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"• ' I

I ,

.

R-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Feb. 3, 1975

Report from Americ.a

·

Gigantic coupJe ·dines out
SHELBYVIU.E, Ind . (UPI)
- The tallest girl in the world
finally had her first date during
the weekend.
Nineteen-year-old Sandy
Allen went out with Dan
Gerber, 7-foot-2.
Sandy is 7-foot~ and is listed
in the Guinness Book of
Records as the world's taUest
woman.
Gerber, 22, traveled 211
.miles from Flora, !II., to take
out Miss Allen after reading a
newspaper article about her.
Despite tbe number of photograPhers and reporters pre,
sent, the couple said, "It is
possible for two people over
seven-feet tall to have a normal
date ."
Miss Allen indicated she
might like to try another date
- if they could find an inbetween meeting , place since
the 211 miles was \oo much for
either to nego ti ate with
regularity.
The date ended with a dinner
in Indianapolis. Waitress
Sandy Fisk said she served the
following :

Miss Allen had three shrimp potato, salad, two buckets of
cocktails, three lklunce filet hot rolls, hot popcorn served in
mignons, ·two giant baked salad bowls, a double pie a ia
potaines with two oversized mode - washed down with ' 19
orders of fren ch-fried mush- soft drinks. .
The couple was accompanied
rooms. a double order of
omon rings and salad. For by Dan's sister, Mrs. Judy
dessert, a dbuble order of ice Bryan, who drove him from
cream ca ke, a triple banana F1ora to Shelbyville for the
split, followed by another triple date.
version of shrimp cocktail and ' Also along was Miss Allen's
two soft drinkss.
6-year-oid brother, Mike WarGerber had a shrimp cock- ner. He settled for a hamburtali, three filets, a baked ger.

="~::~~ ·;;:;. ;:;1 Vandals hit
away your woolens soon now

.

.

:®

I

winter ~

·

-

.

·

KC 0 ££•Ice
.
.

Frank E. Gress

dieq on Friday
Frank E. Gress, 54, Chicago,
lll ., a professional musician,

died Friday at the St. Joseph
·· PUNXSUTAWNEY, Po. (UPII - Itwasa raw
Hospital in Chicago.
morning and the temperature was a ch!Uing 27 degrees. But ~
.
Mr. Gress was born Aug . 11,
PuDxsutawney Phil, the forecaster without peer saw what ~
·
1920.
He was preceded in death
his shivering foUowers could never soe and only hope for - i::
by his father, Frank Gress of
a short winter, with spring just aroWJd the corner.
·
For
the
second
time
this
found
by
Ed
Spears,
Gallia
Pomeroy, and his wife, Gladys.
AI 7:31 a . m. EST, Sunday, the famed groundhog,
year,
vandals
struck
the
office
County
Schools
Maintenance
.Mr . Gress had been a
known as 'the chief weather propostiealor In the United
of Kyger Creek High School man.
member
of the Musicians
Stales (lbe world?l " peekl-d out of bls warm, winter burrow
Principal
Robert
L.
Lanning
According
to
deputies,
Union in Chicago area the past
on Gobbler's Koob to make his annual weather predietion ..
over
the
weekend.
someone
apparently
crawled
30
years. Before becoming a
PbU looked around, concluded there was no way.he was -~
Gallia
Co
unty
sheriff's
onto
the
roof
of
the
school
and
professional
musician, during
going to see bls llhadow on such a cloudy morning, told !§]
deputies
said
th ~ entry oc- down into the closed.Jn yard . his high school years and '
Groundhog Club president Sam Light tho good news aod ;§
turred some time alter 1:30 near the principal's office. shortly after, Gress played in
went back to bed. .
~
Ugbt, 19, who for nearly a quarter'&lt;'entury bas:carried :,~ a.m. Sunday. The damage was They broke out a window next several local orchestras. His
,to the air conditioner in Lan- primary instrument was the
on the 89-year-old tradition of tappiJ;tl! on Phil's door every
ning's office.
saxophone.
Feb. 2 to ask lor a forecast, said Pb1l reaDy surprised him.
Surviving are his mother,
Once
inside,
the
intruders
"I said, 'What, no sbadow?" Ugbtsaid. "Just last night
Lillian
Gress of F'orperoy ; two
damaged
and
ransacked
I heard on the news that there was a big snowstorm in the
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
sons,
Randy
of lafayette, Ind.,
Lanning 's desk. They also
West."
February 1, 1975
entered the school's outer and Frank of Chicago; a
Ugbt, however, did nolleII Phil about the snow.
Sales Report of
office
and ransacked the desk grandson, Randy of lafay~tie;
DENVER CITY , Tex. (UP! ) door neighbor, the J. C. Patton
"Who am I to teU him about the weather," Ugh! said.
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
family
,
who
lived
ao
yards
of
high
school secretary Mrs. two sisters, Mrs. David (Betty)
- The whit&lt; cloud of poison
, : "He's tbe chief weather progoastlcator In the United
STOCKER CATTLE - Diane Bittinger.
closer
to
the
wellhead,
.
and
Ohlinger of Middleport, and
gas billowed from the ruptwed
States."
STEERS - 250 to 300 lbs. 19 to
Missing
were
keys
taken
Mrs .
Leon
(Patricia)
oil well and drifted 200 yards, prayed that he wa\m't too late.
So start putting your woolens in mothbnilo, shine up the
24 ; 300 to 400 lbs. ro to 25.50; 400 from a key cabinet and student
He was. Glenda Patton , 40,
McKnight
of
Pomeroy;
a
seeping ·into the home of Tom
golf clubo aod restring the tennis racquet. When PbU says , to 500 lbs. 20 to 25.25; 500 to 600
answered
the'
call
and
her
42files
taken
from
cabinets.
brother,
Richard
of
Middleport
Merrill . Inside Merrill, his wife
lbs.20 to 26.25; 600 to 700lbs. 19
year-old husband went outside
The vandals took time out to and several nieces and
and two sons were asleep.
to 27.50; 700 lbs. and Over 22 to write obscene language on
winter
over
',
nephews.
Essie Merrill, 31, awoke, at their home to see where the
29.75.
Lanning's desk and spilled
Funeral services will be held
first not kn owing exactly why. smell could be coming from.
HEIFER CALVES - 250 to beer over it and the office · at 10 a. m. Tuesday at the
But
the
Pattons
made
the
She looked at the clock beside
300 lbs. 17 to 2.1; 300 to 400 lbs.· carpet. Missing was a small
'
Sacred Heart Church in
their bc&gt;d It was 5 a.m. Sunday. fat al mistake of retwning to
18 to 21.75; 400 to 500 lbs. 20 to calculator and $18 in change.
the house. Mrs. Patton called
Pomeroy with the Rev. Father
There was something wrong.
24 ; 500 to 600 lbs. 19 to 24.50; 600
the
city
police
and
then
called
Deputies
also
reported
the
Paul Welton officiating. Burial
She sniffed once, twice and
to '100 lbs. 18 to 23.75; 700 lbs. school yard had been damaged
back
the
Merrill
household
to
Con
tinued
from
page
I
will be in Sacred Heart
shoo k her 33-year-old husband
and Over 20 to 26.
tell them that her husband had
by spinning car wheels.
Cemetery. Rosary services
from his slwn ber .
appeared before Judge Bacon
STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS (By
Meanwhile,
Gallipolis
aty
will
be held at 7:30 this evening
"I recognize the odor and come back inside and passed
on a bill of Information and The Head) -Stock Cows 120 to
out.
Minutes
later
they
and
Police
officers
investigated
at the Ewing Funeral Home
knew what we were up
entered a plea of guilty. He 160; Stock Cows and Calves 135
their 18-year-old daughter
three
acts
of
vandalism
and
a
where friends may · call
agai nst, " Merrill said.
pleaded guilty to depriving the to 215; Stock Bulls 115 to 165;
theft complaint over the anytime.
He and his wife scram bled Deede were dead.
owner, the Meigs Local School Baby Calves 15 to 40 ; (By The
So were six others caught in
into the next room and for ced
District of a mechanism for Poundt - Canners &amp; Cutters weekend. ,
'
ST.
WUIS
The
Second
the
deadly
cloud
of
gas
fumes
Edsel New reported someone
their children out of . bed.
Coat Guard District, including testing blood pressure, a tape Cows 15 to 18.25; Holstein Cows slashed the tires on his car
from
an
~attended
carbon
Merrill grabbed for the phone,
0
player, a set of scales and an 18 .25 to 20.60; Commercial
dialed the nun1ber of their next dioxide Injection system de- the Middle Ohio River Valley, AC-DC power supply unit Bulls ( 1,000 lbs . and Over I 20 to which was parked on Third
signed !o squeeze as much oil emergency t&lt;iephone number
Ave. near Bob Rees parking
valued at more than $150.
24.
as poSsible from a well.
'' has been changed. The switch
lot.
Black was arrested on Jan.
VEAL CA LVES - Tops 220
TWO TREATED
Tile Merrills escaped. He was made necessary by a new 30 by the sheriff's Dept. on a
Officers were called to BOb
lbs.
to
250
49
to
54.50;
Medium
Centrex
Telephone
System
The
Middleport
E·R squad
weaved his family out to his
charge of bemg an accessory to 200 lbs. to 300 31 to 42; Culls 30 Saunders' Quaker State Ser- 1111swered a caD to Rutland St.
~eing
install,ed
by
Southcar, pushed his children in the
vice Center where someone cut
a burglary which occurred on
back seat, got his wife· in the wes tern Bell Telephone Jan. 19 at Meigs High School. Down.
the air hose outside the station at 8a. m. Monday for Carl Steel
Company
.
SHOATS
8
to
12.
who was suffering a severe
passenger's seat and climbed
and placed a tire over it.
"ON~ OFTHE BfST EVER MADE!"
Black was released on his own
L~ l Mltlll fl 11111
•
Beginning
February
1st
all
behind the wheel.
Harold Ault of 39 Garfield nosebleed. He was taken to
recognizance by Judge Bacon.
Coast
Guard
numbers
had
the
"We managed to back out In
Ave. reP&lt;Irted someone broke a Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The Information affidavit was
the road and she (his wife) fell prefi~ 425 ins~ ad of.the ~ld 622. prepared by Prosecutor Fultz.
'
- glass with a B.B. gun. Phil The squad also took Roy
Dwing
an
emergency
any
over my foot, sJ8mming the
Stevers of Rodney reported the Boggs, 41, to Veterans
" Good
salesmanship
person
utilitzing
the
western
Continued from page 1
accelerator to the noor and
theft of a CB radio taken from Memorial !Jospital at 7:09 a.
consists ol selling goods
HOSPITAL
NEWS
that's the way we got to town," rivers may reach the · Coast
that won't come back, to
spending, including direct pay- his truck parked at the m. Satuday from ihe Shamrock
Guard
Rescue
Coordination
customers who will. "
Merrill said.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ments, was expected to drop in Gallipolis Electric Company. Inn.
Center
by
calling
(314)
420The Merrills were the lucky
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS fiscal 1976 to $534 million Customers that appreciate
ones . Police arrl ved to find the 4614.
- Grace Roush, Racine; lowest since 1951 - because
good quality materials at
Persons who want to obtain Charles Yonker, Letart Falls; high market prices have
dead -the three Pattoos plus
ressonable pr ices always
general
Coast Guard in- Avis McClellan.• langsville.
five others staying at their
reduced the need for crop
come back to the Pomeroy
formation
can call the Public
home: Mrs. Patton's parents, J.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES suppor t.
Cemenl Block Co., the
home ollhe " FRIENDLY
R. May, 57, of Arlington, Tex ., Mfairs Office at (314 ) 425-4628. - David Jacks, Jr., Patrick
Ford also proposed cuts in:
ONES".
57, and his 55-year-old wife; Consumers interested in ob- Jacks , Bernard Rairden ,
FltDm illl lil&lt;JOi " ""' ft 11m
"
~I
- Conservation .subsidies,
APOt ~ rlalolillni«P ~ It~
Mrs. Patton's sister and her taining recreational boating Juani ta Frederick , Ernest which would be eliminated
Ohio Power Co. customers
WEDNESDAY husband, A. L. Amerson, 53, of safety facts may inquire by Clark, Edward Buffipgton,
entirely
at
an
estimated
saving
with
a hardship in paying their
2 DAYS ONLY
Portales, N.M.; and Clara dialing ( 314) 420-5971.
Elmer Norvell, Albert Hill, of $199 million although Con- electric bills will be extended
Peevey, 18, a friend of Deede
John
Blosser,
Denn is gress is vii-tually certain to additional consideration with
to customers whose amual
Patton's.
McKinney, Jason Reyn olds, keep thell) alive.
regard to payments 1111d cutoff usage of electricity is 9,600
The ninth victim was Steve
Teresa Spencer.
992-5303
-Rw-al housing loans and of service, the Canton-based kilowatt hours or more.
SHOW TIMES 7 ~ 00 • 1:00
Sparger,
19, an · employe of
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS ' IDIUtY ND 'AUU
grants that wowd total $2.142 utility said today.
"As soon as we can make a
Atlantic Richfield.
George Clonch, Gallipolis; billion in fiscal 1976, down $120
An agreement has been change in the wording in our
Murl Ours, Long Bottom; million .
worked out between the state's rate schedule with the PUCO,
•
Leona Stewart, Pomeroy ;
Development Loans
electric and gas companies and we can expand the equal
Joseph Sayre, · Reedsville;
- Rural development loans the Public Utilities Com- payment 1Plan to cUBtomers
Joan Piokens , Portland;\ and grants that would total mission of Ohio whereby the using less ·than 9,600 KWH per
Rhoda South, Racine ; Mary
EXTON, Pa . - Foote Holter, Minersville ; Marvin $1.060 billion, down $120 million. elderly and needy may be year," the spokesman said.
-Soil conservation operations extended special credit
Other points agreed upon
Mineral Company announced Tom, Albany.
including
watershed
developarrangements,
thus
reducing
were that the company would
last week both sales and
•
SUNDAY DISCHARGES - men! would get $409 million, a the necessity of disconnecting communicate with Individuals ,
earnings reached record Sharon Covert, Warren
drop of $17 million.
service for non-payment.
and
through
local
leveJ,s. in.l974..
, Reeves.
Rural
electric
and
..
teleThe
company
said
that
most
organizations to relay in- ·
Whenev.e r you feel we can help you with any banking
'Sales froll) .contin].ling
phone loans which would drop · of the proposals agreed to are formation 'concerning the new
til'
matter and you can't come in to talk with us, just give
oP.rations were $l18.8 ,!.illion
$62 million to just under $2.4 in expansion of its normal company credit procedures,
Holzer Medical Center
. compared with $a8.4 million'in
us a ca ll! We're here tQ serve you and wel come phone
billion.
procedures. For example, the and that Ohio Power will ex- ,
(Births I
1973. Net earnings for 1974 was '
ca lls as well as your per ~ onal visits. So if you want to
company
disconnects a pand its present policy . of
Friday - Mr. and Mrs.
$11.3 million, equivalen~ to
know vour 'bank balance, the latest checks you've writcustomer's
service
only after providing the customers with
$1.47 per share; 1974 net ear- William Adkins, ·daughter ,
ten to 'riear , need information about 8 loan or any bank
extensive Investigation of the instructions to enable him to
INTEREST LOWERED
nings were reduced by J!.9 Ewing ton .
non-payment aod after having make additional credit
ser.v ke - just call us. We want to help.
Mr . and Mrs . Harry
DETROIT
(UPI)
million or $.27 per share
C!Jntacted
the customer.
· arrangements.
because of a change in the Goodrich, daughter, Wellston. Michigan National Bank of
"Ohio
Power
will
cooperate
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Thomas
Hunt,
Detroit announced il has
method : of valuing nearly all
'
•
lowered its prime interest rate with the PUCO in helping
inventories . Earnings were daughter, Ewington.
CLASS
TIME
SET
relieve
the
hardships
which
Mr. and Mrs. Terry May, on business loans to 8% per
$2.8 million equivalent to $.26
RACINE- The first training
cent from 9 per cent. A bank make it difficult for these
per share in 1973 ilnder the new daughter, Bidwell.
for the Racine EMT wiD
class
spokesman said the new rate is people to pay their electric be at 7 p.m. Wednesday at the ·
method (last out, first inPleasant Valley Hospital
believed to be the lowest in the bills," a company spokesman
LlFOI.
firehouse.
POMEROY, OHIO
said.
.
DISCHARGES
Mrs. country.
Sales from continuing
The
company
agreed
to
operations in the fourth Melvin Halstead , Point
make its equal payment plan
MEMBER FDIC
quarter 1974 were $34 million Pleasant; Richard Grinstead,
· to residential
available
CLOSINGS T04
New
Haven
;
Mrs
.
Vance
BOARD TO MEET
compared with $21.5 million in
custOmers
not
presently
MEMBER 'FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
Crow's Steak House will be
The Gallia-Meigs Comthe 1973 quarter. Net earnings Crites, West Columbia; Shirley
eligible in order to spread closed from 8 a.m. until.4 p.m.
Schartizer,
Middleport;
Steven
munity
Action
Agency
for tbe fourth quarter on a
payments more evel\ly over on Tuesday due to the death' of
UFO basis were $3.8 million, Oldaker , Hartfo rd ; Alberta executiVe board will hold its
the
period of a year. Under Dr. Thomas H. Crow, co-owner
equivalent to $.51 per share Davis, Gallipolis ; Mrs. Everett monthly meeting on Thursday,
tenns
and conditions of the
compared to earnings of $1 Schuler, daUghter, Midiueport ; F'eb . 6at 8p. m. at the Cheshire present rates, the equal with his sons, Robert H. Crow,
Syracuse, and Thomas D.
million, equivalent to $.14 per Mrs. Wilford Roush, daughter, Communit y Center . All
plan
now
Is
avaUable
payment
Crow, Pomeroy . .
share for the 1973 period on a Pomeroy ; Mrs. John Black, members are urged to att&lt;nd.
FIFO basis. Foote stated that Northup ; Mrs. Kenneth Bir·
its net earnings and net ear- chfield, Gallipolis ; Sally Allen,
nings per common share on a Fraziers Bottom; Frank
·UFO basis for the first three Bennett, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
quarters of 1974 were $1,091 ,000 lloward Cunningham, Letart;
· ($.12 per share ), $3,283,0110 Bobbi Winebrenner , West
($.43 per share) and $3,ll9,o00 Columbia ; John Beegle, Leon;
. HaD,
West
($.41 per share ) respectively. Benjamin
Columbia;
Clara
Biber!,
Wayne T. Barreti, Fresident
and Chief Executive Officer, Delaware ; Mrs. James Marsh,
.
.
stated ..... "Aithough demand Point Pleasant ; Yvonne .
Bareswilt,
Middleport;
Arthur
has been reduced for some of
our products by ' lower McCoy, Henderson ; Opal
operating levels in the Priddy, Point Pleasant.
aluminum and automotive
Industries, we continue to
ASK TO WED
operate al near capacity levels David Lee Donahue, 22,
because of strong demand Racine, and Loretta Ann
from the steel and foundry Triplert, Route 1, Racine.
industries.
.
Foote operates a plani at ,:n:::n:art:nuu.
ur,r:~
G~ Station in Mason
· EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Co)m!f, W. Va . .
W.e dnesday through
Just received a new shipment of Base
rwosurrs F1LED
Friday, cbance of showers
Cabinets - Wall Cabinets - Utility Cabinets Two actions for support
Weduesday ud a. cbance ·of
Wardrobes
and China Cabinets111der the States' Reciprocal
snow flurries mainly north
.
llipport Agreement Act have
po~a Thursday. Higba·mkf
been IUed in the Meigs County 30s to mid ·tos Wednesday
~ compl_ete new line to meet every household need- Electrically welded
OalmM Pleu Court, one by
lowering to 'the 20s by
1n on_e prece - tops are heat and stain resistant - magnetic iloor catches.
MIDdy Davis, Middleport,
Friday. ~· In the 38s ud
Stop m now- selectthe one·you need and save.
· ·
. lll!linst Richard Davis, Rt. 't,
'
.
upper 20s Wrdnesclay
Belle Vernon, Pa., and the
. '
lowering to 5 to 15 above.
~ by PatriCia Edith Smith,
Friday.

Nine caught by
·deadly white gas

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v

Market Report

~=:el ·~;:~:~ 0~11:~.::.:·$:~:~».=~**'~::J

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Repair,,of .parking lot wall could be this year

Blda for 'the repair of thti upper parking lot wall along ihe
Ohio River in Pomeroy could be invited in March, with repair
work beginning in April, Mayor Dale E. Smith told Pomeroy
Council Monday night.
.
, Mayor Smith said he had been in touch with Cong. Clarence
Mlller, Governor James Rhodes and the U. S. Corps of Engineers
in Huntington about the rna Iter.
·
According to a letter from Col. Scott B. Smlth of the Huntington Corps office, the repair' of the upper lot has been approved by the division engineer and 235 feet of repair work and
reinforcing could be done at a cost of $50,000.
It was also pointed out that under new regulations, up to
$150,000 may be spent on the project without special legislation.
According to ti)e ~etter, tbe project could be adve~tised in
March and work to be,pn in April. Councilman Bill Snouffer said
he doubled if the parking lot wall, which officials charge is going
into the Ohio River due to erosion and the higher water level, ca n
be repaired for the maximum $150,000.
Council approved the first reading of an ordinance which will
increase the pay of the mayor, the villa ge clerk and council
membersas of Jan. 1, 1976. H given final approval, the ordinance

provides·for $2',4110 a year lor the mayor, $3,000 for the clerk, and system. They said they would upgrade service, and indicated
$10 to CQunctimen for regular and $5 for spec!al meetings.
that they bave wurked ih this direction in the operation of their
An amendment was passed aiso setting up the salary of Don bu~iness. Tbey stated that Pomeroy people perhaps would prefer
McKenzie, who was employed recenlly as street superintendent'· domg busmess With an established firm since the route Is already
and increasing wnges of other employes to meet the minimum established.
wage requirement.
Councilmen Harry Davis and John Manley indicatid that a
Mr. and Mrs. Don Griffin who operate Scientific Sanitation new firm might cause more difficulty than the town has now in
inc. which had picked up trash in the community for almost fotir . th e setting up .or a new route by • new firm . Th~y also said they
years, appeared before council to question why someone had felt that Griffm should have been notified of council's intention
been licensed to do the pickup service at the last meeting of before the late January meeting when the new firm was engaged.
council. At that meeting on Jan. 20, council agreed to issue a The Griffins indicated they would cooperate In every way for a
license to Blaine Rice of New MarShfield to operate a collt!ctlon satisfactory arrangement in Pomeroy. The new collection serservice in the town.lt was reported at that time that the license vice is scheduled to begin in March .
·
of Scientific Sanitation had 'eX pired on Dec. 31, 1974.
It was pointed out that Rice has not submitted a contract in
Councilmen said they had talked with some customers of writing, as he had indicated he would , on which he was to outline
Scientific Sanitation in town and found that there were com- services and rates. It was decided to table the matter untll Feb.
plainls aboutthe billing . Scientific Sanitation biDed three months 17 and the Griffins were asked .to have their service provisions
at a time and council members said that residents did not wish to and rates also in writing by that time. It was ngreed, too, to have
pay in advance .
a representative of the Rockwell Parking Meter Co. present at
Mr. and Mrs. Griffin indicated that they would bill in any
the Feb. 17 meeting.
manner that was satisfactory, possibly monthly , tilling a coupon
Pollee Chief Jed Webster reported he has conferred with

•

Weather
Lows tonight mid 30s, highs
Wednesday upper 30s.

Devoted To The. lntere~Sls Of The
POM EROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XXVI NO. 206

Now You Know

en tine

at

Rain likely tonight, changing

to snow, colder Wednesday.

~ompanies selling. officer ut]iforms and 18 getting several price
Usts. It was also reported th~'t Webster will hold a meeting with
officers each month to discuss work and other matters they want
presented to councll.
Mayor Smith read a communication from a Malo, N.Y.;
finn which wished to act as a conoultant for the vlllile'a ob- .
servBDce of the Bicentennial. The finn can build a statue of
Uncle Sam up' to ·1.20 feet II! height, the commualcatlon ~ald. No
action was taken.
Council again discussed the need ior a new or remodeled
village haU. Clerk Jane Walton reported several applications for
federal money which could he used in remodellrig have been
made. Councilman Davis asked that a letter from the village to
Ted Reed, Chamber of Commerce president, be sent urging the
sil!"ing of petitions for securing the former Pomeroy Senior'High
bu1ldmg for a village hall. There was some disagreement,
however, on whether the building would be satisfactory, and it
was suggested that the building committee study the senior high
building .
It was agreed again to advertise for bids on village owned
Continued on page 8

Meigs ~Ma.~on

The term mach, used In
describing supersonic speed, is
named after German physcist
Ern st Mach.

Areu
P.~QNE

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1975

992-2156

Emergency Foley
CG phone
is changed

WOIIDIR·
OriTAIJ.

Farm rural

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PREsENr:eD -

. STATE FLAG
92nd District State
Representative .'Ron James, fourth from left, Monday
presented the Cheshire ViUage Counell a new state flag.
Participating in the presentation were (1-r) Mayor Walter
(Scotty) Lucas, Marjorie Saunders, clerk; Helen Preston,
treaswer; James, Erna Cornelius and Gladys Rife, councilwomen, and Don Skaggs, Ken Wise, Harold Mack and
Grover Cremeans, councilmen.

Ohio );&gt;ower admits

hardship in customers

paying hills

J.~I§.S lH~!!~ov

Records made
in sales and

net earnings .

Give us a call.•.

.

Farmers Bank &amp;Savings Co.

FDIG

ELBERFElDS IN POMEROY
WAREHOUSE ON
MECHANIC sTREET

·. SALE PRICES
.

I.:=~~=;~=========~::;;:~:=;;;;::~~J . 1\0Y
Elkhart,
Ind.,
agaiiut C!Uford
'Smij;h,
~a~use.
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Elberfelds Pomeroy • Warehouse • Mechanic St.

f d.JLCLLL
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By United Press International
SOVIET FOREIGN MINISTER ANDREI GROMYKO met
with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat today to try to talk him out
of going 'along with U.S. efforts to arrange a step-by-6tep peace
settlement In the Middle East. "I am very glad to be here and to
have this po$siblilty to talk and to exchange views, this is alway~
wry useful," Gromyko told Sadat before the private meeting at
the Egyptian's vacation home on the Nile Delta north of Cairo.
The Soviet Union and Syria want a fuU-6cale peace conference - to be chaired jointly by tbe Soviets and the United
States -but the Egyptians wiU not go along, diplomatic sources
said Monday. Tbe diplomats said Sadat is determined to give
'
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger a chance to arrange limited
A total of $1,314.30 was
Arab-Israeil peace moves before reconvening the Geneva peace · collect~d in the annual
conference.
Mothers' March of Dimes in
Meigs County, Mrs. ·Carol Jean
SAIGON - POLITICIANS AND publishers today con- Adams, campaign director,.
demned the govenunent's closing of five newspapers and the announced today.
arrests of newsmen in the most severe crackdown on the press
Of that .amount, $405.92 was
since President Nguyen Van Thieu took office. Fifteen opposition collected in Pomeroy, $406.56
. repreSentatives in the National Assembly demanded, "Thieu in M.iddleport, $101.01 in
must resign at once. He is the enemy of democracy, freedom and Syracuse, $132.37 in Racine,
justice. Thleu means war and corrUption in the army.''
$86 .35 in Tupp.ers Plains,
A newspaper publishers' group called the Committee for the $105.8D in Chester and $76.29 in
Struggle of the Freedom of the Press said in a statement, "Thieu Rutland.
ldlled five papers that dared tell the truth." The government
Conducting the Mothers '
Monday revoked the licenses of five of Saigon's 11 Vietnamese- March were members of Xi
language dallies and announced it had arrested "a number of Gamma Mu and Ohio Eta Phi
Wlderground Communist cadres operating in the editor,ial of- Chapters of Beta Sigma Phi
• flees" of the papers.
Sorority, and Jan Judge, Becky
Thomas, Sally Caldwell,
OOLUMBUS - OffiO DEPARTMENT of Highway Safety Shrirley Balser, Pam Balser,
Director Donald D. Cook today announced a plan for Ohio Carolyn Tripp, Jan Cardone,
motorists to use 19761icense plates for three years in an effort to Beverly Williams, Sue Ann
save money.
Beegle, Jo Ann Willford ,
Multi-year use of license plates with updating stickers save Patricia Pape, Gene Lyons,
the state money in handling, materials and production cosls," Kay Warden, Jean Cleland,
Cook said. Cook said the decision to UBe the red and white plates Margie West, Coraiee Cum·
for three years was made because of present and projected costs mins ,
Judy
Snowden ,
of steel,. and the cost of plate manufacturing by contractors Rosemary Snowden , Lorri
outaide, the 'state. Also considered was Ohio's present plate Snowden, Debbie Williamson,
production system in the Department of Correction and Donna Williamson , Pat
RehabWtation.
Thomas , Gladys Spencer,
Betty NeweU, Judy Starcher,
G~, WIS.- FOR 34 DAYS, THEY HAD occupied a
Judy Eichinger, Jo HiU, Mrs. '
Romari Catholic abbey in the face of National Guardsmen Henry Thomas, Jenny Machie,
IUITOundlng tllem. For the 39 militant Indians, It ended Monday
Flossie MaxsQn, and Janet
night- In handcuffs, riding to jail in two school buses. Seven Ambrose.
·
.aymphatlzers were taken along with the Indians in the two buses
March of Dimes cards have
fnm the Alexlan Brothers abbey, but were released without been placed in all the schools of
.being charged. The charges facing the 39 Indians were not the county and these are yet to
diac~.
be counted and added to the
'lbe evacuation and · arrest of the Indians, who called · total along with receipts of
tbemaelves the Menominee Warrior Society, followed an canisters placed in · business
agieen)ent Wider which the Chicago Catholic group agreed to
houses.
give the facillty to the Indians for $1 and other considerations."
The Indlantt were taken from the abbey area by National Guard
·bUies. Before leaving the area, they were stopped at a guard
•clleckpolnt, photographed and handcuffed, and then transferred
to two school buses.
The Meigs County Commissioners apparently will be
DETROIT - IT TOOK A ONE-TWO ~CH of an energy asked to certify -a special
c:risll tmd a recession to pUsh General Motors - the world's election to provide an
J.rgeet auto COIIIJilllY- from ita top spot among U. S. indU!Jtrial
operating fund for the Meigs
Wipara!iCJiia. Ii lost the proC! edge to Exxon Corp. in 1973 ilnd County .Community School,
with the flnanc:!•lreport'it Issued Monday, gave up'itS hold on the accordin,g to plans made
No.lttpOtln sales. Figures~~ dollar sales in !974 off 12 pei' Monday night .by the · ·Meigs
cent but prolllo down 60 per cent from 1973'~ record levels.
(:oun ty .Board of Retardation .
'lbe- energy cri.IU tbat sent GM skidding from the top of
,Judge Manning Webster ,
the mou"'•ln (itllhed Exxon, the world's largest oil company, to chairman of \!le board , and
the flni Position. EDlin reported 1974 sales of $45.8 billion, Rick Crow wei"e ,named . ·to
ClDIIIJIU1Id .to GM'a $31.5 bWlon .while 'GM profits of $950 million secure information 011 the laws
1!lft DOt even clolle to ED:on'o $3.14 bWlon. The plunge means a governing special elections and
,redlietlan In the quarterly diYidend ~ 85 cents a share to 60 a study will be made on the
cenlo "th~llllerve needed capital';- the first time in 29 years amount of llloney heeded to
!bat GM b.u dJ qpped ill dividend rate .
operate the community school
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Dimes walk
by mothers

nets $1,314

0~~~~ . ·~------.----~~---~---. .·-~~..;.;~.;,..;~J
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Speaker coming
.with the facts

Enormity
of it all
opposed
Mrs . E. A. Wingett discussed
the proposed annexation to
Racme with Meigs County
Commissioners Warden Ours
·and Henry Wells Tuesday
morning.

J11rs. Wingett said she does
not see how the village of
Racine can finance such an
annexation and that she hates
to see the town put so heavily in
debt if the entire four mile
square mile area is annexed.
She said the water system
would have to be extended at a
considerable cost. She stated
that many people of lhl! town
11
don't really want the an~
nexation."
" We aren't against an·
nexation , but the enormity of it
all," Mrs. Wingett said .
A letter from Thereon
Johnson was presented announcing a meeting of the
Meigs County Regional
Planing Commission for 3 p.m.
Wednesday at The Farmers
Bank and Savings Co.

A representative of the state
office of the American Cancer
Society will be at the Senior
Citizens Center Wednesday to
speak on cancer facts and
figures. There will be a session
for women from 10:30 to 11:30
and a general session for both
new .and women from 12 : 15 to
12:45 p.m.
Mrs . Eleanor Thomas,
executive director of the Meigs
TWO GIVEN HELP
County Council on Aging,
reporls that the. program ·is
RACINE - The Racine
open to all residents whether or Emergency Squad was caUed
not they are senior citizens. to Long Bottom, f\oute 1, at
The center is in the former 6:00 a.m. Monday for Wilma
Pomeroy Junior High School. Anderson who was havi:Jlg
chest pains. She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 7:05p.m. Sunday the squad
went to . Hashan for Elmer
MAYOR INJURED
Mayor Fred H.offman, S. Norvell who was having difFQilrlh St., Middleport, ficulty in breathing. Oxygen
production superintendent of was administered .
the Ohio Valley Publishing Co.,
LOCAL TEMPS
suffered the loss of the tip of his
The temperature in downindex finger on his right .hand
Monday evening correcting a town Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
linotype stoppage at the Tuesday was 40 degrees with
Quality Print Shop on Mill St. rain falling .

CANDYSTRIPERS - Capped after comple\lng 10 hours of voiWlteer service with the
Vetera.ns Memorial Hospital Candystrlpers were, left to right, Kathy Campbell, Sandy
Carleton, Crystal Glaze, Tina Duffy, and Penny Landers. Mrs. Teresa Collins presided at the
capping ceremonies. Also eligible for their caps are Dena Pratt and Terri RusseU.

Center's growth, ~ervices,
reviewed at chamber
. meet
.

'
Less than two years ago of the center since attendance

when the Meig's Senior Citizens
Center opened, there were 105
visitors at its first month. In
January , 1975, there were
1,292, · ~cording to Mrs.
Eleanor Thomas , executive
director of the Meigs County
Council on Aging, who addressed the Pomeroy Chamber
of Commerce at a noon luncheon Monday at the Meigs
Inn. ,

Mrs. Thomas outlined the
use of the facilities at the
1Pomeroy Junior High School
where the .center is located .
She cited a need for expansion

Special school elections proposed

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EXTENDED FORECAST
Thursday · through
Saturday, cold with a chance
of snow or snow flurries
Thursday and a chance of
snow nurrles In northern
portions
Friday
and
Saturday. Highs will be In
the 20s or lower 30s. Overnight lows will be In the
lower 20s on Thursday and
mostly In the teens Friday
and Saturday.

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which serves the retarded of
Meigs County.
Meigs County voters turned
down last November a 2. 75 mill
levy for operating the school.
The board, hopefully, will try
to reduce the millage needed
for the operating funds when
the measure comes up at a
special election.
The board also made plans to
move its ,meetings to various
locations· In the county so that
residents in each area may
attet\d and hear first&gt; hand the
problems which confront the

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II

board in providing services for might be available to the board
the county's retarded. Mrs. in continuing the operation of
Grace Weber will contact the school for the remainder of
schools to see If 'facilities can · the year. Present funda of the
board will not cover the
be used free.
It was reported that sub- operations of the school for the
stitute bus drivers l!lld a Title I rest of the year and the board is
, aide are needed. ThOse 'wishing seeking some help irorrl the ·
to apply as drivers should commissioners. ·
·contact Jean Wood and Title I
Attending Monday night's
applican.ts should contact Mrs.
Margaret Ella Lewis, director · meeting in the· commissioners'
of ·the school.
· office were Judge Webster;
It was ,also reported that the Crow, Willlaln Can:, Wilma .
board has not received word Parker, Richard Chambers,
from the County Com- Mrs. Weber, Mrs. Lewis and
missioners on , what .funds the Rev. w..H. Perrin.

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Monday nlght by Mrs. Thomas M. Theiss, director, right,
were left to' right, Mrs. Rhonda Dalley, R.N., Miss Unda
stewart, L.P.N., and Mlsti Janice Evans, L.P.N.

