of 3 pi h t ch
cu lt1vator s $145 Phone 985
3594
1 19 7tp

To BeAnnoun ce d15

• :CAPTAIN EASY

SEPTIC
TANKS
cleaned
Modern San ttntton 992 395-t or
992 7349
9 18 tfc

Employment Wanted

WILL do babys1ttmg any ttme
after noon call 992 5783
1 21 3tc

0

8 DO-Adam 12 3 4 15

heating serv1ce and
general sheet metal
works
Free
Estimates
Phone 949 5961
Emergency 992 3995
or 992-5700

For Sale

1 21 61p

Soc iety 15 Antiques 20 L I as Yoga &amp; You 33 33
7 30- Hol ly wood Squares 3 4 W ild W ld World ol A 11mn 1s 8
Bu ck ON-ens 8 New Pnce IS R tght 10 To T el l the r, uil 13

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
Complete plumbrng &amp;

to

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

West Columbia
Mason
Hartford
New Haven
Conlacl

l

WILL DO land ctear ng 1n trade
f or ch 1pwocd A lso Will c lean
barn s for manure Phone 992
7201
I 19 .ttp

Phone 992

0

Ref1msh1ng
Repa1r1ng
Burntshtng
Can1ng
Upholstenng
We Also Buy An1tques
P1ck up Serv1ce Available

10ME
lm p r o11eme nt
and
R epa r Ser11 ce - Anyth ng
f xed around t he home from
roof to basement You wt l l
like our work and rat es
Phone 742508 1
12 29 ffc
-

---------------1970 D ODGE Coron el 500 ex
eel lent co nd 11on
sel l Call 992 5663

Pomeroy Ohto

r

w~

tO Jl~l'-fJtll s P1-;word AI Star s 6 13 Bob 8rauns5050
Clb
Nt~\'&gt;1:110
' 10 At 11k ll r~..k 1 1r
Spl t Secon d 6 13
Search for
1 n L rrow 8 0 T Bt A• n ou n ced 33
t? 1'\ Elt..:r (
JJ
"2 55 NBC N ~\., 1 S
1 OV N \\ l 1\11 Mv (h lciren 6 IJ P hil Donahue 8 Young &amp;
It k .., • :. ll N
f01 Wumtc t On y 15
JU I(
I S r .. v, rMc~rnJgeJ4 1 5 Le tsMakeaDeal613
'" I
V\t I l l r l:, 8 10
00 [)l .., I (
., I 1 15 'JliO 000 Py r a rn1d 6 13 Guiding
1 11 !1 l )
IU II
wd0w q 1) Edge of Nlght810
G~ 1c r 11 Hos p ta l 6 13
Price ls
l 00 \n t! t

Ut 1lfzaf 1on 33
6 30-- NB C N ews 3 4 15 ABC N ews 13 Bew1 tc hed 6 CBS Nt:ws
8 10 Zoom 20 Your Fu l ur e 1s.,Now 33
7 00-T ru thor Cons 3 4 Bow l1n g tor Dol lars 6 Whill s M t L11t&gt;
8 News 10 Nam e That Tu n e 13 H1g h Sc t1oo1 l V H mar

VIEW

STRIPPING FINISHES
FURNITURE METALS-ETC
MODERN &amp; ANTIQUE

11 ~s
N

1J9-News 3 4 8 tO 13 15 ABC News 6 Etec Co 20 lT V

6

Phone (614) 992 27P8

elc

for Rent

WANTED old upnght ptanos
any cond l10n
Pay ng SIO
each F rst floor only wr.te ro
.'lnd
ve d re el ens to Willen
P1ono CQ Box 188 Sard s
Oh o 43946
1 21 61p

TUESDAY JANUAR Y 21 1975

100 Kerr Street

PHONE
3832 or 843 2667

From a shelf to a house
Pa1"flng std1ng roof1ng
paper hang1ng
lutchen
cabmets expert carpelmg

FUEL T RUCK drtller wanted
I NCOME TaK Prepared both
must have ex per ence dr111 ng ------- - - ~ --- - F edera l and Sta te Taxes w I
tru ck Mall rept1es to Be:&lt;
be done by appo ntments
729 E co The Dally Sent 1nel
only Pl ease phone 992 2272 or
S ROOMS turn shed upstarrs
Pomeroy Oh o
see Mrs Wanda Ebl n Lau rel
apt ut llt1es pad no children
I 16 61 C
Cl ft Rd Po meroy Oh o
or pets Phone 992 5810 814 E
Man St
1 3 30tc WAITRE SS ES needed app ly n
1 21 6tp
person Crows Stea k House
Pomeroy
1 7 tic TWO bedroom turn1shed mobile
hOme Phone 992 3429
1 21 6tp

Motor Route Driver Wanted To Buy
Wanted
o

Television log for easy viewing

Modem Chemicals

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING

1968
DODGE
Coronel
6
cyl nder 3 spee d 4 dr runs
f''lOd 1us t needs w ndShteld
Phone 985 386 1
1 21 6tp

Help Wanted

IF YOU ha11e a ca r and would
ltke to earn ex tra money
come do ltght delt11ery work
for 0/an Mt ll s Full or part
ttme day or e11en ng hour s
App y to V rgm a F reeman
trailer court nex t to the Da ry
Isle Mtddleport
1 20 Jtc

949

Auto Sales

POMEROY, OHIO

AUCT I ON Sal e 2 15 N SPcond
Mtddl eport F r day Jan 24 at
7 00
Metal base ca b net s
co rner cab n et d nmg room
tab le
6 char s
11ery Old
sec retary
sma ll
Ch na
cu pboard 6 legged tab l e old
met al stage coac h Dayton
el ec tr c
scales
ga s
restaurant gn I doubl e cok e
el e cl r c range
coo er 30
1ew brown wa 11e and more
com ng V llag e Aucf on
1 21 Jtc

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCTION

Phone 992-3993
Da1ly After 5 00

POMo~~9XE~a~T9~ CO. @)
Not1ce

n).siness Services

Fire Retardant
Insulation

$4295

2 Door 4 speed tran smtss ton bucket seats
actual miles orange f1ntsh 11 1n yl mtenor

SNOW
MAKE
KEEPING
THEM IN

DIFFIC

4 door 1 owner car and only 10 400 mt les V 8 eng•ne w1fh

1974 OPEL MANTA Wasi289S

::=-

THEY 'RE MAI&lt;lNG ALL
THE UNDERPASSES,
ITRVI!~IG TO LOSE US

CARBINE ON THEIR
MOTOR, TOO DANGEROUS
IN

AND

The
Mrs Norman Schaefer
Mr \nd Mrs Pearl G1lkey,
Bradbury Mr Joe Guess
called on Mr and Mrs Harry
Stahl Mr Stahl1s a pnhent m
Holzer Hospital
M1ss S~san Fleshman
showed pictures taken tn
Afnca to 14 members of the
Laurel C!tff M1ss1onary Soc~ely
wh1ch \\BS held at the par
s01u1g:e Mrs Doris Shook was
hostess
Mr and Mrs Norman
Schaefer Mr and Mrs Vern
Slory attended the funeral of
Mrs Fr1 tz Stahl Marshfield
Mrs Stahl was a slSter-m-law
of Mrs Schaefer

7- The Daily Sent mel Mlddleport-Pomero}, 0 Tuesday Jan 21 1975

ONe OL ''c ."P GETS
L)5EC' TO THt l.l. ..... ,.-c~f3['()

T&gt;&lt;E &amp;VEST 1\00M I kNOW
HE LL SLEEr Wfcl TOO

IN

I

Se nd $ 1 lor J ACOBY MODERN
1 ook to Wm ar 8ffdge (c/ o
II IS t ewspa per) P 0 Box 489
H1d o C ly S IJ ITon New York
NY 10019

�•
6- The Daily Sentmel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Tuesday Jan 21 1975

Justice,

Discount stores
buck price order

not blood

COLUMBUS tUPI) - fhe
Oh1o Department of Commerce
Monday was asked to reopen
heanngs on a reg ula110n
reqwnng discount storeS"lo sell
at least 75 per cent of their
merchandise at 10 per cent
below regular market pnces
John Mahane} prcs1dcn1 of
the Ohw Councn of Re t 111
Merchants said the reg ulat wu
approved b) the departmenl

rct.Hling slipped m four pages
of a reg ulat1 on wh1ch we knew
notlun~ clbout
The ne\~ rules were flied Jan

Wlder the admamstrat10n of

9 b}

former Gov John J G1lhgau
was unlawful
Mahaney \\ants Go1don
Peltier named dtrec tor of the
department b) Gov James 1\
Rhodes to dela } enforcem ent

th e

a(i\ er tl smg
\.\ h1ch
\\ hdt s.,1les pnces

stJpul a t l~s

are
Whf!t are regular market
prtces 0 asked Mahanev rhe
peop le m n ., diVISIOn whom we
ha\e had tro""Juble w1th smce
Ute~ don t see m to understand

Consumer Pr ote ctiO n
Dl\tSIOn offH:Ial s w1th th e

secretar) of state before the
G1U1Han

Adrmmstrat10n

had

offl r lally ended 1!s term
Pel t1 er sa td he wa s studying
the regula tiOn and had been

of the regulatiOn and to reopen se 1' eel not tee of appcCJI by
hearmgs
Rev co Inc Cleveland and
The Consumer Protedwn Goldman Stores Ill Dayton
DlvlSton of the depaltmtmt Pell«r could cte!a) or suspend
held heanngs tn Decrmber on lhe rules for 60 days

G M joins rebate war
DETROIT 1UP!\ - (,ene ral
Motors Corp
&lt;~nnounc e d

l o cuslome1s \\ho bought cars

Monday 1t 1s JOJnmg the pr1u?

from Jan 1 ~

cus tomers and .1rc reb oac ttvc

CrM the gwnt of the tndustry
war among riHlJOI automll kCJs
and Will pa) rebates rangtng sa1cl 11 would pay $200 rebates
fr om S200 to S500 lu bu) ers of lo bo}CI s of all Chevrolel Vega
1ts lU re· subcompa c t and Pontiac /\stre Chevrolet Nova
compact IIHX1el I s Chair Pont1at Venture Oldsmobtle
man Thomas A ~ phy sa1d Omega and Bolek Apollo and
the rebates w1l go do ectly to Skyl.1rk models
It als o salclll \\Ould pay $500
1ebates on &lt;ill Chevrolet Monza
2 plus 2 Oldsmobtle Starftre
and Bu1ck Sk)hawk models
Murph) sa1d he hoped the
1 ebatc program \-\ hiCh will run
throu gh
Feb
26
w11l

Apple Grove

News, Events

Mrs Clara Adams, Ractne
Rt IS a med1c1! pahent at
Veterans Memonal Hospital
Mr and Mrs Bob Morns and
children have moved to lheu
home they recen Uy purchased
and remodeled from Russell
Quillen
Chrtstmas dinner guests of
Mr and Mrs Don Bell were
Mr an~ Mrs Paul Ervm and
son Wendell Mr and Mrs
Eugene Ervm and Kelbe of
Bashan Rd Mr and Mrs
Gene Chaney, Mr and Mrs
John Chaney Roger and Ed of
Five Pomts Raymond Bell of
Oak Grove, MISS Lorna Bell
and Bruce Hart
Ho) t
Mr
and
Mrs
Furgerson of Pomt Pleasant
Steve Norrt1; of Racme visited
Mr and Mrs Floyd Noms
Chrtstmas Day
Mrs Erma W1 !son Mrs

Laura Byers were dmner
guests of Mr and Mrs Roy
Van Meter and children and
Chester Van Meter Saturda)
evening .tnd attended !he
Christmas program at Mor
nmg Star church
Mr and Mrs Milo Richard
son of Michigan spen t the
holidays at the1r farm and
VISIted Mr and Mrs I"'" IS
Ours and other relaltves
Mr and Mrs Ro} Donohew
spent Christmas "1U1 Mr and
Mrs Eugene Webster and
Amta at Cleveland 1he)
VISited Saturday through
Thursday
Christmas dmner guests of

"

d1 amatlcall y mcrease the sale

of 250 000 compacl and sub
compac t models now on dealer
and ~.:o mpany lots

Laurel Cliff
News Notes
BY BERTHA PARKER
Sabbath School attendance
Jan 12 at the F1 ee Methodist
Church was 87 Offertng was
$74 10 building fund $19
Re&gt; a~ Mrs Floyd Shook
" ere ca lled to New York due to
the illness of their son tn law
M1 T J Whttaker
Mr M&lt;irk Sl&lt;ihl and Mr
Raymond H1ckhmn Stockport
Vlstted r ece ntly Wi th Mr Hnd

M1 and Mrs He1 bert Roush
were Mr a nd Mrs Roger
Housh Mrs Iva Orr Mr and
Mrs D.1na Lewis Chftun
ca lled on the Roushes Sunda)
evemng

Chrtstmas D11y guesls of Mr
and Mrs Charles !'.hchael were
Mrs Russell Fmdley Mar)
and Ed Lewis P1ckelt of
Crown Cit) Ca llmg 1n the
afternoon were Mr and Mrs
i\rclue Jarrell and sons Mr
and Mrs Roger Roush Mr
and Mrs He1 ber t Roush Mrs
I\ a Orr

CHARLESTON W Va
1UPI) - A Ku Klux Klan
l ea~er
saying he wants
JUStice and not bloodshed, '
has announced plans for
another KKK rally at West
V1rgm1a s Capitol to protest
contmued use of controversial
textbooks
Dale Reusch a presulenllal
hopeful of the Nattonal Kntghts
of the KKK , telephoned UP!
from Lodi, Oh1o, Monday night
and sa1d a demonstratiOn
would be held on the steps of
the Ca pitol m about two
weeks
Our aun 1s not to corrupt
society or create any vaolen

ce, ' Reusch sa1d

We are
and not

seekmg JUStice
bloodshed '
Reusch also sa1d he was
studymg school textbooks of
the Oh1o public school system
and srud some of the oontroverslal texts were tn
Oberlin, Oh1o classrooms near
Cleveland
The auto worker responded
to cr1t1 c1sm by the Charleston
branch of the NAACP which
w-ged state and City leaders to
denounce the Klan's antitextbook appearance here last
Saturday
Black leaders sa1d the KKK
was trymg to mteqect racial
b1gotry mto the long-ruMm£
textbook battle and warned
slmllar gathenngs could
erupt mto racially-motivated
crunmal violence '
Reusch proposed a special
election to determme whether
Kanawha County residents fa
vored the disputed texts which
opponents claun undermme
God and country
'Let's brmg the 1ssue to the
ballot box, he sa1d
U")he majo11ty favored the
texts, ban-the book forees
should start set ling up pr 1vate
schools, the KKK leader said
Reusch asserted a lot of
people were getting bostile to
h1s group and KKK co
ordmator Ed Miller srud be had
rece1ved ' a couple of
threatening telephone calls "
Hooded Klansmen told a
weekend gathermg of about 150
persons therr great mvls1ble
soc~ety w1ll do everything 1t
can to help you ftne people f1ght
these books of filth '
They pjedged fmanclal support to the anti-textbook forces

Less moonshine brewed
By CHARLF.'i PENTECOST

LOUJSVU.Le K) (UP! ) The Kentucky moonshmer of
tradillon and folklore, once the
subject of ballads and conuc
postcards, may be gomg the
way of the passenger pigeon to
extinction
Walter Conklin, agent m
charge of the bureau of
alcolhol, tobacco and f1reanns
here, an ann of the treasur)
department, sa1d,
Even
before the pnce of sugar \\ent
skyhigh we weren t havmg
much trouble w1th moon
shiners Our work now IS
mostly ftrearms and ex
ploSI ves VIOlations
' Oh, occaSionally we get a
small still up m the mountalllS
but the number •s nothtng ltke
tl was live or 10 years ago he
added "
Bureau records for the last
fiscal year show that moon
shine arrests for the entire
alate of Kentucky have averaged only one a month No
moonshine arrests were

reported 10 December but the
\\ mter months never were
popular "1th outside sttll
operations be cause of bad
\\eather and lack of screemng
foliage
As late as 1964 federal
agents arrested 300 persons tn
Kentuck\ for !tquor law vtola
t1on s durtng an II months
period
You can say the declme IS
due to a combmatton of factors,
mcludtng the curr ent coa l
boom 1n the mountams
Con klin
sa1d
Almost
e\er) bod) m southeast Kentuck)' IS workmg m the mmes
no" for good "ages
The federal gove rnment
took over the Goldenpond area
m "estern Kentucky near the
Tennessee state line once a
botbed of moonshi!UIIg for the
land between the lake s recreational area and moved all the
people out ' be added
illiCit wh1sk:y makmg m that
Kentucky-Tennessee state !me
area nC\ er has recovered from
the resetUement

YOU CAN HEAR THESE
GREAT PROGRAMS ON:

1390 RADIO
-Fashion Fare
-Swap Shop
-Link's Little Ones
-Earl Nightrngale

WMPOAM

Then too education lS a
factor, ' Conklin sa1d Work
around a still 1s hard and the
young people may be lookmg
for someth111g better
Another deterrent 1s the
nagging fear of discovery and
federal priSOn
As for the old Appalachian
code of honor" between
moonshlners
and
revenooers " Conkhn sa1d
with a chuckle, I suppose 1t still
eXIsts - we JUSt don t get
enough of them any more
real!} to tell
Th1s 1s a far cry from IS to 20
years ago when federal author!Ues chartered bus~ m
some southeast Kentucky
towns to take moonshinmg
\1olators to prison followmg
therr oonv1ctions m lederal
court
In the past moonshiners
caught by federal agents at a
"orkmg still often were placed
011 therr honor to oome lll frlllll
ISOlated rural areas for court
appearances -and no-shows
were UY&gt;~

If you have rustv water that
statns futures and clothrng

YOlfD

WMPO

•

9OS AM

10 00 A M and 3 35 P M
12 46 P M
4 00 PM
6AM. til5 30PM Datly

For Fast Results Use Sentin~l Classifieds

BETTER
CALl
Sayre Hardware
New Haven W V a

882 2525

USE OUR

2 SIGNS
OF

Pomero~
T=

Motor Co.

QUALITY
1974 CHEVROLET IMPALA

au toma t1c power steering power brakes factory a1r
hnted glass d elu :.te body and wheel openmg mold1ngs
sandstone 11myl seats beauflful dark red f 1n1sh TRULY A

000

Blown Into Walls
and Attics
Free Est•mates

52250

Lany Lavender

CREA M PUFF

NOWS2695
rad10 5

1913 DATSUN 12002 DR CPE

Local 1 owner car &amp; on l y 20 000 m les automatt c trans
rad10 w h l e wall t1re s 11 ny l 1ntenor sharp as a tack
Orange f msh

FOR Rent
tobacco ba se 2
l eaf e 2 300 lbs on chars or
otherw se Phone 742 516
1 21 5tc
SHO OTIN G match Rac1ne Gun
Club Sunday 1 p m As sort ed
meats and fa ctory choke gun ~
only
12 22 tfc
AUL TION
Thursday
and
Sa turday n ght 7 p m at
Mason Auc tton Horton St U1
Ma son W Va Cons tgnm en ts
we lcome Phone 13041 773
5.471

10 3 tf c
~ -- --------

-FOR your
Cosme t cs

0 1 of Mtnk
Phone BROWN 5

99'15113

1 7 lf c

OLA N
Mils needs
s ate s
managers tra nees Good
earn n g poten t ta l
mus t be
fr ee to tra11e1 t r sta te area
Apply to V rgtn a F re eman
!rater court next to the Datry
Is le M ddleport
1 20 3tc
PORTRA T Sa tes 3personsfu ll
or partt m e We tra 1n you to
conta c t cus tomers from our
off tce to offer an Olan M lis
Portra1t Pan
Rece ve SJ
com m sston
for
each
del ve red sa le
M n mum
hourly wage guaranteed
A pply to V rg n1a Freeman
Tra ler court ne )( t to th e
D a tr y Isle M ddleport
1 20 Jtc

WOMAN to make home Wtlh me
and do ltght hou sew ork for
room and board Phone 992
72 68
1 21 3t c

1951 CHE V ROLET
5502

1 21 3tc

Priced

1973 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass S
850 ser es farm
p S P B and factory a r 1956 FORD
tractor w1th 1111e hydrauliC
25 500 m11es
Call 992 391 4
and 3 pornt h t c h One owner
afterSpm
2 039 hours Also almost new J
1 21 6tp
pt httch Ford mower w th 6
...!.--------- ------.fl c utter bar Contact Mar 11 m
1972 CU TLA SS Supreme 30 000
Keeb augh
Days 992 5342
mt es Fac tory a r p s p b
Even ngs 985 39 13
new rad al ttre s 350 V!l Am
1 15 6tc
F m radto st er eo tape deck
Phone 992 5870 afler S 30 p m
duty
automattc
1 20 5tc HEAVY
washer
s ngle bed w1th
mattress S amese ca t Phone
992 7201
1 19 4tp

WILL do babys1ttmg any ftme
aft er 12 noon Call 992 5783
1 20 3tc

TRACTOR 1953 Ferguson 30
eKCellent cond1t1on S 1 250
Phone 985 3594
1 19 7tp

---- ---------~ EMODELING

plumbmg
heatmg
and al l types of
general
repa tr
Work
guaranteed 20 years ex
per ence PhOne 992 2409
1 19 He

1965 JOHN Deer e Dozer 8 6
outs1de hydrau 1c b la de new
tracks
new clutch es
and
brakes
new pa1nt
tn A I
shape 56 500 Phone 985 3594
I 19 7tp

USED FUEL OIL
HEATER, s50

Dai~

Sentinel

992 2156

L -----------'

FINANCIAL REPORT
OF TOWNSHIPS
For F1scat Yen End1ng
December 31 1974
Columbia Townshtt)
Me1g5. County
Rt 3 Albany Oh1o
January 10 1915
1 c ertify the follow ng r epor t
to be cor rect
Glor a Hutton
Townsh p Clerk
SUMMARY OF CASH

BALANCES RECEIPTS

AND EXPENDITURES
Bai.Jnce Jan 1 1974
General F und
s 2 309 42
Motor Veht cle L cense
T&amp; )( Fund
1 023 25
Gasotme Ta x Fund
I 208 02
Road and Br dg e Fund
52 97
Totals
4 593 66
Total Rece tpts
General Fund
12 .:103 91
Motor Vehtcle L c ense
Tax F und
6 215 01
Gasoline Ta x F1.1nd
15 600 00
RoadandBrdg eFu nd 1 531 07
F edera l Re11enue
Sha r ng Fund
2 366 00
Totals
3811599
Total Recetph &amp; B;alances
General Fund
14 713 33
Motor Veh1cle L tce nse
Ta xF und
723!126
Gasoline Tax Fund
16 808 02
Road and Br dge Fund I 584 0.:1
Federal Re11enue Sharmg
Fun d
236600
Tota l s
42 709 65
E Kpendtlure5.
Gene ra l Fund
8 768 09
Motor Veh c le License
Tax Fund
5 605 IS
Gasol ne Ta x Ftmd
15 659 61
Road and Br dge Fund
99 3 44
Federal Revenue Shar1ng
Fund
1 138 00
Totals
)2 164 29
Bilance Dec 31 1974
General Fund
5 945 24
Motor Veh cle L•cense
Tax Fund
1 63 3 11
Gasol ne Ta~ Fund
1 148 41
Road and Bndoe Fund
S90 60
Federal R evenue
Shar no Fund
1 228 oo
Tot., ! s
I O 545 36

CASH BALANCE
RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITURES

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

WANTED old uprght panes
any cond1110n
Pay ng S10
cash F rrst fl oor on ly Wr te
and gtve d re ct ons to Wttfen
P1ano Co
Box 188 Sard •s
Oh ro 43946
1 15 6tp
OLD furn lure 1ce bo xes brass
beds or complete hou se holds
Wrt te M D Miller Rt 4
Pomeroy OhtO Call 992 77 60
I O 7 74
JUNK autos
complete and
delivered ro our yard We p ck
up auto bodtes and buy all
k nds of scrap metals and
ron R1der s Salvage St Rt
124 Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh o
Call 99 2 5468
10 17 tfc

APT 3 rooms all electn c has
table lop range waH oven
real n ce and clean modern
Lo c ated
m
Porn eroy
overtook1ng the Oh o R ver
Phone Gal •pol s day 446
7699 e11en1ngs 446 95.39
I 19 6tc I
COUNTRY Mob l e Home Park
Rt 33 ten mt les nort h of
Pomeroy
Large lots w tth
concrete pat os
Sidewalks
runner s and
off
street
park ng Phon e 99 2 7479
123l lfc
FURNISHED
apartment
utilll tes fu~n1shed
su1table
for two work1ng men or
ret1red couple L1vmg room
k1tchen shower and bath On
rna nh1ghway Mason W Va
Phone 773 51 47
10 27 tfc
TRA ILER space 2 mtles from
Pomeroy Rt 143 Fhone 992
5858
I O 27 tfc

CASH patd for all makes "nd
models of mob le homes
Phone area code 614 423 9531
4 13 tfc

2 or J BEDROOM home I m1le
from Pomeroy on Old 33 Call
992 1571
1 16 6tc

CONSIG NME NTS welcome at
P&amp;J Aucr on
215 North
Second M ddleport
I 9 30tc

I HO US E unfurn shed 7 rooms
and bath nrce Phone 992 2780
or 992 3432
1 9 tfc

-----------

--

3 and 4 ROOM furn shed and
Ma nten.ance
4 140 36
unfurniShed
apartment s
Gra nd Total Expend iture s
Phone 992 5434
Motnr Veh1cle L1cense
4 12 tfc
Tax Fund
S 605 15 - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Bal Dec 31 1974
1 633 11 PR I VATE meet 1ng room for
Total Expend 1tures Plus
any organ 1zat on pt1one 992
Bat Dec 31 1974
7 238 26
397 5
Gasoltn~TaxFund
311tfc
Ba l Jan 1 197.:1
1 208 02 - - - - - - -- - - - - - -Receipts
FURNISHED apt Adults only
Gaso l me Ta~
1S 600 00
Mtddleport
Phone 992 387-t
Tot a Re ce rpts
IS 600 00
11 I4 tfc
Tota l Begmn ng Balance
- - - - ---- - --Plus Re ce pts
16 808 02