ASSIS'I'ANT DIRECTORS ·- Installed as assistant
directors of the Veterans Memorial Hospital Candystripers

is running higher each month .
She said
woodworking
facilities and a sewing center
are among the additional
accommodations which could
be useful . Attendance at the
center during its early montha
was almost entirely women,
but now runs about half of them
men.
The executive dire ctor
pointed out that the programs
at the center are for all senior
citizens regardless of income.
She said the center makes
obvious the need for an outlet
for stiD quite capable senior
citizens.
About 60 persons take part in
a noon luncheon held at the
center each day and many about 200 .:. _ senior citizens are
active in the . volunteer
program giving their services
in schools, hospitals and
nursing homes.
Mrs. Thomas also r&amp;viewed
the program of ·the center
which refers senior citizens to
various agencies for help and
upon . the recent health
screening program attended
by almost 2110 senior citizens.
She discribed the transportatlon ' progam which
provides ways . for seniOr
citizens to get to various
locations to handle business

matters as well as out-ofcounty trips to h9spitals and
doctors .
The cooperation of other
agencies was tern1ed "wonderfl!l", by Mrs. Thomas, who
said that only through the help
.of the many agencies and
organizations is the work of the
center so successful. .
. In conclusion, Mrs. Thomas
pointed out that guidelines for
federal funding are scheduled
to change and that after next
year the center will be expeeled to be self-6upporting.
The budget runs about
$60,000 a year for aU programs.
Mrs. Thomas Invited all
chamber members having any
suggestions on . how the
program can be supported
locally to pass along their idea~
. to her:
Theodore T. Reed, Jr.,
· ,chamber president, was in
charge of the meeting. Charles
E. Blakeslee announced the .
public hearing on highways to
be conducted at the courthouse
at 7;3a on Feb. 13.
Attending were Reed,
Blakeslee, Ralph Gr~ves, Mrs.
Thomas Wendell
. Hoover Mrs
'
'
Carolyn Thomas, SO£fetary; . ·
Virgil J'eafOrd, Dale ""arner,
Ferman Moore, Fred Crow,
Jack Cl!rsey, Bill j:;rueser,
Co~tinuect · on page B

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Uptum

Groh edges
Geiberger

expected

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3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o.,Tuesday, Feb. 4, 19'75

in 1975

By ROBERT C. Mill EJ1.
first round when he "blacked
By RICHARD HUGHES
UPI Business Writer
HONOLULU (UP!)- G~ out" on the 12th hole by taking
Groh, $40,000 richer and ~;.... a nonchalant, casual swing at
The auto and construction
sured of a year's place on the the ball as it lay poised on the
industries suffered severe
pro tour, headed for Palm edge of the hole.
slumps in 1974 but should snap
"I guess I just blacked out,"
Springs today after winning the
out of their depressed
rain-delayed Hawaiian Open In he said. "!just walked up to the
economic state this year,
an upset one...troke victory.
ball and took an absentminded
according to private and
government reports.
The win was the first for the swing at it. I know one thing for
30-year-old Michigan State certain- ! missed it."
General Motors and Ameridropout, who plays out of
can Motors, the largest and
But Groh, whose father gave
taxless Freeport in the Grand him his first club when he was
smallest U.S. automakers,
both reported rough economic
Bahamas. He stitched tog~ther eight, said the thought of that
going last year.
.
two back-to-back68s, a 70and a one missed Jllltl never bothered
GM sald that although the
68 on the final round for his him during the rest of the
onestroke win over AI tournament .
dollar volume of car sales was
OONCERT TONIGHT - Rio Grande College and Rio Grande Community College will
Geiberger, who lead the
down only 12 per cent 10 1974,
"I setUed down today," he
..
present a free folk concert this evenmg at 91n the College Dining Hall. Featured will be Patti
profits plunged 60 per cent
tournament for the first two said in describing his win, "and
DUMMY PRACI'ICE - SEOEMS' first aid instructor
and Rod Radle of San Antonio, Texas, who prsent music in the folk tradition. Trained 10
GM's directors took the rare
Bonnie Larkin demonstrates mouth to mouth breathing on a
rounds. Californian Geiberger got only one bogey. I hit good
SOCiology, theology, and social work, as C&lt;&gt;directors of a volunteer poverty organization they
dropped back after shooting a drives aU week but I was tired
step of cutting the company's
pracllce dummy. This will be the subject of a televiSion
are anxious for dialogue with students, staff, faculty and residents.
'
program to be shown next week on channelS.
quarterly dividend from 85
71 Sunday, but then charged playing every day and was
cents to 65 ce'nts a share and
the last nine to finish with a 69- glad for the rain.postpon'ed day
275 worth $15,620.
canceling the usually generous
off on Saturday."
bonus program for top exArnold Palmer, who gave his
Groh said he spent the day at
ecutives.
"army" hope by starting the the beach and credited the
With sales of $31.5 b1llion in
final round one stroke behind ·warm Pacific waters and
"
1974, GM slipped to second
leader Forrest Fezler, had relaxing sand for the renewed
trouble on the back nine and strength he needed to win.
behind Exxon Corp. as the
ended up with a 71. This,
world's largest industr~al
"
The rains which forced a
coupled with his 69-67-69 gave day's postponement Saturday
corporation. GM profits 10 1974,
Can people learn first aid State Umvers1ty research him a 276 valued at $15,620.
~jt by an energy crisis at the
cleared off for the fmal round,
skills
from
televiSIOn?
That
1s
who
is
m
charge
of
associate
start and the recession at the
Defending champion Jack which was shot in hot, humid
end, Ie 11 to $950 million, the questiOn being asked by the the prOJect sa1d, "We are Nicklaus had to be content with weather. It was the first time
compared with the record $2.4 consumer education staff of the trymg to f10d out how effective $3,300 prize money for his 281. that the Hawaiian had been
Southeast Ohio Emergency television can be in teaching Nicklaus started off with a 68, forced to cancel a day's play
blllion in ~973.
GM.Oiainnan Thomas Mur- MediCal Serv1ce (SEOEMS). first aid skills to adults . We but had wind trouble the because of weather. A torrenTo help provide the answer, hope that what we learn will second day and shot a 74. He tial downpour Sunday also
phy sald, however, that 1975
more
than 120 residents of help us in produc10g several finished with a 7~9.
would be a "turnaround year"
delayed the proceedings for 37
,
Pomeroy
and
Middleport
are
short
television
spots,
each
with
sales
mcreasing
later
m
Grab
made
news
during
the
minutes.
It is like the replay of a bad dream .
bemg recruited by telephone to dealing with a different hieTwo years after "peace with honor," South Vietnam 1s reeling under widespread and sustained the year.
take
part m an experiment. saving first aid skill."
AMC said it lpst $5.6 million
North Vietnamese offensives. President Ford has called for a $300.million step-up in arms aid in
Those
who agree to take
Over the past year, the
addition to $700 mllllon already authorized for this year, and he and his secretary of defense have in the last three months of 1974. parts will be asked to view a
consumer
education section of
The Commerce Department
warned Hanoi thilt tne United States will not stand 1dly by and see South Vietnam go under.
five
minute
program
on
their
".
'lbe antiwar demonstrators are back in the streets of Washington and the voice of the extremist is sald spending for construction home TV sets. This program SEOEMS has given free
American Red Cross first aid
of $134.4 billion last year was
once again heard In the land.
.
·
will teach mouth-to-mouth courses to almost 700 people in
off
I
per
cent
from
1973,
only
"American opinion historically has reacted In anger to outright aggression unprovoked massive
breathing (artificial 1ts seven county service area .
attacka," said Defense Secretary James R. Schlesinger the other day .. . "Congress under these the second yearly decline on · respiration).
record.
All those who take part in this
drcumatances might well authorize the use of American force.•'
present
television experiment
The
only
other
time
conFrom the other side: "Quite clearly, the United States is the reason for the bloody struggle that
ripped off the nQt six and the
Afterward, they will get the will be invited to take a f1rst aid By RICHARD L. SHOOK
struction
spending
fell
was
goea on," sald Bishop John Burt of the Ohio Episcopal Diocese and participant In something called
United
Press
lnterualloual
10,962 fans might as well have
chance to try out their newly course.
the AMembly to Save the Peace Agreement, conveniently Ignoring the fact that no South Vietnamese during the recession of 1960
Without
cracking
a
smile,
when It dropped 1.2 pet cent. learned skill on a pracllce
The "Mouth to Mouth Tom Heinsohn sald It: "We can gone home right then. Detroit
soldiers hilve ever Invaded North VIetnam.
Jllliled to within three, 46-43,
dummy
at
the
SEOEMS
amBreathmg" television program play better...
Quite as clearly, the American people are not buying either viewpoint. They know who was and is Unemployment in the building
with
3:47 left in tt., half but
bulance
station
located
behind
w11l be broadcast over PoinTthe Instigator of war in Vietnam, but they also know In thetr guts that M,OOO American lives and who Industry has been as high as 30
And
Heinsohn's
Boston
CalBoston zoomed out to a 59-47
Veterans Memonai Hospital m View Cable channel 5 during
can count how many billions of dollars areenough.lf South Vietnam cannot defend itself after all that per cent -four times the
tics were devastating In mtermission edge. The Celllcs
Pomeroy.
F1rst
aid
instructors
national rate
the week of Feb. ID-14, Monday
America has done for it, then It never will be able to.
w1ll be on hand to observe and through Fnday at 8:30 p.m defeating the Detroit Pistons, hit 13 of the 19 shots they trietl
In
Atlanta,
Secretary
of
The pop!,llar mood is reflected In Congress, where it is not just the traditional doves who oppose
114-100, Monday night.
in the second quarter.
help each parllc1pant.
and at 11 a.m. on Tuesday and
an Increase In military aid and who, Schlesinger to the contrary, will certainly not countenance the Housing and Urban Develop..
Don
Nelson
scored
the
In the only other NBA game
return of American military persojlnel. They have the lessons of the past 10 years to support them. ment James T. Lynn said Charles DiSogra, an OhiO Thursday.
lO,oooth point of his 13-year Monday night, the Kansas
Yet the SoUth Vietnamese are lighling well, we are told. It is not lack of will but lack of means housing starts last year totaled
career, Jo Jo While hit for 29 City-Omaha Kings downed the
'lbey did not surrender at Phuoc Blnh, the first provincial capital to fall since 1972, but were over- 1.3 mllllon after three consecuand Dave Cowens scored 18, . Philadelphia 76ers, 100-87
whelmed. Their air force is virtually grounded because of a short~e of fuel and spare parts. Their tive years of more than 2
grabbed 20 rebounds and ran while In the only ABA game:
million housing starts.
artillery has but a handful of rounds. They sustained 120,000 casualties last year.
Bob Lanier into a puddle of the Utah stars held off the New
But he said "things look
Not so the North Vietnamese. They hilve been massively rearmed by Russia and Olina. The Ho
sweat.
York Nets, 111-106.
Oil Minh Trail, safe from American bombers, Is now a four-lane highway down which flows the somewhat better" for the
Boston's lOth straight win
Kings 100, 76ers 87:
future because interest rates
wherewithal of war' \II unceasing stream.
ran Its road record to 20-3, by
Larry MeN eiU had career:.
We have heard it all before: Just a few more planes, tanks, guns. Just a little more effort. The are declining and more morfar the best in the NBA. Detroit highs of 26 points and 18
tgage money is available for
Ught at the end of the tunnel.
had a seven-game winning
housing.
WASHINGTON (UPI) - advocating more when the streak at home snapped and rebounds to lead the Kings past
And ~aln from the other side : The Thieu regime Is corrupt, dictatorial, not worthy of being
Philadelphia. McNeill, a seThe reports of the depressed Democrats in Congress say President
saved. lt is Saigon that violated the peace agreement .
has . already dropped into second place In cond-year forward, recently
state of the auto and construe- they will reject President proposed borrowing and the Midwest Division, . 006
Yet the refugees continue to flee - southward, not northward.
moved into the startlng lineup
lion
Industries came as Presi- Ford's proposed $9 billion spending $52 billion . That behind Chicago.
It is tempting to belleve that just a few more billions, one more show of American resolve will
for
Ron Behagen. Doug Collins
salvage something fr~m this endless and unspeakably tragic conflict. Can we stand aside and ~atch dent Ford predicted an 8 per increase in defense spending deficit, Ford and Congress
"I think we can play better," led the 76ers with 24 points and
what little chance fOr freedom exists In Indochina be overwhelmed by communism when mere cen.t unemployment rate for and devote that sum to the allke recognize, could easily Heinsohn said, "if everybody
this year and next.
money could prevent it?
victims of inflation, recession turn out to total closer to $80 contributes and when the Nate Archibald added 23 for
the Kings, who moved within
Most economists had and poverty.
But we have been lied to so much before. We have seen the "best andl brlghtest" men in our
blllion.
rookies get more experience. 3'f.! games of the Midwest
But for once the Democratic
government adopt the tactics of the,enemy, we have seen our young men debased, the nation's honor predicted a sharp recovery
.'
Rep. George Mahon, 0-Tex., They have to get Used to the
would
be
under
way
in
late
1975
Congress
is not eager to outbid conservative chairman of the pace . Every once In a while, Division lead behind Chicago
stained at places like My Lat. We sl\ould never have gotten Involved in that vicious war. Let us at long
·
and early 1976 In what was a Republican President. The House Appropriations Com- they have a good ball game." and Detroit.
last be done with it entirely.
Stars
111,
Nels
lot:
called a V-ahaped recession -a Democrats say they, too, are mittee, calls the budget
Yeos, we are nearing the end of some kind of twmel. But there is noUght. Only darkness
The Pistons got 27 pOints and
Moses Malone and Ron
sharp decline followed by a stumed by the size of the "breathtaking" and says the 11 rebounds from Lanier, who
Boone
combined for 59 points
sharp recovery.
biggest peacetime deficit in increase In Indebtedness "will picked up 20 of his points In the
and
Utah
survived a lastBut the administration's pre- history.
frighten thoughtful first half, and 26 from Dave minute New York bombing
dictions on continued high
They do not dispute that the Americans.''
Bing, but that was it.
attack to down the Nets. Julius .
unemployment and another economy needs the stimulation
Nobody else got more than Erving scored 22 of his 40
Rep. Morris K. Udall, Ariz.,
yearly decline In the Gross of heavy federal deficit spen- a liberal and a candidate for nine and the four forwards
points In the last quarter as the
National Product indicate the ding, but they are uneasy about the
1976
Democratic Coach Ray Scott Used were 7- Nets Jllllled to within two
White House now believes the
presidential nomination, calla for-32.
points. Wall Jones then hit four
recovery will be slow, lasting faintness.
Lanier hooked In the first free throws to put it out of
the
budget
"bloated"
and
inthrough 1976.
Exercise before a meal if you sensitive "to tile needy, the points of the game but Boston reach.
Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
breathing and exercise? At seem to be getting rid of 11.
are
doing strenuous exercise. elderly, and the disadDEAR DR. LAMB - I've what point in the exercise is it
On the basis of my
This
h particularly true for vantaged.''
just come off a successful diet, best to breathe in and out?
description would you say that
Rather than propose spengoing down to 170 pounds. I'm
When, after a meal, is il best a daily mtake of 1,600 to 1,700 recommended that you breathe heart pat1enis, since digesllon
40, five-feet-6ix, stocky build to exercise? Also, what is the calories should stabilize my in during the left and out while alone increases the work of the ding even more, the Democrats
and a college professor, which biochemistry 10volved here? weight once I get to 160 returning the weight to the heart. Fatty foods mcrease the have targeted on the Penstarting pOSition. You whould clumping tendency of the blood tagon 's S8.8 billion increase, a
makes me somewhat seden- Does one increase the usage of pounds ?
avoid holding your breath m and decrease ophmai cir- 10 per cent boost over current
tary in habits.
calories If he exercises right
ABA Stand.ngs
DEAR READER - You may
lnternal•onal Hockey
deep
mspiration as you might culatory function. Wait at least spending of $85.3 blllion.
By Un1ted Press International
I've read your book on fitness before a meal'
have still more weight to lose
League Standings
Eilst
do
during
a
chm.up.
Breath
two
hours
after
a
fairly
InternatiOnal
Even Mahon predicted Conand follow your exercise
What self tests can one apply than you reahze.
w. I. pet. g .b. By Un1ted Press
North
holding
can
trigger
powerful
meal
before
exeradequate
New York
36
14
720
gress
would
cut
the
defense
routines. I use a stationary to detennme the success of
I don't think it makes much
w. I. t. pfs gl ga
Kentucky
35 1" 714
Sag maw
3J 20 2 68 213 181
bicycle each night to help out - abdominal exercises• I've difference when you breathe reflexed that lead to fainting or cismg vigorously. A good walk budget and not go along with St Loui s
20 33 .377
F
lint
32 17 ~ 68 199 152
l 5 36 294
about 60 minutes or so. I do been at this for more than a durmg your exercises. collapse in some people You after a meal, in healthy people, Ford's proposed cutbacks in MemphiS
Muskegon 32 20 2 66 224 156
V1rom•e
12
39
235
should
also
avoid
ove(is no strain and is often helpful. food stamps, health, veterans,
Port Huron 21 28 J 45 174 187
•"
extensive exercises for my year, doing most of your Whatever is comfortable for
West
Kalamazoo
••
w. 1. pet. g.b . x Lansing 14 33 J 31 134 191
absomen.
exerciSes. I have extensive fat you is all that matters. For breathing or breathmg too fast. Healthy people don't n~ to sit education and other social Denve r
12 28 I 25 145 217
42 12 . 778
This
Induces
chemical
changes
or
lie
down
for
long
periods
programs.
South
What is the relahon between around my waist and do not we1ght traimng, it is usually
San Anton1o
33 24 579 101h
•'
w. I. t. pts gf ga
m the body that also lead to after eating. You will use the
2.4 26 480 16
••
Sen. Alan Cranston, ~lif. , lnd1ana
32 17 3 67 211 180
Utah
23 30 434 18 112 Dayton
same number of calories with SW1Uni1rlzed the Democrats• San
Coll!mbus
JO
23
1
61
224
195
"
Diego
21 33 389 21
Toledo
2A 27 3 51 200 198
"
the same task whether 11 is response to Ford's proposals :
Monday's Results
Des Moines 22 28 J 47 179 200
V 1rgmla 107 San Diego 90
•
before or after the meal.
"Deficit spending, or pump. Utah 111 New York 106
Fort Wayne 18 29 J 39 171 197
x
team
disbanded
The best test for abdominal priming, in a time of recession
Tuesday's Games
•
•
M!Lnday's Results
( No games sc-h~duled)
CINCINNATI. (UPI) -Sally Rand."
physical thing. People wonder not foreign, I was born In fat is your waisUine and the is S1IJlP()Sed to stliilulate ' proNo games scheduled
•
A fascinating, mile-a-minute why I just don't do a couple of Missouri.
Today's Games
' Rand Is now 70 years 'Old, a
m
amount of fat under the skin. duction and employment bere
Al
l
Star
Game
at
Kalamazoo
•
grandmother and still strut- talker, Sally was both elegant weeks In Las Vegas each year.
Born Helen Gould Beck on You can tighten up your ab- athome.lnstead,thePresldent
NBA Standongs
and eloquent as she chatted Well, ti I don't do It every day, Easter Sunday 1n 19«H In the domen with exercise but wants to saddle the American By Unoted Press International
~· '
.
Eastern Conference
•••
The famous fan dancer, with curiOWJ reporters before then I can't do It at all."
Ozark mountain community of exercise won 'I eliminate ab- lupayer with 8 $52 billion
Atlantic Dovisoon
lootlnjl much yoonger than 7Q, taking the stage. Her hair was
•
budget deficit by boosting
w. I. pet. g.b.
fdle since last 'lbankscJvtng, Hickory, Mo., Sally loves dominal fat.
•
Boston
36 u 120
made ber first, appearance of sparkling blonde, her face Sally said she has been taking recounting bow she switched
Abdormnal fat means you military spending aud aid to Buffalo
JJ 18 647 m
PARTY GIVEN
•••
1975 at a I1Uburban Newport, nearly wrinkle free and her ballet cia u every day at ber from a legitimate ballerina still have a lot of excess fat to foreign government&amp; while cut- ~~lla~~;:, ,a ~t
: ~~~ 16
10'1 1 Mr'. and Mrs. Max Eichinger
•
Ky., nigbldub Mooday nlgbt body trim. .
lose, and that means more ting back on health care,
Glendora, Calif. home.
into more earthy dancing.
•
Control D•vlsion
, enterlldnedFritl&amp;Ynlghtwitha
and Vowed to tour 40 weeks this , Twice divorced and not
w. 1. pet. g.b . skating and slumber party
What are her audiences like
l§le W&amp;!l arrested four times calorie restriction and con- educlltlon and job cret1ting Washington 36
••
U .720
CUJTeOtly married, Miss Rand today?
year.
•
in one day at the Chicago tinued exercise routines. For programs for out-of-work Houston
2s 26 .49o liv, honoring their daughter,
•
A J!l'omoler sald she Is proudly passed around picCleveland
24 26 .•so 12 ·Becky, 011 her loth birthday
"Many ol. them are here World's Fair in 1933 and the ; more information write to me Amerlams.''
•
21 3' 389 17
eamtnc $1,500 fcr her week's tures of her grandda118hler for obviously because of the publicity pt'(Jpeiled her from a at PO. 0. Box 1551, Radio City ~.the Democrats Atlanta
•
New Orleans · 6 4l .125 29
anniversary, Pizza WI~ served
wart here -.-avera! lo.mtnute repcrters to admire.
Western Conference
along with other refresllments.
nostalgia," she said. "Then f60a weekshawgtrl to a $15,000 Station, New York, N. Y. 10019, did not dispute the accuracy of
•
In her street clothes she was there are the younger ones who a weet headliner In a matter of and ask for the booklet on Ford's I..._" forec8st that
nlcbtly lfage 'lbon.
Midwest
Div&gt;Slon
Guests
were
Barbara
Grueser
~
w. I. p~ g.b.
,
••
M1si Rand' llid she Is doing enSiled to the hilt. She sported : heard , about me from their days.
weight loss. Send 50 cents to unemployment and inflation Ch•cago
29 21 .580
Becky
Ambrose,
Julie
•
" Detroit
.,1 23 57'
Elbe
••
"euctly tbe same dance'~ she high ~. a black, crushed parents •,and want to aee me.
She said the thought o1. cover costs.
2,
26 'so9 w.
rfeld, Tammy Eichinger,
will remain above normal - Kc.omaha
velvet
dress,
pink
scarf
and
a
cld at lbe 1933 Clllcago World's
•
You'll have to judge yourself througi11!MIII
M•iwaukee · 2• 25 •90 •v. Ruth Ann •and Sue Ellen Fry.
"And u;.t there are the real dancing in the nude was
••
uu., d1ld 1;, sald Rep Sam
Pocilic Division
AJ.o atte-''•• 'IIU .._.,_,1
hJr when she streaked to gigantic feathered hat topped young ooee -the ones who unheard ol. back In 1933 8!ld she how many calories you need
"'S
•
, , _._·
w. I. pel. g.b.
·~....,.
with
pink
bows.
l§le
carried
a
llardoiD by ca¥01'11Dg, apparbrother, Mllll:.
never knew Sally 'Rand wu a likes to perpetuate the mystery after you have eliniinaled all Gibbcios D-Fia. wlien told Golden State 30 ~o 600
••
'
•
Seattle
25 26 490 5'r.l
••
ently Dude, beldnd two Oltrich fan..ahaped purse.
"no-no.' They're the most 16 wllether she actually was the significant fat deposits Ford predi.ctad unemployment Pori land
22 28 .4•0 8
Asked
why
she
continues
a
•
•
.feather fana abe skiUfully
20 27 .426 S'l2
under the skin. In general eat would stagnate around 1 per Phoen ix
fiatterelng audience becauae . 111de behind her waving fans .
46-week
a
year
tOur
acbedule
at
8
••
~- age 70, she replied, "Becauae I lheyuytbe)'Ukemyactnow.'' ' ' She dkm't clear up the only enough to control your centfortbe next two years, '1t , LosAn~~~·doyJ: R!~ull: 10'I2
•
"ADd why DOt tbe same fan
Sally maintllne she's not a questloo MCIIday. Instead she weight and still have an muat 1118&amp; be's going to be 1 Boston 114 Detrolt1DO
.,... pr,...,.
KC .Omaho 100 Philadelphia 87
SING PLANNED
duM;e?" lbe liked. 'Tm tbe love shaw business. I'm a bam "stripper" or·~ dancer." just fluttered her 'long adequate supply of energy. Ir' ·.._
•
•w~~r..,~.
Tut.day•s Games
A
hymn
sing featl!ring the
and
I
really
love
tbat
applaWil!.
CJr'lciMI. Wilen you uy fan
The Repnhllcau -by in- Ph iladelphia at BuHolo
"A atrippl!r must t.te some- ~ and Insisted .:...S she you are reasonably active I
t bou
Los A~geles at New York
"Gospel T~es" will be held at , ••
"And, I've got to stiy In thjng ol.f, I don't. EJ:otlc.lllellll has tlrough the years - "the · would hope that might be at ""~ct
doll'I tbJ'* of Tlllle
owo more uplle 8
t deficit Cieveiond'Ol Atlanta
••
7:30p.m. Satwdayat the 'Hazel
·Tigb. · You think of s.'ny shllpe," she added. "nils is' a ·strange or fDnllgn. Well, I'm Rand Is quicker than the eye," least 2,000 calories a day for spending than Delllocrats _ Portland al Chicago
.
t
•
-'ly s11 t
Golden State at Houston
.Community Olurcb. The pubUc
notstrange,lllkemen,and I'm
you.
'Were musn
ell ·
Washington at PhOeniX
Is Invited.
••

'

_)

'

•

Nrsr
.\iff

..

First aid by TV
tested in Meigs

Editorial comment,
• •
opznlon, features

..

The long, long tunnel

Boston snaps
Piston streak

..

..

Dem·o crats look
to -make switch

Freshm.a n suspended, ·
Auburn tops Tennessee·
BY JOE CARNICELLI
UPI Sports Writer
Bernard King, one of the
finest freshmen basketball
players m the nation, may be
the key to a new recruiting
scandal.
King, the Moot-' Tennessee
star from Brooklyn, N.Y., the
scoring leader in the
Southeastern Conference with
a 27.9 average and ranked
among the league 's top
rebounders, was suspended
indefinitely by the university
Monday pending an mvestlgatlon of possible changes
.
In his grades m
junior high
school.
The Vois felt King's absence
Monday rug' ht when Auburn
rallied in the clo•ino seconds to
-.,
beat Temessee, 6~9. and drop
the Vois to a 13-4 mark.
Athletic Director Bob Woodruff said Monday that King
would be withheld from action
until the matter could be
resolved.
"The University of Tennessee has received a revised
transcript from Fort Hamilton
High School refiecting new
information for junior high
school grades earned by
Bernard King recorded on the
permanent re;.,rd of the high
school " said Woodruff in a
prepa;ed statement
"On the basis of the revised
transcript we are withholding
King !rom'competition pending
luther review by university
officials and appropriate due
process in regard to his
eligibility.
"The transcript received
today (Monday) differs from
previous transcripts provided
to the university by Fort
Hamilton, including one issued
on Jan 3 to two• university
olflciais who visited Fort

SUMMER BALL
Ali girls, ages 16-14, interested in playing on a
Summer Softball League team
should call 992~018 or contact
Kenda Rainey at the Meigs Jr.
High.

Pro Standings

-

..~

n

NfW HAVfN, W.VA.

112·2!1i2!1i

Wilkerson's 18 and Scott May
with 15. Steve Green added 13
and Kent Benson II. C. J .
Kupec led ,Michigan w1th 17.
Charles Cleveland led Alabarna with 22 points and 6-10 Leon
Douglas added 19, all In the
second half, as the Tide roared
out to an 'eariy lead, lost it and
then took control in the late
stages to down Vanderbilt.
Jack Givens paced a secondhili! Kentucky rally and !10d th
ished w1th 14 points to 1ea
e
Wildcats, now 16-2, over LSU .
Glenn Hansen of LSU was the
th
game's high scorer WI 28
·
pam t8 wh'l1e Kentucky 's Kevm
Grevey and Jimmy Dan
Conner had 17 each.
Brad Hoffman,hWalter DaVIs
.
and Mitch Kupc ak combined
for 51 pomts as North C&amp;roima
held off a late rally by South
F1orl'da towm' .Hoffman led the
scormg w1th 18 points, fo11owed
by DaviS with 17. Kupchak,

expected to be •irl•lino&gt;O hecause ol a back ailment, added
16 an d a game-high 13
rebounds.
In another off-the -court
development, Morgan State,
the defendmg NCAA small
college champion, forfeited a
second basketball game in Jess
than a week.
The team declined to appear
for the game w1th Delaware
State in protest of the
suspensiOn of Coach Nathilmal
Frazier for arguing w1th a
referee. Delaware Stale team
received the tipoff and was
dec1ar ed a ~ wmner.
Elsewhere, Miss1ssipp1
downe d Georg1a, 93-87, Furman edged Jacksonville, 92·90,
George Washington beat Virgima M1htary, 90-79, Purdue
crushed Iowa, 107-72, MinnesoIa del eat ed llli nois, 56-50,
and M1ch1gan Stale ripped
Ohw State, tOI-i\3.

Mus k l•es D. en n lSO
• n
'

le n

m ust b attle

''

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By Uolted Press lnlernalional

ln

Exercise alone won't take off fat

Sally Rand still performs at age 70

other games this season but he
scored 14 points Monday night.
H lA bu
.
h d
epu u rn,now l3-4, 8 ea
66-57 and the victory was
clinched when Glen Moon hit
two free throws with eight
seconds left .
Erme Grunfleld, another
New Yorker recruited by
T
ed
.
ennessee, scor 22 P91Dis to
lead the Vois .
In games invoivmg ranked
teams Monday night, No. I
Indiana crushed Michigan, 7448, No. 6 Alabama stopped
Vanderbilt, 66-72, No. 7 Kenblcky edged Louisiana State,
77- 76 • and No. II North
carolina held off stubborn
• 2.
South Fl or1'd a, 7..-7
Indiana overcame a slowdown offense from Big Ten
mal Michigan to extend the
nation's longest winning streak
to 24 games, 21· of them this
season. Four Hoosiers scored
in double figures, led by Bob

It's win or drop out tonight
when Denison and Muskingum
meet in a key Ohio Conference
game at New Concord.
Both the host Muskles and
the Big Red are 5-3 in conterence competiton, only a
game and a half behind pacesetting Marietta, 7-2. But
another loss means almost
certain elimination from
chase
Hamilton to verify all gradea
Another of the seven teams
The latest transcript show~ •who still hilve a chance at the
discrepancies between some
grades earned In junior high OC title, Heidelberg, a game
andrecordedonthepermanent behind the leaders with a 6-3
mark, hosts Otterbein and the
record at Fort Hamilton "
Junior Dan Cox, w~ had Student Princes must also win
played only seven minutes all to keep their hopes alive.
season scored six straight
Monday night 'Michigan
illts
the
last
seconds
to
State
swamped Ohio stale 101po
22
83
lead Auburn past Tennessee.
The win upped the Spartans
Cox had played in only two to 1~ overall and 6-4 in the

..

DR. LAMB

•

loop, while OSU dropped to 11-9
and 5-5.
Didn't Waste Time
Michigan, led by Terry
Furlow with 36 points, wasted
litUe time taking command of
the game, jumping out to a 111-4
lead and pushing It to 25-10.
They led 51-32 at halftime.
Furlow, who connected on 12
of 13 free throw opportUnities,
got ample support from Lindsay Hairston w1th 22 points and
Bill Glover with 16.
Ohio state, which continually
was beaten down the court for
easy baskets by the run and
gun
Spartans,
never
threatened in the final half.
The closest the Buckeyes could
get was 97-83 in the closing
minutes.
Craig Taylor led Ohio Stale
in scoring with 28 points, a
career high, while Bill Andreas

Marauder gals
edge Eastern
EASTERN - The girls of
Me1gs High Coach Mary Jane
Deely had a 16-point lead
dwindle in the closing minutes
here Tuesday evening but held
on to defeat the Eastern Eagle
gals in an exciting basketball
game by the score of 46-43.
The flfst half saw the
Marauders trail only once
early in the second period by
the score of 13-12. They soon
regained the lead for good,
stretchmg 1t to 5 pomts at the
half.
The first half Marauder
attack was led by the shootmg
of Pam Vaughan and Mary
Weyersmiller who had 10 and 8
points respecli¥ely. Beth
Vaughan provided reboundmg
power under both boards.
Second half action began
with Eastern controlling
their
--

-~

-

Henry Block has
17 reasons why you
should come to us
fur li1.come tax hdp.
'

.

Re8801l I. We are income tax
specialists. We ask the right
questions. We dig for every honest
deduction. We want to leave no
stone unturned to make sure you
pay the smallest legitimate tax.

first bp of the mght. They
proceeded to reel off three
straight unanswered buckets'
before Vaughan began where
she left off m the first half. She
battled it out w1th Eagle high
scorer V1cky Epple. Epple,
with the scor~ng of subsbtute
Rachel Hunter and the
rebounding of Jan W1lson cut
the Marauders' lead to one
point twice late in the third
period.
Meigs then scored several
quick baskets to widen its lead
and held off a late surge by the
Eagles to tr1umph 46-43 .
High scorer for the night was
Pam Vaughan with 26. Other
Marauders in the scoring
column were Weyersmiller
w1th 11, Beth Vaughan and
Janel Maue w1th 4 each, and
Joy Wh1le had I.
High scorer for Eastern was
Epple w1th 16 She was
followed by Hunter With 8, Liz
Edwards, Juli Whilehea(i,' and
Tammy F1tch each w1tl\ 6, and
Jan Wilson had I.
·
Me1gs
10 14 10 12-46
Eastern
7 12 12 12-43
MEIGS (46)- B Vaughan 2·
0·4, J . White 0 1·1. J . Maue 2·0·
4, M. Weyersm1ller 5·1·11 , Pam
Vaughan 13·0·26, M. Boggs o.o.
o, Pal Vaughan o 0 0. Totals 21·
4·46.

--

EASTERN (43) - J Wilson
0.1 ·1, L. Edwards 3·0·6, J
Whotehead 3·0·6, T. Fitch 3 0·6,
V. Epple 8-0·16, Hunter 4·0 8.
Totals 21 ·1·43

added 19 and Larry Bolden 18,
many of them coming in the
final few minutes
Michigan State shot 57.5
from the Door for the game,
60.~thesecondhalfandhit 17of
tl •h ., lree throws.
Mi~h1g... •tate coach Gus
Ganakas .a1d he was not
surprised his team shot 57.5 per
cent from the floor.

HoosierS
•
remrun

l

l

0p Sp0

NEW YORK (UPI) - There
was considerable shifting of
position in the United Press
International
Board of
Coaches' coiiege basketball
ratmgs, but undefeated Indiana remained the one constant, retainin~ 1ts unanimous
status as lhe nation's No. I
team.
The Hoosiers, who are · 20-0
this season and whose 23-game
winning streak is the longest In
college basketball, survived
the1r cloSest contest of the
season Saturday with a sixpoint victory at Ohio State.
Meanwhile, UCLA defeated
Pacifie-S Conference archrival Southern C&amp;lifornla by
five points to jump from fourth
to second in the ralings, edgmg
past No. 3 Louisville for the
second spot, although the
Cardinals won both their
games last week.

(20-G l

c

, ,"'""""you

.'

I

.'

.'

.'

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l

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•

•
••

400 2. UCLA ( ~2) 328 3.

The

eBLACK &amp;

WHITE TV
eSTFREO

T'HE INCOME TAX I"EOPLE

MASON RJRNITURE
HERMAN GRATE

nl-5592

MASON, W. VA .

\

I

..

D!~~

1~:~:.:~

__sentinel

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Sundav Times Sentinel
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Easy Terms I

Anything goes tonight when throw In a few Ingredients tljat
the Eastern Eagles host the have proved time and again
Southern Torn8dos m the that records and favorites
second battle between the two don'tmean much when two old
rivals meet, such as home
SV AC squads th1s season
Southern, under the tutelage court advantage and emotions.
Both Wolfe, and his highly
of second-year coach Carl
Wolfe, took the first me~ting, successful counterpart at
44-39 at Racme, just the second Eastern, Bill Phillips, agree
Southern wm m the last 27 that emotions w11l play a key
meetings of the two schools role in the outcome of tonight's
Based on t974 -75 season intra-&lt;:ounty @ff&amp;lr.
"Whoever wants it the most"
records, the Tornados should
be favored tomght. But you can will be on top at the final
whistle" seems to be tho
consensus of both coaches as
the Tornados shoot for their
r.inth win of the aeason and
sixth In league play.
The Eagles, which have
never hnlshe,d lower than
second In the SVAC under
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The Phillips, seem destined to
Cincmnah Reds finally an- break that impressive mark as
nounced some t975 contract they shoot for just their fourth
Slgnings Monday, but unusual victory of the year and fourth
haggling by young players stili m conference activity.
Wolfe Is expected to start
has left the Reds behind last
year 's pacem mking-contracts. Mike Roberts and Tim Hill at
The club's first three an· the guards, with Greg Dunning
nounced signlngs were pitchers and Paul Shull% in the corners
Gary Nolan, Hollie Eastwick and Danny Brown In the
middle. Should Dunning, who'
and Pat Zarhry.
All three pitched mostly for hils been suffering from back
the Indianapolis farm team spasms, not be able to start
lust year and only Eastwick then Wolfe would probably
msert Ruddy Ervin into the
appeared with the Reds starting
five.
eight games 10 September.
Phillips once again will be
Sore-armed Nolan, trying for a
comeback, pitched only twice starting his quick tandem at
the guards, seniors Randy
for Indianapolis In 1974.
Balke
and Greg Bailey.
·
A year ago at this time the
Tim Spencer will be In the
Reds had announced the
middle,
with Phil Bowen and
s1gpmg of 12 players, including
Steve
Nelson
most likely
Jolinny Bench . and several
getting
the
call
at
the corners.
other regulars.
In other SVAC action IOlllght,
Sheldon "Chief" Bender,the
Southwestern
travels to
club's player personnel
Hannan
Trace
and North
director who conducts most of
the negotiations, conceded Gallia visits Wahama.
money dealings are at a slower
pace than a year ago.
"The strange thing is that•
we're having more difficulty
this year with the younger
players," sa1d Bender. "They
ali think they're entitled to
more money just by being on a
rna jor league roster.
."Usually the veterans don't
like to sign too soon. But now
1t 's drifted down to the younger
players and they don't want to
sign .their first contract."
Bender maintains he Is far
from the "panic;' stage.

Three Reds

ink pacts

Are you
gambling..
with your
family's future
avery time·
you start
your car?

row and he played In three
other World Series. His
lifetime batting average waa
.304.

Harris' Senators won the 1924
World Series by beating the
New Yark Giants and lost the
1925 Series to Pittsburgh. He
also managed the 1947 New
York Yankees to a world
championship. Harris' lifetime
record as manager of the
Senators (three times), Detroit
(twice), the Yankees, Boston
Red Sox and Philadelphia
Phlllles was 2159-2219.
The 10 members of the

=~:~~ ~~~~~=· ;~~~co~i

Famera, are Waite Hoyt,
Warren Giles, Olarlie Gehringer, Bill DeWitt, Dan Dllniel,
Bob Broeg, Charlie Segar, Joe
Cronin, Fred Ueb and Paul
Kerr. Stan Mualal and B1ll
Terry were absent.

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I

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William D. Childs

DOWNINGQIILDS
AGENCY, INC.
Middleport, Oliio
'.