Expend1!ures

Tota l Expenditures Mtscellaneous
7 818 67
Mamtenance
7 840 94
Gr and Total EKpend lures Gasol •ne Ta)( Fund
15 659 61
Bal Dec 31 1974
t 148 41
Total Exp Plus Bal
Dec Jl 1974
16 808 02
Road and Bndge Fund
Bal Jan 1 1974
52 97
Rece1pls
Ge neral Property Tax Real Estate { Gross )
658 27
Tang b le P ersonal Propert y
Tax (G rass l
57 1 17
Trans fer s
301 63
Total Recetpls
1 531 07
Tota l Beg nn ng Balan ce
Plus Re cetpts
1 584 0.:1
Expendttures
Total Expenditures M ISCellaneous
166 07
Mamtenance
827 37
Grand Total Expenditures Road and Bndge Fund 993 44
Bal Dec 31 1974
590 60
Total Exp Plus Bal
Dec 31 1974
I 584 04
Federal Revenue.
St'lartng Fund
Rece1pts
Grants- Federal
2 366 OQ
Tota l Rece1pts
2 366 00
E)(pendtfures
Ma1nt and Oper111on
EQUIPment
1 138 00
Total Expenditures
1 138 00
Bal Dec 31 1974
1 228 00
Total Exp Plus Sa l
2 366 00
Dec 31 1'974
TOWNSHIP DEBT-NOTES
Purpose For Wh ich
Not e Debt Was Created
Motor Grader
Outstandtng Jan 1
1974
• 313 03
Redeemed D ur .ng Year
I974
1 138 00
Pal Outstand ing Dec
31 197A
Rate of tnt
Date ot Ftnal Mat
Motor Grade
Outstandtng J an
191A
4 313 02
Redeemed Dur1ng Year
197A
I 138 00
Balance Outstand ng
Dec 31 1n4
431302
Rate of lnt
6 P et
Da te of Fmjll Mat
4 9 1976
Total - Outstandmg
Jan 1 PH4
R 626 OA
Tota l - Redeemed Durmg
Year 197&lt;1
1 138 00
Tota l Bala.rce Outstandmg
Dec 31 1974
7 A88 04

BY FUND
General Fund
Bal Jan 1 197.f
2 309 42
Rece1pts
General Propert y Tu Real Esl."tt~ (Gross ) 4 349 03
Tano •ble Personal Property
Tax ( Gross l
37 12 60
lnhentan ce Tax
( Gross)
31436
Local Govt D st
2 39 4 .t6
C1garette License Fees
and F nes (Gro5.s l
19 50
Check Refund
75 00
Sale of Cemetery Lots
170 00
lnfa ngrb tes
I 368 96
Total Rece pt!O
12 403 91
Total Begmnmg Balance
P lus Rece 1pts
14 713 33
Exptnd•turu
Total Ex.pendrtures Adm 101strat ve
it il30 20
Town Halls Memor al
B ldg and Grounds
I 284 87
Cemetene-s
759 00
Ltght ng
94 02
Grand Total Expend lures Genera l Fund
8 768 09
Bal Dec 31 197&lt;1
5 9A5 24
Tota l E•p P l us Sa l
Dec 31 1'914
14 713 33
Motor Vehtcle L•cense
Tu Fund
Bal Jan 1 1974
1 023 25
Rece1pts
Motor Vtohtcle Ltcense
Tax
6 215 01
Total Rece pts
6 215~1
Total Beg nn ng Balan ce
PIus R ece pts
7 238 26
Ex pend1tures
Total txpend ttures ( ll 21 lfc
M•scet aneous
1 464 79

All New Heaters
Now
Discounted'
1 New Wood Burmng
HEATER-139 95
~POMEROY
•

LANOMAfl .('l
Jack W Carsey Mgr
Phone 992 2181

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

OVATION 12 stnng acouStiC
gu.tar Wtth hardshell case
New cos t S500 w II sell for
$325 G bson Les Paul De l uxe
electr c gut tar With hard she l l
case New cost $530 w II sell
for S325 Call 949 5913 Steve
C eland Racme Oh o .:15771
1 16 6tc

-------------GROCERY busrness for sale

Bulldrng for sale or leas~
P'hone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
to 10 p m fo r appomtment
3 10 tfc

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

Real Estate For Sale
HOUSE 55 000 Phone 992 587I
1 12 18tc
BUILD ING lot 80 ft frontage
by 165ft The second lot on l eft
on R1verv1ew Dr 1ve L ncoln
Hil l Pomeroy Ohio If m
teres ted cal l 992 3230 after 5 p
m
10 17tfc

ELECT~OLUX Sweeper l ,. tV

e

model
Complete W1fh all
cleanmg attachments and
uses paper bags Sltghtly used
but cleans and looks like new
Will sen for S37 2S cash or
terms a11a lable Phone 992
775S
12 18 tfc

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

CLOSE OUT on new Zig Zag
sew1ng machtnes For sew ng
stretch fabr 1cs buttonholes
fancy destgn s etc
Pa1nt
Sl ght l y blemrshed Cho 1c e of
ca rry ng case or sewmg
stand 5H 80 cash or te rms
avarlable Phone 992 7755
12 18 lfc
------ - -------RENTA L ncome property 9
rm house double apt located
at 228 StXth Sf
M dd leport
Conta c t George C Holter
Ho lter Da1ry Farm
1 21 3tc

--------------REDUCE sate and fast With

GoBese Tab l ets &amp; E Vap
water Pills
Ne lso n Drug
1 21 lfp

--------------ST EREO RADIO 8 track tape
combtnatlon am fm
way speaker sound
Balance s 08 7A or
budget terms Call

rad to 4
syste m
use our
992 3965
1 21 tfc

-------------USED
Kelv•nator electr c

71 dn lled

10 town w1th room tor

parking
4 UNITS - Apartment bulldtng
w1th all furniture and good
mcome

A BUY - Would you g1ve
s8 000 oo for $9 000 00 of good
stock and busmess

97 ACRES -

1 19 12tc
- - -- - - - - - - - - -- 1970 DODGE Coronet 500 eiC
ce l l ent cond ttt on pr1ced to
sell Phone 992 5663
1 17 6tp

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

I95 7 CHEVY par:ts
NEW
LakeNood tr act1on bars h r
1acker atr shocks
hoo ker
headers wrth 3 collectors for
sm'all b lock
Call 992 3496
after 6 p m BEST OFFER
10 17 lfc

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

1111.,;
~I&lt;'IJ(X)J
n•

WE'LL JUS"T WA,IT AND

I I l

I
I () rl
I
(l )

I RUGAU

I OAUPIN

1

WEll IM

'feu SU: HH HA.t&gt; A. P~HTY
8AD SMO\IIt-1 MOUND HE D l'IIIIED
1\WFIA. HARD TO MAKE $0/I'IETMIN
816 0 EOHITE 1b HELP E~ER'IJObY

N O"T ZACTL'1

SiJRE. ll WAS
SOME Pllt.CE AN
AWJ'UL LONG
WA.'i FROM ~EA'E

THEN 'lHATJ:OB RUINED
EVE'R~IHG
A.Ntt 1111.\.EO
PoOit OLC&gt; M~ Eo~

SO~T

0 SIC!'(

HE 0
HA.D ENOUGH FOR A WHILE
SO HE WEN,. A I.OkG LONCi
Wt.'1S AWA"'
Tl-t.l'1"$ A.ll I KHOW •

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

READY MIX- CONCRETE de
I vered nght to your pro 1ect
Fast
and
eas-y
Free
est mates Phone 992 3284
Goegle n Ready MIX Co
Middleport Oh10
6 30 lfc

GASO!JNE ALLEY

Some

protect1on

1

SEWING MACHINE Repairs
service all makes 992 22!14
The Fabnc Shop Pomeroy
Authonzed S nger Sates and
Serv ce We Sharpen Setssors
3 29 tfc

\

You must
th1nk I'm

awful,
commq tn

here'

E1-;z;;-c

lJL ABNER

,.,...,_

ITLL COST

AND NCNE'

c ··- .. ~ ... ...

M LLI0f.JS -

DoGPAT0-1 ElACJ&lt;

GIVE' US

24 HOURS
AND WELL.

backhoe
and
d t fcher
waterlme footers dra1ns
roads and brush cleanmg nq
tob too small no weather too
bad Char les R Hatfield Rt 1
Rutland 0 Phone 742 6092
1 7 26tc

13UT ITL.l
BE WORTH
IT "-

To 115 ORIGINAL-

S!TES "-

MOV~

S~5HLY
.SUFF~R fJ

I PAPPY"
NOW AH KIN YANK TH'

"TRUMPET OUTA HIS
SKULL

OUR
HOTE'L-

- - - - --

P&amp;J
Home
Ma 1ntenan c e
heatrng
cool ng
refr tg 1
plumb 1ng
electncal ap •
pi ances We serv1ce an~
repa1r anyt ng n the home or.
bUSiness
21S N
Second,
Mtddleport Phone 992 3509
301~

------- ------ - Real Estate For sare

•
1

-

t

-=::=s

I 0.1

WINNIE
'oiJIN NIE

FSMIAE FASH ION

MAG~ZIN !: JU ~T
HIT THE 5TAND5

ANDlOOK AT

:HIS F~NTASTIC
SPREAD OF
BONNAZ

"1:;HI0~ 51

~

HAT .:..

WINNIE

D~)

THIS HnS
B=:oN'

JO • Y YOU

WE R E~T

PAI?OLEO YOU
WALKED OUT OF
PRISON IN ONE
YOUR IMNY

MINIMUM
SECURITY FACiliTY;
IT WAS A

5NAP'

this

BI I

BPQZND

•
ADTAID

RFD

II

v

l

r

f1

J 1 I~

t or t 11

ARI ES

~M arch

y 1\
1/' I

l

2 1 Apttl 19 ) I

dt

&lt;~ rc

til

t u

I r 1

r i

I

1( C

t.

I

IH

mo.p~::Ch

1

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1I I

(Apnl 20

Moy

20)

~0

Do 1

~ 1

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10
wil l yt t r

r

1e c , pli lllf
w 1r-s 11 ( n y you { 1 w I
\Olr to v th:J.IIf' '.C I H lo1q
I ' I
GEMINI ( Mnv 2 1 June 20 ) You
lnvc :-~. It nde KY 10 s:-~. y one
th q
tl I 1 It &lt;1
II 0 11tH Yu
n IY II lk yn l H d I HI t
C C\IGIIY
l II 0 1 (
W II &lt;;OP
1 r01 qt" 1 1 (' l :1C 111
CANCER (June 211 July 22) A
r I 11 0 I 1 I 11 !
I
I
I
s r dt;
01
'-&gt;1
Cll 7 1 H JOI Ot 1
Cl 1 y
I )
ll
LE O (Jul y 23 Aug 22) ll n 11
th 11 fl 1 ) IJ
dl
\1
bo I
l1 I np )r\ II I CJ I 1 k ';(
m~ll slcp
JW u t v 11
I rg1
o you II los nwm; n um
VIR GO ( Aug 23 S&amp;pl 22) Nor
1 I )
J
JILl'-; 'f
I h rf &lt;l hf'
we well 1 qhl C!
T&lt;dJvwl
be ;1 l ex( pi Jll
S OVO I ly
vllul
wit
t J11lJ
t111e1 es "
LIBRA ( Sept 2::1 Oct 23 ) Co I
LJP.I yr ur t 1 1v "' t1 liON 1
lll()\ht I
{ J rrtp
1 j
llrl I

basement, gas FA heat
carpeted paneled tiled,
garage, roofed patio double'
lot 519 900
POMEROY- CLOSE IN 2
yrs old BRICK &amp; FRAME,
4 BR 2 balhs lovely kitchen
and dlnmg ulllily R about
an

acre,

nice

outside

building workshop
MINERSVILLE AREA Cost less lhan a !ratter, lots
of ground 3 BR, bath n1ce
kitchen NG h&lt;!1it, TP water,
storage bldg 57 900
ALL CASH FOR YOUR
HOME- LET US SELL IT
m 2259or 992 2568

J fN

.

"" '' "
\

...

11 11 11 11

()

s u h v,. ms the fr rs t spade

\

I \\ I 'I

"I

A I

A I
.., 1

1:

.

WEARIN TH
WHEN AUNT ZINNIA
'GITS HERE, LUKEY,
DADBURIV
! WANT 'IE TO WEAR
THING 11
:THAT SOW TIE SfjE GOT

1 fER

SIRFDAV

HERE SHE
COMES NOW

'

I

I

( 1

\\ '-; ltumrs v.1 t h two leads
l ~ ti l tq) h ~ctrts and clubs

I

J that West has follow
d I! o 1e heart and to both
c I11IJs Nuv. South leads a low

.:.Jnd 11ot
~

&lt; lui&gt;
Jl \\

''

tt

'I

\u tl

csl \.\ n s the tnck he must

sr des

After followmg

Sout l1 gets to ruff In one
I tnd nd cl1scard a heart from
1tt c 1t h( r If East wtns he can
r

I

' "

l

Hl

&lt;.t..,h a I cart but the n must gtve

S uri I 1 ' uff and spade d1scard

'"

Ill
I 0
I

•

~'\II

fii&lt; ISt

ASS~

tZ: H;l :~ l!t§,&gt;.,1D
I I r h1d rl pg ha s been

II~

o ......

1lfl \ lwu .., It otn

s J I! I.! I J tl I I l " p I I
nd \ II c!
It
ou h \ ( I
\trbd II til trnf ftull t
) 1 I 1 bit I u •·!II !t
I I
kt
I

pi! Itt

l ht n h1 "I' ' d In " lli.if I i.ind
11/lJunr• d
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one t11k

v.h IV. S k( { [ lfiJ.i. -;rf n
pul j1 wr h svb tnd 1nd C fl1I~CU
l p IOU p• 101" n l1o; "ld
Jl UH
lrll,.;er \ rtl pH ked Up tlh
\\ (S[ I lfll
t(k(d It 1)\f
S!