A

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This Week's Special

•

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DEVOTED TO THE
INTER EST OF
MEIGS·MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
Exec. Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH

COLOR TY

Free Delivery! .

think It's great to be in !hilt
Hall of Fame. ' That's where
most ballplayers wpnt to be.
There are lots more guys who
deserve it who are not in there
yet."
"I'tn glad It finally happened," said Herman, 68. "I've
been hopeful for some time.
Now that I know I can get on
' with my golf game."
"I'm tremendously happy,"
said Harris, 78. "I want to offer
my congratulations to both
Billy and Earl for making it
too. They both are deserving of
the honor."
Averill, a line drive hitter
with good power for his era,
played for Cleveland Detroit
and the Boston Red Sox from
1929 through 1941. He knocked
In more than 100 runs in five
seasons, had a career total of
238 homers and in his prime
had batting averages of .330,
.339, .333, .314, .301, .313, .288
and .378ln successive seasons. '
Herman, considered one of
the most skillful hit-and-run
men of his time, played for the
Chicago Cubs, Brooklyn,
Boston Braves and Pittsburgh
from 1931 through 1947. He was
a key player on the 1935 Cube
who won the pennant by
Winning their last 21 games In a

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NEW YORK (UP!) _ There are two ways you can look at
k
Buc yHarrlS'recordasamanager . Hemanaged29yearslnthe
majors and durmg that time he won more ball games than
hody is
any
e e except Conrue Mack and John McGraw. Outside of
Mack,healsolostmorethilnanymanagerinhlstory.
One thing BuckyHarrls never has lost or abandoned, though, is
h
d
opel an that's why there was all this excitement over at his
place m Bethesda, Md., Monday.
h
T e voting for Baseball's Hall of Fame had nothing to do with
it Bucky Harris, as a matter of fact, wasn't even aware that the
·
spec1a1 Veterans' Committee had a dale to meet Monday and
·
cons1'der th ose old.tuners
b~passed for the Hall of Fame during
th
e regular baUotmg by the writers.
,
Th e rea1excitement
·
•
at Bucky HarriS' pIa ce was generated
by
th 1 · he 1 'i
e act t anu y doctor had come over the house with some
type of new drug which he hoped would help the one-time "Boy
Wonder."
It was in 1924 that Harris was first called the Boy Wonder and
th
· kna
h ulded th
1or the rue
me was because ha
e g
e
weash'reason
s
mgton enators to a world championship t t year in his
f1rst season as a manager while also playing second base for
th
em.
Bucky HarriS is no longer the Boy Wonder. He's 78 and has
be
If ·
· h p ki
is
w1t
ar,. nson's D ease for some years now.
p enk' su ermg
,
·
,
ar mson s 1sn t conta 0 .ous, but 1n some ways It's worse. In
"
H
1
arrlS'lling
particu
hi ar case, it causes him conaiderable difficulty
contra
s right hand. That's why he was so hopeful when his
doctor told him he had something new. You never can tell, maybe
It'll help
.
Right 10 the nuddle of aU this, the teiephonr,rang.
It was a call from the OidTimers' Cornnuttee, some of whom
like Joe Cronin, Charlie Gehringer and Waite Hoyt, had been
contemporaries of Bucky's during the time he played from 1919
until 1931.
TheytoldBucky Harris he had beeneiecledtotheHallof Fame
along with Earl AverDI and BIUy Herman. They also told him to
get in shape for the mduction ceremony at Cooperstown, N.Y.,
Aug. 18.
Bucky Harris was somewhat of an Institution in Washington
where he managed the ball club three different times. He also
handled the Detroit Tigers, Boston Red Sox, Philadelphia
Phillies and New York Yankees. He won a pennant with the
Yanks in 1947 and when he finished third with them a year later,
faiimg to wm by 2'f.! games, they fired him. It was a case of what
have you done for me lately?
When I called Bucky Monday he told me he always had confidence he'd make the Hall of Fame and how hilppy he was to
•- been e1ected whlle?' he was still. a11ve.
"".~e
..What ar~ YD?, domg 1 as~e,d hun.
.
Killing tune, he laughed. I hope to hang on unlli August
18th. 1 used to go out to the bali park occasionally, but when
Washington moved out it made it a hilrdship because Baltimore
is some hilt
dill It f
t 1to "
w more ICU or me 0 ge ·
Buc~y Harris talked about •,orne of the present managers,
u;ctudmg Frank Robinson, who ll be the first playing manager
smce Hank Bauer 14 years ago.
"Iwouldn'tbesurprlSedlfhemakesagoodone,"Harrissaid
of Robinson, Cleveland's new pilot. "Managing and playing at
th~ same time ,isn't eas~. I had youth in my favor. If 1 made a
rmstake' I dldn t realize II. !also got some go_od cooperation from
the older members of the club, fellows like Walter Johnson, Sam
Rice and Joe Judge."

NEW YORK (UPI) - Two
stashing hitters of the 1930s and
a "hoy wonder" manager from
the 1920s have been elected to
baseball's Hall of Fame by a
special veteran's committee of
the Baseball Writers Associalion of America .
Named Monday In the
playercategory were Earl
Averill, Sr., who compiled a
.318battingaverage with three
American League clubs from
1929 through 1941, and Billy
Herman, a second baseman
who batted .304 during ·his
career with four National
League cluba.
Elected along with them was
Stanley "Bucky" Harris, who
as a 30-year-old playing
manager led the Washington
Senators to
successive
American League pennants In
1924 and 1925 and managed in
the major leagues for 29
seasons.
The three will be formally
inducted into the shrine at
Cooperstown, N.Y., Aug. 18
when Ralph Kiner, seven.time
home-run king of .the National
League with the Pltiaburgh
Pirates, also will he Inducted.
Kiner was elected In national
ballo\ing of !().year veterans of
the BBWAA.
1
"Better late than never/'
said the 71-year old Averill
when notified of his election. "I

Louisville (15-1) 321 4.
Maryland (14-3) 227 5. Kentucky (~2) 2117 8. N.C. St. (13'3) 193 7. Alabama (~2) 162 8.
Southern Cal (13-3) m 9.
Arizona St. ( 17-2) 109 10.
Oregon (15-Z) 58 11. North
Carolina (11·5) 26 12.
Marquette (13-3) 2113. Arizona
(15-4) 1514. Oregon St. (!Z-7) 14
•15. Cle111801l (ID-7) 1111. (Tie)
UN-La1 Vega1 (15·3)10 16.
(Tie) Notre Dame (f-6) 10 18.
(Tie) LaSalle (16-3) 9 18. (Tie)
Crelgbtoo (15-4) 9 18. (Tie)
Tet111essee (13-3) 9

Loc•

Eagles. tonight

Averill, Herman, Harris
elected to Hall of Fame

NEW YORK (UPI) - 'lbe
United Press International
Board of Coaches college
basketball ratings, with
number of firs!iJiace votes and
records through Saturday,
Feb. I in parentheses (40 of 42
coaches voting) Ninth week.
Team Points 1. Indiana (40)

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Uptum

Groh edges
Geiberger

expected

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3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o.,Tuesday, Feb. 4, 19'75

in 1975

By ROBERT C. Mill EJ1.
first round when he "blacked
By RICHARD HUGHES
UPI Business Writer
HONOLULU (UP!)- G~ out" on the 12th hole by taking
Groh, $40,000 richer and ~;.... a nonchalant, casual swing at
The auto and construction
sured of a year's place on the the ball as it lay poised on the
industries suffered severe
pro tour, headed for Palm edge of the hole.
slumps in 1974 but should snap
"I guess I just blacked out,"
Springs today after winning the
out of their depressed
rain-delayed Hawaiian Open In he said. "!just walked up to the
economic state this year,
an upset one...troke victory.
ball and took an absentminded
according to private and
government reports.
The win was the first for the swing at it. I know one thing for
30-year-old Michigan State certain- ! missed it."
General Motors and Ameridropout, who plays out of
can Motors, the largest and
But Groh, whose father gave
taxless Freeport in the Grand him his first club when he was
smallest U.S. automakers,
both reported rough economic
Bahamas. He stitched tog~ther eight, said the thought of that
going last year.
.
two back-to-back68s, a 70and a one missed Jllltl never bothered
GM sald that although the
68 on the final round for his him during the rest of the
onestroke win over AI tournament .
dollar volume of car sales was
OONCERT TONIGHT - Rio Grande College and Rio Grande Community College will
Geiberger, who lead the
down only 12 per cent 10 1974,
"I setUed down today," he
..
present a free folk concert this evenmg at 91n the College Dining Hall. Featured will be Patti
profits plunged 60 per cent
tournament for the first two said in describing his win, "and
DUMMY PRACI'ICE - SEOEMS' first aid instructor
and Rod Radle of San Antonio, Texas, who prsent music in the folk tradition. Trained 10
GM's directors took the rare
Bonnie Larkin demonstrates mouth to mouth breathing on a
rounds. Californian Geiberger got only one bogey. I hit good
SOCiology, theology, and social work, as C&lt;&gt;directors of a volunteer poverty organization they
dropped back after shooting a drives aU week but I was tired
step of cutting the company's
pracllce dummy. This will be the subject of a televiSion
are anxious for dialogue with students, staff, faculty and residents.
'
program to be shown next week on channelS.
quarterly dividend from 85
71 Sunday, but then charged playing every day and was
cents to 65 ce'nts a share and
the last nine to finish with a 69- glad for the rain.postpon'ed day
275 worth $15,620.
canceling the usually generous
off on Saturday."
bonus program for top exArnold Palmer, who gave his
Groh said he spent the day at
ecutives.
"army" hope by starting the the beach and credited the
With sales of $31.5 b1llion in
final round one stroke behind ·warm Pacific waters and
"
1974, GM slipped to second
leader Forrest Fezler, had relaxing sand for the renewed
trouble on the back nine and strength he needed to win.
behind Exxon Corp. as the
ended up with a 71. This,
world's largest industr~al
"
The rains which forced a
coupled with his 69-67-69 gave day's postponement Saturday
corporation. GM profits 10 1974,
Can people learn first aid State Umvers1ty research him a 276 valued at $15,620.
~jt by an energy crisis at the
cleared off for the fmal round,
skills
from
televiSIOn?
That
1s
who
is
m
charge
of
associate
start and the recession at the
Defending champion Jack which was shot in hot, humid
end, Ie 11 to $950 million, the questiOn being asked by the the prOJect sa1d, "We are Nicklaus had to be content with weather. It was the first time
compared with the record $2.4 consumer education staff of the trymg to f10d out how effective $3,300 prize money for his 281. that the Hawaiian had been
Southeast Ohio Emergency television can be in teaching Nicklaus started off with a 68, forced to cancel a day's play
blllion in ~973.
GM.Oiainnan Thomas Mur- MediCal Serv1ce (SEOEMS). first aid skills to adults . We but had wind trouble the because of weather. A torrenTo help provide the answer, hope that what we learn will second day and shot a 74. He tial downpour Sunday also
phy sald, however, that 1975
more
than 120 residents of help us in produc10g several finished with a 7~9.
would be a "turnaround year"
delayed the proceedings for 37
,
Pomeroy
and
Middleport
are
short
television
spots,
each
with
sales
mcreasing
later
m
Grab
made
news
during
the
minutes.
It is like the replay of a bad dream .
bemg recruited by telephone to dealing with a different hieTwo years after "peace with honor," South Vietnam 1s reeling under widespread and sustained the year.
take
part m an experiment. saving first aid skill."
AMC said it lpst $5.6 million
North Vietnamese offensives. President Ford has called for a $300.million step-up in arms aid in
Those
who agree to take
Over the past year, the
addition to $700 mllllon already authorized for this year, and he and his secretary of defense have in the last three months of 1974. parts will be asked to view a
consumer
education section of
The Commerce Department
warned Hanoi thilt tne United States will not stand 1dly by and see South Vietnam go under.
five
minute
program
on
their
".
'lbe antiwar demonstrators are back in the streets of Washington and the voice of the extremist is sald spending for construction home TV sets. This program SEOEMS has given free
American Red Cross first aid
of $134.4 billion last year was
once again heard In the land.
.
·
will teach mouth-to-mouth courses to almost 700 people in
off
I
per
cent
from
1973,
only
"American opinion historically has reacted In anger to outright aggression unprovoked massive
breathing (artificial 1ts seven county service area .
attacka," said Defense Secretary James R. Schlesinger the other day .. . "Congress under these the second yearly decline on · respiration).
record.
All those who take part in this
drcumatances might well authorize the use of American force.•'
present
television experiment
The
only
other
time
conFrom the other side: "Quite clearly, the United States is the reason for the bloody struggle that
ripped off the nQt six and the
Afterward, they will get the will be invited to take a f1rst aid By RICHARD L. SHOOK
struction
spending
fell
was
goea on," sald Bishop John Burt of the Ohio Episcopal Diocese and participant In something called
United
Press
lnterualloual
10,962 fans might as well have
chance to try out their newly course.
the AMembly to Save the Peace Agreement, conveniently Ignoring the fact that no South Vietnamese during the recession of 1960
Without
cracking
a
smile,
when It dropped 1.2 pet cent. learned skill on a pracllce
The "Mouth to Mouth Tom Heinsohn sald It: "We can gone home right then. Detroit
soldiers hilve ever Invaded North VIetnam.
Jllliled to within three, 46-43,
dummy
at
the
SEOEMS
amBreathmg" television program play better...
Quite as clearly, the American people are not buying either viewpoint. They know who was and is Unemployment in the building
with
3:47 left in tt., half but
bulance
station
located
behind
w11l be broadcast over PoinTthe Instigator of war in Vietnam, but they also know In thetr guts that M,OOO American lives and who Industry has been as high as 30
And
Heinsohn's
Boston
CalBoston zoomed out to a 59-47
Veterans Memonai Hospital m View Cable channel 5 during
can count how many billions of dollars areenough.lf South Vietnam cannot defend itself after all that per cent -four times the
tics were devastating In mtermission edge. The Celllcs
Pomeroy.
F1rst
aid
instructors
national rate
the week of Feb. ID-14, Monday
America has done for it, then It never will be able to.
w1ll be on hand to observe and through Fnday at 8:30 p.m defeating the Detroit Pistons, hit 13 of the 19 shots they trietl
In
Atlanta,
Secretary
of
The pop!,llar mood is reflected In Congress, where it is not just the traditional doves who oppose
114-100, Monday night.
in the second quarter.
help each parllc1pant.
and at 11 a.m. on Tuesday and
an Increase In military aid and who, Schlesinger to the contrary, will certainly not countenance the Housing and Urban Develop..
Don
Nelson
scored
the
In the only other NBA game
return of American military persojlnel. They have the lessons of the past 10 years to support them. ment James T. Lynn said Charles DiSogra, an OhiO Thursday.
lO,oooth point of his 13-year Monday night, the Kansas
Yet the SoUth Vietnamese are lighling well, we are told. It is not lack of will but lack of means housing starts last year totaled
career, Jo Jo While hit for 29 City-Omaha Kings downed the
'lbey did not surrender at Phuoc Blnh, the first provincial capital to fall since 1972, but were over- 1.3 mllllon after three consecuand Dave Cowens scored 18, . Philadelphia 76ers, 100-87
whelmed. Their air force is virtually grounded because of a short~e of fuel and spare parts. Their tive years of more than 2
grabbed 20 rebounds and ran while In the only ABA game:
million housing starts.
artillery has but a handful of rounds. They sustained 120,000 casualties last year.
Bob Lanier into a puddle of the Utah stars held off the New
But he said "things look
Not so the North Vietnamese. They hilve been massively rearmed by Russia and Olina. The Ho
sweat.
York Nets, 111-106.
Oil Minh Trail, safe from American bombers, Is now a four-lane highway down which flows the somewhat better" for the
Boston's lOth straight win
Kings 100, 76ers 87:
future because interest rates
wherewithal of war' \II unceasing stream.
ran Its road record to 20-3, by
Larry MeN eiU had career:.
We have heard it all before: Just a few more planes, tanks, guns. Just a little more effort. The are declining and more morfar the best in the NBA. Detroit highs of 26 points and 18
tgage money is available for
Ught at the end of the tunnel.
had a seven-game winning
housing.
WASHINGTON (UPI) - advocating more when the streak at home snapped and rebounds to lead the Kings past
And ~aln from the other side : The Thieu regime Is corrupt, dictatorial, not worthy of being
Philadelphia. McNeill, a seThe reports of the depressed Democrats in Congress say President
saved. lt is Saigon that violated the peace agreement .
has . already dropped into second place In cond-year forward, recently
state of the auto and construe- they will reject President proposed borrowing and the Midwest Division, . 006
Yet the refugees continue to flee - southward, not northward.
moved into the startlng lineup
lion
Industries came as Presi- Ford's proposed $9 billion spending $52 billion . That behind Chicago.
It is tempting to belleve that just a few more billions, one more show of American resolve will
for
Ron Behagen. Doug Collins
salvage something fr~m this endless and unspeakably tragic conflict. Can we stand aside and ~atch dent Ford predicted an 8 per increase in defense spending deficit, Ford and Congress
"I think we can play better," led the 76ers with 24 points and
what little chance fOr freedom exists In Indochina be overwhelmed by communism when mere cen.t unemployment rate for and devote that sum to the allke recognize, could easily Heinsohn said, "if everybody
this year and next.
money could prevent it?
victims of inflation, recession turn out to total closer to $80 contributes and when the Nate Archibald added 23 for
the Kings, who moved within
Most economists had and poverty.
But we have been lied to so much before. We have seen the "best andl brlghtest" men in our
blllion.
rookies get more experience. 3'f.! games of the Midwest
But for once the Democratic
government adopt the tactics of the,enemy, we have seen our young men debased, the nation's honor predicted a sharp recovery
.'
Rep. George Mahon, 0-Tex., They have to get Used to the
would
be
under
way
in
late
1975
Congress
is not eager to outbid conservative chairman of the pace . Every once In a while, Division lead behind Chicago
stained at places like My Lat. We sl\ould never have gotten Involved in that vicious war. Let us at long
·
and early 1976 In what was a Republican President. The House Appropriations Com- they have a good ball game." and Detroit.
last be done with it entirely.
Stars
111,
Nels
lot:
called a V-ahaped recession -a Democrats say they, too, are mittee, calls the budget
Yeos, we are nearing the end of some kind of twmel. But there is noUght. Only darkness
The Pistons got 27 pOints and
Moses Malone and Ron
sharp decline followed by a stumed by the size of the "breathtaking" and says the 11 rebounds from Lanier, who
Boone
combined for 59 points
sharp recovery.
biggest peacetime deficit in increase In Indebtedness "will picked up 20 of his points In the
and
Utah
survived a lastBut the administration's pre- history.
frighten thoughtful first half, and 26 from Dave minute New York bombing
dictions on continued high
They do not dispute that the Americans.''
Bing, but that was it.
attack to down the Nets. Julius .
unemployment and another economy needs the stimulation
Nobody else got more than Erving scored 22 of his 40
Rep. Morris K. Udall, Ariz.,
yearly decline In the Gross of heavy federal deficit spen- a liberal and a candidate for nine and the four forwards
points In the last quarter as the
National Product indicate the ding, but they are uneasy about the
1976
Democratic Coach Ray Scott Used were 7- Nets Jllllled to within two
White House now believes the
presidential nomination, calla for-32.
points. Wall Jones then hit four
recovery will be slow, lasting faintness.
Lanier hooked In the first free throws to put it out of
the
budget
"bloated"
and
inthrough 1976.
Exercise before a meal if you sensitive "to tile needy, the points of the game but Boston reach.
Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
breathing and exercise? At seem to be getting rid of 11.
are
doing strenuous exercise. elderly, and the disadDEAR DR. LAMB - I've what point in the exercise is it
On the basis of my
This
h particularly true for vantaged.''
just come off a successful diet, best to breathe in and out?
description would you say that
Rather than propose spengoing down to 170 pounds. I'm
When, after a meal, is il best a daily mtake of 1,600 to 1,700 recommended that you breathe heart pat1enis, since digesllon
40, five-feet-6ix, stocky build to exercise? Also, what is the calories should stabilize my in during the left and out while alone increases the work of the ding even more, the Democrats
and a college professor, which biochemistry 10volved here? weight once I get to 160 returning the weight to the heart. Fatty foods mcrease the have targeted on the Penstarting pOSition. You whould clumping tendency of the blood tagon 's S8.8 billion increase, a
makes me somewhat seden- Does one increase the usage of pounds ?
avoid holding your breath m and decrease ophmai cir- 10 per cent boost over current
tary in habits.
calories If he exercises right
ABA Stand.ngs
DEAR READER - You may
lnternal•onal Hockey
deep
mspiration as you might culatory function. Wait at least spending of $85.3 blllion.
By Un1ted Press International
I've read your book on fitness before a meal'
have still more weight to lose
League Standings
Eilst
do
during
a
chm.up.
Breath
two
hours
after
a
fairly
InternatiOnal
Even Mahon predicted Conand follow your exercise
What self tests can one apply than you reahze.
w. I. pet. g .b. By Un1ted Press
North
holding
can
trigger
powerful
meal
before
exeradequate
New York
36
14
720
gress
would
cut
the
defense
routines. I use a stationary to detennme the success of
I don't think it makes much
w. I. t. pfs gl ga
Kentucky
35 1" 714
Sag maw
3J 20 2 68 213 181
bicycle each night to help out - abdominal exercises• I've difference when you breathe reflexed that lead to fainting or cismg vigorously. A good walk budget and not go along with St Loui s
20 33 .377
F
lint
32 17 ~ 68 199 152
l 5 36 294
about 60 minutes or so. I do been at this for more than a durmg your exercises. collapse in some people You after a meal, in healthy people, Ford's proposed cutbacks in MemphiS
Muskegon 32 20 2 66 224 156
V1rom•e
12
39
235
should
also
avoid
ove(is no strain and is often helpful. food stamps, health, veterans,
Port Huron 21 28 J 45 174 187
•"
extensive exercises for my year, doing most of your Whatever is comfortable for
West
Kalamazoo
••
w. 1. pet. g.b . x Lansing 14 33 J 31 134 191
absomen.
exerciSes. I have extensive fat you is all that matters. For breathing or breathmg too fast. Healthy people don't n~ to sit education and other social Denve r
12 28 I 25 145 217
42 12 . 778
This
Induces
chemical
changes
or
lie
down
for
long
periods
programs.
South
What is the relahon between around my waist and do not we1ght traimng, it is usually
San Anton1o
33 24 579 101h
•'
w. I. t. pts gf ga
m the body that also lead to after eating. You will use the
2.4 26 480 16
••
Sen. Alan Cranston, ~lif. , lnd1ana
32 17 3 67 211 180
Utah
23 30 434 18 112 Dayton
same number of calories with SW1Uni1rlzed the Democrats• San
Coll!mbus
JO
23
1
61
224
195
"
Diego
21 33 389 21
Toledo
2A 27 3 51 200 198
"
the same task whether 11 is response to Ford's proposals :
Monday's Results
Des Moines 22 28 J 47 179 200
V 1rgmla 107 San Diego 90
•
before or after the meal.
"Deficit spending, or pump. Utah 111 New York 106
Fort Wayne 18 29 J 39 171 197
x
team
disbanded
The best test for abdominal priming, in a time of recession
Tuesday's Games
•
•
M!Lnday's Results
( No games sc-h~duled)
CINCINNATI. (UPI) -Sally Rand."
physical thing. People wonder not foreign, I was born In fat is your waisUine and the is S1IJlP()Sed to stliilulate ' proNo games scheduled
•
A fascinating, mile-a-minute why I just don't do a couple of Missouri.
Today's Games
' Rand Is now 70 years 'Old, a
m
amount of fat under the skin. duction and employment bere
Al
l
Star
Game
at
Kalamazoo
•
grandmother and still strut- talker, Sally was both elegant weeks In Las Vegas each year.
Born Helen Gould Beck on You can tighten up your ab- athome.lnstead,thePresldent
NBA Standongs
and eloquent as she chatted Well, ti I don't do It every day, Easter Sunday 1n 19«H In the domen with exercise but wants to saddle the American By Unoted Press International
~· '
.
Eastern Conference
•••
The famous fan dancer, with curiOWJ reporters before then I can't do It at all."
Ozark mountain community of exercise won 'I eliminate ab- lupayer with 8 $52 billion
Atlantic Dovisoon
lootlnjl much yoonger than 7Q, taking the stage. Her hair was
•
budget deficit by boosting
w. I. pet. g.b.
fdle since last 'lbankscJvtng, Hickory, Mo., Sally loves dominal fat.
•
Boston
36 u 120
made ber first, appearance of sparkling blonde, her face Sally said she has been taking recounting bow she switched
Abdormnal fat means you military spending aud aid to Buffalo
JJ 18 647 m
PARTY GIVEN
•••
1975 at a I1Uburban Newport, nearly wrinkle free and her ballet cia u every day at ber from a legitimate ballerina still have a lot of excess fat to foreign government&amp; while cut- ~~lla~~;:, ,a ~t
: ~~~ 16
10'1 1 Mr'. and Mrs. Max Eichinger
•
Ky., nigbldub Mooday nlgbt body trim. .
lose, and that means more ting back on health care,
Glendora, Calif. home.
into more earthy dancing.
•
Control D•vlsion
, enterlldnedFritl&amp;Ynlghtwitha
and Vowed to tour 40 weeks this , Twice divorced and not
w. 1. pet. g.b . skating and slumber party
What are her audiences like
l§le W&amp;!l arrested four times calorie restriction and con- educlltlon and job cret1ting Washington 36
••
U .720
CUJTeOtly married, Miss Rand today?
year.
•
in one day at the Chicago tinued exercise routines. For programs for out-of-work Houston
2s 26 .49o liv, honoring their daughter,
•
A J!l'omoler sald she Is proudly passed around picCleveland
24 26 .•so 12 ·Becky, 011 her loth birthday
"Many ol. them are here World's Fair in 1933 and the ; more information write to me Amerlams.''
•
21 3' 389 17
eamtnc $1,500 fcr her week's tures of her grandda118hler for obviously because of the publicity pt'(Jpeiled her from a at PO. 0. Box 1551, Radio City ~.the Democrats Atlanta
•
New Orleans · 6 4l .125 29
anniversary, Pizza WI~ served
wart here -.-avera! lo.mtnute repcrters to admire.
Western Conference
along with other refresllments.
nostalgia," she said. "Then f60a weekshawgtrl to a $15,000 Station, New York, N. Y. 10019, did not dispute the accuracy of
•
In her street clothes she was there are the younger ones who a weet headliner In a matter of and ask for the booklet on Ford's I..._" forec8st that
nlcbtly lfage 'lbon.
Midwest
Div&gt;Slon
Guests
were
Barbara
Grueser
~
w. I. p~ g.b.
,
••
M1si Rand' llid she Is doing enSiled to the hilt. She sported : heard , about me from their days.
weight loss. Send 50 cents to unemployment and inflation Ch•cago
29 21 .580
Becky
Ambrose,
Julie
•
" Detroit
.,1 23 57'
Elbe
••
"euctly tbe same dance'~ she high ~. a black, crushed parents •,and want to aee me.
She said the thought o1. cover costs.
2,
26 'so9 w.
rfeld, Tammy Eichinger,
will remain above normal - Kc.omaha
velvet
dress,
pink
scarf
and
a
cld at lbe 1933 Clllcago World's
•
You'll have to judge yourself througi11!MIII
M•iwaukee · 2• 25 •90 •v. Ruth Ann •and Sue Ellen Fry.
"And u;.t there are the real dancing in the nude was
••
uu., d1ld 1;, sald Rep Sam
Pocilic Division
AJ.o atte-''•• 'IIU .._.,_,1
hJr when she streaked to gigantic feathered hat topped young ooee -the ones who unheard ol. back In 1933 8!ld she how many calories you need
"'S
•
, , _._·
w. I. pel. g.b.
·~....,.
with
pink
bows.
l§le
carried
a
llardoiD by ca¥01'11Dg, apparbrother, Mllll:.
never knew Sally 'Rand wu a likes to perpetuate the mystery after you have eliniinaled all Gibbcios D-Fia. wlien told Golden State 30 ~o 600
••
'
•
Seattle
25 26 490 5'r.l
••
ently Dude, beldnd two Oltrich fan..ahaped purse.
"no-no.' They're the most 16 wllether she actually was the significant fat deposits Ford predi.ctad unemployment Pori land
22 28 .4•0 8
Asked
why
she
continues
a
•
•
.feather fana abe skiUfully
20 27 .426 S'l2
under the skin. In general eat would stagnate around 1 per Phoen ix
fiatterelng audience becauae . 111de behind her waving fans .
46-week
a
year
tOur
acbedule
at
8
••
~- age 70, she replied, "Becauae I lheyuytbe)'Ukemyactnow.'' ' ' She dkm't clear up the only enough to control your centfortbe next two years, '1t , LosAn~~~·doyJ: R!~ull: 10'I2
•
"ADd why DOt tbe same fan
Sally maintllne she's not a questloo MCIIday. Instead she weight and still have an muat 1118&amp; be's going to be 1 Boston 114 Detrolt1DO
.,... pr,...,.
KC .Omaho 100 Philadelphia 87
SING PLANNED
duM;e?" lbe liked. 'Tm tbe love shaw business. I'm a bam "stripper" or·~ dancer." just fluttered her 'long adequate supply of energy. Ir' ·.._
•
•w~~r..,~.
Tut.day•s Games
A
hymn
sing featl!ring the
and
I
really
love
tbat
applaWil!.
CJr'lciMI. Wilen you uy fan
The Repnhllcau -by in- Ph iladelphia at BuHolo
"A atrippl!r must t.te some- ~ and Insisted .:...S she you are reasonably active I
t bou
Los A~geles at New York
"Gospel T~es" will be held at , ••
"And, I've got to stiy In thjng ol.f, I don't. EJ:otlc.lllellll has tlrough the years - "the · would hope that might be at ""~ct
doll'I tbJ'* of Tlllle
owo more uplle 8
t deficit Cieveiond'Ol Atlanta
••
7:30p.m. Satwdayat the 'Hazel
·Tigb. · You think of s.'ny shllpe," she added. "nils is' a ·strange or fDnllgn. Well, I'm Rand Is quicker than the eye," least 2,000 calories a day for spending than Delllocrats _ Portland al Chicago
.
t
•
-'ly s11 t
Golden State at Houston
.Community Olurcb. The pubUc
notstrange,lllkemen,and I'm
you.
'Were musn
ell ·
Washington at PhOeniX
Is Invited.
••

'

_)

'

•

Nrsr
.\iff

..

First aid by TV
tested in Meigs

Editorial comment,
• •
opznlon, features

..

The long, long tunnel

Boston snaps
Piston streak

..

..

Dem·o crats look
to -make switch

Freshm.a n suspended, ·
Auburn tops Tennessee·
BY JOE CARNICELLI
UPI Sports Writer
Bernard King, one of the
finest freshmen basketball
players m the nation, may be
the key to a new recruiting
scandal.
King, the Moot-' Tennessee
star from Brooklyn, N.Y., the
scoring leader in the
Southeastern Conference with
a 27.9 average and ranked
among the league 's top
rebounders, was suspended
indefinitely by the university
Monday pending an mvestlgatlon of possible changes
.
In his grades m
junior high
school.
The Vois felt King's absence
Monday rug' ht when Auburn
rallied in the clo•ino seconds to
-.,
beat Temessee, 6~9. and drop
the Vois to a 13-4 mark.
Athletic Director Bob Woodruff said Monday that King
would be withheld from action
until the matter could be
resolved.
"The University of Tennessee has received a revised
transcript from Fort Hamilton
High School refiecting new
information for junior high
school grades earned by
Bernard King recorded on the
permanent re;.,rd of the high
school " said Woodruff in a
prepa;ed statement
"On the basis of the revised
transcript we are withholding
King !rom'competition pending
luther review by university
officials and appropriate due
process in regard to his
eligibility.
"The transcript received
today (Monday) differs from
previous transcripts provided
to the university by Fort
Hamilton, including one issued
on Jan 3 to two• university
olflciais who visited Fort

SUMMER BALL
Ali girls, ages 16-14, interested in playing on a
Summer Softball League team
should call 992~018 or contact
Kenda Rainey at the Meigs Jr.
High.

Pro Standings

-

..~

n

NfW HAVfN, W.VA.

112·2!1i2!1i

Wilkerson's 18 and Scott May
with 15. Steve Green added 13
and Kent Benson II. C. J .
Kupec led ,Michigan w1th 17.
Charles Cleveland led Alabarna with 22 points and 6-10 Leon
Douglas added 19, all In the
second half, as the Tide roared
out to an 'eariy lead, lost it and
then took control in the late
stages to down Vanderbilt.
Jack Givens paced a secondhili! Kentucky rally and !10d th
ished w1th 14 points to 1ea
e
Wildcats, now 16-2, over LSU .
Glenn Hansen of LSU was the
th
game's high scorer WI 28
·
pam t8 wh'l1e Kentucky 's Kevm
Grevey and Jimmy Dan
Conner had 17 each.
Brad Hoffman,hWalter DaVIs
.
and Mitch Kupc ak combined
for 51 pomts as North C&amp;roima
held off a late rally by South
F1orl'da towm' .Hoffman led the
scormg w1th 18 points, fo11owed
by DaviS with 17. Kupchak,

expected to be •irl•lino&gt;O hecause ol a back ailment, added
16 an d a game-high 13
rebounds.
In another off-the -court
development, Morgan State,
the defendmg NCAA small
college champion, forfeited a
second basketball game in Jess
than a week.
The team declined to appear
for the game w1th Delaware
State in protest of the
suspensiOn of Coach Nathilmal
Frazier for arguing w1th a
referee. Delaware Stale team
received the tipoff and was
dec1ar ed a ~ wmner.
Elsewhere, Miss1ssipp1
downe d Georg1a, 93-87, Furman edged Jacksonville, 92·90,
George Washington beat Virgima M1htary, 90-79, Purdue
crushed Iowa, 107-72, MinnesoIa del eat ed llli nois, 56-50,
and M1ch1gan Stale ripped
Ohw State, tOI-i\3.

Mus k l•es D. en n lSO
• n
'

le n

m ust b attle

''

''

By Uolted Press lnlernalional

ln

Exercise alone won't take off fat

Sally Rand still performs at age 70

other games this season but he
scored 14 points Monday night.
H lA bu
.
h d
epu u rn,now l3-4, 8 ea
66-57 and the victory was
clinched when Glen Moon hit
two free throws with eight
seconds left .
Erme Grunfleld, another
New Yorker recruited by
T
ed
.
ennessee, scor 22 P91Dis to
lead the Vois .
In games invoivmg ranked
teams Monday night, No. I
Indiana crushed Michigan, 7448, No. 6 Alabama stopped
Vanderbilt, 66-72, No. 7 Kenblcky edged Louisiana State,
77- 76 • and No. II North
carolina held off stubborn
• 2.
South Fl or1'd a, 7..-7
Indiana overcame a slowdown offense from Big Ten
mal Michigan to extend the
nation's longest winning streak
to 24 games, 21· of them this
season. Four Hoosiers scored
in double figures, led by Bob

It's win or drop out tonight
when Denison and Muskingum
meet in a key Ohio Conference
game at New Concord.
Both the host Muskles and
the Big Red are 5-3 in conterence competiton, only a
game and a half behind pacesetting Marietta, 7-2. But
another loss means almost
certain elimination from
chase
Hamilton to verify all gradea
Another of the seven teams
The latest transcript show~ •who still hilve a chance at the
discrepancies between some
grades earned In junior high OC title, Heidelberg, a game
andrecordedonthepermanent behind the leaders with a 6-3
mark, hosts Otterbein and the
record at Fort Hamilton "
Junior Dan Cox, w~ had Student Princes must also win
played only seven minutes all to keep their hopes alive.
season scored six straight
Monday night 'Michigan
illts
the
last
seconds
to
State
swamped Ohio stale 101po
22
83
lead Auburn past Tennessee.
The win upped the Spartans
Cox had played in only two to 1~ overall and 6-4 in the

..

DR. LAMB

•

loop, while OSU dropped to 11-9
and 5-5.
Didn't Waste Time
Michigan, led by Terry
Furlow with 36 points, wasted
litUe time taking command of
the game, jumping out to a 111-4
lead and pushing It to 25-10.
They led 51-32 at halftime.
Furlow, who connected on 12
of 13 free throw opportUnities,
got ample support from Lindsay Hairston w1th 22 points and
Bill Glover with 16.
Ohio state, which continually
was beaten down the court for
easy baskets by the run and
gun
Spartans,
never
threatened in the final half.
The closest the Buckeyes could
get was 97-83 in the closing
minutes.
Craig Taylor led Ohio Stale
in scoring with 28 points, a
career high, while Bill Andreas

Marauder gals
edge Eastern
EASTERN - The girls of
Me1gs High Coach Mary Jane
Deely had a 16-point lead
dwindle in the closing minutes
here Tuesday evening but held
on to defeat the Eastern Eagle
gals in an exciting basketball
game by the score of 46-43.
The flfst half saw the
Marauders trail only once
early in the second period by
the score of 13-12. They soon
regained the lead for good,
stretchmg 1t to 5 pomts at the
half.
The first half Marauder
attack was led by the shootmg
of Pam Vaughan and Mary
Weyersmiller who had 10 and 8
points respecli¥ely. Beth
Vaughan provided reboundmg
power under both boards.
Second half action began
with Eastern controlling
their
--

-~

-

Henry Block has
17 reasons why you
should come to us
fur li1.come tax hdp.
'

.

Re8801l I. We are income tax
specialists. We ask the right
questions. We dig for every honest
deduction. We want to leave no
stone unturned to make sure you
pay the smallest legitimate tax.

first bp of the mght. They
proceeded to reel off three
straight unanswered buckets'
before Vaughan began where
she left off m the first half. She
battled it out w1th Eagle high
scorer V1cky Epple. Epple,
with the scor~ng of subsbtute
Rachel Hunter and the
rebounding of Jan W1lson cut
the Marauders' lead to one
point twice late in the third
period.
Meigs then scored several
quick baskets to widen its lead
and held off a late surge by the
Eagles to tr1umph 46-43 .
High scorer for the night was
Pam Vaughan with 26. Other
Marauders in the scoring
column were Weyersmiller
w1th 11, Beth Vaughan and
Janel Maue w1th 4 each, and
Joy Wh1le had I.
High scorer for Eastern was
Epple w1th 16 She was
followed by Hunter With 8, Liz
Edwards, Juli Whilehea(i,' and
Tammy F1tch each w1tl\ 6, and
Jan Wilson had I.
·
Me1gs
10 14 10 12-46
Eastern
7 12 12 12-43
MEIGS (46)- B Vaughan 2·
0·4, J . White 0 1·1. J . Maue 2·0·
4, M. Weyersm1ller 5·1·11 , Pam
Vaughan 13·0·26, M. Boggs o.o.
o, Pal Vaughan o 0 0. Totals 21·
4·46.

--

EASTERN (43) - J Wilson
0.1 ·1, L. Edwards 3·0·6, J
Whotehead 3·0·6, T. Fitch 3 0·6,
V. Epple 8-0·16, Hunter 4·0 8.
Totals 21 ·1·43

added 19 and Larry Bolden 18,
many of them coming in the
final few minutes
Michigan State shot 57.5
from the Door for the game,
60.~thesecondhalfandhit 17of
tl •h ., lree throws.
Mi~h1g... •tate coach Gus
Ganakas .a1d he was not
surprised his team shot 57.5 per
cent from the floor.

HoosierS
•
remrun

l

l

0p Sp0

NEW YORK (UPI) - There
was considerable shifting of
position in the United Press
International
Board of
Coaches' coiiege basketball
ratmgs, but undefeated Indiana remained the one constant, retainin~ 1ts unanimous
status as lhe nation's No. I
team.
The Hoosiers, who are · 20-0
this season and whose 23-game
winning streak is the longest In
college basketball, survived
the1r cloSest contest of the
season Saturday with a sixpoint victory at Ohio State.
Meanwhile, UCLA defeated
Pacifie-S Conference archrival Southern C&amp;lifornla by
five points to jump from fourth
to second in the ralings, edgmg
past No. 3 Louisville for the
second spot, although the
Cardinals won both their
games last week.

(20-G l

c

, ,"'""""you

.'

I

.'

.'

.'

,,
l

'

'

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•

•
••

400 2. UCLA ( ~2) 328 3.

The

eBLACK &amp;

WHITE TV
eSTFREO

T'HE INCOME TAX I"EOPLE

MASON RJRNITURE
HERMAN GRATE

nl-5592

MASON, W. VA .

\

I

..

D!~~

1~:~:.:~

__sentinel

C•ty Ed1tor
,
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Sundav Times Sentinel
•

•

Easy Terms I

Anything goes tonight when throw In a few Ingredients tljat
the Eastern Eagles host the have proved time and again
Southern Torn8dos m the that records and favorites
second battle between the two don'tmean much when two old
rivals meet, such as home
SV AC squads th1s season
Southern, under the tutelage court advantage and emotions.
Both Wolfe, and his highly
of second-year coach Carl
Wolfe, took the first me~ting, successful counterpart at
44-39 at Racme, just the second Eastern, Bill Phillips, agree
Southern wm m the last 27 that emotions w11l play a key
meetings of the two schools role in the outcome of tonight's
Based on t974 -75 season intra-&lt;:ounty @ff&amp;lr.
"Whoever wants it the most"
records, the Tornados should
be favored tomght. But you can will be on top at the final
whistle" seems to be tho
consensus of both coaches as
the Tornados shoot for their
r.inth win of the aeason and
sixth In league play.
The Eagles, which have
never hnlshe,d lower than
second In the SVAC under
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The Phillips, seem destined to
Cincmnah Reds finally an- break that impressive mark as
nounced some t975 contract they shoot for just their fourth
Slgnings Monday, but unusual victory of the year and fourth
haggling by young players stili m conference activity.
Wolfe Is expected to start
has left the Reds behind last
year 's pacem mking-contracts. Mike Roberts and Tim Hill at
The club's first three an· the guards, with Greg Dunning
nounced signlngs were pitchers and Paul Shull% in the corners
Gary Nolan, Hollie Eastwick and Danny Brown In the
middle. Should Dunning, who'
and Pat Zarhry.
All three pitched mostly for hils been suffering from back
the Indianapolis farm team spasms, not be able to start
lust year and only Eastwick then Wolfe would probably
msert Ruddy Ervin into the
appeared with the Reds starting
five.
eight games 10 September.
Phillips once again will be
Sore-armed Nolan, trying for a
comeback, pitched only twice starting his quick tandem at
the guards, seniors Randy
for Indianapolis In 1974.
Balke
and Greg Bailey.
·
A year ago at this time the
Tim Spencer will be In the
Reds had announced the
middle,
with Phil Bowen and
s1gpmg of 12 players, including
Steve
Nelson
most likely
Jolinny Bench . and several
getting
the
call
at
the corners.
other regulars.
In other SVAC action IOlllght,
Sheldon "Chief" Bender,the
Southwestern
travels to
club's player personnel
Hannan
Trace
and North
director who conducts most of
the negotiations, conceded Gallia visits Wahama.
money dealings are at a slower
pace than a year ago.
"The strange thing is that•
we're having more difficulty
this year with the younger
players," sa1d Bender. "They
ali think they're entitled to
more money just by being on a
rna jor league roster.
."Usually the veterans don't
like to sign too soon. But now
1t 's drifted down to the younger
players and they don't want to
sign .their first contract."
Bender maintains he Is far
from the "panic;' stage.

Three Reds

ink pacts

Are you
gambling..
with your
family's future
avery time·
you start
your car?

row and he played In three
other World Series. His
lifetime batting average waa
.304.

Harris' Senators won the 1924
World Series by beating the
New Yark Giants and lost the
1925 Series to Pittsburgh. He
also managed the 1947 New
York Yankees to a world
championship. Harris' lifetime
record as manager of the
Senators (three times), Detroit
(twice), the Yankees, Boston
Red Sox and Philadelphia
Phlllles was 2159-2219.
The 10 members of the

=~:~~ ~~~~~=· ;~~~co~i

Famera, are Waite Hoyt,
Warren Giles, Olarlie Gehringer, Bill DeWitt, Dan Dllniel,
Bob Broeg, Charlie Segar, Joe
Cronin, Fred Ueb and Paul
Kerr. Stan Mualal and B1ll
Terry were absent.

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William D. Childs

DOWNINGQIILDS
AGENCY, INC.
Middleport, Oliio
'.

A

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This Week's Special

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DEVOTED TO THE
INTER EST OF
MEIGS·MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
Exec. Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH

COLOR TY

Free Delivery! .

think It's great to be in !hilt
Hall of Fame. ' That's where
most ballplayers wpnt to be.
There are lots more guys who
deserve it who are not in there
yet."
"I'tn glad It finally happened," said Herman, 68. "I've
been hopeful for some time.
Now that I know I can get on
' with my golf game."
"I'm tremendously happy,"
said Harris, 78. "I want to offer
my congratulations to both
Billy and Earl for making it
too. They both are deserving of
the honor."
Averill, a line drive hitter
with good power for his era,
played for Cleveland Detroit
and the Boston Red Sox from
1929 through 1941. He knocked
In more than 100 runs in five
seasons, had a career total of
238 homers and in his prime
had batting averages of .330,
.339, .333, .314, .301, .313, .288
and .378ln successive seasons. '
Herman, considered one of
the most skillful hit-and-run
men of his time, played for the
Chicago Cubs, Brooklyn,
Boston Braves and Pittsburgh
from 1931 through 1947. He was
a key player on the 1935 Cube
who won the pennant by
Winning their last 21 games In a

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NEW YORK (UP!) _ There are two ways you can look at
k
Buc yHarrlS'recordasamanager . Hemanaged29yearslnthe
majors and durmg that time he won more ball games than
hody is
any
e e except Conrue Mack and John McGraw. Outside of
Mack,healsolostmorethilnanymanagerinhlstory.
One thing BuckyHarrls never has lost or abandoned, though, is
h
d
opel an that's why there was all this excitement over at his
place m Bethesda, Md., Monday.
h
T e voting for Baseball's Hall of Fame had nothing to do with
it Bucky Harris, as a matter of fact, wasn't even aware that the
·
spec1a1 Veterans' Committee had a dale to meet Monday and
·
cons1'der th ose old.tuners
b~passed for the Hall of Fame during
th
e regular baUotmg by the writers.
,
Th e rea1excitement
·
•
at Bucky HarriS' pIa ce was generated
by
th 1 · he 1 'i
e act t anu y doctor had come over the house with some
type of new drug which he hoped would help the one-time "Boy
Wonder."
It was in 1924 that Harris was first called the Boy Wonder and
th
· kna
h ulded th
1or the rue
me was because ha
e g
e
weash'reason
s
mgton enators to a world championship t t year in his
f1rst season as a manager while also playing second base for
th
em.
Bucky HarriS is no longer the Boy Wonder. He's 78 and has
be
If ·
· h p ki
is
w1t
ar,. nson's D ease for some years now.
p enk' su ermg
,
·
,
ar mson s 1sn t conta 0 .ous, but 1n some ways It's worse. In
"
H
1
arrlS'lling
particu
hi ar case, it causes him conaiderable difficulty
contra
s right hand. That's why he was so hopeful when his
doctor told him he had something new. You never can tell, maybe
It'll help
.
Right 10 the nuddle of aU this, the teiephonr,rang.
It was a call from the OidTimers' Cornnuttee, some of whom
like Joe Cronin, Charlie Gehringer and Waite Hoyt, had been
contemporaries of Bucky's during the time he played from 1919
until 1931.
TheytoldBucky Harris he had beeneiecledtotheHallof Fame
along with Earl AverDI and BIUy Herman. They also told him to
get in shape for the mduction ceremony at Cooperstown, N.Y.,
Aug. 18.
Bucky Harris was somewhat of an Institution in Washington
where he managed the ball club three different times. He also
handled the Detroit Tigers, Boston Red Sox, Philadelphia
Phillies and New York Yankees. He won a pennant with the
Yanks in 1947 and when he finished third with them a year later,
faiimg to wm by 2'f.! games, they fired him. It was a case of what
have you done for me lately?
When I called Bucky Monday he told me he always had confidence he'd make the Hall of Fame and how hilppy he was to
•- been e1ected whlle?' he was still. a11ve.
"".~e
..What ar~ YD?, domg 1 as~e,d hun.
.
Killing tune, he laughed. I hope to hang on unlli August
18th. 1 used to go out to the bali park occasionally, but when
Washington moved out it made it a hilrdship because Baltimore
is some hilt
dill It f
t 1to "
w more ICU or me 0 ge ·
Buc~y Harris talked about •,orne of the present managers,
u;ctudmg Frank Robinson, who ll be the first playing manager
smce Hank Bauer 14 years ago.
"Iwouldn'tbesurprlSedlfhemakesagoodone,"Harrissaid
of Robinson, Cleveland's new pilot. "Managing and playing at
th~ same time ,isn't eas~. I had youth in my favor. If 1 made a
rmstake' I dldn t realize II. !also got some go_od cooperation from
the older members of the club, fellows like Walter Johnson, Sam
Rice and Joe Judge."

NEW YORK (UPI) - Two
stashing hitters of the 1930s and
a "hoy wonder" manager from
the 1920s have been elected to
baseball's Hall of Fame by a
special veteran's committee of
the Baseball Writers Associalion of America .
Named Monday In the
playercategory were Earl
Averill, Sr., who compiled a
.318battingaverage with three
American League clubs from
1929 through 1941, and Billy
Herman, a second baseman
who batted .304 during ·his
career with four National
League cluba.
Elected along with them was
Stanley "Bucky" Harris, who
as a 30-year-old playing
manager led the Washington
Senators to
successive
American League pennants In
1924 and 1925 and managed in
the major leagues for 29
seasons.
The three will be formally
inducted into the shrine at
Cooperstown, N.Y., Aug. 18
when Ralph Kiner, seven.time
home-run king of .the National
League with the Pltiaburgh
Pirates, also will he Inducted.
Kiner was elected In national
ballo\ing of !().year veterans of
the BBWAA.
1
"Better late than never/'
said the 71-year old Averill
when notified of his election. "I

Louisville (15-1) 321 4.
Maryland (14-3) 227 5. Kentucky (~2) 2117 8. N.C. St. (13'3) 193 7. Alabama (~2) 162 8.
Southern Cal (13-3) m 9.
Arizona St. ( 17-2) 109 10.
Oregon (15-Z) 58 11. North
Carolina (11·5) 26 12.
Marquette (13-3) 2113. Arizona
(15-4) 1514. Oregon St. (!Z-7) 14
•15. Cle111801l (ID-7) 1111. (Tie)
UN-La1 Vega1 (15·3)10 16.
(Tie) Notre Dame (f-6) 10 18.
(Tie) LaSalle (16-3) 9 18. (Tie)
Crelgbtoo (15-4) 9 18. (Tie)
Tet111essee (13-3) 9

Loc•

Eagles. tonight

Averill, Herman, Harris
elected to Hall of Fame

NEW YORK (UPI) - 'lbe
United Press International
Board of Coaches college
basketball ratings, with
number of firs!iJiace votes and
records through Saturday,
Feb. I in parentheses (40 of 42
coaches voting) Ninth week.
Team Points 1. Indiana (40)

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Party given Saturday ~ . Socl'al~ &gt;:·:&lt;·r Shrinettes t~ make artick§:
.
M
h
lt
.
,
.
Sh
fior errz ars a 1Calendan~ ~~~ttes
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A bi rthda y part y honoring
Sherri Marshall, daughter of
Mr . and Mrs. Charles Marshall , was held Saturday night
at the home of Mrs. Harry
Davis by the Juniors of the
Ameri can Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Webster Post 39.
A Charlie Brown and Snoopy
theme was carried out in the
l{lble decorations by Lori Wood
and ')'racey J effers. Numerous
gifts were presented to Sherri .
Games were played with prizes
going to Pam Powers, Jennifer
Clonch, and the honored guest,
with Pam Powers winning the
door prize.
Also presented gills were
Robin Campbell and Tracey
Jeffers who had birthdays in
January.
The birthday ca ke was
decorated with candy hearts

FIVE GENERATIONS- The f!unlly of Mn. Dora Carpenter Is another of Meigs Counties
five generation families. From left to right are Mrs. Carpenter of Rutland, Anna Cline, Maxine
Haning, Jim Haning, and daughters, Sonya and Tanya Haning, all of Albany.

·
b
Women 'sclubprogramgiven on drug a USe
NEW HAVEN, W. Va . on Wednesday , a closed
Mrs. Robert Hickel, chair- meeting Is held in Ripley, and
woman of the New Haven on Thursday evening an open
Woman 's 'Club Committee on meeting is held in Ripley at the
Drug .Abuse, was in charge of Episcopal Church.
·
tile program Tuesday at the
Films, "Drink, Drank and
mee ting of · tile New Haven Drunk ," and "Escape from
Woman 's Club " in the New Addiction" ·were shown. Mrs.
Haven Ubrary social room.
Dick Grinstead operated the
The group read the Club projector.
Collect for Women for the
Mrs. Kenneth Thompson,
diwolionals and closed with president, announced that a
prayer.
special business meeting will
Special g_uests introduced be held . on February 11 at 8
were Arin Griffin, Director p.m. in the club room .
Therapist with the -\lcohol Unit
She also announced that the
at Lakin State Hospital, and second annual Ubrary ApJune Baltic, Councilor at Lakin predation Day will be held on
with the Alcohol Unit.
Sunday from 2 to 5 p.m. at the
In a question and answer New Haven Ubrary sponsored
seS.ion, lt w~s brought out that by the New Haven and Mason
not enough information is Ubraries. It will honor the
available to teenagers on the legislators whose interest in
harmful effect of alcohol to the library work has extended
body and that many teenagers throughout the year. Mrs. Paul
are turning to alco~ol 'as it Is · Powell is librarian at tile New
legal and cheaper than drugs .' Haven library a)ld Mrs. Ray
Help dm be obtained from Proffitt is Mason's librarian .
AA (AlcoholiC$ Anonymous )
The pre~ldenl'recornmended
. which meets every Monday that the club encourage
· evening at 8 at Lakin State plartting red, while and blue
Hospltal,ln an open meeting. A petunias in keeping with
closed meeting Is held ,on American Heritage this
Tuesday evening in Galllpolls:

.

POllY'S POINTERS ·
BY pOLLY CR,WER

~fJnel~

~

fJnattress
hard to sweeten

POLLY'SPROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - · How can
one remove the odor of smoke
imd perfume from a · foam
mattress7 \We bought a sleep
set second\ ))and and did not
notice the odor until we had
gotten It home. It Is most annoylng and very noticeable at
night. - ROSALYN.
DEAR ROSALYN - Have
you tried spraying your
mattress with an odorless
household disinfectant? Also
you mlgbt try pliltblg a bowl of
water with ammonia In , It
IUidet the bed for a while
duriD&amp; the day only. A bowl of
vinegar placed there or a
container of charcoal are also
posslbllill.S - both could be
lefllbere day aad night. Good
lock but doubtless several tries
wUI be required. - POLLY.

..

summer and carry this project
&lt;Jver intu summer of 1976. She
suggested as a possibility tha t
a committee sell the seeds.
Mrs. F. C. Reichert was
welcomed
a s a new member.
.I
At the close of the meeting
_the leaders said there is more
opportunities today for successful
treatment
and
prevention of alcoholics than
ever existed before . The
alcoholic program at Lakin is
state and fed eral funded and
the cost os $9 per day. The
whole state is served at Lakip.
Refreshments were servell.
Hostesses were Mrs . Gary
Batey, Mrs. Robert Dye, Mrs.

r{
~

Maxmc t;nmm, Mrs . Dorsey
Roush, Mrs. Donald Roush and
Mrs . Ron Hester.
Attending were Ann Griffin,
Jun e Baltic, Mrs. Phil Baley,
Mrs. Harold Bumgarner, Mrs.
Wayne Carter, Mrs. George
Circle, Mrs. Charles Divers,
Mrs. Jack Flesher, Mrs. R. G.
Greene, Mrs. John Haeberle,
Mrs. Arthur Hart, Mrs. Eugene
Hester, Mrs . Ron Hester, Mrs.
Robert Hickel , Mrs . Tom
Hoffman, Mrs. George Ingels,
Mrs. J . Marshall, Mrs. F. C.
Reichert, Mrs. Ron Robinson,
Mrs. Kenneth Thompson, Mrs.
Dick Grinstead, Mrs. John
Wolfe and Mrs. Frank Young.

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

&gt;.::

and ten candles . It was baked
by Mrs. Paul Casc i. The
refre shm ent s were se rv ed
from a table covered with a
lace cloth and centered with
Snoopy and Charlie Brown
fi gures nanked by red tapers in
crystal holders. Mrs. Robert
Couch serv ed the cake, Cheryl
!£hew the ice cream, and
Denise Marshall presided at
the punch bowl.
Napkin s and min t cups
carried out the theme and for
favor s each ~ues t received a
Sno opy pin . Sherri wa s
presented the cen terpiece by
Lori Wood.
Attendin g the party besides
those named wer e Faye
Reibel, Peggy Snider , Paula
Kloes , Charlie Marshall ; Mrs.
Charles Marshall , and Mrs.
Grace Pra tt.
Sending gills were Laura
Ohlinger, Arlie Runnel , Jill
Barker, · and the junior and
senior Ameri can Legion
Auxiliary untls.
During the evening pic tures
were taken and Mrs . Davis will
present the honored guest with
a cube containing six of them.
Meigs Salon 710, Eight and
Forty, contributed toward the
party.

~~

By Helen and Sue Bottel

!\\

The Best Laid Plans ...
Readers All :
By now you've heard that Sue Is the new Mrs. Clifton Pep.
pers (though she retains "Bolte!" as her pen name).
But did you ever hear of a. bride whose parents replaced her
and her husband on their honeymoon ... while the newlyweds
stayed belllnd to pet-Bit the family dog and cats?
Sounds like one of our wild, unbelievable GENERATIPN
RAP questions, right? ActuaUy, It happened right here in River
City (Sacramento, California) to your columnists, Daughter Sue
and Mama Helen and their respective spouses.
And we're still laughing .. . which proves our young people
have a great sense.of humor- and the older folk enjoy surprises.
The perfectly planned wedding, or so we thought! Sue and
Cliff, coUege students, 1118!TYing at winter semester break,
getting time off from their v'arious jobs and classes so tbat they
could spend eight days In Hawaii - their gift from Sue's parents.
And then, scarcely more than a week before the January 18
ceremony, Cliff was offered a new job he couldn't refuse, with no
possible chance for a vacation break!
So here we were :1 a Hawaiian honeymoon trip all arranged,
last minute calceUations difficult ... and no takers.
Natur11lly, we did what any other sensible parents would do :
we. waved goodbye to our newlyweds (they weekended at a Lake
Tahoe Sid Lodg~). and next day boarded the newlyweds' plane to
Hawaii.
'
Sue and Cliif returned Monday to spend the week with our
various animals (who don't approve of veterinary housing), and
we returned the following Monday, tanned and relaxed and ready
lor a new phase of our lives - the adjuStment that comes when
the, last chick leaves the nest,
ReaUy,lt's kind of nice. A honeymoon does a lot for a couple
who has been married more than 35 years! -HELEN

Mrs.
Barbara
Dugan
presided. Lists of articles to be
made will be distributed to the
members and sewing will be
done at future meetings.
Information sheets will be
mailed to each of the merJ1bei.s
to complete so that a philanthropist report can be completed for the club.
Cards of thanks were read
from Mrs. Mary Baldwin and
Mrs. Clara Adams for
remembrances during their
illnesses. A committee of Mrs.
Erma Yoho, Miss Shirley
Beegle, and Mrs. Emma
Clatworthy was named to
review the by-laws. Mrs.
Dugan and Mrs. Adams will
host the February meeting to
be held at the club house with

MASON PERSONAJ..'!
Mrs. Mary Aumiller, mother
of Mrs . Reuben Stewart and
Mrs. Maxine Arnold is a
patient at Holzer Medical
Center . .She reportedly suffered a stroke.
Mr. and Mrs. George Carson
were dinner guests of her
mother; Mrs. Ollie Roush in
New Haven on Sunday.
Robert
Dudding
is
recuperating from eye surgery
at his home. The surgery was
performed at Holzer Medical
Center.
The Reverend Clarence
McCloud is a patient at ·
Pleasant Valley Hospital. He is
the minister of Mason United
Methodist Church.

G,.,atbuy
.for your

'tavotlte
guy .

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Water and shocreolslant. Styled ill

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sweep aeeond hand. Full
·numera·l dlai.:Biaok
leather strap: ·And •
Bulova·guarMt,e\

ON DEAN'S LIST
Donna Rae Weber, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Weber,
Rutland, was named to the .
dean's list at Ohio Universixy
for the fall quarter. Miss
'w
· a seruor
· maJormg
· · tn
·
eber IS
ed
t'
Sh
e1ementary uca !On. e is
~resident of Kappa Delta Pi,
the
national
education
honorary society.
SALON TO MEET
Gallia County 8 and 40, Salon
612 will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at the home of Grace

All for a mere

S1~.es·.

&lt;ll~me
Goessler
JEWELRY
STORE
Court St., Pomeroy

fIPr:!at~t!in~M~id:d~le~po:r!t·. . . . . .~::::::::::::::::::::

ral.

POMEROY Lodge 164 F&amp;AM
7:30 p.m. All Master Masons
invited.
MIDDLEPORT LITERARY
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
home of Mrs. Forest Bachtel.
Mrs. Thereon Johnson to
review the book, "Thomas
Jefferson'' by Fawn Brodie,
&amp;I'd Miss Kathryn Philson to
review "The Cabin" .by Walter
Collins 0 'Kane. Roll call wiD
be a comment on the book.
THURSDAY
CATHOLIC Women's Club,
Sacred Heart Parish church
hall, 8 . p.m . Thursday,
preceded by Mass at 7:30p.m.
COMMITTEE FOR . the
Mentally Retarded, Thursday,
7:30p.m. Meigs County courtroom. Public invited.
MONTHLY meeting, Meigs
County Pioneer and Historical
Society, 7:30p .m. Thursday at
museum. Gayle Price, Portland, wiD present material on
·the Portland area and the
Price and Curtis families. The
public is invited.

KIMBERLY
ANN
BURTON, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. · Robert BuJ:(on,
celebrated her first birthday
on Jan. 27 with a party at the
home of her parents and
brothers, Steve and Charles.
She is the granddaughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gheen,
Racine.

shallow scratches that 1
·pa,inted with red nail polish.
Then some nicked red beads
received the' same treatment
and both were like new again,
well, almost. - MRS. A.H.E.
DEAR POLLY - One of iny
energy-saving ideas is to make
paper logs that wiD burn about
an hour . Rinse an empty waxed
milk carton, tightly roll old
newspapers and stuff in the
carton and be all set. +++
CHEERFUL.
DEAR POLLY - With this Dear Readers:
Just think. what we can tell our chlldrlm- all about the time
· severe inflation most of us are
Mommy
and Daddy took a Hawaiian honeymoon by proxy.
seeking ways to stretch our
But
really,
it's worked out for the best : we had a terrific
dollars. ' I want to pass' on to
newlywed
weekend
on the ski slopes, and we'll stlll have that trip
others who use a lot of butter
the way I stretch mine. I make to l:lawaii on our first anniversary, or whenever we can manage
.. ·
one pound of butter stretch to vaca\ion time together.
And
we
won't
regret
being
practical:
Cliff
likes
his
new
job
two by adding two cups of
evaporated Jllilk, believe it or with the State - It's made to orderfor a college student - and his
not. Let butter warm to room hours are almost the same as mine at our local KCRA·TV station.
. temperature and then cream. But there were moments back in January I'll never forget: Such
DEAR POLLY - My Pet , Add the milk a litUe at a time as :
... Mom and Dad In the front room discussing plans for their
Peeve may seem small but is and keep beating until all the
OUR) tour, while Isat in the kitchen writing thank-you
(formerly
most annoying. It concerns the milk is absOrbed. Chill to a
IIQtes
to
friends
who had wished Cliff and me a "wonderful trip to
very short line left for zip code solid mold and you •re twice as
Hawaii."
numbers on many order blanks butter-rich. - MRS. W.C.S.
... My offering to lend Mom the bright orange sem1-Btring
and then a longer space Is
DEAR POLLY ..::. Aller you
.
bikini
I'd made for Waiklkl surfs. (FuMy - she turned me
allotted for the state name wash a nannel-backed vinyl
down.)
which could be abbreviated. tablecloth In the washer spray
... For a while there, It was hard being what you'd call
I read in the collimn ahoui starch on the nannel side . You
thrilled
with the duties of w!llchl.t!g the house, feeding and conMrs. G.I.R. using !lilver nail will find it will lay smoother
silting
the
dogs and cats ... and "doo't forget, kids, water the
polish to touch up a worn silver and look like new .- MRS. E.L:
Indoor
plants,
be sure the refrigerator Is ruming, pick up the
·purse. 1 want 'to add to that a'
.
·
newspapers and mall, tum the lights on in the evenirig, lock the
bit. My red shoes had ugly but
doors as you leave, and remember what Tax (our dOg ) does to
the back lt~wn, the shoVel's in the tool shed ... "-aU those things
parents repeat ten times on the way 1o the airport. (Gosh,
honeymoons are conlu.slng - my mother never told me they'd be
!Ike this !)
Ultle did I mow when I chipped in to buy our folks luggage
lor Ouilllmas that they would be using it on MY wedding trip.
·But it was fun, anyway. -SUE

·
TUESDAY
CHESTER Council 323, D of
A 7:30 p.m., at the hall.
Balloting to lake place . Silent
auction by the home and orphans committee .
MIDDLEPORT Mason
.Lodge, F&amp;AM , 7:30 Tuesday at
the Middleport Maslnic
Temple ; entered apprentice
degree work.
SOUTHEASTERN Ohio
Gospel Music Association at
home of Larry McGraw, SR 160
north of Holzer Medical
Center. Potluck at 6 p.m.
meeting at 7 p.m.
INDOOR CAMP meeting ,
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church, 7:30p .m. Rev. A. B.
Malloy , evangelist, Arnold and
Garnett Sexton, song leader
and musicians, nightly through
Friday.
OHIO Eta Phi Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 7' 30 p.m.
at the Coiwnbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co. "Bakeless"
bake sa Ie. Cullura1 repor t by
Mrs . Sharon Bailey, with .
hostesses, Mrs. Bailey and
Kathy Cwnings.
MEIGS County Chapter of
the American Red Cross, 7:30
p.m. at Veterans Memorial
Hospital cafeteria. All board
members asked to be present.

-

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FAMILY CALLS
CLIFTON , W. Va .
Members of the family calling
at the home of Mrs. Chester
(Frances) Oliver Saturday
evening, Jan. 25, to celebrate
her birthday were Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Oli~er , Lance and
Lynn; Mr. and Mrs. Luther
Tucker, Terry, Tim, Tod and
Troy, all of Mason ; Gale
Oliver. Chester Oliver was also
present. Ice cream and birthday cake were served. Gifts
were presented to Mrs. Oliver.

•
v

-.....

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992-2171

Ptt. m-lno
107 Sycamore ' PomerOy

By JACK R. PAYTON
TEL AVIV (UPI ) - Israel
hopes to avoid another Middle
East war and ensure a
measure of stability in the
region by negotiating a secondstage military disengagement
accord with Egypt in the Sinai
desert.
By giving Egypt some of iIs
Sinai territory back and
holding open the possibility
that more will be returned in
future negotiatiQns, Israeli
leaders hope to eliminate the
threat of imminent war on the
country's so~thern flank. By
this metllod they would reduce
the threat from Syria, which
Israel believes does not want to
take on the Israeli army alone.
Negotiations on a new
Israeli-Egyptian accord in
Sinai are to begin in earnest
next month when Secretary of
State Henry A. Kissinger
begins his latest diplomatic
shuttle between Cairo and
Jerusalem. Israeli sources in
Washington have said they
expect the'Kissinger mission to
be exploratory. They said the
secretary probably will return
to the Middle East in March,
possibly to complete the
negotiations.
Though Prime Minister Yilzhak Rabin says Israel is not
acting under deadline pressure
to achieve a new agreement
with Egypt, a natural deadline
Is present. The mandate
allowing United Nations troops
to police the cease-fire on the
Sinai front expires April 24.
The man~ate on the Golan
Heights, which Israel captured
from Syria in 1967, expires May
30.
Kissinger negotiated the
mandates last year as part of
the first troop disengagement
accords followih§ the 1973
Middle East war.
By spring the rains and
snows that · prevent mas s
movement of troops and armor
in tl)e mountainous and rockstudded Golan Heights will
have disappeared and , conditions for warfare, inclllding
aerial combat, will be Ideal.
In addition to the deadlines
imposed by the U. N. mandates, Egyptian President
Anwar Sadat has ·put up a
deadline of his own. Sadat has
said · that is Israel does not
withdraw rnilltarUy from the
. Egyptian, Syrian and Jordanian fronts within three
months, he wiD call for an
immediate resumption of the
Geneva Middle East conference and "blow up" the
peace negotiations.
· In
rejecting
Sad at's
deadline, Rabin said Israel was
not afraid of the Geneva
co!lference and its army was
prepared 'for war.
This assessment-is echoed by
Western defense analysts.
The analysts say the Arabs
lost four times as many aircraft and twice as much armor
as Israel did in the 1973 war.
Even with the massive
resupply of sophisticated
Soviet arms to Syria since the ,
war, they say, Israel still enjoys an edge in weapons
because of the U. S. arms
resupply effort.
In addition, the analysts say
that because the Soviet arms
shipments to the region have
largely bypassed Egypt,
Cairo's army is neither
prepared nor anxious to mount
a fu!lscale war effort soon.
Taking these factors into
consideration, former Defense
Minister Moshe Dayan says he
does not think allout war is
probable in the first half of this
year.
-"The Egyptians don't want
war and the Syrianss aren 'I
ready for it, n~t ill the next
three months anyway," Dayan ·
said. "There's a danger of
course. But I don't think full·
scale war is imminent."
l!lefense analysts say tha!
.Ven though Sadat is·moving to
secure new sources of arms,
especially from France, the
Egyptian army could not hope
to confront .Israel with any
success Wiless It Is bolstered by
masalve shipments of the latest

Soviet weapons.

~

to let our experts exam!

IITfl. iiSPEIIIS

II~

-••...
A

1·-·EIITIIHOT
RUDe, Mr. and Mrs' Tom
Spencer and Jared, Mr. and ·
Ml:s. Lyle SwaiD, Jay and
Joy, and grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs . . Arvil Holter liDd
Mr. and Mrs. JamO!ll 0 .
Swain. Unable . to &lt;: attend
were . his
greatgrandparents, Mr' aad Mrs. .
Worley Davis and J. E.
Barnhart.
·

•

!

NOTE TO THE EIDER BO'ITELS: 1banx, Mom and Dad,
for the beautiful honeymoon, past and future. Hope yours was
half as Interesting as ours! We love you. -CUFF Ar)DSUE

for .sou~s. coffee. cereal, hoi
chocolate, dozens of things.

Israeli
hopeful
.. of peace

Plans to make articles lol' all members asked to take a :
the Shrine hospitals were made valentine.
.
"
In a recent meeting of the Twin
at the club

~::

. .

WEDNESDAY
. MIDDLEPORT Firemen's
Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m. at the
firehouse. Mrs. Euvette
Bechtle and Mrs . Emma
Wayland,
hostesses .
Nomination of officers.

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Generation Rap

~·
·

5- The Daily Sent:inel, Mi&lt;ldle!X&gt;rt~~

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Party given Saturday ~ . Socl'al~ &gt;:·:&lt;·r Shrinettes t~ make artick§:
.
M
h
lt
.
,
.
Sh
fior errz ars a 1Calendan~ ~~~ttes
:~
:;:;

·

•

A bi rthda y part y honoring
Sherri Marshall, daughter of
Mr . and Mrs. Charles Marshall , was held Saturday night
at the home of Mrs. Harry
Davis by the Juniors of the
Ameri can Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Webster Post 39.
A Charlie Brown and Snoopy
theme was carried out in the
l{lble decorations by Lori Wood
and ')'racey J effers. Numerous
gifts were presented to Sherri .
Games were played with prizes
going to Pam Powers, Jennifer
Clonch, and the honored guest,
with Pam Powers winning the
door prize.
Also presented gills were
Robin Campbell and Tracey
Jeffers who had birthdays in
January.
The birthday ca ke was
decorated with candy hearts

FIVE GENERATIONS- The f!unlly of Mn. Dora Carpenter Is another of Meigs Counties
five generation families. From left to right are Mrs. Carpenter of Rutland, Anna Cline, Maxine
Haning, Jim Haning, and daughters, Sonya and Tanya Haning, all of Albany.

·
b
Women 'sclubprogramgiven on drug a USe
NEW HAVEN, W. Va . on Wednesday , a closed
Mrs. Robert Hickel, chair- meeting Is held in Ripley, and
woman of the New Haven on Thursday evening an open
Woman 's 'Club Committee on meeting is held in Ripley at the
Drug .Abuse, was in charge of Episcopal Church.
·
tile program Tuesday at the
Films, "Drink, Drank and
mee ting of · tile New Haven Drunk ," and "Escape from
Woman 's Club " in the New Addiction" ·were shown. Mrs.
Haven Ubrary social room.
Dick Grinstead operated the
The group read the Club projector.
Collect for Women for the
Mrs. Kenneth Thompson,
diwolionals and closed with president, announced that a
prayer.
special business meeting will
Special g_uests introduced be held . on February 11 at 8
were Arin Griffin, Director p.m. in the club room .
Therapist with the -\lcohol Unit
She also announced that the
at Lakin State Hospital, and second annual Ubrary ApJune Baltic, Councilor at Lakin predation Day will be held on
with the Alcohol Unit.
Sunday from 2 to 5 p.m. at the
In a question and answer New Haven Ubrary sponsored
seS.ion, lt w~s brought out that by the New Haven and Mason
not enough information is Ubraries. It will honor the
available to teenagers on the legislators whose interest in
harmful effect of alcohol to the library work has extended
body and that many teenagers throughout the year. Mrs. Paul
are turning to alco~ol 'as it Is · Powell is librarian at tile New
legal and cheaper than drugs .' Haven library a)ld Mrs. Ray
Help dm be obtained from Proffitt is Mason's librarian .
AA (AlcoholiC$ Anonymous )
The pre~ldenl'recornmended
. which meets every Monday that the club encourage
· evening at 8 at Lakin State plartting red, while and blue
Hospltal,ln an open meeting. A petunias in keeping with
closed meeting Is held ,on American Heritage this
Tuesday evening in Galllpolls:

.

POllY'S POINTERS ·
BY pOLLY CR,WER

~fJnel~

~

fJnattress
hard to sweeten

POLLY'SPROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - · How can
one remove the odor of smoke
imd perfume from a · foam
mattress7 \We bought a sleep
set second\ ))and and did not
notice the odor until we had
gotten It home. It Is most annoylng and very noticeable at
night. - ROSALYN.
DEAR ROSALYN - Have
you tried spraying your
mattress with an odorless
household disinfectant? Also
you mlgbt try pliltblg a bowl of
water with ammonia In , It
IUidet the bed for a while
duriD&amp; the day only. A bowl of
vinegar placed there or a
container of charcoal are also
posslbllill.S - both could be
lefllbere day aad night. Good
lock but doubtless several tries
wUI be required. - POLLY.

..

summer and carry this project
&lt;Jver intu summer of 1976. She
suggested as a possibility tha t
a committee sell the seeds.
Mrs. F. C. Reichert was
welcomed
a s a new member.
.I
At the close of the meeting
_the leaders said there is more
opportunities today for successful
treatment
and
prevention of alcoholics than
ever existed before . The
alcoholic program at Lakin is
state and fed eral funded and
the cost os $9 per day. The
whole state is served at Lakip.
Refreshments were servell.
Hostesses were Mrs . Gary
Batey, Mrs. Robert Dye, Mrs.

r{
~

Maxmc t;nmm, Mrs . Dorsey
Roush, Mrs. Donald Roush and
Mrs . Ron Hester.
Attending were Ann Griffin,
Jun e Baltic, Mrs. Phil Baley,
Mrs. Harold Bumgarner, Mrs.
Wayne Carter, Mrs. George
Circle, Mrs. Charles Divers,
Mrs. Jack Flesher, Mrs. R. G.
Greene, Mrs. John Haeberle,
Mrs. Arthur Hart, Mrs. Eugene
Hester, Mrs . Ron Hester, Mrs.
Robert Hickel , Mrs . Tom
Hoffman, Mrs. George Ingels,
Mrs. J . Marshall, Mrs. F. C.
Reichert, Mrs. Ron Robinson,
Mrs. Kenneth Thompson, Mrs.
Dick Grinstead, Mrs. John
Wolfe and Mrs. Frank Young.

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

&gt;.::

and ten candles . It was baked
by Mrs. Paul Casc i. The
refre shm ent s were se rv ed
from a table covered with a
lace cloth and centered with
Snoopy and Charlie Brown
fi gures nanked by red tapers in
crystal holders. Mrs. Robert
Couch serv ed the cake, Cheryl
!£hew the ice cream, and
Denise Marshall presided at
the punch bowl.
Napkin s and min t cups
carried out the theme and for
favor s each ~ues t received a
Sno opy pin . Sherri wa s
presented the cen terpiece by
Lori Wood.
Attendin g the party besides
those named wer e Faye
Reibel, Peggy Snider , Paula
Kloes , Charlie Marshall ; Mrs.
Charles Marshall , and Mrs.
Grace Pra tt.
Sending gills were Laura
Ohlinger, Arlie Runnel , Jill
Barker, · and the junior and
senior Ameri can Legion
Auxiliary untls.
During the evening pic tures
were taken and Mrs . Davis will
present the honored guest with
a cube containing six of them.
Meigs Salon 710, Eight and
Forty, contributed toward the
party.