CMCiull\

l1J l /1 1 d (q

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\o r l h

I to;l

21

South

lolo
I ~"'
4¥
\
I
~ tll h II lr.J
A K-fl 41 ¥ i\ 2 t 9 . AK732
\\ht! d \OU do llUY.&gt;{}
\ - H1d lour spades Th1s b1d
m t\ t osl 'uu hu l It ts more likely to
p
In~ d1v1dends

¥

1'

100\Y' (jUES IION
Jm.l( td )f JUmpmg to four hea rts
I l"l hI S JUS I bid IWO hearts What
t \ J f)) m lh s Insta nce"

hJS Jlll tn( I

IJ \ou hcnltl11 brc1 n-;

SMILE
MMBE ! CAN &lt;&gt;ET A GoOD
NtG&gt;lT 5 SLEEP I'DR ONCE
AND NOT FEEL SO Tlli:EO
I
TOMORROW

d1

I ll\

.. I
I

Ill

..•

¥ h
\

and ~;.~ 1 d

I AM

s w• be a yea r when many
n · ~ 1 1 oprorl uA tres w 111 be
d 'l 1g t d be f o r e you r eye s
Dor 1 nnke sudden changes
ur e:;"' you re posltrve where
t ( v II lend
\ J V. " l t\t I I! I Nl l llii\ISf ASSN I
11

l

dh (Oillpllca ted In ract It IS
sun llllnf prO\ Jded West has
• 1glt l sp Hies and at least one

BPSZED -C FDNHD NR
d f &lt;t 1 ;_rn 111 1 qui h 1 th m &lt;1
Yesterday's Cryptoquote A GOOD L!SfE NER IS NOr bJ'\IVlll ~ JiH k;_rso,;: \oOU \\OUid
ONLY POPULAR EVERYWHERE BUT AFTER A WHILE HE hu'h k t pi y 1ur mou th slu t 1nd
v.rapp('d up \Oil! &lt;onu 1cl
KNOWS SOMETHING - WILSON MIZNER
""Jo1til v. ~-. 11 ~ hl omd th( pl rn
(C) 191'5 Kin&amp; Futures Syndic•te In c )

WY

Jan 22 1975

1

4 BR 1112 baths,
reception R sewing R full

Rf

~~?f~

/o ' I l k( irve d1amonds IS not

TJ

ETQD

SCORPI O (Ocl 24 Nov 22)
E rclllc moves on your behalf
lorli"ly r.ould 10oparchze th e har
110 l Y 1 l nn Imp o r tant
rf' la t1onsh 1p Be mode rate
Keep coo l
SAGITTA RIUS (Nov 23-Dec:
21) You re li kely to fall he•r to
1dd t ona l ta sks today You II
• 3nagc nea tly If yo u don t
1 tkn t em cem tougtler than
lh cy arc
C APR ICO RN (Dec 22 Jan
19) l u 1 c far too sensible to
be l eve yo u ca n get something
101 not 111g yet today yo u II
t 1 k you r !l o pes on that
\llemc
AQUARIUS (Jan 20·Ftb 19)
It yOl re too d ctatorlal w1th
11 o se u yo ur charge today 1t
w 1 pr ovoke a 11ery unpleasant
re ponse - one d1tf1Cult to
t 1 l.l ltO
PISCES (Fob 20 March 20)
Yn 1 w 11 ,,, ve so me dlfftcu ty
1 t •v
( 0 ng I old o f people
V&lt;'t l y 111 rnpo r tan l ap
po rr ~ cn ts

!I

\f tlt Ill

you must see $3 BOO
POMEROY - Nice older

XFT

m1:1k1ng

o r s borrow 119 or ad11IS inQ

Go od p lay ca n ha ndle overbid

11

XZYI' I Q

T tl 1k tv.1 ce be fore

WIN AT _B_R IDGE;

\\

home

7 ROOM house bath and AI
e)(cellent netghborl:'tood wa ll
to wall carpet1ng , large lol
garage reas onabl e uttlttres
Call 992 3877
l 9 lfc

I.ONGFEII OW

One lett er s1mpl y stand&lt;;: for anot her In th1 s samp l e I\ 1s
used for the three L s X fo1 th e tw o 0 s rt c; S ngl lcltt rs

XD

I

TAUR US

/)t /I Ifill I / """"II lm /1 d

rds

.,

r I( II If

letter~

BY UN LOCKING HIM

\ \t

N

p r; 1 Hetl IOc II
S 11 \
'I

DONKEY

POMEROY- CLOSE IN2 62 acres lovely building
site on good road, TP water

N !)l

For WednesdA\1 Jan 22 1975

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to wn 1k t1
AXYDJ, B.\AXR
lo

D

a Barnt ce Bede Oso l

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 European
I Not hollow
river
2 Blue Gown
s Brand
g1rl
names
3 Pooped
10 - podnda
( 2 wds )
11 Most
4 Wnter
distresSing
Bradbury
12 Symbol
5 Old
of France
6 Macaw
Yesterday s Ans.,.,er
lJ Nebraska
7 Table 1tem
22 Beauty shop JO Pal Joey s
nver
8 Art lover
for autos
r1 eatm
l4 Here (Fr)
9 Clam
(2 wds )
31 ( 1unmal
15 Be well
11 Cattmess
23 Opera lie song 32 Candid
- of
15 Sunder
24 DISperse
37 Bm d s
16 Tea variety t8 Son of Adam 25 F1sh
evet
17 Thickness
21 Inverness
27 Robust
3~ I ye
19 - and haw
eg
29 V1r1le
s h~eld
20 N1ght
r;-T,""""i';-14"""
prwr
21 Attra~t1ve
22 Standtng
rank
25 Trade 26 Punc1pal
27 In the
know ( sl)
28 Inlet
29 Flee
( 2 wds )
33 Drtpptng
34 Metrtc
land
measure
35 Pronoun
36 Be present
38 Song
ref ram
39 Metallic
40 Ferrous
41 Tease
42 Clammy

Lucy

l I '}

AstroGraph

CRYPTOQUOTE

available good spr1ng

_____ ________ _

up -

FLAUNT

J

u•

rn u:I j DJ

apostrophes the l eng th nnd f orm;~t 1 on of 11 e
hmts Each d ay the code letters are d1ffer c nt

2 ACRES PLUS - In Pomeroy
for houses or small farm

NEW HOMES No Money Down
Payments accordmg to
mcome on Farmers Home
Adrnln1stratron loan Con
vent1onat f1nancmg
atso
availab l e With m n•mum
down Lovely homes •n three
locations m Me1gs Countv
Some homes w rth wooded
tots
Call for more •n
format 1on 992 5976
.._
1 1S 26tc

If It"

4.n•wr.r
&lt;"

BIL LY IT WAS A

D SGUISt:-&amp;1

SMALL FARMS NEEDED IN
THE WEST END OF THE
COUNTY

\

lUCID

:1o:,

MCtlt u 1t 01 8 10 News 20 Fa mtly Af
W11 JJ
tl Jo Y
r h
~ N &gt;w 10
100 N~.-wo;
160 tO 1315 ABC News 33
11 JO J 1 1, 'Y Cl t "o' J 415 W 1d c Wor ld Spec tal 13 FBI 6
Mov e 0 nis t Prey B M ov1e The Bllllona tre' 10
Janak JJ
I JO W cit W tid S1 CC id l 6
00 T l lllOI rov. J ! Nrw~ 13

form the surpnse Bml\\o er ll.'l
suggested by the abo-.e cartoon

Jumblf'~ GIANT

M 1-.t 0olJQ

II

tl

1 v
0 00

~

yard Phone RIChard west
843 2667
12 24 26tp

19

f

81.1'1 " FLOwU~: MISTER?

----- --- ----CARPET n-sta l lat10n S1 2S per

--- - - --

lt f'Jif'rfi•y 1

m 1 e 4 Somerstt 1~
'lr 1 51 ?0 33 M 'civl e The

o (

(An.wf' nl nt t r1o "l

~e '-'1~

{ t Jt~

s

A

ll NI\L N ., 1 11~ 1\!JC N l \ OS 13 Bew1tched 6 CBS News
H 1 I
) Y r F l I l 1 '&gt; Now 33
1 00
1 r ull 1 C nc 1
{-\{ wlmg f or Dol l ar s 6 What s My Ltoe
11
N w
1lry Ml 11... Ju b lee 13
Ou tlool-.'~ 1\ 1 1 1 ~, 1 u J\J K 1 )W ~ our Schoo ls 33
11 1 1 1 l \
l Nrl n
I I tl l 1 u l &lt;:' 4 Let s Make a Det.! ~
r, \\lit
H 1 ,., t1 T
It rig&lt;' 10 To Te ll the Trulh 11r"
1 t
\ 1 1
1 1 13nok lk'1120 E p1SodeAct1on33
lll
Ll ~ l 1 111~
tpP llllc 1ll l 5 Tha l s MyMama613
1 ') n 11 r {' "" n 1 v1 B n F e t ng Good 20 S.nners 33
JO A
l H 1 I IQl' 6 ll
111
" Ot l1 ( 1 ~
I u r r 11 l~
l C~nr on 8 10
Ragt1me 20
M1.,l!rJ
r II 1! r ll
9 J O M v 1 ~~ r ~w 1y
11 M( v e The Man Wh o Wanted to

MOU&gt;J"TA INE:ER \\il S

[r..,U.IISIIHS.\1 .... ON THE

cln

A!H At , r~c h m.' ;;,pecwl 6 Ja ckpot 4

~

f f

'c

Now arrange the c1rclcd

111r111

t.

\\HAT TH E

1

WELl.. o.N&gt;D'I $Al0 IT AI.\.
MAD£ HIM DISGUSTED AND

~~

1[11 \'•

I
I
to
~=l::::::A===:;-':~·=~·

' '

--=----

-EXCAVATING
-------------dozer

t-. t\J

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1\ v.1l r I

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vr ~

, !JTI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

Lwv ShClw 6 Ma tch Ga me 8 10

1J

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Lv

VI t 1
M rv Gr 11111 1 ABC Afterschool
11 t
w I)
J Ar dy Gr fflth 8 M1ster
R 1 r
Nt tl h Jrl
d 0 )J
., 1l' N ,
t. ll "' rly H lib t\~ 8 Hodge podge L odge 20
I 1 I W o:,
f I
ll
t&gt; 10 N .,
1 t1IO 1t 1~ 1\rK Nlv.o; 6 El ec Co 20 lTV
Ul nl
\l

c, (1(1

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I UI'DYM I

NE.6.RIN'

'"

0

1\\

\

&gt;?1'

fl(t!J ! ~r;' \_

form four ordinary • ords

HOPE "THE KIDNAf'PB1SI
An; SOMEWHERE

F URN IT URE Upho lster ng
Reasonab l e
rat es
fre e
est1mates
p ckup
and
de l very prompt se rv1 c e
Mowrey s Upholstery P01nt
Pleassnt. W Va Phone 675
415.:1 ~ 12 31 26tp

~,

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·;/) (\_

Ct 11 am Kerr 8 Da n I met s World 10

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8 10

EXCELSIOR Salt Works East
Man St Pomeroy All k.nds
of sa lt water pellets wat er
nuggets block salt and own
Oh o R 1ver Salt Phone 992
3691
6 5 lfc

v~ll;y-

{

11 3o-Hollywood Squares 3 4 15 Bra d y Bunc h 6 Love ol L tfe
8 10 Sesam e St 33

Unscramble these rour Jumbles
one letter to each square to

I~

ou

Il

111

kr Kt
IJ

Ill (
I I
\n
1 ll

9 25- Chuck Wh1 te Reporfs 10
9 JQ-Not For Wom en On ly 3 D1na l ~ Ga l lop1ng Guur n ~I ll
T attletales 10
New Zoo Rvue 13
10 oo-Celebrtty Sweepstakes 3 15 Phil Donahue 1 Jc ke r s
Wild 8 10 M ov 1e W1 ves and L overs 1J
10 Jo-Wheel of F ortune 3 15 Gambll 8 10.
11 OD- H1gh Rollers 3 4 15 One L if e lo L 111e 6 Now You Stc

~~

2 11 tfc

DOZER work land clearmg by
the acre 1 hourly or contract
Farm ponds
roads
etc
Large dozer and operator
Wtth over 20 years ex
penence Pul l ms Excavt~~tmg
Pomeroy Oh o Phone 992
2478
1219tfc

~

DJ

~~SQP?t...

Mostly limber

Phone 742 3656

load Phone 742 A831

8 30- Big Vall ey 6
9 00- A M 3 It Takes A Th el 4 Bu lwmkl t: S M orn 1q

M'iiX.D

some bottom old house and
gas well All Mmerals and good
huntmg

-1 72------------ACRES and tocust poSts
-F 1R ------------e-wooo tor sale S15 per

r - - - - - ;1 ~ lfJTo1

EXCAVATING dozer loader
and backhoe work
sepftc
tanks 1nstallef&amp; dump trucks
and lo boy s fof h re w tll haul
fill d1rt top soli l 1mestone &amp;
gravel Call Bob or Roge r
Jeffers day phone 992 1089
n 1Qflt phone 992 3525 or 992

m town w1th a l l util1hes

BUSINESS BUILDING - Has

BORN LOSER

1 21 26tp

5232

Amenca 20 33
8 3Q-M ov e
Death Sla k 3 4 15 M o v 1e Th e Ab udu c l tol
Sa mt Anne 6 13 M ash 8 10 A scen t of Mnn 10 33
9 OO- Hawa1 F 111e 0 8 10
9 30--Woman 20 Wtfness I a Yest erd ay 33
10 oo--Pol1ce Story 3 4 15 Mar cus Wel by M D 6 11 Ba t letb,
Jones 8 10 N ews 20 Sou ndslage 33
10 30--Your Futu re IS Now 20
11 oo-N ews 34 8 10 13 15 ABC New s 33
11 30--Johnny Carson 3 4 IS W1de or d M ys ler y 13 F B 6
Banacek 8 M ov1e H1gh Soc1ety 10 Ja 1ak 1 JJ
12 3o-W 1de World My stery 6
1 00- Tomorrow 3 4 New s 13

6 oo-Sunnse Sem nar 4 Publ 1c A lla 1r s 10
6 15- Engltsh 505 3 6 25- Farm Reporl 3
6 JD-F1ve Mmules to L 1ve By 4 N ew s 6 B1 bl ~ Answf'r ~ !l
Sc h ool Sce ne 10 The Stor y IJ
6 35 - Columbus Today 4
6 45 - Mornmg Reporl F armtnnc 0
7 00- Today 3 4 15 AM Am enca 1J 6 CB S News H 0
8 00- Lasste 6 Ca ptam Kangar oo 8 Popeyc 10 Sesam e St
8 25- Cap t Kangaroo 10

CREMEAN S CONCRETE de
l1vered Monday through
Sat1.1rday
and
e11enmgs
Phon e 446 1142
6 13 tfc

POMEROY - 2 bedroom home

range coppertone au to oven
excellent c ond1tton Phone
949 28 91

I 19 12tp

992 3057

RFD20 Marco Spor tl l te33
Hap p y Days 6 13 Good Tm es 6 10..