~~

By Helen and Sue Bottel

!\\

The Best Laid Plans ...
Readers All :
By now you've heard that Sue Is the new Mrs. Clifton Pep.
pers (though she retains "Bolte!" as her pen name).
But did you ever hear of a. bride whose parents replaced her
and her husband on their honeymoon ... while the newlyweds
stayed belllnd to pet-Bit the family dog and cats?
Sounds like one of our wild, unbelievable GENERATIPN
RAP questions, right? ActuaUy, It happened right here in River
City (Sacramento, California) to your columnists, Daughter Sue
and Mama Helen and their respective spouses.
And we're still laughing .. . which proves our young people
have a great sense.of humor- and the older folk enjoy surprises.
The perfectly planned wedding, or so we thought! Sue and
Cliff, coUege students, 1118!TYing at winter semester break,
getting time off from their v'arious jobs and classes so tbat they
could spend eight days In Hawaii - their gift from Sue's parents.
And then, scarcely more than a week before the January 18
ceremony, Cliff was offered a new job he couldn't refuse, with no
possible chance for a vacation break!
So here we were :1 a Hawaiian honeymoon trip all arranged,
last minute calceUations difficult ... and no takers.
Natur11lly, we did what any other sensible parents would do :
we. waved goodbye to our newlyweds (they weekended at a Lake
Tahoe Sid Lodg~). and next day boarded the newlyweds' plane to
Hawaii.
'
Sue and Cliif returned Monday to spend the week with our
various animals (who don't approve of veterinary housing), and
we returned the following Monday, tanned and relaxed and ready
lor a new phase of our lives - the adjuStment that comes when
the, last chick leaves the nest,
ReaUy,lt's kind of nice. A honeymoon does a lot for a couple
who has been married more than 35 years! -HELEN

Mrs.
Barbara
Dugan
presided. Lists of articles to be
made will be distributed to the
members and sewing will be
done at future meetings.
Information sheets will be
mailed to each of the merJ1bei.s
to complete so that a philanthropist report can be completed for the club.
Cards of thanks were read
from Mrs. Mary Baldwin and
Mrs. Clara Adams for
remembrances during their
illnesses. A committee of Mrs.
Erma Yoho, Miss Shirley
Beegle, and Mrs. Emma
Clatworthy was named to
review the by-laws. Mrs.
Dugan and Mrs. Adams will
host the February meeting to
be held at the club house with

MASON PERSONAJ..'!
Mrs. Mary Aumiller, mother
of Mrs . Reuben Stewart and
Mrs. Maxine Arnold is a
patient at Holzer Medical
Center . .She reportedly suffered a stroke.
Mr. and Mrs. George Carson
were dinner guests of her
mother; Mrs. Ollie Roush in
New Haven on Sunday.
Robert
Dudding
is
recuperating from eye surgery
at his home. The surgery was
performed at Holzer Medical
Center.
The Reverend Clarence
McCloud is a patient at ·
Pleasant Valley Hospital. He is
the minister of Mason United
Methodist Church.

G,.,atbuy
.for your

'tavotlte
guy .

•"
•"

It's a precltlori
· jeweled wllcl&gt;.
Water and shocreolslant. Styled ill

gleaming chrome and

stainless steel. wtth 1

sweep aeeond hand. Full
·numera·l dlai.:Biaok
leather strap: ·And •
Bulova·guarMt,e\

ON DEAN'S LIST
Donna Rae Weber, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Weber,
Rutland, was named to the .
dean's list at Ohio Universixy
for the fall quarter. Miss
'w
· a seruor
· maJormg
· · tn
·
eber IS
ed
t'
Sh
e1ementary uca !On. e is
~resident of Kappa Delta Pi,
the
national
education
honorary society.
SALON TO MEET
Gallia County 8 and 40, Salon
612 will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at the home of Grace

All for a mere

S1~.es·.

&lt;ll~me
Goessler
JEWELRY
STORE
Court St., Pomeroy

fIPr:!at~t!in~M~id:d~le~po:r!t·. . . . . .~::::::::::::::::::::

ral.

POMEROY Lodge 164 F&amp;AM
7:30 p.m. All Master Masons
invited.
MIDDLEPORT LITERARY
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
home of Mrs. Forest Bachtel.
Mrs. Thereon Johnson to
review the book, "Thomas
Jefferson'' by Fawn Brodie,
&amp;I'd Miss Kathryn Philson to
review "The Cabin" .by Walter
Collins 0 'Kane. Roll call wiD
be a comment on the book.
THURSDAY
CATHOLIC Women's Club,
Sacred Heart Parish church
hall, 8 . p.m . Thursday,
preceded by Mass at 7:30p.m.
COMMITTEE FOR . the
Mentally Retarded, Thursday,
7:30p.m. Meigs County courtroom. Public invited.
MONTHLY meeting, Meigs
County Pioneer and Historical
Society, 7:30p .m. Thursday at
museum. Gayle Price, Portland, wiD present material on
·the Portland area and the
Price and Curtis families. The
public is invited.

KIMBERLY
ANN
BURTON, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. · Robert BuJ:(on,
celebrated her first birthday
on Jan. 27 with a party at the
home of her parents and
brothers, Steve and Charles.
She is the granddaughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gheen,
Racine.

shallow scratches that 1
·pa,inted with red nail polish.
Then some nicked red beads
received the' same treatment
and both were like new again,
well, almost. - MRS. A.H.E.
DEAR POLLY - One of iny
energy-saving ideas is to make
paper logs that wiD burn about
an hour . Rinse an empty waxed
milk carton, tightly roll old
newspapers and stuff in the
carton and be all set. +++
CHEERFUL.
DEAR POLLY - With this Dear Readers:
Just think. what we can tell our chlldrlm- all about the time
· severe inflation most of us are
Mommy
and Daddy took a Hawaiian honeymoon by proxy.
seeking ways to stretch our
But
really,
it's worked out for the best : we had a terrific
dollars. ' I want to pass' on to
newlywed
weekend
on the ski slopes, and we'll stlll have that trip
others who use a lot of butter
the way I stretch mine. I make to l:lawaii on our first anniversary, or whenever we can manage
.. ·
one pound of butter stretch to vaca\ion time together.
And
we
won't
regret
being
practical:
Cliff
likes
his
new
job
two by adding two cups of
evaporated Jllilk, believe it or with the State - It's made to orderfor a college student - and his
not. Let butter warm to room hours are almost the same as mine at our local KCRA·TV station.
. temperature and then cream. But there were moments back in January I'll never forget: Such
DEAR POLLY - My Pet , Add the milk a litUe at a time as :
... Mom and Dad In the front room discussing plans for their
Peeve may seem small but is and keep beating until all the
OUR) tour, while Isat in the kitchen writing thank-you
(formerly
most annoying. It concerns the milk is absOrbed. Chill to a
IIQtes
to
friends
who had wished Cliff and me a "wonderful trip to
very short line left for zip code solid mold and you •re twice as
Hawaii."
numbers on many order blanks butter-rich. - MRS. W.C.S.
... My offering to lend Mom the bright orange sem1-Btring
and then a longer space Is
DEAR POLLY ..::. Aller you
.
bikini
I'd made for Waiklkl surfs. (FuMy - she turned me
allotted for the state name wash a nannel-backed vinyl
down.)
which could be abbreviated. tablecloth In the washer spray
... For a while there, It was hard being what you'd call
I read in the collimn ahoui starch on the nannel side . You
thrilled
with the duties of w!llchl.t!g the house, feeding and conMrs. G.I.R. using !lilver nail will find it will lay smoother
silting
the
dogs and cats ... and "doo't forget, kids, water the
polish to touch up a worn silver and look like new .- MRS. E.L:
Indoor
plants,
be sure the refrigerator Is ruming, pick up the
·purse. 1 want 'to add to that a'
.
·
newspapers and mall, tum the lights on in the evenirig, lock the
bit. My red shoes had ugly but
doors as you leave, and remember what Tax (our dOg ) does to
the back lt~wn, the shoVel's in the tool shed ... "-aU those things
parents repeat ten times on the way 1o the airport. (Gosh,
honeymoons are conlu.slng - my mother never told me they'd be
!Ike this !)
Ultle did I mow when I chipped in to buy our folks luggage
lor Ouilllmas that they would be using it on MY wedding trip.
·But it was fun, anyway. -SUE

·
TUESDAY
CHESTER Council 323, D of
A 7:30 p.m., at the hall.
Balloting to lake place . Silent
auction by the home and orphans committee .
MIDDLEPORT Mason
.Lodge, F&amp;AM , 7:30 Tuesday at
the Middleport Maslnic
Temple ; entered apprentice
degree work.
SOUTHEASTERN Ohio
Gospel Music Association at
home of Larry McGraw, SR 160
north of Holzer Medical
Center. Potluck at 6 p.m.
meeting at 7 p.m.
INDOOR CAMP meeting ,
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church, 7:30p .m. Rev. A. B.
Malloy , evangelist, Arnold and
Garnett Sexton, song leader
and musicians, nightly through
Friday.
OHIO Eta Phi Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 7' 30 p.m.
at the Coiwnbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co. "Bakeless"
bake sa Ie. Cullura1 repor t by
Mrs . Sharon Bailey, with .
hostesses, Mrs. Bailey and
Kathy Cwnings.
MEIGS County Chapter of
the American Red Cross, 7:30
p.m. at Veterans Memorial
Hospital cafeteria. All board
members asked to be present.

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FAMILY CALLS
CLIFTON , W. Va .
Members of the family calling
at the home of Mrs. Chester
(Frances) Oliver Saturday
evening, Jan. 25, to celebrate
her birthday were Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Oli~er , Lance and
Lynn; Mr. and Mrs. Luther
Tucker, Terry, Tim, Tod and
Troy, all of Mason ; Gale
Oliver. Chester Oliver was also
present. Ice cream and birthday cake were served. Gifts
were presented to Mrs. Oliver.

•
v

-.....

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I

GORDON WESLEY
HOLTER wu bollored wllb
a party receally al lht bome
qt bit prmala, Mr. aad Mrs.
Gordoa Holier, oa bit .first
blrtllday, Ice crealil ud
cake were '~•.Atteadbag
were Sbaroa aad Greta

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INSURANQ

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15% oz. can J4~
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4 3 o:~;._ cans

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18 oz. iar 89~

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Frozen Foods

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DONALD DUCK

ORANGE JUICE
5 6cansoz.

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2 b'!;, 69~
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ALL WEEI&lt; PRICE

POTATOEs·

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l-Ib. ;

3

bags

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Dairy Foods

a-:~;;~~
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FRENCH ·FRIES

CARTON

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Fresh and Lean

MIDDlEPORT, 0'

Umit
/

us no. lor lull ctiii JII on how 1;\M,!
tp~rk llhQ retintcl. MIRACLE WATEI!I
, can 11 ve' you Money ,If\ t.h • ~.itc h~n ~
"" tl'lt launl!f'Y, '" the Wit), ~
1M l'll:lml' ·~ Of cur-. Acf~lly - yoU morf lhlfl 'i t' tolb.
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PHONE; 992 3480

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SUPER MARKET • Open ~aily 9 to 10 • Sun. 10 to 10

and- money, tool

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f.njoy a ~irade

,•••• '
••
•

'.
I

,.•
"
•••
••

•

992-2171

Ptt. m-lno
107 Sycamore ' PomerOy

By JACK R. PAYTON
TEL AVIV (UPI ) - Israel
hopes to avoid another Middle
East war and ensure a
measure of stability in the
region by negotiating a secondstage military disengagement
accord with Egypt in the Sinai
desert.
By giving Egypt some of iIs
Sinai territory back and
holding open the possibility
that more will be returned in
future negotiatiQns, Israeli
leaders hope to eliminate the
threat of imminent war on the
country's so~thern flank. By
this metllod they would reduce
the threat from Syria, which
Israel believes does not want to
take on the Israeli army alone.
Negotiations on a new
Israeli-Egyptian accord in
Sinai are to begin in earnest
next month when Secretary of
State Henry A. Kissinger
begins his latest diplomatic
shuttle between Cairo and
Jerusalem. Israeli sources in
Washington have said they
expect the'Kissinger mission to
be exploratory. They said the
secretary probably will return
to the Middle East in March,
possibly to complete the
negotiations.
Though Prime Minister Yilzhak Rabin says Israel is not
acting under deadline pressure
to achieve a new agreement
with Egypt, a natural deadline
Is present. The mandate
allowing United Nations troops
to police the cease-fire on the
Sinai front expires April 24.
The man~ate on the Golan
Heights, which Israel captured
from Syria in 1967, expires May
30.
Kissinger negotiated the
mandates last year as part of
the first troop disengagement
accords followih§ the 1973
Middle East war.
By spring the rains and
snows that · prevent mas s
movement of troops and armor
in tl)e mountainous and rockstudded Golan Heights will
have disappeared and , conditions for warfare, inclllding
aerial combat, will be Ideal.
In addition to the deadlines
imposed by the U. N. mandates, Egyptian President
Anwar Sadat has ·put up a
deadline of his own. Sadat has
said · that is Israel does not
withdraw rnilltarUy from the
. Egyptian, Syrian and Jordanian fronts within three
months, he wiD call for an
immediate resumption of the
Geneva Middle East conference and "blow up" the
peace negotiations.
· In
rejecting
Sad at's
deadline, Rabin said Israel was
not afraid of the Geneva
co!lference and its army was
prepared 'for war.
This assessment-is echoed by
Western defense analysts.
The analysts say the Arabs
lost four times as many aircraft and twice as much armor
as Israel did in the 1973 war.
Even with the massive
resupply of sophisticated
Soviet arms to Syria since the ,
war, they say, Israel still enjoys an edge in weapons
because of the U. S. arms
resupply effort.
In addition, the analysts say
that because the Soviet arms
shipments to the region have
largely bypassed Egypt,
Cairo's army is neither
prepared nor anxious to mount
a fu!lscale war effort soon.
Taking these factors into
consideration, former Defense
Minister Moshe Dayan says he
does not think allout war is
probable in the first half of this
year.
-"The Egyptians don't want
war and the Syrianss aren 'I
ready for it, n~t ill the next
three months anyway," Dayan ·
said. "There's a danger of
course. But I don't think full·
scale war is imminent."
l!lefense analysts say tha!
.Ven though Sadat is·moving to
secure new sources of arms,
especially from France, the
Egyptian army could not hope
to confront .Israel with any
success Wiless It Is bolstered by
masalve shipments of the latest

Soviet weapons.

~

to let our experts exam!

IITfl. iiSPEIIIS

II~

-••...
A

1·-·EIITIIHOT
RUDe, Mr. and Mrs' Tom
Spencer and Jared, Mr. and ·
Ml:s. Lyle SwaiD, Jay and
Joy, and grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs . . Arvil Holter liDd
Mr. and Mrs. JamO!ll 0 .
Swain. Unable . to &lt;: attend
were . his
greatgrandparents, Mr' aad Mrs. .
Worley Davis and J. E.
Barnhart.
·

•

!

NOTE TO THE EIDER BO'ITELS: 1banx, Mom and Dad,
for the beautiful honeymoon, past and future. Hope yours was
half as Interesting as ours! We love you. -CUFF Ar)DSUE

for .sou~s. coffee. cereal, hoi
chocolate, dozens of things.

Israeli
hopeful
.. of peace

Plans to make articles lol' all members asked to take a :
the Shrine hospitals were made valentine.
.
"
In a recent meeting of the Twin
at the club

~::

. .

WEDNESDAY
. MIDDLEPORT Firemen's
Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m. at the
firehouse. Mrs. Euvette
Bechtle and Mrs . Emma
Wayland,
hostesses .
Nomination of officers.

Y.....'j~...............................V..."«•'O:.•'·~·.·.•........, .........'-... -... ;o;.o;.o;.o:.o:o:.Q:.OX.O"AA.•._-.•,.,•••••-.,
9'."'~·~-..
•JO;Q,•,•.•.....o;. ••O:•.J!o.'.x.o:o:·:~:ox;:.... .... ......

Generation Rap

~·
·

5- The Daily Sent:inel, Mi&lt;ldle!X&gt;rt~~

'I

�• I

.'

.'

~INC

match , Ra c me GUn
Club isunday l p m As sort ed
meat s &lt;lnd fa ctor,- choke gun s

For Fa~t ·R esults Use Sentinel' Classifieds:

on tv

Auto Sales

12 '12 tfc

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

2 SIGNS
OF

Case No 21329
EJtate of JOHN W ZERKLE

Deceased

Dear Sir
I am writing tills letter m defense of Bradbury School I
attended Bradbw-y School for two years and am now m e1ghth
grade.
Bradoory School is a school where yoo can work at your own
level, at your own speed. You don't have to work m levels which
are too easy for you, or too hard for you. You don't have to be
shoved down to where you get bored. You always have something
to d0.
!learned many things at Bradbury that I never would have
learned In a conventional type of school !learned how to write
poetry, write creatiV!lly, and make things with my hands. I also
learned how to be editor of the school newspaper. I never could
have had these advantages if I had gone to a conventional type of
school.
Would you really close down a school that offers these advantages, with the kind of things to do such as this?
Sure, the schoolls different. But it's being different Is what
helps the kids so much. It was different to what the ldds were
used to. It offered more things to do and more things to overcome.! think it would be a crime to do away with the system at
Bradbury School
I have had many pleasant experiences at Bradbw-y School.
And I know thattlie kids out there now and ir\ the future will have
them too, If they keep it as ills - Toni Pope Laurel St Middleport
'
.,

A view of how adults act
Dear Sir·
I am writing tills letter in regard to the problem about the
Bradbury School. I have been told about the situation at the
school. I !Pel that the Bradbury School should stay the way ills
because I know that my friends who have gone to the school, as
wellu myself, have learned a great deal
The Bradbury School has taught students to be able to do
work as an Individual as well as being in a group. I'm in the 8th
grade, and without help from the Bradbury School, I wouldn't
have been able to .,&gt;et that far so easy.
Each and every child needs help as they go through school.
Aak yourself, Halt the school really done any hann?, or are you
juat making the problems up just to have something to growl
about? Let me ask you something ebe: Do you believe In
dlsclplJne? Students should have enough sense to behave In
school, But it depends on you, I mean the way your child ls
brought up. No teacher Is going to put up with a child that
mlsliehavea In school.
I wlsb to expnlljl my feelings about Mrs. Hackett. She's just
the 18me as any other teacher, she'll punish a student. But as for
punilhlng a student in an abusive manner, she never has.! think
some parents act more like a child than an adult - Jo McKJn..
ney, 477 Sycamore St., Middleport.

First visit to dentist
needed at about age 2
Ed. Note : This is the third in
a series of six articles on dental
health pubUshed by this news·
paper, in cooperation with the
Redwinkel Dental Society, in
observance of National
Children's Dental Health
Week, Feb. 2-8.
OUR CHILD ISN'T qwte two
years old, but we've been told
that he should see the dentist
Don't you think he's a tittle
young to visit the dentist•
Most children have the1r

full set of 20 primary teeth by
the time they are 2 to 21&gt; years
of age These first teeth are
very necessary for chewing,
sp~h. and good looks. In
addition, they help 1rl proper
jaw development Further,
proper space must be matn·
tainild by healthy teeth in their
normal position or the permanent teeth may come in
crooked
Because these pnmary teeth
are so important to his future,
your child should viSit the

Senate will vote
today on schools
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - The the 60 needed to override a veto
Ohio Senate was 10 vote today in the House, not counting the
Republicans.
on a Heme passed
million
supplemental appropriation
Rhodes said last Friday he
lor P!blic schools, setting up was hopeful a compi'omlse
the first direct confrontation could be reached with Demc&gt;between the Democratic-con- cratlc leglllatlve leaders on the
trolled General ABaelllbzy and two versl0118. Senate Preeldent
Republican Gov. Jamee A. Pro Tempore Oliver Oeasek,
Rbodes.
OAkron, said Monday he does
Democrats, dominating the not expect a COIIIJll'(lllil, btt
Senate 21·12, were expected 10 that Democratic leaders will
pus the measure btlndlly at a I listen tb what Rhodes has to
p.m. tloilr 11!1181on and send It to ~er at a acbeduled meeting
Rbolles ftr tdgnature.
Wednesday.
' The bill, drafted by DemoRepublicans oppose the
crata Jut month In response to Hou11e passed bill on grounds
a projected surplus of state the state ls not yet certain r1. a
money, calli! for four monlhl3 surplus to finance the appro.
payments, beginning in March, jrlatlon. They· also maintain
lo each ol Ohio's 613 pubUc the school foundation formula
lcbool dlBirk:tS at a flat t40 per should be equallled before any
more money ls sent to the
~u.
• Rbodes bas prqJOied spend- districts.
Ing $1111 mWi1111 In June on a
"I don't see how you can
direct payment ol $650 to each COillpl'(ll1lbe t40 per pupil,"
publlc school teadler, $300 to Oeasek said. "We've cunpro.
profee"onel IICIJool employes mlaed about as far as we can
and "" to non-proleaslonai go."
Oeasek explained the Demoemployee. Hil packace also
incbldee a 15 per cent bike in crats and Rhodes ...._ !bit
frlnce benefits for school there will be about f!OO mllll1111
Iii surpl1111 fundi al the end r1.
employee.
The 1onmor bas not said the flacal ,ear, and that It ,
wbelher be WllUld veto or stcn shoilkl so for educaUon.
But they do not agree on the
tbe Democratic measure,
wlicb Will releelled fnJm the timing r1. the approp1latlon or
senate Finance Committee the dlltrlbutlon r1. it.
' Monday nlcbt on an ,8-3 party. '" Devlatloll
"AI far as I'm concemed,
there will be no deviation in oar
Haft Vtlel
[.lemocrata bave tbe necea- plan to pus the~ u It ls and
_ , al YGiel to cmnide I ?eta amd It down there (10 Rhodee'
In tbe Seute. , And they rl.flce)," 0cuet uld. ''Wbat
...t...t help from five Repub- be does wttb Ilia up to blm."
Ouul DOted 1i and H0111e
• Hcau ill aendlng tbe lill1 ~·Vernal
G. Riffe Jr., J&gt;.
llinlilllb tbe s - laat waitk.
New
Bo1tan,
plan
10 meel with
•' AJtboUib IIJ81Iolt - ol tbllr
owa Wlel, they IIIli bave II ol Rliodu Wed!Eiday, "and If be

"I

line'*·

•

,

·.

Not1ce 1s hereby given that
Ldllan G Zerkle of 289 North
Th1rd St, M!dc:lleport Oh1o has
been duly appotnted Executrix
of the Estate ot John w Zerk l e
dectased late of Middleport
Me1gS County , Oh10
Creditor s are r e qu~red to f• le
the•r c laim s wllh s.=Hd f1du c 1ary
W1th1n four month s
Dated th1s 24th day of
January 1975

QUALITY

18

(2) 4

11

1973 PlY STA WAGON

IN THE

COURT

Accounts and vouchers of the
fo l lowing named ftduc •arles
have been tiled m the Probat e
Court Me 1g s Coun tv Oh •o for
approval and set t leme nt
CASE NO
16, 148 Tw enty
Second Current Account of
Bessie Oli,..er Guardian of the
person and estate of Grover C
Oliver
CASE NO 17 638 First Ac
count of Marlin G
Kerns
Tru s tee under the Wt l l of
Thomas w Wagner, Deceased
CASE NO 18,333 Fourleenth
Current Account of Betty L
Sm1th , Guardian of the Guar
dl anshlp Estates of Mary K
Gallagher
and
Debra
L
Gallagher. m.nors
CASE NO 20 351 F~rst and
Final Account of George B
Skinner, Guard1an of George E
Skinner, a minor
CASE NO 21 , 161 F ir st and
Flnnl Account of Paul Nelson
A i kman , Executor of the Est~fe
of Blanche E Nelson , Deceased
CASE NO 21 , 296 First and
Ftnal Account of Earl Ktng
E)(ecutor of the Estate of E
Leona K lng , Deceased
Unltss exceptions are filed
thereto . sa1d accounts wil l be
tor hearing before satd Court on
the Sth day of March , 1975, at
which time sa1d acco unts Will be
cons1dered and continued from
day to day until fmaily disposed

of

Any person Interested may
file wri tten exceptions to sa1d
accounts or to m atrers per
talnlno to the execut1on of the
trust not leu than f1ve days
prior to the date set for hearmg
John c Bacon

JUDGE

Common Pleas Court
Probate Ot'w'ISIOn
Meigs Coun ty Oh10

(2) 4, He

dentist by the time all h1s
pnmary teeth have erupted,
provided the child ts
cooperative enough ~I this age
The first v1sit to the dental
off1ce is important because 11
se Is the stage for building a
lifetime of good dental care
habits. The dentist and h1s
aSSistants will try to make thts
visit as pleasant as possible.
They will try to gain his trust
and make him feel weiC&lt;lme
The dentist will examine the
condition of the child's mouth,
and possibly take some x-ray
pictures He may also clean the
teeth and see tf anything else
should be done. FmaUy, he will
suggest ways that you, the
parent, can help to protect your
child's oral health through
daily care and diet.
Before you call for an appointment, it would be helpful
to talk with the child about his
viSit to the dentist Tell him the
dentist ls a friendly doctor who
is going to help him keep his
teeth and mouth healthy
Here are a few pointers that
may be help!ul in planmnt
your child's first VISit·
Make dental visits a fun
adventure; treat them lightly
Don't bribe the child to go to
the dentist or threaten the trip
as a punishment.
Do avoid letting your chtld
know of any anxieties you may
have had about dentists.
Don't tell the ch1ld
frtghlenlng stories about
dentists
Finally, remember that the
basis for developing and
practicing good dental health
habits 1s parental example,
gwdance and encouragement

Fire Retardant
Insulation

$2795

Phone 992-3q93
Daily Alter 5:00

etc

HE(L

Notice

1973 CUTLASS S, 2 dr
heating service and
automat i C Power SteennQ
AUCTION Sale, Every Frtday
brakes , and wtndows cru1se
general
sheet metal
1 p m V illage Auction 215 N
control
t1lf wheel, am tm
Second, Midd l eport
works.
Free
ste reo tape player , new
2 20 30tc
brakes and shocks, radtals
Estimates.
--- ---------- -and tow httch Meta111c blue
INCOME TAX Prepared , by
Phone 949-5961
wtth black mter1or Worth
appo1ntment Phone 992 338 8
$3 400 sell for S2 ,SOO Call 992
Emergency 992-3995
2 2 6fc
3453 or 992 3381
or 992-5700
1
31
Stc
AUCTION , Thursday n1ght , 7
p m
at Mason Auct 1on
1972 VEGA Hatct1back . 3 speed
Horton St In Mason , W Va
automattc E~&lt;cellent con
Cons1gnme nt s welcome
d I ton Phone 992 3914 after 5
Phone 1304 1 773 5471
pm
2 2 ttc
2 4 6tp
MEIGS muzzle loaders public
Shoot , lzaak Walton Fa r m , 1973 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass S 1951 FOR D ,t lathead , V Benglne
P S , P B and factory a•r
wtth standard tranSm i SSIOn
Chester . Oh to , Sunday Feb 9,
25 soo miles
Call 992 3914
1975, at 1 p m
1965 Lmcoln Contmental, 430
after 5 p m
cu •n motor w•ttl automatiC
2 3 6tc
transm tSS t on
One
2 2 6tp
refngerator green m good
NOW selltnO Fulle~ Brush 1969 IMPALA Custom , good
condtt on Call 949 5185 any
Products phone 992 3410
cond1t1on
Factory
atr
,
p s,
ttme or 985 4219 after 7 p m
1 24 ttc
p b , prtced to sell Phone 992
2 4 l ip
7617
I NCOME Tax Prepared both
1 29 6tc
F ederal and State Ta)(es will
be done by appomtments 1960 MGA 2 dr convert•ble HOOVER 01al A Mat!C wtth
only Pl ease phone 992 2271 or
power ctr1ve and attachments
very good cond1t1on Phone
see Mrs Wanda Eblm, Laurel
S75 Phone 985 4132
992 7737 after 5 p m
Cltff Rd Pomeroy . Oh1o
1 29 lOtp
1 29 ~tc
I 3 30tc
197 3 FORD Country Squ~re STEREO RAD IO, 8 track tape
AU1.. liON
Thursday
and
combmation, am fm rad to. 4
wagon , 20,0 00 m •les
all
Saturday ntght. 7 p m at
equ1pment SJ.500 Phone 992
way speaker sound system
Mason Au c t1on , Horton St 1n
3493 or 992 2720
Balance $107 89 or use our
Mason, W Va Cons1gnments
budget terms Call 992 3965
welcome Phone 1304) 773
1 29 tt c
5471
10 3 lfc
business for sale
--------------- TRAILER space , 2 m1les from GROCERY
Bu1ldmg for sale or tease
Pomeroy,
Rt
143,
Phone
992
FOR your ' Otl Of M 1nk '
Phone773 S618from 8 30p m
5858
CosmettcS Phon e BROWN'S
to 10 p m for appointment
9925113
10 27 tfc
J 10 tfc
_____
1 7 ffc
APT :frooms. all electnc . his sTEHO~ADio-Bt;;ck. tape
table top range, wall oven
combmahon, am tm radio, 4
real ntce and clean, modern
way speaker sound system
Located
m
Pomeroy
Balance SlOB 74, or use our
overlooktng
the
Oh1o
R•ver
WANTED Old upr i ght PIANOS .
budget
terms Call 992 3965
Phone Gallipolis day 446
any cond1t1on
Paytng S10
1 21 tfc
7699 . eventngs 446 9539
each Ftrst floor only Wr~te
1
26
lfn
and gtve d1rec t10ns to W1tten
STEREO r adto , 8 track taP;
P1ano Co, Bo)( 188. Sardis ,
combmat1on , AM FM radto , A
2-BED;OO~- --;r~~~-ad~lts
Oh10 .:13946
way speaker , sound system
only Phone 992 3324
1 JO 61p
Balance $107 89, or use our
2 4 tfc
budget terms Call 992 3965
WANTED old upr ight ptanos, TRAI LER SPACE
2 3 tf c
J/&lt;4
mile
any cond i t ion
Pay 1ng SlO
_,
north ol Metgs Htgh School on
each F1rst floor only Wr tt e to
old Rt 33 Phone 992 2941
and g ve d1rect1ons to W 1tten
1 23 tfc
Ptano Co
Bo){ 188 . SardiS
Oh iO 43946
CO UNTRY Mobtle Home Park
2 3 6tp
R t 33 len m 1les north or
Pomeroy
Large lots -&amp;tth
OLD furn•ture 1te bo)(es brass
concrete patiOS Sidewalks.
beds , or complete households
runners
and off
street
All Ne~ Heaters
Wr 1te M 0 Miller , Rt 4
parkmg ~hone 992 7479
Now
Pomeroy , Oh to Call 992 7760
12 31 ttc
10 7 74
Discounted!
~ ;; ~-pTfurnished~~,-;!~t•es · New ~Wood Burmng
JUNK autos . complete and
pa1d , no chtldren or pets
delivered to our yard We P•Ck
HEATER------5239 95
Phone 992 5810 814 East
up auto bod1es and buy all
Mam, Pomeroy
Deluxe model with cab~net
kmds of scrap metals and
2 2 61p Wall hned.
Iron R1der 's Salvage St Rt
I
· ,OME-ROY LANDMARK '
124, Rt 4, Pomeroy Oh•o
3 and 4 ROOM furn tshed and ~ Jack w Carsey Mgr
Call 992 5468
unfurn1shed
apartments
Phone992·2{81
'
10 17 tfc
Phone 9925434
'-~·--~
~
~------~·--~
•.J
412ttc ~·
CASH patd for all makes ahd
models of mobil e homes
PRivATE- ;Eietlng- room-U,r 3 PIECE bedroom sutte, Van •ty
Phone area c ode 614 423 9531
any organ !zat 1on phone 992
dresser, good condition , price
3975
$45 New dinette suite 7 ptece
4 13 tfc
$75 l2x13 112 nylon rug, new
3 11 tfc
-with pad, S60 S.ngle bed $10,
WANTED to - b-uy a used
other 1tems
Call 667 3333
Gravely Trllctor w1th Mower FURNISHED apt Adults only
Middleport Phone 992 3874
after 3 P m
and r•dmg sulky and plow
attachments Phone (304) 882
11 14 tfc 1-------------2~.!_1&lt;
2525 or evenings, 882 2344
HOuse-FoR -RENT~l63~ 1953 JO FERGUSON tractor,
1 26 12tc
Li ncoln Hgts , Pomeroy ,
new motor , good rubber , new
Phone Pomeroy 992 3575 or
pamt Sl.200 Phone 985 3594
OLD COINS and paper money
GalliPOliS 4-46 2749
2 2 7tp
for Me1gs County's only
2 2 tfc
monthly com auct ton Call Ed
6' MOWER, 3 pt h1tch f1ts Ford
Burkett 992 3476 after 5 JO
or Ferguson tractor, $100
NEWLY fufnlshed apt
2
pm
New culttvator , $125 Phone
bedrooms
reference
Phone
1 31 121 c
98S 3594
949 3783
2 2 ltp
2 2 ltp
CONSIGNMENTS welcome at
P&amp;J Auct1on
215 Nortl1
FURNISHED apt 3 rooms and 1965 JOHN Deere Dozer, 4
Second , M i ddleport
cylinder, detsel. 8' blade
bath, newly decorated Phone
1 9 30tc
canopy
New
clutches.
992 2937
brakes, and tracks. A 1
_ _ _ _ _ _ ..jt _
__
700 BALES oi good da1ry hay
• _ _ _ _ _226tp
condlt•on $6,500 Phone 98S
Phone 7A2 31 82
3594
I
Hous.=:
Ut~furn•shed
7
ro-oms
2 2 61p
2 2 ltp
and bath , n•ce Phone 992 2780
or 992 3432
CASHSSS$ FOR JUNK CARS
EXTRA n 1ce corn fed freezer
beef your choice Phone 949
Complete , FRYE'S TRUCK --- ---------- ~ tfc
AND AUTO PARTS , Rutland
4762
2 2 3tc
Phone 742 6094
1 22 26tp

For Sale

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

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

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

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

For Rent

by-pass

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

USED FUEL OIL .

HEATER, sso

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

----,---------- !

Ph 992-2174

3 ROOM 2 ba th, bUill m k1tchen
w tlh bar , carport. 18)(40 sun
deck , com plete
Prtvate
wooded
acre .
near
Harrtsonv tlle $24 500 Phon e
742 6261
2 4 6tc

60 ACRE farm at V tnton Oh10
S55,000 tnc lud tng all farm
machmery Phone 388 8420
2 4 Jtc

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

NEW HOMES No Mone y Down
Payments according to
tncome on Farm ers Home
Admtntstrat!on loan Con
vent10nal flnanctng atso
a'w'allable w1th m1n1mum
down· Lovel y homes m three
locat1ons In Me1gs County
Some homes w1th wooded
lot s
Call for more m
formation 992 5976
1 15 26tc

NEW LISTING 5 room
home, bath, gas furnace , lots of
paneling and ce1ling file. C1ty
water,

w1fh

large

Oniv $10,000 oo

level

lot

NEW LISTING-·- acres, B of·
bottom "
\ { \ woods, 2

0·\..·U

bedrc C
gas heat,
rural ;J•
t..,tu1et with
orivac, ~12,000 00

.BUILDING
' .
LOT -

With stone

foundation on good quiet street,

out

of high wafer. _
BARGAIN - - {\.., frame

0 \ ·U'

with
water,
natura ~. •\,.; .ctr1c on
corner .) w,J,tJOO 00

!'OM E ROY -

N1ce renovated

3 bedroom home Lots of n1ce

paneling, wall to wall car
petlng, 2 porches, basement,
and fenced yard $17,500 00
HAVING
TROUBLE
SELLING,
CALL
A
PROFESSIONAL SALESMAN
AT m-331~5.

REMODELING ,
plumb i ng,
heatmg, and all types ot
general
repa 1r
work
guaranteed 20 years e)(
pertence Phone 992 2409
1 19 tfc

LADlES , turn your spare ti me
tnto money
Pos1t1on now
open tor amb tttous person
Phone 992 2868

2 2 ltc
--------- ------ --------------R N tor Partt •me pos1f•on w i th

Mobile Homes For Sale

197-4 GREENBRIER 2 bedroom ,
all electnc , $6,900 can 992

7328

2 2 3tc

planned parenthood , ciln1cs,
education , and social serv1ces
responsibilitieS 16 hours per
week
Call Off •ce. 992 5912
weekdays except Thursday
1 29 6tc

--------------1972 MOBILE home , 12)(60, 2 --------------Wanted ioRent

NEW A cc ord1on and case ,
ortgmal pnce $350, will sell
for S175 Phone 1 (30~) 773

5•27

2 2 lie

19-57- CHEVY parts
NEW
Lake'Nood traction bars , hi
IIcker a~r shocks, hooker
headers , Wtfh 3 'collectors for
small block
Call 992 3496
after 6 p m BEST OFFER
•
1017tfc

For Sale or Tlilde

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

Coatrollq

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

llllllatcn,

..pm

Real Esllti For,S.

-----------

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

111011 puplla.

1 30 -12tc

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

992 2975

1 29 6tc

.

2 2 121p

-----------

H

6 45-Mornlng Report J, Farmtlme 10
7 00-Today 3.4 15, AM America 6, 13. CBS News B, 10
B 00-lassle 6. Captain Kangaroo B, Popeye 10, Sesame Sf JJ
8 25-Cap1 Kangaroo 10
8 JQ-Big Valley 6
9 00-A M 3, Phil Donahue 4,, 15 Bul lwl nkle B; Morning with
D J 13
.
! 25-Chuck White Reports 10
9 JQ-Not For Women Only 3, Dinah 6, Galloping Gourmet B.

P: .. IT Woo:..D ~ N€ RlbHT IF 1,\'JV ~

0 1-!A.R.b-. .. ,
1

Mlf.:e t..le)(T iU~DA'/!

Tattletales 10, New

100 Kerr Slreet
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone(614) 992-2798
STRIPPING- FINISHES
FURNITURE-METALS-ETC.
MOOERN &amp; ANTIQUE
Refinishing . Repairing
Burnishing
~aning
Upholslering.
We Also Buy Antiques
P1ck-up S~rv1ce Available

Unscramble those four Jumbles,

one letter to each square, to

ALLEY ClOP
, ..TH ' BOYS AN' I
ARE GOING .8A,CK
T'MOO AND ROUND
UP SOME MORE
MEN!

ltvered nght to your project
Fast
and
easy
Free
est1mates Phone 992 3284
Goeglem Ready M1x Co ,
Middleport Oh10
6 30 trc

I I

SEWING MACHINE , Repairs,
serv•ce, all makes, 992 2284
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy,
Authortzed Stnger Sales and
Service We sharpen SCISSOrs

repair

:!r----------J

AstrdGrapR
Now arronre

'==~f,_~_Ll~~~~~~~:_:'":"~uted brlhe abo•• cartoon.

r 'Pr.t .. llRSIANSW11111t1

''(

12 19 tfc

Jumblr11 RIGOR SNACK MASCOT OBTUSE

Yetlerdar••

I

"-•wer1

p,.,,,," tl/~tt(• 1/u, H44f dltn/.;11- "BAR·GAINS"

~~-~·"

and
Repair Serv1ce Anything
ft)(ed around the home, from
roof t o basement You will
l tke our work and rates
Phone 742 5081
1229tfc

ACROSS

salt tree
Marceau, 40 Purswt
U Fleshy
e.g.
5 French
frwt
DOWN
author
10 Golf
I Opera
club
heroine
11 Emulated 2 Sultan's
Juliet
decree
13 Baby
3 When one's
word
eyes are
14 Scoundrel
opened
15 Chemical
(3 wds.)
sufftx
4 Spanish
16 Storage
queen
box
5 Moderate
17 "-to
red
Billie
6 Unassisted
Joe"
7 Bon18 Place in
I CUrrent
a box
(4 wds.)
zo Aunt (Sp.) ...-'tr""r.-n-

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

GASOUNE AlLEY

At. two How come
mtnutes remember
past. exact
tenr .t;me?

ELWOOD- BOWERSREPAIR
- Sweepers, toasters, 1rons,
all small app\1ances Lawn
mowers, next to State H!gh
way Garage on Route7 Home
Phone 985 3825
2 2 2otc

uoL~&gt;\J/

IS YORE I Q
L OW 'NUFFTV
GUIDE A 13RCUP
TO LOW5SI
SLOBBOVIA 2

992 3057

1 21 26tp

L!O (July 23-Aug. 22) You'll
be dlseppolnted with some
friends at lhl&amp; time If you ex·
peel more than they can give
Apprec i ate
them
for
themselves
VIRGO (Aug . 23·1ept. 22) Be
of service becauae you re
needed, not because you think

11 will lmpreso another A job
well done Ia your reward
LtB_~A ll~t. 23·001. 23) You

WIN AT BRIDGE

9 18 tfc

~;:-;:- --trim - ; ;- ,uf;ee-;-or

11"5 A130UT THI5 IRRE51STI13LE URGE YOU
HAVE 10 IMPEROONATE PEOPlE. I WANT
TO 0C&gt; 50METHIN0 POSITIVC.. '1&gt;--r:'

THERE:? SOMETHII\G'
I'D ll KE 10 DISCUSS
WITH YOU SIT DOWN
FOR A MINUTE ,
PLEASE.

Pe~~;;;~tion:;--;-25

'tJ\R
-;er
yacd Phone R •chard West '
843 2667
•
12 24 26tp

n---~

tK88

oloJ93

oloQ!052

BUILDING lot, eo ft frontage ·
by 16~ ft The second lot on lett
on R.1verv1ew Drive, L 1ncoln
Hill , Pomeroy, Ohio If In
teres ted catl992 -3230 after 5 p

m •

AXYDLIIAAXa
LONGFBLLOW

WMJ•
PO EMRVPEMB KHE ZCEM
PVB DC ZHXM GCYM OTHJ DC LCZ·

10 17ttc

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

ZHJN

Hear Local, State, and National

HEZPMB

-JPJCJ

NM

G'MJLGCB

'

I

OUR IV
rJIAW'S
HIDE!!

Yesterday'• Cryplltqaote: THE MAGIC OF FIRST LOVE 18
OUR IGNORANCE THAT IT CAN EVER ENO.-BENJAMIH
OISRAELI

PJ \ ' I I...,

••I

I

'

1

••
rl'

•

'

~i

'f

1

(

I -

South

Pass
Pass

3•
Pasa

Pall
Pass

4•

t,

1171

You will make two lnterntlng
friends thlo year. Both will add
luster and zoot to your life. One
will stimulate your creative In·
leresta, lha other, how to gain
knowledge.

South didn't like tbla play and
decided to live tbe opjJOllelltl a •I
chance to ro WI'Dlll· He drew · ·
trumps with two leada and
threw Weat in with hi1Ia1t dia-

Weal had to decide between a
'Club and a heart lead. Had be
811011ed the club South mlJht
well have ro~e down two, bufu
happe111 so tiften, Wnllueued
wronr and led the four ol
hearls'.
Thia took care ol all South'•
proble1111 in beartl and clubl
and he made his rather doubtful
contract.

The blddtnr bu been·
Weot

By Oawa1d &amp; Jamea Jacoby
Things 1larted out badly for
South. East's king of diamonds
held tbe first trick and he
returned the eiglit. South could
play either the jack or nine of
diamonds, but whichever one he
played would be covered by
West So South oould count two
diamond losers, pillS the ace of
hearts and a possible club1
He could btlndle that club
loser by leadlnf a heart towird
his btlild and ineulnt· lbe 10
spot If East held die jack,
South's, contract would come
home, If Ea1l dldn\ ~South
would be only one
while he would 1ote two beartl
61 would be able jo aet rid of bla
IOII~~i-club later
/

down--

AMAZtltjO! foal
HE KNOIII TWAT ?

tlETT£11.

..

Ea1t

Tl.IJlT·..;

TAAiS'RJO
8NJ I HOPE
'()II'U: FEEL

•J

Peb.

:.

~

1
•

~

,

I

•

.,,

N..U

Eaot

4

8aotll

I.

It

I

u

lolo
!

Send $1 lor JACOBY MOOERN_
book to "';'(In at 8fldQ(/' (CIO ''
this nowlpe}ler), ,. 0 : ao.r 4811. 1.;
R~dio City Station, New Yorll, 1:

N. y 100111.

~--

I

'·

Nortll

Opening lead- 2 t

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's bow to work It:

Real Estate For Slle

~~

I.

One letter limp()' ataOO. for another. In thlt sample A Ia
1lHd for the three L'a, X for the two O's, ete. Sln&amp;1e 1elten,
apootrophea, the leneth and formation of lhe worda at'l an
blntl. Eacb day the code lettel'l are dilerent.
CRYPTOQUOTE

!·

Welt

38Locatln8

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

'

INEWSP.\Pl:H l:NTERrRI&amp;t: ASSN I

II

News First On

•AU!

Both vulnerable

3'1 Govern

SOMETHIN6 CCW.5TRr/CTIVe
AII30UT TI-IAT I

needa.

mond.

Eall
.82

• J 93
oloA76

35New

'

your practical

know you're capable ol. Sot
your sights on victory

I

tQ!052

President

992 7l49

to

Give opponents chance to err

'1:1 Liquid

...SEPTIC.
TANKS
cleaned
Modern San it at ton, 992 3954 or

• I

Don't deal In tlalf.. meaaure•
now or perform less than you

SOUTH (0)
• A K 7 51
• Q 10

measure
28 Ham it up
29 Fatal
31 Craggy
hill
3% Seafood
item
33 Capture

AQUAIIIUI (Jtn. 20-1'111. 1tl
You still hove to kHp a light
rein flnonclolly Don't spend
foolishly lor things untottntlal

PIICII (,til, 20·MirGh 201

.93
¥J874

34G-Ib.

needt your htlp now bon1
bout of your noble deed.

your efforts, rather than bankIng on what the future may br·

WEST

25 Room for
linens,
jugs,
etc.

C BRAOf-OR D, AucttOneer Complete Serv1ce
Phone 949 3821 or 949 3161
Racine, Ohio
Cntt Bradford
S 1 tfc ,

to rectify

NORTH
• Q J 10 8
¥ K 62
t A 74
o1oK81

Z3 Slant

26

reaaonabla bounda to one who

lng

Yesterday's Aaswer
9 Shabbier 29 Rock
12 Bemused
'n' roll
16 Curse
years
19 EgypUan 30 - Illy
Christian 34 "Suds"
22 Burgler's 38 New
loot
Mexican
Z3 Standing
Indian
~ Taciturn
n Criminal
25 Epochal
charge
fl Excavate
(sl.)

•

·1

CA,fiiCOIIN (Deo. D·Jan.
1•1 Be goneroua wllhln

CANCER (June 2f·July 22)
work now for that which offers
you an Immediate return for

son
AT THE' CQV\PLJTER C5N T&amp;Fl

you won'! be bellt¥od

come through another if
you re not on the ball, you'll not
realize Its full benefits

eldest
- TI-IEN IT'S MAH
I Q's DUTY ID
SINK LOW 'NUFF
10 6LJIDE 'GMrr-

meke a more colorful tale, but

TAURUS (April 20·Mty 20) A
worthwhile opportunity will

21 Resiliency
2% Noah's

ULABNER

IAGITTAIIIUI (Now. 11-Dta.
211 You have o tendency today
to exaggerete a bit. lt may

tlmlsm is baaed upon fact

~lftlcult

39 Tamarisk

1 Marcel

P&amp;J
Home
Maintenance,
heattng, cooling, refr~g,
plumbing , electrtcal ap
pl1ances We servtce and
repa~r anytlng m the home or
busmes s 215 N Second,
M tddleport Phone 992 3509
1 9 30tc

For Wodnttdoy, Feb. 5, 1171
ARIEl (March 21·Aprll11) It's
good to be optlmlatlc roger·
ding the outcome of events It's
equelly lmpottanl that your OP·

to make an error In Judgment

I

lmproveme~f

ICORPIO (001. 14·Nov. 221
You 11111 havelmproctlctl urg11
to opend beyond your metnt.
Pull In your horna lodoy or
you'll be oorry.

GEMINI (Mty 21·June 20)
Weigh Issues carefully before
major declelons or you'rellkely

by THOMAS JOSEPH

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

ABC National News on the half-hour.
State and local news on the hour.
The N0011 Report with BIU Prne and Mellssa
I · Corise.
Paul Harvey News 8:30 a.m. ud 12:30 p:.1.0.
WMPOAM
6:00a.m. t0 5:30p.m. Dally
' -.
.
'.

I I I 1 T'

(Aiuwen lomonow)

EXCAVAl -IN G .=- d~-;-~r ,
backhoe,
and
dilcher ,
waterline, footers , drams,
roads, and brush cleanmg, no
10b too small, no weather tool
bad Charles R ' Hatfield, Rt 1
Rutland 0 Phone 742 6092
1 7 26tc

AM~FM

the circled lotion

to form the aurprl1e answer, u

I

2478

have aome good ideaa but

don't depend on olhfrs to
supply the muscle Succeu
com at only If you do II youraotf

' Btmlct Bide Otol

I'"~

•

WMPO

I

. THROCCI•

U'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

8, 10, To Be Announced 33.

7 00-Truth or Cons 3,4; Bowling for Dollars~. Whal'• My Line
8, News 10, Country Music JubiiH 13; I Spy 15; Behind lhe
llnes 20, Know Your Schools 33.
7 Jo-Pollce Surgeon 3, Name That Tune 4, lot'• Make a Deal
6, Wilburn Brothers 8, The Judge 10 ; To Tell the Truth 13;
Book Beat 20, Episode Action 33
8 00-llttle House on the Pralrla 3.~. 15, Thai's My Mama~. 13;
Tony Orlando and Sawn 8, 10; What Makes a Good Father 20;
Sinners JJ
B Jo-Movle "All Together Now" 13; Movie "Two for the
Money" 6
9 00-luca• Tonner 3,4, IS; Cannon 8.10; Appalachllan Grttn
Parks Prolect 20, Maslerpltce Theatre JJ
10. 00-Pelrocelll 3.~. 15, Got Christie lo•e ~,13; Man hunter 8, 10;
News 20, Family At War 33.
•
10 JQ-Your Future Is Now 20.
11 00-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News JJ.

I t)

DOZER work, land. cleanng by
the acre, hourly or contract
Farm , ponds , roads , etc
Large dozer and operator
wtth over 20 years ex
per!ence Pullms Excavatmg,
Pomeroy, Ohto Phont 992

shrubbery ,
clean
out
basements, atttcs , etc !"hone
949 3221 or 742 A441
1 26 26tc

Tomorrow

12 45-Eiec Co 33
12 55-NBC News 3,15
1 00-News 3; All My Children 6. 13, Phil Donahue 8, Young &amp;
the Restless 10. Not For Women Only 15.
1 3Q-How to Survive• Marriage 3,4, 15, Let's Make a Deal6,13;
As the World Turns 8,10
2 00-Doys of Our Llvt! 3,4,15, $10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Guiding
Light B. 10
2 3D-Doctors 3,4, 15, Big Showdown 6, 13; Edge of Night 8, 10.
l 00-Another World 3,4, 15, General Ho•pltal 6, IJ; Price Ia
Right 8,1 0, RFD 20
J 30-0ne Life to Live IJ, Lucy Show 6, Match Game 8,10;
Aging 20
4 00-Mr Cartoon J, I Dream of Jeannie ~~ Somer$0t 15;
Gilligan ' s Is 6, Tattletales 8, Se•ame 51 20,JJ, Movie
"C lnderFello" 10; Mike Douglas 13
4 Jo-Bewltched 3; ABC Afterschool Special 6, Merv Griffin 4;
lucy Show 8; Bonanza 15.
5 00-F B I 3. ABC Aflerschool Special 13; Andy Grlffllth 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33
5 JO-News 6, Beverly Hillbillies 8; Hodgepodge lodge 20; Gel
Smart 15, E lee Co 33
6 00-News 3,4,8,10,13.15, ABC News ~- Elec. Co 20, lTV
Utilization JJ.
~ JO-NBC News 3,4, 15, ABC News 13, Bewitched 6, CBS News
8, 10. Zoom 20, Your Future Is Now 33

ISEPPOOI

EXPERT tree serv 1ce, free
est1mates, 20 years e)(
penence Call ( 1) 667 3041 or

house needs some

(J

News 13

12 00-Jackpol J, 15, Password All Stars 6,13 ; Bob Braun'• 50-50
Club 4, News 8, 10.
12 JQ-Biank Check 3,15; Spilt Second 6,1 3, Search for

11:3Q-Johnny Carson 3.~.15; Wide World Special 13; FBI 6,
Movie "The La•t Challenge" 8, Movie "SynanOfl" 10; Janakl
33.
12 3D-Wlde World Special 6
1·00-Tomorrow 3,4; Nws 13.

'

,,WITH ENOUGH OF US LOOK·
lNG AIWUND OUT 1l1ERE, WE
MlG~T GE.T LUCKY AND PICK
UP SOME TRACE OF~
GIRLS!

YOBOT

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

POMEROY - Business R
and furniShed apartment
located on Main St 1n good
traff1c area Good Income
Investment Priced to sell.
I&gt;DRTLAND - 4 n~ce lots,
good drilled well anq water
syslem,
block
garage,
slorage building, 2 story

-=1=

How do you
get around?

form four ordinary worda.

READY MIX CONCREfEOe."

:tOMe

t

Revue 13

~lJ]J~)1l!:;!t'~==~

g

6 13 tfc

acres $8,000 00.

Zoo

10 00-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4, 15, Joker's Wild 8, 10, Movie
" F1ve Branded Women" 13
10 JQ-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15. Gambit B. 10
11 OO-H1gh Rollers 3,4, 15, One Life to Live 6, Now You See It

;•

211ttc
~------- ----CRE .~EANS CONCRETE de
livered MondiY'( through
Saturday
and
evenings
Phone 446 1142

CARPENTER 2 story
frame,
4 BR, 1'/, balhs,
dining R, porches, storage
bldg 2 garages, about 2

13

0 J!r-\..OIUinOU:) I OOay

I'M '3::li&lt;R'i I RJRWT 'IOJf&lt;. BIR:rHD.A!-/ 1

Pomeroy

not

For Sale

today

BORN LOSER

5232

------------;--

nlchi-

6 00-Sunnse Seminar 4 , Sunrise Semester 10
6 15-Engllsh 505 J
6 25-Farm Report 13
6 JG--F1ve Minutes to Live By 4, News 6, Bible Answers 8,
6 JS...:Columbus
4 Story

Truck or 1

anu backhoe work, sept1c
t anks mstalled, dump trucks
and lo boys for h1re , Will haul
fill d 1rt , top soiL limestone &amp;
gravel , Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers, day phone 992 7089, 1
ntght phone 992 3525 or 992

Whole works at just $4,700
NEAR LANGSVILLE ELEC1 P&lt;OLUX Sweeper c.: .m, e About 10 acres, 011 good
model
Con:u:tlete with ali
fishing creek, close to mine
cleaning attachments and
areas, good blacktop road
usespaperbl.'gs Slightly use-d
but cleans and looks like new
ASKING ;ust $4,000
Will sell for $37 25 cash or
ALL
CASH FOR YOUR
terms ava1fable Phone 992
PROPERTY LET US
77SS
12 18 tfc, KNOW WHAT YOU HAVE
- PROPERTY IS SEJ.LING
CLOSE OUT on . new Z1g Zag FAST AT THIS TIME.
sewing mechrnes For sewing
m-2259 or 992-2568
stretch fabr i cs. buttonholes.

bedrooms' Pnced reasonable
Phone 992 2709 or 742 5641 ' WANTED old upnght pianos,
hu any plan' for cOIIIJII'OIIIbe,
2 4 6tc
any condit1on
Paying $10
be can tell liS. We'll be glad to
each First floor only Write
and !::liVe direct•ons to Wi tten
MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE
listen."
P1ano Co, Box 188, Sardis ,
NOTICE•
Ot.,~e
to
the
l)emocrata knocked down foreclosure on one of Ohio's Oh10 ~3946 .
1 29 6tp
largest MCb1le Home Dealers
foUr Republican m~~~tidments
we , wlU offer for sate the
~committee debate MOnfollowing Mobile Homes at a
very , verv large d iscount
day
1- 6Ax12 Liberty, J bedroom
8 INCH 3 pt hitCh post hole
fancy dftSi gns , etc Paint
Two of them would have l-60X12 Liberty , 2 bedroom
digger or trade for 3 pt h1tch
slightly blemtshed Choice of
made tbe commitment to l -SOxt2 RIChardson , 2 bedroom
pickup dtsc Phone 742 5322
carrying cas~ or sewing
l-60xl'2 PMC , 3 bedroom
2 2 3fp
stan.d SA9 so cash or terms
apend the money, btl
1111tll 160)(1.2 T•tan , 2 bedroom
available Phone 992 7755
1
.....
60)(
12
Park
wood
,
2
bedro9m
the .moo1 foundation formula
12 18 ttc
1- 60x.U Elcona , 2 bedrooms ,
Ia I'Cp'lllwed later IIU year.
central air
REWARD for the return Of
Rtcharason .
3 USED parts , Frye ' s Truck and S50
A tblrd amendment would 1- 65x12
our Blllck and Decktr eleclr•c
Auto
Parts,
Rutland,
Oh10
bedroom , 2 full baths, 8x12
saw, 11h 1n blade Phone (1)
bave ,left It up 10 the state
Phone (61~, 7~2 609.4
expando .
667 -3737 Viv1an MaKey
\
122781p
Board, domi.. ted We also have a good se1ect1on of
1-Jl 61p
8. 10 and 12 W•de Mob•le
by
to delenDine If other
Homes Tttese are mostly all ;;~~AMAHA-i'SQ." neW-parts.
e)(tras, good cond1tlon Phone
\ate model Homes (some have
the
wu bolditW up and never
992 2258 after 6 p m
been lived In l If you
the money could be paid.
1 J0-61c
are lntertsted In a good
Approximately one acre in
Mobl\e Home at a very large
The fotrib m~~t'""'-1 Will
Rutland, set up for mobile
discount, don ' t walt Stop tn GRAVELY tractor Pre season
the Rbodes propoul rl. a direct
spec1al Purchase any ntw
home Phone CU ~A6-9662.
today at BERRY MILLER
Gravely convertible tractor
Mobile Home Sales , 70S
bonus to leacbers.
1 Jb 7tc
at regular list price and we
Farson Street, Belpre. Oh io.
Sen. M. Morrla Jacbon, J&gt;. . phone •2J-9SJI
w11t give you a new 30" rotary 5 ROOM house: - oarwtn Phone
mower attichment, FREE
J 8 o• Brleri, attorney , 9?2
Cleveland, complained the
1 30 lotc
2720
No trade tn anCI no delivery on
10-.ernor'a plan WllUld benefit -lOxS~-;;r-;;;;;-;arpettd.-;~ , th1sotteroood tlllrouoh Feb . a,
2 2-6!p
achooll with tbiiDOIIIelcbn,
52 gallon hot water healer ,· 1975 Gra¥ely Tractor Soles,
ROOM hOU$0. S5,000 Phone
underpfnn.ng CAll 992 51S3 - Pomeroy. on1o Phf"' C6U&gt; 5 992-5871
not --.rily tboa.e with the

10 00-Pollce Story 3,4, 15, Marcu• Welby M D 6 13, Barnaby
Jones8, Tom Jones 10, News20, Soundstage 33
10 3D-Your Future Is Now 20
11 00-News 3.4,6.8,1 0, 13,15, ABC News JJ
11 JQ-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15, Wide World Mystery 13 13 , FBI 6,
Movte "The Lawyer" 8, Movie " The Great Sioux Massacre"
10, Janak/ JJ
12 JD-W1de Wor ld Mystery " The Centerfold Murders" 6
1 00-Tomorrow 3.4.. News 13
WEONESDAY , FEBRUARY 5,1975

EXC~VAT I NG,-;;;~ -Ioader

------------!. ____

2 2 lip

.. 0THERWI5&amp; YOU MAY 'lOT ~
HAVE TIME TO COU~r THE BUllfT5
If TAKE5 TO $TOP M!;'.,,
WHIL!; I 'M
ii&gt;LICIN6 VOU
TORI880N5!

- -----

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

Employment Wanted

I ~F I DEL Pit;~ YOU
HAD SETTER ?HOOT
STRAIGHT!

J 2! tfC

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

1972 YAMAHA 175CC , 21" front
wheel Phone 992 7869

OUTA ME' WAY
DROP THAT
ClAM OP&amp;NER,
BUCKO· AFO"!;' I
PVNCTUI?E5 YE R
GIZZARD!
~~r

MQdem Chemicals

Real Estate For Sale

u

WAITRESSES needed , apply m
person Crow 's Steak House
Pomeroy
I 7 tf c

70 THI? I'll 1:'&gt;
5 WAI'I? THE
PP:I NC !;'75'
Gt,!A;&lt;D, EH ';

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Open Mon Sat
8 AM .. 6 P.M.

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

Help Wanted

6 00-News J.4.B.10,1J,15, ABC News 6, Elec Co 2 o, lTV
Utilization JJ
6 Jo-NBC NewsJ,4,15, ABC News 13; Bewltched6, CBS News
B. 10. Zoom 20, Your Future Is Now JJ
7 00-Truth or Cons 3,4 ; Bowling for Dollars 6, What' s My Line
8., News 10, Name !hot Tune 13; High School TV Honor
Society 15, Antiques 20, L Ill as Yoga &amp; You JJ
7 3D-Hollywood Squares 3.,4 , Wild Wild Wor ld of Animals 6,
Buck Owens B, New Price Is Right 10 To Tell the Truth 13,
Spnng Street USA 15, RFD 20, Marco Sporlllte JJ
B 00-Adam 12 3,4, 15, Movie " Death Be Not Proud " 6, 13, Good
T ' m es 8, 10, America 20.33
B JD-HallofFameJ,4.15, MashB,lO, AscenlofMan20JJ
9 00-Hawall Five 0 B
9 3D-Woman 20 , Witness to Yeslerday JJ

CAP!' AIN EASY

Bulldozer Rad 1alor to the
smallest Heater Core
Nalhan B1ggs
Radiator Spec1alsll

Ph. 992-5682 or 992-1121
All Mechanical Work

Wanted To Buy

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

From the largest

8,10
11 ·30-Holtywood Squares 3,15; Brody Bunch 6; News4; LO¥e of
Life 8, 10, Sesome St 33
II 55-Take Kerr with Graham Kerr 8; Don I mel's World 10;

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1975

...

towards

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

---- -----

Television log for eas~~ viewing

TO

I

Rutland

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

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

7

GOING

EXPERIENCED
,.
Radlato
I
'
Seryl~~ ·,_ ; I

On State Rt. 124, 112 m1. from
Route

1M

SEE YOU LATER.

Free P1ckup and Delivery

ROGER HYSELl'S
GARAGE

RACINE PWMBING
&amp; HEATING
Complete plumbing &amp;

OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

843-2824 or 843-2293
Portland, Ohio
REPAIR-Broken
Parts Mended
STRIPPIN&lt;r-By
Hand
,
NO DIP TANKS
Supplies· Strippers
Stains· Finsihes

Lany Lavender

From a shelf to a house
Paanttng, stdtng , roofing ,
paper hanging, kttctlen
cabanets, expert carpehng ,

IM GOING TO MEET HIM.

The Furniture Fixer

Blown Into Walls
and Attics
Free Esti111ates

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING

1975

'I

' ~ ----~---

PHONE
949-3832 or 843 2667

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

MEIG S

Business Servic~.s

0. &amp;~
CONSTRUCTION I

Suburban 3 Seat V 8 eng me, automatic trans , power
steering &amp; brakes, factory air condlf10f11ng, luggage rack,
green fln1sh , radio Lrke new w w tires.

COMMON PLEAS COURT
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY , OH 10
IN THE MATTER OF SET
TLEMENT OF ACCOUNTS
PROBATE

. .

Motor Co.

1974 OPEL MANTA
$2695
2 Door, orange ftn1sh, blk vmylmtenor, bucket seats, less
than 5,000 m1les Rad1o, deluxe bumpers

Jtc

COU NTY OHI O

J

1974 CHEll IMPALA
$4195
4 Or , 1 owner car &amp; only 10,.400 m1 , V 8 eng me w1th
automat i c, power steering , P brakes, fac air tinted
glass, deluxe body and wheel openmg mouldtngs , sand
stone viny l seats Beaut1ful dark red f(n 1sh Truly a cream
puff

Mann ing D Webster
Judge
Court of Common Pleas
Probate DI VISIOn
( 1)

P~_meroy

'
7- Tht! Daily Sent~l,Middlepori-Pomeroy,
0.,
' DICK TRACY

,..

Ill .

i"
id

�• I

.'

.'

~INC

match , Ra c me GUn
Club isunday l p m As sort ed
meat s &lt;lnd fa ctor,- choke gun s

For Fa~t ·R esults Use Sentinel' Classifieds:

on tv

Auto Sales

12 '12 tfc

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

2 SIGNS
OF

Case No 21329
EJtate of JOHN W ZERKLE

Deceased

Dear Sir
I am writing tills letter m defense of Bradbury School I
attended Bradbw-y School for two years and am now m e1ghth
grade.
Bradoory School is a school where yoo can work at your own
level, at your own speed. You don't have to work m levels which
are too easy for you, or too hard for you. You don't have to be
shoved down to where you get bored. You always have something
to d0.
!learned many things at Bradbury that I never would have
learned In a conventional type of school !learned how to write
poetry, write creatiV!lly, and make things with my hands. I also
learned how to be editor of the school newspaper. I never could
have had these advantages if I had gone to a conventional type of
school.
Would you really close down a school that offers these advantages, with the kind of things to do such as this?
Sure, the schoolls different. But it's being different Is what
helps the kids so much. It was different to what the ldds were
used to. It offered more things to do and more things to overcome.! think it would be a crime to do away with the system at
Bradbury School
I have had many pleasant experiences at Bradbw-y School.
And I know thattlie kids out there now and ir\ the future will have
them too, If they keep it as ills - Toni Pope Laurel St Middleport
'
.,

A view of how adults act
Dear Sir·
I am writing tills letter in regard to the problem about the
Bradbury School. I have been told about the situation at the
school. I !Pel that the Bradbury School should stay the way ills
because I know that my friends who have gone to the school, as
wellu myself, have learned a great deal
The Bradbury School has taught students to be able to do
work as an Individual as well as being in a group. I'm in the 8th
grade, and without help from the Bradbury School, I wouldn't
have been able to .,&gt;et that far so easy.
Each and every child needs help as they go through school.
Aak yourself, Halt the school really done any hann?, or are you
juat making the problems up just to have something to growl
about? Let me ask you something ebe: Do you believe In
dlsclplJne? Students should have enough sense to behave In
school, But it depends on you, I mean the way your child ls
brought up. No teacher Is going to put up with a child that
mlsliehavea In school.
I wlsb to expnlljl my feelings about Mrs. Hackett. She's just
the 18me as any other teacher, she'll punish a student. But as for
punilhlng a student in an abusive manner, she never has.! think
some parents act more like a child than an adult - Jo McKJn..
ney, 477 Sycamore St., Middleport.

First visit to dentist
needed at about age 2
Ed. Note : This is the third in
a series of six articles on dental
health pubUshed by this news·
paper, in cooperation with the
Redwinkel Dental Society, in
observance of National
Children's Dental Health
Week, Feb. 2-8.
OUR CHILD ISN'T qwte two
years old, but we've been told
that he should see the dentist
Don't you think he's a tittle
young to visit the dentist•
Most children have the1r

full set of 20 primary teeth by
the time they are 2 to 21&gt; years
of age These first teeth are
very necessary for chewing,
sp~h. and good looks. In
addition, they help 1rl proper
jaw development Further,
proper space must be matn·
tainild by healthy teeth in their
normal position or the permanent teeth may come in
crooked
Because these pnmary teeth
are so important to his future,
your child should viSit the

Senate will vote
today on schools
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - The the 60 needed to override a veto
Ohio Senate was 10 vote today in the House, not counting the
Republicans.
on a Heme passed
million
supplemental appropriation
Rhodes said last Friday he
lor P!blic schools, setting up was hopeful a compi'omlse
the first direct confrontation could be reached with Demc&gt;between the Democratic-con- cratlc leglllatlve leaders on the
trolled General ABaelllbzy and two versl0118. Senate Preeldent
Republican Gov. Jamee A. Pro Tempore Oliver Oeasek,
Rbodes.
OAkron, said Monday he does
Democrats, dominating the not expect a COIIIJll'(lllil, btt
Senate 21·12, were expected 10 that Democratic leaders will
pus the measure btlndlly at a I listen tb what Rhodes has to
p.m. tloilr 11!1181on and send It to ~er at a acbeduled meeting
Rbolles ftr tdgnature.
Wednesday.
' The bill, drafted by DemoRepublicans oppose the
crata Jut month In response to Hou11e passed bill on grounds
a projected surplus of state the state ls not yet certain r1. a
money, calli! for four monlhl3 surplus to finance the appro.
payments, beginning in March, jrlatlon. They· also maintain
lo each ol Ohio's 613 pubUc the school foundation formula
lcbool dlBirk:tS at a flat t40 per should be equallled before any
more money ls sent to the
~u.
• Rbodes bas prqJOied spend- districts.
Ing $1111 mWi1111 In June on a
"I don't see how you can
direct payment ol $650 to each COillpl'(ll1lbe t40 per pupil,"
publlc school teadler, $300 to Oeasek said. "We've cunpro.
profee"onel IICIJool employes mlaed about as far as we can
and "" to non-proleaslonai go."
Oeasek explained the Demoemployee. Hil packace also
incbldee a 15 per cent bike in crats and Rhodes ...._ !bit
frlnce benefits for school there will be about f!OO mllll1111
Iii surpl1111 fundi al the end r1.
employee.
The 1onmor bas not said the flacal ,ear, and that It ,
wbelher be WllUld veto or stcn shoilkl so for educaUon.
But they do not agree on the
tbe Democratic measure,
wlicb Will releelled fnJm the timing r1. the approp1latlon or
senate Finance Committee the dlltrlbutlon r1. it.
' Monday nlcbt on an ,8-3 party. '" Devlatloll
"AI far as I'm concemed,
there will be no deviation in oar
Haft Vtlel
[.lemocrata bave tbe necea- plan to pus the~ u It ls and
_ , al YGiel to cmnide I ?eta amd It down there (10 Rhodee'
In tbe Seute. , And they rl.flce)," 0cuet uld. ''Wbat
...t...t help from five Repub- be does wttb Ilia up to blm."
Ouul DOted 1i and H0111e
• Hcau ill aendlng tbe lill1 ~·Vernal
G. Riffe Jr., J&gt;.
llinlilllb tbe s - laat waitk.
New
Bo1tan,
plan
10 meel with
•' AJtboUib IIJ81Iolt - ol tbllr
owa Wlel, they IIIli bave II ol Rliodu Wed!Eiday, "and If be

"I

line'*·

•

,

·.

Not1ce 1s hereby given that
Ldllan G Zerkle of 289 North
Th1rd St, M!dc:lleport Oh1o has
been duly appotnted Executrix
of the Estate ot John w Zerk l e
dectased late of Middleport
Me1gS County , Oh10
Creditor s are r e qu~red to f• le
the•r c laim s wllh s.=Hd f1du c 1ary
W1th1n four month s
Dated th1s 24th day of
January 1975

QUALITY

18

(2) 4

11

1973 PlY STA WAGON

IN THE

COURT

Accounts and vouchers of the
fo l lowing named ftduc •arles
have been tiled m the Probat e
Court Me 1g s Coun tv Oh •o for
approval and set t leme nt
CASE NO
16, 148 Tw enty
Second Current Account of
Bessie Oli,..er Guardian of the
person and estate of Grover C
Oliver
CASE NO 17 638 First Ac
count of Marlin G
Kerns
Tru s tee under the Wt l l of
Thomas w Wagner, Deceased
CASE NO 18,333 Fourleenth
Current Account of Betty L
Sm1th , Guardian of the Guar
dl anshlp Estates of Mary K
Gallagher
and
Debra
L
Gallagher. m.nors
CASE NO 20 351 F~rst and
Final Account of George B
Skinner, Guard1an of George E
Skinner, a minor
CASE NO 21 , 161 F ir st and
Flnnl Account of Paul Nelson
A i kman , Executor of the Est~fe
of Blanche E Nelson , Deceased
CASE NO 21 , 296 First and
Ftnal Account of Earl Ktng
E)(ecutor of the Estate of E
Leona K lng , Deceased
Unltss exceptions are filed
thereto . sa1d accounts wil l be
tor hearing before satd Court on
the Sth day of March , 1975, at
which time sa1d acco unts Will be
cons1dered and continued from
day to day until fmaily disposed

of

Any person Interested may
file wri tten exceptions to sa1d
accounts or to m atrers per
talnlno to the execut1on of the
trust not leu than f1ve days
prior to the date set for hearmg
John c Bacon

JUDGE

Common Pleas Court
Probate Ot'w'ISIOn
Meigs Coun ty Oh10

(2) 4, He

dentist by the time all h1s
pnmary teeth have erupted,
provided the child ts
cooperative enough ~I this age
The first v1sit to the dental
off1ce is important because 11
se Is the stage for building a
lifetime of good dental care
habits. The dentist and h1s
aSSistants will try to make thts
visit as pleasant as possible.
They will try to gain his trust
and make him feel weiC&lt;lme
The dentist will examine the
condition of the child's mouth,
and possibly take some x-ray
pictures He may also clean the
teeth and see tf anything else
should be done. FmaUy, he will
suggest ways that you, the
parent, can help to protect your
child's oral health through
daily care and diet.
Before you call for an appointment, it would be helpful
to talk with the child about his
viSit to the dentist Tell him the
dentist ls a friendly doctor who
is going to help him keep his
teeth and mouth healthy
Here are a few pointers that
may be help!ul in planmnt
your child's first VISit·
Make dental visits a fun
adventure; treat them lightly
Don't bribe the child to go to
the dentist or threaten the trip
as a punishment.
Do avoid letting your chtld
know of any anxieties you may
have had about dentists.
Don't tell the ch1ld
frtghlenlng stories about
dentists
Finally, remember that the
basis for developing and
practicing good dental health
habits 1s parental example,
gwdance and encouragement

Fire Retardant
Insulation

$2795

Phone 992-3q93
Daily Alter 5:00

etc

HE(L

Notice

1973 CUTLASS S, 2 dr
heating service and
automat i C Power SteennQ
AUCTION Sale, Every Frtday
brakes , and wtndows cru1se
general
sheet metal
1 p m V illage Auction 215 N
control
t1lf wheel, am tm
Second, Midd l eport
works.
Free
ste reo tape player , new
2 20 30tc
brakes and shocks, radtals
Estimates.
--- ---------- -and tow httch Meta111c blue
INCOME TAX Prepared , by
Phone 949-5961
wtth black mter1or Worth
appo1ntment Phone 992 338 8
$3 400 sell for S2 ,SOO Call 992
Emergency 992-3995
2 2 6fc
3453 or 992 3381
or 992-5700
1
31
Stc
AUCTION , Thursday n1ght , 7
p m
at Mason Auct 1on
1972 VEGA Hatct1back . 3 speed
Horton St In Mason , W Va
automattc E~&lt;cellent con
Cons1gnme nt s welcome
d I ton Phone 992 3914 after 5
Phone 1304 1 773 5471
pm
2 2 ttc
2 4 6tp
MEIGS muzzle loaders public
Shoot , lzaak Walton Fa r m , 1973 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass S 1951 FOR D ,t lathead , V Benglne
P S , P B and factory a•r
wtth standard tranSm i SSIOn
Chester . Oh to , Sunday Feb 9,
25 soo miles
Call 992 3914
1975, at 1 p m
1965 Lmcoln Contmental, 430
after 5 p m
cu •n motor w•ttl automatiC
2 3 6tc
transm tSS t on
One
2 2 6tp
refngerator green m good
NOW selltnO Fulle~ Brush 1969 IMPALA Custom , good
condtt on Call 949 5185 any
Products phone 992 3410
cond1t1on
Factory
atr
,
p s,
ttme or 985 4219 after 7 p m
1 24 ttc
p b , prtced to sell Phone 992
2 4 l ip
7617
I NCOME Tax Prepared both
1 29 6tc
F ederal and State Ta)(es will
be done by appomtments 1960 MGA 2 dr convert•ble HOOVER 01al A Mat!C wtth
only Pl ease phone 992 2271 or
power ctr1ve and attachments
very good cond1t1on Phone
see Mrs Wanda Eblm, Laurel
S75 Phone 985 4132
992 7737 after 5 p m
Cltff Rd Pomeroy . Oh1o
1 29 lOtp
1 29 ~tc
I 3 30tc
197 3 FORD Country Squ~re STEREO RAD IO, 8 track tape
AU1.. liON
Thursday
and
combmation, am fm rad to. 4
wagon , 20,0 00 m •les
all
Saturday ntght. 7 p m at
equ1pment SJ.500 Phone 992
way speaker sound system
Mason Au c t1on , Horton St 1n
3493 or 992 2720
Balance $107 89 or use our
Mason, W Va Cons1gnments
budget terms Call 992 3965
welcome Phone 1304) 773
1 29 tt c
5471
10 3 lfc
business for sale
--------------- TRAILER space , 2 m1les from GROCERY
Bu1ldmg for sale or tease
Pomeroy,
Rt
143,
Phone
992
FOR your ' Otl Of M 1nk '
Phone773 S618from 8 30p m
5858
CosmettcS Phon e BROWN'S
to 10 p m for appointment
9925113
10 27 tfc
J 10 tfc
_____
1 7 ffc
APT :frooms. all electnc . his sTEHO~ADio-Bt;;ck. tape
table top range, wall oven
combmahon, am tm radio, 4
real ntce and clean, modern
way speaker sound system
Located
m
Pomeroy
Balance SlOB 74, or use our
overlooktng
the
Oh1o
R•ver
WANTED Old upr i ght PIANOS .
budget
terms Call 992 3965
Phone Gallipolis day 446
any cond1t1on
Paytng S10
1 21 tfc
7699 . eventngs 446 9539
each Ftrst floor only Wr~te
1
26
lfn
and gtve d1rec t10ns to W1tten
STEREO r adto , 8 track taP;
P1ano Co, Bo)( 188. Sardis ,
combmat1on , AM FM radto , A
2-BED;OO~- --;r~~~-ad~lts
Oh10 .:13946
way speaker , sound system
only Phone 992 3324
1 JO 61p
Balance $107 89, or use our
2 4 tfc
budget terms Call 992 3965
WANTED old upr ight ptanos, TRAI LER SPACE
2 3 tf c
J/&lt;4
mile
any cond i t ion
Pay 1ng SlO
_,
north ol Metgs Htgh School on
each F1rst floor only Wr tt e to
old Rt 33 Phone 992 2941
and g ve d1rect1ons to W 1tten
1 23 tfc
Ptano Co
Bo){ 188 . SardiS
Oh iO 43946
CO UNTRY Mobtle Home Park
2 3 6tp
R t 33 len m 1les north or
Pomeroy
Large lots -&amp;tth
OLD furn•ture 1te bo)(es brass
concrete patiOS Sidewalks.
beds , or complete households
runners
and off
street
All Ne~ Heaters
Wr 1te M 0 Miller , Rt 4
parkmg ~hone 992 7479
Now
Pomeroy , Oh to Call 992 7760
12 31 ttc
10 7 74
Discounted!
~ ;; ~-pTfurnished~~,-;!~t•es · New ~Wood Burmng
JUNK autos . complete and
pa1d , no chtldren or pets
delivered to our yard We P•Ck
HEATER------5239 95
Phone 992 5810 814 East
up auto bod1es and buy all
Mam, Pomeroy
Deluxe model with cab~net
kmds of scrap metals and
2 2 61p Wall hned.
Iron R1der 's Salvage St Rt
I
· ,OME-ROY LANDMARK '
124, Rt 4, Pomeroy Oh•o
3 and 4 ROOM furn tshed and ~ Jack w Carsey Mgr
Call 992 5468
unfurn1shed
apartments
Phone992·2{81
'
10 17 tfc
Phone 9925434
'-~·--~
~
~------~·--~
•.J
412ttc ~·
CASH patd for all makes ahd
models of mobil e homes
PRivATE- ;Eietlng- room-U,r 3 PIECE bedroom sutte, Van •ty
Phone area c ode 614 423 9531
any organ !zat 1on phone 992
dresser, good condition , price
3975
$45 New dinette suite 7 ptece
4 13 tfc
$75 l2x13 112 nylon rug, new
3 11 tfc
-with pad, S60 S.ngle bed $10,
WANTED to - b-uy a used
other 1tems
Call 667 3333
Gravely Trllctor w1th Mower FURNISHED apt Adults only
Middleport Phone 992 3874
after 3 P m
and r•dmg sulky and plow
attachments Phone (304) 882
11 14 tfc 1-------------2~.!_1&lt;
2525 or evenings, 882 2344
HOuse-FoR -RENT~l63~ 1953 JO FERGUSON tractor,
1 26 12tc
Li ncoln Hgts , Pomeroy ,
new motor , good rubber , new
Phone Pomeroy 992 3575 or
pamt Sl.200 Phone 985 3594
OLD COINS and paper money
GalliPOliS 4-46 2749
2 2 7tp
for Me1gs County's only
2 2 tfc
monthly com auct ton Call Ed
6' MOWER, 3 pt h1tch f1ts Ford
Burkett 992 3476 after 5 JO
or Ferguson tractor, $100
NEWLY fufnlshed apt
2
pm
New culttvator , $125 Phone
bedrooms
reference
Phone
1 31 121 c
98S 3594
949 3783
2 2 ltp
2 2 ltp
CONSIGNMENTS welcome at
P&amp;J Auct1on
215 Nortl1
FURNISHED apt 3 rooms and 1965 JOHN Deere Dozer, 4
Second , M i ddleport
cylinder, detsel. 8' blade
bath, newly decorated Phone
1 9 30tc
canopy
New
clutches.
992 2937
brakes, and tracks. A 1
_ _ _ _ _ _ ..jt _
__
700 BALES oi good da1ry hay
• _ _ _ _ _226tp
condlt•on $6,500 Phone 98S
Phone 7A2 31 82
3594
I
Hous.=:
Ut~furn•shed
7
ro-oms
2 2 61p
2 2 ltp
and bath , n•ce Phone 992 2780
or 992 3432
CASHSSS$ FOR JUNK CARS
EXTRA n 1ce corn fed freezer
beef your choice Phone 949
Complete , FRYE'S TRUCK --- ---------- ~ tfc
AND AUTO PARTS , Rutland
4762
2 2 3tc
Phone 742 6094
1 22 26tp

For Sale

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

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

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

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

For Rent

by-pass

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

USED FUEL OIL .