WEDNESDAY JANUARY 22 1975

EXPERT t ree ser111ce
free
est mates
20 years ex
per.ence Ca l l ( 1) 667 3041 or

well septic tank and cellar on
Rt 7 near town $4 000 00

6 room

•

SEPTIC tanks
excavaftng
dump truck Phone 742 3742
122026tc

restdent al and commerc1al
w nng Btg and l 1ttle tobs
Call 593 8078 Athens
Free
est1mates
I 19 10tc

TRAILER LOT -

A&gt;JY(; ODY 5

-- ----- ------~l_!_fc 1

HffiiNG

for Sale

IF

FORGOTTE"-.1

C BRADFORD Auct toneer
Complete Serv1ce
Phone 949 3821 or 949 3I61
Rae ne Oh1o
Cnft Bradford

- - ------ - -- EAR CORN for sale by bl.lshel
for SJ 25 Phone 1 ( 614 ) 367
7481 or 388 9991
1 16 7tc

D A R I\JEO R,J_,HT

A&gt;J r

HElL

PIANO
1.m ng and repa1r
Char les ScoH 992 3718
12 13 J2tp

3 PT HITCH mower 6 fl bar
$125 ~ew se t of 3 pi h t ch
cu lt1vator s $145 Phone 985
3594
1 19 7tp

To BeAnnoun ce d15

• :CAPTAIN EASY

SEPTIC
TANKS
cleaned
Modern San ttntton 992 395-t or
992 7349
9 18 tfc

Employment Wanted

WILL do babys1ttmg any ttme
after noon call 992 5783
1 21 3tc

0

8 DO-Adam 12 3 4 15

heating serv1ce and
general sheet metal
works
Free
Estimates
Phone 949 5961
Emergency 992 3995
or 992-5700

For Sale

1 21 61p

Soc iety 15 Antiques 20 L I as Yoga &amp; You 33 33
7 30- Hol ly wood Squares 3 4 W ild W ld World ol A 11mn 1s 8
Bu ck ON-ens 8 New Pnce IS R tght 10 To T el l the r, uil 13

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
Complete plumbrng &amp;

to

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

West Columbia
Mason
Hartford
New Haven
Conlacl

l

WILL DO land ctear ng 1n trade
f or ch 1pwocd A lso Will c lean
barn s for manure Phone 992
7201
I 19 .ttp

Phone 992

0

Ref1msh1ng
Repa1r1ng
Burntshtng
Can1ng
Upholstenng
We Also Buy An1tques
P1ck up Serv1ce Available

10ME
lm p r o11eme nt
and
R epa r Ser11 ce - Anyth ng
f xed around t he home from
roof to basement You wt l l
like our work and rat es
Phone 742508 1
12 29 ffc
-

---------------1970 D ODGE Coron el 500 ex
eel lent co nd 11on
sel l Call 992 5663

Pomeroy Ohto

r

w~

tO Jl~l'-fJtll s P1-;word AI Star s 6 13 Bob 8rauns5050
Clb
Nt~\'&gt;1:110
' 10 At 11k ll r~..k 1 1r
Spl t Secon d 6 13
Search for
1 n L rrow 8 0 T Bt A• n ou n ced 33
t? 1'\ Elt..:r (
JJ
"2 55 NBC N ~\., 1 S
1 OV N \\ l 1\11 Mv (h lciren 6 IJ P hil Donahue 8 Young &amp;
It k .., • :. ll N
f01 Wumtc t On y 15
JU I(
I S r .. v, rMc~rnJgeJ4 1 5 Le tsMakeaDeal613
'" I
V\t I l l r l:, 8 10
00 [)l .., I (
., I 1 15 'JliO 000 Py r a rn1d 6 13 Guiding
1 11 !1 l )
IU II
wd0w q 1) Edge of Nlght810
G~ 1c r 11 Hos p ta l 6 13
Price ls
l 00 \n t! t

Ut 1lfzaf 1on 33
6 30-- NB C N ews 3 4 15 ABC N ews 13 Bew1 tc hed 6 CBS Nt:ws
8 10 Zoom 20 Your Fu l ur e 1s.,Now 33
7 00-T ru thor Cons 3 4 Bow l1n g tor Dol lars 6 Whill s M t L11t&gt;
8 News 10 Nam e That Tu n e 13 H1g h Sc t1oo1 l V H mar

VIEW

STRIPPING FINISHES
FURNITURE METALS-ETC
MODERN &amp; ANTIQUE

11 ~s
N

1J9-News 3 4 8 tO 13 15 ABC News 6 Etec Co 20 lT V

6

Phone (614) 992 27P8

elc

for Rent

WANTED old upnght ptanos
any cond l10n
Pay ng SIO
each F rst floor only wr.te ro
.'lnd
ve d re el ens to Willen
P1ono CQ Box 188 Sard s
Oh o 43946
1 21 61p

TUESDAY JANUAR Y 21 1975

100 Kerr Street

PHONE
3832 or 843 2667

From a shelf to a house
Pa1"flng std1ng roof1ng
paper hang1ng
lutchen
cabmets expert carpelmg

FUEL T RUCK drtller wanted
I NCOME TaK Prepared both
must have ex per ence dr111 ng ------- - - ~ --- - F edera l and Sta te Taxes w I
tru ck Mall rept1es to Be:&lt;
be done by appo ntments
729 E co The Dally Sent 1nel
only Pl ease phone 992 2272 or
S ROOMS turn shed upstarrs
Pomeroy Oh o
see Mrs Wanda Ebl n Lau rel
apt ut llt1es pad no children
I 16 61 C
Cl ft Rd Po meroy Oh o
or pets Phone 992 5810 814 E
Man St
1 3 30tc WAITRE SS ES needed app ly n
1 21 6tp
person Crows Stea k House
Pomeroy
1 7 tic TWO bedroom turn1shed mobile
hOme Phone 992 3429
1 21 6tp

Motor Route Driver Wanted To Buy
Wanted
o

Television log for easy viewing

Modem Chemicals

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING

1968
DODGE
Coronel
6
cyl nder 3 spee d 4 dr runs
f''lOd 1us t needs w ndShteld
Phone 985 386 1
1 21 6tp

Help Wanted

IF YOU ha11e a ca r and would
ltke to earn ex tra money
come do ltght delt11ery work
for 0/an Mt ll s Full or part
ttme day or e11en ng hour s
App y to V rgm a F reeman
trailer court nex t to the Da ry
Isle Mtddleport
1 20 Jtc

949

Auto Sales

POMEROY, OHIO

AUCT I ON Sal e 2 15 N SPcond
Mtddl eport F r day Jan 24 at
7 00
Metal base ca b net s
co rner cab n et d nmg room
tab le
6 char s
11ery Old
sec retary
sma ll
Ch na
cu pboard 6 legged tab l e old
met al stage coac h Dayton
el ec tr c
scales
ga s
restaurant gn I doubl e cok e
el e cl r c range
coo er 30
1ew brown wa 11e and more
com ng V llag e Aucf on
1 21 Jtc

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCTION

Phone 992-3993
Da1ly After 5 00

POMo~~9XE~a~T9~ CO. @)
Not1ce

n).siness Services

Fire Retardant
Insulation

$4295

2 Door 4 speed tran smtss ton bucket seats
actual miles orange f1ntsh 11 1n yl mtenor

SNOW
MAKE
KEEPING
THEM IN

DIFFIC

4 door 1 owner car and only 10 400 mt les V 8 eng•ne w1fh

1974 OPEL MANTA Wasi289S

::=-

THEY 'RE MAI&lt;lNG ALL
THE UNDERPASSES,
ITRVI!~IG TO LOSE US

CARBINE ON THEIR
MOTOR, TOO DANGEROUS
IN

AND

The
Mrs Norman Schaefer
Mr \nd Mrs Pearl G1lkey,
Bradbury Mr Joe Guess
called on Mr and Mrs Harry
Stahl Mr Stahl1s a pnhent m
Holzer Hospital
M1ss S~san Fleshman
showed pictures taken tn
Afnca to 14 members of the
Laurel C!tff M1ss1onary Soc~ely
wh1ch \\BS held at the par
s01u1g:e Mrs Doris Shook was
hostess
Mr and Mrs Norman
Schaefer Mr and Mrs Vern
Slory attended the funeral of
Mrs Fr1 tz Stahl Marshfield
Mrs Stahl was a slSter-m-law
of Mrs Schaefer

7- The Daily Sent mel Mlddleport-Pomero}, 0 Tuesday Jan 21 1975

ONe OL ''c ."P GETS
L)5EC' TO THt l.l. ..... ,.-c~f3['()

T&gt;&lt;E &amp;VEST 1\00M I kNOW
HE LL SLEEr Wfcl TOO

IN

I

Se nd $ 1 lor J ACOBY MODERN
1 ook to Wm ar 8ffdge (c/ o
II IS t ewspa per) P 0 Box 489
H1d o C ly S IJ ITon New York
NY 10019

�• L •

'

I I

Hypnosis brings out long dead Gretchen
"Many times man lhes and dies between his t~o eter·

For the Jays 1! started the day m 1970 the mm1ster hyp
not!Zed his w1fe - for a backache, or something When I
fl mshed I asked her tf 1t still hurt She answered somethmg
that so unded hke 'nem, but I couldn t make anythmg of 1!
I asked her tf she felt okay and when she answered 'Ja • f
got out my tape recorder and began to tape her '
Jay srud the response from h1s w1fe sounded German and
he took the tapes to a language teacher who sa1d 1! deflmtely
was
Stevenson and seve ral other professors who speak German
became mterested Over the course of three years of m
terv~ews Mrs Jay slowly descnbed her hfe as Gretchen
J.ty sa1d 'Gr etchen was about 16 years old and hved dunng
th e 1870s She Is 1lhterate and can't read or wnte "
Accordmg to the tapes Gretchen was murdered while she
waited m a fo rest to meet her uncle s~e sa1d liad h1dden
horses to help them escape She sa1d she was captured by a
group of mert and k1lled
At that penod In Germany, Bismarck lfled to defeat
Ger man Ca tholics who had become a political for ce Some
active Catholi cs were thrown mto Jail at the tune 'Gretchen ' ha s told her ques\loners that her father had been unPr!Soned because of h1s part m the ' churchs trouble
In all, there are 18 tapes of Mrs Jay under hypnosis
Stevenso11 sa1d he 1s convmced he Jays are thoroughly
honest ' Jay quoted Stevenson as saytng he 'told us 11 s a

nllles" - W B Yeats
ELKTON, Va 1UPI ) - In th1s world Mrs Delores Jay IS
Am en ca n, 52 years old and the Wife of a m1mstcr In another
world "hose doorway 1s through hypnosis she IS Gre tchen
Gottheb who tells of he r own murde~ m B1smatek s Ger
many a century ago
Mrs Ja) spea ks no German -and ha s taken he detectm
tests to substantia te 1! But under hypnosis she speaks m
German drawtng a VIVId p1 cture of 19th..("entu n hfe m a tm)
\'lllage named Ebeswalde cuhmnatmg an her own dea th at
th e age of about 16
Remcarnatlon" D1d Mrs Ja) ac tuall) l1ve as the teen-iigc
illiterate Gretchen w1th her bu rgcrme~st er father m Ebc
swalde m th e yea rs when Bism arck was trv mg to defea t
German Cat.hohcs " There ma) be a case for Jt says D1 Jan

Stevenson, a psychology profcsso1
A dl\'lne power speakin g thr ough her " 11lat s one of the

few poSSible explanatiOns her husband, the Rev Ca rroll
Jay has considered
Another mlfllster, fundam enla l1st Rev Johnny Hensley of
Elkton says 1! ma) Indeed be ,, m) S!IC force - tha t of
Satan
The case e\•oked memori es of tv.. o decades ago -{)f .1
Colorado housewife usmg the synonym of Ruth S1mmom
who under deep hypnosis, became Bnde) Murphy an
IriSh g ~rl speakmg m Gaehc of hfe man obscure lnsh v1lla ~ e
m the 19th century

strong case for remcarnahon

Mrs Jay IS skeptical

I have alwa;s believed that

E\all~

Oil export tax lowered
CARA CAS
I UPI l
Venezuela 1 uesday w11l lower
tax pnces for Its 01! exports
and sharply reduce freight
prem1wn charges while hikmg
the income tax level for U S
and other foreign 011 compames, ofhc tal
sources
reported
The complex restructurmg of
Venezuela's 2 7 m1lhon barrel
per day exports IS auned at
narrowing the g 1p berneen 1ts
arl!fie~al tax values and the
real market pnce of 011 the

CALLS ANSWERED
RACINE - Three calls were
answered
Monday
and
Tuesday by th e Racme
Emergency Squad At 8 :JO
am Monday, the squad transported Garret Ctrcle , a
mediCal patient, to Pleasant
Valley Hosp1lal He was
released later In the day and
was then taken to the same
hospital at 8 30 a m Tuesday
At 4 30p m Monday, the squad
was called for Zelia Lawson,
Rt 2 Racme, a medical
patient She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where she was adrmtted

MEIGS THEATRE
Ton1ght thru Thursday
JAN 2) 23
NOT OPEN
FRIDAY thru SUNDAY
JAN 24 25 26
JUGGERNAUT
( Tf!chnlcolor)
Sta rnn g R1 c ha rd Har r 1s

I PG )
Colorcartoons
Show Starts 1 00 p m

sources sa td
The reform should not mean
an y mcrea se 1n the prll'e of m1
for consumers the sources
sa1d, pomtmg out that
Venezuela will lower the export
tax price for gasohnes, heating
mls and other reftned products
Venezuela 1s the world s
third larg est O!l -e xpor tmg
nal!on after Saud! Arabia and

on Route 35
The

Gulh c~ -M ~ t gs

H1 g h\\cl)

Pos t Ohto
Pa trol zepoltcd two

rlCC!dents Monday
i\!6 50 a 111 Clara K Pulhns
42 Pomeroy, and I IZZY I
McCarty 42 Cheshire, were
westbound on US 35 wes t of SR
7 when Pulhns pulled mto the
passmg lane to pass the Me
Carty auto
The Pulhns veh1cle struck
the left 1ear of the McCarl) ca r
causmg slight damag e to
McCart) s au to The Pulhns
velacle wa s dl s o sli g hlh
dcll llHged
No UIJurws \\tn.• repoJted
and no cJt(ltJOns \\c.;rc tssued
At 11 55 11 111 on Buidvlllc
Porter Rd , Ger ald R
Thompson 53, Pomeroy was
northbound when he dltempted lo turn mto a pr~vat e
dnve, losmg control of h1s
truck on the tee and shdmg mto
a ditch striking a It ee
Thompson wa s not InJured
and no cttahons \\ere tss ued
Thompson s truck suffered
moderat e dama ge

Pave the way
for your
"Special

A FULL

SERVICE
BANK

The Almanac
Bv United Press International

Today IS Tuesdav. Jan 21
the 21st day of 1975 w1th 3H to
folio"
I he moon 1s bet\\ ee n 1ts fir st
qu,u te1 and full phase
rhe rn ornm g st..'1r IS Mars
l he evemng stars are Me I
cury

Vt:nu s

Jupiter

dnd

Saturn
Tho~e

born on th1s date are

under the s1gn of Aquanus
Civil War Gen Thomas
Jonathan Jackson---a Southern
Confedrate commander known
as Stone\HIII Jack son ~wa s

born J.m 21 1824
On this ddy m tu st01)

In

1861

J effe1son

D,n IS

1e!j 1gn..:d hom the Umted Stutes
Sr n&lt;~ tc•

12 da1 s before MISSIS

sippi .st•ced ed fi om the Umon

fn 1908 New York City
enactod the 'Sullivan Ordmance whiCh held smokmg b)
• omen Illegal
In 1954 U1e world s first
atmmr po" e1ed submanne the
NdutJlus ' was !,umched at
Gt uton Conn
In 1968 a US A1r Force B52
carrymg four repm ted)y nonexp losl\ e h)dr oge n bomb s
ua shed off Greenland

A th ought for the day
President Harr) l'ruman sa1d
1 he 1esp onslblhll of the grea t
st.:'l tes 1s to St.: I vc and not to
dormn&lt;\ lt~ tll C' \\ orld

NOll 'OL KNOW

\ tol rn t
\\lnd storm
on g mc~ l e d Ill the Sahdfd 111 1901
( rosscd the Medtlen anean and
deposi ted more than 2 milh on
tons of dust 111 Europe
\

Something"

lo huiJd

HE'D GO BACK ANYTIME

17th restaurant

han, sh1ppmg about I 6 mllhon
barrels per day of crude and
refmed 011 to U S markets
The Venezu elan move
compiles w1th a Dec 13
resolutiOn ISsued by the
Orgaruzal!on of the petrolewn
Exportmg Countnes (OPEC)
mcreastng producing coun
tries revenue while seekmg to
establish a smgle pnce system
based on the actual market
pr1ce of oll It Will be apphed
retroacl!vely from Jan 1

Cars collide

have only one chance m this life,' she sa1d 'I don't believe m
reincarnation '
Jay sa1d, ! don't really know but there are several posSib!hl!es She could be speakmg through the su~onsctous,
some sort of genetiC memory or a posSibility It's a div111e
power speakmg through her '
Dr Martm T Orne, a Umvers1ty of Pennsylvama hypnosts
expert sa1d "She must have been exposed to Gennan at
some po111t There s no way she could have learned tt any
other fashion ' He sa1d ev1dence used to support "splfltual or
remcarnallon mterpretatwns IS anecdoqal at best "
stevenson , who has been study111g cases of reported
re1ncarnatwns for 20 years, disagrees 'Language Is a
learned skill Anyone who has ever tried to learn one knows
that you must practice and practiCe "
Stevenson sa1d one .of the next steps will be to check
records to ftnd whether a g1rl named Gretchen Gottlieb hved
m a VIllage named Ebeswa!de m the 1870s It may not be that
s1mple There are several Ebeswaldes m Germany
Its been almost a year s111ce Mrs Jay was last hypnotized
and asswned the 'Gretchen personality " Jay satd there are
no plans to do 1t agam He sa1d he believes mfonnation from
the tapes should be enough to complete the study
Jay admitted from all the commotiOn created by ''Gretchen, ' that if g1ven the chmce, "!wish 1t never bappened "
But he added,' I dort't believe we have done anything wrong
I feel Ills a sclenl!ftc venture wh1ch now has to be completed
regardless of the consequences "

Bob Evans Farms has begun
construction of Its 17th fam1ly
style restaurant scheduled to
open an late spnng, 197.:
Located on Everhard Road at
f 77 m North Canton th1s Is the
company s th1rd restaurant m
norlheastern OhiO
Although a var1ety of country
foods are offered at Bob Evans
Re s taurants the fea lured
menu !lem 1s the saus,ge
products sold 1n mne states
tmder the Bob Evans Farms
name
fhe company currently
operates
family-style
restaurants m maJOr ctbes
throughout OhiO and 111
Florence, Ky Additional umts

Wall Street trader
works his ~deli

sudden change •
'No, not at all At th1s particular tune I'm very happy to
be m busmess at all It keeps
me busy physically and
mentally Before, I had JUst
been stttmg at my desk wa1ting
for the phones to rmg - for two
years But the stock market
gets m your velllS I have every
mtentlon of gomg back when
the market gets better "
How was tt on Wall Street?
"Exc1tmg life There's nothmg as exc1tmg as a bull
are planned for Youngstown
market Money Responand Dayton m OhiO, and m
Sibthty The day never ends at
fnd1anapol!s lnd
sundown Entertamment Dtnners Theater You travel
coast-t&lt;HOOast
seemg
mslttuttonai clients, gomg to
conventtons Everything on
DECISION fO BE MADE
expense
account "
EDMONTON (UP! ) - The
Pat - h1s full name IS
World Hockey Assoc1at1on
Pasquale
-IS a slun, trun
Board of Trustees was exf1gure
w1th
a
mop of black hatr,
pected to dec1de today 1f the
black
moustache,
wearmg a
financially plagued Michigan
white open neck shirt and wh1te
Stags, who have canceled three
apron
He opened the Dyker
consecutive home game.s, w1ll
Deh
m
h1s own neighborhood,
di sband unmed•ately or move
the
Dyker
Hetghts sectton of
to Baltimore
Brooklyn, on Dec 21 m partLea gue President Denms
nership
w1th hts nephew,
Mw-phy satd, " Very frankly,
Anthony
Mtceh,
24, known as
we have to make the deCISIOn
'
Butch
"
before we leave here •
'Butchie smother, my s1ster
The board ~&gt;as expected to
Mary.
1s one of our cooks, and
leave after tomght's All-Star
Mrs lise Gertke, the fonner
game
owner, IS the other We cook
everythtng nght here, roast
beef and all Got a spectal now
on the beef, $2 99 a pound, top
round
CAZZIE MAY PLAY
pneumoma"
"Incidentally, I think the
OAKlAND (UP! )- The L&lt;ls
Your soctallife as a bachelor market will turn upward soon
An geles Lakers may have
has gone to blazes•
I feel the economy wtll be
Cazzie Russell m the lmeup for
You better believe 1t This somewhat unproved m the
the first time this season when
busmess ts JUSt hke havmg a thtrd quarter of th1s year, and
they faC~J the Pacific Dmswnthe market usually reacts
ball and cham tied to you "
leading Golden State Warrtors
Are you sad about thts about SIX months ahead It
ton1ght
should show some real life
Russell, an ex-Warrtor, has
around February I'm anbeen s1delmed smce unIN EXERCISE
ttctpatmg returmng and
dergomg knee surgery m
RUTLAND - Navy Gtm leaVtng the bustness m the
October He was InJUred m an ner s Mate Third Class Rov E
hands of Butchie and my stster
exhibition game at Seattle
Powell, whose w1fe Penny IS
"It'll always be something to
The Lakers need Russell at the daughter of Mr and Mrs
fall back on when the market
forward smcc Conme Hawkins Kenneth Wolfe of Route 1
goes sow- agam -and It MIL
IS out w1th a broken fmger on
Rutland parltc!pated m an Always goes m cycles Hi, Mr
his nght hand
operatiOnal readmess trammg Rooney, what'll you have 1 "
exercise off the Cal!forma
The httle deli -15 by 40 feet
coast as a crew member of the -IS a real neighborhood JOmt
destro; er USS Turner Joy
In the wmdow 1s a stgn
Teams Needed for Slow Pitch
MAN FINED
Softball League For InformaIn 8) neuse Mayor Herman tion See Butch Inside "
London's court Monda) mght
Clinton Pierce Syracuse , was
fmed $25 and costs on disorderly conduct charges He was
c1ted to court by Pollee Ch1ef
M1lton Vanan
ByH D Quigg
UPI Senlor Edttor
BROOKLYN: U SA (UP!)
- Pat Tullo 34, stngle, formerly of Wall Street, now
clerkmg m a delicatessen,
stood bes1de h1s menu stgn
• Heroes Regular Hot • It
listed
everythmg
from
· Eggp lant pann $1 40" to
' V1rg Hm $1 40 "
Pat Tullo 1s a orte-man
example of the woes of WaJI
street He was a trader m
brokerage ftrms there for 14
years Never worked anywhere
else Wants to go back there
But not now Let hun tell 11
In 1972 I made $90,000 personal ' mcome In 1973 I
earned $5,500 In 1974 ! earned
$4,100 -and only $1,600 of that
came durmg the last s1x
months ! dectded to pack 1t tn
I qmt the ftrst week m
November to buy a delicatessen
' But q111t Is hardly the word
It was understood that when
thmgs got better I d come
back No anunos1ty ~ catered
the firm's Chnstmas party two
months after I left
"Would I consider remrunmg
m the dell busmess• No way I
work here from 7 to 7, and tt
leaves me so ltred that ! have
oo soc1allife At the heglllllmg,
I was workmg 18-19 hours a
day, mcludmg pamtlng fiXm g
up and stockmg In the first
month ! lost 18 pounds and
wound up w1th walkmg

January Sale

Credit easier
By RICHARD HUGHES
UPI Business Wrller
Gredtt for busmess ezpanston IS gomg to he eaSier
and cheaper, thanks to the
Federal Reserve Board's latest
money move
The Fed, the government's
money managers, Monday
pumped $1 ! billion into the
economy to help curb unemployment and busmess cutbacks
The action IS a major step in
the battle agall!St recesston
and means more and cheaper
credtt will be available through
the natton's 14,000 banks for
bosmess expsmsion It IS expected to produce continued
lowermg of the prune rate for
corporate loans
The Fed pumped the government funds tnto the banking
network by lowertng by onehalf to one percentage point the
money banks must keep on
hand agamst deposits
Thts, the seven-member
Federal Reserve Boad satd, IS
"destgned to pernut further
gradual unprovement in bank
hqutdtty and to facthtate
moderate growth" m the
natton's money supply The
vote to lower the reserve

Insurance for

Americans

housing will
be explained
MASON- An explanatiOn of
the availability of flood m
surance wtll be presented at
the Feb 3 meeting of Mason
Town COIIllcll
At Monday's Town Council
meeting tt was agreed to mvtte
Glenver Boggess of the
AdFederal
Housmg
mmtstratwn to discuss the
avallabil1ty of flood msurance
for residents of Mason m
regard to federal housmg
loans
In other achon Monday
mght, counc1l agreed to purchase school crossmg stgns for
U S 33, also known as Second
St , and approved the purchase
of a 3-M copter and the
necessary paper
Mayor Fred Taylor stated
t.ha t t~e pollee offtce ts bemg
remodeled wtth paneling of the
walls among the changes
In addtl!on to Mayor Taylor,
others present were recorder
Kenneth Reynolds, Charlotte
Jenks, Lawrence Roush,
Robert Roach, Walter Werry
and Dayton C Raynes

\,

News.

requirements was un~
a spokesman satd
It will take several weeks Ill
the additional funds to fillll
through the economy to a paiD
where they will he felt in Ill
government's battle agabll
receSSion and Wlemploytllllll
Elsewhere, crtt1c1sm o
President Ford's $30 bllllol
energy package grew as Flll'l
prepared to Implement be
executive action the hrst 111111
m makmg unported crude ot
more expenSive through a P 1
barrel tax LegislatiOn prepared to prevent tilt
taxation by act of Congress.
In new developments in 1111
energy crl818, two natural Jill
comparues un~ tough .._
tnct10ns on natural gas 1111,
another utility satd It IS almoll
lroke and others got or soUjlbl
higher prtces
More workers were d!acharged e1ther because of !be
general econonuc slwnp c.
because of cutbacks forced b)'
a reduction m gas supplies
_ In other developments:
~JioUStng Secretary Jamt11
T. nyrm SBJd 111 Dallas !be
mterest rate on government.baclted home mortgate l08DI
would be cut to 8 5 per cmt
effective today to help !be
depressed housmg mdustry.
Lynn al!o satd more than f1
billion tn rent and houslnl
substdles will be extended to
elderly, handicapped and poor