HEATER, sso

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

----,---------- !

Ph 992-2174

3 ROOM 2 ba th, bUill m k1tchen
w tlh bar , carport. 18)(40 sun
deck , com plete
Prtvate
wooded
acre .
near
Harrtsonv tlle $24 500 Phon e
742 6261
2 4 6tc

60 ACRE farm at V tnton Oh10
S55,000 tnc lud tng all farm
machmery Phone 388 8420
2 4 Jtc

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

NEW HOMES No Mone y Down
Payments according to
tncome on Farm ers Home
Admtntstrat!on loan Con
vent10nal flnanctng atso
a'w'allable w1th m1n1mum
down· Lovel y homes m three
locat1ons In Me1gs County
Some homes w1th wooded
lot s
Call for more m
formation 992 5976
1 15 26tc

NEW LISTING 5 room
home, bath, gas furnace , lots of
paneling and ce1ling file. C1ty
water,

w1fh

large

Oniv $10,000 oo

level

lot

NEW LISTING-·- acres, B of·
bottom "
\ { \ woods, 2

0·\..·U

bedrc C
gas heat,
rural ;J•
t..,tu1et with
orivac, ~12,000 00

.BUILDING
' .
LOT -

With stone

foundation on good quiet street,

out

of high wafer. _
BARGAIN - - {\.., frame

0 \ ·U'

with
water,
natura ~. •\,.; .ctr1c on
corner .) w,J,tJOO 00

!'OM E ROY -

N1ce renovated

3 bedroom home Lots of n1ce

paneling, wall to wall car
petlng, 2 porches, basement,
and fenced yard $17,500 00
HAVING
TROUBLE
SELLING,
CALL
A
PROFESSIONAL SALESMAN
AT m-331~5.

REMODELING ,
plumb i ng,
heatmg, and all types ot
general
repa 1r
work
guaranteed 20 years e)(
pertence Phone 992 2409
1 19 tfc

LADlES , turn your spare ti me
tnto money
Pos1t1on now
open tor amb tttous person
Phone 992 2868

2 2 ltc
--------- ------ --------------R N tor Partt •me pos1f•on w i th

Mobile Homes For Sale

197-4 GREENBRIER 2 bedroom ,
all electnc , $6,900 can 992

7328

2 2 3tc

planned parenthood , ciln1cs,
education , and social serv1ces
responsibilitieS 16 hours per
week
Call Off •ce. 992 5912
weekdays except Thursday
1 29 6tc

--------------1972 MOBILE home , 12)(60, 2 --------------Wanted ioRent

NEW A cc ord1on and case ,
ortgmal pnce $350, will sell
for S175 Phone 1 (30~) 773

5•27

2 2 lie

19-57- CHEVY parts
NEW
Lake'Nood traction bars , hi
IIcker a~r shocks, hooker
headers , Wtfh 3 'collectors for
small block
Call 992 3496
after 6 p m BEST OFFER
•
1017tfc

For Sale or Tlilde

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

Coatrollq

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

llllllatcn,

..pm

Real Esllti For,S.

-----------

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

111011 puplla.

1 30 -12tc

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

992 2975

1 29 6tc

.

2 2 121p

-----------

H

6 45-Mornlng Report J, Farmtlme 10
7 00-Today 3.4 15, AM America 6, 13. CBS News B, 10
B 00-lassle 6. Captain Kangaroo B, Popeye 10, Sesame Sf JJ
8 25-Cap1 Kangaroo 10
8 JQ-Big Valley 6
9 00-A M 3, Phil Donahue 4,, 15 Bul lwl nkle B; Morning with
D J 13
.
! 25-Chuck White Reports 10
9 JQ-Not For Women Only 3, Dinah 6, Galloping Gourmet B.

P: .. IT Woo:..D ~ N€ RlbHT IF 1,\'JV ~

0 1-!A.R.b-. .. ,
1

Mlf.:e t..le)(T iU~DA'/!

Tattletales 10, New

100 Kerr Slreet
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone(614) 992-2798
STRIPPING- FINISHES
FURNITURE-METALS-ETC.
MOOERN &amp; ANTIQUE
Refinishing . Repairing
Burnishing
~aning
Upholslering.
We Also Buy Antiques
P1ck-up S~rv1ce Available

Unscramble those four Jumbles,

one letter to each square, to

ALLEY ClOP
, ..TH ' BOYS AN' I
ARE GOING .8A,CK
T'MOO AND ROUND
UP SOME MORE
MEN!

ltvered nght to your project
Fast
and
easy
Free
est1mates Phone 992 3284
Goeglem Ready M1x Co ,
Middleport Oh10
6 30 trc

I I

SEWING MACHINE , Repairs,
serv•ce, all makes, 992 2284
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy,
Authortzed Stnger Sales and
Service We sharpen SCISSOrs

repair

:!r----------J

AstrdGrapR
Now arronre

'==~f,_~_Ll~~~~~~~:_:'":"~uted brlhe abo•• cartoon.

r 'Pr.t .. llRSIANSW11111t1

''(

12 19 tfc

Jumblr11 RIGOR SNACK MASCOT OBTUSE

Yetlerdar••

I

"-•wer1

p,.,,,," tl/~tt(• 1/u, H44f dltn/.;11- "BAR·GAINS"

~~-~·"

and
Repair Serv1ce Anything
ft)(ed around the home, from
roof t o basement You will
l tke our work and rates
Phone 742 5081
1229tfc

ACROSS

salt tree
Marceau, 40 Purswt
U Fleshy
e.g.
5 French
frwt
DOWN
author
10 Golf
I Opera
club
heroine
11 Emulated 2 Sultan's
Juliet
decree
13 Baby
3 When one's
word
eyes are
14 Scoundrel
opened
15 Chemical
(3 wds.)
sufftx
4 Spanish
16 Storage
queen
box
5 Moderate
17 "-to
red
Billie
6 Unassisted
Joe"
7 Bon18 Place in
I CUrrent
a box
(4 wds.)
zo Aunt (Sp.) ...-'tr""r.-n-

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

GASOUNE AlLEY

At. two How come
mtnutes remember
past. exact
tenr .t;me?

ELWOOD- BOWERSREPAIR
- Sweepers, toasters, 1rons,
all small app\1ances Lawn
mowers, next to State H!gh
way Garage on Route7 Home
Phone 985 3825
2 2 2otc

uoL~&gt;\J/

IS YORE I Q
L OW 'NUFFTV
GUIDE A 13RCUP
TO LOW5SI
SLOBBOVIA 2

992 3057

1 21 26tp

L!O (July 23-Aug. 22) You'll
be dlseppolnted with some
friends at lhl&amp; time If you ex·
peel more than they can give
Apprec i ate
them
for
themselves
VIRGO (Aug . 23·1ept. 22) Be
of service becauae you re
needed, not because you think

11 will lmpreso another A job
well done Ia your reward
LtB_~A ll~t. 23·001. 23) You

WIN AT BRIDGE

9 18 tfc

~;:-;:- --trim - ; ;- ,uf;ee-;-or

11"5 A130UT THI5 IRRE51STI13LE URGE YOU
HAVE 10 IMPEROONATE PEOPlE. I WANT
TO 0C&gt; 50METHIN0 POSITIVC.. '1&gt;--r:'

THERE:? SOMETHII\G'
I'D ll KE 10 DISCUSS
WITH YOU SIT DOWN
FOR A MINUTE ,
PLEASE.

Pe~~;;;~tion:;--;-25

'tJ\R
-;er
yacd Phone R •chard West '
843 2667
•
12 24 26tp

n---~

tK88

oloJ93

oloQ!052

BUILDING lot, eo ft frontage ·
by 16~ ft The second lot on lett
on R.1verv1ew Drive, L 1ncoln
Hill , Pomeroy, Ohio If In
teres ted catl992 -3230 after 5 p

m •

AXYDLIIAAXa
LONGFBLLOW

WMJ•
PO EMRVPEMB KHE ZCEM
PVB DC ZHXM GCYM OTHJ DC LCZ·

10 17ttc

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

ZHJN

Hear Local, State, and National

HEZPMB

-JPJCJ

NM

G'MJLGCB

'

I

OUR IV
rJIAW'S
HIDE!!

Yesterday'• Cryplltqaote: THE MAGIC OF FIRST LOVE 18
OUR IGNORANCE THAT IT CAN EVER ENO.-BENJAMIH
OISRAELI

PJ \ ' I I...,

••I

I

'

1

••
rl'

•

'

~i

'f

1

(

I -

South

Pass
Pass

3•
Pasa

Pall
Pass

4•

t,

1171

You will make two lnterntlng
friends thlo year. Both will add
luster and zoot to your life. One
will stimulate your creative In·
leresta, lha other, how to gain
knowledge.

South didn't like tbla play and
decided to live tbe opjJOllelltl a •I
chance to ro WI'Dlll· He drew · ·
trumps with two leada and
threw Weat in with hi1Ia1t dia-

Weal had to decide between a
'Club and a heart lead. Had be
811011ed the club South mlJht
well have ro~e down two, bufu
happe111 so tiften, Wnllueued
wronr and led the four ol
hearls'.
Thia took care ol all South'•
proble1111 in beartl and clubl
and he made his rather doubtful
contract.

The blddtnr bu been·
Weot

By Oawa1d &amp; Jamea Jacoby
Things 1larted out badly for
South. East's king of diamonds
held tbe first trick and he
returned the eiglit. South could
play either the jack or nine of
diamonds, but whichever one he
played would be covered by
West So South oould count two
diamond losers, pillS the ace of
hearts and a possible club1
He could btlndle that club
loser by leadlnf a heart towird
his btlild and ineulnt· lbe 10
spot If East held die jack,
South's, contract would come
home, If Ea1l dldn\ ~South
would be only one
while he would 1ote two beartl
61 would be able jo aet rid of bla
IOII~~i-club later
/

down--

AMAZtltjO! foal
HE KNOIII TWAT ?

tlETT£11.

..

Ea1t

Tl.IJlT·..;

TAAiS'RJO
8NJ I HOPE
'()II'U: FEEL

•J

Peb.

:.

~

1
•

~

,

I

•

.,,

N..U

Eaot

4

8aotll

I.

It

I

u

lolo
!

Send $1 lor JACOBY MOOERN_
book to "';'(In at 8fldQ(/' (CIO ''
this nowlpe}ler), ,. 0 : ao.r 4811. 1.;
R~dio City Station, New Yorll, 1:

N. y 100111.

~--

I

'·

Nortll

Opening lead- 2 t

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's bow to work It:

Real Estate For Slle

~~

I.

One letter limp()' ataOO. for another. In thlt sample A Ia
1lHd for the three L'a, X for the two O's, ete. Sln&amp;1e 1elten,
apootrophea, the leneth and formation of lhe worda at'l an
blntl. Eacb day the code lettel'l are dilerent.
CRYPTOQUOTE

!·

Welt

38Locatln8

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

'

INEWSP.\Pl:H l:NTERrRI&amp;t: ASSN I

II

News First On

•AU!

Both vulnerable

3'1 Govern

SOMETHIN6 CCW.5TRr/CTIVe
AII30UT TI-IAT I

needa.

mond.

Eall
.82

• J 93
oloA76

35New

'

your practical

know you're capable ol. Sot
your sights on victory

I

tQ!052

President

992 7l49

to

Give opponents chance to err

'1:1 Liquid

...SEPTIC.
TANKS
cleaned
Modern San it at ton, 992 3954 or

• I

Don't deal In tlalf.. meaaure•
now or perform less than you

SOUTH (0)
• A K 7 51
• Q 10

measure
28 Ham it up
29 Fatal
31 Craggy
hill
3% Seafood
item
33 Capture

AQUAIIIUI (Jtn. 20-1'111. 1tl
You still hove to kHp a light
rein flnonclolly Don't spend
foolishly lor things untottntlal

PIICII (,til, 20·MirGh 201

.93
¥J874

34G-Ib.

needt your htlp now bon1
bout of your noble deed.

your efforts, rather than bankIng on what the future may br·

WEST

25 Room for
linens,
jugs,
etc.

C BRAOf-OR D, AucttOneer Complete Serv1ce
Phone 949 3821 or 949 3161
Racine, Ohio
Cntt Bradford
S 1 tfc ,

to rectify

NORTH
• Q J 10 8
¥ K 62
t A 74
o1oK81

Z3 Slant

26

reaaonabla bounda to one who

lng

Yesterday's Aaswer
9 Shabbier 29 Rock
12 Bemused
'n' roll
16 Curse
years
19 EgypUan 30 - Illy
Christian 34 "Suds"
22 Burgler's 38 New
loot
Mexican
Z3 Standing
Indian
~ Taciturn
n Criminal
25 Epochal
charge
fl Excavate
(sl.)

•

·1

CA,fiiCOIIN (Deo. D·Jan.
1•1 Be goneroua wllhln

CANCER (June 2f·July 22)
work now for that which offers
you an Immediate return for

son
AT THE' CQV\PLJTER C5N T&amp;Fl

you won'! be bellt¥od

come through another if
you re not on the ball, you'll not
realize Its full benefits

eldest
- TI-IEN IT'S MAH
I Q's DUTY ID
SINK LOW 'NUFF
10 6LJIDE 'GMrr-

meke a more colorful tale, but

TAURUS (April 20·Mty 20) A
worthwhile opportunity will

21 Resiliency
2% Noah's

ULABNER

IAGITTAIIIUI (Now. 11-Dta.
211 You have o tendency today
to exaggerete a bit. lt may

tlmlsm is baaed upon fact

~lftlcult

39 Tamarisk

1 Marcel

P&amp;J
Home
Maintenance,
heattng, cooling, refr~g,
plumbing , electrtcal ap
pl1ances We servtce and
repa~r anytlng m the home or
busmes s 215 N Second,
M tddleport Phone 992 3509
1 9 30tc

For Wodnttdoy, Feb. 5, 1171
ARIEl (March 21·Aprll11) It's
good to be optlmlatlc roger·
ding the outcome of events It's
equelly lmpottanl that your OP·

to make an error In Judgment

I

lmproveme~f

ICORPIO (001. 14·Nov. 221
You 11111 havelmproctlctl urg11
to opend beyond your metnt.
Pull In your horna lodoy or
you'll be oorry.

GEMINI (Mty 21·June 20)
Weigh Issues carefully before
major declelons or you'rellkely

by THOMAS JOSEPH

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

ABC National News on the half-hour.
State and local news on the hour.
The N0011 Report with BIU Prne and Mellssa
I · Corise.
Paul Harvey News 8:30 a.m. ud 12:30 p:.1.0.
WMPOAM
6:00a.m. t0 5:30p.m. Dally
' -.
.
'.

I I I 1 T'

(Aiuwen lomonow)

EXCAVAl -IN G .=- d~-;-~r ,
backhoe,
and
dilcher ,
waterline, footers , drams,
roads, and brush cleanmg, no
10b too small, no weather tool
bad Charles R ' Hatfield, Rt 1
Rutland 0 Phone 742 6092
1 7 26tc

AM~FM

the circled lotion

to form the aurprl1e answer, u

I

2478

have aome good ideaa but

don't depend on olhfrs to
supply the muscle Succeu
com at only If you do II youraotf

' Btmlct Bide Otol

I'"~

•

WMPO

I

. THROCCI•

U'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

8, 10, To Be Announced 33.

7 00-Truth or Cons 3,4; Bowling for Dollars~. Whal'• My Line
8, News 10, Country Music JubiiH 13; I Spy 15; Behind lhe
llnes 20, Know Your Schools 33.
7 Jo-Pollce Surgeon 3, Name That Tune 4, lot'• Make a Deal
6, Wilburn Brothers 8, The Judge 10 ; To Tell the Truth 13;
Book Beat 20, Episode Action 33
8 00-llttle House on the Pralrla 3.~. 15, Thai's My Mama~. 13;
Tony Orlando and Sawn 8, 10; What Makes a Good Father 20;
Sinners JJ
B Jo-Movle "All Together Now" 13; Movie "Two for the
Money" 6
9 00-luca• Tonner 3,4, IS; Cannon 8.10; Appalachllan Grttn
Parks Prolect 20, Maslerpltce Theatre JJ
10. 00-Pelrocelll 3.~. 15, Got Christie lo•e ~,13; Man hunter 8, 10;
News 20, Family At War 33.
•
10 JQ-Your Future Is Now 20.
11 00-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News JJ.

I t)

DOZER work, land. cleanng by
the acre, hourly or contract
Farm , ponds , roads , etc
Large dozer and operator
wtth over 20 years ex
per!ence Pullms Excavatmg,
Pomeroy, Ohto Phont 992

shrubbery ,
clean
out
basements, atttcs , etc !"hone
949 3221 or 742 A441
1 26 26tc

Tomorrow

12 45-Eiec Co 33
12 55-NBC News 3,15
1 00-News 3; All My Children 6. 13, Phil Donahue 8, Young &amp;
the Restless 10. Not For Women Only 15.
1 3Q-How to Survive• Marriage 3,4, 15, Let's Make a Deal6,13;
As the World Turns 8,10
2 00-Doys of Our Llvt! 3,4,15, $10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Guiding
Light B. 10
2 3D-Doctors 3,4, 15, Big Showdown 6, 13; Edge of Night 8, 10.
l 00-Another World 3,4, 15, General Ho•pltal 6, IJ; Price Ia
Right 8,1 0, RFD 20
J 30-0ne Life to Live IJ, Lucy Show 6, Match Game 8,10;
Aging 20
4 00-Mr Cartoon J, I Dream of Jeannie ~~ Somer$0t 15;
Gilligan ' s Is 6, Tattletales 8, Se•ame 51 20,JJ, Movie
"C lnderFello" 10; Mike Douglas 13
4 Jo-Bewltched 3; ABC Afterschool Special 6, Merv Griffin 4;
lucy Show 8; Bonanza 15.
5 00-F B I 3. ABC Aflerschool Special 13; Andy Grlffllth 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33
5 JO-News 6, Beverly Hillbillies 8; Hodgepodge lodge 20; Gel
Smart 15, E lee Co 33
6 00-News 3,4,8,10,13.15, ABC News ~- Elec. Co 20, lTV
Utilization JJ.
~ JO-NBC News 3,4, 15, ABC News 13, Bewitched 6, CBS News
8, 10. Zoom 20, Your Future Is Now 33

ISEPPOOI

EXPERT tree serv 1ce, free
est1mates, 20 years e)(
penence Call ( 1) 667 3041 or

house needs some

(J

News 13

12 00-Jackpol J, 15, Password All Stars 6,13 ; Bob Braun'• 50-50
Club 4, News 8, 10.
12 JQ-Biank Check 3,15; Spilt Second 6,1 3, Search for

11:3Q-Johnny Carson 3.~.15; Wide World Special 13; FBI 6,
Movie "The La•t Challenge" 8, Movie "SynanOfl" 10; Janakl
33.
12 3D-Wlde World Special 6
1·00-Tomorrow 3,4; Nws 13.

'

,,WITH ENOUGH OF US LOOK·
lNG AIWUND OUT 1l1ERE, WE
MlG~T GE.T LUCKY AND PICK
UP SOME TRACE OF~
GIRLS!

YOBOT

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

POMEROY - Business R
and furniShed apartment
located on Main St 1n good
traff1c area Good Income
Investment Priced to sell.
I&gt;DRTLAND - 4 n~ce lots,
good drilled well anq water
syslem,
block
garage,
slorage building, 2 story

-=1=

How do you
get around?

form four ordinary worda.

READY MIX CONCREfEOe."

:tOMe

t

Revue 13

~lJ]J~)1l!:;!t'~==~

g

6 13 tfc

acres $8,000 00.

Zoo

10 00-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4, 15, Joker's Wild 8, 10, Movie
" F1ve Branded Women" 13
10 JQ-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15. Gambit B. 10
11 OO-H1gh Rollers 3,4, 15, One Life to Live 6, Now You See It

;•

211ttc
~------- ----CRE .~EANS CONCRETE de
livered MondiY'( through
Saturday
and
evenings
Phone 446 1142

CARPENTER 2 story
frame,
4 BR, 1'/, balhs,
dining R, porches, storage
bldg 2 garages, about 2

13

0 J!r-\..OIUinOU:) I OOay

I'M '3::li&lt;R'i I RJRWT 'IOJf&lt;. BIR:rHD.A!-/ 1

Pomeroy

not

For Sale

today

BORN LOSER

5232

------------;--

nlchi-

6 00-Sunnse Seminar 4 , Sunrise Semester 10
6 15-Engllsh 505 J
6 25-Farm Report 13
6 JG--F1ve Minutes to Live By 4, News 6, Bible Answers 8,
6 JS...:Columbus
4 Story

Truck or 1

anu backhoe work, sept1c
t anks mstalled, dump trucks
and lo boys for h1re , Will haul
fill d 1rt , top soiL limestone &amp;
gravel , Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers, day phone 992 7089, 1
ntght phone 992 3525 or 992

Whole works at just $4,700
NEAR LANGSVILLE ELEC1 P&lt;OLUX Sweeper c.: .m, e About 10 acres, 011 good
model
Con:u:tlete with ali
fishing creek, close to mine
cleaning attachments and
areas, good blacktop road
usespaperbl.'gs Slightly use-d
but cleans and looks like new
ASKING ;ust $4,000
Will sell for $37 25 cash or
ALL
CASH FOR YOUR
terms ava1fable Phone 992
PROPERTY LET US
77SS
12 18 tfc, KNOW WHAT YOU HAVE
- PROPERTY IS SEJ.LING
CLOSE OUT on . new Z1g Zag FAST AT THIS TIME.
sewing mechrnes For sewing
m-2259 or 992-2568
stretch fabr i cs. buttonholes.

bedrooms' Pnced reasonable
Phone 992 2709 or 742 5641 ' WANTED old upnght pianos,
hu any plan' for cOIIIJII'OIIIbe,
2 4 6tc
any condit1on
Paying $10
be can tell liS. We'll be glad to
each First floor only Write
and !::liVe direct•ons to Wi tten
MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE
listen."
P1ano Co, Box 188, Sardis ,
NOTICE•
Ot.,~e
to
the
l)emocrata knocked down foreclosure on one of Ohio's Oh10 ~3946 .
1 29 6tp
largest MCb1le Home Dealers
foUr Republican m~~~tidments
we , wlU offer for sate the
~committee debate MOnfollowing Mobile Homes at a
very , verv large d iscount
day
1- 6Ax12 Liberty, J bedroom
8 INCH 3 pt hitCh post hole
fancy dftSi gns , etc Paint
Two of them would have l-60X12 Liberty , 2 bedroom
digger or trade for 3 pt h1tch
slightly blemtshed Choice of
made tbe commitment to l -SOxt2 RIChardson , 2 bedroom
pickup dtsc Phone 742 5322
carrying cas~ or sewing
l-60xl'2 PMC , 3 bedroom
2 2 3fp
stan.d SA9 so cash or terms
apend the money, btl
1111tll 160)(1.2 T•tan , 2 bedroom
available Phone 992 7755
1
.....
60)(
12
Park
wood
,
2
bedro9m
the .moo1 foundation formula
12 18 ttc
1- 60x.U Elcona , 2 bedrooms ,
Ia I'Cp'lllwed later IIU year.
central air
REWARD for the return Of
Rtcharason .
3 USED parts , Frye ' s Truck and S50
A tblrd amendment would 1- 65x12
our Blllck and Decktr eleclr•c
Auto
Parts,
Rutland,
Oh10
bedroom , 2 full baths, 8x12
saw, 11h 1n blade Phone (1)
bave ,left It up 10 the state
Phone (61~, 7~2 609.4
expando .
667 -3737 Viv1an MaKey
\
122781p
Board, domi.. ted We also have a good se1ect1on of
1-Jl 61p
8. 10 and 12 W•de Mob•le
by
to delenDine If other
Homes Tttese are mostly all ;;~~AMAHA-i'SQ." neW-parts.
e)(tras, good cond1tlon Phone
\ate model Homes (some have
the
wu bolditW up and never
992 2258 after 6 p m
been lived In l If you
the money could be paid.
1 J0-61c
are lntertsted In a good
Approximately one acre in
Mobl\e Home at a very large
The fotrib m~~t'""'-1 Will
Rutland, set up for mobile
discount, don ' t walt Stop tn GRAVELY tractor Pre season
the Rbodes propoul rl. a direct
spec1al Purchase any ntw
home Phone CU ~A6-9662.
today at BERRY MILLER
Gravely convertible tractor
Mobile Home Sales , 70S
bonus to leacbers.
1 Jb 7tc
at regular list price and we
Farson Street, Belpre. Oh io.
Sen. M. Morrla Jacbon, J&gt;. . phone •2J-9SJI
w11t give you a new 30" rotary 5 ROOM house: - oarwtn Phone
mower attichment, FREE
J 8 o• Brleri, attorney , 9?2
Cleveland, complained the
1 30 lotc
2720
No trade tn anCI no delivery on
10-.ernor'a plan WllUld benefit -lOxS~-;;r-;;;;;-;arpettd.-;~ , th1sotteroood tlllrouoh Feb . a,
2 2-6!p
achooll with tbiiDOIIIelcbn,
52 gallon hot water healer ,· 1975 Gra¥ely Tractor Soles,
ROOM hOU$0. S5,000 Phone
underpfnn.ng CAll 992 51S3 - Pomeroy. on1o Phf"' C6U&gt; 5 992-5871
not --.rily tboa.e with the

10 00-Pollce Story 3,4, 15, Marcu• Welby M D 6 13, Barnaby
Jones8, Tom Jones 10, News20, Soundstage 33
10 3D-Your Future Is Now 20
11 00-News 3.4,6.8,1 0, 13,15, ABC News JJ
11 JQ-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15, Wide World Mystery 13 13 , FBI 6,
Movte "The Lawyer" 8, Movie " The Great Sioux Massacre"
10, Janak/ JJ
12 JD-W1de Wor ld Mystery " The Centerfold Murders" 6
1 00-Tomorrow 3.4.. News 13
WEONESDAY , FEBRUARY 5,1975

EXC~VAT I NG,-;;;~ -Ioader

------------!. ____

2 2 lip

.. 0THERWI5&amp; YOU MAY 'lOT ~
HAVE TIME TO COU~r THE BUllfT5
If TAKE5 TO $TOP M!;'.,,
WHIL!; I 'M
ii&gt;LICIN6 VOU
TORI880N5!

- -----

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

Employment Wanted

I ~F I DEL Pit;~ YOU
HAD SETTER ?HOOT
STRAIGHT!

J 2! tfC

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

1972 YAMAHA 175CC , 21" front
wheel Phone 992 7869

OUTA ME' WAY
DROP THAT
ClAM OP&amp;NER,
BUCKO· AFO"!;' I
PVNCTUI?E5 YE R
GIZZARD!
~~r

MQdem Chemicals

Real Estate For Sale

u

WAITRESSES needed , apply m
person Crow 's Steak House
Pomeroy
I 7 tf c

70 THI? I'll 1:'&gt;
5 WAI'I? THE
PP:I NC !;'75'
Gt,!A;&lt;D, EH ';

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Open Mon Sat
8 AM .. 6 P.M.

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

Help Wanted

6 00-News J.4.B.10,1J,15, ABC News 6, Elec Co 2 o, lTV
Utilization JJ
6 Jo-NBC NewsJ,4,15, ABC News 13; Bewltched6, CBS News
B. 10. Zoom 20, Your Future Is Now JJ
7 00-Truth or Cons 3,4 ; Bowling for Dollars 6, What' s My Line
8., News 10, Name !hot Tune 13; High School TV Honor
Society 15, Antiques 20, L Ill as Yoga &amp; You JJ
7 3D-Hollywood Squares 3.,4 , Wild Wild Wor ld of Animals 6,
Buck Owens B, New Price Is Right 10 To Tell the Truth 13,
Spnng Street USA 15, RFD 20, Marco Sporlllte JJ
B 00-Adam 12 3,4, 15, Movie " Death Be Not Proud " 6, 13, Good
T ' m es 8, 10, America 20.33
B JD-HallofFameJ,4.15, MashB,lO, AscenlofMan20JJ
9 00-Hawall Five 0 B
9 3D-Woman 20 , Witness to Yeslerday JJ

CAP!' AIN EASY

Bulldozer Rad 1alor to the
smallest Heater Core
Nalhan B1ggs
Radiator Spec1alsll

Ph. 992-5682 or 992-1121
All Mechanical Work

Wanted To Buy

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

From the largest

8,10
11 ·30-Holtywood Squares 3,15; Brody Bunch 6; News4; LO¥e of
Life 8, 10, Sesome St 33
II 55-Take Kerr with Graham Kerr 8; Don I mel's World 10;

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1975

...

towards

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

---- -----

Television log for eas~~ viewing

TO

I

Rutland

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

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

7

GOING

EXPERIENCED
,.
Radlato
I
'
Seryl~~ ·,_ ; I

On State Rt. 124, 112 m1. from
Route

1M

SEE YOU LATER.

Free P1ckup and Delivery

ROGER HYSELl'S
GARAGE

RACINE PWMBING
&amp; HEATING
Complete plumbing &amp;

OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

843-2824 or 843-2293
Portland, Ohio
REPAIR-Broken
Parts Mended
STRIPPIN&lt;r-By
Hand
,
NO DIP TANKS
Supplies· Strippers
Stains· Finsihes

Lany Lavender

From a shelf to a house
Paanttng, stdtng , roofing ,
paper hanging, kttctlen
cabanets, expert carpehng ,

IM GOING TO MEET HIM.

The Furniture Fixer

Blown Into Walls
and Attics
Free Esti111ates

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING

1975

'I

' ~ ----~---

PHONE
949-3832 or 843 2667

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

MEIG S

Business Servic~.s

0. &amp;~
CONSTRUCTION I

Suburban 3 Seat V 8 eng me, automatic trans , power
steering &amp; brakes, factory air condlf10f11ng, luggage rack,
green fln1sh , radio Lrke new w w tires.

COMMON PLEAS COURT
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY , OH 10
IN THE MATTER OF SET
TLEMENT OF ACCOUNTS
PROBATE

. .

Motor Co.

1974 OPEL MANTA
$2695
2 Door, orange ftn1sh, blk vmylmtenor, bucket seats, less
than 5,000 m1les Rad1o, deluxe bumpers

Jtc

COU NTY OHI O

J

1974 CHEll IMPALA
$4195
4 Or , 1 owner car &amp; only 10,.400 m1 , V 8 eng me w1th
automat i c, power steering , P brakes, fac air tinted
glass, deluxe body and wheel openmg mouldtngs , sand
stone viny l seats Beaut1ful dark red f(n 1sh Truly a cream
puff

Mann ing D Webster
Judge
Court of Common Pleas
Probate DI VISIOn
( 1)

P~_meroy

'
7- Tht! Daily Sent~l,Middlepori-Pomeroy,
0.,
' DICK TRACY

,..

Ill .

i"
id

�..

.

•

.,

'·

Market Report
Point Pleasant Market
Fe bruary I, 1975
SLAUG HT ER CO WS
Commercial 18·19 ; 'Utility
17.80-18 ; Canner &amp; Cutter 12-16.
\'E,\L - 226-265 lbs. 49.9052.50.
' . YEA RLING HEIFERS Good &amp; Choi ce 500-600 lbs . 17·
19,9{).
STEER CALVES - 400-500
lbs. 16-20.75; 500-600 lbs. 18.2522.
HEIFER CALVES - 300-400
lbs. 17; Cows ! By Head ) 150217.50.
BABY CALVES (B Y HEAD)
- Beef 35; Hols te in &amp; Brown
Swiss 12-:!3.
HOGS - U.S. 1·3, 190-240 lbs.
38.90; Sows. U.S. 1-3, 300-WO
lbs. 35-36 : Boars 300-600 lbs. 2025 ; Pigs I By 'head) 20-40 lbs. 611: 40-60 lbs. 12- 19.50; 60 lbs. +

•·

Malloy speaker (lt indoor camp

Film
shows Oswald
..