• •

-President Ford held more
conferences With econonuc advisers and prepared for a
major news conference today
and a speech to businessmen
Wednesday.
-William F Ford, chief
economist for the Amer1can
Bankers Association, said
major U S banks face heavy
loan losses m 1975 but have
prepared for 1t by setting aside
1974 profits to prevent future
bank failures

Pleasant Valley Hospital
DISCHARGES
Mrs
James Counctl, Langsville, Icy
Neal, Leon, Clarence Waugh,
Pomt Pleasant, Norman
McBrayer, Romt Pleasant,
Ellis Corll, Phny, Samuel
Anderson, Hartford; Lmda
Johnson, Northup; Mrs James
Batrd, Southside, Mary
Beagle, New Haven, Mrs
Boggs, Patnot; Mrs Brady
Bonecutter, Leon, Mrs Paul Grunm and daughter, Letart;
Mrs Ray Smtth, Pmnt
Pleasant, Mrs Nora L&lt;Jonus,
Harold Loorn1s and Edna
Baxter, Pomt Pleasant

in Briefs

Continued from page I
Paulk was dead when he was camed 111to Santa Maruca Medical
Center Today, doctors say they expect him to recover
Dr William G Plested was credited with savtng Paulk'slife
Plested, sensmg there was no time for anesthesia, qu1ckly cut
tnto Paulk's chest, spread hlB r1bs and took the heart .in his hand
to sew up the stab wound Police SBid It took etght persons to hold
the still-eonsc1ous Paulk m place, but a spokeswoman for the
center denied the report.
"The man was essentially dead or dymg at the time," said
Dr Janesta Janzen "He d1d not respond even to deep pain when
his chest was opened "

MIAMI - THE 500-FOOT CYPRIOT TANKER Lucky Era
ran aground on a Bahamian reef early today, exploded and burst
mto flames The Coast Guard satd the Russian ship, Aleksandr
Kollontay, rushed to the stricken tanker's aid, lowered small
boats and removed 34 crewmen from the Cypriot ship
At 8 a.m the Coast Guard sa1d the fires aboard the Cypriot
tanker "were still burrung out of control "The Coast Guard said
tt was not urunedtately !mown if the lanker was loaded with fuel
or where 11 was heading when it ran aground. The Coast Guard
SBJd the Lucky Era ran aground on the eastern reef of
Mayaguana Island in the South Ca1cos cham of the Bahamas,
some 4&amp;0 miles south of Minmf

A Tnp? Weddmg? Car ? Deposit money, regularly. m a savmgs
account . It's the way to make that
dream w~c true. Interest rates )
Htghest allowed by law

FINE FURNITURE!

Auto Teller Window and
Walk-up Window
Open Friday Even1ngs 5 to 7 P.M.

When You Visit, Park FREE PITTSBURGh

lilbens ,alional B hk

15E
HOT WATER
..._ _ DISPEISER

AT

••n•

No mor e tn l t!IIU to te nd o
111
• •• 1!.&gt; bill Th e ISE ti ot Wat er O t

CINCINNA T!

~1\SII

Cit Yeft UD 10 61) CUDt ~~ 1110
• ~ !lour r 9 1'11 n;:o •
to hot dr
III II 1 ti;OUDI
t::eretlf oegetall II

"'a

'

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
'
"The Fnend!y Bank"

DeposiTS Insured by FD!Cto S40,ooo

BAKER
FURNITURE
Midd
I

rt, VIIIU

n' s

anD s co• •• ol llou anota tUU •~en u
••rm111g ~ t by botll es e r too. .,. "9 I•
lids Hl nd iQ"'• Cll f'-'''" J p ~I '" Ill l'llal
•• 1t a nt "" 11 - no t! n"ly lflsttll l on s ~k
b- l1.ue11 I &amp;Mml)l' or o " r:cu n tii10b ~ • • •
by ISE H.., t We t• r Olt pen1 tl Moe
you wor~ li me and ttmoer ' ""'rymtt

Sayre Hardware
New Haven. W Va
682 2S2S

SALE I
MEN'S DOUBLE KNIT

DRESS SLACKS

-

•

Future C&amp;SOE building
hangs on increase in rate

recalled in

t

:*

·-

Meigs' past

t

•

•

at

enttn e

Co-op to
•
organize
Ufi d er Ia w

Price rise slows down

Veterans
~

Officers elected
by Citizens· Bank

invited to

organiZe

High court 5-4
on student side

Teachers go in training

Production cut !4 ·at Kaiser

Regular pr~ces $10 .95 to
$16 95 Stzes 29 to 42 waist.

I

Two

Deckhand drowned

1h PRICE

WRESTLING MEETING
Wrestling offiCials and
coaches of southeastern Ohio
and any mterested persons Will
meet al 8 p m Wednesday at
the MeJgS High School