,

didn't kill JFK
photographer claims

Speaking this week In an
indoor camp meeting, the Rev.
A. B. Malloy, pqror of the
Church of Christ In Chriatlan
Union, WeiiBtoit, is evangelist
for the nightly services at the
Laurel C1iH Free Methodist
Church, starting at 7:30 each
evening · sponsored by the
Meigs
Area
Holiness
Association,..
·
The musicians ·and song
leader for the Indoor camp
meeting are Arnold and
Garnett Sexton, Nazarenes,

frcm AJilland, .Ky. They
been doln&amp; oVI!IPiilllc:
for oeveral yean. Thill II
annual event llpOIIIOI'etlbJ
Holiness , AuoCiation,
NIW'elle, Free Methodlllt.
and Wesleyan clmdletl U,
up the asaociatim In this an..

na tion :would have tOhave gas
rBy ROBERT MACKAY
distinguish the "rifle" from the
ration ing for five to 10 years_
CHICAGO (UPI) - Robert tr ee branches . Both are
DEER KILLED
" II is estimated that if the
Groden says more than one blurred in the film.
A deer was killed In a trame ·
Congress leg islates gas
accident at 1:15 p.m. Monday
person was involved in the
Groden said at least six
rationing, there will be 140
on County Road 35, two and two
assassination of President bullets were fired at Kennedy
mi llion licensed automobile
ten~ miles northof Rt. 124 in
John Kennedy, tha t Lee -oot' three as ' the Warren
drivers in the country who
Meigs
County when It ran into
Harvey Oswald had nothing to Commission had concluded.
would be eligible for their
the path of a car operated by
do with it -and that he has the
The first shot missed the
.
"Obviously," he sa id, "our quotas," he said .
James
Sellers, 32, of Shade.
film to prove it.
president and hit a street curb,
hational vulnerabili ty is
" If they were to cut back
TITLES
REPORTED
minor damage to his ,
There
was
,Gro den is a New York hesaid,andwaslaterremoved
aggrava ted as Amer ica from their present average
There
were
649
certlficates
of
car,
according
to the State
photographe r and optical ,by the FBI. He said the second
procrastinates. I, for one, will usage of 50 gallons per month
ti
tie
issued
by
the
office
of
Patrol.
specialist. He showed the film shot was fl.red from behind and
not fiddle while energy burns." to 36 gallons to achieve the
Monday at a news confe rence hit Kennedy in the back and the . Meigs County Clerk of Courts
The President to ld the necessary savings, that would
called by political activist Dick third shot hit then Gov. Jolm Larry Spencer during January.
gathering there is ~~no one. leave each one with abou t nine
MEETING SET
Gregory, who said last week he Connally of Texas In the Total fees collected for the
shot, painless answer to the gallons a week," he said.
month amounted to $1646 in·
The Meigs County Regional
had evidence indicating the sboulder.
complex energy problem."
Ford also said ratio ning 18-23.
eluding
$649
for
titles
;
$301.50
Planning
Commission wlll hold
·Central
Intelligence
Agency
'lbe
fourth,
shot
from
behind,
Market generally higher .
He said it will not be enough would penalize lower income
for
notations
of
lien;
$115
for
its
first
monthly
meeting of the
was involved in the Kenn!'dy he said, hit Kennedy in the
to reduce oil consump tion, America ns who would be
memorandums;
$322.50
for
year at 3 p.m. Wednesday at
CO LUMBUS IUPII - Feder . assassination.
head and then the fifth hit
unless domestic oil production forced to buy coupons from al.state summary of Ohio Gregory said the film was Kennedy in the front of the sa lvage titles ; $210 for the Fanners Bank and Savings
also is encou raged. Fur- those who use less than thei r lives tock auctions Monday. partially to back up those head and ' lifted him back- penalties, and $30 for certified Co. Committees for the year
thermo re, he said, these allotment.
copies: Of the total receipts, will be named along with other
Fe~a t~iet975compared to lasl allega tions.
wards ..
measures
'
mus t be acgoes to the county and business to come before the
$1,333
Monday slaughter steers and
Groden said the film was a
"The shot from behind that
companied by a drive to ge t
group.
heifers steady to 1.00 higher, blown-up ver sion of th e hithiminthe head and then the $343 to the state.
sla ughter cows steady to U lO Ab ha
Za d f'lm
maximum efficiency out of all
1
• the one from the front were fired in
higher, slaughter bulls 1.50
ra m pru er
energy used , and 8 national
higher, vealers and feeder only one of the actual shooting, less than on"""ighteenth ·Df a
search for new and be tter
catl le sleady.
and that it showed "as many as second," Groden said.
Slaug hte r s teers : Choice 880- four, possibly five " persons
energy sources."
11 60 lb yield grade 2-4 36.00
.
He said a bullet fired from
Ford aga in lashed out at the
39.00, few 34.25-35.00 ; good were shooting at the president, Oswald's supposed position In
Continued from page I
sentiment in Congress for gas
29.90·33.00. high dressi ng 33.00· and proves Oswald " had the window of the·Texas Bank properties in the First, Second and Third Warda. Bids wllll!lve
rationing and contended it will
35.00; standard 26.40·31.75. low nothin g to do with the
Depository would have hit officials some ideas on what funds they mlgbt have to work with
standard 25 .00-26.00; low stand.
not be the answer . He said tha t
Mrs. Lois A. Pa ul ey, ard and uti lity 17 .00-24.00.
assassination ."
Kennedy at a different angle locally in working out some plan for a new or remodeled village
to make the program work, the Pomeroy Branch Manager of
Sla ughter he ifers: Few in· He said the film was the than any of the wounds he hall.
Strout Realty Co., will meet dividua l choice and prime 950- property of Time Inc. but recet'ved.
The request of senior citizens that the space between the
1tOO lb y1e ld grade 2-3 36.75 · ' fu
with the Ohio, Pennsylvania, 37.50 ; good and choie&lt;&gt; 850-t200 re ~edtosay howthe fllmwas
Gregory said the film was Blue and Grey and The Dally Sentloel on Court St. be filled and
Virginia, West Virginia and lb yiel d grade 3-4 33.00-35.50. obtamed.
d f
or II years made into a park area was discussed. The senior citizens are
Maryland members of the fi rm Low dress ing 29 .75·32.50 ; good This was the sanie film the suppresse
lb yield gr ade 2-3 27.25- Warren Commission studied because "it was limited to advised to get permisaoin from Amy Kingsland, owner of the
at the Sherwood Knoll Quality 665-875
29.75; standa rd 20.00-25.25.
.
excerpts and still photographs property, Blld from the owners of the two adjoining buildlngB to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Hartfo rd ; Billy Brewer, Port- Inn in Lancaster, Pa. March 4
Slaughter cows : Ulill ty and befor e' concludmg Oswald that failed to show the 1m- the location and return to council. Council wlll then decide on
ADMITT ED
Alfred land; Elmer Norvell, Long and 5.
commerc ial 885·1825 lb 14.85· acted alone in the killing of portant points of the film and whether or not to place fill dirt there.
·
Kennedy
·
Warren , Gallip olis ; Wilma Bottom.
·
The company's new National 21.85.
·
. .
.
its implications ."
Slaug hter bulls : Yie ld grade 1
Councilman Manley reported that the village
sweeper
Anderson , Long Bottom; Carl
DISCHARG ED - Sy bil real es tate referral center will 1210·1800 lb 25.25·29.50.
Kennedy was killed m a
Gregory said he wlll meet is repaired. Cost of the parts amounted to only about f$0, Manley
Still, Jr., Middleport; Marjorie Greene, J ohn Gould, Oswell be highlighted as will ways 'to
Vea lers: Choice 230-26Q lb motor cade in Dallas, Texas, on with the Rockefeller commis- said.
54.00-65.00.
.
Nov. 22, 1963. Oswald was
Gibbs, New Ha ~e n ; Mary Durham. Mary Koenig, Avis fi nd money for buyers.
Feeder cattle Cho•ce steers
. .
slon presently investigating
Council discussed two open lOWers In the area of Coal ant(
Harbrecht, Pomeroy: Mary McClellan, Gladys Goulding,
400-500 lb 24.75·26.75, 500-855 lb arrested for the assassmation CIA activities, and more Hlll Sts. Don McKenzie, the'new street su[ierlntendent, reported
Cundiff, Mason; Rodney King, Robert La wrence, Na ncy
23 .50·29.75 ; good 300·400 lb 51.00 and was himself killed in the evidencewlll be released in the that he is familiar with the [rOblema. He outlined the worlt: done
Letart, W. Va .; Hilda White, Walker, Charles Yonker, Doris
Dallas police headquarters by next three or four weeka on the by his department on Mmday. Among a IIWllber of other acLENTEN BREAKFAST
82.50 per head, 400·500 lb 100.00- a bystander, Jack Ruby.
· Long Bottom ; Terri Miller , Haynes, Henry Sayre.
tivities, the parking lots along the rive~ were swept and the
The annual Lenten breakfas t 122.50 per head; standard .300- The film, enl arged and assassination .
Rutland; Bernard Rairde n.
collections
of f11bbish removed. ·
followed by a program for all 500 lb 16.75·20.00. 500·600 lb shown in slow motion, showed
The
departlnent
patched a ntunbel,- of h~les and shoveled dirt
area churches will be held at 14.00-16.25. Good heifer ~ 300·500 Kennedy being hit in the head.
Holzer Medical Center
for
30
feet
away
from
catch lllalns in some areu.
Delivery Special
7:45 a.m. on Wednesday, Feb. lb 97.50-99.00 pe r head. 700·800 Groden said the film shows the
(ntrths)
McKenzl.e
aaid
he
plans
to have the sil'eet lllll'eeper operating
Monday - Mr. and Mrs. 12 at the Trlni ty Church in lb 16.50-18.00 ; sta ndard 300·400 force of the bullet pushing
downtown twice a week and that he has made plans with fire
35.00·67.50 per head, 610·830 Kennedy back and to his left, .
Mark Beegle , daughter, Pomeroy. Women of the lb
lb
12.75-1
6.00.
chief
Otarles Legar for firemen to wash atreeta belore Euler.
Racine. Mr. and Mrs. James church aga in will arrange the
Hogs : bar rows and gi lts .50- indicating he was shot from the
McKenzie
said he has inspected 90pct. of the alreebJ to see what
2.10 hig her, US 1-3 194·234 lb front and not from the back as
Blanton, Jr., son, Jackson. Mr. annu al event.
should
be
dooe In the way of repairs.
Continued from page 1
39.00-40.00, lot 230 lb 40.30 ; US was originally ·thought .
and Mrs. Thomas Hill, son,
Attending the meetlog were Mayor Smith, clerk Walton,
2·3 241 ·279 lb 36.1 0-38.75.
OF
The film also shows two men Richard Chambers, R. L. treasurer Phyllis Hennessy, councilmen Ralph Werry, Davia,
Jackso n. Mr . and Mrs.
Sows stea dy to .40 lower , US
OFFICE MOVED
2·3 451 ·57 1 lb 36.00-36.05; us Groden said were shOQtlng at Jacobs, Fred Morrow, Melissa Snouffer, Manley, Pl!il Globokar, Lou Osborne, chief Webster,
Naaman Lewis Stapelton, son,
The Meigs County offi ce for medium and 1-3 381 ·650 lb 32.10· Kennedy . One was behind a Cerise, Beulah Jones and Bob
Ewlngton, and Mr. and Mrs.
and McKenzie.
Hoefli ch.
tuberculosis
has moved to the . 35.50.
Robert Wilbur, son , Wellston.
Feeder pigs 2.00 hi gher, US 2- pedestal on a gl'assy knoll in
Council refused pennlsalon for solicitors from Federal
first floor of the former Meigs 3 30·40 lb 8.50·18.50 per head, 50- front of the motorcade. The
Mrs . Thomas dis tributed
Hocking
High School to come Into the ccmmunlty to lleCUre adCounty Ch ildren's Home 651b 22 .50·28.50 per head.
other is also in front of the detailed information on the vertising for a program to be distributed In conjt11ectl011 with a
ONLY
Sheep : Shorn sla ughter lam bs motorcade, under a low tree, senior citizens comprehensive
PLEASANT VALLEY
building, also occupied by the
$7.50 Val~e ,
.35
1.45 lower , wooled slaug hter
DISC HARGES
Rev. county sc hools administration lambs
program and copies of the sectional basketball tournament In which Meigs HJsh School will
~ 25 - 2 . 50 higher, choice and his head is visible on the
Clare nce McCloud , Maso n: offices.
Meigs County Council on Aging take part, and to be staged at the Federal Hocking High School.
and pr ime shorn with No. 2 and film .
No. 3 pelts 99. t1J lb 41.70·42 .35.
La ura Swis her , Ches hire ;
newsletter which is distributed Council also met with a representative of the Twbl Qty cab eo.
Groden
said
he
is
carrying
a
wbo aaid that his employer would have rates on trips to Mayor
full wool 93·1tOlb 38.25·42.25, lot
Robert G. Hite, Letart; Billy
rifl e, but it is hard to to senior citizens.
89 lb 44.00.
Smith
today .
Stovers , Gallipolis; J ohn
FINED$999
59 N. Second St.
Campbell, New Haven; Susan
CIN CINNATI · I UPIJ
Middleport, 0. ·
Casey. Gallipolis. ·
Stephen Prince, 29, Cincinnati,
was sentenced Monday to a 180- ·
day workhouse term and fined
Charging I extreme cruelty,
$999, one dollar less than Kenda Rainey, Pomeroy, has
maximum $1,000, for wrapping filed suit for divorce against
I
his head )l'i th bandages In an Jack Rainey, Poi~ t Pleasant,
attempt to secure welfare in the Meigs Coun ty Common
I
payments. Prince had been Pleas Court . The plaintiff asks
CALCUTTA CLOTH:
charged
with
falsification
and
restorati on of her maiden
I
THE SMARTEST WRINKLE
attempt to obtain welfare by name, "Chaney."
IN FABRICS!
fraud.
In the same court, Betty
Triple tt, Racine, was granted a
divorce fr om Ernest Triplett
on grounds of gross neglec t of
UNIT CALLED
The Middleport emergency dul y and extreme cruelty. She
A
squad was called to the Roy was given custody of a minor
Searls h'ome on the New Lima child .
Shortly aftet· the divorce was
Road .at 1:24 p.m. t.~onday for
Terri Miller. Suffering from a granted, an answer and cr01&gt;s
possible fractured ankle, she petition was fil ed in the suit.
Dismissed in the court was a
was taken to Veterans
Wi flow Run cuts dashMemorial HC~&gt; pital where she sui t for money fi led by the
ing figures of crinkly
Pomeroy Cemen t Block Co.
was admitted.
textured Calcutta Clothagainst Howard A. Wilson,
MlTQIEU. KU,LED
Middleport.
matchob le tops and
AMELIA, Ohio (UPI ) - A
bottoms in Beige f)olyhomemade gyrocopter crashed
at
a
private
airport
near
here
We're the ·bank that understands your
ester/coHon blend.
FILM TOMORROW
Monday,
killing
tbe
pilot.
need for a loan and If the're's any possl·
Build on ensemble of
RIO GRANDE - The second
The vicUm was identified as
film
in
the
13-part
Nati
onal
ble way we can help, we like to say
these talented parts
Odell L. Mitchell, 34, U&gt;veland.
,,
Gallery
of
Ar
t
"Civilisation"
;
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"Yes!". So If you need a loan for almost
tho t go everywhere.
color film series will be shown
I
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. any good purpose ..,
Add zingy print shirts
on the Rio Grande .College
I .
:r
1
:
Camp uS, Wednes d ay,
of Arne!®, All in
new car, . paying bills, remodellng ... or
I
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\,
New clinical tests completed at a February 5 at 2: 50 p.m. in
sizes
5
to
~
3,
·
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1,.
ll
whatever, see your friends at our bank.
major unlve:1;ity hospital prove thlf the
:• •I
ODIIINEX Plan will help you lose Anniversary Hall. Ill , and at 8
I
We're here to help you with all your bank·
p.m.
in
the
Student
Center.
The
""" weight Qulclly.
ODRINEX contains an arriazina showings are free and open to
1!
',_
lng needs.
A. Long-sleeved_crop
'I I
hunger tamer that suppresses the the public.
jacket has flap trim
''
appetite. Enjoy three good meals a day
rl
os the tiny- ODIIINEX ta blet auto·
!
patch pockets

ATLANTA
(UP!)
President For.d today warned
that another Middle East oil
embargo could cripple the
nation's economy and threaten
national security: He said a
"couple of congl'essionaJ ·
aspirins" will not solve the
·
problem.
ford told th'e Opportunities
lndustralization Ce nt er , a
group which trains disad·
vantaged
Ame r ican
miJJorities, that his economic
and energy plan "tackles all
the questions and offers answers that will work."
After the speech, Ford
arranged to hold a news conference. He was in the second
of a two-day stay in Georgia to
drum up grass roots support
for his anti-recession prog ram .
During the first day Ford
gained the surprise backing of
Alabama Gov . George Wallace
and seven other South er n
governors.
"Another embargo co ul d
cripple our economy, making
us. vuln erable, not only
economically, but in the field of
na tional defense as well," Ford

said.
"In short, we really are not
talk iog about whe ther to act but how .
"The longer the debate, the
greater the delay. The longer
the &lt;)elay, the greater the
problem.
·

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MARION - An lncrea~ Of 6,. cents a day - $2.55 a month Is how the average residential' phone user will be affected by
General Telephone Co . of Ohio's $13 .5million rate boost.
1 The increase, granted Jan. 31 by the Public Utilities Com, mission of Ohio, goes into effect as soon ·as new rate schedules
are approved. Flllng of new schedules was done Tuesday.
Robert M. Wopat of Marlon, president. of the company, said
taxes will take more than half the $13.5 million, leavlng ·net additiOnal annual revenues of about $6:8 million.
'lbe rate boost affects about 325,000 users in 70 counties.
He emphasi.zed.,lhat former Northern Ohio Telephone Co.
customers are not affected. An $6.8 millidn request .filed June 21,
1973, by Northern is still pending before the PUOO. Northern was
merged into General last May 31 but is not I. party to this case.
Aboot 35 pet. of the $13.5 million will he derived from in-

creases incertainservicesand one.fune charges, he sa id.
Chief among them is the charge for inswllation of a primary
service. For residential users the rate will increase from $12 to
$25 and business froin $15 tol' $30. The charge for reeswblishing
residential service after disconnection for non-payment rises
from $12 to $15.
·
The monthly charge for a non-published phone number will
be raised from 50 cents to 75 cents, and the one.fune charge to
change a npn-published number will be $15, up from $7.50.
Extra listings In the whi te pages of the phone directory Increase 25 cents to 75 ce nts monthly for residential customers.
Business users will pay $1.50a month, up from $1.
Monthly rate for an extension pbone will go from $1 to $1.50
for residences and $2 to $2.50 for businesses.
Additional increases for premium instMH'1P"'• o1oo ""p

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Weather

at y

Light rain tonight, changing
to snow flurries later: colder.
lows in upper 20s. A chance of
snow Thursday. highs in the
low 30s.

Devoted 1'u Th e

VOL XXVI

NO. 207

Repair of parking lot

attend
conference

BEAUTIFUL
BREATH

Center

SPRING
BOUQUET

595

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POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OH 10

KNOWI·NG
YOU HAVE
A FRIEND
WHEN YOU
NEED A LOAN

FIGHTS UGLY FAT
3 TIMES A DAY

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DEPOSITS

TO •40,000

Auto·Teller Window and· Walk-up Window
()pen Friday Evening$ 5 to 7 P.M.

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directPd · wil l not make you nervous.
l oc ~ better, feel better as you star t

!

huna·y. With l ew~;n calories. your
weight a;oes down. Safe· li ken as

INSURED

tl,

bein~

mBtically helps you eat tess without

SISTER DIES
George Freeland, Syracuse,
sllm mlngd,wntod•y with ODIIINEX. has recei ved word that his
Satislactio.n 11Jitanteed or money back. sister, Mrs. Carrie Huffman
84, died at her home in Miami:
Nelson's Drug Store
., Friday.
Fla
Pomeroy , Ohio

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Shirt of Arne!® jerwy
knit has long sleeves.
Brown print

\~

Button-front, self belt
17" skirt

I

ASl&gt;li:TACIUII WUIILD Of ltATUIIE!

•

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When You Visit, Park FREE

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lnt e r·esl.~

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litbens /~ational

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An estl!nated 200 parents and interested persons attending a
special session of the Meigs Local School Board Tuesday night
where the future of the non-graded Bradbury Elementary School
was contended.
'
The s,esston, with Supt. George Hargraves as moderator, was
held in the Meigs Junior High School in Middleport. The meeting,
over an hour and a half in duration, was orderly and provided
lnfonnation for the administration and board of education. All
membera of the board, as well as the Bradbury staff, were
p-esent.
Hargraves, following an opening prayer, outlined ti)e
beginning ofthe present concept of the Bradbul')' School in 1970, a
school for fifth and sixth graders structured to meet the in- . '
divldual needs of each student.
He commended the staff of the school for dedicated, hard
work in establlshing the school which he said is a different way of
preaentlog education. He stressed that Bradbury lays no claims
to greater or lesser success with students as they move on to
higher grades. ·
Hargraves pointed out that the public meeting was scheduled
because of Complaints lodged against the school at two previous
board meetings.
~eryooe atteudlng the meellog was given the opportunity to
express an opinion. Many did not apeak, but tbelr approval of the
ludlvldoallzed, non.graded program waa reflected In the en·
lbuslutic applause given those who did apeak ootiD favor of !be
achooJ.
Genuna easel spoke highly of Bradbury. She said she had no
p-oblems with the school because She "believed in leaving
education to the educatora".
I'll contrati to Mrs. Caacl waa Thurman Carsey, a parent ol a
~I Bradbury stndent,.who IBid he wu "bitterly oppoaed" to
!be school. He charged that tbe chUdren were not taught or
dllelplloed properly lucl aaid changes ahonld be made and
· report cardo iAoued.

"ONE OF THE BEST EVER

By United Preoalnlernatlooal
WASHINGTON - THE HOUSE WAYS AND MEANS
Committee has voted down the year's first effort to end the oil
depletlm allowance. n had been added to President Ford's quick
tax cut bill. The House Rules Committee also separated another
doublt&gt;barreled measure Monday, a delay in Ford's $3 per barrel
oil Import fee and a $36 billion Increase in the national debt.
'lbe unsuccessful tactic was to force the Pr!!Sidenl to accept
legislation he did not like because he wanted and needed the
other measures so badly that he wouW not veto' them. Ways and
means had attached the Oil Import delay to the national debt
Increase. Sources said the Democrats feared the tactic would
backfire and they would be unable to override a veto, so on
Mmdliy the Rules committee decided the measureS wlll be voted
~ separately.

OOLUMBUS - A SPOKESMAN FOR THE OIDO Department of Transportation said Tuesday the use of studded tires on
Ohio highways should be curtailed. "Damage to highways far
ootweighs the safety factor' of studs," said T. H. Bovard,
aasislant to TranaportaUon Director Richard Jackson in
testimony before the Senate Transportation Committee.
'lbe cOilUlllttee is holding hearings on a proposal to extend
the use of studded tires from Nov. I until Aprill5. Studded tires
are now allOwed on Ohio highways from Nov. 15 to March 15.
Jolm Shimer, Dayton, a director of the Ohio Tire Dealers
Aasoclatl011, testified In favor of the studded tires.
"People might 'disobey the law (the Nov. Iii-March 15.
p-ovialon) if they believe their own safety without studded tires
is U..eatened," said Shimer.
ADDIS ABABA - THE ETHIOPIAN GOVERNMENT today
said ''peace haa been restored" In Asmara after five days of
flghtlng with secessionist rebels, bul fresh troops were airlifted
to the city. Gunfire was reported on. the northern oulsllirts.
Mllltary sources said the airllft and a convoy of 50 tanks
oupported by armored personnel carriera would Jnng the total of
govermnent troops In the area to 18,000. The -.·ebels, who are
~ghllng for Independence for the province of Eritrea, number
!&lt;ilOUI 15,000. .
A total of 130 Americans, most of them women and children,
among the 253 foreignOil brought to Addis" Ababa In the
lint day of evacuaUm Tuesday.
-

WASHINGTON -

·Sill FrnciKt Llam'w

-ceelllltltballn view ofTuelday'aheavy flouse vote- 374 to
a_ AgriL'ultun ~ Earl L. Botz would urge President

i1Qim: l1i \mli!UII lilfu I t\li! ·fob

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation,,
"THE FRIENDLY BANK'" .

STARTS.TOMORROW
2 DAYS ONLY

,

ShOp Weekdays 9:30 to

MEIGS THEATRE

s-

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Ford not to veto tbe D!MI!ft.
The Senate AgriL'ultun C..Omlttee takes up the House bill
today. '(Jnder Ford '1 pl'OIIOIIIthe cost of fedel'al food staiilj)fl for
the poor would lncnUe Mardi I fnm an·average of 23 per cent
ci their iJicrml1s to :10 per cent.
.
.
I Al:i:ardlng to Rep. Thomas Foley, D-Wash., manager of..the

and s.tuntl,s 9:30 ., a

Fridays

·

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ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY.'

SHOW TIMES · 7iOO · 9:00
SORRY NO PAIS ES

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THE HOUSE HAS VOTED over-

.,.t..Jml~y to delay President Ford'• ~ Increase In the
111101111 the poor ·IIIWII pay for food stamps. AdmlnlslraUon

"A SPELLBINDING FILM !"

Cor.llnued oo page 16

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Mrs. Mary Wayland spoke favorably of the school stating
that she thought teachers were doing a good job and that a
comprehensive report that she received from the staff was better
than a report card.
Joe Magnotta spoke several times saying (basically) that he
felt the program at Bradbury is excellent and that teaching is
"very fine". He said that discipline should start at home and if it
ian 'tin the home, then little can be done in the school.
"Teachers can't do anything", he stated. Magnotta
displayed one of the written comprehensive reports issued twice
a year by the staff on the work of each child. He stated that such a
report reveals far more than a report card can.
·
Mrs. Louise Johnson, who had a child at Bradbury, but
moved him to the Pomeroy Elementary School, ~in that she
doesn 't think much· of the Bradbury program. She said Mid·
dleport parents should have a choice in the type of program their
children take since the Bradbury School is not a conventional
type school. She urged school officials to give parents a choice fo
the type of school.
Doris Skidmore complained about the spelling program at
the school as to the students giving each other lists of words and
one of the students not having Ume to give the lis! to her child
because of fooling around.
Rosemary Hysell said her family had come to Middleport
after two and a hall years in Germany. She said she had one child
in Bradbury ~rller and had no problems and hoped that she
would be permitted to send a younger child to Bradbury under its
present structure.
Carl Smith objected to the applause which greeted the talks
by supporters of the school. He said the crowd was there to find
outaboutthe school and what it does. "We are here to state facts
and get facts," Smith said.
Mrs. Nancy Pope spoke on the experience of her children at
Bradbury School. She said she was pleased wlh the program's
aspects of level teaching.

v

Premiums raised

· l·l AIIIIIIS liftltl

CINCINNATI

en tine

If South Ame rica were
moved direc tly nor th, its
weste rnmost point would run
along a line roughly from
Tampa, Fla. , to Cleveland,
Ohio.

Uf 1'h e Meigs- M11scm A reil

15 CENTS

PHONE 992'-2156

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1975

'

BRUSSElS- THE U. S. DOlLAR, IN THE SIX'I11 week of
ooe of ila worst slumps, opened even lower on European ex~ea IDday. The price of gold roee $1.75 In Zorich to open at
$17U5 an ounce and went lip 50 cenls In London to open at
$17Ui.
·
Paris bankers called the dollar's retreat a ' 'technical
reaction",1J1C1 an adjullment em .the market. The bankers said
tbe lllgbt decline was of little llgniflcance. Londm bankers said
tbe p1n1 made by the dollar Tuesday bad p-ot.bly bee!! overdone. .
'

. Pant has wide extension
• waistband, 24" leg. ·

Now You Know

Board hears Bradhu.r y School dispute

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8• Short sleeved jacket
has self-tie belt, flap
. trim pockets

Pomeroy , here's how most customers wiU be affected by the rate
increase :
For residences -a one party phone under the new rate wlll
be $10 compared to the old rate of $7.60, an increase of $2.40. A
two party phdhe will be $9.05 compared to the former $6.75, ail
increase of$2.30. Afour party phone will be $6.15compared to the
former rate of $5.95, an increase of $2.20, and a multi-party phone
will be $6.45 compared to the former rate of $6.20, an increase of
$2.25.
For businesses -a one party line will cast $19.85 under the
increase compared to $14.40, an lnc;rease of $5.45, a two party
phone wlll cost$17.75, np from $12.70, an Increase of $5.05, and a
multi-party phone will cost $16.90, an increase of $5.15 over the
old rate of $11.75.

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

Divorce asked·

IS ...

scheduled. The "starlite," for instance, will be 85 cents a month,
up from 75 cents, and "stylellne," $1.25 up from $1.
,
Wopal commented on rema rkS by the PUCO in connection
with its announcement on the company's case last Saturday.
"We agree t11at the state legislature should revise Ohio's
rate-making statutes . We recommend changes to be made to
allow adjudication of rale requests within four to six mOiiths, as
other states do," he said.
"This would make it possible to get increases at the time
they are needed."
In Ohio, utilities usually wa it two years or longer for PUCO
action . General's case, which was adj udicated Jan. 31, had been
pending since Dec. 27, 1972.
The company's last rate increase was November, 1971.
According to a rate schedule recieved from the company In

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atreet

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Gen-Tel rate boost will cost $2.55 per montli

Manager to

HOSPITAL NEWS

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a..,. The Dally Sentinel, Middlepart-Ponieroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Feb: 4, 1975

Ford:·warns: u.s.
of new emhargos

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Premi urns for the annual
horse and pony pulling contests
were increased Monday night

Directors,
officers
reelected
All directors were reelected
at the annual meeting of the
shareholders of the Pomeroy
National Bank Tuesday according to Edison Hobstetter,
chairman and president.
Reelected were Dr. R. E.
·Boice, Edison Hobstetter,
Horace Karr, Roger Morgan,
Warren Pickens, and Orion W.
Rol!l'h.
Officers reelected by the
board were Edison Hobstetter,
president; Richard Chambers,
vice president ; Ge orge s.
Hobstetter, vice pres ident ;
Dennis E. Keney, vice
president ; Don E. Nelson,
assistant vice president ;
Maxine Griffith; cashier ; Lera
K. Jones, assistant cashier;
Richard Poulin, assistant
cashier ; Joan Wolfe, assistant
cahsier, and Marilyn Wolfe,
assistan t cashier; at the
Rutland Branch, William J.
1
Hobstetter, vice president and
branch manager, and· Joan
May, · assistant
branch
manager.
Employees reelected were
Ceryl Abbott, Sharon Buf·
fington, Ronda Dempsey, Lee
Ann Nease, Donna Nelson,
Marilyn Robinson, Doris
· Snowden, Unda Spencer; and
at the Rutland Branch,
Sharon Barr , Rulh Ann
Graham, Norma Sue Jeffers,
Bl,ld Kathry Stewart.
"Our achievements in the
past years have reconfirmed
our belief in the viability of the
economy of our area," Ho~stetter said . He also reported
that total resources at year-end
were $21,394,410.09, and that
during 1974, total deposi ts
increased $2,192,116.52.
"Our directors, officers, and
's!;lff. have been oriented to
progress and growth, .and we
· will strive to continue to set
new standards of service to our
customers,',' he said.
·

when the Meigs Coun ty Fair
Board met at the Rock Springs
fairgrounds.
The board added $10 to each
of the five premiums to be
awarded in three weig ht
classes of the horse pulling
contest and added a sixth prize
of $15. The first five prizes
under the increase will be $90,
$75, $60, $35 and $25. In the pony
pulling contest a sixth place
prize of $15 was added and $10
was added to 11\'e premium of
the top five places in two
classes. The first five places
with the increase will be $40,
$35, $30, $25, and $20.
At the request of 'harness
horse racemen, plans were
made for putting sand on the
race track for this summer's
ra ce program. Mrs. Lucille
Leifheit who attended the state
convention
rece ntly
in
Columbus along with Mr. and
Mrs. Wallace Bradford, gave a
report on the event and
outlined the talent which has
bee n engaged for grandstand
entertainment.
The board discussed the
purchase of bleachers for the
tractor pulling contest area
and a committee was named to
investigate further. Twelve
members and three visitors
attended the meeting.

Mrs. John Tyree said that she has had three children at the
school. She spoke highly of the program, told of the problems her
children met in going to onother school, and of moving back to
Middleport so that her children could take par! in the Bradbury
program which, she ~aid , "Is very good".
Mrs. Ida Martin said that her children had attended Bradbury and had moved on quite successfully at another sGhool.
Paul Casci said that he was, at first , apprehensive of the
Bradbury program which was experienced only by the last of his
six children. He stated that he found out more about the
education of his last child at Bradbury than he had about the
other five of other schools. He stated that he was proud of the
work of the-Bradbury teachers and in favor of the program.

Highway high ·
in Rhodes plan
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Highway construction will be one of
Gov. James A. Rhodes' most
important programs because it
will end unemployment, crime
and welfare, the governor said
here Tuesday at an OI,J.io
Turnpike Commission meeting.
Rhodes said he wants to
finish construction . on all
interstate highways In Ohio in
three or four years. Once the
highway program is completed,
· Rhodes said he would turn his
attention to mass transportation
for cities and counties which
need it.
Rhodes said the Ohio Turn·
pike is a model for all other
turn pike~ in the nation.
Four r.epa ving contracts were
accepted by the commission,
which.also said its 26th annual
report was given last Friday to
the Ohio General Assembly and
Rhodes.
Missing the meeting was
commission member 0. L.
Teagarden of Oak Harbor, who
was ill. Teagarden was hospitalized here with a diabetesrelated illness, a commission
spokesman said.
Rhodes used the meeting to
soften opposition to increased

20 more

farms in

Co-Op

The Southeastern Ohio
Farmers Co-Dp Tuesday night
received new memberships
.and orders for supplies according to a c&lt;HJp spokesman.
' Twenty new a rea farms
:-..;:::::m:::::::::::-;*~-:.~«.:x:::::o;::'h'h::'ho;o;-;::~- joined the c(H)JJ and placed
EXTENDED FORECAST
orders for fertilizer. barbed
Eriday throQgh ·Sooday, wire and baling twine.
fair and cold Friday, warThe organization's attorney,
mer with rain or snow by Joe Cain, and three members
Sunday. Highs Friday will be will confer with the C&lt;HJp's
in the upper 20s or low 30s, dealer later this week . and
warming to the Qpper 30s by finalize terms of las t night's
Sunday. wws Friday wUI be orders.
In the upper teens and low
Next co-op mee ting will be
20s and in the upper 20s by March4, beginning at 7:3op.m.
early Sooday.
In th e Jackson Production
~;rm;~xm:::::::::'m:'~(.~(.i~ Credit Building.on Upper Rt. 7
.
'in Gallia County .
.
Calls reported
Deadlin e for $100 memb S
: bership fees Is March 4. Mter
Y yracuse unit
that date, an additional $5 a
Tpe Syracuse Fire Depart- month penalty fee will be
ment and ·Emergency Squad · charg~s those joining the co-op
has reported several calls.
during the next 12 · months.
On Monday the fire depart- Initiation membership fees last
ment was called to the Don night totaled $2,000. Orders
Hendricks home · where · an amounted to $7,315.62.
1
outbuilding was destroyed. by
Members of the by-law's
fire. Cause of the blaze was not coin.J!littee will meet with the ·
known. Over the weekend tue organization's attorney Friday
squad was called.on Sunday.for at 7:30 p:m.
an infant, Sarah Eynon, who
All fa rmers and their wives
- was taken to Holzer' Medical are invited tb attend the next
Center.
1co.op meeting o~ Marc.h 4.

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Mrs. Johnson questioned Hargraves on results of evaluations
of studOflts who had attended Bradbury School in comparison to
fifth and sixth graders from other schoollt.
Hargraves said such evaluations disclosed nothln&amp; better or
worse in Bradbury students. He stated that evaluations have
shown that it was not where the student came from but his abiUty
that counted.
students above average contloued to do above average work,
average students contloued to do average wotk, and below
average students contloued to be below average, Hargrayes
said. It was pointed out that Information secured on students of
the schools could not be revealed for public scrutiny because of
Continued on page 16

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'highway spending by pegging
such spending on creating joqs
.and breafing traffic bottlenecks. ,. He also said his plan
would cost less than the
proposal by construction lobbyis~ who wish to increase
gasoline sales taxes by fourcents per gallon and hike· the
cost of license plates and
drivers' licenses by $1Q.
" Nothing is easy in public life
beca use th ere ar e so many
cross currents," Rhodes saifl.
" Some people sa y we don 't
need any more highways jsst
like some say we don 't need
any more policemen or fire-

\

men.

"But I am concerned about
our hi ghway program and there
are. ugly gaps in the interstate
systeni in the cities that muust
be closed," he said.
·
"Sometimes a public official
must take the unpopular side
and do what he believes is best
ond that is exactly the position
I will be in when we announce
the program .
"There may be poin~ of
diffe rence in approach to
problems," the governor added,
"but I don'I believe there is
disagreement on the end result
which is to build highways. "
Commission Chairman James
W. Shoc kn essy said he was
pleased Rhodes had assured
him he was "not supporting
any such preposterous plan to
impose a sales tax on top of a
gasoline (price) increase."
In other matters, the commis·
sion members were told it is
impossible to prevent persons
from throwing stones from
turnpike overpasses an d that no
turnpike employe has 'faced a
job la yoff because of the
recession.
The study involving ston~ s
being thro)l'il. from overpasses
stenuned from an incident last
Christmas morning in which a
piece of concrete thrown from
an overpass in Lorain County
fatally injured a Bucyrus
woman .

RHONDA ERVIN

Rhonda Ervin .is
county chairman
Miss Rhonda Ervin, Racine, voluntary services are Inwas presented her numbered ternationally recognized. The
badge and appointment card as number issued to Miss Ervin
a Na tional American Red becomes a part of her perCross Disaster Nurse when the manent record at National
Red
Cross
Meigs County American Red American
Cross Chapter met Tuesd~y Headquarters and will not be
night at Veterans Memorial reissued.
During Tuesday night's
Hospital.
meetin
g presided over by
The daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Ervin, Miss Larry Baker, vice chairman,
Ervin is a graduate of Southern Miss Ervin was named
High School. She graduated disa ster chairman of the !peal
from the Ohio State University Red Cross Chapter,.
During the meeting th e
School of Nursing ln June, 1974,
of Robert Buck as
resignation
and since that time has ileen
chairman
was
accepted .with
employed
at
Veterans
MemQrial Hospital. She had regret. Mrs. Alwilda Werner
completed a special disaster presented the financial report
nursing course at Ohio State. and Mrs. Lelah Weatherby
The ·Red Cross badge reported on service to military
presented to Miss Ervln is a families. A vis it by the
di s tinctive · symbol
of bloodmobile was announced
professional attainment of for Monday, Feb. 10, at the
se rvice to humanity. It Pomeroy Elementary ·School
represents an affiliation with a from I to 6 p.m. Baker also
worldwide humanita r ian _ reported on first aid programs
in
which in the county.
movement
professional
skills and

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Adm issions Bernice
Lav elly, Rac ine; Mark
Gilland, New Haven; William
Polaski , Bellaire; Raymond
Sayr e, Syr acuse ; Clifford
. T 'Vo dump trucks
Smith , Jr., Syracuse; . Alice
PROTEST PL\~0
Jacobs, Rutland ; Brabara
A meeijng to organize a bought by county
Wolfe, Syracuse.
protest against removal of the
The · bid ·of the Pomeroy
Discharges - Sharon Smith , Penn Central and Chesapeake
Motor
Co. on two dump trucks
Carl Still, Jr.
and Ohio Railroad lines from at $10,250 each w§s' accepted by
Meigs and Gallia Counties will the Meigs . County Com~
SQUAD CALLED
The Middleport E-R Squad ·be held at 7:30, Wednesday, missioners on Tuesday.
was called today at 8:56 a.m. Feb. 12, at Middler&gt;&lt;!"t Village , The commissioll!!rs 'provided
fo r Denzil Proctor, a medical council chambers. The public' for bond for CoiJilj;y Engineer
patient, who was taken to is invited.
Wesley Buehl and paid bil11t.
Pleasan t Valley Hospital.
The board also approved a ·
reqoest fr~ Jolul Rice, county
CHAMBER TO MEET
LOCAL TEMPS
agricultural agent, for em·
The
Middleport
Chamber
of
The temperature: In downployt~~ent of e· student to .work
town Po~eroy at 11 a.m. today Commerce will meet at 12:15 ·
in
dem9nstrations , of
was 43 degrees under cloudy p.m. Thursday ·at the Martin .
agricultural
programa.
~estaurant in Mlddlep?"t.
skies.
· ·
.'
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