By GENE CARLSON
meetmg of the Conference
··--·~~
WASH! NGION \UPI) Board , 11 Ne\\ York based
0
blO'O'leS Pres1dent Ford told U1e natiOn busmcss 1 escarch group On
~~he would veto a gasoline fhur sday, he mee ts w1th
;~
rat10nmg b1ll and reject au governors of Ne \\ England
-j
thonty to unpose "age-puce states. the reg ton most lik ely to
,.,v
controls He \\as horrtfted ' reel a ptnch Ill heatmg Oil pt tce
COLUMBUS I UPJ) - Arthur Green, pres 1~ent of
over duvtng Ute goverruuent mucases
,x
Colun1bus and Southern Ohio Electric Co testified I uesday -:l
another $75 b1lhon 10 the red
F'r1da; Ford 11111 luke the
Uwt future construction by the ullh ty Will requu e an un- ~l
It \\as the start of a Ford fir st aL tu al step m h1s -.· tncdaate 19 per ce nt rate htke
~j
Wttz to sell tu s ~t:ononm: p10g: ranJ on e of th e fe w
CSOE IS askmg PUCO to approve a $50 7 m1ll10n rate ;-.::~
fh e ) ears t937 ,and 19&gt;0 me program to the nat ton
allowed \\ tlhout cong1ess10nal
1
mcrease affectmg )learly all of 1ts customers m central and ;:~
In a televtSl&gt;d news c onfer~ approval lie "Ill s1gn an
b1 g m the \\ ea th er .mnals of
so uU1ern Oh1o "'lh $27 I m!lhon_ of that total m emergency '1}
MC!gs Coun t) The fi rst " as ence Tuesday, Ford also sa1d exet'Utlve order ra1smg the
~
rate mcreases
:·:
when a lot of watet came 1n the Umted States reserved the tanff on 1n1p01 ted Cl udc ml
Keith Henley, an assistant Oh10 attorney general, ques- @
Januarv , the second when 11 lot nght to go to war to prevent from a token 42 cents a barrel
•
honed Green wheU1er or not Ute company s facts m their '.I'J
economtc
strdngulat!On ' to ~ · md e1entually $3 a barrel
of snow cam e m No\ ember
appllcalton JUStify the emergency met ease or proposed ~~
In case th e oncomm g through cutoff of 1ts overseas
A 1 1ber of Democrats have
expendttures are reasonable
~
gene1 atwn has d o ub~ about petroleum suppl y But he hunbusted Ford s plan to hoost
;
Henley pou1ted out that the company rece~ved a rate ~@
th1s b1t of local h!Ston the cautioned th1s •as a hypo- tanffs cmd exc1se taxes on
mcrease of $24 m•lhon to $25 nulhon based on present level :-;
fl ood IS pJCtut ed ~above ) at thetical que stion of the most forelb'11 and dome stic 011 as
==~
of expemses then and future construction
::-.,
near crest level tn the aren of extreme kmd
1nftal10narv
Ga so ltn e
Henley sa1d the company Is now seekmg an additiOnal $27 ~:j
Ford used most of the sessiOn rat10nmg has been offered as
the Blue Grey corne1 Mam
million - even more than the first mcrease - usmg the t~
w1lh reporters to boost h1s ant! &lt;HI ener gy savmg alteJmt tn t•
and Court Pomero)
same construction program as Justlftcatmn
·•
rccesswn package of economic
And Mrs C H W1 se J1
But m ,, prepared statement
While only a few consumer wttnesses appeared as com- ;::
Waverly, provided the pKiure and energy proposals unveiled before takmg questiOns, Ford
pared to Monday's openmg sessiOn exammer W1lham ~:,
•
at left of the heavy sno• of last week 10 hiS State of the turned thumbs down An efDonahue sa1d all cll!zens will be g1ven a_c~:~c.e .~~ ~~.s!~:~_. _
November, 19&gt;0 shoWIOf the Umon message
fe ct! ve ratiOning program
He planned a follow-up sales would take five to ten years
s1de of the M1ddlepm t Lunch
p1tch tomght to a Washmgton and would hm1t the average motonst to about mne gallons cuns1dered such an act, he
Room
of gasolme a week, workmg a srud The President prom1sed
special hardship on farmers to consult With Congress before
and long-dastance commuters, conumtling American troops
he sa1d
to any future mUltary act10n
Ford sa1d the mth\ary sttuaLater,
dunn g
the
questlonmg, he sa1d that 1f tion 111 South Vtetnam 1s grave
Congress legtslates mandatory and that the United States
gasolme rat•onmg he would should tncrease a1d to th e
veto 11
Satgon government by $300
Devoted 1'o 1'1ze Interests of The Meigs-M;1so11 Are11
The pnce tag of Ford's anti- rn!lhon -to $1 b1lhon m the
' ecesswn program ts an es- current fiscal year --to help
VOL XXVI NO 197
tunated deftc1t m the current stave off attacks by Nort11
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
WEDNESDARY JANUARY 22 1975
15 CENTS ftscal
year of $30 b!llton and $45 VIetnamese and V1et Con g
b11llon m fiscal 1976
forces
Ford said he was 'horrified"
On the domestiC h ont, he
EXTENDED FORECAST
at those figures But he added sa1d a bilhon-&lt;lollar plan for
'I behev~ that It Is the right governn~ent-backed health mFriday through Sunday, a
chance o( SUO\\ In northern
med1c1ne for our curre nt suranee drafted by the NIXon
Illness And I think that if we admtmstratlon will not be put
counties and ram In southern
had nothmg, the pat1ent would forward m the proposed 1976
sections., Frtdoy. Fa ir
By RICHARD HUGHES
of wages -whah left to spend supply to the tlve plants The Unemployement 111 the Motor Saturday with a chance of
have been m much worse budget because of spendmg
UPI Business Writer
after adJustments for higher company SaJd thts would mean City IS 17 9 per cent, compared Sunday snow flurries ,
lunltatlons
condition "
Pr1ces are still gomg up pnces and taxes --exceeded productiOn cutbacks and thus wtth the natwnal average of mamly m northern sectums
Ford s carefully worded anAnd he defended his decision
but not as fast as they did most that of lnflatton
swer to a QUeStiOn to pOSSible to ratse the cost of food stamps
layoffs When the FPC par- 7 1
Highs will be In the mid or
of last year
At a news conference, Presi- l!ally restored the gas sUpply,
future US military mvolve- to the poor and to eut
upper 30s m the north and In
• Detrmt has been the har
The Labor Department re- dent Ford defended his propos- the steel company canceled the
The Southeastern Oh10 ment m the M1ddle East en- automatic mcreases m Soc1al
dest hit of all Clites m the the lower 40s 111 the south
ported Tuesday the cost of al to for higher fuel oil and layoffs
Farmers
Co-Op commit tee dorsed a sumtlar statement Security benefits from 9 to 5
Lows
will
range
from
the
Uruted States and we're gettmg
livtng mdex rose 0 7per cent m gasoline taxes He satd the
Armco Steel of M1ddletown , JUSt a pittance," satd Coun- m1d to upper 20s north to the
Tuesday mght di scussed recently by Secretary of State per cent
December, the smallest maJor alternative, ral!onmg, Ohw, reported record earnmgs
Ford repeated his promtse to
low 30s south
req111rements of state statutes Henry Klssmger
Cilwoman Erma Henderson
monthly riSe stnce July. The would be unfatr and inef- of $204 2 m•lhon for 1974
veto
any new money bills sent
" U a COWlfry ts bemg
to have the g• oup become a
Meanwhtle, ,Amencan
pnce mdex showed, however, fective Ford sa1d he would
Detroit IS constdermg askmg Motors jotned the other US
leg a ll y
c on s t!lu te d strangled,:' the President said, to hun by Congress, except
that 111 1974 the annual-rate of veto any btU Congress passed the federal government to automakers 111 offermg cash
• and I use 'strangled' m the those m the energy f~eld
cooper attve
inflation was 12 2 per cent, reqwrtng 11
Ford sa1d that 1f Congress
of the hypothetiCal
sense
declare 11 a dtsaster area rebates to stunulate new car
Tentative agzeemen t was
highest smce the end of World
llllplements
ius program, he
But New Hampshtre Gov
questiOn,
that
m
effect
means
because of soarmg unemploy- sales
made on the group s name
War !I
expects
a
'jturn..around
' rn
Meldrm Thomson, a Repub- ment and SOCial problems
meetmg place and a broad that a coW1try has the right to
At least one btg company, lican, satd he would Circulate
range of plll poses were p1 otect 1tself agalliSt death " economic actmty by la te
US Steel, canceled layoffs In pet!l!ons 1n hundreds of
But an embargo slm1!ar to the sununer and hopefully also Jess
discussed
New Hampshire, the governor grocery stores and serviCe
one
unposed in 1973 by the unemployment
A comm1ttee w1ll meel w1th
pushed a grass-roots campatgn stat1ons agrunst both ratlonmg
an attorney on Fnday mght to Arab ml block would not be
agamst higher fuel prices or and Ford's program
•
make the fmal draft of the
gasoline rat10nmg
• Tins ts better than takmg
articles of mcorpor.atwn
Irwtn Kellner, economtst at court act1on agamst the PresiA rough draft of the by-laws
Manufacturers Hanover Bank dent," Thomson said
RIO GRANDE - R10 Grande will be prepared at that
m New ~York, sa1d even more
Co llege and Rw Grande mee lmg to be presented to the
U S Steel canceled planned
encouragmg was an mcrease of layoffs of 1,300 workers at f1ve
Commun1ty
College students body at a speCial meetmg, to be
Three new officers were Gene Grate assastan t vtce
0 6 per cent m the purchas111g plants The Federal Power named at the annual meetmg
hope
to
establish
a new announced later
president, and Edward Ow st,
power of conswners
orgamzat10n on the campus for
CornmiSston last week ordered of stockholders aud dtrectors of ass1stant cashier
WASHING TON ( UPI) - The process rules must be applied
The pnces of several
For the first t1me m stx Carnegte Gas Co , a U S steel the C1l!zens NatiOnal Bank m
veterans
and
persons
rece1vmg
products were giVen to the Supreme Court ruled &gt; to 4 to make sure tlle sUspension Is
Directors reelected mclude
months, the purchasmg power subsidiary, to cut the gas Middleport Tuesday
G
I Btl! benef1 ts
group for comparison wtth today that public high school warranted, White srud
James F Arnold, Rodney
Ben
Snyder
of
RIO
Grande
A school administration Will
students are entitled to present
local suppliers
Manmng Kloes, who has Downmg, Dale M Dutton
and
W1lham
Cant
rell
of
meet
the court's reqUirements
The attorney w11J attempt to their case at an mformal
been cashter, was elected to Bernard V Fultz, Jay Hall, Sr
Galhpohs,
both
students,
hale
1f
11
tells
a student why he may
have all legal WVI k done m hearing before they can be
the pos!llons of viCe president Harold E Hubbard, Rose S
proposed
the
new
Veterans
'
be suspended and g1ves hun an
order that membership fees suspended from school
and cash1er, L&lt;l1s McE!hmny, Re) nolds and Paul S. Smart
orgamzahon
and
Will
conduct
opporturuty
to present h1s own
The
Cow-t
said
nme
Colwnand
orders
can
be
taken
at
the
who has been serv 1n g as
President Hubbard reported
the
f~rst meetmg th1s evemng
stde
of
the
story
next meehng E1ghty-two bus, Oh1o high school students
asStstant cashter was elected 1974 had been a good year for
"In the great maJonty of
By United Preoolnternatfonal
ass1stant v1ce president and the bank and he pledged that at 8 tn Room Ill, Anmversary farms were represented at last were demed their nghts to due
BELFAST -THE IRISH REPUBUCAN ARMY has ended Chester Kmg was elected the bank w11! contmue to be Hall, on the R10 Grande mght s meehng
process of law when they were cases the dlsc!plmar!an may
suspended for up to 10 days informally discuss the alleged
the !measy no-war, no-peace timbo tn Northern Ireland w1th an assistant cashter
actave tn commumty affairs Campus
All
area
veterans
are
mv•ted
Without a heartng because of misconduct wtth the student
outbreak of hombmgs and shootmgs leaVtng at least three perOther officers r eelected and provade bankmg serv aces
to
attend
whether
they
are
Rw
mmutes after zt has occurred,"
thetr alleged role
1n
sons dead Desp1te the fresh fighting, Bnhsh and IRA offtctals mcluded Paul S Smart, mentmg the contmued conworked behind the scenes 1n an attempt to negotiate a resump- cha1nnan of the board, Harold fidence of the stockholders Grande College students or JUst
Two cars were damaged and widespread student unrest m White srud
mterested
an
be
commg
'We hold only that, m bemg '
tion of the collapsed hohday cease-fire
E Hubbard, president , Ber- customers and busmess
the dm er of one of them was 1971
students
Purpose
of
the
g~ven
an opporturuty to explam
Jusl!ce
Byron
R
White,
The British army satd all the v1ctuns m Tuesday's eruption nard V Fultz \Ice president
community
Ci ted to mayor s court as the
orgamzahon
IS
to
gav
e
a
his verston of the facts at this
of Northern Ireland VIolence were members of the outlawed
result of an acc ident on wr•tmg for the maJority, satd
11
collectJVe vmce to the vetenms
dlscusston,
the student f1rst be
that
a
10-day
supenswn
was
8
ffiA's mtlttant proVJs!Onal wmg An army spokesman srud two
Mulberry Ave at 5 30 p m
on campus and to help others
told what he Is accused of domg
senous
event
m
the
hfe
of
the
ffiA guerrillas died Tuesday mght when a car loaded With exTuesday
w1th problems 10 gettmg the G
suspended child "
and what the basts of the acplostves blew up m downtown Belfast He sa1d an IRA gunman
Pomeroy pollee sa1d a southAs a result, mmunwn due cusatiOn 1s "
I B1ll Snyder and Cantrell
was shot to death Tuesday mormng m an attempt to htjack a bus
hound car dr1ven by Claren ce
sa1d
the
new
group
will
be
near the border
Meetmg w1th the Me~gs s!b!hly such payments would
Mcintyre, Racme , sk1dded
Count) CommiSSIOners be The money w1ll be trans composed entirely of veterans over the centerlme and struck
For more mformatwn on the
PHNOM PENH - A 20-SHIP SUPPLY convoy sailed Tuesday were Joe Barsotti, !erred by authonl!es to e~ther
a northbound car dnven b)
through fierce rebel ftre today tn an attempt to reach Phnom director of the Commuml) CAP or the commissiOners, new orgamzahon contact Raymond Hoce, Pomeroy The
Penh before the ctty's dWindling food reserves l'Wl out by the end Acl!on Program (CAP), and w1th the recipient to be w e1ther Ben Snyder or W1lham Hoce car had moilerate
LETART FALLS - MIChael portal!On Co
Cantrell at RIO Grande College
of the week Military officers satd the convoy, loaded wtth food, Hazel McKelvey , both to charge of payments
damage the Mcintyre car Wayne Fisher, 24 , Pt
F1sher fellm the Ohw R1 ve1
fuel and ammumt1on,left the South VIetnamese port of Tan Chau review the new T1tle VI
In other busmess permlSsJOn
mmor There v.ere no lnJUfl es Pleasant, acctdently drowned
m about 25 to 30 feet of u.ter
Tuesday eventng and headed up the Mekong Rtver tnto Cam- program, a federally funded was gran ted to Robert Buck,
Mcintyre was Cited on a left of th1s mormng at 6 50 am when The captam, RIChard Ta; lor,
SQUAD SUMMONED
hodia
prOJect to create JObs for COIIllty court judge, and h1s
he shpped and fell between two and another deckhand , Ira
The Middleport Emergency center charge
The officers SaJd lllSurgent gunners along the rtver's jungled unemployed
employes to attend a meetmg
barges at the s1te of R1chards Haye saw F1sher fall
Squad answered a call to
banks be,gan "extremely heavy" attacks agatnst the convoy SIX
The vtsttors discussed 10 Colwnbus, Jan 30
Dragg1ng operations are
and Son Inc , Sand and Gravel
DEER KILLED
miles mto Cambodia Guerrilla frogmen also cut the cable of a payment of soc1al secuntY,
Attendwg were Robert Hysell Run at 3 09 p m ,
bemg conducted by Racme ,
The Me~gs County Sheriff's Co near here
barge m the convoy, sending the vessel floating back 111to South benefits for those employed by Clark Henry Wells and Tuesday for Mrs Leroy
Pomeroy and Middleport, TriDale
Taylor,
general
VIetnamese waters, the off1cers sa1d
the project but came to no Warden Ours, commtsstoners, Bartrwn who was 111 She was Department reported Tuesday manager lor Rtchards and Son, State Matenals and Richards
1n other actton, tnsurgents fll'ed a barrage of 22 rockets mto dec1s10n on whos e re spon and Martha Chambers, cle1k taken to Veterans Memonal at 6 &gt;O p m that a deer was
Hospital and admitted At 5 34 killed on SR 7 near Chester and Reserve TransportatiOn and Son Sand and Gravel
Pochentong Airport thts mornmg m an attempt to close Phnom
The m1ssmg man IS the son of
p m the squad was called to when 1t ran mto the path of a Co reported that Fisher was a
Penh's last remammg source of supplies Military off1cers
Mrs
Ros1e H1ggenbotham ,
deckhand
on
the
Tradewmd
North Second Ave for Ruth tractor trailer dmen b) Dana
reported only ltght damage
Pomt
Pleasant,
1! was learned
Hawkins , who was Ill She was W Murray, Rt 2, Pomeroy owned by the Reserve TransRACINE - Supt of Schools Umvers1ty, who has done also taken to Veterans
COLUMBUS - STATE AUDITOR THOMAS E Ferguson
Bobby Ord sa1d Tuesday e~tens1ve work w1lh teachers Memqpal Ho,p!tal and adtoday annmmced January distrtbution of $3 46 million to Ohio's 88
Jumor and Semor H1gh m southeastern OhiO m th1s mitted
COW\ties and 351 cities and villages levymg tncome taxes
teachers m the Southern Local area
Ferguson sa1d d1stnbut10n for January was $541,445less than
District Will parl!c1pate 10 two
RAVENSWOOD - KaiSer one of four the Mead hne one last year , and demand 1s exThe tra1mng Is be10g
the amount distributed tn December and $62,375 more than the
DRIVER FINED
tn-s ervtce trammg sess1on s prOVIded by the Southern UJCaJ
pected to contmue to decline m
amount distnbuted m January, 1974
Robert W Mood1spaugh, 22, Alwnmwn &amp; Chem1ca! Cor- of e1ght
dur10g January, both des1gned Board of Educahon Ill con- Middleport, was fmed $25 and poratiOn today announced that
A spokesman at Ravenswood the f1rst quarter ,' Mater said
to help them be more effective Juncl!on w1th the InstructiOnal costs when he appeared 10 the 11 w11l reduce operahng rates at sa1d Tuesday, "Up to ioo JObs
"We expect the alummwn
CARACAS- VENEZUELA'S SWEEPING REFORM of 1ts
teach1ng
undermol!vated
Its
prtmary
alumtnum
market
to beg m to 1mprove m
could be mvolved "
Resource Center of the South- court of M1ddleport Mayor
oil tax, pnce and freight cost structure will not mean iiicreased
students Teachers wtll learn eastern
C~ne ll C Ma1er Prestdent
the second half of thiS year,
Ohw
Regwnal Fred Hoffman Tuesday mg~t smelters at Ravenswood W
cost for conswners, government oil experts SBid today The U S
how
to
use
behaviOr Education Service Agenc)
Va
and
Mead,
Washmgton,
and
barrmg a deeper and more
and
Ch1ef
Executive
Offtcer,
and oth e~ foretgn oil comparues here, htt by a 38 cent per barrel
on a reckless operation charge
modlft
caho
n
te
c
hmque
s,
effechve
February
J.
prolonged
recessiOn, we expect
sa1d the reduchons are bemg
add1tior.al tax mcrease, however, are expected to try to recover
W1lham C Johnson, 58 ,
methods and procedures for
The cutbacks w1ll take one made to brmg operatmg rates 1976 to be a very strong
at lea' ' v•1 of the cost through tncreases tn consumer prtces
Pomeroy , forfeited a $50 bond
mod1fy1ng ms tru ctwnal ' ap·
pothne
out of opera lion at each more m lme w1th the current alummum demand year
On 1uesday, Venezuela announced mcrease tn tncome taxes
posted on a diSorderly mann~r
proache s, and techmques
plant,
a
hne w1th a rated an - and anticipated needs of the We 've (l)bu1lt depleted mpatd by th e oil companies and at the same time cut back artiftclal
charge
to
reach
the
un
l&lt;Jws
tomght
10
low
20s
nual
capac1ty
of app1 ox1mately market
ventones to a more sattsfacbe
tter
expQrt values for tts 2.6 million barrel per day exports and
ASK
TOWED
dennohvated student
Cloudy Thursday , h~gh 10 the
40,000 tons at Ravenswood , one
' Alummum demand, Im- tory level and, consequently, a
rrl •·ed fretght charges As a result of the refonn, Venezuela
Stephen
Wayne
PriCe',
18,
Consultant
for
the
IOtl!al
30s
Probabtht
y
of
w1th
a
rated
annual
capac1ty
of
upper
pacted
by !he slumpmg reduction m operatmg rates is
n""• • cetves$9 S8 per barrel m state re1~ue, while the average
M
iddleport
,
and
Marv
Kathryn
pree~
p1
ta
t
wn
20
pot
toda;
and
approximat
ely
25,000
tons
at
necessary until the market
sess1on on Janua•y 23rd "!II he
nahon~l economy has dropped
&lt;'XI', t valuefor r•ude and refined oifft&lt;~t from $1 91 to $1 14 per
W
erry
17,
Pomeroy
Mead The Ravenswood line ts considerable from the levels of turns up agam ,'' he satd
Dr James Grubb of Oh10 tomght 10 pet T'l ursday
barrel
.--

Title VI reviewed

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

WOMEN TO MEET
A meeting of the Me1g.
County Christian Women s
Fellowship wtll be held at 7 30
p m Thursday at the Pomeroy
Church of Chr~st The Middleport Chw-ch of Chnst group
will be m charge of devol!ons

-

J

Ford vows to veto
•
•
any gas rationing

Autos collide

of

FLEXSTEEL

I

Solid colors and patterns.

-------MENSS49.9S
Double Knit

SPORT COATS

Weather

SALE '24.88
•

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
----------~----~~,
'
I '
••

-

-

r

'

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